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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67141 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67141)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Corea, by William Elliot Griffis
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Corea
- The Hermit Nation
-
-Author: William Elliot Griffis
-
-Release Date: January 10, 2022 [eBook #67141]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net/ for Project Gutenberg (This
- file was produced from images generously made available by
- The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COREA ***
-
-
-
-
-
- COREA
- THE HERMIT NATION
-
- I.—ANCIENT AND MEDIÆVAL HISTORY
- II.—POLITICAL AND SOCIAL COREA
- III.—MODERN AND RECENT HISTORY
-
-
- BY
- WILLIAM ELLIOT GRIFFIS
- FORMERLY OF THE IMPERIAL UNIVERSITY OF TOKIO, JAPAN
- AUTHOR OF “THE MIKADO’S EMPIRE”
-
-
- NINTH EDITION, REVISED AND ENLARGED
-
- NEW YORK
- CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
- 1911
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- TO
-
- ALL COREAN PATRIOTS:
-
- WHO SEEK
- BY THE AID OF SCIENCE, TRUTH, AND PURE RELIGION,
- TO ENLIGHTEN
- THEMSELVES AND THEIR FELLOW-COUNTRYMEN,
- TO RID
- THEIR LAND OF SUPERSTITION, BIGOTRY, DESPOTISM, AND
- PRIESTCRAFT—BOTH NATIVE AND FOREIGN—
- AND TO PRESERVE
- THE INTEGRITY, INDEPENDENCE, AND HONOR, OF THEIR COUNTRY;
- THIS UNWORTHY SKETCH
- OF
- THEIR PAST HISTORY AND PRESENT CONDITION
- IS DEDICATED.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE TO THE NINTH EDITION.
-
-
-The year 1910 saw the Land of the Plum Blossom and the Islands of the
-Cherry Blooms united. In this ninth edition of a work which for nearly
-thirty years has been a useful hand-book of information—having, by
-their own unsought confession, inspired not a few men and women to
-become devoted friends and teachers of the Corean people—I have made
-some corrections and added a final chapter, “Chō-sen: A Province of
-Japan.” Besides outlining in brief the striking events from 1907 to
-1911, I have analyzed the causes of the extinction of Corean
-sovereignty, aiming in this to be a disinterested interpreter rather
-than a mere annalist.
-
-Although the sovereignty of Corea, first recognized and made known to
-the world by the Japanese in their treaty of 1876, has been, through
-the logic of events, destroyed, I doubt not that the hopes of twelve
-millions of people will be increasingly fulfilled under the new
-arrangement. Not in haste, but only after long compulsion, did the
-statesmen of Japan assume a responsibility that may test to the full
-their abilities and those of their successors. The severe criticisms,
-in Japan itself, of the policy of the Tokio government bear witness to
-the sensitiveness of the national conscience in regard to the treatment
-of their colonies. In this respect, as in so many other points of
-public ethics, the Japanese are ranging themselves abreast with the
-leading nations that are making a world-conscience.
-
-In sending forth what may be the final edition of a work, with the
-title of which time has had its revenges, while the contents are still
-of worth, the author thanks heartily all who, from 1876, when the work
-was planned, until the present time, have assisted in making this book
-valuable to humanity.
-
-
-W. E. G. Ithaca, N. Y., June 27, 1911.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE TO THE EIGHTH EDITION.
-
-
-When in October, 1882, the publishers of “Corea the Hermit Nation”
-presented this work to the public of English-speaking nations, they
-wrote:
-
-“Corea stands in much the same relation to the traveller that the
-region of the pole does to the explorer, and menaces with the same
-penalty the too inquisitive tourist who ventures to penetrate its
-inhospitable borders.”
-
-For twenty-four years, this book, besides enjoying popular favor, has
-been made good use of by writers and students, in Europe and America,
-and has served even in Corea itself as the first book of general
-information to be read by missionaries and other new comers. In this
-eighth edition, I have added to the original text, ending with Chapter
-XLVIII (September, 1882), five fresh chapters: on The Economic
-Condition of Corea; International Politics: Chinese and Japanese; The
-War of 1894: Corea an Empire; Japan and Russia in Conflict; and Corea a
-Japanese Protectorate, bringing the history down to the late autumn of
-1906.
-
-Within the brief period of time treated in these new chapters, the
-centre of the world’s politics has shifted from the Atlantic and the
-Mediterranean to the waters surrounding Corea, the strange anomaly of
-dual sovereignty over the peninsular state has been eliminated, and the
-military reputation of China ruined, and that of Russia compromised.
-The rise of Japan, within half a century of immediate contact with the
-West, to the position of a modern state, able first to humiliate China
-and then to grapple successfully with Russia, has vitally affected
-Corea, on behalf of whose independence Japan a second time went to war
-with a Power vastly greater in natural resources than herself. In this
-period also, the United States of America has become one of the great
-Powers interested in the politics of Asia, and with which the would-be
-conquerors of Asiatic peoples must reckon.
-
-The present or eighth edition shows in both text and map, not only the
-swift, logical results both of Japan’s military and naval successes in
-Manchuria and on the sea of Japan and of her signal diplomatic victory
-at Portsmouth, but more. It makes clear the reasons why Corea, as to
-her foreign relations, has lost her sovereignty.
-
-The penalty laid upon the leaders of the peninsular kingdom for making
-intrigue instead of education their work, and class interests instead
-of national welfare their aim, is also shown to be pronounced—less by
-the writer than by the events themselves—in the final failure of
-intriguing Yang-banism, in May, 1906. The Japanese, in the
-administration of Corea, are like the other protecting nations,
-British, American, French, German, now on a moral trial before the
-world.
-
-In again sending forth a work that has been so heartily welcomed, I
-reiterate gladly my great obligations to the scholars, native and
-foreign, who have so generously aided me by their conversation,
-correspondence, criticism, and publications, and the members of the
-Korean Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, who have honored me with
-membership in their honorable body. My special obligations are due to
-our late American Minister, H. N. Allen, for printed documents and
-illustrative matter; to Professor Homer B. Hulbert, Editor of The Korea
-Review, from the pages of which I have drawn liberally, and to the
-Editor of The Japan Mail, the columns of which are rich in
-correspondence from Corea. I would call attention also to the additions
-made upon the map at the end of the volume.
-
-I beg again the indulgence of my readers, especially of those who by
-long residence upon the soil, while so thoroughly able to criticize,
-have been so profuse in their expression of appreciation. From both
-sides of the Atlantic and Pacific have come these gratifying tokens,
-and to them as well as to my publishers, I make glad acknowledgments in
-sending forth this eighth edition.
-
-
-W. E. G. Ithaca, N. Y., December 12, 1906.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION.
-
-
-In the year 1871, while living at Fukui, in the province of Echizen,
-Japan, I spent a few days at Tsuruga and Mikuni, by the sea which
-separates Japan and Corea. Like “the Saxon shore” of early Britain, the
-coast of Echizen had been in primeval times the landing-place of
-rovers, immigrants, and adventurers from the continental shore
-opposite. Here, at Tsuruga, Corean envoys had landed on their way to
-the mikado’s court. In the temple near by were shrines dedicated to the
-Corean Prince of Mimana, and to Jingu Kōgō, Ojin, and Takénouchi, whose
-names in Japanese traditions are associated with “The Treasure-land of
-the West.” Across the bay hung a sweet-toned bell, said to have been
-cast in Corea in A.D. 647; in which tradition—untested by
-chemistry—declared there was much gold. Among the hills not far away,
-nestled the little village of Awotabi (Green Nook), settled centuries
-ago by paper-makers, and visited a millenium ago by tribute-bearers,
-from the neighboring peninsula; and famous for producing the crinkled
-paper on which the diplomatic correspondence between the two nations
-was written. Some of the first families in Echizen were proud of their
-descent from Chō-sen, while in the villages, where dwelt the Eta, or
-social outcasts, I beheld the descendants of Corean prisoners of war.
-Everywhere the finger of tradition pointed westward across the waters
-to the Asian mainland, and the whole region was eloquent of “kin beyond
-sea.” Birds and animals, fruits and falcons, vegetables and trees,
-farmers’ implements and the potter’s wheel, names in geography and
-things in the arts, and doctrines and systems in religion were in some
-way connected with Corea.
-
-The thought often came to me as I walked within the moss-grown feudal
-castle walls—old in story, but then newly given up to schools of
-Western science and languages—why should Corea be sealed and
-mysterious, when Japan, once a hermit, had opened her doors and come
-out into the world’s market-place? When would Corea’s awakening come?
-As one diamond cuts another, why should not Chō-ka (Japan) open Chō-sen
-(Corea)?
-
-
-
-Turning with delight and fascination to the study of Japanese history
-and antiquities, I found much that reflected light upon the neighbor
-country. On my return home, I continued to search for materials for the
-story of the last of the hermit nations. No master of research in China
-or Japan having attempted the task, from what Locke calls “the
-roundabout view,” I have essayed it, with no claim to originality or
-profound research, for the benefit of the general reader, to whom Corea
-“suggests,” as an American lady said, “no more than a sea-shell.” Many
-ask “What’s in Corea?” and “Is Corea of any importance in the history
-of the world?”
-
-My purpose in this work is to give an outline of the history of the
-Land of Morning Calm—as the natives call their country—from before the
-Christian era to the present year. As “an honest tale speeds best,
-being plainly told,” I have made no attempt to embellish the narrative,
-though I have sought information from sources from within and without
-Corea, in maps and charts, coins and pottery, the language and art,
-notes and narratives of eye-witnesses, pencil-sketches, paintings and
-photographs, the standard histories of Japan and China, the testimony
-of sailor and diplomatist, missionary and castaway, and the digested
-knowledge of critical scholars. I have attempted nothing more than a
-historical outline of the nation and a glimpse at the political and
-social life of the people. For lack of space, the original manuscript
-of “Recent and Modern History,” part III., has been greatly abridged,
-and many topics of interest have been left untouched.
-
-The bulk of the text was written between the years 1877 and 1880; since
-which time the literature of the subject has been enriched by Ross’s
-“Corea” and “Corean Primer,” besides the Grammar and Dictionary of the
-Corean language made by the French missionaries. With these linguistic
-helps I have been able to get access to the language, and thus clear up
-doubtful points and obtain much needed data. I have borrowed largely
-from Dallet’s “Histoire d’Eglise de Corée,” especially in the chapters
-devoted to Folk-lore, Social Life, and Christianity. In the
-Bibliography following the Preface is a list of works to which I have
-been more or less indebted.
-
-Many friends have assisted me with correspondence, advice, or help in
-translation, among whom I must first thank my former students,
-Haségawa, Hiraii, Haraguchi, Matsui, and Imadatté, and my newer
-Japanese friends, Ohgimi and Kimura, while others, alas! will never in
-this world see my record of acknowledgment—K. Yaye′ and Egi
-Takato—whose interest was manifested not only in discussion of mooted
-points, but by search among the book-shops in Kiōto and Tōkiō, which
-put much valuable standard matter in my hands. I also thank Mr. Charles
-Lanman, Secretary of the Legation of Japan in Washington, for four
-ferrotypes taken in Seoul in 1878 by members of the Japanese embassy;
-Mr. D. R. Clark, of the United States Transit of Venus Survey, for four
-photographs of the Corean villages in Russian Manchuria; Mr. R. Idéura,
-of Tōkiō, for a set of photographs of Kang-wa and vicinity, taken in
-1876, and Mr. Ozawa Nankoku, for sketches of Corean articles in
-Japanese museums. To Lieutenant Wadhams, of the United States Navy, for
-the use of charts and maps made by himself while in Corea in 1871, and
-for photographs of flags and other trophies, now at Annapolis, captured
-in the Han forts; to Fleet-Surgeon H. O. Mayo, and other officers of
-the United States Navy, for valuable information, I hereby express my
-grateful appreciation of kindness shown. I would that Admiral John
-Rodgers, Commodore H. C. Blake, and Minister F. F. Low were living to
-receive my thanks for their courtesies personally shown me, even
-though, in attempting to write history, I have made criticisms also. To
-Lieutenant N. Y. Yanagi, of the Hyrographic Bureau, of the Japanese
-Navy, for a set of charts of the coast of Corea; to Mr. Metcalfe, of
-Milwaukee, for photographs of Coreans; to Miss Marshall, of New York,
-for making colored copies of the battle-flags captured by our naval
-battalion in 1871, and for the many favors of correspondents—in St.
-Petersburg, Mr. Hoffman Atkinson; in Peking, Jugoi Arinori Mori; in
-Tōkiō, Dr. D. B. McCartee, Hon. David Murray, Rev. J. L. Amerman, and
-others whose names I need not mention. To Gen. George W. McCullum,
-Vice-President, and to Mr. Leopold Lindau, Librarian, of the American
-Geographical Society, I return my warmest thanks; as well as to my dear
-wife and helpmeet, for her aid in copying, proof-reading, suggestions,
-and criticism during the progress of the work.
-
-In one respect, the presentation of such a subject by a compiler, while
-shorn of the fascinating element of personal experience, has an
-advantage even over the narrator who describes a country through which
-he has travelled. With the various reports of many witnesses, in many
-times and places, before him, he views the whole subject and reduces
-the many impressions of detail to unity, correcting one by the other.
-Travellers usually see but a portion of the country at one time. The
-compiler, if able even in part to control his authorities, and if
-anything more than a tyro in the art of literary appraisement, may be
-able to furnish a hand-book of information more valuable to the general
-reader.
-
-In the use of my authorities I have given heed to Bacon’s
-advice—tasting some, chewing others, and swallowing few. In ancient
-history, original authorities have been sought, and for the story of
-modern life, only the reports of careful eye-witnesses have been set
-down as facts; while opinions and judgments of alien occidentals
-concerning Corean social life are rarely borrowed without due flavoring
-of critical salt.
-
-Corean and Japanese life, customs, beliefs, and history are often
-reflections one of the other. Much of what is reported from Corea,
-which the eye-witnesses themselves do not appear to understand, is
-perfectly clear to one familiar with Japanese life and history. China,
-Corea, and Japan are as links in the same chain of civilization. Corea,
-like Cyprus between Egypt and Greece, will yet supply many missing
-details to the comparative student of language, art, science, the
-development of civilization, and the distribution of life on the globe.
-
-Some future writer, with more ability and space at command than the
-undersigned, may discuss the question as to how far the opening of
-Corea to the commerce of the world has been the result of internal
-forces; the scholar, by his original research, may prepare the
-materials for a worthy history of Corea during the two or three
-thousand years of her history; the geologist or miner may determine the
-question as to how far the metallic wealth of Corea will affect the
-monetary equilibrium of the world. The missionary has yet to prove the
-full power of Christianity upon the people—and before Corean paganism,
-any form of the religion of Jesus, Roman, Greek or Reformed, should be
-welcomed; while to the linguist, the man of science, and the political
-economist, the new country opened by American diplomacy presents
-problems of profound interest.
-
-
-W. E. G. Schenectady, N. Y., October 2, 1882.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-BIBLIOGRAPHY.
-
-
-The following is a list of books and papers containing information
-about Corea. Those of primary value to which the compiler of this work
-is specially indebted are marked with an asterisk (*); those to which
-slight obligation, if any, is acknowledged with a double asterisk; and
-those which he has not consulted, with a dagger (†). See also under The
-Corean Language and Cartography, in the Appendix.
-
-
-* History of the Eastern Barbarians. “Book cxv. contains a sketch of
-the tribes and nations occupying the northeastern seaboard of China,
-with the territory now known as Manchuria and Corea.” This extract from
-a History of the Later Han Dynasty (25–220 A.D.), by a Chinese scholar
-of the fifth century, has been translated into English by Mr. Alexander
-Wylie, and printed in the Revue de l’Extrême Orient, No. 1, 1882. Du
-Halde and De Mailla, in French, and Ross, in English, have also given
-the substance of the Chinese writer’s work, which also furnishes the
-basis of Japanese accounts of Corean history previous to the fourth
-century.
-
-† The Subjugation of Chaou-seen, by A. Wylie. (Atti del IV. Cong. int.
-degli Orient, ii., pp. 309–315, 1881.) This fragment is a translation
-of the 95th book of the History of the Former Han Dynasty of China.
-
-* Empire de la Chine et la Tartarie Chinoise, par P. du Halde.
-
-* The Kōjiki and Nihongi, written in Japan during the eighth century,
-throws much light on the early history of Corea.
-
-* Wakan-San-sai Dzuyé. Article on Chō-sen in this great Japanese
-Encyclopædia.
-
-† Tong-Kuk Tong-Kan (General View of the Eastern Kingdom), a native
-Corean history written in Chinese.
-
-* Zenrin Koku Hoki (Precious Jewels from a Neighboring Country), by
-Shiuho. Japan, 1586.
-
-* Corea, its History, Manners, and Customs, by John Ross. 1 vol., pp.
-404. Illustrations and maps. Paisley, 1880.
-
-* The Chinese Reader’s Manual, by W. Fred. Mayers. 1 vol., pp. 440.
-Shanghae, 1874. An invaluable epitome of Chinese history, biography,
-chronology, bibliography, and whatever is of interest to the student of
-Chinese literature.
-
-* Kō-chō Rekidai Enkaku Zukai. Historical Periods and Changes of the
-Japanese Empire, with maps and notes, by Otsuki Tōyō.
-
-** San Koku Tsu-ran To-setsu. Mirror of the Three [Tributary] Kingdoms,
-Chō-sen, Riu kiu, and Yezo, by Rin Shihei, 1785. This work, with its
-maps, was translated into French by J. Klaproth, and published in
-Paris, 1832. 1 vol. 8vo, pp. 288, of which pp. 158 relate to Chō-sen.
-Digested also in Siebold’s Archiv.
-
-** Archiv zur Beschreibung von Japan, by Franz von Siebold. This
-colossal work contains much matter in text and illustrations relating
-to Corea, and the digest of several Japanese books, in the part
-entitled Nachrichten über Korai, Japan’s Bezüge mit der Koraischen
-Halbinsel und mit Schina.
-
-** Corea und dessen Einfluss auf die Bevölkerung Japans. Zeit. für
-Ethnologie, Zitzungbericht VIII. p. 78, 1876. P. Kempermann.
-
-** O Dai Ichi Ran. This work, containing the annals of the emperors of
-Japan, is a bird’s-eye view of the principal events in Japanese
-history, written in the style of an almanac, which Titsingh copied down
-from translations made by Japanese who spoke Dutch. Klaproth revised
-and corrected Titsingh’s work, and published his own version in 1834.
-Paris and London, 8vo, pp. 460. This work contains many references to
-Corea and the relations of the two countries, transcribed from the
-older history.
-
-** Tableaux Historiques de l’Asie, depuis la monarchie de Cyrus jusque
-nos jours, accompagnes de recherches historiques et ethnographiques,
-etc. Par J. Klaproth, Paris, 1826. Avec un atlas in folio. This manual
-of the political geography of Asia is very useful, but not too
-accurate.
-
-† A Heap of Jewels in a Sea of Learning (Gei Kai Shu Jin; Jap. pron.).
-A chapter from this Chinese book treats of Corea.
-
-† Chō-sen Hitsu Go-shin. A collection of conversations with the pen,
-with a Corean who could not speak Japanese. By Ishikawa Rokuroku
-Sanjin, Yedo.
-
-* The Classical Poetry of the Japanese. By Basil Hall Chamberlain.
-London, 1880.
-
-** An Outline History of Japanese Education, New York, 1876. This
-monograph, prepared for the Centennial Exposition at Philadelphia,
-reviews the educational influences of Corea upon Japan. The information
-given is, with other data, from Klaproth, utilized in Pickering’s
-Chronological History of Plants, by Charles Pickering, M.D., Boston,
-1879.
-
-* Japanese Chronological Tables. By William Bramsen, Tōkiō, 1880. An
-invaluable essay on Japanese chronology, which was, like the Corean,
-based on the Chinese system. We have used this work of the lamented
-scholar (who died a few months after it was published) in rendering
-dates expressed in terms of the Chinese into those of the Gregorian or
-modern system.
-
-** History of the Mongols. 3 vols. pp. 1827. London, 1876. By Henry
-Howorth. This portly work is full of the fruits of research concerning
-the people led by Genghis Khan. It contains excellent maps of Asia, and
-of Mongolia, and Manchuria, illustrating the Mongol conquests.
-
-† Chō-sen Ki-che. (Memorandum upon Corean Affairs.) The Chinese
-ambassador sent by the Ming emperor in 1450, gives in this little work
-an account of his journey, which throws light upon the political and
-geographical situation of Chō-sen and China at that time. Quoted by M.
-Scherzer, but not translated.
-
-* Nihon Guaishi. Military History of Japan, by Rai Sanyo. This is the
-Japanese standard history. It was published in 1827 in twenty-two
-volumes. It covers the period from the Taira and Minamoto families to
-that of the Tokugawa in the seventeenth century. The first part of this
-work was translated into English by Mr. Ernest Satow, and published in
-The Japan Mail at Yokohama, 1872–74. In the latter portion the invasion
-of Chō-sen, 1592–97, is outlined.
-
-* Chō-sen Seito Shimatsŭki. A work in five volumes, giving an account
-of the embassies, treaties, documents relating to the invasion of
-1592–97, with an outline of the war, geographical notes, with nine maps
-by Yamazaki Masanagi and Miura Katsuyoshi.
-
-* Illustrated History of the Invasion of Chō-sen. Written by Tsuruminé
-Hikoichiro. Illustrations by Hashimoto Giokuron. 20 vols. Yedo, 1853.
-This popular work, besides an outline of Corean history from the
-beginning, condensed from local legends and Chinese writers, details
-the operations of war and diplomacy relating to Hidéyoshi’s invasion.
-It is copiously illustrated with first-class wood engravings. It has
-not been translated.
-
-* Chō-sen Monogatari. A Diary and Narrative of the Japanese Military
-Operations in Chō-sen during the Campaign of 1594–97, by Okoji
-Hidémoto. Copied out and published in 1672, and again in 1849. This
-narrative of an eye-witness was written by the author at the time of
-the events described, and afterward copied by his own son and deposited
-in the temple at which his ancestors worshipped. This vivid and
-spirited story of the second invasion of Chō-sen by Hidéyoshi has been
-translated into German by Dr. A. Pfizmaier, under the title Der Feldzug
-der Japaner gegen Corea, im Jahre, 1597. 2 vols. Vienna, 1875: 4to, pp.
-98; 1876: 4to, pp. 58.
-
-** Chohitsuroku. History of the Embassies, Treaties, and War Operations
-during the Japanese Invasion. This work is by a Corean author, who was
-one of the ministers of the king throughout the war. It is written in
-Chinese, has a map, and gives the Corean side of the history of affairs
-from about 1585 to 1598. 3 vols.
-
-* Three Severall Testimonies Concerning the mighty Kingdom of Coray,
-tributary to the Kingdom of China, and bordering upon her Northeastern
-Frontiers, and called by the Portugales, Coria, etc., etc., collected
-out of Portugale yeerely Japonian Epistles, dated 1590, 1592, 1594. In
-Hakluyt, London, 1600.
-
-* Hidéyoshi’s Invasion of Korea. Trans. Asiatic Society of Japan. By W.
-G. Aston. In these papers Mr. Aston gives the results of a study of the
-campaign of 1592–97, as found in Japanese and Corean authors.
-
-** Lettre Annuelle de Mars 1593, ecrite par le P. Pierre Gomez au P.
-Claude Acquavira, general de la Compagnie de Jesus. Milan, 1597, p. 112
-et suiv. In Hakluyt.
-
-* Histoire de la Religion Chrétienne au Japon. Par Leon Pages. 2 vols.,
-text and documents. Paris, 1869.
-
-** Histoire des deux Conquerans Tartares, qui ont subjugé la Chine, par
-le R. P. Pierre Joseph D’Orliens.
-
-* Chō-sen Monogatari (Romantic Narrative of Travels in Corea), by two
-Men from Mikuni, in Echizen, cast ashore in Tartary in 1645. This work
-is digested in Siebold’s Archiv.
-
-* Narrative of an Unlucky Voyage and Imprisonment in Corea, 1653–1667
-In Astley’s and Pinkerton’s Voyages. By Hendrik Hamel.
-
-* Imperial Chinese Atlas, containing maps of China and each of the
-Provinces, including Shing-king and the neutral strip.
-
-* Histoire de l’Eglise de Corée, par Ch. Dallet. 2 vols. 8vo, pp. 982.
-Paris, 1874. This excellent work contains 192 pages of introduction,
-full of accurate information concerning the political social life,
-geography, and language of Corea, and a history of the introduction and
-progress of Roman Christianity, and the labors of the French
-missionaries, from 1784–1866. It contains also a map and four charts of
-Corean writing.
-
-* Une Expedition en Corée. In la Tour du Monde for 1873 there is an
-article of 16 pp. (401–417) with illustrations, by M. H. Zuber, a
-French naval officer, who was in Corea in 1866 under Admiral Roze. An
-excellent descriptive paper by an eye-witness.
-
-* Diary of a Chinese Envoy to Corea (Journal d’une Mission en Corée),
-by Koei Ling, Ambassador of his Majesty the Emperor of China, to the
-court of Chō-sen in 1866. Translated from the Chinese into French by F.
-Scherzer, Interpreter to the French Legation at Peking. 8vo, pp. 77.
-Paris, 1882. This journal of the last Chinese ambassador to Seoul is
-well rendered, and is copiously supplied with explanatory notes, and a
-colored map of the author’s route from Peking through Chili,
-Shing-king, via Mukden, and through three provinces of Corea to Seoul.
-
-† Many memoirs and special papers prepared by French officers in the
-expedition to Corea in 1866 were prepared and read before local
-societies at Cherbourg, Lyons, etc.
-
-† Expedition de Corée. Revue maritime et coloniale, February, 1867, pp.
-474–481.
-
-† Paris Moniteur, 1866–67.
-
-** Lettre sur la Corée et son Eglise Chrétienne. Bulletin de la Société
-Geographique de Lyon, 1876, pp. 278–282, and June, 1870, pp. 417–422,
-and map.
-
-** The Corean Martyrs. By Canon Shortland. 1 vol., pp. 115. London.
-Compiled from the letters of the French missionaries.
-
-** Nouvelle Geographie Universelle. This superb treasury of
-geographical science, still unfinished, contains a full summary of our
-knowledge of Corea, especially showing the prominent part which French
-navigators, scholars, and missionaries have taken in its exploration.
-Paris.
-
-** Voyage of Discovery to the North Pacific Ocean and Round the World.
-By William R. Broughton. 2 vols. 4to, with atlas. London, 1804.
-
-** Voyage Round the World. By Jean François de Gallou de La Perouse.
-London, 1799.
-
-** Voyages to the Eastern Seas in the year 1818. By Basil Hall. New
-York, London, and revised by Captain Hall in 1827. Jamaica, N. Y.
-
-* Narrative of a Voyage in His Majesty’s late Ship Alceste, to the
-Yellow Sea, along the Coast of Corea, and through its numerous hitherto
-undiscovered Islands, etc., etc. By John McLeod, Surgeon of the
-Alceste. 1 vol., pp. 288 (see pp. 38–53). London, 1877. A witty and
-lively narrative.
-
-** Voyages along the Coast of China (Corea), etc. By Charles Gutzlaff.
-1 vol., pp. 332. New York, 1833. (From July 17, to August 17, 1832; pp.
-254–287.)
-
-* Narrative of the Voyage of H.M.S. Samarang, during the years 1843–46.
-By Captain Sir E. Belcher. 2 vols. 8vo, pp. 574–378. London, 1848. Vol.
-i. pp. 324–358; vol. ii., pp. 444–466, relate to Corea.
-
-* American Commerce with China. By Gideon Nye, Esq. In the Far East.
-Shanghae, 1878. A history of the commercial relations of the United
-States with China, especially before 1800.
-
-* Diplomatic Correspondence of the United States, China, and Japan,
-1866–81.
-
-* Report of the Secretary of the Navy to Congress, pp. 275–313. 1872.
-
-* Private Notes, Charts, and Maps of Officers of the United States Navy
-who were in Corea in 1871.
-
-** A Summer Dream of ’71. A Story of Corea. By T. G. The Far East.
-Shanghae, April, 1878.
-
-* Journey through Eastern Mantchooria and Korea. By Walton Grinnell.
-Journal American Geographical Society, 1870–71, pp. 283–300.
-
-* Japan and Corea. A valuable monograph in six chapters, by Mr. E. H.
-House, in The Tōkiō Times, 1877.
-
-** On a Collection of Crustacea made in the Corean and Japanese Seas.
-J. Muirs, 1879. London Zoological Society’s Proceedings (pp. 18–81,
-pls. 1–113). Reviewed by J. S. Kingsley. Norwich, N. Y. American
-Naturalist.
-
-** A Private Trip in Corea. By Frank Cowan, M.D. The Japan Mail, 1880.
-
-† The Leading Men of Japan. By Charles Lanman. Boston, 1882. Contains a
-chapter on Corea.
-
-* Manuscript volume of pencil notes made by Kawamura Kuanshiu, an
-officer on the Japanese gunboat Unyo-kuan, during her cruise and
-capture of the Kang-wa Fort, 1875. Partly printed in the Japan Mail.
-
-* Journals of Japanese Military and Diplomatic Officers who have
-visited Corea, and Correspondence of the Japanese newspapers, from
-Seoul, Fusan, Gensan, etc. These have been partly translated for the
-English press at Yokohama.
-
-* Correspondence, Notes, Editorials, etc., in the English and French
-newspapers published in China and Japan.
-
-** Maru-maru Shimbun (Japanese Punch).
-
-* Chō-sen: Its Eight Administrative Divisions. 1 vol. Tōkiō, Japan,
-1882.
-
-* Chō-sen Jijo. A short Account of Corea, its History, Productions,
-etc. 2 vols. Tōkiō, 1875.
-
-* Chō-sen Bunkenroku (Things Seen and Heard concerning Corea). By Sato
-Hakushi. 2 vols. Tōkiō, 1875.
-
-* Travels of a Naturalist in Japan [Corea] and Manchuria. By Arthur
-Adams. 1 vol., pp. 334. London, 1870. See chaps, x., xi., pp. 125–166.
-
-** Ueber die Reise der Kais. Corvette Hertha, in besondere nach Corea.
-Kramer, Marine Prediger. Zeit. für Ethnologie, 1873. Verhandlungen, pp.
-49–54.
-
-** A Forbidden Land. By Ernest Oppert. 1 vol., pp. 349. Illustrations,
-charts, etc. New York, 1880.
-
-** Journeys in North China. By Rev. A. Williamson. 2 vols. 16mo.
-London, 1870. Besides a chapter on Corea, this work contains an
-excellent map of the country north and east of Chō-sen
-
-** The Middle Kingdom. By S. Wells Williams.
-
-** Consular Reports in the Blue Books of the British Government,
-especially the Reports of Mr. McPherson, Consul at Niu-chwang. January,
-1866.
-
-* Handbook for Central and Northern Japan, with maps and plans. Satow
-and Hawes. 1 vol. 16mo, pp. 489. This work, which leaves nothing to be
-desired as a guide-book, contains several references to Corean art and
-history.
-
-** The Wild Coasts of Nipon. By Captain H. C. St. John (who surveyed
-some parts of Southern Corea in H.B.M.S. Sylvia). See chap, xii., pp.
-235–255, with a map of Corea.
-
-** Darlegung aus der Geschichte und Geographie Coreas. Pfizmaier. 8vo,
-pp. 56. Vienna, 1874.
-
-† Petermann’s Mittheilungen, No. 1, Carte No. 19, 1871.
-
-** Das Konigreich Korea. Von Kloden. Aus allen Welth., x., Nos. 5 u. 6.
-
-† Corea. Geographical Magazine. (S. Mossman.) vi. p. 148, 1877.
-
-† Corea. By Captain Allen Young, Royal Geographical Society. Vol. ix.,
-No. 6, pp. 296–300.
-
-** China, with an Appendix on Corea. By Charles Eden. 1 vol., pp.
-281–322. London. A popular compilation.
-
-** Korea and the Lost Tribes, and Map and Chart of Korea. Text and
-illustrations. The title of this work is sufficient. Even the
-bibliography of Corea has a comic side.
-
-** Chi-shima (Kurile Islands) and Russian Invasion. A lecture delivered
-in Japanese, before the Tōkiō United Geographical Society, February 24,
-1882. By Admiral Enomoto. This valuable historical treatise, translated
-for the Japan Mail and Japan Herald, contains much information about
-Russian operations in the countries bordering the North Pacific and the
-Coreans north of the Tumen.
-
-† Bulletin de la Société Geographique, 1875. Corean villages in the
-Russian possessions described.
-
-** Ravensteins, The Russians on the Amoor. London, 1861.
-
-† Die Insel Quelpart. Deutsche Geogr. Blätter, 1879. iii., No. 1, S.
-45–46.
-
-† A Trip to Quelpaert. Nautical Magazine, 1870, No. 4, p. 321–325.
-
-** The Edinburgh Review of 1872, and Fortnightly Review of 1875,
-contain articles on Corea.
-
-* The Missionary Record of the United Presbyterian Church of Scotland,
-Edinburgh, containing the Correspondence and Notes of the Missionaries
-laboring among the Chinese and Coreans, and who have translated the New
-Testament into Corean.
-
-† La Corée, par M. Paul Tournafond, editor of L’Exploration, a
-geographical journal published in Paris, which contains frequent notes
-on Corea.
-
-† La Corée, ses Ressources, son avenir commercial, par Maurice Jametel.
-L’Economiste Français, Juillet 23, 1881.
-
-* The Japan Herald, The Japan Mail, The Japan Gazette, L’Echo du Japan,
-of Yokohama, and North China Herald, Shanghae, have furnished much
-information concerning recent events in Corea.
-
-Corea, the Last of the Hermit Nations. Sunday Magazine, New York, May,
-1878.
-
-Corea and the United States. The Independent, New York, Nov. 17, 1881.
-
-Corea, the Hermit Nation. Bulletin of the American Geographical
-Society, New York, 1881, No. 3.
-
-Chautauqua Text-Books, No. 34. Asiatic History; China, Corea, Japan.
-16mo, pp. 86. New York, 1881.
-
-Library of Universal Knowledge, articles Corea, Fusan, Gensan, Kang-wa,
-etc. New York, 1880.
-
-Cyclopædia of Political Science, etc., article Corea. Chicago, 1881.
-
-The Corean Origin of Japanese Art. Century Magazine. December, 1882. By
-Wm. Elliot Griffis.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ORTHOGRAPHY AND PRONUNCIATION.
-
-
-In the transliteration of Corean names into English, an attempt has
-been made to render them in as accurate and simple a manner as is,
-under the circumstances, possible. The Coreans themselves have no
-uniform system of spelling proper names, nor do the French missionaries
-agree in their renderings—as a comparison of their maps and writings
-shows. Our aim in this work has been to use as few letters as possible.
-
-Japanese words are all pronounced according to the European method—a as
-in father, é as in prey, e as in men, i as in machine, o as in bone, u
-as in tune, ŭ as in sun; ai as in aisle, ua as in quarantine, ei as in
-feign, and iu is sounded as yu; g is always hard; and c before a vowel,
-g soft, l, q, s used as z, x, and the combinations ph and th are not
-used. The long vowel, rather diphthong o, or oho, is marked ō.
-
-The most familiar Chinese names are retained in their usual English
-form.
-
-Corean words are transliterated on the same general principles as the
-Japanese, though ears familiar with Corean will find the obscure sound
-between o and short u is written with either of these letters, as
-Chan-yon, or In-chiŭn, or Kiung-sang. Ch may sometimes be used instead
-of j; and e where o or a or u might more correctly be used, as in
-Kang-wen, or Wen-chiu. Instead of the French ou, or ho, we have written
-W, as in Whang-hai, Kang-wa, rather than Hoang-hai, Kang-hoa,
-Kang-ouen, Tai-ouen Kun, etc.; and in place of ts we have used ch, as
-Kwang-chiu rather than Kwang-tsiu, and Wen-chiu than Ouen-tsiu.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-MAPS AND PLANS.
-
-
- PAGE
- Ancestral Seats of the Fuyu Race, 25
- Sam-han, 30
- Ancient Japan and Corea, 56
- The Neutral Territory, 85
- The Japanese Military Operations of 1592, 99
- The Campaign in the North, 1592–1593, 107
- The Operations of the Second Invasion, 131
- Plan of Uru-san Castle, 138
- Home of the Manchius and their Migrations, 155
- The Jesuit Survey of 1709, 165
- Ping-an Province, 181
- The Yellow Sea Province, 185
- The Capital Province, 188
- Military Geography of Seoul, 190
- Chung-chong Province, 194
- Chulla-dō, 199
- The Province Nearest Japan, 204
- Kang-wen Province, 208
- Corean Frontier Facing Manchuria and Russia, 210
- Southern Part of Ham-kiung, 215
- The Missionary’s Gateway into Corea, 364
- Border Towns of Northern Corea, 365
- The French Naval and Military Operations, 1866, 379
- Map Illustrating the “General Sherman” Affair, 393
- Map Illustrating the “China” Affair, 400
- Map of the American Naval Operations in 1871, 415
- General Map of Corea at the End of 1906 At end of volume.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
-PART I.
-ANCIENT AND MEDIÆVAL HISTORY.
-
- CHAPTER I. PAGE
- The Corean Peninsula, 1
-
- CHAPTER II.
- The Old Kingdom of Chō-sen, 11
-
- CHAPTER III.
- The Fuyu Race and their Migrations, 19
-
- CHAPTER IV.
- Sam-han, or Southern Corea, 30
-
- CHAPTER V.
- Epoch of the Three Kingdoms.—Hiaksai, 35
-
- CHAPTER VI.
- Epoch of the Three Kingdoms.—Korai, 40
-
- CHAPTER VII.
- Epoch of the Three Kingdoms.—Shinra, 45
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
- Japan and Corea, 51
-
- CHAPTER IX.
- Korai, or United Corea, 63
-
- CHAPTER X.
- Cathay, Zipangu, and the Mongols, 70
-
- CHAPTER XI.
- New Chō-sen, 76
-
- CHAPTER XII.
- Events Leading to the Japanese Invasion, 88
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
- The Invasion—On to Seoul, 95
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
- The Campaign in the North, 104
-
- CHAPTER XV.
- The Retreat from Seoul, 115
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
- Cespedes, the Christian Chaplain, 121
-
- CHAPTER XVII.
- Diplomacy at Kiōto and Peking, 124
-
- CHAPTER XVIII.
- The Second Invasion, 129
-
- CHAPTER XIX.
- The Siege of Uru-san Castle, 137
-
- CHAPTER XX.
- Changes after the Invasion, 145
-
- CHAPTER XXI.
- The Issachar of Eastern Asia, 154
-
- CHAPTER XXII.
- The Dutchmen in Exile, 167
-
-
-PART II.
-POLITICAL AND SOCIAL COREA.
-
- CHAPTER XXIII.
- The Eight Provinces, 179
-
- CHAPTER XXIV.
- The King and Royal Palace, 218
-
- CHAPTER XXV.
- Political Parties, 224
-
- CHAPTER XXVI.
- Organization and Methods of Government, 230
-
- CHAPTER XXVII.
- Feudalism, Serfdom, and Society, 237
-
- CHAPTER XXVIII.
- Social Life—Woman and the Family, 244
-
- CHAPTER XXIX.
- Child Life, 256
-
- CHAPTER XXX.
- Housekeeping, Diet, and Costume, 262
-
- CHAPTER XXXI.
- Mourning and Burial, 277
-
- CHAPTER XXXII.
- Out-door Life.—Characters and Employments, 284
-
- CHAPTER XXXIII.
- Shamanism and Mythical Zoölogy, 300
-
- CHAPTER XXXIV.
- Legends and Folk-lore, 307
-
- CHAPTER XXXV.
- Proverbs and Pithy Sayings, 317
-
- CHAPTER XXXVI.
- The Corean Tiger, 320
-
- CHAPTER XXXVII.
- Religion, 326
-
- CHAPTER XXXVIII.
- Education and Culture, 337
-
-
-PART III.
-MODERN AND RECENT HISTORY.
-
- CHAPTER XXXIX.
- The Beginnings of Christianity—1784–1794, 347
-
- CHAPTER XL.
- Persecution and Martyrdom—1801–1834, 353
-
- CHAPTER XLI.
- The Entrance of the French Missionaries—1835–1845, 361
-
- CHAPTER XLII.
- The Walls of Isolation Sapped, 367
-
- CHAPTER XLIII.
- The French Expedition, 377
-
- CHAPTER XLIV.
- American Relations with Corea, 388
-
- CHAPTER XLV.
- A Body-Snatching Expedition, 396
-
- CHAPTER XLVI.
- Our Little War with the Heathen, 403
-
- CHAPTER XLVII.
- The Ports Opened to Japanese Commerce, 420
-
- CHAPTER XLVIII.
- The Year of the Treaties, 433
-
- CHAPTER XLIX.
- The Economic Condition of Corea, 443
-
- CHAPTER L.
- Internal Politics: Chinese and Japanese, 458
-
- CHAPTER LI.
- The War of 1894: Corea an Empire, 472
-
- CHAPTER LII.
- Japan and Russia in Conflict, 484
-
- CHAPTER LIII.
- Corea a Japanese Protectorate, 497
-
- CHAPTER LIV.
- Chō-sen: A Province of Japan, 507
-
-
- INDEX, 521
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-
- PAGE
- A City in Corea, Frontispiece.
- Corean Coin, 10
- Coin of Modern Chō-sen, 18
- The Founder of Fuyu Crossing the Sungari River, 20
- Coin of the Sam-han, or the Three Kingdoms, 34
- Coin of Korai, 69
- Two-masted Corean Vessel, 75
- The Walls of Seoul, 79
- Magistrate and Servant, 81
- Corean Knight of the Sixteenth Century, 101
- Styles of Hair-dressing in Corea, 161
- A Pleasure-party on the River, 196
- Corean Village in Russian Territory, 211
- Table Spread for Festal Occasions, 264
- Gentlemen’s Garments and Dress Patterns, 275
- Thatched House near Seoul, 282
- Battle-flag Captured by the Americans in 1871, 305
- Battle-flag Captured in the Han Forts, 1871, 320
- House and Garden of a Noble, 355
- Breech-loading Cannon of Corean Manufacture, 382
- The Entering Wedge of Civilization, 407
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-I.
-
-ANCIENT AND MEDIÆVAL HISTORY
-
-
-COREA:
-THE HERMIT NATION.
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-THE COREAN PENINSULA.
-
-
-Corea, though unknown even by name in Europe until the sixteenth
-century, was the subject of description by Arab geographers of the
-middle ages. Before the peninsula was known as a political unit, the
-envoys of Shinra, one of the three Corean states, and those from Persia
-met face to face before the throne of China. The Arab merchants trading
-to Chinese ports crossed the Yellow Sea, visited the peninsula, and
-even settled there. The youths of Shinra, sent by their sovereign to
-study the arts of war and peace at Nanking, the mediæval capitol of
-China, may often have seen and talked with the merchants of Bagdad and
-Damascus. The Corean term for Mussulmans is hoi-hoi, “round and round”
-men. Corean art shows the undoubted influence of Persia.
-
-A very interesting passage in the chronicles of Japan, while
-illustrating the sensitive regard of the Japanese for the forms of
-etiquette, shows another point of contact between Corean and Saracen
-civilization. It occurs in the Nihon O Dai Ichi Ran, or “A View of the
-Imperial Family of Japan.” “In the first month of the sixth year of
-Tempiō Shōhō [February, 754 A.D.], the Japanese nobles Ohan no Komaro
-and Kibi no Mabi returned from China, in which country they had left
-Fujiwara no Seiga. The former reported that at the audience which they
-had of the Emperor Gen-sho, on New Tear’s Day [January 18th], the
-ambassadors of Towan [Thibet] occupied the first place to the west,
-those from Shinra the first place to the east, and that the second
-place to the west had been destined for them (the Japanese envoys), and
-the second place to the east for the ambassadors of the Kingdom of Dai
-Shoku [Persia, then part of the empire of the Caliphs]. Komaro,
-offended with this arrangement, asked why the Chinese should give
-precedence over them to the envoys of Shinra, a state which had long
-been tributary to Japan. The Chinese officials, impressed alike with
-the firmness and displeasure exhibited by Komaro, assigned to the
-Japanese envoys a place above those of Persia and to the envoys of
-Shinra a place above those of Thibet.”
-
-Thus the point at issue was settled, by avoiding it, and assigning
-equal honor to Shinra and Japan.
-
-This incident alone shows that close communications were kept up
-between the far east and the west of Asia, and that Corea was known
-beyond Chinese Asia. At that time the boundaries of the two empires,
-the Arab and the Chinese, touched each other.
-
-The first notice of Corea in western books or writings occurs in the
-works of Khordadbeh, an Arab geographer of the ninth century, in his
-Book of Roads and Provinces. He is thus quoted by Richthofen in his
-work on China (p. 575, note):
-
-“What lies on the other side of China is unknown land. But high
-mountains rise up densely across from Kantu. These lie over in the land
-of Sila, which is rich in gold. Mussulmans who visit this country often
-allow themselves, through the advantages of the same, to be induced to
-settle here. They export from thence ginseng, deerhorn, aloes, camphor,
-nails, saddles, porcelain, satin, zimmit (cinnamon?) and galanga
-(ginger?).”
-
-Richthofen rightly argues that Sila is Shinra and Kantu is the
-promontory province of Shantung. This Arabic term “Sila” is a
-corruption of Shinra—the predominant state in Corea at the time of
-Khordadbeh.
-
-The name of this kingdom was pronounced by the Japanese, Shinra, and by
-the Chinese, Sinlo—the latter easily altered in Arabic mouths to Sila.
-
-The European name Corea is derived from the Japanese term Korai
-(Chinese Kaoli), the name of another state in the peninsula, rival to
-Shinra. It was also the official title of the nation from the eleventh
-to the fourteenth century. The Portuguese, who were the first
-navigators of the Yellow Sea, brought the name to Europe, calling the
-country Coria, whence the English Corea.
-
-The French Jesuits at Peking Gallicized this into Corée. Following the
-genius of their language, they call it La Corée, just as they speak of
-England as L’Angleterre, Germany as L’Allemagne, and America as
-L’Amérique. Hence has arisen the curious designation, used even by
-English writers, of this peninsula as “the Corea.” But what is good
-French in this case is very bad English, and we should no more say “the
-Corea” than “the Germany,” “the England,” or “the America.” English
-usage forbids the employment of the definite article before a proper
-name, and those writers who persist in prefixing the definite article
-to the proper name Corea are either ignorant of the significance of the
-word, or knowingly violate the laws of the English language. The native
-name of the country is Chō-sen (Morning Calm or Fresh Morning), which
-French writers, always prodigal in the use of vowels, spell Tsio-sen,
-Teo-cen, or Tchao-sian. The Chinese call it Tung-kwo (Eastern Kingdom),
-and the Manchius, Sol-ho or Solbo.
-
-The peninsula, with its outlying islands, is nearly equal in size to
-Minnesota or to Great Britain. Its area is between eighty and ninety
-thousand square miles. Its coast line measures 1,740 miles. In general
-shape and relative position to the Asian Continent it resembles
-Florida. It hangs down between the Middle Kingdom and the Sunrise Land,
-separating the sea of Japan and the Yellow Sea, between the 34th and
-43d parallels of north latitude. In its general configuration, when
-looked at from the westward on a good map, especially the magnificent
-one made by the Japanese War Department, Chō-sen resembles the
-outspread wings of a headless butterfly, the lobes of the wings being
-toward China, and their tops toward Japan.
-
-Legend, tradition, and geological indications lead us to believe that
-anciently the Chinese promontory and province of Shantung and the
-Corean peninsula were connected, and that dry land once covered the
-space filled by the waters joining the Gulf of Pechili and the Yellow
-Sea. These waters are so shallow that the elevation of their bottoms
-but a few feet would restore their area to the land surface of the
-globe. On the other side, also, the sea of Japan is very shallow, and
-the straits of Corea, at their greatest depth, have but eighty-three
-feet of water. That portion of the Chinese province of Shing King, or
-Southern Manchuria, bordering the sea, is a great plain, or series of
-flats elevated but a few feet above tide water, which becomes nearly
-impassable during heavy rains.
-
-A marked difference is noted between the east and west coasts of the
-peninsula. The former is comparatively destitute of harbors, and the
-shore is high, monotonous, and but slightly indented or fringed with
-islands. It contains but three provinces. On the west coast are five
-provinces, and the sea is thickly strewn with islands, harbors and
-landing places, while navigable rivers are more numerous. The “Corean
-Archipelago” contains an amazing number of fertile and inhabited
-islands and islets rising out of deep water. They are thus described by
-the naturalist Arthur Adams:
-
-“Leaving the huge, cone-like island of Quelpaert in the distance, the
-freshening breeze bears us gallantly toward those unknown islands which
-form the Archipelago of Korea. As you approach them you look from the
-deck of the vessel and you see them dotting the wide, blue, boundless
-plain of the sea—groups and clusters of islands stretching away into
-the far distance. Far as the eye can reach, their dark masses can be
-faintly discerned, and as we close, one after another, the bold
-outlines of their mountain peaks stand out clearly against the
-cloudless sky. The water from which they seem to arise is so deep
-around them that a ship can almost range up alongside them. The rough,
-gray granite and basaltic cliffs, of which they are composed, show them
-to be only the rugged peaks of submerged mountain masses which have
-been rent, in some great convulsion of nature, from the peninsula which
-stretches into the sea from the main land. You gaze upward and see the
-weird, fantastic outline which some of their torn and riven peaks
-present. In fact, they have assumed such peculiar forms as to have
-suggested to navigators characteristic names. Here, for example, stands
-out the fretted, crumbling towers of one called Windsor Castle, there
-frowns a noble rock-ruin, the Monastery, and here again, mounting to
-the skies, the Abbey Peak.
-
-“Some of the islands of this Archipelago are very lofty, and one was
-ascertained to boast of a naked granite peak more than two thousand
-feet above the level of the sea. Many of the summits are crowned with a
-dense forest of conifers, dark trees, very similar in appearance to
-Scotch firs.”
-
-The king of Corea may well be called “Sovereign of Ten Thousand Isles.”
-
-Almost the only striking feature of the inland physical geography of
-Chō-sen, heretofore generally known, is that chain of mountains which
-traverses the peninsula from North to South, not in a straight line,
-but in an exceedingly sinuous course, similar to the tacking of a ship
-when sailing in the eye of the wind. As the Coreans say, “it winds out
-and in ninety-nine times.”
-
-Striking out from Manchuria it trends eastward to the sea at Cape Bruat
-on the 41st parallel, thence it strikes southwest about eighty miles to
-the region west of Broughton’s Bay (the narrowest part of Corea),
-whence it bears westward to the sea at the 37th parallel, or Cape
-Pelissier, where its angle culminates in the lofty mountain peaks named
-by the Russians Mount Popoff—after the inventor of the high turret
-ships. From this point it throws off a fringe of lesser hills to the
-southward while the main chain strikes southwest, and after forming the
-boundary between two most southern provinces reaches the sea near the
-Amherst Isles. Nor does its course end here, for the uncounted islands
-of the Archipelago, with their fantastic rock-ruins and perennial
-greenery, that suggest deserted castles and abbeys mantled with ivy,
-are but the wave-worn and shattered remnants of this lordly range.
-
-This chief feature in the physical geography of the peninsula
-determines largely its configuration, climate, river system and
-watershed, political divisions, and natural barriers. Speaking roughly,
-Eastern Corea is a mountainous ridge of which Western Corea is but the
-slope.
-
-No river of any importance is found inside the peninsula east of these
-mountains, except the Nak-tong, which drains the valley formed by the
-interior and the sea-coast ranges, while on the westward slope ten
-broad streams collect the tribute of their melted snows to enrich the
-valleys of five provinces.
-
-Through seven parallels of latitude this range fronts the sea of Japan
-with a coast barrier which, except at Yung-hing Bay, is nearly
-destitute of harbors. Its timbered heights present a wall of living
-green to the mariner sailing from Vladivostok to Shanghai.
-
-Great differences of climate in the same latitude are observed on
-opposite sides of this mountain range, which has various local
-epithets. From their height and the permanence of their winter
-covering, the word “white” forms an oft-recurring part of their names.
-
-The division of the country into eight dō, or provinces, which are
-grouped in southern, central, and northern, is based mainly on the
-river basins. The rainfall in nearly every province finds an outlet on
-its own sea-border. Only the western slopes of the two northeastern
-provinces are exceptions to this rule, since they discharge part of
-their waters into streams emptying beyond their boundaries. The Yalu,
-and the Han—“the river”—are the only streams whose sources lie beyond
-their own provinces. In rare instances are the rivers known by the same
-word along their whole length, various local names being applied by the
-people of different neighborhoods. On the maps in this work only the
-name most commonly given to each stream near its mouth is printed.
-
-In respect to the sea basins, three provinces on the west coast form
-one side of the depression called the Yellow Sea Basin, of which
-Northeastern China forms the opposite rim. The three eastern dō, or
-circuits, lining the Sea of Japan, make the concave in the sea basin to
-which Japan offers the corresponding edge. The entire northern boundary
-of the peninsula from sea to gulf, except where the colossal peak
-Paik-tu (‘White Head’) forms the water-shed, is one vast valley in
-which lie the basins of the Yalu and Tumen.
-
-Corea is, in reality, an island, as the following description of White
-Head Mountain, obtained from the Journal of the Chinese Ambassador to
-Seoul, shows. This mountain has two summits, one facing north, the
-other east. On the top is a lake thirty ri around. In shape the peak is
-that of a colossal white vase open to the sky, and fluted or scolloped
-round the edge like the vases of Chinese porcelain. Its crater, white
-on the outside, is red, with whitish veins, inside. Snow and ice clothe
-the sides, sometimes as late as June. On the side of the north, there
-issues a runnel, a yard in depth, which falls in a cascade and forms
-the source of the (Tumen) river. Three or four ri from the summit of
-the mountain the stream divides into two parts; one is the source of
-the Yalu River.
-
-In general, it may be said to dwellers in the temperate zone that the
-climate of Corea is excellent, bracing in the north, and in the south
-tempered by the ocean breezes of summer. The winters in the higher
-latitudes are not more rigorous than in the State of New York; while,
-in the most southern, they are as delightful as those in the Carolinas.
-In so mountainous and sea-girt a country there are, of course, great
-climatic varieties even in the same provinces.
-
-As compared with European countries of the same latitude, Corea is much
-colder in winter and hotter in summer. In the north, the Tumen River is
-usually frozen during five months in the year. The Han River at Seoul
-may be crossed on ice during two or three months. Even in the southern
-provinces, deep snows cover the mountains, though the plains are
-usually free, rarely holding the snow during a whole day. The lowest
-point to which the mercury fell, in the observation of the French
-missionaries, was at the 35th parallel of latitude 8° and at the 37th
-parallel 15° (F.). The most delightful seasons in the year are spring
-and autumn. In summer, in addition to the great heat, the rain falls
-often in torrents that blockade the roads and render travelling and
-transport next to impossible. Toward the end of September occurs the
-period of tempests and variable winds.
-
-A glance at the fauna of Corea suggests at once India, Europe,
-Massachusetts, and Florida. In the forests, especially of the two
-northern circuits, tigers of the largest size and fiercest aspect
-abound. When food fails them, they attack human habitations, and the
-annual list of victims is very large. The leopard is common. There are
-several species of deer, which furnish not only hides and venison, but
-horns which, when “in velvet,” are highly prized as medicine. In the
-fauna are included bears, wild hogs and the common pigs of stunted
-breed, wild cats, badgers, foxes, beavers, otters, several species of
-martens. The salamander is found in the streams, as in western Japan.
-
-Of domestic beasts, horses are very numerous, being mostly of a short,
-stunted breed. Immense numbers of oxen are found in the south,
-furnishing the meat diet craved by the people who eat much more of
-fatty stuff than the Japanese.
-
-Goats are rare. Sheep are imported from China only for sacrificial
-purposes. The dog serves for food as well as for companionship and
-defence. Of birds, the pheasant, falcon, eagle, crane, and stork, are
-common.
-
-Corea has for centuries successfully carried out the policy of
-isolation. Instead of a peninsula, her rulers have striven to make her
-an inaccessible island, and insulate her from the shock of change. She
-has built not a Great Wall of masonry, but a barrier of sea and
-river-flood, of mountain and devastated land, of palisades and cordons
-of armed sentinels. Frost and snow, storm and winter, she hails as her
-allies. Not content with the sea-border she desolates her shores lest
-they tempt the mariner to land. Between her Chinese neighbor and
-herself, she has placed a neutral space of unplanted, unoccupied land.
-This strip of forests and desolated plains, twenty leagues wide,
-stretches between Corea and Manchuria. To form it, four cities and many
-villages were suppressed three centuries ago, and left in ruins. The
-soil of these solitudes is very good, the roads easy, and the hills not
-high.
-
-For centuries, only the wild beasts, fugitives from justice, and
-outlaws from both countries, have inhabited this fertile but forbidden
-territory. Occasionally, borderers would cultivate portions of it, but
-gather the produce by night or stealthily by day, venturing on it as
-prisoners would step over the “dead line.” Of late years, the Chinese
-Government has respected the neutrality of this barrier less and less.
-One of those recurring historical phenomena peculiar to Manchuria—the
-increase and pressure of population—has within a generation caused the
-occupation of large portions of this neutral strip. Parts of it have
-been surveyed and staked out by Chinese surveyors, and the Corean
-Government has been too feeble to prevent the occupation. Though no
-towns or villages are marked on the map of this “No-man’s land,” yet
-already, a considerable number of small settlements exist upon it.
-
-As this once neutral territory is being gradually obliterated, so the
-former lines of palisades and stone walls on the northern border which,
-two centuries and more ago, were strong, high, guarded and kept in
-repair, have year by year, during a long era of peace, been suffered to
-fall into decay. They exist no longer, and should be erased from the
-maps.
-
-The pressure of population in Manchuria upon the Corean border is a
-portentous phenomenon. For Manchuria, which for ages past has, like a
-prolific hive, swarmed off masses of humanity into other lands, seems
-again preparing to send off a fresh cloud. Already her millions press
-upon her neighbors for room.
-
-The clock of history seems once more about to strike, perhaps to order
-again another dynasty on the oft-changed throne of China.
-
-From mysterious Mongolia, have gone out in the past the various hordes
-called Tartars, or Tâtars, Huns, Turks, Kitans, Mongols, Manchius.
-Perhaps her loins also are already swelling with a new progeny. This
-marvellous region gave forth the man-children who destroyed the Roman
-Empire; who extinguished Christianity in Asia and Africa, and nearly in
-Europe; who, after conquering India and China threatened Christendom,
-and holding Russia for two centuries, created the largest empire ever
-known on earth; and finally reared “the most improvable race in Asia”
-that now holds the throne and empire of China.
-
-Chō-sen since acting the hermit policy of ancient Egypt and mediæval
-China, has preserved two loopholes at Fusan and Ai-chiu, the former on
-the sea toward Japan, and the latter in the northwest, on the Chinese
-border. What in time of peace is a needle’s eye, is in time of war a
-flood-gate for enemies. From the west, the invading armies of China
-have again and again marched around over the Gulf of Liao Tung and
-entered the peninsula to plunder and to conquer, while Chinese fleets
-from Shan-tung have over and over again arched their sails in the
-Yellow Sea to furl them again in Corean Rivers. From the east, the
-Japanese have pushed across the sea to invade Corea as enemies, to help
-as allies against China, to levy tribute and go away enriched, or anon
-to send their grain-laden ships to their starving neighbors.
-
-From a political point of view the geographical position of this
-country is most unfortunate. Placed between two rival nations, aliens
-in blood, temper, and policy, Chō-sen has been the rich grist between
-the upper and nether millstones of China and Japan. Out of the north,
-rising from the vast plains at Manchuria, the conquering hordes, on
-their way to the prize lying south of the Great Wall, have over and
-over again descended on Corean soil to make it their granary. From the
-pre-historic forays of the tribes beyond the Sungari, to the last new
-actors on the scene, the Russians, who stand with their feet on the
-Tumen, looking over the border on her helpless neighbor, Corea has been
-threatened or devastated by her eager enemies.
-
-Nevertheless Corea has always remained Corea, a separate country; and
-the people are Coreans, more allied to the Japanese than the Chinese,
-yet in language, politics, and social customs, different from either.
-As Ireland is not England or Scotland, neither is Chō-sen China nor
-Japan.
-
-In her boasted history of “four thousand years,” the little kingdom has
-too often been the Ireland of China, so far as misgovernment on the one
-side, and fretful and spasmodic resistance on the other, are
-considered. Yet ancient Corea has also been an Ireland to Japan, in the
-better sense of giving to her the art, letters, science, and ethics of
-continental civilization. As of old, went forth from Tara’s halls to
-the British Isles and the continent, the bard and the monk to elevate
-and civilize Europe with the culture of Rome and the religion of
-Christianity, so for centuries there crossed the sea from the peninsula
-a stream of scholars, artists, and missionaries who brought to Japan
-the social culture of Chō-sen, the literature of China, and the
-religion of India. A grateful bonze of Japan has well told the story of
-Corea’s part in the civilization of his native country in a book
-entitled “Precious Jewels from a Neighbor Country.”
-
-Corea fulfils one of the first conditions of national safety in having
-“scientific frontiers,” or adequate natural boundaries of river,
-mountain, and sea. But now what was once barrier is highway. What was
-once the safety of isolation, is now the weakness of the recluse. Steam
-has made the water a surer path than land, and Japan, once the pupil
-and anon the conqueror of the little kingdom, has in these last days
-become the helpful friend of Corea’s people, and the opener of the
-long-sealed peninsula.
-
-Already the friendly whistle of Japanese steamers is heard in the
-harbors of two ports in which are trading settlements. At Fusan and
-Gensan, the mikado’s subjects hold commercial rivalry with the Coreans,
-and through these two loopholes the hermits of the peninsula catch
-glimpses of the outer world that must waken thought and create a desire
-to enter the family of nations. The ill fame of the native character
-for inhospitality and hatred of foreigners belongs not to the people,
-nor is truly characteristic of them. It inheres in the government which
-curses country and people, and in the ruling classes who, like those in
-Old Japan, do not wish the peasantry to see the inferiority of those
-who govern them.
-
-Corea cannot long remain a hermit nation. The near future will see her
-open to the world. Commerce and pure Christianity will enter to elevate
-her people, and the student of science, ethnology, and language will
-find a tempting field on which shall be solved many a yet obscure
-problem. The forbidden land of to-day is, in many striking points of
-comparison, the analogue of Old Japan. While the last of the hermit
-nations awaits some gallant Perry of the future, we may hope that the
-same brilliant path of progress on which the Sunrise Kingdom has
-entered, awaits the Land of Morning Calm.
-
-We add a postscript. As our manuscript turns to print, we hear of the
-treaty successfully negotiated by Commodore Shufeldt.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-THE OLD KINGDOM OF CHŌ-SEN.
-
-
-Like almost every country on earth, whose history is known, Corea is
-inhabited by a race that is not aboriginal. The present occupiers of
-the land drove out or conquered the people whom they found upon it.
-They are the descendants of a stock whose ancestral seats were beyond
-those ever white mountains which buttress the northern frontier.
-
-Nevertheless, for the origins of their national history, we must look
-to one whom the Coreans of this nineteenth century still call the
-founder of their social order. The scene of his labors is laid partly
-within the peninsula, and chiefly in Manchuria, on the well watered
-plains of Shing-king, formerly called Liao Tung.
-
-The third dynasty of the thirty-three or thirty-four lines of rulers
-who have filled the oft-changed throne of China, is known in history as
-the Shang (or Yin). It began B.C. 1766, and after a line of
-twenty-eight sovereigns, ended in Chow Sin, who died B.C. 1122. He was
-an unscrupulous tyrant, and has been called “the Nero of China.”
-
-One of his nobles was Ki Tsze, viscount of Ki (or Latinized, Kicius).
-He was a profound scholar and author of important portions of the
-classic book, entitled the Shu King. He was a counsellor of the tyrant
-king, and being a man of upright character, was greatly scandalized at
-the conduct of his licentious and cruel master.
-
-The sage remonstrated with his sovereign hoping to turn him from his
-evil ways. In this noble purpose he was assisted by two other men of
-rank named Pi Kan and Wei Tsze. All their efforts were of no avail, and
-finding the reformation of the tyrant hopeless, Wei Tsze, though a
-kinsman of the king, voluntarily exiled himself from the realm, while
-Pi Kan, also a relative of Chow Sin, was cruelly murdered in the
-following manner:
-
-The king, mocking the wise counsellor, cried out, “They say that a sage
-has seven orifices to his heart; let us see if this is the case with Pi
-Kan.” This Chinese monarch, himself so much like Herod in other
-respects, had a wife who in her character resembled Herodias. It was
-she who expressed the bloody wish to see the heart of Pi Kan. By the
-imperial order the sage was put to death and his body ripped open. His
-heart, torn out, was brought before the cruel pair. Ki Tsze, the third
-counsellor, was cast into prison.
-
-Meanwhile the people and nobles of the empire were rising in arms
-against the tyrant whose misrule had become intolerable. They were led
-on by one Wu Wang, who crossed the Yellow River, and met the tyrant on
-the plains of Muh. In the great battle that ensued, the army of Chow
-Sin was defeated. Escaping to his palace, and ordering it to be set on
-fire, he perished in the flames.
-
-Among the conqueror’s first acts was the erection of a memorial mound
-over the grave of Pi Kan, and an order that Ki Tsze should be released
-from prison, and appointed Prime Minister of the realm.
-
-But the sage’s loyalty exceeded his gratitude. In spite of the
-magnanimity of the offer, Ki Tsze frankly told the conqueror that duty
-to his deposed sovereign forbade him serving one whom he could not but
-regard as a usurper. He then departed into the regions lying to the
-northeast. With him went several thousand Chinese emigrants, mostly the
-remnant of the defeated army, now exiles, who made him their king. It
-is not probable that in his distant realm he received investment from
-or paid tribute to King Wu. Such an act would be a virtual
-acknowledgment of the righteousness of rebellion and revolution. It
-would prove that the sage forgave the usurper. Some Chinese historians
-state that Ki Tsze accepted a title from Wu Wang. Others maintain that
-the investiture “was a euphemism to shield the character of the
-ancestor of Confucius.” The migration of Ki Tsze and his followers took
-place 1122 B.C.
-
-Ki Tsze began vigorously to reduce the aboriginal people of his realm
-to order. He policed the borders, gave laws to his subjects, and
-gradually introduced the principles and practice of Chinese etiquette
-and polity throughout his domain. Previous to his time the people lived
-in caves and holes in the ground, dressed in leaves, and were destitute
-of manners, morals, agriculture and cooking, being ignorant savages.
-The divine being, Dan Kun, had partially civilized them, but Kishi, who
-brought 5,000 Chinese colonists with him, taught the aborigines
-letters, reading and writing, medicine, many of the arts, and the
-political principles of feudal China. The Japanese pronounce the
-founder’s name Kishi, and the Coreans Kei-tsa or Kysse.
-
-The name conferred by Kishi, the civilizer, upon his new domain is that
-now in use by the modern Coreans—Chō-sen or Morning Calm.
-
-This ancient kingdom of Chō-sen, according to the Coreans, comprised
-the modern Chinese province of Shing-king, which is now about the size
-of Ohio, having an area of 43,000 square miles, and a population of
-8,000,000 souls. It is entirely outside and west of the limits of
-modern Corea.
-
-In addition to the space already named, the fluctuating boundaries of
-this ancient kingdom embraced at later periods much territory beyond
-the Liao River toward Peking, and inside the line now marked by the
-Great Wall. To the east the modern province of Ping-an was included in
-Chō-sen, the Ta-tong River being its most stable boundary. “Scientific
-frontiers,” though sought for in those ancient times, were rather ideal
-than hard and fast. With all due allowance for elastic boundaries, we
-may say that ancient Chō-sen lay chiefly within the Liao Tung peninsula
-and the Corean province of Ping-an, that the Liao and the Ta-tong
-Rivers enclosed it, and that its northern border lay along the 42d
-parallel of latitude.
-
-The descendants of Ki Tsze are said to have ruled the country until the
-fourth century before the Christian era. Their names and deeds are
-alike unknown, but it is stated that there were forty-one generations,
-making a blood-line of eleven hundred and thirty-one years. The line
-came to an end in 9 A.D., though they had lost power long before this
-time.
-
-By common consent of Chinese and native tradition, Ki Tsze is the
-founder of Corean social order. If this tradition be true, the
-civilization of the hermit nation nearly equals, in point of time, that
-of China, and is one of the very oldest in the world, being
-contemporaneous with that of Egypt and Chaldea. It is certain that the
-natives plume themselves upon their antiquity, and that the particular
-vein of Corean arrogance and contempt for western civilization is
-kindred to that of the Hindoos and Chinese. From the lofty height of
-thirty centuries of tradition, which to them is unchallenged history,
-they look with pitying contempt upon the upstart nations of yesterday,
-who live beyond the sea under some other heaven. When the American
-Admiral, John Rodgers, in 1871, entered the Han River with his fleet,
-hoping to make a treaty, he was warned off with the repeated answer
-that “Corea was satisfied with her civilization of four thousand years,
-and wanted no other.” The perpetual text of all letters from Seoul to
-Peking, of all proclamations against Christianity, of all
-death-warrants of converts, and of the oft-repeated refusals to open
-trade with foreigners is the praise of Ki Tsze as the founder of the
-virtue and order of “the little kingdom,” and the loyalty of Corea to
-his doctrines.
-
-In the letter of the king to the Chinese emperor, dated November 25,
-1801, the language following the opening sentence is as given below:
-
-“His Imperial Majesty knows that since the time when the remnants of
-the army of the Yin dynasty migrated to the East [1122 B.C.], the
-little kingdom has always been distinguished by its exactness in
-fulfilling all that the rites prescribe, justice and loyalty, and in
-general by fidelity to her duties,” etc., etc.
-
-In a royal proclamation against the Christian religion, dated January
-25, 1802, occurs the following sentence:
-
-“The kingdom granted to Ki Tsze has enjoyed great peace during four
-hundred years [since the establishment of the ruling dynasty], in all
-the extent of its territory of two thousand ri and more,” etc.
-
-These are but specimens from official documents which illustrate their
-pride in antiquity, and the reverence in which their first law giver is
-held by the Coreans.
-
-Nevertheless, though Kishi may possibly be called the founder of
-ancient Chō-sen, and her greatest legislator, yet he can scarcely be
-deemed the ancestor of the people now inhabiting the Corean peninsula.
-For the modern Coreans are descended from a stock of later origin, and
-quite different from the ancient Chō-senese. From Ki Tsze, however,
-sprang a line of kings, and it is possible that his blood courses in
-some of the noble families of the kingdom.
-
-As the most ancient traditions of Japan and Corea are based on Chinese
-writings, there is no discrepancy in their accounts of the beginning of
-Chō-sen history.
-
-Ki Tsze and his colonists were simply the first immigrants to the
-country northeast of China, of whom history speaks. He found other
-people on the soil before him, concerning whose origin nothing is known
-in writing. The land was not densely populated, but of their numbers,
-or time of coming of the aborigines, or whether of the same race as the
-tribes in the outlying islands of Japan, no means yet in our power can
-give answer.
-
-Even the story of Ki Tsze, when critically examined, does not satisfy
-the rigid demands of modern research. Mayers, in his “Chinese Reader’s
-Manual” (p. 369), does not concede the first part of the Chow dynasty
-(1122 B.C.–255 A.D.) to be more than semi-historical, and places the
-beginning of authentic Chinese history between 781 and 719 B.C., over
-four centuries after Ki Tsze’s time. Ross (p. 11) says that “the story
-of Kitsu is not impossible, but it is to be received with suspicion.”
-It is not at all improbable that the Chō-sen of Ki Tsze’s founding lay
-in the Sungari valley, and was extended southward at a later period.
-
-It is not for us to dissect too critically the tradition concerning the
-founder of Corea, nor to locate exactly the scene of his labors.
-Suffice it to say that the general history, prior to the Christian era,
-of the country whose story we are to tell, divides itself into that of
-the north, or Chō-sen, and that of the south, below the Ta-tong River,
-in which region three kingdoms arose and flourished, with varying
-fortunes, during a millennium.
-
-We return now to the well-established history of Chō-sen. The Great
-Wall of China was built by Cheng, the founder of the Tsin dynasty (B.C.
-255–209), who began the work in 239 A.D. Before his time, China had
-been a feudal conglomerate of petty, warring kingdoms. He, by the power
-of the sword, consolidated them into one homogeneous empire and took
-the title of the “First Universal Emperor” (Shi Whang Ti). Not content
-with sweeping away feudal institutions, and building the Great Wall, he
-ordered all the literary records and the ancient scriptures of
-Confucius to be destroyed by fire. Yet the empire, whose perpetuity he
-thought to secure by building a rampart against the barbarians without,
-and by destroying the material for rebellious thought within, fell to
-pieces soon after, at his death, when left to the care of a foolish
-son, and China was plunged into bloody anarchy again.
-
-One of these petty kingdoms that arose on the ruins of the empire was
-that of Yen, which began to encroach upon its eastern neighbor Chō-sen.
-
-In the later days of the Ki Tsze family, great anarchy prevailed, and
-the last kings of the line were unable to keep their domain in order,
-or guard its boundaries.
-
-Taking advantage of its weakness, the king of Yen began boldly and
-openly to seize upon Chō-sen territory, annexing thousands of square
-miles to his own domain. By a spasmodic effort, the successors of Ki
-Tsze again became ascendant, reannexing a large part of the territory
-of Yen, and receiving great numbers of her people, who had fled from
-civil war in China, within the borders of Chō-sen for safety and peace.
-
-Thus the spoiler was spoiled, but, later on, the kingdom of Yen was
-again set up, and the rival states fixed their boundaries and made
-peace. The Han dynasty in B.C. 206 claimed the imperial power, and sent
-a summons to the king of Yen to become vassal. On his refusing, the
-Chinese emperor despatched an army against him, defeated his forces in
-battle, extinguished his dynasty, and annexed his kingdom.
-
-One of the survivors of this revolt, named Wei-man, with one thousand
-of his followers, fled to the east. Dressing themselves like wild
-savages they entered Chō-sen, pretending, with Gibeonitish craft, that
-they had come from the far west, and begged to be received as subjects.
-
-Kijun, the king, like another Joshua, believing their professions,
-welcomed them and made their leader a vassal of high rank, with the
-title of ‘Guardian of the Western Frontier.’ He also set apart a large
-tract of land for his salary and support.
-
-In his post at the west, Wei-man played the traitor, and collecting a
-number of his former countrymen from the Yen province, suddenly sent to
-Kijun a messenger, informing him that a large Chinese army of the
-conquering Han was about to invade Chō-sen. At the same time, he
-suggested that he should be called to the royal side and be made
-Protector of the Capital. His desire being granted, he hastened with
-his forces and suddenly appearing before the royal castle, attacked it.
-Kijun was beaten, and fled by sea, escaping in a boat to the southern
-end of the peninsula.
-
-Wei-man then proclaimed himself King of Chō-sen, 194 B.C. He set out on
-a career of conquest and seized several of the neighboring provinces,
-and Chō-sen again expanded her boundaries to cover an immense area.
-Wei-man built a city somewhere east of the Ta-tong River. It was named
-Wang-hien.
-
-Two provinces of modern Corea were thus included within Chō-sen at this
-date. The new kingdom grew in wealth, power, and intelligence. Many
-thousands of the Chinese gentry, fleeing before the conquering arms of
-the Han “usurpers,” settled within the limits of Chō-sen, adding
-greatly to its prosperity.
-
-During the reign of Yukio (Chinese, Yow Jin), the grandson of Wei-man,
-he received a summons to become vassal to the Chinese emperor, who
-sublimely declared that henceforward the eastern frontier of China
-should be the Ta-tong River—thus virtually wiping out Chō-sen with a
-proclamation. In B.C. 109, a Chinese ambassador sailed over from China,
-entered the Ta-tong River, and visited Yukio in his castle. He plead in
-vain with Yukio to render homage to his master.
-
-Nevertheless, to show his respect for the emperor and his envoy, Yukio
-sent an escort to accompany the latter on his way. The sullen Chinaman,
-angry at his defeat, accepted the safe conduct of the Chō-sen troops
-until beyond the Ta-tong River, and then treacherously put their chief
-to death. Hurrying back to his master, he glossed over his defeat, and
-boasted of his perfidious murder. He was rewarded with the appointment
-of the governorship of Liao Tung.
-
-Smarting at the insult and menace of this act, Yukio, raising an army,
-marched to the west and slew the traitor. Having thus unfurled the
-standard of defiance against the mighty Han dynasty, he returned to his
-castle, and awaited with anxious preparation the coming of the invading
-hosts which he knew would be hurled upon him from China.
-
-The avenging expedition, that was to carry the banners of China farther
-toward the sunrise than ever before, was despatched both by land and
-sea, B.C. 108. The horse and foot soldiers took the land route around
-the head of Liao Tung Gulf, crossed on the ice of the Yalu River, and
-marched south to the Ta-tong, where the Chō-sen men attacked their van
-and scattered it.
-
-The fleet sailed over from Shantung, and landed a force of several
-thousand men on the Corean shore, in February or March, B.C. 107.
-Without waiting for the entire army to penetrate the country, Yukio
-attacked the advance guards and drove them to the mountains in
-disorder.
-
-Diplomacy was now tried, and a representative of the emperor was sent
-to treat with Yukio. The latter agreed to yield and become vassal, but
-had no confidence in the general whom he had just defeated. His memory
-of Chinese perfidy was still so fresh, that he felt unable to trust
-himself to his recently humbled enemies, and the negotiations ended in
-failure. As usual, with the unsuccessful, the Chinaman lost his head.
-
-Recourse was again had to the sword. The Chinese crossed the Ta-tong
-River on the north, and defeating the Chō-sen army, marched to the
-king’s capital, and laid siege to it in conjunction with the naval
-forces. In spite of their superior numbers, the invaders were many
-months vainly beleaguering the fortress. Yet, though the garrison
-wasted daily, the king would not yield. Knowing that defeat, with
-perhaps a cruel massacre, awaited them, four Chō-sen men, awaiting
-their opportunity, during the fighting, discharged their weapons at
-Yukio, and leaving him dead, opened the gates of the citadel, and the
-Chinese entered.
-
-With the planting of the Han banners on the city walls, B.C. 107, the
-existence of the kingdom of Chō-sen came to an end. Henceforth, for
-several centuries, Liao Tung and the land now comprised within the two
-northwestern provinces of Corea, were parts of China.
-
-The conquered territory was at once divided into four provinces, two of
-which comprised that part of Corea north of the Ta-tong River. The
-other two were in Liao Tung, occupying its eastern and its western
-half. Within the latter was the district of Kokorai, or Kaokuli, at
-whose history we shall now glance.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE FUYU RACE AND THEIR MIGRATIONS.
-
-
-Somewhere north of that vast region watered by the Sungari River,
-itself only a tributary to the Amur, there existed, according to
-Chinese tradition, in very ancient times, a petty kingdom called Korai,
-or To-li. Out of this kingdom sprang the founder of the Corean race.
-Slightly altering names, we may say in the phrase of Genesis: “Out of
-Korai went forth Ko and builded Corea,” though what may be sober fact
-is wrapped up in the following fantastic legend.
-
-Long, long ago, in the kingdom called To-li, or Korai (so pronounced,
-though the characters are not those for the Korai of later days), there
-lived a king, in whose harem was a waiting-maid. One day, while her
-master was absent on a hunt, she saw, floating in the atmosphere, a
-glistening vapor which entered her bosom. This ray or tiny cloud seemed
-to be about as big as an egg. Under its influence, she conceived.
-
-The king, on his return, discovered her condition, and made up his mind
-to put her to death. Upon her explanation, however, he agreed to spare
-her life, but at once lodged her in prison.
-
-The child that was born proved to be a boy, which the king promptly
-cast among the pigs. But the swine breathed into his nostrils and the
-baby lived. He was next put among the horses, but they also nourished
-him with their breath, and he lived. Struck by this evident will of
-Heaven, that the child should live, the king listened to its mother’s
-prayers, and permitted her to nourish and train him in the palace. He
-grew up to be a fair youth, full of energy, and skilful in archery. He
-was named “Light of the East,” and the king appointed him Master of his
-stables.
-
-One day, while out hunting, the king permitted him to give an
-exhibition of his skill This he did, drawing bow with such unerring aim
-that the royal jealousy was kindled, and he thought of nothing but how
-to compass the destruction of the youth. Knowing that he would be
-killed if he remained in the royal service, the young archer fled the
-kingdom. He directed his course to the southeast, and came to the
-borders of a vast and impassable river, most probably the Sungari.
-Knowing his pursuers were not far behind him he cried out, in a great
-strait,
-
-“Alas! shall I, who am the child of the Sun, and the grandson of the
-Yellow River, be stopped here powerless by this stream.”
-
-So saving he shot his arrows at the water.
-
-Immediately all the fishes of the river assembled together in a thick
-shoal, making so dense a mass that their bodies became a floating
-bridge. On this, the young prince (and according to the Japanese
-version of the legend, three others with him), crossed the stream and
-safely reached the further side. No sooner did he set foot on land than
-his pursuers appeared on the opposite shore, when the bridge of fishes
-at once dissolved. His three companions stood ready to act as his
-guides. One of the three was dressed in a costume made of sea-weeds, a
-second in hempen garments, and a third in embroidered robes. Arriving
-at their city, he became the king of the tribe and kingdom of Fuyu,
-which lay in the fertile and well-watered region between the Sungari
-River and the Shan Alyn, or Ever-White Mountains. It extended several
-hundred miles east and west of a line drawn southward through Kirin,
-the larger half lying on the west.
-
-Fuyu, as described by a Chinese writer of the Eastern Han dynasty (25
-B.C.–190 A.D.), was a land of fertile soil, in which “the five cereals”
-(wheat, rice, millet, beans, and sorghum) could be raised. The men were
-tall, muscular, and brave, and withal generous and courteous to each
-other. Their arms were bows and arrows, swords, and lances. They were
-skilful horsemen. Their ornaments were large pearls, and cut jewels of
-red jade. They made spirits from grain, and were fond of drinking
-bouts, feasting, dancing, and singing. With many drinkers there were
-few cups. The latter were rinsed in a bowl of water, and with great
-ceremony passed from one to another. They ate with chopsticks, out of
-bowls, helping themselves out of large dishes.
-
-It is a striking fact that the Fuyu people, though living so far from
-China, were dwellers in cities which they surrounded with palisades or
-walls of stakes. They lived in wooden houses, and stored their crops in
-granaries.
-
-In the administration of justice, they were severe and prompt. They had
-regular prisons, and fines were part of their legal system. The thief
-must repay twelve-fold. Adultery was punished by the death of both
-parties. Further revenge might be taken upon the woman by exposing her
-dead body on a mound. Certain relatives of a criminal were denied
-burial in a coffin. The other members of the family of a criminal
-suffering capital punishment were sold as slaves. Murderers were buried
-alive with their victims.
-
-The Fuyu religion was a worship of Heaven, their greatest festival
-being in the eleventh month, when they met joyfully together, laying
-aside all grudges and quarrels, and freeing their prisoners. Before
-setting out on a military expedition they worshipped Heaven, and
-sacrificed an ox, examining the hoof, to obtain an omen. If the cloven
-part remained separated, the portent was evil, if the hoof closed
-together, the omen was auspicious.
-
-The Fuyu chief men or rulers were named after the domestic beasts,
-beginning with their noblest animal, the horse, then the ox, the dog,
-etc. Rulers of cities were of this order. Their king was buried at his
-death in a coffin made of jade.
-
-Evidently the Fuyu people were a vigorous northern race, well clothed
-and fed, rich in grain, horses and cattle, possessing the arts of life,
-with considerable literary culture, and well advanced in social order
-and political knowledge. Though the Chinese writers classed them among
-barbarians, they were, in contrast with their immediate neighbors, a
-civilized nation. Indeed, to account for such a high stage of
-civilization thus early and so far from China, Mr. Ross suggests that
-the scene of the Ki Tsze’s labors was in Fuyu, rather than in Chō-sen.
-Certain it is that the Fuyu people were the first nation of Manchuria
-to emerge from barbarism, and become politically well organized. It is
-significant, as serving to support the conjecture that Ki Tsze founded
-Fuyu, that we discern, even in the early history of this vigorous
-nation, the institution of feudalism. We find a king and nobles, with
-fortified cities, and wealthy men, with farms, herds of horses, cattle,
-and granaries. We find also a class of serfs, created by the
-degradation of criminals or their relatives. The other Manchurian
-people, or barbarians, surrounding China, were still in the nomadic or
-patriarchal state. Why so early beyond China do we find a
-well-developed feudal system and high political organization?
-
-It was from feudal China, the China of the Yin dynasty, from which Ki
-Tsze emigrated to the northeast. Knowing no other form of government,
-he, if their founder, doubtless introduced feudal forms of government.
-
-Whatever may be thought of the theory there suggested, it is certainly
-surprising to find a distinctly marked feudal system, already past the
-rudimentary stage, in the wilderness of Manchuria, a thousand miles
-away from the seats of Chinese culture, as early as the Christian era.
-
-As nearly the whole of Europe was at some time feudalized, so China,
-Corea, and Japan have each passed through this stage of political life.
-
-The feudal system in China was abolished by Shi Whang Ti, the first
-universal Emperor, B.C. 221, but that of Japan only after an interval
-of 2,000 years, surviving until 1871. It lingers still in Corea, whose
-history it has greatly influenced, as our subsequent narrative will
-prove. In addition to the usual features of feudalism, the existence of
-serfdom, in fact as well as in form, is proved by the testimony of
-Dutch and French observers, and of the language itself. The richness of
-Corean speech, in regard to every phase and degree of servitude, would
-suffice for a Norman landholder in mediæval England, or for a Carolina
-cotton-planter before the American civil war.
-
-Out of this kingdom of Fuyu came the people who are the ancestors of
-the modern Coreans. In the same Chinese history which describes Fuyu,
-we have a picture of the kingdom of Kokorai (or Kao-ku-li), which had
-Fuyu for its northern and Chō-sen for its southern neighbor. “The land
-was two thousand li square, and contained many great mountains, and
-deep valleys.” There was a tradition among the Eastern barbarians that
-they were an offshoot from Fuyu. Hence their language and laws were
-very much alike. The nation was divided into five families, named after
-the four points of the compass, with a yellow or central tribe.
-
-Evidently this means that a few families, perhaps five in number,
-leaving Fuyu, set out toward the south, and in the valleys west of the
-Yalu River and along the 42d parallel, founded a new nation. Their
-first king was Ko, who, perhaps, to gain the prestige of ancient
-descent, joined his name to that of Korai (written however with the
-characters which make the sound of modern Korai) and thus the realm of
-Kokorai received its name.
-
-A Japanese writer derives the term Kokorai from words selected out of a
-passage in the Chinese classics referring to the high mountains. The
-first character Ko, in Kokorai, means high, and it was under the
-shadows of the lofty Ever White Mountains that this vigorous nation had
-its cradle and its home in youth. Here, too, its warriors nourished
-their strength until their clouds of horsemen burst upon the frontiers
-of the Chinese empire, and into the old kingdom of Chō-sen. The people
-of this young state were rich in horses and cattle, but less given to
-agriculture. They lived much in the open air, and were fierce,
-impetuous, strong, and hardy. They were fond of music and pleasure at
-night. Especially characteristic was their love of decoration and
-display. At their public gatherings they decked themselves in dresses
-embroidered with gold and silver. Their houses were also adorned in
-various ways. Their chief display was at funerals, when a prodigal
-outlay of precious metals, jewels, and embroideries was exhibited.
-
-In their religion they sacrificed to Heaven, to the spirits of the
-land, and of the harvests, to the morning star, and to the celestial
-and invisible powers. There were no prisons, but when crimes were
-committed the chiefs, after deliberation, put the criminal to death and
-reduced the wives and children to slavery. In this way serfs were
-provided for labor. In their burial customs, they made a cairn, and
-planted fir-trees around it, as many Japanese tombs are made.
-
-In the general forms of their social, religious, and political life,
-the people of Fuyu and Kokorai were identical, or nearly so; while both
-closely resemble the ancient Japanese of Yamato.
-
-The Chinese authors also state that these people were already in
-possession of the Confucian classics, and had attained to an unusual
-degree of literary culture. Their officials were divided into twelve
-ranks, which was also the ancient Japanese number. In the method of
-divination, in the wearing of flowery costumes, and in certain forms of
-etiquette, they and the Japanese were alike. As is now well known, the
-ancient form of government of the Yamato Japanese (that is, of the
-conquering race from Corea and the north) was a rude feudalism and not
-a monarchy. Further, the central part of Japan, first held by the
-ancestors of the mikado, consists of five provinces, like the Kokorai
-division, into five clans or tribes.
-
-At the opening of the Christian era we find the people of Kokorai
-already strong and restless enough to excite attention from the Chinese
-court. In 9 A.D. they were recognized as a nation with their own
-“kings,” and classified with Huentu, one of the districts of old
-Chō-sen. One of these kings, in the year 30, sent tribute to the
-Chinese emperor. In 50 A.D. Kokorai, by invitation, sent their warriors
-to assist the Chinese army against a rebel horde in the northwest. In
-A.D. 70 the men of Kokorai descended upon Liao Tung, and having now a
-taste for border war and conquest, they marched into the petty kingdom
-of Wei, which lay in what is now the extreme northeast of Corea.
-Absorbing this little country, they kept up constant warfare against
-the Chinese. Though their old kinsmen, the Fuyu men, were at times
-allies of the Han, yet they gradually spread themselves eastward and
-southward, so that by 169 A.D. the Kokorai kingdom embraced the whole
-of the territory of old Chō-sen, or of Liao Tung, with all the Corean
-peninsula north of the Ta-tong, and even to the Tumen River.
-
-This career of conquest suffered a check for a time, when a Chinese
-expedition, sailing up the Yalu River, invested the capital city of the
-king and defeated his army. The king fled beyond the Tumen River. Eight
-thousand people are said to have been made prisoners or slaughtered by
-the Chinese. For a time it seemed as though Kokorai were too badly
-crippled to move again.
-
-Anarchy broke out in China, on the fall of the house of Han, A.D. 220,
-and lasted for half a century. That period of Chinese history, from 221
-to 277, is called the “Epoch of the Three Kingdoms.” During this
-period, and until well into the fifth century, while China was rent
-into “Northern” and “Southern” divisions, the military activities of
-Kokorai were employed with varying results against the petty kingdoms
-that rose and fell, one after the other, on the soil between the Great
-Wall and the Yalu River. During this time the nation, free from the
-power and oppression of China, held her own and compacted her power. In
-the fifth century her warriors had penetrated nearly as far west as the
-modern Peking in their cavalry raids. Wily in diplomacy, as brave in
-war, they sent tribute to both of the rival claimants for the throne of
-China which were likely to give them trouble in the future. Dropping
-the family name of their first king, they retained that of their
-ancestral home-land, and called their nation Korai.
-
-Meanwhile, as they multiplied in numbers, the migration of Kokorai
-people, henceforth known as Korai men, set steadily southward. Weakness
-in China meant strength in Korai. The Chinese had bought peace with
-their Eastern neighbors by titles and gifts, which left the Koraians
-free to act against their southern neighbors. In steadily displacing
-these, they came into collision with the little kingdom of Hiaksai,
-whose history will be narrated farther on. It will be seen that the
-Korai men, people of the Fuyu race, finally occupied the territory of
-Hiaksai. Already the Koraians, sure of further conquest southward,
-fixed their capital at Ping-an.
-
-In 589 A.D. the house of Sui was established on the dragon throne, and
-a portentous message was sent to the King of Korai, which caused the
-latter to make vigorous war preparations. Evidently the Chinese emperor
-meant to throttle the young giant of the north, while the young giant
-was equally determined to live. The movement of a marauding force of
-Koraians, even to the inside of the Great Wall, gave the bearded dragon
-not only the pretext of war but of annexation.
-
-For this purpose an army of three hundred thousand men and a fleet of
-several hundred war-junks were prepared. The latter were to sail over
-from Shantung, and enter the Ta-tong River, the goal of the expedition
-being Ping-an city, the Koraian capital
-
-The horde started without provisions, and arrived in mid-summer at the
-Liao River in want of food. While waiting, during the hot weather, in
-this malarious and muddy region, the soldiers died by tens of thousands
-of fever and plague. The incessant rains soon rendered the roads
-impassable and transport of provisions an impossibility. Disease melted
-the mighty host away, and the army, reduced to one-fifth its numbers,
-was forced to retreat The war-junks fared no better, for storms in the
-Yellow Sea drove them back or foundered them by the score.
-
-Such a frightful loss of life and material did not deter the next
-emperor, the infamous Yang (who began the Grand Canal), from following
-out the scheme of his father, whom he conveniently poisoned while
-already dying. In spite of the raging famines and losses by flood, the
-emperor ordered magazines for the armies of invasion to be established
-near the coast, and contingents of troops for the twenty-four corps to
-be raised in every province. All these preparations caused local
-famines and drove many of the people into rebellion.
-
-This army, one of the greatest ever assembled in China, numbered over
-one million men. Its equipment consisted largely of banners, gongs, and
-trumpets. The undisciplined horde began their march, aiming to reach
-the Liao River before the hot season set in. They found the Koraian
-army ready to dispute their passage. Three bridges, hastily
-constructed, were thrown across the stream, on which horse and foot
-pressed eagerly toward the enemy. The width of the river had, however,
-been miscalculated and the bridges were too short, so that many
-thousands of the Chinese were drowned or killed by the Koraians, at
-unequal odds, while fighting on the shore. In two days, however, the
-bridges were lengthened and the whole force crossed over. The Chinese
-van pursued their enemy, slaughtering ten thousand before they could
-gain the fortified city of Liao Tung. Once inside their walls, however,
-the Korai soldiers were true to their reputation of being splendid
-garrison fighters. Instead of easy victory the Chinese army lay around
-the city unable, even after several months’ besieging, to breach the
-walls or weaken the spirit of the defenders.
-
-Meanwhile the other division had marched northward and eastward,
-according to the plan of the campaign. Eight of these army corps,
-numbering 300,000 men, arrived and went into camp on the west bank of
-the Yalu River. In spite of express orders to the contrary, the
-soldiers had thrown away most of the hundred days’ rations of grain
-with which they started, and the commissariat was very low. The Koraian
-commander, carrying out the Fabian policy, tempted them away from their
-camp, and led them by skirmishing parties to within a hundred miles of
-Ping-an. The Chinese fleet lay within a few leagues of the invading
-army, but land and sea forces were mutually ignorant of each other’s
-vicinity. Daring not to risk the siege of a city so well fortified by
-nature and art as Ping-an, in his present lack of supplies, the Chinese
-general reluctantly ordered a retreat, which began in late summer, the
-nearest base of supplies being Liao Tung, four hundred miles away and
-through an enemy’s country.
-
-This was the signal for the Koraians to assume the offensive, and like
-the Cossacks, upon the army of Napoleon, in Russia, they hung upon the
-flanks of the hungry fugitives, slaughtering thousands upon thousands.
-
-When the Chinese host were crossing the Chin-chion River, the Koraian
-army fell in full force upon them, and the fall of the commander of
-their rear-guard turned defeat into a rout. The disorderly band of
-fugitives rested not till well over and beyond the Yalu River. Of that
-splendid army of 300,000 men only a few thousand reached Liao Tung
-city. The weapons, spoil, and prisoners taken by the Koraians were
-“myriads of myriads of myriads.” The naval forces in the river, on
-hearing the amazing news of their comrades’ defeat, left Corea and
-crept back to China. The Chinese emperor was so enraged at the utter
-failure of his prodigious enterprise, that he had the fugitive officers
-publicly put to death as an example.
-
-In spite of the disasters of the previous year, the emperor Yang, in
-613, again sent an army to besiege Liao Tung city. On this occasion
-scaling ladders, 150 feet long, and towers, mounted on wheels, were
-used with great effect. Just on the eve of the completion of their
-greatest work and tower the Chinese camp was suddenly abandoned, the
-emperor being called home to put down a formidable rebellion. So
-cautious were the besieged and so sudden was the flight of the
-besiegers, that it was noon before a Koraian ventured into camp, and
-two days elapsed before they discovered that the retreat was not
-feigned. Then the Koraian garrison attacked the Chinese rear-guard with
-severe loss.
-
-The rebellion at home having been put down the emperor again cherished
-the plan of crushing Korai, but other and greater insurrections broke
-out that required his attention; for the three expeditions against
-Corea had wasted the empire even as they had sealed the doom of the Sui
-dynasty. Though no land forces could be spared, a new fleet was sent to
-Corea to lay siege to Ping-an city. Even with large portions of his
-dominions in the hands of rebels, Tang never gave up his plan of
-humbling Korai. This project was the cause of the most frightful
-distress in China, and seeing no hope of saving the country except by
-the murder of the infamous emperor, coward, drunkard, tyrant, and
-voluptuary, a band of conspirators, headed by Yü Min, put him to death
-and Korai had rest.
-
-To summarize this chapter. It is possible that Ki Tsze was the founder
-of Fuyu. The Kokorai tribes were people who had migrated from Fuyu, and
-settled north and west of the upper waters of the Yalu River. They
-entered into relations with the Chinese as early as 9 A.D., and coming
-into collision with them by the year 70, they kept up a fitful warfare
-with them, sustaining mighty invasions, until the seventh century,
-while in the meantime Korai, instead of being crushed by China, grew in
-area and numbers until the nation had spread into the peninsula, and
-overrun it as far as the Han River.
-
-
-
-Thus far the history of Corea has been that of the northern and western
-part of the peninsula, and has been derived chiefly from Chinese
-sources. We turn now to the southern and eastern portions, and in
-narrating their history we shall point out their relations with Japan
-as well as with China, relying largely for our information upon the
-Japanese annals.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-SAM-HAN, OR SOUTHERN COREA.
-
-
-At the time of the suppression of Chō-sen and the incorporation of its
-territory with the Chinese Empire, B.C. 107, all Corea south of the
-Ta-tong River was divided into three han, or geographical divisions.
-Their exact boundaries are uncertain, but their general topography may
-be learned from the map.
-
-
-
-
-MA-HAN AND BEN-HAN.
-
-This little country included fifty-four tribes or clans, each one
-independent of the other, and living under a sort of patriarchal
-government. The larger tribes are said to have been composed of ten
-thousand, and the smaller of a thousand, families each. Round numbers,
-however, in ancient records are worth little for critical purposes.
-
-South of the Ma-han was the Ben-han, in which were twelve tribes,
-having the same manners and customs as the Ma-han, and speaking a
-different yet kindred dialect. One of these clans formed the little
-kingdom of Amana, from which came the first visit of Coreans recorded
-in the Japanese annals.
-
-After the overthrow of his family and kingdom by the traitor Wei-man,
-Kijun, the king of old Chō-sen escaped to the sea and fled south toward
-the archipelago. He had with him a number of his faithful adherents,
-their wives and children. He landed among one of the clans of Ma-han,
-composed of Chinese refugees, who, not wishing to live under the Han
-emperors, had crossed the Yellow Sea. On account of their numbering,
-originally, one hundred families, they called themselves Hiaksai.
-Either by conquest or invitation Kijun soon became their king. Glimpses
-of the manner of life of these early people are given by a Chinese
-writer.
-
-The Ma-han people were agricultural, dwelling in villages, but neither
-driving nor riding oxen or horses, most probably because they did not
-possess them. Their huts were made of earth banked upon timber, with
-the door in the roof. They went bareheaded, and coiled or tied their
-hair in a knot. They set no value on gold, jewels, or embroidery, but
-wore pearls sewed on their clothes and hung on their necks and ears.
-Perhaps the word here translated “pearl” may be also applied to drilled
-stones of a cylindrical or curved shape, like the magatama, or “bent
-jewels,” of the ancient Japanese. They shod their feet with sandals,
-and wore garments of woven stuff. In etiquette they were but slightly
-advanced, paying little honor to women or to the aged. Like our Indian
-bucks, the young men tested their endurance by torture. Slitting the
-skin of the back, they ran a cord through the flesh, upon which was
-hung a piece of wood. This was kept suspended till the man, unable
-longer to endure it, cried out to have it taken off.
-
-After the field work was over, in early summer, they held drinking
-bouts, in honor of the spirits, with songs and dances. Scores of men,
-quickly following each other, stamped on the ground to beat time as
-they danced. In the late autumn, after harvests, they repeated these
-ceremonies. In each clan there was a man, chosen as ruler, to sacrifice
-to the spirits of heaven. On a great pole they hung drums and bells for
-the service of the heavenly spirits. Perhaps these are the originals of
-the tall and slender pagodas with their pendant wind-bells at the many
-eaves and corners.
-
-Among the edible products of Ma-han were fowls with tails five feet in
-length. These “hens with tails a yard long” were evidently
-pheasants—still a delicacy on Corean tables. The large apple-shaped
-pears, which have a wooden taste, half way between a pear and an apple,
-were then, as now, produced in great numbers. The flavor improves by
-cooking.
-
-As Kijun’s government was one of vigor, his subjects advanced in
-civilization, the Hiaksai people gradually extended their authority and
-influence. The clan names in time faded away or became symbols of
-family bonds instead of governmental authority, so that by the fourth
-century Hiaksai had become paramount over all the fifty-four tribes of
-Ma-han, as well as over some of those of the other two han.
-
-Thus arose the kingdom of Hiaksai (called also Kudara by the Japanese,
-Petsi by the Chinese, and Baiji by the modern Coreans), which has a
-history extending to the tenth century, when it was extinguished in
-name and fact in united Corea.
-
-Its relations with Japan were, in the main, friendly, the islanders of
-the Sunrise Kingdom being comrades in arms with them against their
-invaders, the Chinese, and their hostile neighbors, the men of
-Shinra—whose origin we shall now proceed to detail.
-
-
-
-
-SHIN-HAN.
-
-After the fall of the Tsin dynasty in China, a small body of refugees,
-leaving their native seats, fled across the Yellow Sea toward the Sea
-of Japan, resting only when over the great mountain chain. They made
-settlements in the valleys and along the sea-coast. At first they
-preserved their blood and language pure, forming one of the twelve
-clans or tribes into which the han or country was divided.
-
-This name Shin (China or Chinese), which points to the origin of the
-clan, belonged to but one of the twelve tribes in eastern Corea. As in
-the case of Hiaksai, the Shin tribe, being possessed of superior power
-and intelligence, extended their authority and boundaries, gradually
-becoming very powerful. Under their twenty-second hereditary chief, or
-“king,” considering themselves paramount over all the clans, they
-changed the name of their country to Shinra, which is pronounced in
-Chinese Sinlo.
-
-Between the years 29 and 70 A.D., according to the Japanese histories,
-an envoy from Shinra arrived in Japan, and after an audience had of the
-mikado, presented him with mirrors, swords, jade, and other works of
-skill and art. In this we have a hint as to the origin of Japanese
-decorative art. It is evident from these gifts, as well as from the
-reports of Chinese historians concerning the refined manners, the
-hereditary aristocracy, and the fortified strongholds of the Shinra
-people, that their grade of civilization was much higher than that of
-their northern neighbors. It was certainly superior to that of the
-Japanese, who, as we shall see, were soon tempted to make descents upon
-the fertile lands, rich cities, and defenceless coasts of their
-visitors from the west.
-
-How long the Chinese colonists who settled in Shin-han preserved their
-language and customs is not known. Though these were lost after a few
-generations, yet it is evident that their influence on the aborigines
-of the country was very great. From first to last Shinra excelled in
-civilization all the petty states in the peninsula, of which at first
-there were seventy-eight. Unlike the Ma-han, the Shin-han people lived
-in palisaded cities, and in houses the doors of which were on the
-ground and not on the roof. They cultivated mulberry-trees, reared the
-silk-worm, and wove silk into fine fabrics. They used wagons with yoked
-oxen, and horses for draught, and practised “the law of the road.”
-Marriage was conducted with appropriate ceremony. Dancing, drinking,
-and singing were favorite amusements, and the lute was played in
-addition to drums. They understood the art of smelting and working
-iron, and used this metal as money. They carried on trade with the
-other han, and with Japan. How far these arts owed their encouragement
-or origin to traders, or travelling merchants from China, is not known.
-Evidently Shinra enjoyed leadership in the peninsula, largely from her
-culture, wealth, and knowledge of iron. The curious custom, so well
-known among American savages, of flattening the heads of newly born
-infants, is noted among the Shin-han people.
-
-Neither Chinese history nor Japanese tradition, though they give us
-some account of a few hundred families of emigrants from China who
-settled in the already inhabited Corean peninsula, throws any light on
-the aborigines as to whence or when they came. The curtain is lifted
-only to show us that a few people are already there, with language and
-customs different from those of China. The descendants of the
-comparatively few Chinese settlers were no doubt soon lost, with their
-language and ancestral customs, among the mass of natives. These
-aboriginal tribes were destined to give way to a new people from the
-far north, as we shall learn in our further narrative. The Japanese
-historians seem to distinguish between the San Han, the three countries
-or confederacies of loosely organized tribes, and the San Goku, or
-Three Kingdoms. The Coreans, however, speak only of the Sam-han,
-meaning thereby the three political divisions of the peninsula, and
-using the word as referring rather to the epoch. The common “cash,” or
-fractional coin current in the country, bears the characters meaning
-“circulating medium of the Three Kingdoms,” or Sam-han. These were
-Korai in the north, Shinra in the southeast, and Hiaksai in the
-southwest. Other Japanese names for these were respectively Komé,
-Shiriaki, and Kudara, the Chinese terms being Kaoli, Sinlo, and Pe-tsi.
-
-Like the three kingdoms of England, Scotland, and Wales, called also
-Britannia, Caledonia, and Cambria, these Corean states were distinct in
-origin, were conquered by a race from without, received a rich infusion
-of alien blood, struggled in rivalry for centuries, and were finally
-united into one nation, with one flag and one sovereign.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-EPOCH OF THE THREE KINGDOMS.—HIAKSAI.
-
-
-The history of the peninsular states from the time in which it is first
-known until the tenth century, is that of almost continuous civil war
-or border fighting. The boundaries of the rival kingdoms changed from
-time to time as raid and reprisal, victory or defeat, turned the scale
-of war. A series of maps of the peninsula expressing the political
-situation during each century or half-century would show many
-variations of boundaries, and resemble those of Great Britain when the
-various native and continental tribes were struggling for its mastery.
-Something like an attempt to depict these changes in the political
-geography of the peninsula has been made by the Japanese historian,
-Otsuki Tōyō, in his work entitled “Historical Periods and Changes of
-the Japanese Empire.”
-
-Yet though our narrative, through excessive brevity, seems to be only a
-picture of war, we must not forget that Hiaksai, once lowest in
-civilization, rapidly became, and for a while continued, the leading
-state in the peninsula. It held the lead in literary culture until
-crushed by China. The classics of Confucius and Mencius, with letters,
-writing, and their whole train of literary blessings, were introduced
-first to the peninsula in Hiaksai. In 374 A.D. Ko-ken was appointed a
-teacher or master of Chinese literature, and enthusiastic scholars
-gathered at the court. Buddhism followed with its educational
-influences, becoming a focus of light and culture. As early as 372 A.D.
-an apostle of northern Buddhism had penetrated into Liao Tung, and
-perhaps across the Yalu. In 384 A.D. the missionary Marananda, a
-Thibetan, formally established temples and monasteries in Hiaksai, in
-which women as well as men became scholastics. Long before this new
-element of civilization was rooted in Shinra or Korai, the faith of
-India was established and flourishing in the little kingdom of Hiaksai,
-so that its influences were felt as far as Japan. The first teacher of
-Chinese letters and ethics in Nippon was a Corean named Wani, as was
-also the first missionary who carried the images and sutras of northern
-Buddhism across the Sea of Japan. To Hiaksai more than to any other
-Corean state Japan owes her first impulse toward the civilization of
-the west.
-
-Hiaksai came into collision with Kokorai as early as 345 A.D., at which
-time also Shinra suffered the loss of several cities. In the fifth
-century a Chinese army, sent by one of the emperors of the Wei dynasty
-to enforce the payment of tribute, was defeated by Hiaksai. Such
-unexpected military results raised the reputation of “the eastern
-savages” so high in the imperial mind, that the emperor offered the
-King of Hiaksai the title of “Great Protector of the Eastern Frontier.”
-By this act the independence of the little kingdom was virtually
-recognized. In the sixth century, having given and received Chinese aid
-and comfort in alliance with Shinra against Korai, Hiaksai was ravaged
-in her borders by the troops of her irate neighbor on the north. Later
-on we find these two states in peace with each other and allied against
-Shinra, which had become a vassal of the Tang emperors of China.
-
-From this line of China’s rulers the kingdoms of Korai and Hiaksai were
-to receive crushing blows. In answer to Shinra’s prayer for aid, the
-Chinese emperor, in 660, despatched from Shantung a fleet of several
-hundred sail with 100,000 men on board. Against this host from the west
-the Hiaksai army could make little resistance, though they bravely
-attacked the invaders, but only to be beaten. After a victory near the
-mouth of the Rin-yin River, the Chinese marched at once to the capital
-of Hiaksai and again defeated, with terrible slaughter, the provincial
-army. The king fled to the north, and the city being nearly empty of
-defenders, the feeble garrison opened the gates. The Tang banners
-fluttered on all the walls, and another state was absorbed in the
-Chinese empire. For a time Hiaksai, like a fly snapped up by an angry
-dog, is lost in China.
-
-Not long, however, did the little kingdom disappear from sight. In 670
-a Buddhist priest, fired with patriotism, raised an army of monks and
-priests, and joining Fuku-shin (Fu-sin), a brave general, they laid
-siege to a city held by a large Chinese garrison. At the same time they
-sent word to the emperor of Japan praying for succor against the
-“robber kingdom.” They also begged that Hōsho (Fung), the youthful son
-of the late king, then a hostage and pupil at the mikado’s court, might
-be invested with the royal title and sent home. The mikado despatched a
-fleet of 400 junks and a large body of soldiers to escort the royal
-heir homeward. On his arrival Hōsho was proclaimed king.
-
-Meanwhile the priest-army and the forces under Fuku-shin had
-reconquered nearly all their territory, when they suffered a severe
-defeat near the sea-coast from the large Chinese force hastily
-despatched to put down the rebellion. The invaders marched eastward and
-effected a junction with the forces of Shinra. The prospects of Hiaksai
-were now deplorable.
-
-For even among the men of Hiaksai there was no unity of purpose.
-Fuku-shin had put the priest-leader to death, which arbitrary act so
-excited the suspicions of the king that he in turn ordered his general
-to be beheaded. He then sent to Japan, appealing for reinforcements.
-The mikado, willing to help an old ally, and fearing that the Chinese,
-if victorious, might invade his own dominions, quickly responded. The
-Japanese contingent arrived and encamped near the mouth of the Han
-River, preparatory to a descent by sea upon Shinra. Unsuspecting the
-near presence of an enemy, the allies neglected their usual vigilance.
-A fleet of war-junks, flying the Tang streamers, suddenly appeared off
-the camp, and while the Japanese were engaging these, the Chinese land
-forces struck them in flank. Taken by surprise, the mikado’s warriors
-were driven like flocks of sheep into the water and drowned or shot by
-the Chinese archers. The Japanese vessels were burned as they lay at
-anchor in the bloody stream, and the remnants of the beaten army got
-back to their islands in pitiable fragments. Hōsho, after witnessing
-the destruction of his host, fled to Korai, and the country was given
-over to the waste and pillage of the infuriated Chinese. The royal
-line, after thirty generations and nearly seven centuries of rule,
-became extinct. The sites of cities became the habitations of tigers,
-and once fertile fields were soon overgrown. Large portions of Hiaksai
-became a wilderness.
-
-Though the Chinese Government ordered the bodies of those killed in war
-and the white bones of the victims of famine to be buried, yet many
-thousands of Hiaksai families fled elsewhere to find an asylum and to
-found new industries. The people who remained on their fertile lands,
-as well as all Southern Corea, fell under the sway of Shinra.
-
-The fragments of the beaten Japanese army gradually returned to their
-native country or settled in Southern Corea. Thousands of the people of
-Hiaksai, detesting the idea of living as slaves of China, accompanied
-or followed their allies to Japan. On their arrival, by order of the
-mikado, 400 emigrants of both sexes were located in the province of
-Omi, and over 2,000 were distributed in the Kuantō, or Eastern Japan.
-These colonies of Coreans founded potteries, and their descendants,
-mingled by blood with the Japanese, follow the trade of their
-ancestors.
-
-In 710 another body of Hiaksai people, dissatisfied with the poverty of
-the country and tempted by the offers of the Japanese, formed a colony
-numbering 1,800 persons and emigrated to Japan. They were settled in
-Musashi, the province in which Tōkiō, the modern capital, is situated.
-Various other emigrations of Coreans to Japan of later date are
-referred to in the annals of the latter country, and it is fair to
-presume that tens of thousands of emigrants from the peninsula fled
-from the Tang invasion and mingled with the islanders, producing the
-composite race that inhabit the islands ruled by the mikado. Among the
-refugees were many priests and nuns, who brought their books and
-learning to the court at Nara, and thus diffused about them a literary
-atmosphere. The establishment of schools, the awakening of the Japanese
-intellect, and the first beginnings of the literature of Japan, the
-composition of their oldest historical books, the Kojiki and the
-Nihongi—all the fruits of the latter half of the seventh and early part
-of the eighth century—are directly traceable to this influx of the
-scholars of Hiaksai, which being destroyed by China, lived again in
-Japan. Even the pronunciation of the Chinese characters as taught by
-the Hiaksai teachers remains to this day. One of them, the nun Hōmiō, a
-learned lady, made her system so popular among the scholars that even
-an imperial proclamation against it could not banish it. She
-established her school in Tsushima, A.D. 655, and there taught that
-system of [Chinese] pronunciation [Go-on] which still holds sway in
-Japan, among the ecclesiastical literati, in opposition to the Kan-on
-of the secular scholars. The Go-on, the older of the two
-pronunciations, is that of ancient North China, the Kan-on is that of
-mediæval Southern China (Nanking). Corea and Japan having phonetic
-alphabets have preserved and stereotyped the ancient Chinese
-pronunciation better than the Chinese language itself, since the
-Chinese have no phonetic writing, but only ideographic characters, the
-pronunciation of which varies during the progress of centuries.
-
-Hiaksai had given Buddhism to Japan as early as 552 A.D., but
-opposition had prevented its spread, the temple was set on fire, and
-the images of Buddha thrown in the river. In 684 one Sayéki brought
-another image of Buddha from Corea, and Umako, son of Inamé, a minister
-at the mikado’s court, enshrined it in a chapel on his own grounds. He
-made Yeben and Simata, two Coreans, his priests, and his daughter a
-nun. They celebrated a festival, and henceforth Buddhism [1] grew
-apace.
-
-The country toward the sunrise was then a new land to the peninsulars,
-just as “the West” is to us, or Australia is to England; and Japan made
-these fugitives welcome. In their train came industry, learning, and
-skill, enriching the island kingdom with the best infusion of blood and
-culture.
-
-Hiaksai was the first of the three kingdoms that was weakened by civil
-war and then fell a victim to Chinese lust of conquest.
-
-The progress and fall of the other two kingdoms will now be narrated.
-Beginning with Korai, we shall follow its story from the year 613 A.D.,
-when the invading hordes of the Tang dynasty had been driven out of the
-peninsula with such awful slaughter by the Koraians.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-EPOCH OF THE THREE KINGDOMS.—KORAI.
-
-
-After the struggle in which the Corean tiger had worsted the Western
-Dragon, early in the seventh century, China and Korai were for a
-generation at peace. The bones of the slain were buried, and
-sacrificial fires for the dead soothed the spirits of the victims. The
-same imperial messenger, who in 622 was sent to supervise these offices
-of religion, also visited each of the courts of the three kingdoms. So
-successful was he in his mission of peaceful diplomacy, that each of
-the Corean states sent envoys with tribute and congratulation to the
-imperial throne. In proof of his good wishes, the emperor returned to
-his vassals all his prisoners, and declared that their young men would
-be received as students in the Imperial University at his capital.
-Henceforth, as in many instances during later centuries, the sons of
-nobles and promising youth from Korai, Shinra, and Hiaksai went to
-study at Nanking, where their envoys met the Arab traders.
-
-Korai having been divided into five provinces, or circuits, named
-respectively the Home, North, South, East, and West divisions, extended
-from the Sea of Japan to the Liao River, and enjoyed a brief spell of
-peace, except always on the southern border; for the chronic state of
-Korai and Shinra was that of mutual hostility. On the north, beyond the
-Tumen River, was the kingdom of Pu-hai, with which Korai was at peace,
-and Japan was in intimate relations, and China at jealous hostility.
-
-The Chinese court soon began to look with longing eyes on the territory
-of that part of Korai lying west of the Yalu River, believing it to be
-a geographical necessity that it should become their scientific
-frontier, while the emperor cherished the hope of soon rectifying it.
-Though unable to forget the fact that one of his predecessors had
-wasted millions of lives and tons of treasure in vainly attempting to
-humble Kokorai, his ambition and pride spurred him on to wade through
-slaughter to conquest and revenge. He waited only for a pretext.
-
-This time the destinies of the Eastern Kingdom were profoundly
-influenced by the character of the feudalism brought into it from
-ancient times, and which was one of the characteristic institutions of
-the Fuyu race.
-
-The Government of Korai was simply that of a royal house, holding, by
-more or less binding ties of loyalty, powerful nobles, who in turn held
-their lands on feudal tenure. In certain contingencies these noble
-land-holders were scarcely less powerful than the king himself.
-
-In 641 one of these liegemen, whose ambition the king had in vain
-attempted to curb and even to put to death, revenged himself by killing
-the king with his own hands. He then proclaimed as sovereign the nephew
-of the dead king, and made himself prime minister. Having thus the
-control of all power in the state, and being a man of tremendous
-physical strength and mental ability, all the people submitted quietly
-to the new order of things, and were at the same time diverted, being
-sent to ravage Shinra, annexing all the country down to the 37th
-parallel. The Chinese emperor gave investiture to the new king, but
-ordered this Corean Warwick to recall his troops from invading Shinra,
-the ally of China. The minister paid his tribute loyally, but refused
-to acknowledge the right of China to interfere in Corean politics. The
-tribute was then sent back with insult, and war being certain to
-follow, Korai prepared for the worst. War with China has been so
-constant a phenomenon in Corean history that a special term, Ho-ran,
-exists and is common in the national annals, since the “Chinese wars”
-have been numbered by the score.
-
-Again the sails of an invading fleet whitened the waters of the Yellow
-Sea, carrying the Chinese army of chastisement that was to land at the
-head of the peninsula, while two bodies of troops were despatched by
-different routes landward. The Tang emperor was a stanch believer in
-Whang Ti, the Asiatic equivalent of the European doctrine of the divine
-right of kings to reign—a tenet as easily found by one looking for it
-in the Confucian classics, as in the Hebrew scriptures. He professed to
-be marching simply to vindicate the honor of majesty and to punish the
-regicide rebel, but not to harm nobles or people. The invaders soon
-overran Liao Tung, and city after city fell. The emperor himself
-accompanied the army and burned his bridges after the crossing of every
-river. In spite of the mud and the summer rains he steadily pushed his
-way on, helping with his own hands in the works at the sieges of the
-walled cities—the ruins of which still litter the plains of Liao Tung.
-In one of these, captured only after a protracted investment, 10,000
-Koraians are said to have been slain. In case of submission on summons,
-or after a slight defence, the besieged were leniently and even kindly
-treated. By July all the country west of the Yalu was in possession of
-the Chinese, who had crossed the river and arrived at Anchiu, only
-forty miles north of Ping-an city.
-
-By tremendous personal energy and a general levy in mass, an army of
-150,000 Korai men was sent against the Chinese, which took up a
-position on a hill about three miles from the city. The plan of the
-battle that ensued, made by the Chinese emperor himself, was skilfully
-carried out by his lieutenants, and a total defeat of the entrapped
-Koraian army followed, the slain numbering 20,000. The next day, with
-the remnant of his army, amounting to 40,000 men, the Koraian general
-surrendered. Fifty thousand horses and 10,000 coats of mail were among
-the spoils. The foot soldiers were dismissed and ordered home, but the
-Koraian leaders were made prisoners and marched into China.
-
-After so crushing a loss in men and material, one might expect instant
-surrender of the besieged city. So far from this, the garrison
-redoubled the energy of their defence. In this we see a striking trait
-of the Corean military character which has been noticed from the era of
-the Tangs, and before it, down to Admiral Rodgers. Chinese, Japanese,
-French, and Americans have experienced the fact and marvelled thereat.
-It is that the Coreans are poor soldiers in the open field and exhibit
-slight proof of personal valor. They cannot face a dashing foe nor
-endure stubborn fighting. But put the same men behind walls, bring them
-to bay, and the timid stag amazes the hounds. Their whole nature seems
-reinforced. They are more than brave. Their courage is sublime. They
-fight to the last man, and fling themselves on the bare steel when the
-foe clears the parapet. The Japanese of 1592 looked on the Corean in
-the field as a kitten, but in the castle as a tiger. The French, in
-1866, never found a force that could face rifles, though behind walls
-the same men were invincible. The American handful of tars kept at
-harmless distance thousands of black heads in the open, but inside the
-fort they met giants in bravery. No nobler foe ever met American steel.
-Even when disarmed they fought their enemies with dust and stones until
-slain to the last man. The sailors found that the sheep in the field
-were lions in the fort.
-
-The Coreans themselves knew both their forte and their foible, and so
-understood how to foil the invader from either sea. Shut out from the
-rival nations on the right hand and on the left by the treacherous sea,
-buttressed on the north by lofty mountains, and separated from China by
-a stretch of barren or broken land, the peninsula is easily secure
-against an invader far from his base of supplies. The ancient policy of
-the Coreans, by which they over and over again foiled their mighty foe
-and finally secured their independence, was to shut themselves up in
-their well-provisioned cities and castles, and not only beat off but
-starve away their foes. In their state of feudalism, when every city
-and strategic town of importance was well fortified, this was easily
-accomplished. The ramparts gave them shelter, and their personal valor
-secured the rest. Reversing the usual process of starving out a
-beleaguered garrison, the besiegers, unable to fight on empty stomachs,
-were at last obliged to raise the siege and go home. Long persistence
-in this resolute policy finally saved Corea from the Chinese colossus,
-and preserved her individuality among nations.
-
-Faithful to their character, as above set forth, the Koraians held
-their own in the city of Anchiu, and the Chinese could make no
-impression upon it. In spite of catapults, scaling ladders, movable
-towers, and artificial mounds raised higher than the walls, the
-Koraians held out, and by sorties bravely captured or destroyed the
-enemy’s works. Not daring to leave such a fortified city in their rear,
-the Chinese could not advance further, while their failing provisions
-and the advent of frost showed them that they must retreat.
-
-Hungrily they turned their faces toward China.
-
-In spite of the intense chagrin of the foiled Chinese leader, so great
-was his admiration for the valor of the besieged that he sent the
-Koraian commander a valuable present of rolls of silk. The Koraians
-were unable to pursue the flying invaders, and few fell by their
-weapons. But hunger, the fatigue of crossing impassable oceans of worse
-than Virginia mud, cold winds, and snow storms destroyed thousands of
-the Chinese on their weary homeward march over the mountain passes and
-quagmires of Liao Tung. The net results of the campaign were great
-glory to Korai; and besides the loss of ten cities, 70,000 of her sons
-were captives in China, and 40,000 lay in battle graves.
-
-According to a custom which Californians have learned in our day, the
-bones of the Chinese soldiers who died or were killed in the campaign
-were collected, brought into China, and, with due sacrificial rites and
-lamentations by the emperor, solemnly buried in their native soil.
-Irregular warfare still continued between the two countries, the
-offered tribute of Korai being refused, and the emperor waiting until
-his resources would justify him in sending another vast fleet and army
-against defiant Korai. While thus waiting he died.
-
-After a few years of peace, his successor found occasion for war, and,
-in 660 A.D., despatched the expedition which crushed Hiaksai, the ally
-of Korai, and worried, without humbling, the latter state. In 664 Korai
-lost its able leader, the regicide prime minister—that rock against
-which the waves of Chinese invasion had dashed again and again in vain.
-
-His son, who would have succeeded to the office of his father, was
-opposed by his brother. The latter, fleeing to China, became guide to
-the hosts again sent against Korai “to save the people and to chastise
-their rebellious chiefs.” This time Korai, without a leader, was
-doomed. The Chinese armies having their rear well secured by a good
-base of supplies, and being led by skilful commanders, marched on from
-victory to victory, until, at the Yalu River, the various detachments
-united, and breaking the front of the Korai army, scattered them and
-marched on to Ping-an. The city surrendered without the discharge of an
-arrow. The line of kings of Korai came to an end after twenty-eight
-generations, ruling over 700 years.
-
-All Korai, with its five provinces, its 176 cities, and its four or
-five millions of people, was annexed to the Chinese empire. Tens of
-thousands of Koraian refugees fled into Shinra, thousands into Pu-hai,
-north of the Tumen, then a rising state; and many to the new country of
-Japan. Desolated by slaughter and ravaged by fire and blood, war and
-famine, large portions of the land lay waste for generations. Thus fell
-the second of the Corean kingdoms, and the sole dominant state now
-supreme in the peninsula was Shinra, an outline of whose history we
-shall proceed to give.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-EPOCH OF THE THREE KINGDOMS.—SHINRA.
-
-
-When Shinra becomes first known to us from Japanese tradition, her
-place in the peninsula is in the southeast, comprising portions of the
-modern provinces of Kang-wen and Kiung-sang. The people in this warm
-and fertile part of the peninsula had very probably sent many colonies
-of settlers over to the Japanese Islands, which lay only a hundred
-miles off, with Tsushima for a stepping-stone. It is probable that the
-“rebels” in Kiushiu, so often spoken of in old Japanese histories, were
-simply Coreans or their descendants, as, indeed, the majority of the
-inhabitants of Kiushiu originally had been. The Yamato tribe, which
-gradually became paramount in Japan, were probably immigrants of old
-Kokorai stock, that is, men of the Fuyu race, who had crossed from the
-north of Corea over the Sea of Japan, to the land of Sunrise, just as
-the Saxons and Engles pushed across the North Sea to England. They
-found the Kumaso, or Kiushiu “rebels,” troublesome, mainly because
-these settlers from the west, or southern mainland of Corea, considered
-themselves to be the righteous owners of the island rather than the
-Yamato people. At all events, the pretext that led the mikado Chiu-ai,
-who is said to have reigned from 192 to 200 A.D., to march against them
-was, that these people in Kiushiu would not acknowledge his authority.
-His wife, the Amazonian queen Jingu, was of the opinion that the root
-of the trouble was to be found in the peninsula, and that the army
-should be sent across the sea. Her husband, having been killed in
-battle, the queen was left to carry out her purposes, which she did at
-the date said to be 202 A.D. She set sail from Hizen, and reached the
-Asian mainland probably at the harbor of Fusan. Unable to resist so
-well-appointed a force, the king of Shinra submitted and became the
-declared vassal of Japan. Envoys from Hiaksai and another of the petty
-kingdoms also came to the Japanese camp and made friends with the
-invaders. After a two months’ stay, the victorious fleet, richly laden
-with precious gifts and spoil, returned.
-
-How much of truth there is in this narrative of Jingu it is difficult
-to tell. The date given cannot be trustworthy. The truth seems at least
-this, that Shinra was far superior to the Japan of the early Christian
-centuries. Buddhism was formally established in Shinra in the year 528;
-and as early as the sixth century a steady stream of
-immigrants—traders, artists, scholars, and teachers, and later Buddhist
-missionaries—passed from Shinra into Japan, interrupted only by the
-wars which from time to time broke out. The relations between Nippon
-and Southern Corea will be more fully related in another chapter, but
-it will be well to remember that the Japanese always laid claim to the
-Corean peninsula, and to Shinra especially, as a tributary nation. They
-supported that claim not only whenever embassies from the two nations
-met at the court of China, but they made it a more or less active part
-of their national policy down to the year 1876. Many a bloody war grew
-out of this claim, but on the other hand many a benefit accrued to
-Japan, if not to Shinra.
-
-Meanwhile, in the peninsula the leading state expanded her borders by
-gradual encroachments upon the little “kingdom” of Mimana to the
-southwest and upon Hiaksai on the north. The latter, having always
-considered Shinra to be inferior, and even a dependent, war broke out
-between the two states as soon as Shinra assumed perfect independence.
-Korai and Hiaksai leagued themselves against Shinra, and the game of
-war continued, with various shifting of the pieces on the board, until
-the tenth century. The three rival states mutually hostile, the
-Japanese usually friends to Hiaksai, the Chinese generally helpers of
-Shinra, the northern nations beyond the Tumen and Sungari assisting
-Korai, varying their operations in the field with frequent alliances
-and counter-plots, make but a series of dissolving-views of battle and
-strife, into the details of which it is not profitable to enter. Though
-Korai and Hiaksai felt the heaviest blows from China, Shinra was
-harried oftenest by the armies of her neighbors and by the Japanese.
-Indeed, from a tributary point of view, it seems questionable whether
-her alliances with China were of any benefit to her. In times of peace,
-however, the blessings of education and civilization flowed freely from
-her great patron. Though farthest east from China, it seems certain
-that Shinra was, in many respects, the most highly civilized of the
-three states. Especially was this the case during the Tang era (618–905
-A.D.), when the mutual relations between China and Shinra were closest,
-and arts, letters, and customs were borrowed most liberally by the
-pupil state. Even at the present time, in the Corean idiom, “Tang-yang”
-(times of the Tang and Yang dynasties) is a synonym of prosperity. The
-term for “Chinese,” applied to works of art, poetry, coins, fans, and
-even to a certain disease, is “Tang,” instead of the ordinary word for
-China, since this famous dynastic title represents to the Corean mind,
-as to the student of Kathayan history, one of the most brilliant epochs
-known to this longest-lived of empires. What the names of Plantagenet
-and Tudor represent to an Anglo-Saxon mind, the terms Tang and Sung are
-to a Corean.
-
-During this period, Buddhism was being steadily propagated, until it
-became the prevailing cult of the nation. Reserving the story of its
-progress for a special chapter, we notice in this place but one of its
-attendant blessings. In the civilization of a nation, the possession of
-a vernacular alphabet must be acknowledged to be one of the most potent
-factors for the spread of intelligence and culture. It is believed by
-many linguists that the Choctaws and Coreans have the only two perfect
-alphabets in the world. It is agreed by natives of Chō-sen that their
-most profound scholar and ablest man of intellect was Chul-chong, a
-statesman at the court of Kion-chiu, the capital of Shinra. This famous
-penman, a scholar in the classics and ancient languages of India as
-well as China, is credited with the invention of the Nido, or Corean
-syllabary, one of the simplest and most perfect “alphabets” in the
-world. It expresses the sounds of the Corean language far better than
-the kata-kana of Japan expresses Japanese. Chul-chong seems to have
-invented the Nido syllabary by giving a phonetic value to a certain
-number of selected Chinese characters, which are ideographs expressing
-ideas but not sounds. Perhaps the Sanskrit alphabet suggested the model
-both for manner of use and for forms of letters. The Nido is composed
-almost entirely of straight lines and circles, and the letters
-belonging to the same class of labials, dentals, etc., have a
-similarity of form easily recognized. The Coreans state that the Nido
-was invented in the early part of the eighth century, and that it was
-based on the Sanskrit alphabet. It is worthy of note that, if the date
-given be true, the Japanese kata-kana, invented a century later, was
-perhaps suggested by the Corean.
-
-One remarkable effect of the use of phonetic writing in Corea and Japan
-has been to stereotype, and thus to preserve, the ancient sounds and
-pronunciation of words of the Chinese, which the latter have lost.
-These systems of writing outside of China have served, like Edison’s
-phonographs, in registering and reproducing the manner in which the
-Chinese spoke, a whole millennium ago. This fact has already opened a
-fertile field of research, and may yet yield rich treasures of
-discovery to the sciences of history and linguistics.
-
-Certainly, however, we may gather that the Tang era was one of learning
-and literary progress in Corea, as in Japan—all countries in pupilage
-to China feeling the glow of literary splendor in which the Middle
-Kingdom was then basking. The young nobles were sent to obtain their
-education at the court and schools of Nanking, and the fair damsels of
-Shinra bloomed in the harem of the emperor. Imperial ambassadors
-frequently visited the court of this kingdom in the far east. Chinese
-costume and etiquette were, for a time, at least, made the rigorous
-rule at court. On one occasion, in 653 A.D., the envoy from Shinra to
-the mikado came arrayed in Chinese dress, and, neglecting the
-ceremonial forms of the Japanese court, attempted to observe those of
-China. The mikado was highly irritated at the supposed insult. The
-premier even advised that the Corean be put to death; but better
-counsels prevailed. During the eighth and ninth centuries this
-flourishing kingdom was well known to the Arab geographers, and it is
-evident that Mussulman travellers visited Shinra or resided in the
-cities of the peninsula for purposes of trade and commerce, as has been
-shown before.
-
-Kion-chiu, the capital of Shinra, was a brilliant centre of art and
-science, of architecture and of literary and religious light. Imposing
-temples, grand monasteries, lofty pagodas, halls of scholars,
-magnificent gateways and towers adorned the city. In campaniles,
-equipped with water-clocks and with ponderous bells and gongs, which,
-when struck, flooded the valleys and hill-tops with a rich resonance,
-the sciences of astronomy and horoscopy were cultivated. As from a
-fountain, rich streams of knowledge flowed from the capital of Shinra,
-both over the peninsula and to the court of Japan. Even after the decay
-of Shinra’s power in the political unity of the whole peninsula, the
-nation looked upon Kion-chiu as a sacred city. Her noble temples,
-halls, and towers stood in honor and repair, enshrining the treasures
-of India, Persia, and China, until the ruthless Japanese torch laid
-them in ashes in 1596.
-
-The generation of Corean people during the seventh century, when the
-Chinese hordes desolated large portions of the peninsula and crushed
-out Hiaksai and Korai, saw the borders of Shinra extending from the
-Everlasting White Mountains to the Island of Tsushima, and occupying
-the entire eastern half of the peninsula. From the beginning of the
-eighth until the tenth century, Shinra is the supreme state, and the
-political power of the Eastern Kingdom is represented by her alone. Her
-ambition tempted, or her Chinese master commanded, her into an invasion
-of the kingdom of Pu-hai beyond her northern border, 733 A.D. Her
-armies crossed the Tumen, but met with such spirited resistance that
-only half of them returned. Shinra’s desire of conquest in that
-direction was appeased, and for two centuries the land had rest from
-blood.
-
-Until Shinra fell, in 934 A.D., and united Corea rose on the ruins of
-the three kingdoms, the history of this state, as found in the Chinese
-annals, is simply a list of her kings, who, of course, received
-investiture from China. On the east, the Japanese, having ceased to be
-her pupils in civilization during times of peace, as in time of war
-they were her conquerors, turned their attention to Nanking, receiving
-directly therefrom the arts and sciences, instead of at second-hand
-through the Corean peninsula. They found enough to do at home in
-conquering all the tribes in the north and east and centralizing their
-system of government after the model of the Tangs in China. For these
-reasons the sources of information concerning the eighth and ninth
-centuries fail, or rather it is more exact to say that the history of
-Shinra is that of peace instead of war. In 869 we read of pirates from
-her shores descending upon the Japanese coast to plunder the tribute
-ships from Buzen province, and again, in 893, that a fleet of fifty
-junks, manned by these Corean rovers, was driven off from Tsushima by
-the Japanese troops, with the loss of three hundred slain. Another
-descent of “foreign pirates,” most probably Coreans, upon Iki Island,
-in 1019, is recorded, the strangers being beaten off by reinforcements
-from the mainland. The very existence of these marauders is, perhaps, a
-good indication that the power of the Shinra government was falling
-into decay, and that lawlessness within the kingdom was preparing the
-way for some mighty hand to not only seize the existing state, but to
-unite all Corea into political, as well as geographical, unity. In the
-far north another of those great intermittent movements of population
-was in process, which, though destroying the kingdom of Puhai beyond
-the Tumen, was to repeople the desolate land of Korai, and again call a
-dead state to aggressive life. From the origin to the fall of Shinra
-there were three royal families of fifty-five kings, ruling nine
-hundred and ninety-three years, or seven years less than a millennium.
-
-
- Despite the modern official name of the kingdom, Chō-sen, the
- people of Corea still call their country Gaoli, or Korai, clinging
- to the ancient name. In this popular usage, unless we are mistaken,
- there is a flavor of genuine patriotism. Chō-sen does indeed mean
- Morning Calm, but the impression made on Western ears, and more
- vividly upon the eye by means of the Chinese characters, is apt to
- mislead. The term is less a reflection of geographical position
- than of the inward emotions of those who first of all were more
- Chinese than Corean in spirit, and of a desire for China’s favor.
- The term Chō-sen savors less of dew and dawn than of policy and
- prosy fact. It is probable, despite the Corean’s undoubted love of
- nature and beautiful scenery, that Americans and Europeans have
- been led astray as to the real significance of the phrase “morning
- calm.” At the bottom, it means rather peace with China than the
- serenity of dewy morning. Audience of the Chinese emperor to his
- vassals is always given at daybreak, and to be graciously received
- after the long and tedious prostrations is an auspicious beginning
- as of a day of heaven upon earth. To the founder of Corea, Ki Tsze,
- the gracious favor of the Chow emperor was as “morning calm;” and
- so to Ni Taijo, in 1392 A.D., was the sunshine of the Ming
- emperor’s favor. In both instances the name Chō-sen given to their
- realm had, in reality, immediate reference to the dayspring of
- China’s favor, and “the calm of dawn” to the smile of the emperor.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-JAPAN AND COREA.
-
-
-It is as nearly impossible to write the history of Corea and exclude
-Japan, as to tell the story of mediæval England and leave out France.
-Not alone does the finger of sober history point directly westward as
-the immediate source of much of what has been hitherto deemed of pure
-Japanese origin, but the fountain-head of Japanese mythology is found
-in the Sungari valley, or under the shadows of the Ever-White
-Mountains. The first settler of Japan, like him of Fuyu, crosses the
-water upright upon the back of a fish, and brings the rudiments of
-literature and civilization with him. The remarkable crocodiles and
-sea-monsters, from which the gods and goddesses are born and into which
-they change, the dragons and tide-jewels and the various mystic symbols
-which they employ to work their spells, the methods of divination and
-system of prognostics, the human sacrifices and the manner of their
-rescue, seem to be common to the nations on both sides of the Sea of
-Japan, and point to a common heritage from the same ancestors. Language
-comes at last with her revelations to furnish proofs of identity.
-
-The mischievous Susanoō, so famous in the pre-historic legends, told in
-the Kojiki, half scamp, half benefactor, who planted all Japan with
-trees, brought the seeds from which they grew from Corea. His rescue of
-the maiden doomed to be devoured by the eight-headed dragon (emblem of
-water, and symbolical of the sea and rivers) reads like a gallant
-fellow saving one of the human beings who for centuries, until the now
-ruling dynasty abolished the custom, were sacrificed to the sea on the
-Corean coast fronting Japan. In Kiōto, on Gi-on Street, there is a
-temple which tradition declares was “founded in 656 A.D. by a Corean
-envoy in honor of Susanoō, to whom the name of Go-dzu Tenno (Heavenly
-King of Go-dzu) was given, because he was originally worshipped in
-Go-dzu Mountain in Corea.”
-
-Dogs are not held in any honor in Japan, as they were anciently in
-Kokorai. Except the silk-haired, pug-nosed, and large-eyed chin, which
-the average native does not conceive as canine, the dogs run at large,
-ownerless, as in the Levant; and share the work of street scavenging
-with the venerated crows. Yet there are two places of honor in which
-the golden and stone effigies of this animal—highly idealized indeed,
-but still inu—are enthroned.
-
-The ama-inu, or heavenly dogs, in fanciful sculpture of stone or gilt
-wood, represent guardian dogs. They are found in pairs guarding the
-entrances to miya or temples. As all miya (the name also of the
-mikado’s residence) were originally intended to serve as a model or
-copy of the palace of the mikado and a reminder of the divinity of his
-person and throne, it is possible that the ama-inu imitated the golden
-Corean dogs which support and guard the throne of Japan. Access to the
-shrine was had only by passing these two heavenly dogs. These creatures
-are quite distinct from the “dogs of Fo,” or the “lions” that flank the
-gateways of the magistrate’s office in China. Those who have had
-audience of the mikado in the imperial throne-room, as the writer had
-in January, 1873, have noticed at the foot of the throne, serving as
-legs or supports to the golden chair, on which His Majesty sits, two
-dogs sitting on their haunches, and upright on their forelegs. These
-fearful-looking creatures, with wide-open mouths, hair curled in tufts,
-especially around the front neck, and with tails bifurcated at their
-upright ends, are called “Corean dogs.” For what reason placed there we
-know not. It may be in witness of the conquest of Shinra by the empress
-Jingu, who called the king of Shinra “the dog of Japan,” or it may
-point to some forgotten symbolism in the past, or typify the vassalage
-of Corea—so long a fundamental dogma in Japanese politics. It is
-certainly strange to see this creature, so highly honored in Fuyu and
-dishonored among the vulgar in Japan, placed beneath the mikado’s
-throne.
-
-The Japanese laid claim to Corea from the second century until the 27th
-of February, 1876. On that day the mikado’s minister plenipotentiary
-signed the treaty, recognizing Chō-sen as an independent nation.
-Through all the seventeen centuries which, according to their annals,
-elapsed since their armies first compelled the vassalage of their
-neighbor, the Japanese regarded the states of Corea as tributary. Time
-and again they enforced their claim with bloody invasion, and when
-through a more enlightened policy the rulers voluntarily acknowledged
-their former enemy as an equal, the decision cost Japan almost
-immediately afterward seven months of civil war, 20,000 lives, and
-fifty millions of dollars in treasure. The mainspring of the “Satsuma
-rebellion” of 1877 was the official act of friendship by treaty, and
-the refusal of the Tōkiō Government to make war on Corea.
-
-From about the beginning of the Christian era until the fifteenth
-century the relations between the two nations were very close and
-active. Alternate peace and war, mutual assistance given, and embassies
-sent to and fro are recorded with lively frequency in the early
-Japanese annals, especially the Nihongi and Kojiki. A more or less
-continual stream of commerce and emigration seems to have set in from
-the peninsula. Some writers of high authority, who are also comparative
-students of the languages of the two countries, see in these events the
-origin of the modern Japanese. They interpret them to mean nothing less
-than the peopling of the archipelago by continental tribes passing
-through the peninsula, and landing in Japan at various points along the
-coast from Kiushiu to Kaga. Some of them think that Japan was settled
-wholly and only by Tungusic races of Northeastern Asia coming from or
-through Corea. They base their belief not only on the general stream
-and tendency of Japanese tradition, but also and more on the proofs of
-language.
-
-The first mention of Corea in the Japanese annals occurs in the fifth
-volume of the Nihongi, and is the perhaps half-fabulous narrative of
-ancient tradition. In the 65th year of the reign of the tenth mikado,
-Sujin (97–30 B.C.), a boat filled with people from the west appeared
-off the southern point of Chō-shiu, near the modern town of
-Shimonoséki. They would not land there, but steered their course from
-cape to cape along the coast until they reached the Bay of Keji no Wara
-in Echizen, near the modern city of Tsuruga. Here they disembarked and
-announced themselves from Amana Sankan (Amana of the Three Han or
-Kingdoms) in Southern Corea. They unpacked their treasures of finely
-wrought goods, and their leader made offerings to the mikado Sujin.
-These immigrants remained five years in Echizen, not far from the city
-of Fukui, till 28 B.C. Before leaving Japan, they presented themselves
-in the capital for a farewell audience. The mikado Mimaki, having died
-three years before, the visitors were requested on their return to call
-their country Mimana, after their patron, as a memorial of their stay
-in Japan. To this they assented, and on their return named their
-district Mimana.
-
-Some traditions state that the first Corean envoy had a horn growing
-out of his forehead, and that since his time, and on account of it, the
-bay near which he dwelt was named Tsunaga (Horn Bay) now corrupted into
-Tsuruga.
-
-It may be added that nearly all mythical characters or heroes in
-Japanese and Chinese history are represented as having one or more very
-short horns growing out of their heads, and are so delineated in native
-art.
-
-Six years later an envoy from Shinra arrived, also bringing presents to
-the mikado. These consisted of mirrors, jade stone, swords, and other
-precious articles, then common in Corea but doubtless new in Japan.
-
-According to the tradition of the Kojiki (Book of Ancient Legends) the
-fourteenth mikado, Chiu-ai (A.D. 192–200) was holding his court at
-Tsuruga in Echizen, in A.D. 194, when a rebellion broke out in Kiushiu.
-He marched at once into Kiushiu, against the rebels, and there fell by
-disease or arrow. His consort, Jingu Kōgō, had a presentiment that he
-ought not to go into Kiushiu, as he would surely fail if he did, but
-that he should strike at the root of the trouble and sail at once to
-the west.
-
-After his death she headed the Japanese army and, leading the troops in
-person, quelled the revolt. She then ordered all the available forces
-of her realm to assemble for an invasion of Shinra. Japanese modern
-writers have laid great stress upon the fact that Shinra began the
-aggressions which brought on war, and in this fact justify Jingu’s
-action and Japan’s right to hold Corea as an honestly acquired
-possession.
-
-All being ready, the doughty queen regent set sail from the coast of
-Hizen, in Japan, in the tenth month A.D. 202, and beached the fleet
-safely on the coast of Shinra. The King of Shinra, accustomed to meet
-only with men from the rude tribes of Kiushiu, was surprised to see so
-well-appointed an army and so large a fleet from a land to the
-eastward. Struck with terror he resolved at once to submit. Tying his
-hands in token of submission and in presence of the queen Jingu, he
-declared himself the slave of Japan. Jingu caused her bow to be
-suspended over the gate of the palace of the king in sign of his
-submission. It is even said that she wrote on the gate “The King of
-Shinra is the dog of Japan.” Perhaps these are historic words, which
-find their meaning to-day in the two golden dogs forming part of the
-mikado’s throne, like the Scotch “stone of Scone,” under the coronation
-chair in Westminster Abbey.
-
-The followers of Jingu evidently expected a rich booty, but after so
-peaceful a conquest the empress ordered that no looting should be
-allowed, and no spoil taken except the treasures constituting tribute.
-She restored the king to the throne as her vassal, and the tribute was
-then collected and laden on eighty boats with hostages for future
-annual tribute. The offerings comprised pictures, works of elegance and
-art, mirrors, jade, gold, silver, and silk fabrics.
-
-Preparations were now made to conquer Hiaksai also, when Jingu was
-surprised to receive the voluntary submission and offers of tribute of
-this country.
-
-The Japanese army remained in Corea only two months, but this brief
-expedition led to great and lasting results. It gave the Japanese a
-keener thirst for martial glory, it opened their eyes to a higher state
-of arts and civilization. From this time forth there flowed into the
-islands a constant stream of Corean emigrants, who gave a great impulse
-to the spirit of improvement in Japan. The Japanese accept the story of
-Jingu and her conquest as sound history, and adorn their greenback
-paper money with pictures of her foreign exploits. Critics reject many
-elements in the tradition, such as her controlling the waves and
-drowning the Shinra army by the jewels of the ebbing and the flowing
-tide, [2] and the delay of her accouchement by a magic stone carried in
-her girdle. The Japanese ascribe the glory of victory to her then
-unborn babe, afterward deified as Ojin, god of war, and worshipped by
-Buddhists as Hachiman or the Eight-bannered Buddha. Yet many temples
-are dedicated to Jingu, one especially famous is near Hiōgo, and
-Koraiji (Corean village) near Oiso, a few miles from Yokohama, has
-another which was at first built in her honor. Evidently the core of
-the narrative of conquest is fact.
-
-At the time when the faint, dim light of trustworthy tradition dawns,
-we find the people inhabiting the Japanese archipelago to be roughly
-divided, as to their political status, into four classes.
-
-In the central province around Kiōto ruled a kingly house—the mikado
-and his family—with tributary nobles or feudal chiefs holding their
-lands on military tenure. This is the ancient classic land and realm of
-Yamato. Four other provinces adjoining it have always formed the core
-of the empire, and are called the Go-Kinai, or five home provinces,
-suggesting the five clans of Kokorai.
-
-To the north and east stretched the little known and less civilized
-region, peopled by tribes of kindred blood and speech, who spoke nearly
-the same language as the Yamato tribes, and who had probably come at
-some past time from the same ancestral seats in Manchuria, and called
-the Kuan-tō, or region east (tō) of the barrier (kuan) at Ozaka; or
-poetically Adzuma.
-
-Still further north, on the main island and in Yezo, lived the Ainos or
-Ebisŭ, probably the aborigines of the soil—the straight-eyed men whose
-descendants still live in Yezo and the Kuriles. The northern and
-eastern tribes were first conquered and thoroughly subdued by the
-Yamato tribes, after which all the far north was overrun and the Ainos
-subjugated.
-
-In the extreme south of the main island of Japan and in Kiushiu, then
-called Kumaso by the Yamato people, lived a number of tribes of perhaps
-the same ethnic stock as the Yamato Japanese, but further removed.
-Their progenitors had probably descended from Manchuria through Corea
-to Japan. Their blood and speech, however, were more mixed by infusions
-from Malay and southern elements. Into Kiushiu—it being nearest to the
-continent—the peninsulars were constantly coming and mingling with the
-islanders.
-
-The allegiance of the Kiushiu tribes to the royal house of Yamato was
-of a very loose kind. The history of these early centuries, as shown in
-the annals of Nihon, is but a series of revolts against the distant
-warrior mikado, whose life was chiefly one of war. He had often to
-leave his seat in the central island to march at the head of his
-followers to put down rebellions or to conquer new tribes. Over these,
-when subdued, a prince chosen by the conqueror was set to rule, who
-became a feudatory of the mikado.
-
-The attempts of the Yamato sovereign to wholly reduce the Kiushiu
-tribes to submission, were greatly frustrated by their stout
-resistance, fomented by emissaries from Shinra, who instigated them to
-“revolt,” while adventurers from the Corean mainland came over in large
-numbers and joined the “rebels,” who were, in one sense, their own
-compatriots.
-
-From the time of Jingu, if the early dates in Japanese history are to
-be trusted, may be said to date that belief, so firmly fixed in the
-Japanese mind, that Corea is, and always was since Jingu’s time, a
-tributary and dependency of Japan. This idea, akin to that of the claim
-of the English kings on France, led to frequent expeditions from the
-third to the sixteenth century, and which, even as late as 1874, 1875,
-and 1877, lay at the root of three civil wars.
-
-All these expeditions, sometimes national, sometimes filibustering,
-served to drain the resources of Japan, though many impulses to
-development and higher civilization were thus gained, especially in the
-earlier centuries. It seemed, until 1877, almost impossible to
-eradicate from the military mind of Japan the conviction that to
-surrender Corea was cowardice and a stain on the national honor. But
-time will show, as it showed centuries ago in England, that the glory
-and prosperity of the conqueror were increased, not diminished, when
-Japan relinquished all claim on her continental neighbor and treated
-her as an equal.
-
-The Coreans taught the Japanese the arts of peace, while the Coreans
-profited from their neighbors to improve in the business of war. We
-read that, in 316 A.D., a Corean ambassador, bringing the usual
-tribute, presented to the mikado a shield of iron which he believed to
-be invulnerable to Japanese arrows. The mikado called on one of his
-favorite marksmen to practice in the presence of the envoy. The shield
-was suspended, and the archer, drawing bow, sent a shaft through the
-iron skin of the buckler to the astonishment of the visitor. In all
-their battles the Coreans were rarely able to stand in open field
-before the archers from over the sea, who sent true cloth-yard shafts
-from their oak and bamboo bows.
-
-The paying of tribute to a foreign country is never a pleasant duty to
-perform, though in times of prosperity and good harvests it is not
-difficult. In periods of scarcity from bad crops it is well nigh
-impossible. To insist upon its payment is to provoke rebellion.
-Instances are indeed given in Japanese history where the conquerors not
-only remitted the tribute but even sent ship loads of rice and barley
-to the starving Coreans. When, however, for reasons not deemed
-sufficient, or out of sheer defiance, their vassals refused to
-discharge their dues, they again felt the iron hand of Japan in war.
-During the reign of Yuriaki, the twenty-second mikado (A.D. 457–477),
-the three states failed to pay tribute. A Japanese army landed in
-Corea, and conquering Hiaksai, compelled her to return to her duty. The
-campaign was less successful in Shinra and Korai, for after the
-Japanese had left the Corean shores the “tribute” was sent only at
-intervals, and the temper of the half-conquered people was such that
-other expeditions had to be despatched to inflict chastisement and
-compel payment.
-
-The gallant but vain succor given by the Japanese to Hiaksai during the
-war with the Chinese, in the sixth century, which resulted in the
-destruction of the little kingdom, has already been detailed. Among the
-names, forever famous in Japanese art and tradition, of those who took
-part in this expedition are Saté-hiko and Kasi-wadé. The former sailed
-away from Hizen in the year 536, as one of the mikado’s body-guard to
-assist their allies the men of Hiaksai. A poetical legend recounts that
-his wife, Sayohimé, climbed the hills of Matsura to catch the last
-glimpse of his receding sails. Thus intently gazing, with straining
-eyes, she turned to stone. The peasants of the neighborhood still
-discern in the weather-worn rocks, high up on the cliffs, the figure of
-a lady in long trailing court dress with face and figure eagerly bent
-over the western waves. Not only is the name Matsura Sayohimé the
-symbol of devoted love, but from this incident the famous author Bakin
-constructed his romance of “The Great Stone Spirit of Matsura.”
-
-Kasiwadé, who crossed over to do “frontier service” in the peninsula a
-few years later, was driven ashore by a snow squall at an unknown part
-of the coast. While in this defenceless condition his camp was invaded
-by a tiger, which carried off and devoured his son, a lad of tender
-age. Kasiwadé at once gave chase and followed the beast to the
-mountains and into a cave. The tiger leaping out upon him, the wary
-warrior bearded him with his left hand, and buried his dirk in his
-throat. Then finishing him with his sabre, he skinned the brute and
-sent home the trophy. From olden times Chō-sen is known to Japanese
-children only as a land of tigers, while to the soldier the “marshal’s
-baton carried in his knapsack” is a tiger-skin scabbard, the emblem and
-possession of rank.
-
-As the imperial court of Japan looked upon Shinra and Hiaksai as
-outlying vassal states, the frequent military movements across the sea
-were reckoned under “frontier service,” like that beyond the latitude
-of Sado in the north of the main island, or in Kiushiu in the south.
-“The three countries” of Corea were far nearer and more familiar to the
-Japanese soldiers than were Yezo or the Riu Kiu Islands, which were not
-part of the empire till several centuries afterward. Kara Kuni, the
-country of Kara (a corruption of Korai?), as they now call China, was
-then applied to Corea. Not a little of classic poetry and legend in the
-Yamato language refers to this western frontier beyond the sea. The
-elegy on Ihémaro, the soldier-prince, who died at Iki Island on the
-voyage over, and that on the death of the Corean nun Riguwan, have been
-put into English verse by Mr. Chamberlain (named after the English
-explorer and writer on Corea, Basil Hall), in his “Classical Poetry of
-the Japanese.” This Corean lady left her home in 714, and for
-twenty-one years found a home with the mikado’s Prime Minister, Otomo,
-and his wife, at Nara. She died in 735, while her hosts were away at
-the mineral springs of Arima, near Kobé; and the elegy was written by
-their daughter. One stanza describes her life in the new country.
-
-
- “And here with aliens thou didst choose to dwell,
- Year in, year out, in deepest sympathy;
- And here thou builtest thee a holy cell,
- And so the peaceful years went gliding by.”
-
-
-An interesting field of research is still open to the scholar who will
-point out all the monuments of Corean origin or influence in the
-mikado’s empire, in the arts and sciences, household customs, diet and
-dress, or architecture; in short, what by nature or the hand of man has
-been brought to the land of Sunrise from that of Morning Calm. One of
-the Corean princes, who settled in Japan early in the seventh century,
-founded a family which afterward ruled the famous province of Nagatō or
-Chōshiu. One of his descendants welcomed Francis Xavier, and aided his
-work by gifts of ground and the privilege of preaching. Many of the
-temples in Kiōto still contain images, paintings, and altar furniture
-brought from Corea. The “Pheasant Bridge” still keeps its name from
-bygone centuries; in a garden near by pheasants were kept for the
-supply of the tables of the Corean embassies. The Arab and Persian
-treasures of art and fine workmanship, in the imperial archives and
-museums of Nara, which have excited the wonder of foreign visitors, are
-most probably among the gifts or purchases from Shinra, where these
-imports were less rare. A Buddhist monk named Shiuho has gathered up
-the traditions and learning of the subject, so far as it illustrated
-his faith, and in “Precious Jewels from a Neighboring Country,”
-published in 1586, has written a narrative of the introduction of
-Buddhism from Corea and its literary and missionary influences upon
-Japan.
-
-Under the chapters on Art and Religion we shall resume this topic. As
-earnestly as the Japanese are now availing themselves of the science
-and progress of Christendom in this nineteenth century, so earnestly
-did they borrow the culture of the west, that is of Corea and China, a
-thousand years ago.
-
-The many thousands of Coreans, who, during the first ten centuries of
-the Christian era, but especially in the seventh, eighth, and ninth,
-settled in Japan, lived peaceably with the people of their adopted
-country, and loyally obeyed the mikado’s rule. An exception to this
-course occurred in 820, when seven hundred men who some time before had
-come from Shinra to Tōtōmi and Suruga revolted, killed many of the
-Japanese, seized the rice in the store-houses, and put to sea to
-escape. The people of Musashi and Sagami pursued and attacked them,
-putting many of them to death.
-
-The general history of the Coreans in Japan divides itself into two
-parts. Those who came as voluntary immigrants in time of peace were in
-most cases skilled workmen or farmers, who settled in lands or in
-villages granted them, and were put on political and social equality
-with the mikado’s subjects. They founded industries, intermarried with
-the natives, and their identity has been lost in the general body of
-the Japanese people.
-
-With the prisoners taken in war, and with the laborers impressed into
-their service and carried off by force, the case was far different.
-These latter were set apart in villages by themselves—an outcast race
-on no social equality with the people. At first they were employed to
-feed the imperial falcons, or do such menial work, but under the ban of
-Buddhism, which forbids the destruction of life and the handling of
-flesh, they became an accursed race, the “Etas” or pariahs of the
-nation. They were the butchers, skinners, leather-makers, and those
-whose business it was to handle corpses of criminals and all other
-defiling things. They exist to-day, not greatly changed in blood,
-though in costume, language, and general appearance, it is not possible
-to distinguish them from Japanese of purest blood. By the humane edict
-of the mikado, in 1868, granting them all the rights of citizenship,
-their social condition has greatly improved.
-
-From the ninth century onward to the sixteenth, the relations of the
-two countries seem to be unimportant. Japan was engaged in conquering
-northward the barbarians of her main island and Yezo. Her intercourse,
-both political and religious, grew to be so direct with the court of
-China, that Corea, in the Japanese annals, sinks out of sight except at
-rare intervals. Nihon increased in wealth and civilization while
-Chō-sen remained stationary or retrograded. In the nineteenth century
-the awakened Sunrise Kingdom has seen her former self in the hermit
-nation, and has stretched forth willing hands to do for her neighbor
-now, what Corea did for Japan in centuries long gone by.
-
-Still, it must never be forgotten that Corea was not only the bridge on
-which civilization crossed from China to the archipelago, but was most
-probably the pathway of migration by which the rulers of the race now
-inhabiting Nihon reached it from their ancestral seats around the
-Sungari and the Ever-White Mountains. True, it is not absolutely
-certain whether the homeland of the mikado’s ancestors lay southward in
-the sea, or westward among the mountains, but that the mass of the
-Corean and Japanese people are more closely allied in blood than either
-are with the Chinese, Manchius, or Malays, seems to be proved, not only
-by language and physical traits, but by the whole course of the history
-of both nations, and by the testimony of the Chinese records. Both
-Coreans and Japanese have inherited the peculiar institutions of their
-Fuyu ancestors—that race which alone of all the peoples sprung from
-Manchuria migrated toward the rising, instead of toward the setting,
-sun.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-KORAI, OR UNITED COREA.
-
-
-The fertile and well-watered region drained by the Amur River and its
-tributaries, stretching from the Pacific Ocean to Lake Baikal, covers
-the ancestral seats of many nations, and is perhaps the home of nations
-yet to arise. It may be likened to a great intermittent geyser-spring
-which, at intervals, overflows with terrific force and volume. The
-movements of population southward seem, on a review of Chinese and
-Corean history, almost as regular as a law of nature. As the conquerors
-from the central Asian plateaus have over and over again descended into
-India, as the barbarians overran the Roman empire, so out of the region
-drained by the Amur and its tributaries have burst forth, time and
-again, floods of conquest to overwhelm the rich plains of China. Or, if
-we regard the flowery and grassy lands of Manchuria and beyond as a
-great hive, full of busy life which, from the pressure of increasing
-numbers, must swarm off to relieve the old home, we shall have a true
-illustration. Time and again have clouds of human bees, with the sting
-of their swords and the honey of their new energy, issued from this
-ancient hive. The swarms receive different names in history: Hun, Turk,
-Tartar, Mongol, Manchiu, but they all emerge from the same source,
-giving or receiving dynastic names, but being in reality Tungusic
-people of the same basic stock.
-
-A tribe inhabiting one of the ravines or rich river flats of the
-Sungari region increases in wealth and numbers. A powerful chief leads
-them to war and victory. Tribes and lands are annexed. Martial valor,
-wealth, and strength increase. Ambition and the pressure of numbers
-tempt to farther conquest. Over and beyond the Great Wall is the
-ever-glittering prize—teeming China. The march begins southward. After
-many a battle, and only, it may be, after a generation of war against
-the imperial legions beyond the frontiers, the goal is reached. The
-Middle Kingdom is conquered and a new dynasty sits on the Dragon
-Throne, until long peace enervates and luxury weakens. Then out of the
-old northern seats of population rolls a new flood of conquest, and a
-new swarm of conquerors is hived off.
-
-Thus we see the original land embracing the Amur and Sungari valleys
-has had its periods of power and decay, of historical and unhistorical
-life. Unity and movement make history, disintegration and apathy cause
-the page of history to be blank. But the land is still there with the
-people and the possibilities of the future.
-
-In spite of the associations of hoary antiquity that cluster around
-Asiatic countries, the reader of history does not expect to hear of
-single empires enduring through many centuries. With the exception of
-Japan, no nation of Asia can show a dynastic line extending through a
-millennium. The empires founded by Asiatic conquerors are short-lived.
-The countries and the people remain, but the rulers constantly change,
-and the building up, flourishing, decay, and dissolution suggest the
-seasons rather than the centuries. No enduring political fabrics, like
-those of Rome or Britain, are known in Asia. Though China and India
-abide like the oak, their rulers change like the leaves. Socially,
-these countries are the symbols of petrifaction, politically they are
-as the kaleidoscope. From this law of continuous political mutation,
-Corea has not been free.
-
-In one of these epochs of historical movement, at the opening of the
-eighth century, there arose the kingdom of Puhai, the capital of which
-was the present city of Kirin. Its northern boundaries first touched
-the Sungari, and later the Amur, shifting to the Sungari again. Its
-southern border was at first the Tumen River, and later the modern
-province of Ham-kiung was included in it. Lines drawn southwardly
-through Lake Hanka on the east, and Mukden on the west, would enclose
-its longitude. Its life lasted from about 700 to 925 A.D. This kingdom
-was continually on bad terms with China, and the Tang emperors for
-nearly a century attempted to crush it into vassalage. Puhai made brave
-resistance, being aided not only by the large numbers of Koraians, who
-had fled when beaten by the Chinese across the Tumen River, but also by
-the Japanese, whose supremacy they acknowledged by payment of tribute.
-With the latter their relations were always of a peaceful and pleasant
-nature, and the correspondence and other documents of the visiting
-embassies to the mikado’s court are still preserved in Japan.
-
-Yet though Puhai was able to resist China and hold part of the old
-territory of Korai, it fell before the persistent attacks of the Kitan
-tribes, whose empire, lasting from 907 to 1125 A.D., stretched from
-west of Lake Baikal to the Pacific Ocean. In the early part of the
-tenth century this Puhai kingdom, whose age was scarcely two centuries,
-melted away again into tribes and villages, each with its chief. The
-country being without political unity returned to unhistorical
-obscurity, as part of the Kitan empire. Without crossing the Tumen, to
-enter China by way of Corea, the Kitans marched at once around the
-Ever-White Mountains and down the Liao Tung valley into China.
-
-The breaking up of Puhai was not without its influence on the Corean
-peninsula. As early as the ninth century thousands of refugees, driven
-before the Kitans or dissatisfied with nomad life on the plains,
-recrossed the Tumen and a great movement of emigration set into
-Northern Corea, which again became populous, cultivated, and rich. With
-increasing prosperity better government was desired. The worthlessness
-of the rulers and the prospect of a successful revolution tempted the
-ambition of a Buddhist monk named Kung-wo who, in 912 A.D., left his
-monastery and raised the flag of rebellion. He set forth to establish
-another political fabric of mushroom duration, which was destined to
-make way for a more permanent kingdom, and, in the end, united Corea.
-
-With his followers, Kung-wo attacked the city of Kaichow (in the modern
-Kang-wen province), and was so far successful as to enter it and
-proclaim himself king. His personal success was of short duration. His
-lieutenant, Wang-ken, that is Wang the founder, was a descendant of the
-old kingly house of Korai. During all the time of Chinese occupancy, or
-Shinra supremacy, his family had kept alive their spirit, traditions,
-and claims. Thinking he could rule better than a priest, Wang put the
-ex-monk to death and proclaimed himself the true sovereign of Korai.
-All this went on without the interference of China, which at this time
-was torn by internal disorder and the ravages of the same Kitan tribes
-that had destroyed Puhai. Wang made Ping-an and Kaichow the capitals of
-his kingdom, and resolved to take full advantage of his opportunity to
-conquer the entire peninsula and unite all its parts under his sceptre.
-
-Circumstances made this an easy task. With China passive, Shinra weak,
-through long absorption in luxury and the arts of peace, and with most
-part of the population of the peninsula of Koraian blood and descent,
-the work was easy. The whole country, from the Ever-White Mountains to
-Quelpart Island, was overrun and welded into unity. The name of Shinra
-was blotted out after a line of fifty-six kings and a life of nine
-hundred and ninety-three years. For the first time the peninsula became
-a political unit, and the name Korai, springing to life again like the
-Arabian phœnix out of its ashes, became the symbol alike of united
-Corea and of the race which peopled it. Even yet the name Korai (Gauli
-or Gori in the vernacular) is generally used by the people.
-
-The probabilities are that the people of the old Fuyu race, descendants
-of the tribes of Kokorai, as the more vigorous stock, had already so
-far supplanted the old aboriginal people inhabiting Southern Corea as
-to make conquest by Wang, who was one of their own blood, easy. This is
-shown in a series of maps representing the three kingdoms of Corea from
-201 to 655 A.D., by the Japanese scholar Otsuki Tōyō. At the former
-date the Kokorai people beyond that part of their domain conquered by
-China have occupied the land as far south as the Han River, or to the
-37th parallel. Later, Shinra, in 593, and again in 655, backed by
-Chinese armies, had regained her territory a degree or two northward,
-and in the eighth and ninth centuries, acting as the ally of China,
-ruled all the country to the Tumen River. Yet, though Shinra held the
-land, the inhabitants were the same, namely, the stock of Korai, ready
-to rise against their rulers and to annihilate Shinra in a name and
-monarchy that had in it nationality and the prestige of their ancient
-freedom and greatness.
-
-Thoroughly intent on unifying his realm, Wang chose a central location
-for the national capital. Kion-chiu, the metropolis of Shinra, was too
-far south, Ping-an, the royal seat of old Korai, was too far north; but
-one hundred miles nearer “the river” Han, was Sunto. This city, now
-called Kai-seng, is twenty-five miles from Seoul and equally near the
-sea. Wang made Sunto what it has been for over nine centuries, a
-fortified city of the first rank, the chief commercial centre of the
-country, and a seat of learning. It remained the capital until 1392
-A.D. Wang-ken or Wang, the founder of the new dynasty under which the
-people were to be governed for over four hundred years, was an ardent
-Buddhist. Spite of his having put the monk to death to further personal
-ends, he became the defender of the India faith and made it the
-official religion. Monasteries were founded and temples built in great
-numbers. To furnish revenues for the support of these, tracts of land
-were set apart as permanent endowment. The four centuries of the house
-of Korai are the palmy days of Corean Buddhism.
-
-From China, which at this time was enjoying that era of literary
-splendor, for which the Sung dynasty was noted, there came an impulse
-both to scholastic activity and to something approaching popular
-education.
-
-The Nido, or native syllabary, which had been invented by Chul-chong,
-the statesman of Shinra, now came into general use. While Chinese
-literature and the sacred books of Buddhism were studied in the
-original Sanscrit, popular works were composed in Corean and written
-out in the Nido, or vernacular syllables. The printing press, invented
-by the Sung scholars, was introduced and books were printed from cut
-blocks. The Japanese are known to have adopted printing from Corea as
-early as the twelfth century, when a work of the Buddhist canon was
-printed from wooden blocks. “A Corean book is known which dates
-authentically from the period 1317–1324, over a century before the
-earliest printed book known in Europe.” The use of metal type, made by
-moulding and casting, is not distinctly mentioned in Corea until the
-year 1420, and the invention and use of the Unmun, a true native
-alphabet, seems to belong to the same period. The eleven vowels and
-fourteen consonants serve both as an alphabet and a syllabary, the
-latter being the most ancient system, and the former an improvement on
-it.
-
-The unifier of Corea died in 945 and was succeeded by his son Wu.
-Fifteen years later the last of the five weak dynasties that had
-rapidly succeeded each other in China, fell. The Chinese emperor
-proposing, and the Corean king being willing, the latter hastened to
-send tribute, and formed an alliance of friendship with the imperial
-Sung, who swayed the destinies of China for the next 166 years
-(960–1101).
-
-Korai soon came into collision with the Kitans in the following manner.
-The royal line of united Corea traced their descent directly from the
-ancient kings of Kokorai, and therefore claimed relationship with the
-princes of Puhai. On the strength of this claim, the Koraian king
-asserted his right to the whole of Liao Tung, which had been formerly
-held by Puhai. The Kitans, having matters of greater importance to
-attend to at the time, allowed its temporary occupation by Korai
-troops. Nevertheless the king thought it best to send homage to the
-Kitan emperor, in order to get a clear title to the territory. In 1012
-he despatched an embassy acknowledging the Kitan supremacy. This verbal
-message did not satisfy the strong conqueror, who demanded that the
-Koraian king should come in person and make obeisance. The latter
-refused. A feud at once broke out between them, which led to a war, in
-which Korai was worsted and stripped of all her territory west of the
-Yalu River.
-
-Palladius has pointed out the interesting fact that a little village
-about twenty miles north of Tie-ling, and seventy miles north of
-Mukden, called Gauli-chan (Korai village) still witnesses by its name
-to its former history, and to the possession by Corea of territory west
-of the Yalu.
-
-The Kitans, not satisfied with recovering Liao Tung, crossed the river
-and invaded Korai, in 1015. By this time a new nation, under the name
-of Nüjun or Ninchi, had formed around Lake Hanka, in part of the
-territory of extinct Puhai. With their new frontagers the Koraians made
-an alliance “as solid as iron and stone,” and with their aid drove back
-the Kitan invaders.
-
-Henceforth the boundaries of Corea remained stationary, and have never
-extended beyond the limits with which the western world is familiar.
-
-An era of peace and prosperity set in, and a thriving trade sprang up
-between the Nüjun and Korai. The two nations, cemented in friendship
-through a common fear of the Kitans, grew apace in numbers and
-prosperity.
-
-The Kitans were known to Chinese authors as early as the fifth century,
-seven nomad tribes being at that time confederate under their banners.
-At the beginning of the tenth century, these wanderers had been
-transformed into hordes of disciplined cavalry. Their wealth and
-intelligence having increased by conquest, they formed a great empire
-in 925, which extended from the Altai Mountains to the Pacific Ocean,
-and from within the Great Wall to the Yablonoi Mountains, having Peking
-for one of its capitals. It flourished until the twelfth century (A.D.
-1125), when it gave way to the Kin empire, which held Mongolia and
-still more territory than the Kitans possessed within what is now China
-proper.
-
-This Kin empire was founded by the expansion of the Nüjun, who, from
-their seats north of the Tumen and east of the Sungari, had gradually
-widened, and by conquest absorbed the Kitans. Aguta, the founder of the
-new empire, gave it the name of the Golden Dominion. During its
-existence Corea was not troubled by her great neighbor, and for two
-hundred years enjoyed peace within her borders. Her commerce now
-flourished at all points of the compass, both on land, with her
-northern and western neighbors, with the Japanese on the east, and the
-Chinese south and west. Much direct intercourse in ships, guided by the
-magnetic needle, “the chariot of the south,” took place between Ningpo
-and Sunto. Mr. Edkins states that the oldest recorded instance of the
-use of the mariner’s compass is that in the Chinese historian’s account
-of the voyage of the imperial ambassador to Corea, from Nanking by way
-of Ningpo, in a fleet of eight vessels, in the year 1122.
-
-The Arabs, who about this time were also trading with the Coreans, and
-had lived in their country, soon afterward introduced this silent
-friend of the mariner into their own country in the west, whence it
-found its way into Europe and to the hands of Columbus. To the eye of
-the Corean its mysterious finger pointed to the south. To the western
-man it pointed to the lode-star.
-
-The huge wide-open eyes which the sailors of Chinese Asia paint at the
-prow of their ship, to discover a path in the sea, became more than
-ever an empty fancy before this unerring pathfinder. As useless as the
-ever-open orbs on a mummy lid, these lidless eyes were relegated to the
-domain of poetry, while the swinging needle opened new paths of science
-and discovery.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-CATHAY, ZIPANGU, AND THE MONGOLS.
-
-
-After a long breathing-spell—as one, in reading history, might call
-it—the old hive in the north was again ready to swarm. It was to be
-seen once more how useless was the Great Wall of China in keeping back
-the many-named invaders, known in history by the collective term
-Tâtars. A new people began descending from their homeland, which lay
-near the northern and eastern shores of Lake Baikal. This inland
-sea—scarcely known in the school geographies, or printed in the average
-atlas in such proportionate dimensions as to suggest a pond—is one of
-the largest lakes in the world, being 370 miles long and covering
-13,300 square miles of surface. Its shores are now inhabited by Russian
-colonists and its waters are navigated by whole fleets of ships and
-steamers. It lies 1,280 feet above the sea.
-
-Beginning their migrations from this point, in numbers and bulk that
-suggest only the snowball, the Mongol horsemen moved with resistless
-increase and momentum, consolidating into their mass tribe after tribe,
-until their horde seemed an avalanche of humanity that threatened to
-crush all civilization and engulph the whole earth. These mounted
-highlanders from the north were creatures who seemed to be horse and
-man in one being, and to actualize the old fable of the Centaurs. With
-a tiger-skin for a saddle, a thong loop with only the rider’s great toe
-thrust in it for a stirrup, a string in the horse’s lower jaw for a
-bridle, armed with spear and cimeter, these conquerors who despised
-walls went forth to level cities and slaughter all who resisted. In
-their raids they found food ever ready in the beasts they rode, for a
-reeking haunch of horse-meat, cut from the steed whose saddle had been
-emptied by arrow or accident, was usually found slung to their pommels.
-A slice of this, raw or warmed, served to sustain life for these hard
-riders, who lived all day in the saddle and at night slept with it
-wrapped around them.
-
-For a century the power of these nomads was steadily growing, before
-they emerged clearly into history and loomed up before the frontiers of
-the empire. The master mind and hand that moulded them into unity was
-Genghis Khan (1160–1227 A.D.).
-
-Who was Genghis Khan? A Japanese writer, who is also a traveller in
-Corea and China, has written in English a thesis which shows, with
-strong probability, at least, that this unifier of Asia was Gen-Ghiké,
-or Yoshitsuné. This Japanese hero, born in 1159, was the field-marshal
-of the army of the Minamoto who annihilated the Taira family. [3] In
-1189, having fled from his jealous brother, Yoritomo, he reached Yezo
-and thence crossed, it is believed, to Manchuria. His was probably the
-greatest military mind which Japan ever produced.
-
-That Yoshitsuné and Genghis Khan were one person is argued by Mr.
-Suyematz, [4] who brings a surprising array of coincidences to prove
-his thesis. These are in names, titles, ages, dates, personal
-characteristics, flags and banners, myths and traditions, nomenclature
-of families, localities and individuals, and Japanese relics, coins,
-arms, and fortresses in Manchuria. Without reaching the point of
-demonstration, it seems highly probable that this wonderful
-personality, this marvellous intellect, was of Japanese origin.
-
-Whoever this restless spirit was, it is certain that he gathered tribes
-once living in freedom like the wild waves into the unity of the
-restless sea. Out from the grassy plains of Manchuria rolled a
-tidal-wave of conquest that swept over Asia, and flung its last drops
-of spray alike over Japan, India, and Russia. Among the nations
-completely overrun and overwhelmed by the Mongol hordes was Corea.
-
-In 1206, Yezokai—the word in Japanese means Yezo Sea—the leader of the
-Mongols, at the request of his chieftains, took the name of Genghis
-Khan and proclaimed himself the ruler of an empire. He now set before
-himself the task of subduing the Kitans and absorbing their land and
-people, preparatory to the conquest of China. This was accomplished in
-less than six years. Liao Tung was invaded and, in 1213, his armies
-were inside the Great Wall. Three mighty hosts were now organized, one
-to overrun all China to Nepal and Anam, one to conquer Corea and Japan,
-and one to bear the white banners of the Mongols across Asia into
-Europe. This work, though not done in a day, was nearly completed
-before a generation passed. [5] Genghis Khan led the host that moved to
-the west. In 1218 the Corean king declared himself a vassal of Genghis.
-In 1231 the murder of a Mongol envoy in Corea was the cause of the
-first act of war. The Mongols invaded the country, captured forty of
-the principal towns, received the humiliation of the king, who had fled
-to Kang-wa Island, and began the abolition of Corean independence by
-appointing seventy-two Mongol prefects to administer the details of
-local government. The people, exasperated by the new and strange
-methods of their foreign conquerors, rose against them and murdered
-them all. This was the signal for a second and more terrible invasion.
-A great Mongol army overran the country in 1241, fought a number of
-pitched battles, defeated the king, and again imposed heavy tribute on
-their humbled vassal. In 1256 the Corean king went in person to do
-homage at the court of the conqueror of continents.
-
-In the details of the Mongol rule kindness and cruelty were blended.
-The most relentless military measures were taken to secure obedience
-after the conciliatory policy failed. By using both methods the great
-Khan kept his hold on the little peninsula, although the Coreans
-manifested a constant disposition to revolt.
-
-About this time began a brilliant half century of intercourse between
-Europe and Cathay, which has been studied and illustrated in the
-writings of Colonel H. Yule. The two Franciscan monks Carpinini and
-Rubruquis visited China, and the camps of the great Khan, between the
-years 1245 and 1253. By their graphic narratives, in which the wars of
-Genghis were described, they made the name of Cathay (from Kitai, or
-Kitan) familiar in Europe. Matteo, Nicolo, and Marco Polo, who came
-later, as representatives of the commerce which afterward flourished
-between Venice and Genoa, and Ningpo and Amoy, were but a few among
-many merchants and travellers. Embassies from the Popes and the Khan
-exchanged courtesies at Avignon and Cambaluc (Peking). Christian
-churches were established in Peking and other cities by the Franciscan
-monks. The various Europeans who have saved their own names and a few
-others from oblivion, and have left us a romantic, but in the main a
-truthful, picture of mediæval China and the Mongols, were probably only
-the scribes among a host who traded or travelled, but never told their
-story. Among the marvels of the empire of the Mongols, in which one
-might walk safely from Corea to Russia, was religious toleration. When,
-however, the Mongols of central Asia embraced the creed of Islam,
-bigotry closed the highway into Europe, and communications ceased.
-Cathay, Zipangu, and Corea again sunk from the eyes of Europe into the
-night of historic darkness.
-
-Khublai Khan having succeeded his grandfather, Genghis, and being now
-ruler of all the Asiatic mainland, resolved, in 1266, to conquer Japan.
-He wrote a letter to the mikado, but the envoys were so frightened by
-the Corean’s exaggerated account of the difficulties of reaching the
-empire in the sea, that they never sailed. Other embassies were
-despatched in 1271 and 1273, and Khublai began to prepare a mighty
-flotilla and army of invasion. One hundred of the ships were built on
-Quelpart Island. His armada, consisting of 300 vessels and 15,000 men,
-Chinese, Mongols, and Coreans, sailed to Japan and was met by the
-Japanese off the island of Iki. Owing to their valor, but more to the
-tempest that arose, the expedition was a total loss, only a few of the
-original number reaching Corea alive.
-
-Evidently desirous of conquering Japan by diplomacy, the great Khan
-despatched an embassy which reached, not the mikado’s, but only the
-shō-gun’s court in 1275. His ambassadors were accompanied by a large
-retinue from his Corean vassals. The Japanese allowed only three of the
-imposing number to go to Kamakura, twelve miles from the modern Tōkiō,
-and paid no attention to the Khan’s threatening letters. So irritated
-were the brave islanders that when another ambassador from the Khan
-arrived, in the following year, he disembarked as a prisoner and was
-escorted, bound, to Kamakura, where he was thrown into prison, kept
-during four years, and taken out only to be beheaded.
-
-Upon hearing this, Khublai began the preparation of the mightiest of
-his invading hosts. To be braved by a little island nation, when his
-sceptre ruled from the Dnieper to the Yellow Sea, was not to be thought
-of. Various fleets and contingents sailed from different ports in China
-and made rendezvous on the Corean coast. The fleet was composed of
-3,500 war junks, of large size, having on board 180,000 Chinese,
-Mongols, and Coreans. Among their engines of war were the catapults
-which the Polos had taught them to make. They set sail in the autumn of
-1281.
-
-From the very first the enterprise miscarried. The general-in-chief
-fell sick and the command devolved on a subordinate, who had no plan of
-operation. The various divisions of the force became separated. It is
-probable that the majority of them never reached the mainland of Japan.
-The Mongol and Corean contingent reached the province of Chikuzen, but
-were not allowed to make a successful landing, for the Japanese drove
-them back with sword and fire. The Chinese division, arriving later,
-was met by a terrible tempest that nearly annihilated them and
-destroyed the ships already engaged. The broken remnant of the fleet
-and armies, taking refuge on the island of Iki, were attacked by the
-Japanese and nearly all slain, imprisoned, or beheaded in cold blood.
-Only a few reached Corea to tell the tale.
-
-The “Mongol civilization,” so-called, seems to have had little
-influence on Corea. The mighty empire of Genghis soon broke into many
-fragments. The vast fabric of his government melted like a sand house
-before an incoming wave, and that wave receding left scarcely a
-sediment recognizable on the polity or social life of Corea. Marco Polo
-in his book hardly mentions the country, though describing Zipangu or
-Japan quite fully. One evil effect of their forced assistance given to
-the Mongols, was that the hatred of the Japanese and Coreans for each
-other was mutually intensified. After the Mongolian invasion begins
-that series of piratical raids on their coast and robbery of their
-vessels at sea, by Japanese adventurers, that made navigation beyond
-sight of land and ship-building among the Coreans almost a lost art.
-
-The centuries following the Mongol invasion were periods of anarchy and
-civil war in Japan, and the central government authority being weak the
-pirates could not be controlled. Building or stealing ships, bands of
-Japanese sailors or ex-soldiers put to sea, capturing Corean boats,
-junks, and surf-rafts. Landing, they harried the shores and robbed and
-murdered the defenceless people. Growing bolder, the marauders sailed
-into the Yellow Sea and landed even in China and in Liao Tung. They
-kept whole towns and cities in terror, and a chain of coast forts had
-to be built in Shan-tung to defend that province.
-
-The fire-signals which, in the old days of “the Three Kingdoms,” had
-flashed upon the headlands to warn of danger seaward, were now made a
-national service. The system was perfected so as to converge at the
-capital, Sunto, and give notice of danger from any point on the coast.
-By this means better protection against the sea-rovers was secured.
-
-All this evil experience with the piratical Japanese of the middle ages
-has left its impress on the language of the Coreans. From this period,
-perhaps even long before it, date those words of sinister omen of which
-we give but one or two examples which have the prefix wai (Japan) in
-them. A wai-kol, a huge, fierce man, of gigantic aspect, with a bad
-head, though perhaps with good heart, a kind of ogre, is a Japanese kol
-or creature. A destructive wind or typhoon is a Japanese wind. As
-western Christendom for centuries uttered their fears of the Norse
-pirates, “From the fury of the Northmen, Good Lord, deliver us,” so the
-Korai people, along the coast, for many generations offered up constant
-petition to their gods for protection against these Northmen of the
-Pacific.
-
-This chronic danger from Japanese pirates, which Korai and Chō-sen
-endured for a period nearly as extended as that of England from the
-Northmen, is one of the causes that have contributed to make the
-natives dread the sea as a path for enemies, and in Corea we see the
-strange anomaly of a people more than semi-civilized whose wretched
-boats scarcely go beyond tide-water.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-NEW CHŌ-SEN.
-
-
-It will be remembered that the first Chinese settler and civilizer of
-Corea, Ki Tsze, gave it the name of Chō-sen. Coming from violence and
-war, to a land of peace which lay eastward of his old home, Ki Tsze
-selected for his new dwelling-place a name at once expressive of its
-outward position and his own inward emotions—Chō-sen, or Morning Calm.
-
-For eleven centuries a part of Manchuria, including, as the Coreans
-believe, the northern half of the peninsula, bore this name. From the
-Christian era until the tenth century, the names of the three kingdoms,
-Shinra, Hiaksai, and Kokorai, or Korai, express the divided political
-condition of the country. On the fall of these petty states, the united
-peninsula was called Korai. Korai existed from A.D. 934 until A.D.
-1392, when the ancient name of Chō-sen was restored. Though the Coreans
-often speak of their country as Korai (Gauli, or Gori), it is as the
-English speak of Britain—with a patriotic feeling rather than for
-accuracy. Chō-sen is still the official and popular designation of the
-country. This name is at once the oldest and the newest.
-
-The first bestowal of this name on the peninsula was in poetic mood,
-and was the symbol of a peaceful triumph. The second gift of the name
-was the index of a political revolution not unaccompanied with
-bloodshed. The latter days of the dynasty founded by Wang were marked
-by licentiousness and effeminacy in the palace, and misrule in the
-country. The people hated the cruelties of their monarch, the
-thirty-second of his line, and longed for a deliverer. Such a one was
-Ni Taijo (Japanese, Ri Seiki), who was born in the region of
-Broughton’s Bay, in the Ham-kiung province. It is said of him that from
-his youth he surpassed all others in virtue, intelligence, and skill in
-manly exercises. He was especially fond of hunting with the falcon.
-
-One day, while in the woods, his favorite bird, in pursuing its quarry,
-flew so far ahead that it was lost to the sight of its master.
-Hastening after it the young man espied a shrine at the roadside into
-which he saw his hawk fly. Entering, he found within a hermit priest.
-Awed and abashed at the weird presence of the white-bearded sage, the
-lad for a moment was speechless; but the old man, addressing him, said:
-“What benefit is it for a youth of your abilities to be seeking a stray
-falcon? A throne is a richer prize. Betake yourself at once to the
-capital.”
-
-Acting upon the hint thus given him, and leaving the falcon behind,
-Taijo wended his way westward to Sunto, and entered the military
-service of the king. He soon made his mark and rapidly rose to high
-command, until he became lieutenant-general of the whole army. He
-married and reared children, and through the espousal of his daughter
-by the king, became father-in-law to his sovereign.
-
-The influence of Taijo was now immense. While with his soldierly
-abilities he won the enthusiastic regard of the army, his popularity
-with the people rested solely on his virtues. Possessed of such
-influence with the court, the soldiers, and the country at large, he
-endeavored to reform the abuse of power and to curb the cruelties of
-the king. Even to give advice to a despot is an act of bravery, but
-Taijo dared to do it again and again. The king, however, refused to
-follow the counsel of his father-in-law or to reform abuses. He thus
-daily increased the odium in which he was held by his subjects.
-
-Such was the state of affairs toward the end of the fourteenth century,
-when everything was ripe for revolution.
-
-In China, great events, destined to influence “the little kingdom,”
-were taking place. The Mongol dynasty, even after the breaking up of
-the empire founded by Genghis Khan, still held the dragon throne; but
-during the later years of their reign, when harassed by enemies at
-home, Corea was neglected and her tribute remained unpaid. A spasmodic
-attempt to resubdue the lapsed vassal, and make Corea a Mongol castle
-of refuge from impending doom, was ruined by the energy and valor of Ni
-Taijo. The would-be invaders were driven back. The last Mongol emperor
-fell in 1341, and the native Ming, or “Bright,” dynasty came into
-power, and in 1368 was firmly established.
-
-Their envoys being sent to Corea demanded pledges of vassalage. The
-king neglected, finally refused, and ordered fresh levies to be made to
-resist the impending invasion of the Chinese. In this time of gloom and
-bitterness against their own monarch, the army contained but a
-pitifully small number of men who could be depended on to fight the
-overwhelming host of the Ming veterans. Taijo, in an address to his
-followers, thus spoke to them:
-
-“Although the order from the king must be obeyed, yet the attack upon
-the Ming soldiers, with so small an army as ours, is like casting an
-egg against a rock, and no one of the army will return alive. I do not
-tell you this from any fear of death, but our king is too haughty. He
-does not heed our advice. He has ordered out the army suddenly without
-cause, paying no attention to the suffering which wives and children of
-the soldiers must undergo. This is a thing I cannot bear. Let us go
-back to the capital and the responsibility shall fall on my shoulders
-alone.”
-
-Thereupon the captains and soldiers being impressed with the purity of
-their leader’s motives, and admiring his courage, resolved to obey his
-orders and not the king’s. Arriving at Sunto, he promptly took measures
-to depose the king, who was sent to Kang-wa, the island so famous in
-modern as in ancient and mediæval history.
-
-The king’s wrath was very great, and he intrigued to avenge himself.
-His plot was made known, by one of his retainers, to Taijo, who, by a
-counter-movement, put forth the last radical measure which, in Chinese
-Asia means, for a private person, disinheritance; for a king,
-deposition; and for a royal line, extinction. This act was the removal
-of the tablets of the king’s ancestors from their shrine, and the issue
-of an order forbidding further continuance of sacrifice to them. This
-Corean and Chinese method of clapping the extinguisher upon a whole
-dynasty was no sooner ordered than duly executed.
-
-Ni Taijo was now made king, to the great delight of the people. He sent
-an embassy to Nanking to notify the Ming emperor of affairs in the
-“outpost state,” to tender his loyal vassalage, to seek the imperial
-approval of his acts, and to beg his investiture as sovereign. This was
-graciously granted. The ancient name of Chō-sen was revived, and at the
-petitioner’s request conferred upon the country by the emperor, who
-profited by this occasion to enforce upon the Coreans his calendar and
-chronology—the reception of these being in itself alone tantamount to a
-sufficient declaration of fealty. Friendship being now fully
-established with the Mings, the king of Chō-sen sent a number of
-youths, sons of his nobles, to Nanking to study in the imperial Chinese
-college.
-
-The dynasty thus established is still the reigning family in Corea,
-though the direct line came to an end in 1864. The Coreans in their
-treaty with Japan, in 1876, dated the document according to the 484th
-year of Chō-sen, reckoning from the accession of Ni Taijo to the
-throne. One of the first acts of the new dynasty was to make a change
-in the location of the national capital. The new dynasty made choice of
-the city of Han Yang, situated on the Han River, about fifty miles from
-its mouth. The king enlarged the fortifications, enclosed the city with
-a wall of masonry of great extent, extending over the adjacent hills
-and valleys. On this wall was a rampart pierced with port-holes for
-archers and over the streams were built arches of stone. He organized
-the administrative system which, with slight modification, is still in
-force at the present time. The city being well situated, soon grew in
-extent, and hence became the seoul or capital (pronounced by the
-Chinese king, as in Nanking and Peking, and the Japanese kio, as in
-Kiōto and Tōkiō). He also re-divided the kingdom into eight dō or
-provinces. This division still maintains. The names, formed each of two
-Chinese characters joined to that of dō (circuit or province), and
-approximate meanings are given below. [6] With such names of bright
-omen, “the eight provinces” entered upon an era of peace and
-flourishing prosperity. The people found out that something more than a
-change of masters was meant by the removal of the capital to a more
-central situation. Vigorous reforms were carried out, and changes were
-made, not only in political administration, but in social life, and
-even in religion. In all these the influence of the China of the Ming
-emperors is most manifest.
-
-Buddhism, which had penetrated into every part of the country, and had
-become, in a measure, at least, the religion of the state, was now set
-aside and disestablished. The Confucian ethics and the doctrines of the
-Chinese sages were not only more diligently studied and propagated
-under royal patronage, but were incorporated into the religion of the
-state. From the early part of the fifteenth century, Confucianism
-flourished until it reached the point of bigotry and intolerance; so
-that when Christianity was discovered by the magistrates to be existing
-among the people, it was put under the band of extirpation, and its
-followers thought worthy of death.
-
-Whatever may have been the motive for supplanting Buddhism, whether
-from sincere conviction of the paramount truth of the ancient ethics,
-or a desire to closely imitate the Middle Kingdom in everything, even
-in religion, or to obtain easy and great wealth by confiscating the
-monastery and temple lands, it is certain that the change was sweeping,
-radical, and thorough. All observers testify that the cult of Shaka in
-Corea is almost a shadow. On the other hand, in many cities throughout
-the land, are buildings and halls erected and maintained by the
-government, in which sit in honor the statues of Confucius and his
-greatest disciples.
-
-One great measure that tended to strengthen and make popular the new
-religious establishment, to weaken the old faith, to give strength and
-unity to the new government, to foster education and make the Corean
-literary classes what they are to-day—critical scholars in Chinese—was
-what Americans would call “civil service reform.” Appointment to office
-on the basis of merit, as shown in the literary examinations, was made
-the rule. Modelled closely upon the Chinese system, three grades of
-examinations were appointed, and three degrees settled. All candidates
-for military or civil rank and office must possess diplomas, granted by
-the royal or provincial examiners, before appointment could be made or
-salary begun. The system, which is still in vogue, is more fully
-described in the chapter on education.
-
-Among the changes in the fashion of social life, introduced under the
-Ni dynasty, was the adoption of the Ming costume. To the Chinese of
-to-day the Corean dress and coiffure, as seen in Peking, are subjects
-for curiosity and merriment. The lack of a long queue, and the very
-different cut, form, and general appearance of these eastern strangers,
-strike the eye of mandarin and street laborer alike, very much as a
-gentleman in knee-breeches, cocked hat, and peruke, or the peasant
-costumes at Castle Garden, appear to a New Yorker, stepping from the
-elevated railway, on Broadway.
-
-Yet from the fourteenth to the seventeenth century, the Chinese
-gentleman dressed like the Corean of to-day, and the mandarin of Canton
-or Nanking was as innocent of the Tartar hair-tail as is the citizen of
-Seoul. The Coreans simply adhere to the fashions prevalent during the
-Ming era. The Chinese, in the matter of garb, however loath foreigners
-may be to credit it, are more progressive than their Corean neighbors.
-
-To the house of Ni belongs also the greater honor of abolishing at
-least two cruel customs which had their roots in superstition.
-Heretofore the same rites which were so long in vogue in Japan, traces
-of which were noticed even down to the seventeenth century, held
-unchallenged sway in Corea. Ko-rai-chang, though not fully known in its
-details, was the habit of burying old men alive. In-chei was the
-offering up of human sacrifices, presumably to the gods of the
-mountains and the sea. Both of these classes of rites, at once
-superstitious and horrible, were anciently very frequent; nor was
-Buddhism able to utterly abolish them. In the latter case, they choked
-the victims to death, and then threw them into the sea. The island of
-Chansan was especially noted as the place of propitiation to the gods
-of the sea.
-
-The first successors of the founder of the house of Ni held great
-power, which they used for the good of the people, and hence enjoyed
-great popularity. The first after Taijo reigned two years, from 1398 to
-1400. Hetai-jong, who came after him, ruled eighteen years, and among
-other benefits conferred, established the Sin-mun-ko, or box for the
-reception of petitions addressed directly to the king. Into this
-coffer, complaints and prayers from the people could lawfully and
-easily be dropped. Though still kept before the gate of the royal
-palace in Seoul, it is stated that access to it is now difficult. It
-seems to exist more in name than in fact. Among the first diplomatic
-acts of King Hetai-jong was to unite with the Chinese emperor, in a
-complaint to the mikado of Japan, against the buccaneers, whom the
-authorities of the latter country were unable to control. Hence the
-remonstrance was only partially successful, and the evil, which was
-aggravated by Corean renegades acting as pilots, grew beyond all
-bounds. These rascals made a lucrative living by betraying their own
-countrymen.
-
-Siei-jong, who succeeded to the throne on the death of his father,
-Hetai-jong, enjoyed a long reign of thirty-two years, during which the
-fortifications of the capital were added to and strengthened. The
-Manchius beyond the Ever-white Mountains were then beginning to rise in
-power, and Liao Tung was disturbed by the raids of tribes from
-Mongolia, which the Ming generals were unable to suppress. When the
-fighting took place within fifty miles of her own boundary river,
-Chō-sen became alarmed, and looked to the defence of her own frontier
-and capital. In 1450, on the death of the king, who “in time of peace
-prepared for war,” Mun-jong, his son, succeeded to royal power. As
-usual on the accession of a new sovereign, a Chinese ambassador was
-despatched from Peking, which had been the Ming capital since 1614, to
-Seoul, to confer the imperial patent of investiture. This dignitary, on
-his return, wrote a book recounting his travels, under the title of
-“Memorandum concerning the Affairs of Chō-sen.” According to this
-writer, the military frontier of Corea at that time was at the Eastern
-Mountain Barrier, a few miles northwest of the present Border Gate.
-Palladius, the Russian writer, also states that, during the Ming
-dynasty, three grades of fortresses were erected on the territory
-between the Great Wall and the Yalu River, “to guard against the
-attacks of the Coreans.”
-
-It is more in accordance with the facts to suppose that the Chinese
-erected these fortifications to guard against invasion from the
-Manchius and other northern tribes that were ravaging Liao Tung, rather
-than against the Coreans. These defences did not avail to keep back the
-invasion which came a generation or two later, and “the Corean
-frontier,” which the Chinese traveller, in 1450, found much further
-west than even the present “wall of stakes,” shows that the neutral
-territory was then already established, and larger than it now is. Of
-this strip of rich forest and ginseng land, with many well-watered and
-arable valleys, once cultivated and populous, but since the fifteenth
-century desolate, we shall hear again. In Chinese atlases the space is
-blank, with not one village marked where, until the removal by the
-Chinese government of the inhabitants westward, there was a population
-of 300,000 souls. The depopulation of this large area of fertile soil
-was simply a Chinese measure of military necessity, which compelled her
-friendly ally Chō-sen, for her own safety, to post sentinels as far
-west of her boundary river as the Eastern Mountain Barrier, described
-by the imperial envoy in 1450.
-
-The century which saw America discovered in the west, was that of
-Japan’s greatest activity on the sea. On every coast within their
-reach, from Tartary to Tonquin, and from Luzon to Siam, these bold
-marauders were known and feared. The Chinese learned to bitterly regret
-the day when the magnetic needle, invented by themselves, got into the
-hands of these daring islanders. The wounded eagle that felt the shaft,
-which had been feathered from his own plumes, was not more to be pitied
-than the Chinese people that saw the Japanese craft steering across the
-Yellow Sea to ravage and ruin their cities, guided by the compass
-bought in China. They not only harried the coasts, but went far up the
-rivers. In 1523, they landed even at Ningpo, and in the fight the chief
-mandarin of the city was killed.
-
-Yet, with the exception of incursions of these pirates, Chō-sen enjoyed
-the sweets of peace, and two centuries slipped away in Morning Calm.
-The foreign vessels from Europe which first, in 1530, touched at the
-province of Bungo, in Southern Japan, may possibly have visited some
-part of the Corean shores. Between 1540 and 1546 four arrivals of
-“black ships” from Portugal, are known to have called at points in
-Japan. It was from these the Japanese learned how to make the gunpowder
-and firearms which, before the close of the century, were to be used
-with such deadly effect in Corea.
-
-Now came back to Europe accounts of China and Japan—which were found to
-be the old Kathay, and Zipangu of Polo and the Franciscans—and of
-“Coria,” which Polo had barely mentioned. It was from the Portuguese,
-that Europe first learned of this middle land between the mighty domain
-of the Mings, and the empire in the sea. Stirred by the spirit of
-adventure and enterprise, and unwilling that the Iberian peninsulars
-should gain all the glory, an English “Society for the Discovery of
-Unknown Lands” was formed in 1555. A voyage was made as far as Novaia
-Zemlia and Weigatz, but neither Corea nor Cathay was reached. Other
-attempts to find a northeast passage to India failed, and Asia remained
-uncircumnavigated until our own and Nordenskjöld’s day. The other
-attempts to discover a northwest passage to China around the imaginary
-cape, in which North America was supposed to terminate, and through the
-equally fictitious straits of Anian, resulted in the discoveries of the
-Cabots, and of Hudson and Frobisher—of the American continent from the
-Hudson River to Greenland, but the way to China lay still around
-Africa.
-
-From Japan, the only possibility of danger during these two centuries
-was likely to come. In the north, west, and south, on the main land,
-hung the banners of the Ming emperors of China, and, as the tribute
-enforced was very light, the protection of her great neighbor was worth
-to Chō-sen far more than the presents she gave. From China there was
-nothing to fear.
-
-At first the new dynasty sent ships, embassies, and presents regularly
-to Japan, which were duly received, yet not at the mikado’s palace in
-Kiōto, but at the shō-gun’s court at Kamakura, twelve miles from the
-site of the modern Japanese capital, Tōkiō. But as the Ashikaga family
-became effeminate in life, their power waned, and rival chiefs started
-up all over the country. Clan fights and chronic intestine war became
-the rule in Japan. Only small areas of territory were governed from
-Kamakura, while the mikado became the tool and prey of rival daimiōs.
-One of these petty rulers held Tsushima, and traded at a settlement on
-the Corean coast called Fusan, by means of which some intercourse was
-kept up between the two countries. The Japanese government had always
-made use of Tsushima in its communications with the Coreans, and the
-agency at Fusan was composed almost exclusively of retainers of the
-feudal lord of this island. The journey by land and sea from Seoul to
-Kamakura, often consumed two or three months, and with civil wars
-inland and piracy on the water, intercourse between the two countries
-became less and less. The last embassy from Seoul was sent in 1460, but
-after that, owing to continued intestine war, the absence of the
-Coreans was not noticed by the Ashikagas, and as the Tsushima men
-purposely kept their customers ignorant of the weakness of their rulers
-at Kamakura and Kiōto, lest the ancient vassals should cease to fear
-their old master, the Coreans remained in profound ignorance of the
-real state of affairs in Japan. As they were never summoned, so they
-never came. Giving themselves no further anxiety concerning the matter,
-they rejoiced that such disagreeable duties were no longer incumbent
-upon them. It is even said in Corean histories that their government
-took the offensive, and under the reign of the king Chung-jong
-(1506–1544) captured Tsushima and several other Japanese islands,
-formerly tributary to Corea. Whatever fraction of truth there may be in
-this assertion, it is certain that Japan afterward took ample revenge
-on the score both of neglect and of reprisal.
-
-So, under the idea that peace was to last forever, and the morning calm
-never to know an evening storm, the nation relaxed all vigilance.
-Expecting no danger from the east, the military resources were
-neglected, the army was disorganized, and the castles were allowed to
-dilapidate into ruin. The moats filled and became shallow ditches,
-choked with vegetation, the walls and ramparts crumbled piecemeal, and
-the barracks stood roofless. As peace wore sweeter charms, and as war
-seemed less and less probable, so did all soldierly duties become more
-and more irksome. The militia system was changed for the worse. The
-enrolled men, instead of being called out for muster at assigned camps,
-and trained to field duty and the actual evolutions of war, were
-allowed to assemble at local meetings to perform only holiday
-movements. The muster rolls were full of thousands of names, but off
-paper the army of Corea was a phantom. The people, dismissing all
-thought of possibility of war, gave themselves no concern, leaving the
-matter to the army officials, who drew pay as though in actual war.
-They, in turn, devoted themselves to dissipation, carousing, and
-sensual indulgence. It was while the country was in such a condition
-that the summons of Japan’s greatest conqueror came to them and the
-Coreans learned, for the first time, of the fall of Ashikaga, and the
-temper of their new master.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-EVENTS LEADING TO THE JAPANESE INVASION.
-
-
-China and Japan are to each other as England and the United States. The
-staid Chinaman looks at the lively Japanese with feelings similar to
-those of John Bull to his American “cousin.” Though as radically
-different in blood, language, and temperament as are the Germans and
-French, they are enough alike to find food for mutual jealousy. They
-discover ground for irritation in causes, which, between nations more
-distant from each other, would stir up no feeling whatever. China
-considers Japan a young, vain, and boasting stripling, whose attitude
-ought ever to be that of the pupil to the teacher, or the child to the
-father. Japan, on the contrary, considering China as an old fogy, far
-behind the age, decayed in constitution and fortune alike, and more
-than ready for the grave, resents all dictation or assumption of
-superiority. Even before their adoption of the forces of occidental
-civilization in this nineteenth century, something of this haughty
-contempt for China influenced the Japanese mind. Japan ever refused to
-become vassal or tributary to China, and the memory of one of her
-military usurpers, who accepted the honorary title of Nihon-O, or King
-of Japan, from the Chinese Emperor, is to this day loaded with
-increasing execration. It has ever been the practice of the Japanese
-court and people cheerfully to heap upon their mikado all the honors,
-titles, poetical and divine appellations which belong also to the
-Chinese emperor.
-
-To conquer or humble their mighty neighbor, to cross their slender
-swords of divine temper with the clumsy blades of the continental
-braves, has been the ambition of more than one Japanese captain. But
-Hidéyoshi alone is the one hero in Japanese annals who actually made
-the attempt.
-
-As the Mongol conquerors issuing from China had used Corea as their
-point of departure to invade Japan, so Hidéyoshi resolved to make the
-peninsula the road for his armies into China. After two centuries of
-anarchy in Japan, he followed up the work which Nobunaga had begun
-until the proudest daimiō had felt the weight of his arm, and the
-empire was at peace.
-
-Yet, although receiving homage and congratulations from his feudal
-vassals, once proud princes, Hidéyoshi was irritated that Chō-sen,
-which he, with all Japanese, held to be a tributary province, failed to
-send like greetings. Since, to the Ashikagas, she had despatched
-tribute and embassies, he was incensed that similar honors were not
-awarded to him, though, for over a century, all official relations
-between the two countries had ceased.
-
-On the 31st day of July, 1585, Hidéyoshi was made Kuambaku, or Regent,
-and to celebrate his elevation to this, the highest office to which a
-subject of the mikado’s could aspire, he shortly afterward gave a great
-feast in Kiōto, and proclaimed holiday throughout the empire. This
-feast was graced by the presence of his highest feudatories, lords, and
-captains, court nobles and palace ladies in their richest robes. Among
-others was one Yasuhiro, a retainer of the lord of Tsushima.
-Hidéyoshi’s memory had been refreshed by his having had read to him,
-from the ancient chronicles, the account of Jingu Kōgō’s conquests in
-the second century. He announced to his captains that, though Chō-sen
-was from ancient times tributary to Japan, yet of late years her envoys
-had failed to make visits or to send tribute. He then appointed
-Yasuhiro to proceed to Seoul, and remind the king and court of their
-duty.
-
-The Japanese envoy was a bluff old campaigner, very tall, and of
-commanding mien. His hair and beard had long since turned white under
-years and the hardships of war. His conduct was that of a man
-accustomed to command and to instant obedience, and to expect victory
-more by brute courage than by address. On his journey to Seoul he
-demanded the best rooms in the hotels, and annoyed even the people of
-rank and importance with haughty and strange questions. He even laughed
-at and made sarcastic remarks about the soldiers and their weapons.
-This conduct, so different from that of previous envoys, greatly
-surprised the Corean officials. Heretofore, when a Japanese officer
-came to Fusan, native troops escorted him from Fusan to Seoul,
-overawing him by their fierceness and insolence. Yasuhiro, accustomed
-to constant war under Hidéyoshi’s gourd-banner, rode calmly on his
-horse, and, amid the lines of lances drawn up as a guard of honor,
-spoke to his followers in a loud voice, telling them to watch the
-escort and note any incivility. In a certain village he joked with a
-Corean soldier about his spear, saying, with a pun, that it was too
-short and unfit for use. At this, all the Japanese laughed out loud.
-The Coreans could not understand the language, but hearing the laugh
-were angry and surprised at such boldness. At another town he insulted
-an aged official who was entertaining him, by remarking to his own men
-that his hair and that of the Japanese grew gray by years, or by war
-and manly hardships; “but what,” cried he, “has turned this man’s hair
-gray who has lived all his life amid music and dancing?” This sarcastic
-fling, at premature and sensual old age, stung the official so that he
-became speechless with rage. At the capital, credentials were presented
-and a feast given, at which female musicians sang and wine flowed.
-During the banquet, when all were well drunk, the old hero pulled out a
-gourd full of pepper seeds and began to hand them around. The
-singing-girls and servants grabbed them, and a disgraceful scuffle
-began. This was what Yasuhiro wanted. Highly disgusted at their greedy
-behavior, he returned to his quarters and poured out a tirade of abuse
-about the manners of the people, which his Corean interpreter duly
-retailed to his superiors. Yasuhiro made up his mind that the country
-was in no way prepared for invasion; the martial spirit of the people
-was very low, and the habits of dissipation and profligacy among them
-had sapped the vigor of the men.
-
-To the offensive conduct of the envoy was added the irritation produced
-by the language of Hidéyoshi’s summons; for in his letter he had used
-the imperial form of address, “we,” the plural of majesty. Yasuhiro
-asked for a reply to these letters, that he might return speedily to
-Japan. There was none given him, and the Coreans, pleading the flimsy
-excuse of the difficulty of the voyage, refused to send an embassy to
-Japan.
-
-Hidéyoshi was very angry at the utter failure of Yasuhiro’s mission. He
-argued that for an envoy to be content with such an answer was sure
-proof that he favored the Coreans. Some of Yasuhiro’s ancestors, being
-daimiōs of Tsushima, had served as envoys to Chō-sen, and had enjoyed a
-monopoly of the lucrative commerce, and even held office under the
-Corean government. Reflecting on these things, Hidéyoshi commanded
-Yasuhiro and all his family to be put to death.
-
-He then despatched a second envoy, named Yoshitoshi, himself the daimiō
-of Tsu Island, who took with him a favorite retainer, and a priest,
-named Genshō, as his secretary. They reached Seoul in safety, and,
-after the formal banquet, demanded the despatch of an envoy to Japan.
-The Corean dignitaries did not reply at once, but unofficially sent
-word, through the landlord of the hotel, that they would be glad to
-agree to the demand if the Japanese would send back the renegades who
-piloted the Japanese pirates in their raids upon the Corean coasts.
-Thereupon, Yoshitoshi despatched one of his suite to Japan. With
-amazing promptness he collected the outlaws, fourteen in number, and
-produced them in Seoul. These traitors, after confessing their crime,
-were led out by the executioners and their heads knocked off.
-Meanwhile, having tranquillized “all under Heaven” (Japan), even to
-Yezo and the Ainos, and finding nothing “within the four seas” worth
-capturing, Hidéyoshi cast his eyes southward to the little kingdom well
-named Riu Kiu, or the Sleepy Dragon without horns. The people of these
-islands, called Loo Choo, on old maps, are true Japanese in origin,
-language, and dynasty. They speak a dialect kindred to that of Satsuma,
-and their first historical ruler was Sunten, a descendant of Tamétomo,
-who fled from Japan in the twelfth century. Of the population of
-120,000 people, one-tenth were of the official class, who lived from
-the public granaries. Saving all expense in war equipment, and warding
-off danger from the two great powers between which they lay, they had
-kept the good will of either by making their country act the part of
-the ass which crouches down between two burdens. They made presents to
-both, acknowledging Japan as their father, and China as their mother.
-From early times they had sent tribute-laden junks to Ningpo, and had
-introduced the Chinese classics, and social and political customs. When
-the Ming dynasty came into power, the Chinese monarch bestowed on the
-Prince of Riu Kiu a silver seal, and a name for his country, which
-meant “hanging balls,” a reference to the fact that their island chain
-hung like a string of tassels on the skirt of China. Another of their
-ancient native names was Okinawa, or “long rope,” which stretches as a
-cable between Japan and Formosa. Sugar and rice are the chief products.
-Hidéyoshi, wishing to possess this group of isles as an ally against
-China, and acting on the principle of baiting with a sprat in order to
-catch a mackerel, sent word to Riu Kiu to pay tribute hereafter only to
-him.
-
-The young king, fearing the wrath of the mighty lord of Nippon, sent a
-priest as his envoy, and a vessel laden with tribute offerings.
-Arriving in the presence of the august parvenu, the priest found
-himself most graciously received. Hidéyoshi entered into a personal
-conversation with the bonze, and set forth the benefits of Riu Kiu’s
-adherence to Japan alone, and her ceasing to send tribute to China. At
-the same time he gave the priest clearly to understand that, willing or
-unwilling, the little kingdom was to be annexed to the mikado’s empire.
-When the priest returned to Riu Kiu and gave the information to the
-king, the latter immediately despatched a vessel to China to inform the
-government of the designs of Japan.
-
-Meanwhile, the court at Seoul, highly gratified with the action of the
-Japanese government in the matter of the renegade pilots, gave a
-banquet to the embassy. Yoshitoshi had audience of the king, who
-presented him with a horse from his own stables. An embassy was chosen
-which left Seoul, in company with Yoshitoshi and his party, and their
-musicians and servants, in April, 1590, and, after a journey and voyage
-of three months, arrived at Kiōto during the summer of 1590. At this
-time Hidéyoshi was absent in Eastern Japan, not far from the modern
-city of Tōkiō, besieging Odawara Castle and reducing “the second Hōjō”
-family to submission. Arriving at Kiōto in the autumn, he postponed
-audience with the Coreans in order to gain time for war preparations,
-for his heart was set on conquests beyond sea.
-
-Finally, after five months had passed, they were accorded an interview.
-They were allowed to ride in palanquins under the gateway of the palace
-without dismounting—a mark of deference to their high rank—all except
-nobles of highest grade being compelled to get out and walk. As usual,
-their band of musicians accompanied them.
-
-They report Hidéyoshi as a man of low appearance, but with eyes that
-shot fire through their souls. All bowed before him, but his conduct in
-general was of a very undignified character. This did not raise him in
-the estimation of his guests, who had already discovered his true
-position, which was that of a subject of the mikado, whose use of the
-imperial “we” in his letters was, in their eyes, a preposterous
-assumption of authority. They delivered the king’s letter, which was
-addressed to Hidéyoshi on terms of an equal as a Koku O (king of a
-nation, in distinction from the title of Whang Ti, by which title the
-Heavenly Ruler, or Emperor—the Mikado of Japan, or the Emperor of
-China—is addressed). The letter contained the usual commonplaces of
-friendly greeting, the names of the envoys, and a reference to the list
-of accompanying presents.
-
-The presents—spoken of in the usual terms of Oriental mock
-modesty—consisted of two ponies and fifteen falcons, with harness for
-bird and beast, rolls of silk, precious drugs, ink, paper, pens, and
-twenty magnificent tiger-skins. The interview over, Hidéyoshi wished
-the envoys to go home at once. This they declined to do, but, leaving
-Kiōto, waited at the port of Sakai. A letter to the king finally
-reached them, but couched in so insolent a tone that the ambassadors
-sent it back several times to be purged. Even in its improved form it
-was the blustering threat of a Japanese bully. All this consumed time,
-which was just what Hidéyoshi wished.
-
-Some years before this, some Portuguese trading ships had landed at the
-island of Tané, off the south of Japan. The Japanese, for the first
-time, saw Europeans and heard their unintelligible language. At first
-all attempts to understand them were in vain. A Chinese ship happened
-to arrive about the same time, on which were some sailors who knew a
-little Portuguese, and thus communications were held. The foreigners,
-being handsomely treated, gave their hosts some firearms, probably
-pistols, taught their use, and how to make powder. These “queer things,
-able to vomit thunder and lightning, and emitting an awful smell,” were
-presented to Shimadzŭ, the daimiō of Satsuma, who gave them to
-Hidéyoshi. Among the presents, made in return to Chō-sen, were several
-of these new weapons made by Japanese. They were most probably sent as
-a hint, like that of the Pequot’s offering of the arrows wrapped in
-snake-skin. With them were pheasants, stands of swords and spears,
-books, rolls of paper, and four hundred gold koban (a coin worth about
-$5.00).
-
-With the returning embassy, Hidéyoshi sent the priest and a former
-colleague of Yoshitoshi to Seoul. They were instructed to ask the king
-to assist Hidéyoshi to renew peaceful relations between Japan and
-China. These, owing to the long continued piratical invasions from
-Japan, during the anarchy of the Ashikaga, had been suspended for some
-years past.
-
-The peaceful influences of Christianity’s teachings now came between
-these two pagan nations, in the mind and person of Yoshitoshi, who had
-professed the faith of Jesus as taught by the Roman Catholic
-missionaries from Portugal, then in Japan. Be this as it may,
-Yoshitoshi, who had been in Seoul, and lived in Tsushima, being well
-acquainted with the military resources of the three countries, knew
-that war would result in ruin to Chō-sen, while, in measuring their
-swords with China, the Japanese were at fearful odds. Animated by a
-desire to prevent bloodshed, he resolved to mediate with the olive
-branch. He started on an independent mission, at his own cost, to
-persuade the Coreans to use their good offices at mediation between
-Japan and China, and thus prevent war. Arriving at Fusan, in 1591, he
-forwarded his petition to Seoul, and waited in port ten days in hopes
-of the answer he desired. But all was in vain. He received only a
-letter containing a defiant reply to his master’s bullying letter. In
-sadness he returned to Kiōto, and reported his ill-success. Surprised
-and enraged at the indifference of the Coreans, Hidéyoshi pushed on his
-war preparations with new vigor. He resolved to test to its utmost the
-military strength of Japan, in order to humble China as well as her
-vassal. Accustomed to victory under the gourd-banner in almost every
-battle during the long series of intestine wars now ended, an army of
-seasoned veterans heard joyfully the order to prepare for a campaign
-beyond sea.
-
-Hidéyoshi, during this year, nominally resigned the office of Kuambaku,
-in favor of his son, and, according to usage, took the title of Taikō,
-by which name (Taikō Sama) he is popularly known, and by which we shall
-refer to him. Among the Coreans, even of to-day, he is remembered by
-the title which still inspires their admiration and terror—Kuambaku.
-Chinese writers give a grotesque account of Hidéyoshi, one of whose
-many names they read as Ping-syew-kye. They call him “the man under a
-tree,” in reference to his early nickname of Kinomoto. He is also
-dubbed “King of Taikō.” The Jesuit missionaries speak of him in their
-letters as Quabacundono (His Lordship the Kuambaku), or by one of his
-personal names, Faxiba (Hashiba).
-
-The Coreans were now in a strait. Though under the protectorate of
-China, they had been negotiating with a foreign power. How would China
-like this? Should they keep the entire matter secret, or should they
-inform their suzerain of the intended invasion of China? They finally
-resolved upon the latter course, and despatched a courier to Peking.
-About the same time the messenger from Riu Kiu had landed, and was on
-his way with the same tidings. The Riukiuan reached Peking first, and
-the Corean arrived only to confirm the news. Yet, in spite of such
-overwhelming evidence of the designs of Japan, the colossal “tortoise”
-could, at first, scarce believe “the bee” would attempt to sting.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-THE INVASION—ON TO SEOUL.
-
-
-For the pictures of camps, fleets, the details of armory and
-commissariat, and all the pomp and circumstance that make up the bright
-side of Japanese war preparations in 1591 and 1592, we are indebted,
-not only to the Japanese writers, but to those eye witnesses and
-excellent “war correspondents,” the Portuguese missionaries then in
-Kiushiu, and especially to Friar Louis Frois. He tells us of the
-amplitude, vigor, and brilliancy of Taikō’s measures for invasion, and
-adds that the expenses therefor greatly burdened the “ethniques” or
-daimiōs who had to pay the cost. Those feudatories, whose domain
-bordered the sea, had to furnish a mighty fleet of junks, while to man
-them, the quota of every hundred houses of the fishing population was
-ten sailors.
-
-The land and naval forces assembled at Nagoya, in Hizen, now called
-Karatsu, and famous for being the chief place for the manufacture of
-Hizen porcelain. Here a superb castle was built, while huge inns or
-resting-places were erected all along the road from Kiōto. The armies
-gathered here during the war numbered 500,000 men; of whom 150,000
-formed the army of invasion, 60,000 the first reserve, while 100,000
-were set apart as Taikō’s body-guard; the remainder were sailors,
-servants, camp followers, etc.
-
-Beside the old veterans were new levies of young soldiers, and a corps
-of matchlock men, who afterward did good execution among the Coreans.
-The possession of this new and terrible weapon gave the invaders a
-mighty advantage over their enemies. Though firearms had been known and
-manufactured in Japan for a half century, this was the first time they
-were used against foreign enemies, or on a large scale. Taikō also
-endeavored to hire or buy from the Portuguese two ships of war, so as
-to use their artillery; but in this he failed, and the troops were
-despatched in native-built vessels. These made a gallant display as
-they crowded together by hundreds. At the signal, given by the firing
-of cannon, the immense fleet hoisted sail and, under a fresh breeze,
-bore away to the west.
-
-Their swelling sails, made of long sections of canvass laced together,
-vertically, at their edges, from stem to boom (thus differing from the
-Chinese, which are laced horizontally), were inscribed with immense
-crests and the heraldic devices of feudalism, many feet in diameter.
-Near the top were cross-wise bands or stripes of black. The junks of
-Satsuma could be distinguished by the white cross in a circle; those of
-Higo by the broad-banded ring. On one were two crossed arrow-feathers,
-on others the chess-board, the “cash” coin and palm-leaves, the
-butterfly, the cloisonné symbol, the sun, the fan, etc. Innumerable
-banners, gay with armorial designs or inscribed with Buddhist texts,
-hung on their staves or fluttered gaily as flags and streamers from the
-mastheads. Stuck into the back of many of the distinguished veterans,
-or officers, were the sashi-mono, or bannerets. Kato Kiyomasa, being a
-strict Buddhist, had for the distinctive blazon of his back-pennant,
-and on the banners of his division, the prayer and legend of his sect,
-the Nichirenites, “Namu miyo ho rengé kiō” (Glory to the Holy Lotus, or
-Glory to the salvation-bringing book of the Holy Law of Buddha). On the
-forward deck were ranged heavy shields of timber for the protection of
-the archers. These, at close quarters, were to be let down and used as
-boarding planks, when the sword, pike, and grappling-hook came into
-play. Huge tassels, dangling from the prows like the manes of horses,
-tossed up and down as the ships rode over the waves. Each junk had a
-huge eye painted at the prow, to look out and find the path in the sea.
-With the squadron followed hundreds of junks, laden with salt meat,
-rice-wine, dried fish, and rice and beans, which formed the staple of
-the invaders’ commissariat for man and horse. Transport junks, with
-cargoes of flints, arrows, ball, powder, wax candles, ship and camp
-stores, “not forgetting a single thing,” sailed soon after, as well as
-the craft containing horses for the cavalry.
-
-Taikō did not go to Corea himself, being dissuaded by his aged mother.
-The court also wished no weaker hand than his to hold the reins of
-government while the army was on foreign shores. The men to whom he
-entrusted the leadership of the expedition, were Konishi Yukinaga and
-Kato Kiyomasa. To the former, he presented a fine war horse, telling
-him to “gallop over the bearded savages” with it, while to the latter
-he gave a battle-flag. Konishi was an impetuous young man, only
-twenty-three years of age. He was a favorite of Taikō, and sprung like
-the latter from the common people, being the son of a medicine dealer.
-His crest or banner was a huge, stuffed, white paper bag, such as
-druggists in Japan use as a shop sign. In this he followed the example
-of his august chief, who, despising the brocade banners of the imperial
-generals, stuck a gourd on a pole for his colors. For every victory he
-added another gourd, until his immense cluster contained as many proofs
-of victory as there are bamboo sticks in an umbrella. The
-“gourd-banner” became the emblem of infallible victory. Konishi also
-imitated his master in his tactics—impetuous attack and close following
-up of victory.
-
-Konishi was a Christian, an ardent convert to the faith of the Jesuit
-fathers, by whom he had been baptized in 1584. In their writings, they
-call him “Don Austin”—a contraction of Augustine. Other Christian lords
-or daimiōs, who personally led their troops in the field with Konishi,
-were Arima, Omura, Amakusa, Bungo, and Tsushima. The personal name of
-the latter, a former envoy to Corea, of whom we have read before, was
-Yoshitoshi. He was the son-in-law of Konishi. Kuroda, as Mr. Ernest
-Satow has shown, is the “Kondera” of the Jesuit writers.
-
-Kato Kiyomasa was a noble, whose castle seat was at Kumamoto in Higo.
-From his youth he had been trained to war, and had a reputation for
-fierce bravery. It is said that Kato suggested to Taikō the plan of
-invading Corea. His crest was a broad-banded circle, and his favorite
-weapon was a long lance with but one cross-blade instead of two. Kato
-is the “Toronosqui” of the Jesuit fathers, who never weary of loading
-his memory with obloquy. This “vir ter execrandus” was a fierce
-Buddhist and a bitter foe to Christianity. A large number of fresh
-autographic writings had been made by the bonzes in the monasteries
-expressly for Kato’s division. The silk pennon, said to have been
-inscribed by Nichiren himself and worn by Kato during the invasion, is
-now in Tōkiō, owned by Katsu Awa, and is six centuries old.
-
-With such elements at work between the two commanders, bitterness of
-religious rivalry, personal emulation, the desire to earn glory each
-for himself alone, the contempt of an old veteran for a young aspirant,
-harmony and unity of plan were not to be looked for. Nevertheless, the
-personal qualities of each general were such as to inspire his own
-troops with the highest enthusiasm, and the army sailed away fully
-confident of victory.
-
-What were the objects of Taikō in making this war? Evidently his
-original thought was to invade and humble China. Then followed the
-determination to conquer Chō-sen. Ambition may have led him to rival
-Ojin Tennō, who, in his mother’s womb, made the conquest of Shinra,
-and, as the deified Hachiman, became the Japanese god of war. Lastly,
-the Jesuit fathers saw in this expedition a plot to kill off the
-Christian leaders in a foreign land, and thus extirpate Christianity in
-Japan. To ship the Christians off to a foreign soil to die of wounds or
-disease, was easier than to massacre them. They make Taikō a David, and
-his best generals Uriahs—though Coligny, slain twenty years before,
-might have served for a more modern illustration.
-
-Certain it is that it was during the absence of the Christian leaders
-that the severest persecutions at home took place. It is probable,
-also, that his jealousy of the success and consequent popularity of the
-Christian generals created irresolution in Taikō’s mind, leading him to
-neglect the proper support of the expedition and thus to bring about a
-gigantic failure.
-
-Finally, we must mention the theory of a Japanese friend, Mr. Egi
-Takato, who held that Taikō, having whole armies of unemployed
-warriors, all jealous of each other, was compelled, in order to ensure
-peace in Japan, to find employment for their swords. His idea was to
-send them on this distant “frontier service,” and give them such a
-taste of home-sickness that peaceful life in Japan would be a
-desideratum ever afterward.
-
-The Coreans, by their own acknowledgment, were poorly prepared for a
-war with the finest soldiers in Asia, as the Japanese of the sixteenth
-century certainly were. Nor had they any leader of ability to direct
-their efforts. Their king, Sien-jo, the fifteenth of the house of Ni,
-who had already reigned twenty-six years, was a man of no personal
-importance, addicted entirely to his own pleasures, a drunkard, and a
-debauchee. Though the royal proclamation was speedily issued, calling
-on the people to fortify their cities, to rebuild the dilapidated
-castles, and to dig out the moats, long since choked by mud and
-vegetation, the people responded so slowly, that few of the fortresses
-were found in order when their enemies laid siege to them. Weapons were
-plentiful, but there were no firearms, save those presented as
-curiosities by the Taikō to the king. There was little or no military
-organization, except on paper, while the naval defences were in a sad
-plight. However, they began to enroll and drill, to lay up stores of
-fish and grain for the army, to build ships, to repair their walls, and
-even to manufacture rude firearms.
-
-Yet even the most despondent of the Coreans never dreamed that the
-Japanese, on their first arrival, would sweep everything before them
-like a whirlwind, and enter the capital within eighteen days after
-their landing at Fusan. One of the first castles garrisoned and
-provisioned was that of Tong-nai, near Fusan. On the morning of May 25,
-1592, the sentinels on the coast descried the Japanese fleet of eight
-hundred ships, containing the division of Konishi. Before night the
-invaders had disembarked, captured Fusan, and laid siege to Tong-nai
-Castle, which at once surrendered. So sudden was the attack that the
-governor of the district, then in the city, was unable to escape.
-Konishi, writing a letter to the king, gave it into the hands of the
-governor, and made him swear to deliver it safely, promising him
-unconditional liberty if he did so. The governor agreed, and at once
-set out for Seoul; but on reaching it he simply said he had escaped,
-and made no mention of the letter. His perjury was not to remain
-undetected, as later events proved. Without an hour’s delay Konishi’s
-division, leaving Tong-nai, marched up the Nak-tong valley to
-Shang-chiu.
-
-Kato’s division, delayed by a storm, arrived next day. Landing
-immediately, he saw with chagrin the pennons of his rival flying from
-the ramparts of Tong-nai. Angry at being left behind by “the boy,” he
-took the more northerly of the two routes to the capital. The two rival
-armies were now straining every nerve on a race to Seoul, each eager to
-destroy all enemies on the march, and reach the royal palace first.
-Kuroda and other generals led expeditions into the southern provinces
-of Chulla and Chung-chong. These provinces being subdued, and the
-castles garrisoned, they were to make their way to the capital.
-
-The Coreans proved themselves especially good bowmen, but inexpert at
-other weapons, their swords being of iron only, short, clumsy, and
-easily bent. Their spears, or rather pikes, were shorter than the
-Japanese, with heavy blades, from the base of which hung tassels. The
-iron heads were hollow at the base, forming a socket, in which the
-staff fitted. The Japanese spearheads, on the contrary, were riveted
-down and into the wood, which was iron-banded for further security,
-making a weapon less likely to get out of order, while the blades were
-steel-edged. The Corean cavalry had heavy, three-pronged spears, which
-were extremely formidable to look at, but being so heavy as to be
-unwieldly at close quarters, they did little execution. Many of their
-suits of armor were handsomely inlaid, made of iron and leather, but
-less flexible and more vulnerable than those of the Japanese, which
-were of interlaced silk and steel on a background of tough buckskin,
-with sleeves of chain mail. The foot soldiers on either side were
-incased in a combination of iron chain and plate armor, but the Coreans
-had no glaves, or cross-blades on their pikes, and thus were nearly
-helpless against their enemy’s cavalry. The Japanese were
-smooth-shaven, and wore stout helmets, with ear-guards and visors, but
-the Coreans, with open helmets, without visors, and whiskered faces,
-were dubbed “hairy barbarians.” They were beginning to learn the use of
-powder, which, however, was so badly mixed as to be exasperatingly slow
-in burning. Their very few firearms were of the rudest and most
-cumbrous sort. They used on their ramparts a kind of wooden cannon,
-made of bamboo-hooped timber, from which they shot heavy wooden darts,
-three feet long, pointed with sharp-bladed, Y-shaped iron heads. The
-range of these clumsy missiles was very short. The Japanese, on the
-contrary, had at several sieges pieces of light brass ordnance, with
-which they quickly cleared the walls of the castles, and then scaled
-them with long and light ladders, made of bamboo, and easily borne by
-men on a run. The Japanese were not only better equipped, but their
-tactics were superior. Their firearms frightened the Corean horses, and
-the long spears and halberds of their cavalry were used with fearful
-effect while pursuing the fugitives, who were pierced or pulled off
-their steeds, or sabred in droves. Few bodies of native troops faced
-the invaders in the field, while fire-arrows, gunpowder, and ladders
-quickly reduced the castles. Not a few of the Corean officers were
-killed inside their fortresses by the long range fire of the
-sharp-shooters in the matchlock corps.
-
-The greater share of glory fell to Konishi, the younger man. Taking the
-southern route, he reached the castle of Shang-chiu, in the
-northwestern part of Kiung-sang, and captured it. Leaving a garrison,
-he pushed on to Chiun-chiu. This fortress of Chiun-chiu is situated in
-the northeastern part of Chung-chong province, and on the most
-northerly of the two roads, over which Kato was then marching. It was
-at that time considered to be the strongest castle in the peninsula. On
-it rested the fate of the capital. It lay near one of the branches of
-the Han River, which flows past Seoul. At this point the two high roads
-to the capital, on which the two rivals were moving, converged so as to
-nearly touch. Chiun-chiu castle lay properly on Kato’s route, but
-Konishi, being in the advance, invested it with his forces and, after a
-few days’ siege, captured the great stronghold. The loss of the Coreans
-thus far in the three fortresses seized by Konishi, as reported by
-Friar Frois, was 5,000 men, 3,000 of whom fell at Chiun-chiu; while the
-Japanese had lost but 100 killed and 400 wounded. After such a victory,
-“Konishi determined to conquer all Corea by himself.”
-
-Kato and his army, arriving a few days after the victory, again saw
-themselves outstripped. Konishi’s pennons floated from every tower, and
-the booty was already disposed of. The goal of both armies was now “the
-Miaco of the kingly city of Coray.” Straining every nerve, Kato pressed
-forward so rapidly that the two divisions of the Japanese army entered
-Seoul by different gates on the same day. No resistance was offered, as
-the king, court, and army had evacuated the city three days before. The
-brilliant pageant of the Japanese army, in magnificent array of gay
-silk and glittering armor, was lost on the empty streets of deserted
-Seoul.
-
-When Taikō heard of the success of his lieutenants in Corea, especially
-of Konishi’s exploits, he was filled with joy, and cried out, “Now my
-own son seems risen from the dead.”
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-THE CAMPAIGN IN THE NORTH.
-
-
-The court at Seoul had been too much paralyzed by the sudden invasion
-to think of or carry out any effective means of resistance. Konishi had
-sent letters from Fusan and Shang-chiu, but these, through official
-faithlessness and the accidents of war, had failed in their purpose.
-Konishi was too fast for them. When the news reached Seoul, of the fall
-of Chiun-chiu castle, the whole populace, from palace to hut, was
-seized with a panic which, in a few hours, emptied the city. The
-soldiers deserted their post, and the courtiers their king, while the
-people fled to the mountains. His Majesty resolved to go with his court
-into Liao Tung, but to send the royal princes into the northern
-provinces, that the people might realize the true state of affairs. So
-hurried were the preparations for flight, which began June 9th, that no
-food was provided for the journey. The only horses to be obtained were
-farm and pack animals, as the royal stables had been emptied by the
-runaway soldiers. The rain fell heavily, in perpendicular streams, soon
-turning the roads to mire, and drenching the women and children. The
-Corean dress, in wet weather, is cold and uncomfortable, and when
-soaked through, becomes extremely heavy, making a foot journey a severe
-tax on the strength. To add to the distress of the king, as the cortege
-passed, the people along the road clamored, with bitter tears, that
-they were being abandoned to the enemy. Tortured with hunger and
-fatigue, the wretched party floundered on.
-
-Their first day’s journey was to Sunto, or Kai Seng, thirty miles
-distant. Darkness fell upon them long before they reached the Rin-yin
-River, a tributary of the Han, which joins it a few miles above Kang-wa
-Island. The city lay beyond it, and the crossing of the stream was done
-in the light of the conflagration kindled behind them. The king had
-ordered the torch to be applied to the barracks and fortifications
-which guarded the southern bank of the river. Another motive for this
-incendiary act was to deprive their pursuers of ready materials to
-ferry themselves across the river. It was not until near midnight that
-the miserable fugitives, tortured with hunger and almost dead with
-fatigue, entered the city. Though feeling safe for the moment, since
-the Japanese pursuers could not cross the river without boats or rafts,
-most of the king’s household were doomed still to suffer the pangs of
-hunger. The soldiers had stolen the food provided for the party, and
-the king had a scant supper, while his household remained hungry until
-the next day, when some of the military gave them a little rice. The
-march was resumed on the following morning and kept up until Ping-an
-was reached. Here they halted to await the progress of events.
-
-The king ordered his scattered forces to rally at the Rin-yin River,
-and, on its northern bank, to make a determined stand.
-
-Kato and Konishi, remaining but a short time in the capital, united
-their divisions and pressed forward to the north. Reaching the Rin-yin
-River, they found the Corean junks drawn up on the opposite side in
-battle array. The Japanese, being without boats, could not cross, and
-waited vainly during several days for something to turn up. Finally
-they began a feigned retreat. This induced a portion of the Corean army
-to cross the river, when the Japanese turned upon them and cut them
-down with terrible slaughter. With the few rafts and boats used by the
-enemy, the Japanese matchlock men rapidly crossed the stream, shot down
-the sailors and the remaining soldiers in the junks, and thus secured
-the fleet by which the whole army crossed and began the march on
-Ping-an.
-
-The rival Japanese commanders, Kato and Konishi, who had hitherto
-refrained from open quarrel, now found it impossible to remain longer
-together, and drew lots to decide their future fields of action in the
-two northern provinces. Ham-kiung fell to Kato, who immediately marched
-eastward with his division, taking the high road leading to Gensan.
-Konishi, to whom the province of Ping-an fell, pushed on to Ping-an
-City, arriving on the south bank of the river toward the end of July,
-or about three weeks after leaving Seoul. Here he went into camp, to
-await the reinforcements under Kuroda and Yoshitoshi. These soon
-afterward arrived, having traversed the four provinces bordering on the
-Yellow Sea.
-
-The great need of the Japanese was floating material; next to this,
-their object was to discover the fords of the river. On July 20th they
-made a demonstration against the fleet of junks along the front of the
-city, by sending out a few detachments of matchlock men on rafts.
-Though unsuccessful, the Corean king was so frightened that he fled
-with his suite to Ai-chiu. The garrison still remained alert and
-defiant.
-
-Delay made the Japanese less vigilant. The Corean commanders, noticing
-this, planned to surprise their enemy by a night attack. Owing to bad
-management and delay, the various detachments did not assemble on the
-opposite side of the river until near daylight. Then forming, they
-charged furiously upon Konishi’s camp, and, taking his men by surprise,
-carried off hundreds of prisoners and horses, the cavalry suffering
-worse than the infantry. Kuroda’s division came gallantly to their
-support, and drove the Coreans back to the river. By this time it was
-broad daylight, and the cowardly boat-keepers, frightened at the rout
-of their countrymen, had pushed off into mid-stream. Hundreds of the
-Coreans were drowned, and the main body, left in the lurch, were
-obliged to cross by the fords. This move gave the Japanese the
-possession of the coveted secret. Flushed with victory, the entire army
-crossed over later on the same day and entered the city. Dispirited by
-their defeat, the garrison fled, after flinging their weapons into the
-castle moats and ditches of the city; but all the magazines of grain,
-dried fish, etc., were now in the hands of the invaders. Frois reports,
-from hearsay, that 80,000 Coreans made the attack on Konishi’s camp,
-8,000 of whom were slain.
-
-The news of the fall of Ping-an City utterly demoralized the Coreans,
-so that, horses being still numerous, the courtiers deserted the king,
-and the villagers everywhere looted the stores of food provided for the
-army. Many of the fugitives did not cease their flight until they had
-crossed the Yalu River, and found themselves on Chinese territory.
-These bore to the Governor of Liao Tung province, who had been an
-anxious observer of events, the news of the fall of Ping-an, and the
-irresistible character of the invasion. The main body of the Corean
-army went into camp at Sun-an, between An-ton and Sun-chon. In Japan,
-there was great rejoicing at the news received from the frontier,
-because, as Frois wrote, Konishi, “in twenty days, hath subdued so
-mighty a kingdom to the crown of Japan.” Taikō sent the brilliant young
-commander a two-edged sword and a horse—“pledges of the most peerless
-honor that can possibly be done to a man.”
-
-The Japanese soldiers felt so elated over their victory that they
-expected immediate orders to march into China. With this purpose in
-view, Konishi sent word to the fleet at Fusan to sail round the western
-coast, into Ta-tong River, in order to co-operate with the victorious
-forces at Ping-an. Had this junction taken place, it is probable China
-would have been invaded by Japanese armies, and a general war between
-these rival nations might have turned the current of Asiatic history.
-This, however, was not to be. Corean valor, with the aid of gunpowder
-and improved naval construction, prevented this, and kept three hundred
-miles of distance, in a mountainous country, between the Japanese and
-their base of supplies.
-
-Oriental rhetoric might describe the situation in this wise: the
-eastern dragon of invasion flew across the sea in winged ships, and
-speedily won the crystal of victory. But on land the dragon must go
-upon its belly. The Corean navy snatched the jewel from the very claws
-of the dragon, and left it writhing and hungry.
-
-In cool western phrase, sinister, but significant, Konishi was soon
-afterward obliged to “make a change of base.” The brilliant success of
-the army seems to have impressed the Japanese naval men with the idea
-that there was nothing for them to do. On the contrary, the Chō-sen
-people set to work to improve the architecture of their vessels by
-having them double-decked. They also provided for the safety of their
-fighting men, by making heavy bulwarks, and rearing, along the upper
-deck, a line of strong planks, set edgewise, and bolted together.
-Behind these, archers discharged their missiles without danger, while
-from port-holes below they fired their rude, but effective, cannon.
-Appearing off the inlet, in which the Japanese fleet lay at anchor,
-they at first feigned retreat, and thus enticed their enemies into
-pursuit. When well out on the open sea, they turned upon their
-pursuers, and then their superior preparation and equipment were
-evident at once.
-
-Lively fighting began, but this time the Coreans seemed invulnerable.
-They not only gained the advantage by the greater length of their
-lances and grappling-hooks, with which, using them like long forks,
-they pulled their enemies into the sea, but they sunk a number of the
-Japanese junks, either by their artillery or by ramming them with their
-prows. The remnant of the beaten fleet crept back to Fusan, and all
-hope of helping the army was given up. The moral effect of the victory
-upon the Corean people was to inspire them to sacrifice and resistance,
-and in many skirmishes they gained the advantage. They now awaited
-hopefully the approach of Chinese reinforcements.
-
-To the Chinese it seemed incredible that the capture of the strongest
-castles, the capital, and the chief northern city, could be
-accomplished without the treasonable connivance of the Coreans. In
-order to satisfy his own mind, the Chinese mandarin sent a special
-agent into Corea to examine and report. The government at Peking were
-even more suspicious, but after some hesitation, they despatched, not
-without misgiving, a small body of Chinese soldiers to act as a
-body-guard to the Corean king. These braves crossed the frontier; but
-while on their way to Ping-an, heard of the fall of the city, and,
-facing about, marched back into Liao Tung. The king and the fragments
-of his court now sent courier after courier with piteous appeals to
-Peking for aid, even offering to become the subjects of China in return
-for succor rendered. A force of 5,000 men was hastily recruited in Liao
-Tung, who marched rapidly into Corea. Early in August the Japanese
-pickets first descried the yellow silk banners of the Chinese host.
-These were inscribed with the two characters Tai-Ming (Great
-Brightness), the distinctive blazon of the Ming dynasty. For the first
-time, in eight centuries, the armies of the rival nations were to meet
-in pitched battle.
-
-The Chinese seemed confident of success, and moved to the attack on
-Ping-an with neither wariness nor fear. Having invested the city, they
-began the assault on August 27th. The Japanese allowed them to enter
-the city and become entangled in its narrow lanes. They then attacked
-them from advantageous positions, which they had occupied previously,
-assailing them with showers of arrows, and charging them with their
-long lances. One body of the Ming soldiers attempted to scale the wall
-of a part of the fortifications, which seemed to have been neglected by
-the Japanese, when near the top, the whole face of the castle being
-covered with climbing men, the garrison, rushing from their
-hiding-places, tumbled over or speared their enemies, who fell down and
-into the mass of their comrades below. Those not killed by thrusts or
-the fall, were shot by the gunners on the ramparts, and the Chinese now
-received into their bosoms a shower of lead, against which their armor
-of hide and iron was of slight avail. In this fight the Ming commander
-was slain. The rout of the Chinese army was so complete, that the
-fugitives never ceased their retreat until safely over the border, and
-into China.
-
-The government at Peking now began to understand the power of the enemy
-with whom they had to deal. An army of 40,000 men was raised to meet
-the invaders, and, in order to gain time, a man, named Chin Ikei, was
-sent, independently of the Coreans, to treat with Konishi and propose
-peace. Some years before the Japanese pirates had carried off a
-Chinaman to Japan, where he was kept captive for many years. Returning
-to China, he made the acquaintance of Chin Ikei, and gave him much
-information concerning the country and people of his captivity. Chin
-Ikei was evidently a mercenary adventurer, who could talk Japanese, and
-hoped for honors and promotion by acting as a go-between. He had no
-commission or any real authority. The Chinese seem to have used him
-only as a cat’s-paw.
-
-Arriving at the Corean camp, at Sun-an, early in October, and fully
-trusting the honor of the Japanese commander, Chin Ikei ventured, in
-spite of the warnings of the frightened Coreans, and to their intense
-admiration, within the Japanese lines, and had a conference with
-Konishi, Yoshitoshi, and Genshō. The Chinese agent agreed to proceed to
-Peking, and, returning to Ping-an after fifty days, to report the
-approval or disapproval of his government. To this Konishi agreed, and
-there was a truce. The conditions of peace, insisted on by Konishi,
-were that the Japanese ancient territory in the peninsula, namely,
-those portions covered by the old states of Shinra and Hiaksai, should
-be delivered over to Japan, to be held as vassal provinces. This demand
-virtually claimed all Corea south of the Ta-tong River, in right of
-ancient possession and recent conquest and occupation.
-
-Arriving in Peking, Chin Ikei found the Chinese army nearly ready to
-march, and, as their government disowned his right to treat with the
-Japanese, nothing, except the time gained for the Chinese, resulted
-from the negotiations. Meanwhile Kato Kiyomasa, with his troops, had
-overran the whole extent of Ham-kiung, the longest and largest province
-of Corea, occupying also parts of Kang-wen. No great pitched battle in
-force was fought, but much hard fighting took place, and many castles
-were taken after bloody sieges. In one of these, the two royal princes,
-sent north by their father on his flight from Seoul, and many men of
-rank were captured. Among his prisoners, was “a young girl reputed to
-be the most beautiful in the whole kingdom.” In the pursuit of the
-fugitives the Japanese were often led into wild and lonely regions and
-into the depths of trackless mountains and forests, in which they met,
-not only human foes, but faced the tiger disturbed from his lair. They
-were often obliged to camp in places where these courageous beasts
-attacked the sentries or the sleeping soldiers. Kato himself slew a
-tiger with his lance, after a desperate struggle. After a hard
-campaign, the main body of the troops fixed their camp at Am-pen, near
-Gensan, but closer to the southern border of the province. Nabéshima’s
-camp was in Kang-wen, three days’ journey distant. From a point on the
-sea-coast near by, in fair weather, the island cone of Dagelet is
-visible. To the question of Kato, some Corean prisoners falsely
-answered that this was Fujiyama—the worshipped mountain of the
-home-land, and “the thing of beauty and a joy forever” to the Japanese
-people. Immediately the Japanese reverently uncovered their heads and,
-kneeling on the strand, gazed long and lovingly with homesick hearts—a
-scene often portrayed in Japanese decorative art.
-
-Thus the year 1592 drew near its close; the Japanese, necessarily
-inactive, and the spirit of patriotism among the Coreans rising.
-Collecting local volunteer troops and forming guerilla bands, they kept
-the Japanese camps, along the road from Fusan to Ping-an, constantly
-vigilant They ferreted out the spies who had kept the Japanese informed
-of what was going on, and promptly cut off their heads. Isolated from
-all communication, Konishi remained in ignorance of the immense Chinese
-army that was marching against him. The discovery, by the Japanese, of
-the existence of the regular Chinese troops in Corea, was wholly a
-matter of accident. According to Chinese report, the commander of the
-Ming army, Li-yu-son (Japanese, Ri Jo Shō), was a valiant hero fresh
-from mighty victories over the rising Manchiu tribes in the north. The
-march of his host of 60,000 men through Liao Tung in winter, especially
-over the mountain passes, was a severe one, and the horses are said to
-have sweated blood. Evidently the expectation of the leader was to
-drive out the invaders and annex the country to China. When the Corean
-mountains appeared, as they reached the Yalu River, the leader cried
-out, “There is the place which it depends on our valor to recover as
-our hereditary possessions.” On the sixth day, after crossing the
-frontier, he arrived at Sun-an. It was then near the last of January,
-1592, and the New Year was close at hand. Word was sent to Konishi that
-Chin Ikei had arrived and was ready to reopen negotiations, with a
-favorable reply. Konishi promptly despatched a captain, with a guard of
-twenty men, to meet Chin Ikei and escort him within the lines. It being
-New Year’s Day, February 2, 1593, the guard sallied out amid the
-rejoicings of their comrades who, tired of desolate Chō-sen, longed for
-peace and home. The treacherous Chinamen received the Japanese with
-apparent cordiality, and feasted them until they were well drunk. Then
-the unsuspicious Japanese were set upon while their swords were undrawn
-in their scabbards. All were killed except two or three. According to
-another account, they fell into an ambuscade, and fought so bravely
-that only three were taken alive. From the survivors Konishi first
-learned of the presence of the Ming army. The pretext, afterward given
-by the lying Chinaman, was that the interpreters misunderstood each
-other, and began a quarrel. The gravity of the situation was now
-apparent. A Chinese army, of whose numbers the Japanese were ignorant,
-menaced them in front, while all around them the natives were gathering
-in numbers and in courage to renew the struggle for their homes and
-country. The new army from China was evidently well equipped,
-disciplined, and supplied, while the Japanese forces were far in an
-enemy’s country, distant from their base of supplies, and with a
-desolate territory in the rear. Under this gloomy aspect of affairs,
-the faces of the soldiers wore a dispirited air.
-
-Konishi’s alternative lay between the risk of a battle and retreat to
-Kai-seng. He was not long in resolving on the former course, for, in
-six days afterward, the Ming host, gay with gleaming arms, bright
-trappings, and dragon-bordered silk banners, appeared within sight of
-the city’s towers. Konishi anxiously watched their approach, having
-posted his little force to the best advantage. The city was defended on
-the west by a steep mountainous ridge, on the north by a hill, and on
-the south by a river. The Japanese occupying the rising ground to the
-north, which they had fortified by earthworks and palisades.
-
-At break of day, on February 10th, the allies began a furious assault
-along the whole line. The Japanese at first drove back their besiegers
-with their musketry fire, but the Chinese, with their scaling ladders,
-reached the inside of the works, where their numbers told. When night
-fell on the second day of the siege, all the outworks were in their
-possession, and nearly two thousand of the Japanese lay dead. The
-citadel seemed now an easy prize to the Corean generals; but the
-Chinese commander, seeing that the Japanese were preparing to defend it
-to the last, and that his own men were exhausted, gave the order to
-return to camp, expecting to renew the attack next morning.
-
-Konishi had despatched a courier to Otomo, the Japanese officer in
-command at Hozan, a small fortress in Whang-hai, to come to his aid. So
-far from obeying, the latter, frightened at the exaggerated reports of
-the numbers of the Chinese, evacuated his post and marched back to
-Seoul. Unable to obtain succor from the other garrisons, and having
-lost many men by battle and disease, while many more were disabled by
-wounds and sickness, Konishi gave orders to retreat. One of his bravest
-captains was put in command of the rear-guard, and the castle was
-silently deserted at midnight. In this masterly retreat, little was
-left behind but corpses. Crossing, upon the ice, the river, which was
-then frozen many feet in thickness, their foes were soon left behind.
-Next day the allied army, surprised at seeing no enemy to meet them,
-entered the castle, finding neither man nor spoil of any kind. The
-Coreans wished to pursue their enemy, but the Chinese commander, not
-only forbade it, but glad of a pretext by which he could shift the
-blame on some other person, cashiered the Corean general for allowing
-the Japanese to escape so easily. Konishi, without stopping at
-Kai-seng, was thus enabled to reach Seoul, now the headquarters of all
-the invading forces. Fully expecting the early advance of the Chinese,
-the men were now set to work in fortifying the city.
-
-In the flush of success, Li-yu-sung, the Ming commander, sent an envoy
-with a haughty summons of surrender to Kato and Nabéshima. To this Kato
-answered in a tone of defiance, guarded his noble prisoners more
-vigilantly, and with his own hand, in sight of the envoy, put the
-beautiful Corean girl to death, by transfixing her, with a spear, from
-waist to shoulder, while bound to a tree. He immediately sent
-reinforcements to the castle of Kié-chiu, then threatened by the enemy.
-
-The Corean patriots, who organized small detachments of troops, began
-to attack or repel the invaders in several places, and even to lay
-siege to castles occupied by Japanese wherever they suspected the
-garrison was weak. The possession of a few firearms and even rude
-artillery made them very daring. They compelled the evacuation of one
-fortress held by Kato’s men by the following means. A Corean, named
-Richosun, says a Japanese author, invented bombs, or shin-ten-rai
-(literally, heaven-shaking thunder), containing poison. Going secretly
-to the foot of the castle, he discharged the bombs out of a cannon into
-the castle. As soon as they fell or touched anything they burst and
-emitted poisonous gas, and every one within reach fell dead. The first
-of these balls fell into the garden of the castle, and the Japanese
-soldiers did not know what it was. They gathered around to examine it,
-and while doing so, the powder in the ball exploded. The report shook
-heaven and earth. The ball was rent into a thousand pieces, which
-scattered like stars. Every man that was hit instantly fell, and thus
-more than thirty men were killed. Even those who were not struck fell
-down stunned, and the soldiers lost their courage. Many balls were
-afterward thrown in, which finally compelled the evacuation of the
-castle.
-
-From the above account it seems that the Coreans actually invented
-bombs similar to the modern iron shells. They may have been fired from
-a heavy wooden cannon, a sort of howitzer, made by boring out a section
-of tree trunk and hooping it along its whole length with stout bamboo.
-Such cannon are often used in Japan. They will shoot a ten or twenty
-pound rocket or case of fireworks many hundred feet in the air. The
-Corean most probably selected a spot so distant from the castle that a
-sortie for its capture could not be successfully made. Corean gunpowder
-is proverbially slow in burning, which accounts for the fact that the
-Japanese had time to gather round it. The bomb was most probably a thin
-shell of iron, loaded only with gunpowder, which, like the Chinese
-mixture, contains an excess of sulphur. The military customs of the
-Japanese required every man disabled by a wound to commit hara-kiri, so
-that the number of actual deaths must have been swelled by the suicides
-that followed wounds inflicted by the iron fragments. The Japanese were
-so completely demoralized that they evacuated the castle.
-
-Two other castles at Kinzan and Kishiu, being beleagured by the
-patriots, Kato started to succor the slender garrisons. The Coreans,
-hearing this, redoubled their efforts to capture them before Kato
-should arrive. They had so far succeeded that the Japanese officer in
-the citadel, having lost nearly all his men, went into the keep, or
-fireproof storehouse, in the centre of the castle, and opened his
-bowels, preferring to die by his own hands rather than allow a Corean
-the satisfaction of killing him. Just at that moment the black rings of
-Kato’s banners appeared in sight. The Coreans, setting the castle on
-fire, and giving loud yells of defiance and victory, disappeared.
-
-Kato and Nabéshima had received an urgent message from Seoul to come
-with their troops, and thus unite all the Japanese forces in a stand
-against the Chinese. Kato disliked exceedingly to obey this order
-because he knew it came from Konishi, but he finally set out to march
-across the country. Thorough discipline was maintained on the march,
-and the rivers were safely crossed. Cutting down trees, the soldiers,
-in companies of five or ten, holding on abreast of logs, forded or
-floated over the most impetuous torrents, while the cavalry kept the
-Coreans at bay. Though annoyed by attacks of guerilla parties on their
-flanks, the Japanese succeeded in reaching Seoul without serious loss.
-
-By the retreat of the Japanese armies, and their concentration in
-Seoul, the four northern provinces, comprising half the kingdom, were
-virtually lost to them. At the fall of Ping-an the war found its pivot,
-for the Japanese never again retrieved their fortunes in Chō-sen.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-THE RETREAT FROM SEOUL.
-
-
-The allies, after looking well to their commissariat, began their march
-on Seoul, about the middle of February, with forces which the Japanese
-believed to number two hundred thousand men. The light cavalry formed
-the advance guard. The main body, after floundering through the muddy
-roads, arrived, on February 26th, about forty miles northwest of Seoul.
-
-In the first skirmish, which took place near the town shortly
-afterward, the allies drove back the Japanese advance detachment with
-heavy loss. Li-yo-sun, the commander-in-chief, now ordered the army to
-move against the capital.
-
-In the council of war, held by the Japanese generals, Ishida, who, like
-Konishi, was a Christian in faith, advised the evacuation of Seoul.
-This, of course, provoked Kato, who rose and angrily said: “It is a
-shame for us to give up the capital before we have seen even a single
-banner of the Ming army. The Coreans and our people at home will call
-us cowards, and say we were afraid of the Chinamen.” Hot words then
-passed between the rival generals, but Otani and others made peace
-between them. All concluded that, in order to guard against treason,
-the Coreans in the capital must be removed. Thereupon, large portions
-of the city were set on fire, and houses, gates, bridges, public and
-private buildings, were soon a level waste of ashes. The people, old
-and young, of both sexes, sick and well, were driven out at the point
-of the lance. To the stern necessities of war were added the needless
-carnage of massacre, and hundreds of harmless natives were cruelly
-murdered. Only a few lusty men, to be used as laborers and
-burden-bearers, were spared.
-
-Years after, the memory of this frightful and inhuman slaughter,
-burdening the conscience of many a Japanese soldier, drove him a
-penitent suppliant into the monasteries. There, exiled from the world,
-with shaven head and priestly robe, he spent his days in fasting,
-vigils, and prayers for pardon, seeking to obtain Nirvana with the
-Eternal Buddha.
-
-Meanwhile the work of fortification went on. The advance guard of the
-Chinese host were now within a few miles of the city, and daily
-skirmishes took place. The younger Japanese officers clamored to lead
-the van against the Chinese, but Kobayékawa, an elderly general, was
-allowed to arrange the order of battle, and the Japanese army marched
-out from the capital to the attack in three divisions, Kobayékawa
-leading the third, or main body of ten thousand men, the others having
-only three thousand each. In the battle that ensued the Japanese were
-at first unable to hold their ground against the overwhelming forces of
-their enemies. The Chinese and Coreans drove back their first and
-second divisions with heavy loss. Then, thinking victory certain, they
-began a pursuit with both foot soldiers and cavalry, which led them
-into disorder and exhausted their strength. When well wearied,
-Kobayékawa, having waited till they were too far distant from their
-camp to receive reinforcements, led his division in a charge against
-the allies. The battle then became a hand-to-hand fight on a gigantic
-scale. The Chinese were armed mainly with swords, which were short,
-heavy, and double-edged. The allies had a large number of cavalry
-engaged, but the ground being miry from the heavy rains, they were
-unable to form or to charge with effect. Their advantage in other
-respects was more than counterbalanced by the length of the Japanese
-swords, the strength of their armor, and their veteran valor and
-coolness. Even the foot soldiers wielded swords having blades usually
-two, but sometimes three and four, feet long.
-
-The Japanese have ever prided themselves upon the length, slenderness,
-temper, and keen edge of their blades, and look with unmeasured
-contempt upon the short and clumsy weapons of the continental Asiatics.
-They proudly call their native land “The country ruled by a slender
-sword.” Marvellous in wonder and voluminousness are their legends,
-literature, and exact history concerning ken (two-edged, short
-falchion), and katana (two-handed and single-edged sabre). In this
-battle it was the sword alone that decided the issue, though firearms
-lent their deadly aid. The long, cross-bladed spears of their foot
-soldiers were also highly effective, first, in warding off the sabre
-strokes of the Chinese cavalry, and then unhorsing them, either by
-thrust or grapple. One general of high rank was pulled off his steed
-and killed.
-
-The Japanese leaders were in their best spirits, as well as in their
-finest equipments. One was especially noticeable by his gilded helmet
-that flashed and towered conspicuously. It was probably that of Kato,
-whose head-gear was usually of incredible height and dazzling splendor.
-
-After a long struggle and frightful slaughter, the allies were beaten
-back in confusion. Ten thousand Chinese and Coreans, according to
-Japanese accounts, were slaughtered on this bloodiest day and severest
-pitched battle of the first invasion.
-
-The Chinese suffered heavily in officers, and their first taste of war
-in the field with such veterans as the soldiers of Taikō was
-discouraging in the extreme. Li-yo-sun drew off his forces and soon
-after retired to Sunto. Not knowing that Kato had got into Seoul, and
-fearing an attack from the rear, on Ping-an, he drew off his main body
-to that city, leaving a garrison at Sunto. Tired, disgusted, and
-scared, the redoubtable Chinaman, like “the beaten soldier that fears
-the top of the tall grass,” sent a lying report to Peking, exaggerating
-the numbers of the Japanese, and asking for release from command, on
-the usual Oriental plea of poor health. As for the Japanese, they had
-lost so heavily in killed, that they were unable to follow up the
-victory, if victory it may be called. A small force, however, pressed
-forward and occupied Kai-jo, while the main body prepared to pass a
-miserable winter in the desolate capital.
-
-The Corean stronghold of An-am was also assaulted. This castle was
-built on a precipitous steep, having but one gate and flank capable of
-access, and that being a narrow, almost perpendicular, cutting through
-the rocks. The attacking force entered the gloomy valley shut in from
-light by the luxuriant forest, which darkened the path even in the
-daytime. At the tops, and on the ledges of the rocks beetling over the
-entrance-way, the Corean archers took up advantageous positions, while
-others of the garrison, with huge masses of rock and timber piled near
-the ledge, stood ready to hurl these upon the invaders.
-
-Awaiting in silence the approach of their enemies, they soon saw the
-Japanese fan-standards and paper-strip banners approach, when these
-were directly beneath them, every bow twanged, and a shower of arrows
-rained upon the invaders, while volleys of stones fell into their
-ranks, crushing heads and helmets together. The besiegers were
-compelled to draw off and arrange a new attack; but in the night the
-garrison withdrew. Next day the Japanese entered, garrisoned the
-castle, and decorated it with their streamers.
-
-The long-continued abandonment of the soil, owing to the war and the
-presence of three large armies, bore their natural fruits, and turned
-fertile Corea into a land of starvation. Famine began its ravages of
-death on friend and foe alike. The peasants petitioned their government
-for food, but none was to be had. Thousands of the poor people died of
-starvation. The fathers suffered in camp, while the dead mothers lay
-unburied in the houses, and the children, tortured with hunger, cried
-for food. One day a captain in the Chinese army found, by the roadside,
-an emaciated infant vainly seeking for nourishment from the cold and
-rigid breast of its dead mother. Touched with compassion, the warrior
-took the child and reared him to manhood under his own care.
-
-Some rice was distributed to the wretched people from the government
-store-houses in certain places, but still the groans and cries of the
-starving filled the air. Pestilence entered the Japanese camp, and
-thousands of the home-sick soldiers died ingloriously. The long winter
-rains made the living despondent and gloomy enough to commit hara-kiri,
-while the state of the roads and the dashing courage of the guerillas,
-who pushed their raids to the very gates of the camps, made foraging an
-unpopular duty among the men. In such discomfort, winter wore away, and
-tardy spring approached. In this state of affairs the Japanese were
-willing to listen, and the allies ready to offer, terms of peace. A
-Corean soldier, named Rijunchin, by permission of his superior officer,
-had penetrated into Seoul to visit the two captive princes. On his
-return to the camp, he stated that the Japanese generals were very
-homesick and heartily tired of the war. At the same time, a letter was
-received from Konishi, stating his readiness to receive terms of peace.
-Chin Ikei was again chosen to negotiate. Reaching the Japanese lines at
-Kai-jo, he held an interview with Konishi, and the following points of
-agreement were made:
-
-1. Peace between the three countries.
-
-2. Japan to remain in possession of the three southern provinces of
-Chō-sen.
-
-3. Corea to send tribute to Japan as heretofore.
-
-4. Hidéyoshi to be recognized as King of Corea. The three other
-articles drawn up were not made public, but the acknowledgment of Taikō
-as the equal of the Emperor of China was evidently one of them. The
-Japanese, on their part, were to return the two captive princes,
-withdraw all their armies to Fusan, and evacuate the country when the
-stipulations were carried out.
-
-Both parties were weary of the war. The Ming commander had requested to
-be relieved of his command and to return to China, while the three old
-gentlemen, who were military advisers in the Japanese camp, yearning
-for the pleasures of Kiōto, wrote to Taikō, asking leave to come home,
-telling him the object of his ambition was on the eve of attainment,
-and that he was to receive investiture from the Chinese emperor, and
-recognition as an equal.
-
-Scholarship and literature were not at a very high premium at that time
-among the Japanese military men. The martial virtues and
-accomplishments occupied the time and thoughts of the warriors to the
-exclusion of book learning and skill at words. The sword for the
-soldier, and the pen for the priest, was the rule. The bluff warrior in
-armor looked with contempt, not unmingled with awe, upon the
-shaven-pated man of ink and brush. One of the bonzes from the monastery
-was usually of necessity attached to the service of each commander. It
-was by reason of the ignorance, as well as the vanity, of the
-illiterate Japanese generals that such a mistake, in supposing that
-Taikō was to be recognized as equal to the Emperor of China, was
-rendered possible. The wily Chin Ikei, who drove a lucrative trade as
-negotiator, hoodwinked Konishi, who would not have been thus outwitted
-if he had had a bonze present to inspect the writing. Being a
-Christian, however, he was on bad terms with the bonzes.
-
-In both camps there were those who bitterly opposed any peace short of
-that which the sword decided. The Corean generals chafed at the time
-wasted in parley, and wished to march on the Japanese at once, whose
-ranks they knew were decimated with sickness, and their spirit and
-discipline relaxed under the idea of speedy return home. An epidemic
-had also broken out among their horses, probably owing to scant
-provender. Thus crippled and demoralized, victory would certainly
-follow a well-planned attack in force. Within the camp of the invaders
-Achilles and Agamemnon were as far as ever from harmony. Kato sullenly
-refused to entertain the idea of peace, partly because Konishi proposed
-it, but mainly because, if the two princes were given up, his
-achievements would be brought to naught, and all the glory of the war
-would redound to his rival. Only after the earnest representation by
-his friends of the empty granaries, and the danger of impending
-starvation, the great sickness among the troops, and the fearful loss
-of horses, was he induced to agree with the other commanders that Seoul
-should be evacuated.
-
-Meanwhile, the allies were advancing toward the capital.
-
-On May 22, 1593, the Japanese, with due precautions, evacuated the
-city, and the vanguard of the Chinese army entered on the same day. The
-retreat of the Japanese was effected in good order, and, to guard
-against treachery, they bivouacked in the open air, avoiding sleeping
-in the houses or villages, and rigidly kept up the vigilance of their
-sentinels and the discipline of the divisions. In this way the various
-detachments of the army safely reached Fusan, Tong-nai, Kinka, and
-other places near the coast. Here, after fortifying their camps, they
-rested for a space from the alarms of war, almost within sight of their
-native land. The allies later on marched southward and went into camp a
-few leagues to the northward. Since crossing the Yalu River, the
-Chinese had lost by the sword and disease twenty thousand men.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-CESPEDES, THE CHRISTIAN CHAPLAIN.
-
-
-The aspect of affairs had now changed from that of a triumphal march
-through Corea into China and to Peking, to long and tedious camp life,
-with uncertain fortunes in the field, which promised a long stay in the
-peninsula. Konishi had now breathing time and space for reflection.
-Being an ardent Christian—after the faith and practice of the
-Portuguese Jesuits—he wished for himself and his fellow-believers the
-presence and ministrations of one of the European friars to act as
-chaplain. He therefore sent, probably when at or near Fusan, a message
-to the superior of the Mission in Japan, asking for a priest.
-
-Toward the end of 1593, the Vice-Provençal of the Company of the
-Jesuits despatched Father Gregorio de Cespedes and a Japanese convert
-named “Foucan Eion” to the army in Chō-sen. They left Japan and spent
-the winter in Tsushima, the domain of Yoshitoshi, one of the Christian
-lords then in the field. Early in the spring of 1594 they reached
-Corea, arriving at Camp Comangai (most probably a name given by the
-Japanese after the famous hero Kumagayé), at which Konishi made his
-headquarters. The two holy men immediately began their labors among the
-Japanese armies. They went from castle to castle, and from camp to
-camp, preaching to the pagan soldiers, and administering the rite of
-baptism to all who professed the faith, or signed themselves with the
-cross. They administered the sacraments to the Christian Japanese,
-comforted and prayed with the sick, reformed abuses, assisted the
-wounded, and shrived the dying. New converts were made and old ones
-strengthened. Dying in a foreign land, of fever or of wounds, the soul
-of the Japanese man-at-arms was comforted with words of hope from the
-lips of the foreign priest. Held before his glazing eyes gleamed the
-crucifix, on which appeared the image of the world’s Redeemer. The
-home-sick warrior, pining for wife and babe, was told of the “House not
-made with hands.”
-
-The two brethren seem to have been very popular among the Japanese
-soldiers. Perhaps they already dreamed of planting the faith in Corea,
-when, suddenly, their work was arrested at its height by Kato, whose
-jealousy of Konishi was only equalled by his fanatical zeal for the
-Buddhist faith. Being in Japan he denounced the foreign priest to
-Taikō, declaring that these zealous endeavors to propagate the
-Christian faith only concealed a vast conspiracy against himself and
-the power of the mikado. At this time Taikō was dealing with the
-Jesuits in Japan, and endeavoring to rid the country of their presence
-by shipping them off to China. He fully believed that they were
-political as well as religious emissaries, and that their aim was at
-temporal power. These suspicions, as every student of Japan knows, were
-more than well founded.
-
-Besides accusing Cespedes, Kato insinuated that Konishi himself was
-leading the conspiracy. The cry of chō-téki (rebel, or enemy of the
-mikado) in Japan is enough to blacken the character of the bravest man
-and greatest favorite. Treason against the mikado being the supreme
-crime, Konishi found it necessary to return to Kiōto, present himself
-before Taikō, and cleanse his reputation even from suspicion. This the
-lull in the active operations, occasioned by the negotiations of Chin
-Ikei, enabled him to do.
-
-Immediately sending back the priest, he shortly afterward crossed the
-straits, and, meeting Taikō, succeeded in fully ingratiating himself
-and allaying all suspicion.
-
-The wife of Konishi had also embraced the Christian faith, her baptized
-name being Marie. To her, while in camp, he had sent two Corean lads,
-both of whom were of rank and gentle blood, the elder being called in
-the letters of the Jesuits “secretary to the Corean king.” He was the
-son of a brave captain in the army, and was thirteen years old. The
-lady, Marie, touched by their misfortune, kept the younger to be
-educated in the faith under her own direction, and sent the elder to
-the Jesuit seminary in Kiōto. Of this young man’s career we catch some
-glimpses from the letters of the missionaries. At the college he was a
-favorite, by reason of his good character, gentle manners, and fine
-mind. Professing the faith, he was baptized in 1603, taking the name of
-Vincent. He began his religious work by instructing and catechising
-Japanese and his numerous fellow Coreans at Nagasaki. When about
-thirty-three years old, the Jesuits, wishing to establish a mission in
-Corea, proposed to send him to his native land as missionary; but not
-being able, on account of the persecution then raging in Japan, he was
-chosen by the Father Provençal to go to Peking, communicate with the
-Jesuits there, and enter Corea from China. At Peking he remained four
-years, being unable to enter his own country by reason of the Manchius,
-who then held control of the northern provinces of Manchuria and were
-advancing on Peking, to set on the throne that family which is still
-the ruling dynasty of the Middle Kingdom. Vincent was recalled to Japan
-in 1620, where, in the persecutions under Iyémitsŭ, the third Tokugawa
-shō-gun, he fell a victim to his fidelity, and was martyrized in 1625,
-at the age of about forty-four.
-
-Warned of the dangers of patronizing the now proscribed religion, there
-was no farther return of zeal on Konishi’s part, or that of the other
-Christian princes, and no farther opportunity was given to plant the
-seeds of the faith in the desolated land.
-
-Of the large numbers of Corean prisoners sent over to Japan, from time
-to time, many of those living in the places occupied by the
-missionaries became Christians. Many more were sold as slaves to the
-Portuguese. In Nagasaki, of the three hundred or more living there,
-most of them were converted and baptized. They easily learned the
-Japanese language so as to need no interpreter at the confessional—a
-fact which goes to prove the close affinity of the two languages.
-
-Others, of gentle blood and scholarly attainments, rose to positions of
-honor and eminence under the government, or in the households of the
-daimiōs. Many Corean lads were adopted by the returned soldiers or kept
-as servants. When the bloody persecutions broke out, by which many
-thousand Japanese found death in the hundred forms of torture which
-hate and malice invented, the Corean converts remained steadfast to
-their new-found faith, and suffered martyrdom with fortitude equal to
-that of their Japanese brethren. But, by the army in Corea, or by
-Cespedes, no seed of Christianity was planted or trace of it left, and
-its introduction was postponed by Providence until two centuries later.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-DIPLOMACY AT KIŌTO AND PEKING.
-
-
-The Chinese ambassadors, with whom was Chin Ikei, set sail from Fusan,
-and reached Nagoya, in Hizen, on June 22d. Taikō received them in
-person, and entertained them in magnificent style. His lords imitated
-the august example set them, and both presents and attentions were
-showered upon the guests. Among other entertainments in their honor was
-a naval review, in which hundreds of ships, decorated with the heraldry
-of feudalism, were ranged in line. The boats moved in procession; the
-men, standing up as they worked the sculls, sang in measured chorus.
-The sheaves of glittering weapons, spears, and halberds arranged at
-their bows, were inlaid with gold and pearl The cabins were arranged
-with looped brocades and striped canvas, with huge crests and imperial
-chrysanthemums of colossal size. The ambassadors were delighted, both
-with the lovely scenery and the attentions paid them, and so remained
-until August.
-
-Little, however, came of this mission. Taikō sent orders to Kato to
-release the Corean princes and nobles; and Chin Ikei, who usually went
-off like a clumsy blunderbuss, at half-cock, hied back to Chō-sen to
-tell the news and get the credit of having secured this concession. The
-Coreans were made to bear the blame of the war, and the envoys of
-China, in good humor, returned to Peking in company with a Japanese
-ambassador.
-
-Yet Taikō, though willing to be at peace with China, did not intend to
-spare unhappy Chō-sen. To soothe the spirit of Kato, the order was
-given to capture the castle of Chin-chiu, forty miles west of Fusan,
-which had not yet been taken by the Japanese, though once before
-invested.
-
-Alarmed at the movements of the invaders, the Coreans tried to
-revictual and garrison the devoted fortress, and even to attack the
-enemy on the way. Unable, however, to make a stand against their foes,
-they were routed with frightful carnage. Kato led the besieging force,
-eager to make speedy capture so as to irritate the Coreans and prevent
-the peace he feared.
-
-He invested the castle which the Coreans had not been able to
-reinforce, but the vigorous resistance of the garrison, who threw
-stones and timber upon the heads of his assaulting parties, drove him
-to the invention of Kamé-no-kosha, or tortoise-shell wagons, which
-imitated the defensive armor of that animal. Collecting together
-several hundred green hides, and dry-hardening them in the fire, he
-covered four heavily built and slant-roofed wagons with them. These
-vehicles, proof against fire, missiles, or a crushing weight, and
-filled with soldiers, were pushed forward to the foot of the walls.
-While the matchlock men in the lines engaged those fighting on the
-ramparts, the soldiers, under the projecting sheds of the tortoise
-wagons, that jutted against the walls, began to dig under the
-foundations. These being undermined, the stones were pried out, and
-soon fell in sufficient number to cause a breach. Into this fresh
-soldiers rushed and quickly stormed the castle. The slaughter inside
-was fearful.
-
-The news of the fall of this most important fortress fell like a clap
-of thunder in Peking, and upon the Corean king, who was preparing to go
-back to Seoul. The Chinese government appointed fresh commissioners of
-war, and ordered the formation of a new and larger army.
-
-The immediate advance of the invaders on the capital was expected, but
-Kato, having obeyed Taikō’s orders, left a garrison in the castle and
-fell back on Fusan.
-
-The Chinese general, upbraiding Chin Ikei for his insincerity, sent him
-to Konishi again. Their interview was taken up mainly with mutual
-charges of bad faith. Chin Ikei, returning, tried to persuade the
-Chinese commander to evacuate Corea, or, at least, retire to the
-frontier. Though he refused, being still under orders to fight, the
-Chinese army moved back from Seoul toward Manchuria, while Konishi, on
-his own responsibility, despatched a letter to the Chinese emperor.
-Large detachments of the Japanese army actually embarked at Fusan, and
-returned to Japan. In the lull of hostilities, negotiations were
-carried on at Peking and Kiōto, as well as between the hostile camps.
-The pen took the place of the matchlock, and the ink-stone furnished
-the ammunition.
-
-A son was born to Taikō, and named Hidéyori. A great pageant, in honor
-of the infant, was given at the newly built and splendid castle of
-Fushimi, near Kiōto, which was graced by a large number of the
-commanders and veterans of Corea, who had returned home on furlough,
-while negotiations were pending. The result of the Japanese mission to
-Peking was the despatch of an ambassador extraordinary, named Rishosei,
-with one of lesser rank, to Japan, by way of Fusan.
-
-On his arrival, he requested to see Konishi, who, however, evaded him,
-excusing himself on the plea of expecting to hear from Taikō, after
-which he promised to hold an interview. Konishi then departed for
-Japan, taking Chin Ikei with him. On his return he still avoided the
-Chinese envoy, for he had no definite orders, and the other generals
-refused to act without direct word from their master in Kiōto.
-Meanwhile Chin Ikei, consumed with jealousy, and angry at the Peking
-mandarins for ignoring him and withholding official recognition and
-honors, planned revenge against Rishosei; for Chin Ikei believed
-himself to have done great things for Chō-sen and China, and yet he had
-received neither thanks, pay, nor promotion for his toils, while
-Rishosei, though a young man, with no experience, was honored with high
-office solely on account of being of rank and in official favor at
-Peking. Evidently with the intent of injuring Rishosei, Chin Ikei gave
-out that Taikō did not wish to be made King of Chō-sen, but had sent an
-envoy to China merely to have a high ambassador of China come to Japan,
-that he might insult or rather return the insult of the sovereign of
-China, in the person of his envoy, by making him a prisoner or putting
-him to death. Konishi and Chin Ikei again crossed to Japan to arrange
-for the reception of the Chinese envoys.
-
-The reports started by Chin Ikei, coming to the ears of Rishosei, so
-frightened him that he fled in disguise from Fusan, and absconded to
-China. His colleague denounced him as a coward, and declaring that the
-Chinese government desired only “peace with honor,” sailed with his
-retinue and two Corean officers to Japan. “And Satan [Chin Ikei], came
-also among them.” All landed safely at Sakai, near Ozaka, October 8,
-1596.
-
-Audience was duly given with pomp and grandeur in the gorgeous castle
-at Fushimi, on October 24th. The ambassador brought the imperial
-letter, the patent of rank, a golden seal, a crown, and
-silk-embroidered robes of state. At a banquet, given next day, these
-robes were worn by Taikō and his officers.
-
-Formalities over, the Ming emperor’s letter was delivered to Taikō, who
-at once placed it in the hands of three of the most learned priests,
-experts in the Chinese language, and ordered them to translate its
-contents literally.
-
-To Konishi, then at Kiōto, came misgivings of his abilities as a
-diplomatist Visiting the bonzes, he earnestly begged them to soften
-into polite phrase anything in the letter that might irritate Taikō.
-But the priests were inflexibly honest, and rendered the text of the
-letter into the exact Japanese equivalent. In it the patent of nobility
-first granted to the Ashikaga shō-gun (1403–1425) was referred to; and
-the gist of this last imperial letter was: “We, the Emperor of China,
-appoint you, Taikō, to be the King of Japan” (Nippon O). In other
-words, the mighty Kuambaku of Japan was insulted by being treated no
-better than one of the Ashikaga generals!
-
-This was the mouse that was born from so great a mountain of diplomacy.
-The rage of Taikō was so great that, with his own hands, he would have
-slain Konishi, had not the bonzes plead for his life, claiming that the
-responsibility of the negotiations rested upon three other prominent
-persons. As usual, the “false-hearted Coreans” were made to bear the
-odium of the misunderstanding.
-
-The Chinese embassy, dismissed in disgrace, returned in January, 1596,
-and made known their humiliation at Peking; while the King of Corea,
-who had been living in Seoul during the negotiations, appealed at once
-for speedy aid against the impending invasion. Hidéyoshi again applied
-himself with renewed vigor to raising and drilling a new army, and
-obtaining ships and supplies. A grand review of the forces of invasion,
-consisting of one hundred and sixty-three thousand horse and foot
-soldiers, was held under his inspection. Kuroda, Nagamasa, and other
-generals, with their divisions, sailed away for Fusan, January 7, 1597,
-and joined the army under Konishi and Kato.
-
-The new levies from China, which had been waiting under arms, crossed
-the Yalu and entered from the west at about the same time. Marching
-down through Ping-an and Seoul, a division of ten thousand garrisoned
-the castle of Nan-on, in Chulla. The Coreans, meanwhile, fitted out a
-fleet, under the command of Genkai, expecting a second victory on the
-water.
-
-An extinguisher was put on Chin Ikei, who was suspected of being in the
-pay of Konishi. Genkai, a Chinese captain, had long believed him to be
-a dangerous busybody, without any real powers from the Peking
-government, but only used by them as a decoy duck, while, in reality,
-he was in the pay of the Japanese, and the chief hinderance to the
-success of the allied arms. On the other hand, this volunteer
-politician, weary and disappointed at not receiving from China the high
-post and honors which his ambition coveted, was in a strait. Taikō
-urged him to secure from China the claim of Japan to the southern half
-of Corea. China, on the contrary, ordered him to induce the Japanese
-generals to leave the country. Thus situated, Chin Ikei knew not what
-to do. He sent a message, through a priest, to Kato, urging him to make
-peace or else meet an army of one hundred thousand Chinamen. The
-laconic reply of the Japanese was: “I am ready to fight. Let them
-come.”
-
-Bluffed in his last move, and aware of the plots of Genkai, his enemy,
-Chin Ikei, at his wits’ end, resolved to escape to Konishi’s camp. The
-spies of Genkai immediately reported the fact to their master, who lay
-in wait for him. Suddenly confronting his victim, they demanded his
-errand. “I am going to treat with Kato, the Japanese general; I shall
-be back in one month,” answered Chin Ikei. He was seized and, on being
-led back, was thrown into prison. A searching party was then despatched
-at once to his house. There they found gold, treasure, and jewels
-“mountain high,” and his wife living in luxury. Believing all these to
-have been purchased by Japanese gold, and the fruits of bribery, the
-Chinese confiscated the spoil and imprisoned the traitor’s family.
-
-This ended all further negotiations until the end of the war.
-Henceforth, on land and water, by the veterans of both armies, with
-fresh levies, both of allies and invaders, the issue was tried by sword
-and siege.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-THE SECOND INVASION.
-
-
-The plan of the second invasion was to land all the Japanese forces at
-Fusan, and then to divide them into three columns, which were to
-advance by the south to Nan-on castle in Chulla, and by two roads,
-northward and westward, to the capital. As before, Konishi and Kato
-Kiyomasa were the two field commanders, while Hidéaki, a noble lad,
-sixteen years old, was the nominal commander-in-chief.
-
-The Coreans had made preparations to fight the Japanese at sea as well
-as on land. Their fleet consisted of about two hundred vessels of heavy
-build, for butting and ramming, as well as for accommodating a maximum
-of fighting men. They were two hundred and fifty or three hundred feet
-in length, with huge sterns, having enormous rudders, the tillers of
-which were worked by eight men. Their high, flat prows were hideously
-carved and painted to represent the face and open jaws of a dragon, or
-demon, ready to devour. Stout spars or knotted logs, set upright along
-the gunwale, protected the men who worked the catapults, and heavily
-built roofed cabins sheltered the soldiers and gave the archers a
-vantage ground. The rowers sat amidships, between the cabins and the
-gunwales, or rather over on these latter, in casements made of stout
-timber. The catapults were on deck, between the bows. They were
-twenty-four feet long, made of tree-trunks a yard in circumference.
-Immense bows, drawn to their notches by windlasses, shot iron-headed
-darts and bolts six feet long and four inches thick. On some of the
-ships towers were erected, in which cannon, missile-engines, and
-musketeers were stationed, to shoot out fire-arrows, stones, and balls.
-At close quarters the space at the bows—about one-third of the deck—was
-free for the movements of the men wielding spear and sword, and for
-those who plied the grappling hooks or boarding planks. The decks
-crowded with men in armor, the glitter of steel and flash of oars, the
-blare of the long Corean trumpets, and the gay fluttering of thousands
-of silken flags and streamers made brilliant defiance.
-
-The Japanese accepted the challenge, and, sailing out, closed with the
-enemy. Wherever they could, they ran alongside and gave battle at the
-bows. Though their ships were smaller, they were more manageable. In
-some cases, they ran under the high sterns and climbed on board the
-enemy’s ships. Once at hand to hand fight, their superior swordsmanship
-quickly decided the day. Their most formidable means of offence which,
-next to their cannon, won them the victory, were their rockets and
-fire-arrows, which they were able to shoot into the sterns, where the
-dry wood soon caught fire, driving the crews into the sea, where they
-drowned. Two hours fighting sufficed, by which time one hundred and
-seventy-four Corean ships had been burned or taken. News of this
-brilliant victory was at once sent by a swift vessel to Japan.
-
-Endeavors were made to strengthen the garrison at Nan-on, but the
-Japanese general, Kato Yoshiakira, meeting the reinforcements on their
-way, prevented their design. Kato Kiyomasa, changing his plans, also
-marched to Nan-on, resolving to again, if possible, snatch an honor
-from his rival As usual, the younger man was too swift for him. Konishi
-now moved his entire command in the fleet up the Sem River, in Chulla
-province, and landing, camped at a place called Uren, eighteen ri from
-Nan-on castle. He rested here five days in the open meadow land to
-allow the horses to relax their limbs after the long and close
-confinement in the ships. From a priest, whom they found at this place,
-they learned that the garrison of Nan-on numbered over 20,000 Chinese
-and Coreans, the reinforcements in the province, and on their way,
-numbered 20,000 more, while in the north was another Chinese corps of
-20,000.
-
-At the council of war held, it was resolved to advance at once to take
-the castle before succor came. In spite of many lame horses, and the
-imperfect state of the commissariat, the order to march was given. Men
-and beasts were in high spirits, but many of the horses were ridden to
-death, or rendered useless by the forced march of the cavalry. Early on
-the morning of September 21st, the advance guard camped in the morning
-fog at a distance of a mile from the citadel. The main body, coming up,
-surrounded it on all sides, pitched their camp, threw out their
-pickets, set up their standards, and proceeded promptly to fortify
-their lines.
-
-Nan-on castle was of rectangular form, enclosing a space nearly two
-miles square, as each side was nine thousand feet long. Its walls,
-which were twelve feet high, were built of great stones, laid together
-without cement. Though no mortar had been used on wall or tower,
-shell-lime had been laid over the outside, in which glistened
-innumerable fragments of nacre and the enamel of shells, giving the
-structure the appearance of glittering porcelain. At the angles, and at
-intervals along the flanks, were towers, two or three stories high. The
-four ponderous gates were of stone, fourteen feet high.
-
-The preparations for defence were all that Chinese science could
-suggest. In the dry ditch, three hundred feet wide, was an abatis of
-tree-trunks, with their branches outward, behind which were iron-plated
-wagons, to be filled with archers and spearmen. From the towers,
-fire-missiles and shot from firearms were in readiness.
-
-The weak points, at which no enemy was expected, and for which
-preparations for defence were few, were on the east and west
-
-No effect being produced during the first two days, either by bullets
-or fire-arrows, Konishi, on the third, sent large detachments of men
-into the rice-fields, then covered with a promising harvest of growing
-rice, which the farmers, in the hope of peace, had sown. Reaping the
-green, juicy stalks, the hundreds of soldiers gathered an enormous
-quantity of sheaves and waited, with these and their stacks of bamboo
-poles and ladders, until night. In the thick darkness, and in perfect
-silence, they moved to a part of the wall which, being over twenty feet
-high, was but slightly guarded, and began to build a platform of the
-sheaves. Four Japanese, reaching the top by climbing, raised the
-war-cry, and one of the towers being set on fire by their arrows, the
-work was discovered. Yet the matchlock men kept the walls swept by
-their bullets, while the work of piling fresh sheaves and bundles of
-bamboo went on. The greenness of the rice-stalks made the mass both
-firm and fire-proof. At last the mound was so high that it overtopped
-the wall. The men now climbed over the ramparts by the hundreds, and
-the swordsmen, leaping into the castle, began the fight at hand to
-hand. Most of the Chinese fought with the courage of despair, while
-others, in their panic, opened the gates to escape, by which more of
-the besiegers entered. The garrison, smitten in front and rear, were
-driven to the final wall by Konishi’s troops. On the other side a body
-of picked men, from Kato’s army, joined in the slaughter. They had
-entered the castle at the rear, by scaling a rugged mountain path known
-only to the Corean prisoners, whose treachery they had purchased by the
-promise of their lives. Between the two attacking forces the Coreans
-and Chinese, who could not escape, were slain by thousands.
-
-Among many curious incidents narrated by Ogawuchi, who tells the story
-of this siege and attack, was this. As he entered the castle, amid the
-smoke and confusion, in which he saw some of the panic-stricken
-garrison destroying themselves, he cut off the heads of two enemies,
-and then, suddenly recollecting that this fifteenth day of the eighth
-month was the day sacred to Hachiman, the god of war and Buddha of the
-Eight Banners, he flung down his bloody sword, put his red palms
-together, and bowing his head, prayed devoutly toward his adored Japan.
-His devotions ended, he sliced off the noses from the heads of the two
-enemies he had slain, wrapped them in paper, twisted the package to his
-girdle, and sprang forward to meet, with but three men, the charge of
-fifty horsemen. The first sweep of the Japanese sabre severed the leg
-of the nearest rider, who fell to the earth on the other side of his
-horse, and Ogawuchi’s companions killing each his man, the enemy fled.
-The fires of the burning towers now lighted up the whole area of the
-castle, while the autumn moon rose red and clear. Ogawuchi slew, with
-his own hand, Kéku-shiu, one of the Chinese commanders. His body, in
-rich armor, lined with gold brocade, was stripped, and the trappings
-secured as trophies to be sent home, while his head was presented for
-Konishi’s inspection next morning.
-
-According to the barbarous custom of the victors, they severed the
-heads of the bodies not already decapitated in fight, until the castle
-space resembled a great slaughter-yard. Collecting them into a great
-heap, they began the official count. The number of these ghastly
-trophies, or “glory-signs,” was three thousand seven hundred and
-twenty-six. The ears and noses of the slain were then sheared off, and
-with the commander’s head, were packed with salt and quick lime in
-casks, and sent to Japan to form the great ear-tomb now in Kiōto, the
-horrible monument of a most unrighteous war.
-
-A map of the castle and town, with the list of the most meritorious
-among the victors, was duly sent back to Taikō. Then the walls and
-towers, granaries, and barracks were destroyed. This work occupied two
-days.
-
-Promptly on September 30th the army moved on to Teru-shiu, the cavalry
-riding day and night, and reaching the castle only to find it deserted,
-the garrison having fled toward Seoul. The Japanese remained here ten
-days, levelling the fortress with fire and hammer.
-
-As the cold weather was approaching, the Japanese commanders, after
-council, resolved at once to march to the capital. Katsuyoshi and
-Kiyomasa had joined them, and the advance northward was at once began.
-By October 19th they were within seventeen miles of Seoul. [7]
-
-The successes on land, brilliant though they were, were balanced by the
-defeat of the Japanese navy off the southern coast. The Chinese admiral
-Rishinshin, in conjunction with the Coreans, won an important victory
-over Kuroda’s naval forces a few days after the fall of Nan-on. In this
-instance, the Chinese ships were not only heavy enough to be formidable
-as rams, but were made more manageable by numerous rowers sitting in
-well-defended timber casements, apparently covered with metal. The
-warriors, too, seem to have been armed with larger lances. The Chinese
-commanders, having improved their tactics, so managed their vessels
-that the Japanese fleet was destroyed or driven away.
-
-This event may be said to have decided the fate of the campaign. Bereft
-of their fleet, which would, by going round the west coast, have
-afforded them a base of supplies, they were now obliged to advance into
-a country nearly empty of forage, and with no store of provisions. As
-in the opening of the war, so again, the loss of the fleet at a
-critical period made retreat necessary even at the moment of victory.
-
-Meanwhile, the Chinese general Keikai, thoroughly disliking the rigors
-of a camp in a Corean winter, and feeling deeply for his soldiers
-suffering from exposure in a desolate land, determined on closing the
-war as soon as possible. Erecting an altar, in presence of the army, he
-offered sacrifices to propitiate the spirits of Heaven and Earth, and
-prayed for victory against the invaders. Then, after seeing well to
-commissariat and equipment, he gave orders for a general movement of
-all the allied forces, with the design of ending the war by a brief and
-decisive campaign. The Japanese generals at Koran, by means of their
-spies and advance parties, kept themselves well informed of the
-movements of the enemy. At a skirmish at Chin-zen the Chinese advance
-guard was defeated with heavy loss, but the Japanese at once began
-their retreat. Shishida and Ota, who were further east, learning of the
-overwhelming odds against them, fell back into Uru-san, which was
-already manned by a detachment of Kato’s corps.
-
-While Kato and Katsuyoshi were at Chin-zen, a grand tiger hunt was
-proposed and carried out, in which a soldier was bitten in two places
-and died. The army agreed that tiger-hunting required much nerve and
-valor. Besides the tiger steaks, which they ate, much fresh meat was
-furnished by the numerous crane, pheasants, and “the ten thousand
-things different from those in Japan,” which they made use of to eke
-out their scanty rations.
-
-To remain in camp until the Han River was frozen over, and could be
-crossed easily, or to press on at once, was the question now considered
-by the Japanese. While thus debating, word came that the Chinese armies
-had made junction at Seoul, and numbered one hundred thousand men. The
-Japanese “felt cold in their breasts” when they heard this. Far from
-their base of supplies, their fleet destroyed, and they at the
-threshold of winter in a famine-stricken land, they were forced,
-reluctantly, again to retreat into Kiung-sang.
-
-This turning their backs on Seoul was, in reality, the beginning of
-their march homeward. The invaders, therefore, enriched themselves with
-the spoil of houses and temples as they moved toward the coast—gold and
-silver brocades, rolls of silk, paintings, works of art, precious
-manuscripts, books written with gold letters on azure paper, inlaid
-weapons and armor, rich mantles, and whatever, in this long-settled and
-wealthy province, pleased their fancy. On the boundaries of roads and
-provinces they noticed large dressed stone columns of an octagonal
-form, with inscriptions upon them. Their route lay from Chin-zen, which
-they left in ashes, on October 25th, to Chin-nan; to Ho-won; to Ho-kin;
-to Karon; reaching Kion-chiu, the old capital of Shinra, after some
-fighting along the way.
-
-The Japanese were impressed with the size and grandeur of the buildings
-in this old seat of the civilization and learning of Shinra and Korai.
-Here, in ancient days, was the focus of the arts, letters, religion,
-and science which, from the west, the far off mysterious land of India,
-and the nearer, yet august, empire of China, had been brought to Corea.
-Here, too, their own ancient mikados had sent embassies, and from this
-historic city had radiated the influences of civilization into Japan.
-As Buddhism had been the dominant faith of Shinra and Korai, this was
-the old sacred city of the peninsula, and among the historic edifices
-still standing and most admired were the halls and pagodas of the
-Eternal Buddha. Kion-chiu was to the Japanese very much what London is
-to an American, Geneva to a Protestant, or Dordrecht to a Hollander.
-Yet, in spite of all classic associations, the city was wantonly
-destroyed. On the morning of November 2d, beginning at the magnificent
-temples, the whole city was given to the torch. Three hundred thousand
-dwellings were burned, and the flames lighted up the long night with
-the glare of day.
-
-The next morning, turning their backs on the gray waste of ashes, they
-resumed their march. Kokiō, Kunoi, Sin-né were passed through.
-Skirmishing and the destruction of castles, and the burning of
-granaries, were the pastimes enjoyed between camps. On November 18th
-the army reached a river, where the Coreans made an unsuccessful night
-attack, repeating the same in the morning, while the Japanese were
-crossing the stream, with the same negative results.
-
-Thence through Yei-tan, they came to Kéku-shiu, another famous old seat
-of Shinra’s ancient grandeur. The beautiful situation and rich
-appearance of the city charmed the invaders, who lingered long in the
-deserted streets before applying the torch. The “three hundred thousand
-houses of the people” were clustered around the great Buddhist temple
-in the centre. The clock-tower, eighteen stories high, was especially
-admired. The massive swinging beam by which the tongueless bells, or
-gongs, of the Far East are made to boom out the hours, struck against a
-huge bronze lotus eight or nine feet in diameter. This sacred flower of
-the Buddhist emblem of peace and calm in Nirvana had in Corean art
-taken the place of the suspended bell, being most probably a cup-shaped
-mass of metal set with mouth upright, or like a bell turned upside
-down—such being the form often seen in the temples of Chinese Asia.
-Again did antiquity, religion, or the promptings of mercy fail to
-restrain the invaders. Securing what spoils they cared for, everything
-else was burned up.
-
-After camping at Kiran, they reached the sea-coast, at Uru-san,
-November 18th.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-THE SIEGE OF URU-SAN CASTLE.
-
-
-The Japanese now took up the spade as their immediate weapon of defence
-against the infuriated Coreans and the avenging Chinese. A force of
-twenty-three thousand men was at once set to work, “without regard to
-wind or rain,” along the lines marked out by the Japanese engineers. To
-furnish the wood for towers, gates, huts, and engines, a party of two
-thousand axemen and laborers, guarded by twenty-eight mounted pickets
-and three hundred matchlock men, with seven flags, went daily into the
-forest.
-
-The winter huts were hastily erected, walls thrown up, ditches dug,
-towers built, and sentinels and watch stations set. The work went on
-from earliest daybreak till latest twilight, the carpenters so
-suffering from the cold that “their finger nails dropped off.” By the
-first part of January the castle was almost completed. From the
-eleventh day the garrison took rest.
-
-The fortress was three-sided, the south face lying on the sea. The
-total line of works was about three and a half miles, pierced by three
-gates. The inner defences were in three parts, or maru. The third maru,
-or enclosure, had stone walls, one tower and one gate; the second had
-two towers, two gates; and the first or chief citadel had stone walls,
-forty-eight feet high, with two towers and two gates.
-
-The war operations, which had hitherto covered large spaces of the
-country, now found the pivot at this place situated in Kiung-sang, on
-the sea-coast, thirty-five miles north of Fusan. Another commander,
-Asano, marched to assist the garrison and entered the castle before the
-Ming army arrived. His advance guard, while reconnoitring, was defeated
-by the Coreans, yet he succeeded, by an impetuous charge, in entering
-the castle.
-
-The Chinese, smarting under their losses at Chin-sen, and stung by the
-gibes of the Coreans, now hastened to Uru-san, to swallow up the
-Japanese. The Corean army, which had been collecting around the
-Japanese camps, were soon joined by the advance guard of the Ming army.
-The arrival of the Chinese forces was made known in the following
-manner.
-
-A Japanese captain commanded one of the advance pickets, which had
-their quarters in the cloisters of Ankokuji (Temple of the Peaceful
-Country). One night a board, inscribed with Chinese characters, was set
-up before the gate of the camp. The soldiers, seeing it in the morning,
-but unable to read Chinese, carried it to their captain, who handed it
-to his priest-secretary. The board contained a warning that the Chinese
-were near and would soon attack Uru-san. Betraying no emotion and
-saying nothing, the captain soon after declared himself on the
-sick-list, and secretly absconded to Fusan. The truth was, that an
-overwhelming Ming army was now in front of them and their purpose to
-invest the castle was thus published. The entire Japanese forces were
-now gathered close under the walls, or inside the castle, and the
-sentinels were doubled.
-
-On the morning of January 30th the Ming army suddenly assaulted the
-castle. A small detachment, evidently a decoy and forlorn hope,
-attempting to scale the walls, was driven back by the matchlock men and
-began to retreat. Seeing this, the Japanese recklessly opened the
-barbican gate and began pursuit of their enemies, thinking they were
-only Coreans. Lured on to a distance, they suddenly found themselves
-encircled by a mighty host. By their black and yellow standards, and
-their excellent tactics, the Japanese officers saw that they were Ming
-soldiers. The dust raised by the horses of the oncoming enemy seemed to
-the garrison as high as Atago Mountain in Japan. They now knew that
-eighty thousand Chinese were before their gates. Only after hard
-fighting, was the remnant of the Japanese sortie enabled to get back
-within the castle, while the allies, surrounding the walls, fought as
-fiercely as if they intended to take it by immediate assault. Some of
-the bravest leaders of the garrison fell outside, but no sooner were
-the gates locked than Katsuyoshi, without extracting the two arrows
-from his wounds, or stanching the blood, posted the defenders on the
-walls in position. Ogawuchi had performed the hazardous feat of
-sallying out and firing most of the outside camps. He re-entered the
-castle with arrows in his clothes, but received no wounds. The battle
-raged until night, when the Chinese drew off.
-
-The Japanese had suffered fearfully by the first combat beyond and on
-the walls. “There was none but had been shot at by five or ten or
-fifteen arrows.” One of their captains reckoned their loss at eighteen
-thousand three hundred and sixty men, which left them but a garrison of
-five thousand fighting men. A large number of non-combatants, including
-many of the friendly people of the neighborhood, had crowded into the
-fortifications, and had to be fed.
-
-Food growing scarcer, and danger increasing, Asano sent word to Kato
-for help. On a fleet horse the messenger arrived, after a ride of two
-days. Kato had, in Japan, taken oath to Asano’s father to help him in
-every strait. Immediately, with seventy picked companions, he put out
-to sea in seven boats, and, after hard rowing, succeeded in entering
-the castle.
-
-On January 31, 1598, the war-conch sounded in the Ming camp, as the
-signal of attack, and the ears of the besieged were soon deafened by
-the yells of the “eighty thousand” besiegers. The Japanese were at
-first terrified at the clouds of dust, through which the awful sight of
-ranks of men, twenty deep, were on all sides visible. The enemy, armed
-with shields shaped like a fowl’s wings, upon which they received the
-missiles of the garrison, charged on the outer works, but when into and
-on the slope of the ditch, flung their shields away, and plied axe,
-knife, sword, and lance. Though seven attacks were repulsed, the wall
-was breached, the outer works were gained by overwhelming numbers, and
-the garrison was driven into the inner enclosure.
-
-Night fell upon the work of blood, but at early morn, the enemy waked
-the garrison with showers of arrows, and with ladders and hurdles of
-bamboo, tried to scale the walls. In four hours, seven attacks in force
-had been repulsed, yet the fighting went on. In spite of the intense
-cold, the soldiers perspired so that the sweat froze on their armor.
-Over their own heaps of corpses the Chinese attempted to force one of
-the gates, while, from the walls of the inner citadel, and from the
-higher gate above them, the Japanese smote them. The next day the
-carnage ceased from the third to the ninth hour. On February 3d, the
-Chinese, with their ladders, were again repulsed. At night their
-sentinels “gathered hoar-frost on their helmets,” while guarding the
-night long against the sortie, which they feared. Another attack from
-the clouds of enemies kept up the work of killing. Some of the Japanese
-warriors now noticed that their stockings and greave-bands kept
-slipping down, though adjusted repeatedly. The fact was their flesh had
-shrunk until their bones were nearly visible, and “their legs were as
-lean as bamboo sticks.” Another warrior, taking off his helmet and
-vizor, was seen to have a face so thin and wizen that he reminded his
-comrades of one of those hungry demons of the nether world, which they
-had seen so often depicted in temple pictures at home.
-
-On February 5th, the Ming generals, who had looked upon the reduction
-of Uru-san as a small affair to be settled by the way, and vexed at not
-having been able to take it by one assault, tried negotiation. In fact,
-they were suffering from lack of provisions. The Japanese sent back a
-defiant answer, and some of them profited by the lull in the fighting
-to make fires of broken arrows and lances, to strip the armor from the
-dead and frozen carcasses of their steeds, and enjoy a dinner of hot
-horse-meat. The vast number of shafts that had fallen within the walls,
-were gathered into stacks, and those damaged were reserved for fuel.
-Outside the citadel, they lay under the wall in heaps many feet high.
-
-The next day, February 6th, was one of quiet, but it was intensely
-cold, and many of the worn out soldiers of the garrison died. Sitting
-under the sunny side of the towers for warmth, they were found in this
-position frozen to death. Yet amid all the suffering, the Japanese
-jested with each other, poured out mutual compliments, and kept light
-hearts and defiant spirits.
-
-A council of war had been held February 2d, at Fusan, and a messenger
-sent to encourage the garrison. By some means he was able to
-communicate with his beleaguered brethren. With helmets off, the
-leaders listened to the words of cheer and praise, and promised to hold
-out yet longer.
-
-While the lull or truce was in force, the Chinese were, according to
-Ogawuchi, plotting to entrap the Japanese leaders. This they learned
-from one Okomoto, a native of Japan, who had lived long in China, and
-was a division commander of eight thousand men in the Chinese army. He
-it was who first brought the offers of accommodation from the Ming
-side. The Chinese proposed to get the Japanese leaders to come out of
-their citadel, leave their horses and weapons at a certain place, and
-go to the altar to swear before Heaven to keep the peace. Then the
-Chinese were to surround and make prisoners of the Japanese. Okomoto’s
-soul recoiled at the perfidy. Going by night to the side of the castle
-near the hills, he was admitted in the citadel, and exposing the plot,
-gave warning of the danger. A profound impression was produced on the
-grateful leaders, who immediately made a plan to show their gratitude
-to Okomoto. They swore by all the gods to reward also his sons and
-daughters who were still living in Japan. When this fact was made known
-to him, he burst into tears and said he had never forgotten his wife or
-children; though he saw them often in his dreams, yet “the winds
-brought him no news.”
-
-On the following morning a Chinese officer, coming to the foot of the
-wall, made signs with his standard, and offered the same terms in
-detail which Okomoto had exposed. The Japanese leaders excused
-themselves on the plea of sickness, and the parley came to nothing.
-
-Yet the sufferings of the Japanese were growing hourly severer. To half
-rations and hunger had succeeded famine, and with famine came actual
-death from starvation. Unfortunately there was no well in the castle,
-so the Japanese had at first sallied out, under cover of the night, and
-carried water from the mountain brooks. The Chinese, discovering this,
-posted archers in front of every accessible stream, and thus cut off
-all approach by night or day. To hunger was added the torture of
-thirst. The soldiers who fought by day stole out at night and licked
-the wounds of their slain enemies and even secretly chewed the raw
-flesh sliced from the corpses of the Chinese. Within the castle,
-ingenuity was taxed to the utmost to provide sustenance from the most
-unpromising substances. The famished soldiers chewed paper, trapped
-mice and ate them, killed horses and devoured every part of them.
-Braving the arrows of the Chinese pickets, they wandered at night
-wherever their dead enemies lay, and searched their clothes for stray
-grains of parched rice. On one occasion the Chinese, lying in wait,
-succeeded in capturing one hundred of the garrison, that were prowling
-like ghouls around the corpses of the slain. After this the commanders
-forbade any soldier, on pain of death, to leave the castle. Yet famine
-held revel within, and scores of starved and frozen multiplied into
-hundreds, until room for the corpses was needed.
-
-Tidings of the straits of the dwindling garrison at Uru-san having
-reached the other Japanese commanders, Nabéshima and Kuroda, they
-marched to the relief of their compatriots. One of the Chinese
-generals, Rijobai, leaving camp, set out to attack them.
-
-The foiled Chinese commander-in-chief, angry at the refusal of the
-Japanese to come to his camp, ordered a fresh attack on the castle.
-This time fresh detachments took the places of others when wearied. The
-day seemed shut out by the dust of horses, the smoke of guns, the
-clouds of arrows, and the masses of flags. Again the scaling ladders
-were brought, but made useless by the vigilant defenders in armor iced
-with frozen sweat, and chafing to the bone. Their constant labor made
-“three hours seem like three years.” The attack was kept up unceasingly
-until February 12th, when the exhausted garrison noticed the Chinese
-retreating. The van of the reinforcements from Fusan had attacked the
-allies in the rear, and a bloody combat was raging. At about the same
-time the fleet, laden with provisions, was on its way and near the
-starving garrison.
-
-Next morning the keen eyes of their commander noticed flocks of wild
-birds descending on the Chinese camp. The careful scrutiny of the
-actions of wild fowl formed a part of the military education of all
-Japanese, and they inferred at once that the camp was empty and the
-birds, attracted by the refuse food, were feeding without fear. Orders
-were immediately given to a detachment to leave the castle and march in
-pursuit. Passing through the deserted Ming camp, they came up with the
-forces of Kuroda and Nabéshima, who had gained a great victory over the
-allies. In this battle of the river plain of Gisen, February 9, 1598,
-the Japanese had eighteen thousand men engaged. Their victory was
-complete, thirteen thousand two hundred and thirty-eight heads of
-Coreans and Chinese being collected after the retreat of the allies.
-The noses and ears were, as usual, cut off and packed for shipment to
-Kiōto.
-
-The sufferings of the valiant defenders were now over. Help had come at
-the eleventh hour. For fourteen days they had tasted neither rice nor
-water, except that melted from snow or ice. The abundant food from the
-relief ships was cautiously dealt out to the famished, lest sudden
-plenty should cause sudden death. The fleet men not only congratulated
-the garrison on their brave defence, but decorated the battered walls
-with innumerable flags and streamers, while they revictualed the
-magazines. On the ninth, the garrison went on the ships to go to
-Sezukai, another part of the coast, to recruit their shattered
-energies. With a feeling as if raised from the dead, the warriors took
-off their armor. The reaction of the fearful strain coming at once upon
-them, they found themselves lame and unable to stand or sit. Even in
-their dreams, they grappled with the Ming, and, laying their hand on
-their sword, fought again their battles in the land of dreams. For
-three years afterward they did not cease these night visions of war.
-
-According to orders given, the number of the dead lying on the frozen
-ground, within two or three furlongs of the castle, was counted, and
-found to be fifteen thousand seven hundred and fifty-four. Of the
-Japanese, who had starved or frozen to death, eight hundred and
-ninety-seven were reported.
-
-In the camp of the allies, crimination and recrimination were going on,
-the Coreans angry at being foiled before Uru-san, and the Chinese
-mortified that one fortress, with its garrison, could not have been
-taken. They made their plans to go back and try the siege anew, when
-the explosion of their powder magazine, which killed many of their men,
-changed their plans. For his failure the Chinese commander-in-chief was
-cashiered in disgrace.
-
-On May 10th the soldiers of the garrison, now relieved, left for their
-homes in Japan.
-
-Thus ended the siege of Uru-san, after lasting an entire year.
-
-After this nothing of much importance happened during the war. The
-invaders had suffered severely from the cold and the climate, and from
-hunger in the desolated land. Numerous skirmishes were fought, and a
-continual guerilla war kept up, but, with the exception of another
-naval battle between the Japanese and Chinese, in which artillery was
-freely used, there was nothing to influence the fortunes of either
-side. In this state of inaction, Hidéyoshi fell sick and died,
-September 9, 1598, at the age of sixty-three. Almost his last words
-were, “Recall all my troops from Chō-sen.” The governors appointed by
-him to carry out his policy at once issued orders for the return of the
-army. The orders to embark for home were everywhere gladly heard in the
-Japanese camps by the soldiers whose sufferings were now to end. Before
-leaving, however, many of the Japanese improved every opportunity to
-have a farewell brush with their enemies.
-
-It is said, by a trustworthy writer, that 214,752 human bodies were
-decapitated to furnish the ghastly material for the “ear-tomb” mound in
-Kiōto. Ogawuchi reckons the number of Corean heads gathered for
-mutilation at 185,738, and of Chinese at 29,014; all of which were
-despoiled of ears or noses. It is probable that 50,000 Japanese,
-victims of wounds or disease, left their bones in Corea.
-
-Thus ended one of the most needless, unprovoked, cruel, and desolating
-wars that ever cursed Corea, and from which it has taken her over two
-centuries to recover.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-CHANGES AFTER THE INVASION.
-
-
-The war over, and peace again in the land, the fugitives returned to
-their homes and the farmers to their fields. The whole country was
-desolate, the scars of war were everywhere visible, and the curse of
-poverty was universal. From the king and court, in the royal city, of
-which fire had left little but ashes, and of which war and famine had
-spared few inhabitants, to the peasant, who lived on berries and roots
-until his scanty seed rose above the ground and slowly ripened, all now
-suffered the woful want which the war had bred. Kind nature, however,
-ceased not her bountiful stores, and from the ever-ready and ever-full
-treasuries of the ocean, fed the stricken land.
-
-The war was a fruitful cause of national changes in Corean customs and
-institutions. The first was the more thorough organization of the
-military, the rebuilding and strengthening of old castles, and the
-erection of new ones; though, like most measures of the government, the
-proposed reforms were never properly carried out. The coasts were
-guarded with fresh vigilance. Upon one of the Corean commanders, who
-had been many times successful against the Japanese, a new title and
-office was created, and the coast defence of the three southern
-provinces was committed to him. This title was subsequently conferred
-upon three officials whose headquarters were at points in Kiung-sang.
-Among the literary fruits of the leisure now afforded was the
-narrative, in Chinese, of the events leading to the war with the
-Japanese, written by a high dignitary of the court, and covering the
-period from about 1586 to 1598. This is, perhaps, the only book
-reprinted in Japan, which gives the Corean side of the war. In his
-preface the excessively modest author states that he writes the book
-“because men ought to look at the present in the mirror of the past.”
-The Chinese style of this writer is difficult for an ordinary Japanese
-to read. The book (Chōhitsuroku) contains a curious map of the eight
-provinces.
-
-In Japan the energies of the returned warriors were fully employed at
-home after their withdrawal from Corea. The adherents of Taikō and
-those of Iyéyasŭ, the rising man, came to blows, and at the great
-battle of Sékigahara, in October, 1600, Iyéyasŭ crushed his foes. Many
-of the heroes of the peninsular campaign fell on the field; or, as
-beaten men, disembowelled themselves, according to the Japanese code of
-honor.
-
-Konishi, being a Christian, and unable, from conscientious scruples, to
-commit suicide by hara kiri, was decapitated. The humbled spirit and
-turbulent wrath of Satsuma were appeased, and given a valve of escape
-in the permission accorded them to make definite conquest of Riu Kiu.
-This was done by a well-planned and vigorously executed expedition in
-1609, by which the little archipelago was made an integral part of the
-Japanese empire. When retiring from Chō-sen, in 1597, the daimiō and
-general Nabéshima requited himself for the possible loss of further
-military glory, by bringing over and settling in Satsuma a colony of
-Corean potters. He builded better than he knew, for in founding these
-industries in his own domain, he became the prime author of that
-delight of the æsthetic world, “old Satsuma faïence.” Other daimiōs, in
-whose domains were potteries, likewise transported skilled workers in
-clay, who afterward brought fame and money to their masters. On the
-other hand, Iyéyasŭ sent back the Corean prisoners in Japan to their
-own homes.
-
-The spoil brought back from the peninsular campaign—weapons, flags,
-brocades, porcelains, carvings, pictures, and manuscripts was duly
-deposited, with certifying documents, in temples and storehouses, or
-garnished the home of the veterans for the benefit of posterity. Some,
-with a literary turn, employed their leisure in writing out their notes
-and journals, several of which have survived the wreck of time. Some,
-under an artistic impulse, had made valuable sketches of cities,
-scenery, battle-fields, and castles, which they now finished. A few of
-the victors shore off their queues and hair, and became monks. Others,
-with perhaps equal piety, hung up the arrow-pierced helmet, or corslet
-slashed by Chinese sabre, as ex-voto at the local shrines. The writer
-can bear personal witness to the interest which many of these authentic
-relics inspired in him while engaged in their study. In 1878 a large
-collection of various relics of the Corean war of 1592–1597 came into
-the possession of the mikado’s government in Tōkiō, from the heirs or
-descendants of the veterans of Taikō. In Kiōto, besides the
-Ear-monument, the Hall of the Founder, in one of the great Buddhist
-temples, rebuilt by the widow of Taikō, was ceiled with the choice wood
-of the war junk built for the hero.
-
-Though the peninsula was not open to trade or Christianity, it was not
-for lack of thought or attention on the part of merchant or missionary.
-
-In England, a project was formed to establish a trading-station in
-Japan, and, if there was a possibility, in Corea also, or, at least, to
-see what could be done in “the island”—as Corea then, and for a long
-time afterward, was believed to be. Through the Dutch, the Jesuits, and
-their countryman, Will Adams, in Japan, they had heard of the Japanese
-war, and of Corea. Captain Saris arrived off Hirado Island about the
-middle of June, 1613, with a cargo of pepper, broadcloth, gunpowder,
-and English goods. In a galley, carrying twenty-five oars and manned by
-sixty men furnished by the daimiō, Saris and his company of seventeen
-Englishmen set out to visit the Iyéyasŭ at Yedo, by way of Suruga (now
-Shidzuoka). After two days’ rowing along the coast, they stopped for
-dinner in the large and handsome city of Hakata (or Fukuoka), the city
-being, in reality, double. As the Englishmen walked about to see the
-sights, the boys, children, and worse sort of idle people would gather
-about them, crying out, “Coré, Coré, Cocoré Waré” (Oh you Coreans,
-Coreans, you Kokorai men), taunting them by these words as Coreans with
-false hearts, whooping, holloaing, and making such a noise that the
-English could hardly hear each other speak. In some places, the people
-threw stones at these “Corean” Englishmen. Hakata was one of the towns
-at which the embassy from Seoul stopped while on its way to Yedo, and
-the incident shows clearly that the Japanese urchins and common people
-had not forgotten the reputed perfidy of the Coreans, while they also
-supposed that any foreigner, not a Portuguese, with whom they were
-familiar, must be a Corean. In the same manner, at Nankin, for a long
-while all foreigners, even Americans, were called “Japanese.”
-
-Nothing was done by Saris, so far as is known, to explore or open Corea
-to Western commerce, although the last one of the eight clauses of the
-articles of license to trade, given him by Iyéyasŭ, was, “And that
-further, without passport, they may and shall set out upon the
-discovery of Yeadzo (Yezo), or any other part in and about our empire.”
-By the last clause any Japanese would understand Corea and Riu Kiu as
-being land belonging to, but outside of “civilized” Nippon.
-
-After leaving Nagasaki, and calling at Bantam, Saris took in a load of
-pepper, and sailed for England, reaching Plymouth September 27, 1614.
-
-An attempt was also made by the Dominican order of friars to establish
-a mission in Corea. Vincent (Caun), the ward of Konishi, who had been
-educated and sent over by the Jesuits to plant Christianity among his
-countrymen, reached Peking and there waited four years to accomplish
-his purposes, but could not, owing to the presence of the hostile
-Manchius in Liao Tung. But just as he was returning to Japan, in 1618,
-another attempt was made by the Dominican friars to penetrate the
-sealed land. Juan de Saint Dominique, a Castilian Spaniard, who had
-labored as a missionary in the Philippine Islands since 1601, was the
-chosen man. Having secured rapid mastery of the languages of the Malay
-archipelago, he was selected as one well fitted to acquire Corean. With
-two others of the same fraternity he embarked for the shores of Morning
-Calm. For some reason, not known, they could not land in Corea, and so
-passed over to Japan, where the next year, March 19th, having met
-persecution, Dominique died in prison. The ashes of his body, taken
-from the cremation furnace, were cast in the sea; but his followers,
-having been able to save from the fire a hand and a foot, kept the
-ghastly remnants as holy relics.
-
-The exact relations of “the conquering and the vassal state,” as the
-Japanese would say, that is, of Nihon and Chō-sen, were not definitely
-fixed, nor the menace of war withdrawn, until the last of the line of
-Taikō died, and the family became extinct by the death of Hidéyori, the
-son of Taikō, in 1612.
-
-There is not a particle of evidence that the conquerors ever exacted an
-annual tribute of “thirty human hides,” as stated by a recent French
-writer. While Iyéyasŭ had his hands full in Japan, he paid little
-attention to the country which Taikō had used as a cockpit for the
-Christians. Iyéyasŭ dealt with the Jesuit, the Christian, and the
-foreigner, in a manner different from, and for obvious reasons with
-success greater than, that of Taikō. He unified Japan, re-established
-the dual system of mikado and shō-gun, with two capitals and two
-centres of authority, Kiōto and Yedo. He cleared the ground for his
-grandson Iyémitsŭ, who at once summoned the Coreans to renew tributary
-relations and pay homage to him at Yedo. Magnifying his authority, he
-sent, in 1623, a letter to the King of Corea, in which he styles
-himself Tai-kun (“Tycoon”), or Great Prince. This is the equivalent in
-Chinese pronunciation of the pure Japanese O-gimi, an ancient title
-applied only to the mikado. No assumption or presumption of pomp and
-power was, however, scrupled at by the successors of Iyéyasŭ.
-
-The title “Tycoon,” too, was intended to overawe the Coreans, as being
-even higher than the title Koku O (king of a [tributary] country),
-which their sovereign and the Ashikaga line of rulers held by patents
-from the Emperor of China, and which Taikō had scornfully refused.
-
-The court at Seoul responded to the call, and, in 1624, sent an embassy
-with congratulations and costly presents. The envoys landed in Hizen,
-and made their journey overland, taking the same route so often
-traversed by the Hollanders at Déshima, and described by Kaempfer,
-Thunberg, and others. A sketch by a Yedo artist has depicted the
-gorgeous scene in the castle of the “Tycoon.” Seated on silken
-cushions, on a raised dais, behind the bamboo curtains, with
-sword-bearer in his rear, in presence of his lords, all in imitation of
-the imperial throne room in Kiōto, the haughty ruler received from the
-Corean envoy the symbol of vassalage—a gohei or wand on which strips of
-white paper are hung. Then followed the official banquet.
-
-Since the invasion, Fusan, as before, had been held and garrisoned by
-the retainers of the daimiō of Tsushima. At this port all the commerce
-between the two nations took place. The interchange of commodities was
-established on an amicable basis. Japanese swords, military equipments,
-works of art, and raw products were exchanged for Corean merchandise.
-Having felt the power of the eastern sword-blades, and unable to
-perfect their own clumsy iron hangers, either in temper, edge, or
-material, they gladly bought of the Japanese, keeping their
-sword-makers busy. Kaempfer, who was at Nagasaki from September 24,
-1690, to November, 1692, tells us that the Japanese imported from Fusan
-scarce medicinal plants, especially ginseng, walnuts, and fruits; the
-best pickled fish, and some few manufactures; among which was “a
-certain sort of earthen pots made in Japij and Ninke, two Tartarian
-provinces.” These ceramic oddities were “much esteemed by the Japanese,
-and bought very dear.”
-
-From an American or British point of view, there was little trade done
-between the two countries, but on the strength, of even this small
-amount, Earl Russell, in 1862, tried to get Great Britain included as a
-co-trader between Japan and Corea. He was not successful. Provision was
-also made for those who might be cast, by the perils of the sea, upon
-the shore of either country. At the expense of the Yedo government a
-Chō-sen Yashiki (Corean House), was built at Nagasaki. From whatever
-part of the Japanese shores the waifs were picked up, they were sent to
-Nagasaki, fed and sheltered until a junk could be despatched to Fusan.
-These unfortunates were mostly fishermen, who, in some cases, had their
-wives and children with them. It was from such that Siebold obtained
-the materials for his notes, vocabulary, and sketches in the Corean
-department of his great Archiv.
-
-The possession of Fusan by the Japanese was, until 1876, a perpetual
-witness of the humiliating defeat of the Coreans in the war of
-1592–1597, and a constant irritation to their national pride. Their
-popular historians, passing over the facts of the case, substitute
-pleasing fiction to gratify the popular taste. The subjoined note of
-explanation, given by Dallet, attached to a map of Corea of home
-manufacture, thus accounts for the presence of the foreigners. The
-substance of the note is as follows: During the sixteenth century many
-of the barbarous inhabitants of Tsushima left that island, and, coming
-over to Corea, established themselves on the coast of Corea, in three
-little ports, called Fusan, Yum, and Chisi, and rapidly increased in
-numbers. About five years after Chung-chong ascended the throne, the
-barbarians of Fusan and Yum made trouble. They destroyed the walls of
-the city of Fusan, and killed also the city governor, named Ni Utsa.
-Being subdued by the royal troops, they could no longer live in these
-ports, but were driven into the interior. A short time afterward,
-having asked pardon for their crimes, they obtained it and came and
-established themselves again at the ports. This was only for a short
-time, for a few years afterward, a little before the year 1592, they
-all returned to their country, Tsushima. In the year 1599 the king,
-Syen-cho, held communication with the Tsushima barbarians. It happened
-that he invited them to the places which they had quitted on the coast
-of Corea, built houses for them, treated them with great kindness,
-established for their benefit a market during five days in each month,
-beginning on the third day of the month, and when they had a great
-quantity of merchandise on hand to dispose of he even permitted them to
-hold it still oftener.
-
-This is a good specimen of Corean varnish-work carried into history.
-The rough facts are smoothed over by that well-applied native lacquer,
-which is said to resemble gold to the eye. The official gloss has been
-smeared over more modern events with equal success, and even defeat is
-turned into golden victory.
-
-Yet, with all the miseries inflicted upon her, the humble nation
-learned rich lessons and gained many an advantage even from her enemy.
-The embassies, which were yearly despatched to yield homage to their
-late invaders, were at the expense of the latter. The Japanese pride
-purchased, at a dear rate, the empty bubble of homage, by paying all
-the bills. We may even suspect that a grim joke was practised upon the
-victors by the vanquished. Year by year they swelled the pomp and
-numbers of their train until, finally, it reached the absurd number of
-four hundred persons. With imperturbable effrontery they devastated the
-treasury of their “Tycoon.” To receive an appointment on the embassy to
-Yedo was reckoned a rich sinecure. It enabled the possessor to enjoy an
-expensive picnic of three months, two of which were at the cost of the
-entertainers. Landing in Chikuzen, or Hizen, they slowly journeyed
-overland to Yedo, and, after their merrymaking in the capital,
-leisurely made their jaunt back again. For nearly a century the Yedo
-government appeared to relish the sensation of having a crowd of people
-from across the sea come to pay homage and bear witness to the
-greatness of the Tokugawa family. In 1710 a special gateway was erected
-in the castle at Yedo to impress the embassy from Seoul, who were to
-arrive next year, with the serene glory of the shō-gun Iyénobu. From a
-pavilion near by the embassy’s quarters, the Tycoon himself was a
-spectator of the feats of archery, on horseback, in which the Coreans
-excelled. The intolerable expense at last compelled the Yedo rulers to
-dispense with such costly vassalage, and to spoil what was, to their
-guests, a pleasant game. Ordering them to come only as far as Tsushima,
-they were entertained by the So family of daimiōs, who were allowed by
-the “Tycoon” a stipend in gold kobans for this purpose.
-
-A great social custom, that has become a national habit, was introduced
-by the Japanese when they brought over the tobacco plant and taught its
-properties, culture, and use. The copious testimony of all visitors,
-and the rich vocabulary of terms relating to the culture, curing, and
-preparation of tobacco show that the crop that is yearly raised from
-the soil merely for purposes of waste in smoke is very large. In the
-personal equipment of every male Corean, and often in that of women and
-children, a tobacco pouch and materials for firing forms an
-indispensable part. The smoker does not feel “dressed” without his
-well-filled bag. Into the forms of hospitality, the requisites of
-threshold gossip and social enjoyment, and for all other purposes, real
-or imaginary, which nicotine can aid or abet, tobacco has entered not
-merely as a luxury or ornament, but as a necessity.
-
-Another great change for the better, in the improvement of the national
-garb, dates from the sixteenth century, and very probably from the
-Japanese invasion. This was the introduction of the cotton plant.
-Hitherto, silk for the very rich, and hemp and sea grass for the middle
-and poorer classes, had been the rule. In the north, furs were worn to
-a large extent, while plaited straw for various parts of the limbs
-served for clothing, as well as protection against storm and rain. The
-vegetable fibres were bleached to give whiteness. Cotton now began to
-be generally cultivated and woven.
-
-It is true that authorities do not agree as to the date of the first
-use of this plant. Dallet reports that cotton was formerly unknown in
-Corea, but was grown in China, and that the Chinese, in order to
-preserve a market for their textile fabrics within the peninsula,
-rigorously guarded, with all possible precautions, against the
-exportation of a single one of the precious seeds.
-
-One of the members of the annual embassy to Peking, with great tact,
-succeeded in procuring a few grains of cotton seed, which he concealed
-in the quill of his hat feather. Thus, in a manner similar to the
-traditional account of the bringing of silk-worms’ eggs inside a staff
-to Constantinople from China, the precious shrub reached Corea about
-five hundred years ago. It is now cultivated successfully in the
-peninsula in latitude far above that of the cotton belt in America, and
-even in Manchuria, the most northern limit of its growth.
-
-It is evident that a country which contains cotton, crocodiles, and
-tigers, cannot have a very bleak climate. It seems more probable that
-though the first seeds may have been brought from China, the
-cultivation of this vegetable wool was not pursued upon a large scale
-until after the Japanese invasion. Our reasons for questioning the
-accuracy of the date given in the common tradition is, that it is
-certain that cotton was not known in Northern China five hundred years
-ago. It was introduced into Central China from Turkestan in the
-fourteenth century, though known in the extreme south before that time.
-The Chinese pay divine honors to one Hwang Tao Po, the reputed
-instructress in the art of spinning and weaving the “tree-wool.” She is
-said to have come from Hainan Island.
-
-Though cotton was first brought to Japan by a Hindoo, in the year 799,
-yet the art of its culture seems to have been lost during the long
-civil wars of the middle ages. The fact that it had become extinct is
-shown in a verse of poetry composed by a court noble in 1248. “The
-cotton-seed, that was planted by the foreigner and not by the natives,
-has died away.” In another Japanese book, written about 1570, it is
-stated that cotton had again been introduced and planted in the
-southern provinces.
-
-The Portuguese, trading at Nagasaki, made cotton wool a familiar object
-to the Japanese soldiers. While the army was in Corea a European ship,
-driven far out of her course and much damaged by the storm, anchored
-off Yokohama. Being kindly treated while refitting, the captain, among
-other gifts to the daimiō of the province, gave him a bag of cotton
-seeds, which were distributed. The yarn selling at a high price, the
-culture of the shrub spread rapidly through the provinces of Eastern
-and Northern Japan, being already common in the south provinces. Even
-if the culture of cotton was not introduced into Corea by the Japanese
-army, it is certain that it has been largely exported from Japan during
-the last two centuries. The increase of general comfort by this one
-article of wear and use can hardly be estimated. Not only as wool and
-fibre, but in the oil from its seeds, the nation added largely to the
-sum of its blessings.
-
-Paper, from silk and hemp, rice stalk fibres, mulberry bark, and other
-such raw material, had long been made by the Chinese, but it is
-probable that the Coreans, first of the nations of Chinese Asia, made
-paper from cotton wool. For this manufacture they to-day are famed.
-Their paper is highly prized in Peking and Japan for its extreme
-thickness and toughness. It forms part of the annual tribute which the
-embassies carry to Peking. It is often thick enough to be split into
-several layers, and is much used by the tailors of the Chinese
-metropolis as a lining for the coats of mandarins and gentlemen. It
-also serves for the covering of window-frames, and a sewed wad of from
-ten to fifteen thicknesses of it make a kind of armor which the troops
-wear. It will resist a musket-ball, but not a rifle-bullet.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-THE ISSACHAR OF EASTERN ASIA.
-
-
-The Shan-yan Alin, or Ever-White Mountains, stand like a wall along the
-northern boundary of the Corean peninsula. Irregular mountain masses
-and outjutting ranges of hills form its buttresses, while, at
-intervals, lofty peaks rise as towers. These are all overtopped by the
-central spire Paik-tu, or Whitehead, which may be over ten thousand
-feet high. From its bases flow out the Yalu, Tumen, and Hurka Rivers.
-
-From primeval times the dwellers at the foot of this mountain, who saw
-its ever hoary head lost in the clouds, or glistening with fresh-fallen
-snow, conceived of a spirit dwelling on its heights in the form of a
-virgin in white. Her servants were animals in white fur and birds in
-white plumage.
-
-When Buddhism entered the peninsula, as in China and Japan, so, in
-Corea, it absorbed the local deities, and hailed them under new names,
-as previous incarnations of Buddha before his avatar in India, or the
-true advent of the precious faith through his missionaries. They were
-thenceforth adopted into the Buddhist pantheon, and numbered among the
-worshipped Buddhas. The spirit of the Ever-White Mountains, the virgin
-in ever-white robes, named Manchusri, whose home lay among the
-unmelting snows, was one of these. Perhaps it was from this deity that
-the Manchius, the ancestors of the ruling dynasty of China, the wearers
-of the world-famous hair tails, took their name.
-
-According to Manchiu legend, as given by Professor Douglas, it is said
-that “in remote ages, three heaven-born virgins dwelt beneath the
-shadow of the Great White Mountains, and that, while they were bathing
-in a lake which reflected in its bosom the snowy clad peaks which
-towered above it, a magpie dropped a blood red fruit on the clothes of
-the youngest. This the maiden instinctively devoured, and forthwith
-conceived and bore a son, whose name they called Ai-sin Ghioro, which
-being interpreted is the ‘Golden Family Stem,’ and which is the family
-name of the emperors of China. When his mother had entered the icy cave
-of the dead, her son embarked on a little boat, and floated down the
-river Hurka, until he reached a district occupied by three families who
-were at war with each other. The personal appearance of the
-supernatural youth so impressed these warlike chiefs that they forgot
-their enmities, and hailed him as their ruler. The town of O-to-le
-[Odoli] was chosen as his capital, and from that day his people waxed
-fat and kicked against their oppressors, the Chinese.”
-
-The home of the Manchius was, as this legend shows, on the north side
-of the Ever-White Mountains, in the valley of the Hurka. From beyond
-these mountains was to roll upon China and Corea another avalanche of
-invasion. Beginning to be restless in the fourteenth century, they had,
-in the sixteenth, consolidated so many tribes, and were so strong in
-men and horses, that they openly defied the Chinese. The formidable
-expeditions of Li-yu-sun, previous to the Japanese invasion of Corea,
-kept them at bay for a time, but the immense expenditure of life and
-treasure required to fight the Japanese, drained the resources of the
-Ming emperors, while their attention being drawn away from the north,
-the Manchiu hordes massed their forces and grew daily in wealth,
-numbers, discipline, and courage. The invasion of Chō-sen by the
-Japanese veterans was one of the causes of the weakness and fall of the
-Ming dynasty.
-
-To repress the rising power in the north, and to smother the life of
-the young nation, the Peking government resorted to barbarous cruelties
-and stern coercion, in which bloodshed was continual. Unable to protect
-the eastern border of Liao Tung, the entire population of three hundred
-thousand souls, dwelling in four cities and many villages, were removed
-westward and resettled on new lands. Fortresses were planned, but not
-finished, in the deserted land, to keep back the restless cavalry
-raiders from the north. Thus the foundation of the neutral strip of
-fifty miles was unconsciously laid, and ten thousand square miles of
-fair and fertile land, west of the Yalu, was abandoned to the wolf and
-tiger. What it soon became, it has remained until yesterday—a howling
-wilderness. (See map on page 155.)
-
-Unable to meet these cotton-armored raiders in the field, the Ming
-emperor ordered, and in 1615 consummated, the assassination of their
-king. This exasperated all the Manchiu tribes to vengeance, and
-hostilities on a large scale at once began by a southwest movement into
-Liao Tung.
-
-China had now again to face an invasion greater than the Japanese, for
-this time a whole nation was behind it. Calling on her vassal, the
-Eastern Kingdom, to send an army of twenty thousand men, she ordered
-them to join the imperial army at Hing-king. This city, now called
-Yen-den, lies about seventy miles west of the Yalu River, near the 42d
-parallel, just beyond what was “the neutral strip,” and inside the
-palisades erected later. In the battle, which ensued, the Coreans first
-faced the Manchius. The imperial legions were beaten, and the Coreans,
-seeing which way the victory would finally turn, deserted from the
-Chinese side to that of their enemy. This was in 1619.
-
-The Manchiu general sent back some of the runaway Coreans to their
-king, intimating that, though the Coreans were acting gratefully in
-assisting the Chinese, who had formerly helped the Coreans against the
-Japanese, yet it might hereafter be better to remain neutral. So far
-from taking any notice of this letter, the government at Seoul allowed
-the king’s subjects to cross the Yalu and assist the people of Liao
-Tung against the Manchius, who were making Hing-king their capital. At
-the same time the Chinese commander was permitted to enter Corea, and
-thence to make expeditions against the Manchius, by which they
-inflicted great damage upon the enemy. This continued until the winter
-of 1827, when the Manchius, having lost all patience with Corea,
-prepared to invade the peninsula. Compelling two refugees to act as
-their guides, they crossed the frozen Yalu in four divisions, in
-February, and at once attacked the Chinese army, which was defeated,
-and retreated into Liao Tung. They then began the march to Seoul.
-Ai-chiu was the first town taken, and then, after crossing the
-Ching-chong River, followed in succession the cities lining the high
-road to Ping-an. Thence, over the Tatong River, they pressed on to
-Seoul, the Coreans everywhere flying before them. Thousands of
-dwellings and magazines of provisions were given to the flames, and
-their trail was one of blood and ashes. Among the slain were two
-Hollanders, who were captives in the country.
-
-Heretofore a line of strong palisades had separated Corea from
-Manchuria, on the north, but large portions of it were destroyed at
-this time in the constant forays along the border. Those parts which
-stood yet intact were often seen by travellers along the Manchurian
-side as late as toward the end of the last century. Since then this
-wooden wall, a pigmy imitation of China’s colossal embargo in masonry,
-has gradually fallen into decay.
-
-The Manchius invested Seoul and began its siege in earnest. The queen
-and ladies of the court had already been sent to Kang-wa Island. The
-king, to avoid further shedding of blood, sent tribute offerings to the
-invaders, and concluded a treaty of peace by which Chō-sen again
-exchanged masters, the king not only acknowledging from the Manchiu
-sovereign the right of investiture, but also direct authority over his
-person, that is, the relation of master and subject.
-
-The Coreans now waited to see whether events were likely to modify
-their new relations, so reluctantly entered into, for the Chinese were
-far from beaten as yet. When free from the presence of the invading
-army the courage of the ministers rose, and by their advice the king,
-by gradual encroachments and neglect, annulled the treaty.
-
-No sooner were the Manchius able to spare their forces for the purpose,
-than, turning from China, they marched into Corea, one hundred thousand
-strong, well supplied with provisions and baggage-wagons. Entering the
-peninsula, both at Ai-chiu and by the northern pass, they reached
-Seoul, and, after severe fighting, entered it. Being now provided with
-cannon and boats, they took Kang-wa, into which all the royal, and many
-of the noble, ladies had fled for safety.
-
-The king now came to terms, and made a treaty in February, 1637, in
-which he utterly renounced his allegiance to the Ming emperor, agreed
-to give his two sons as hostages, promised to send an annual embassy,
-with tribute, to the Manchiu court, and to establish a market at the
-Border Gate, in Liao Tung. These covenants were ratified by the solemn
-ceremonial of the king, his sons and his ministers confessing their
-crimes and making “kow-tow” (bowing nine times to the earth). Tartar
-and Corean worshipped together before Heaven, and the altar erected to
-Heaven’s honor. A memorial stone, erected near this sacred place,
-commemorates the clemency of the Manchiu conqueror.
-
-In obedience to the orders of their new masters, the Coreans despatched
-ships, loaded with grain, to feed the armies operating against Peking,
-and sent a small force beyond the Tumen to chastise a tribe that had
-rebelled against their conquerors. A picked body of their matchlock men
-was also admitted into the Manchiu service.
-
-After the evacuation of Corea, the victors marched into China, where
-bloody, civil war was already raging. The imperial army was badly
-beaten by the rebels headed by the usurper Li-tse-ching. The Manchius
-joined their forces with the Imperialists, and defeated the rebels, and
-then demanded the price of their victory. Entering Peking, they
-proclaimed the downfall of the house of Ming. The Tâtar (vassal) was
-now a “Tartar.” The son of their late king was set upon the
-dragon-throne and proclaimed the Whang Ti, the Son of Heaven, and the
-Lord of the Middle Kingdom and all her vassals. The following tribute
-was fixed for Chō-sen to pay annually:
-
-100 ounces of gold, 1,000 ounces of silver, 10,000 bags of rice, 2,000
-pieces of silk, 300 pieces of linen, 10,000 pieces of cotton cloth, 400
-pieces of hemp cloth, 100 pieces of fine hemp cloth, 10,000 rolls
-(fifty sheets each) of large paper, 1,000 rolls small sized paper,
-2,000 knives (good quality), 1,000 ox-horns, 40 decorated mats, 200
-pounds of dye-wood, 10 boxes of pepper, 100 tiger skins, 100 deer
-skins, 400 beaver skins, 200 skins of blue (musk?) rats.
-
-When, as it happened the very next year, the shō-gun of Japan demanded
-an increase of tribute to be paid in Yedo, the court of Seoul plead in
-excuse their wasted resources consequent upon the war with the
-Manchius, and their heavy burdens newly laid upon them. Their excuse
-was accepted.
-
-Twice, within a single generation, had the little peninsula been
-devastated by two mighty invasions that ate up the land. Between the
-mountaineers of the north, and “the brigands” from over the sea, Corea
-was left the Issachar among nations. The once strong ass couched down
-between two burdens. “And he saw that the rest was good, and the land
-that it was pleasant, and bowed his shoulder to bear, and became a
-servant unto tribute.”
-
-The Manchius, being of different stock and blood from the Chinese, yet
-imposed their dress and method of wearing the hair upon the millions of
-Chinese people, but here their tyranny seemed to stop. Hitherto, the
-Chinese and Corean method of rolling the hair in a knot or ball, on the
-top of the head, had been the fashion for ages. As a sign of loyalty to
-the new rulers, all people in the Middle Kingdom were compelled to
-shave the forefront of the head and allow their hair to grow in a
-queue, or pig-tail, behind on their back. At first they resisted, and
-much blood was shed before all submitted; but, at length, the once
-odious mark of savagery and foreign conquest became the national
-fashion, and the Chinaman’s pride at home and abroad. Even in foreign
-lands, they cling to this mark of their loyalty as to life and country.
-The object of the recent queue-cutting plots, fomented by the
-political, secret societies of China, is to insult the imperial family
-at Peking by robbing the Chinese of their loyal appendage, and the
-special sign of the Tartar dominion.
-
-As a special favor to the Coreans who first submitted to the new
-masters of Kathay, they were spared the infliction of the queue, and
-allowed to dress their hair in the ancient style.
-
-The Corean king hastened to send congratulations to the emperor, Shun
-Chi, which ingratiated him still more in favor at Peking. In 1650 a
-captive Corean maid, taken prisoner in their first invasion, became
-sixth lady in rank in the imperial household. Through her influence her
-father, the ambassador, obtained a considerable diminution of the
-annual tribute, fixed upon in the terms of capitulation in 1637. In
-1643, one-third of this tribute had been remitted, so that, by this
-last reduction, in 1650, the tax upon Corean loyalty was indeed very
-slight. Indeed it has long been considered by the Peking government
-that the Coreans get about as much as they give, and the embassy is one
-of ceremony rather than of tribute-bringing. Their offering is rather a
-percentage paid for license to trade, than a symbol of vassalage.
-Nevertheless, the Coreans of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries
-found out, to their cost, that any lack of due deference was an
-expensive item of freedom. Every jot and tittle, or tithe of the mint
-or anise of etiquette, was exacted by the proud Manchius. In 1695, the
-king of Chō-sen was fined ten thousand ounces of silver for the
-omission of some punctilio of vassalage. At the investiture of each
-sovereign in Seoul, two grandees were sent from Peking to confer the
-patent of royalty. The little bill for this costly favor was about ten
-thousand taels, or dollars, in silver. The Coreans also erected, near
-one of the gates of Seoul, a temple, which still stands, in honor of
-the Manchius general commanding the invasion, and to whom, to this day,
-they pay semi-divine honors. Yet to encourage patriotism it was
-permitted, by royal decree, to the descendants of the minister who
-refused, at the Yalu River, to allow the Manchius to cross, and who
-thereby lost his life, to erect to his memory a monumental gate, a mark
-of high honor only rarely granted.
-
-The Jesuits at Peking succeeded in ingratiating themselves with the
-conquerors, and Shun-chi, the emperor, was a pupil of Adam Schall, a
-German Jesuit, who became President of the Board of Mathematicians.
-Nevertheless, in the troubles preceding the peace, many upright men
-lost their lives, and hundreds of scholars who hated the Tâtar
-conquerors of their beloved China—as the Christians of Constantinople
-hated the Turks—fled to Corea and Japan, conferring great literary
-influence and benefit. In both countries their presence greatly
-stimulated the critical study of Chinese literature. With the Mito and
-Yedo scholars in Japan, they assisted to promote the revival of
-learning, so long neglected during the civil wars. At Nagasaki, a
-Chinese colony of merchants, and trade between the two countries, were
-established, after the last hope of restoring the Mings had been
-extinguished in Kokusenya (Coxinga), who also drove the Dutch from
-Formosa. This exodus of scholars was somewhat like the dispersion of
-the Greek scholars through Europe after the fall of the Byzantine
-empire.
-
-To the Jesuits in Peking, who were mostly Frenchmen, belongs the credit
-of beginning that whole system of modern culture, by which modern
-science and Christianity are yet to transform the Chinese mind, and
-recast the ideas of this mighty people concerning nature and Deity.
-They now began to make known in Europe much valuable information about
-China and her outlying tributary states. They sent home a map of
-Corea—the first seen in Europe. Imperfect, though it was, it made the
-hermit land more than a mere name. In “China Illustrata,” written by
-the Jesuit Martini, and published in 1649, in Amsterdam—the city of
-printing presses and the Leipsic of that day—there is a map of Corea.
-The same industrious scholar wrote, in Latin, a book, entitled “De
-Bello inter Tartaros et Seniensis” (On the War between the Manchius and
-the Chinese), which was issued at Antwerp in 1654, and in Amsterdam in
-1661. It was also translated into English, French, and Spanish, the
-editions being issued at London, Donay, and Madrid. The English title
-is “Bellum Tartaricum; or, the Conquest of the Great and Most Renowned
-Empire of China by the Invasion of the [Manchiu] Tartars,” London,
-1654, octavo.
-
-The Dutch had long tried to get a hand in the trade of China, and, in
-1604, 1622, and 1653, had sent fleets of trading vessels to Chinese
-ports, but were in every instance refused. The Russians, however, were
-first allowed to trade on the northern frontier of China before the
-same privileges were granted to other Europeans. The Cossacks, when
-they first crossed the Ural Mountains, in 1579, with their faces set
-toward the Pacific, never ceased their advance till they had added to
-the Czar’s domain a portion of the earth’s surface as large as the
-United States, and half of Europe. Once on the steppes, there began
-that long duel between Cossack and Tartar, which never ended until the
-boundaries of Russia touched those of Corea, Japan, and British
-America. Cossacks discovered, explored, conquered, and settled this
-triple-zoned region of frozen moss, forest land and fertile soil,
-bringing over six million square miles of territory under the wings of
-the double-headed eagle. They brought reports of Corea to Russia, and
-it was from Russian sources that Sir John Campbell obtained the
-substance of his “Commercial History of Chorea and Japan” in his
-voyages and travels, printed in London, 1771.
-
-In 1645, a party of Japanese traversed Chō-sen from Ai-chiu to Fusan,
-the Dan and Beersheba of the peninsula. Returning from their travels,
-one of them wrote a book called the “Romance of Corea” (Chō-sen
-Monogatari). Takéuchi Tosaémon and his son, Tozo, and shipmaster Kunida
-Hisosaémon, on April 26, 1645, left the port of Mikuni in the province
-of Echizen—the same place to which the first native of Corea is said to
-have reached Japan in the legendary period. With three large junks,
-whose crews numbered fifty-eight men, they set sail for the north on a
-trading voyage. Off the island of Sado a fearful storm broke upon them,
-which, after fifteen days, drove them on the mountain coast of Tartary,
-where they landed, May 12th, to refit and get fresh water. At first the
-people treated them peacefully, trading off their ginseng for the saké,
-or rice-beer, of the Japanese. Later on, the Japanese were attacked by
-the natives, and twenty-five of their number slain. The remainder were
-taken to Peking, where they remained until the winter of 1646.
-Honorably acquitted of all blame, they were sent homeward, into the
-Eastern Kingdom, under safe conduct of the Chinese emperor Shun-chi.
-They began the journey December 18th, and, crossing the snow-covered
-mountains and frozen rivers of Liao Tung, reached Seoul, after
-twenty-eight days travel, February 3, 1647.
-
-The Japanese were entertained in magnificent style in one of the royal
-houses with banquets, numerous servants, presents, and the attendance
-of an officer, named Kan-shun, who took them around the city and showed
-them the sights. The paintings on the palace walls, the tiger-skin
-rugs, the libraries of handsomely bound books, the festivities of New
-Year’s day, the evergreen trees and fine scenery, were all novel and
-pleasing to the Japanese, but still they longed to reach home. Leaving
-Seoul, February 12th, they passed through a large city, where, at
-sunset and sunrise, they heard the trumpeters call the laborers to
-begin and cease work. They noticed that the official class inscribed on
-their walls the names and dates of reign and death of the royal line
-from the founder of the dynasty to the father of the ruling sovereign.
-This served as an object lesson in history for the young. The merchants
-kept in their houses a picture of the famous Tao-jō-kung, who, by skill
-in trade, accumulated fortunes only to spend them among his friends. On
-February 21st, they passed through Shang-shen (or Shang-chiu?), where
-the Japanese gained a great victory.
-
-In passing along the Nak-tong River, they witnessed the annual trial of
-archery for the military examinations. The targets were straw
-mannikins, set up on boats, in the middle of the river. On March 6th
-they reached Fusan. The Japanese settlement, called Nippon-machi, or
-Japan Street, was outside the gates of the town, a guard-house being
-kept up to keep the Japanese away. Only twice a year, on August 15th
-and 16th, were they allowed to leave their quarters to visit a temple
-in the town. The Coreans, however, were free to enter the Japanese
-concession to visit or trade. The waifs were taken into the house of
-the daimiō of Tsushima, and glad, indeed, were they to talk with a
-fellow countryman. Sailing to Tsushima, they were able there to get
-Japanese clothes, and, on July 19th, they reached Ozaka, and finally
-their homes in Echizen. One of their number wrote out an account of his
-adventures.
-
-Among other interesting facts, he states that he saw, hanging in the
-palace at Peking, a portrait of Yoshitsuné, the Japanese hero, who, as
-some of his countrymen believe, fled the country and, landing in
-Manchuria, became the mighty warrior Genghis Khan. Whether mistaken or
-not, the note of the Japanese is interesting.
-
-Mr. Leon Pages, in his “Histoire de la Religion Chrétienne au Japon,”
-says that these men referred to above found established in the capital
-a Japanese commercial factory, but with the very severe restrictions
-similar to those imposed upon the Hollanders at Deshima. This is
-evidently a mistake. There was no trading mart in the capital, but
-there was, and had been, one at Fusan, which still exists in most
-flourishing condition.
-
-The Manchius, from the first, showed themselves “the most improvable
-race in Asia.” In 1707, under the patronage of the renowned emperor
-Kang Hi, the Jesuits in Peking began their great geographical
-enterprise—the survey of the Chinese Empire, including the outlying
-vassal kingdoms. From the king’s palace, at Seoul, Kang Hi’s envoy
-obtained a map of Corea, which was reduced, drawn, and sent to Europe
-to be engraved and printed. From this original, most of the maps and
-supposed Corean names in books, published since that time, have been
-copied. Having no Corean interpreter at hand, the Jesuit cartographers
-gave the Chinese sounds of the characters which represent the local
-names. Hence the discrepancies between this map and the reports of the
-Dutch, Japanese, French, and American travellers, who give the
-vernacular pronunciation. To French genius and labor, from first to
-last, we owe most of what is known in Europe concerning the secluded
-nation. The Jesuits’ map is accurate as regards the latitude and
-longitude of many places, but lacking in true coast lines.
-
-While making their surveys, the party of missionaries, whose assignment
-of the work was to Eastern Manchuria, caught something like a Pisgah
-glimpse of the country which, before a century elapsed, was to become a
-land of promise to French Christianity. In 1709, as they looked across
-the Tumen River, they wrote: “It was a new sight to us after we had
-crossed so many forests, and coasted so many frightful mountains to
-find ourselves on the banks of the river Tumen-ula, with nothing but
-woods and wild beasts on one side, while the other presented to our
-view all that art and labor could produce in the best cultivated
-kingdoms. We there saw walled cities, and placing our instruments on
-the neighboring heights, geometrically determined the location of four
-of them, which bounded Korea on the north.” The four towns seen by the
-Jesuit surveyors were Kion-wen, On-son, and possibly Kion-fun and
-Chon-shon.
-
-The Coreans could not understand the Tartar or Chinese companions of
-the Frenchmen, but, at Hun-chun, they found interpreters, who told them
-the names of the Corean towns. The French priests were exceedingly
-eager and anxious to cross the river, and enter the land that seemed
-like the enchanted castle of Thornrose, but, being forbidden by the
-emperor’s orders, they reluctantly turned their backs upon the smiling
-cities.
-
-This was the picture of the northern border in 1707, before it was
-desolated, as it afterward was, so that the Russians might not be
-tempted to cross over. At Hun-chun, on the Manchiu, and Kion-wen, on
-the Corean side of the river, once a year, alternately, that is, once
-in two years, at each place, a fair was held up to 1860, where the
-Coreans and Chinese merchants exchanged goods. The lively traffic
-lasted only half a day, when the nationals of either country were
-ordered over the border, and laggards were hastened at the spear’s
-point. Any foreigner, Manchiu, Chinese, or even Corean suspected of
-being an alien, was, if found on the south side of the Tumen, at once
-put to death without shrift or pity. Thus the only gate of parley with
-the outside world on Corea’s northern frontier resembled an embrasure
-or a muzzle. When at last the Cossack lance flashed, and the Russian
-school-house rose, and the church spire glittered with steady radiance
-beyond the Tumen, this gateway became the terminus of that “underground
-railroad,” through which the Corean slave reached his Canada beyond, or
-the Corean Christian sought freedom from torture and dungeons and
-death.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-THE DUTCHMEN IN EXILE.
-
-
-The old saw which tells us that “truth is stranger than fiction”
-receives many a new and unexpected confirmation whenever a traveller
-into strange countries comes back to tell his tale. Marco Polo was
-denominated “Signor Milliano” (Lord Millions) by his incredulous
-hearers, because, in speaking of China, he very properly used this
-lofty numeral so frequently in his narratives. Mendez Pinto, though
-speaking truthfully of Japan’s wonders, was dubbed by a pun on his
-Christian name, the “Mendacious,” because he told what were thought to
-be very unchristian stories. In our own day, when Paul Du Chaillu came
-back from the African wilds and told of the gorilla which walked
-upright like a man, and could dent a gun-barrel with his teeth, most
-people believed, as a college professor of belles lettres, dropping
-elegant words for the nonce, once stated, that “he lied like the
-mischief.” When lo! the once mythic gorillas have come as live guests
-at Berlin and Philadelphia, while their skeletons are commonplaces in
-our museums. Even Stanley’s African discoveries were, at first,
-discredited.
-
-The first European travellers in Corea, who lived to tell their tale at
-home, met the same fate as Polo, Pinto, Du Chaillu, and Stanley. The
-narratives were long doubted, and by some set down as pure fiction.
-Like the Indian braves that listen to Red Cloud and Spotted Tail, who,
-in the lodges of the plains, recount the wonders of Washington and
-civilization, the hearers are sure that they have taken “bad medicine.”
-Later reports or personal experience, however, corroborate the first
-accounts, and by the very commonplaceness of simple truth the first
-reports are robbed alike of novelty and suspicion.
-
-The first known entrance of any number of Europeans into Corea was that
-of Hollanders, belonging to the crew of the Dutch ship Hollandia, which
-was driven ashore in 1627. In those days the Dutch were pushing their
-adventurous progress in the eastern seas as well as on the American
-waters. They had forts, trading settlements, or prosperous cities in
-Java, Sumatra, the Spice Islands, Formosa, and the ports of Southern
-Japan. The shores of these archipelagoes and continents being then
-little known, and slightly surveyed, shipwrecks were very frequent. The
-profits of a prosperous voyage usually repaid all losses of ships,
-though it is estimated that three out of five were lost. The passage
-between China and Japan and up the seas south of Corea, has, from
-ancient times, been difficult, even to a Chinese proverb.
-
-A big, blue-eyed, red-bearded, robust Dutchman, named John Weltevree,
-whose native town was De Rijp, in North Holland, volunteered on board
-the Dutch ship Hollandia in 1626, in order to get to Japan. In that
-wonderful country, during the previous seventeen years, his
-fellow-countrymen had been trading and making rich fortunes,
-occasionally fighting on the seas with the Portuguese and other
-buccaneers of the period.
-
-The good ship, after a long voyage around the Cape of Good Hope, and
-through the Indian and Chinese Seas, was almost in sight of Japan.
-Coasting along the Corean shores, Mr. John Weltevree and some
-companions went ashore to get water, and there were captured by the
-natives. The Coreans were evidently quite willing to have such a man at
-hand, for use rather than ornament. After the Japanese invasions a
-spasm of enterprise in the way of fortification, architecture, and
-development of their military resources possessed them, and to have a
-big-nosed and red-bearded foreigner, a genuine “Nam-ban,” or barbarian
-of the south, was a prize. To both Coreans and Japanese, the Europeans,
-as coming in ships from the southward, were called “Southerners,” or
-“Southern savages.” Later on, after learning new lessons in geography,
-they called them “Westerners,” or “Barbarians from the West.”
-
-Like the black potentates of Africa, who like to possess a white man,
-believing him to be a “spirit,” or a New Zealand chief, who values the
-presence of a “paheka Maori” (Englishman), the Coreans of that day
-considered their western “devil” a piece of property worth many tiger
-skins. It may be remembered—and the Coreans may have borrowed the idea
-thence—that the Japanese, then beginning their hermit policy, had also
-a white foreigner in durance for their benefit. This was the Englishman
-Will Adams, who had been a pilot on a Dutch ship that sailed from the
-same Texel River. Perhaps the boy Weltevree had seen and talked with
-the doughty Briton on the wharves of the Dutch port. Adams served the
-Japanese as interpreter, state adviser, ship architect, mathematician,
-and in various useful ways, but was never allowed to leave Japan. It is
-highly probable that the ambassadors from Seoul, while in Yedo, saw
-Will Adams, since he spent much of his time in public among the
-officials and people, living there until May, 1620.
-
-The magnates of Seoul probably desired to have a like factotum, and
-this explains why Weltevree was treated with kindness and comparative
-honor, though kept as a prisoner. When the Manchius invaded Corea, in
-1635, his two companions were killed in the wars, and Weltevree was
-left alone. Having no one with whom he could converse, he had almost
-forgotten his native speech, when after twenty-seven years of exile, in
-the fifty-ninth year of his age, he met some of his fellow-Hollanders
-and acted as interpreter to the Coreans, under the following
-circumstances:
-
-In January, 1653, the Dutch ship Sperwer (Sparrowhawk) left Texel
-Island, bound for Nagasaki. Among the crew was Hendrik Hamel, the
-supercargo, who afterward became the historian of their adventures.
-After nearly five months’ voyage, they reached Batavia, June 1st, and
-Formosa July 16th. From this island they steered for Japan, fortunately
-meeting no “wild Chinese” or pirates on their course. Off Quelpart
-Island, a dreadful storm arose, and, being close on a lee shore with
-death staring all in the face, the captain ordered them “to cut down
-the mast and go to their prayers.” The ship went to pieces, but
-thirty-six out of the sixty-four men composing the crew reached the
-shore alive. The local magistrate, an elder of some seventy years of
-age, who knew a little Dutch, met them with his retainers, and learned
-their plight, who they were, and whence they came. The Hollanders were
-first refreshed with rice-water. The Coreans then collected the pieces
-of the broken ship, and all they could get from the hulk, and burned
-them for the sake of the metal. One of the iron articles happened to be
-a loaded cannon, which went off during the firing. The liquor casks
-were speedily emptied into the gullets of the wreckers, and the result
-was a very noisy set of heathen.
-
-The old leader, however, evidently determined to draw the line between
-virtue and vice somewhere. He had several of the thieves seized and
-spanked on the spot, while others were bambooed on the soles of their
-feet, one so severely that his toes dropped off.
-
-On October 29th the survivors were brought by the officials to be
-examined by the interpreter Weltevree. The huge noses, the red beards
-and white faces were at once recognized by the lone exile as belonging
-to his own countrymen. Weltevree was very “rusty” in his native
-language, after twenty-seven years’ nearly complete disuse, but in
-company with the new arrivals he regained it all in a month.
-
-Of course, the first and last idea of the captives was how to escape.
-The native fishing-smacks were frequently driven off to Japan, which
-they knew must be almost in sight. One night they made an attempt to
-reach the sea-shore. They at first thought they were secure, when the
-dogs betrayed them by barking and alarming the guards.
-
-It is evident that the European body has an odor entirely distinct from
-a Mongolian. The Abbé Huc states that even when travelling through
-Thibet and China, in disguise, the dogs continually barked at him and
-almost betrayed him, even at night. In travelling, and especially when
-living in the Japanese city of Fukui, the writer had the same
-experience. In walking through the city streets at night, even when
-many hundred yards off, the Japanese dogs would start up barking and
-run toward him. This occurred repeatedly, when scores of native
-pedestrians were not noticed by the beasts. The French missionaries in
-Corea, even in disguise, report the same facts.
-
-The baffled Hollanders were caught and officially punished after the
-fashion of the nursery, but so severely that some had to keep their
-beds for a month, in order to heal their battered flanks. Finally they
-were ordered to proceed to the capital, which the Dutchmen call Sior
-(Seoul).
-
-Hamel gives a few names of the places through which he passed. These
-are in the pronunciation of the local dialect, and written down in
-Dutch spelling. Most of them are recognizable on the map, though the
-real sound is nearly lost in a quagmire of Dutch letters, in which
-Hamel has attempted to note the quavers and semi-demi-quavers of Corean
-enunciation. He writes Coeree for Corea, and Tyocen-koeck for Chō-sen
-kokŭ, and is probably the first European to mention Quelpart Island, on
-which the ship was wrecked.
-
-The first city on the mainland to which they came was Heynam (Hai-nam),
-in the extreme southwest of Chulla. This was about the last of May.
-Thence they marched to Jeham, spending the night at Na-diou (Nai-chiu).
-The gunner of the ship died at Je-ham, or Je-ban. They passed through
-San-siang (Chan-shon), and came to Tong-ap (Chon-wup?), after crossing
-a high mountain, on the top of which was the spacious fortress of
-Il-pam San-siang. The term “San-siang,” used twice here, means a
-fortified stronghold in the mountains, to which, in time of war, the
-neighboring villagers may fly for refuge. Teyn (Tai-in), was the next
-place arrived at, after which, “having baited at the little town of
-Kuniga” (Kumku), they reached Khin-tyo (Chon-chiu), where the governor
-of Chillado (Chulla dō) resided. This city, though a hundred miles from
-the sea, was very famous, and was a seat of great traffic. After this,
-they came to the last town of the province, Jesan, and, passing through
-Gunun and Jensan, reached Konsio (Kong-chiu), the capital of
-Chung-chong province. They reached the border of Kiung-kei by a rapid
-march, and, after crossing a wide river (the Han), they traversed a
-league, and entered Sior (Seoul). They computed the length of the
-journey at seventy-five leagues. This, by a rough reckoning, is about
-the distance from Hainam to Seoul, as may be seen from the map.
-
-In the capital, as they had been along the road, the Dutchmen were like
-wild beasts on show. Crowds flocked to see the white-faced and
-red-bearded foreigners. They must have appeared to the natives as Punch
-looks to English children. The women were even more anxious than the
-men to get a good look. Every one was especially curious to see the
-Dutchmen drink, for it was generally believed that they tucked their
-noses up over their ears when they drank. The size and prominence of
-the nasal organ of a Caucasian first strikes a Turanian with awe and
-fear. Thousands of people no doubt learned, for the first time, that
-the western “devils” were men after all, and ate decent food and not
-earthworms and toads. Some of the women, so Hamel flattered himself,
-even went so far as to admire the fair complexions and ruddy cheeks of
-the Dutchmen. At the palace, the king (Yo-chong, who reigned from 1648
-to 1658) improved the opportunity for a little fun. It was too good a
-show not to see how the animals could perform. The Dutchmen laughed,
-sang, danced, leaped, and went through miscellaneous performances for
-His Majesty’s benefit. For this they were rewarded with choice drink
-and refreshments. They were then assigned to the body-guard of the king
-as petty officers, and an allowance of rice was set apart for their
-maintenance. Chinese and Dutchmen drilled and commanded the palace
-troops, who were evidently the flower of the army. During their
-residence at the capital the Hollanders learned many things about the
-country and people, and began to be able to talk in the “Coresian”
-language.
-
-The ignorance and narrowness of the Coreans were almost incredible.
-They could not believe what the captives told them of the size of the
-earth. “How could it be possible,” said they, in sneering incredulity,
-“that the sun can shine on all the many countries you tell us of at
-once?” Thinking the foreigners told exaggerated lies, they fancied that
-the “countries” were only counties and the “cities” villages. To them
-Corea was very near the centre of the earth, which was China.
-
-The cold was very severe. In November the river was frozen over, and
-three hundred loaded horses passed over it on the ice.
-
-After they had been in Seoul three years, the “Tartar” (Manchiu)
-ambassador visited Seoul, but before his arrival the captives were sent
-away to a fort, distant six or seven leagues, to be kept until the
-ambassador left, which he did in March. This fort stood on a mountain,
-called Numma, which required three hours to ascend. In time of war the
-king sought shelter within it, and it was kept provisioned for three
-years. Hamel does not state why he and his companions were sent away,
-but it was probably to conceal the fact that foreigners were drilling
-the royal troops. The suspicions of the new rulers at Peking were
-easily roused.
-
-When the Manchiu envoy was about to leave Seoul, some of the prisoners
-determined to put in execution a plan of escape. They put on Dutch
-clothes, under their Corean dress, and awaited their opportunity. As
-the envoy was on the road about to depart, some of them seized the
-bridle of his horse, and displaying their Dutch clothing, begged him to
-take them to Peking. The plan ended in failure. The Dutchmen were
-seized and thrown into prison. Nothing more was ever heard of them, and
-it was believed by their companions that they had been put to death.
-This was in March.
-
-In June there was another shipwreck off Quelpart Island, and Weltevree
-being now too old to make the journey, three of the Hollanders were
-sent to act as interpreters. Hamel does not give us the result of their
-mission.
-
-The Manchiu ambassador came again to Seoul in August. The nobles urged
-the king to put the Hollanders to death, and have no more trouble with
-them. His Majesty refused, but sent them back into Chulla, allowing
-them each fifty pounds of rice a month for their support.
-
-They set out from Seoul in March, 1657, on horseback, passing through
-the same towns as on their former journey. Reaching the castle-city of
-“Diu-siong,” they were joined by their three comrades sent to
-investigate the wreck at Quelpart, which made their number
-thirty-three. Their chief occupation was that of keeping the castle and
-official residence in order—an easy and congenial duty for the neat and
-order-loving Dutchmen.
-
-Hamel learned many of the ideas of the natives. They represented their
-country as in the form of a long square, “in shape like a
-playing-card”—perhaps the Dutchmen had a pack with them to beguile the
-tedium of their exile. Certain it is that they still kept the arms and
-flag of Orange, to be used again.
-
-The exiles were not treated harshly, though in one case, after a change
-of masters, the new magistrate “afflicted them with fresh crosses.”
-This “rotation in office” was evidently on account of the change on the
-throne. Yo-chong ceased to reign in 1658, and “a new king arose who
-knew not Joseph.” Yen-chong succeeded his father, reigning from 1658 to
-1676.
-
-Two large comets appearing in the sky with their tails toward each
-other, frightened the Coreans, and created intense alarm. The army was
-ordered out, the guards were doubled, and no fires were allowed to be
-kindled along the coast, lest they might attract or guide invaders or a
-hostile force. In the last few decades, comets had appeared, said the
-Coreans, and in each case they had presaged war. In the first, the
-Japanese invasions from the east, and, in the second, the Manchius from
-the west. They anxiously asked the Dutchmen how comets were regarded in
-Holland, and probably received some new ideas in astronomy. No war,
-however, followed, and the innocent comets gradually shrivelled up out
-of sight, without shaking out of their fiery hair either pestilence or
-war.
-
-The Dutchmen saw many whales blowing off the coast, and in December
-shoals of herring rushed by, keeping up an increasing stream of life
-until January, when it slackened, and in March ceased. The whales made
-sad havoc in these shoals, gorging themselves on the small fry. These
-are the herring which arrive off the coast of Whang-hai, and feed on
-the banks and shoals during the season. The catching of them affords
-lucrative employment to hundreds of junks from North China.
-
-From their observations, the Dutchmen argued—one hundred and twenty
-years before La Perouse demonstrated the fact—that there must be a
-strait north of Corea, connecting with the Arctic Ocean, like that of
-Waigats (now called the Strait of Kara), between Nova Zemla and the
-island lying off the northwestern end of Russia. They thus conjectured
-the existence of the Straits of Tartary, west of Saghalin, before they
-appeared on any European map. Waigats was discovered by the Englishman,
-Stephen Burroughs, who had been sent out by the Muscovy company to find
-a northwest passage to China. Their mention of it shows that they were
-familiar with the progress of polar research, since it was discovered
-in 1556, only seven years before they left Holland. It had even at that
-time, however, become a famous hunting-place for whalers and herring
-fishers.
-
-These marine studies of the captives, coupled with the fact that they
-had before attempted to escape, may have aroused the suspicions of the
-government. In February, 1663, by orders from Seoul, they were
-separated and put in three different towns. Twelve went to “Saysiano,”
-five to Siun-schien, and five to Namman, their numbers being now
-reduced to twenty-two. Two of these places are easily found on the
-Japanese map. During all the years of their captivity, they seem not to
-have known anything of the Japanese at Fusan, nor the latter of them.
-
-Though thus scattered, the men were occasionally allowed to visit each
-other, which they did, enjoying each other’s society, sweetened with
-pipes and tobacco, and Hamel devoutly adds that “it was a great mercy
-of God that they enjoyed good health.” A new governor having been
-appointed over them, evidently was possessed with the idea of testing
-the skill of the bearded foreigners, with a view of improving the art
-productions of the country. He set the Dutchmen to work at moulding
-clay—perhaps to have some pottery and tiles after Dutch patterns, and
-the Delft system of illustrating the Bible at the fireplace. This was
-so manifestly against the national policy of making no improvements on
-anything, that the poor governor lost his place and suffered
-punishment. The spies informed on him to the king. An explosion of
-power took place, the ex-governor received ninety strokes on his
-shin-bones, and was disgraced from rank and office. The quondam
-improvers of the ceramic art of Corea were again set to work at pulling
-up grass and other menial duties about the official residence.
-
-As the years passed on, the poor exiles were in pitiful straits. Their
-clothing had been worn to tatters, and they were reduced even to
-beggary. They were accustomed to go off in companies to seek alms of
-the people, for two or three weeks at a time. Those left at home,
-during these trips, worked at various odd jobs to earn a pittance,
-especially at making arrows. The next year, 1664, was somewhat easier
-for them, their overseer being kind and gentle; but, in 1665, the
-homesick fellows tried hard to escape. In 1666, they lost their
-benefactor, the good governor. Now came the time for flight.
-
-All possible preparations were made, in the way of hoarding provisions,
-getting fresh water ready, and studying well the place of exit. They
-waited for the sickness or absence of their overseer, to slacken the
-vigilance of their guards.
-
-In the latter part of August, or early in September, 1667, as the
-fourteenth year of their captivity was drawing to a close, the governor
-fell sick. The Dutchmen, taking time by the forelock, immediately, as
-soon as dark, on the night of September 4th, climbed the city wall, and
-reaching the seaside succeeded, after some parleying, in getting a
-boat. “A Corean, blinded by the offer of double the value of it,” sold
-them his fishing craft. They returned again to the city. At night they
-crept along the city wall, and this time the dogs were asleep, absent,
-or to windward, though the Dutchmen’s hearts were in their mouths all
-the time. They carried pots of rice and water, and that darling of a
-Dutchman—the frying-pan. Noiselessly they slipped the wood and stone
-anchor, and glided out past the junks and boats in the harbor, none of
-the crews waking from their mats.
-
-They steered directly southeast, and on the 6th found themselves in a
-current off the Goto Islands. They succeeded in landing, and cooked
-some food. Not long after, some armed natives (probably from the
-lingering influence of the comet) approached them cautiously, as the
-Japanese feared they were Coreans, and forerunners of an invading band.
-
-Hamel at once pulled out their flag, having the arms and colors of the
-Prince of Orange. Surrendering themselves, they stated their history,
-and condition, and their desire of getting home. The Japanese were
-kind, “but made no return for the gifts” of the Dutchmen. They finally
-got to Nagasaki in Japanese junks, and met their countrymen at Déshima.
-The annual ship from Batavia was then just about to return, and in the
-nick of time the waifs got on board, reached Batavia November 20th,
-sailed for Holland December 28th, and on July 20, 1668, stepped ashore
-at home.
-
-
-
-Hamel, the supercargo of the ship, wrote a book on his return,
-recounting his adventures in a simple and straightforward style. It was
-written in Dutch and shortly after translated into French, German, and
-English. Four editions in Dutch are known. The English version may be
-found in full in the Astley, and in the Pinkerton, Collections of
-Voyages and Travels.
-
-The French translator indulges in skepticism concerning Hamel’s
-narrative, questioning especially his geographical statements. Before a
-map of Corea, with the native sounds even but approximated, it will be
-seen that Hamel’s story is a piece of downright unembroidered truth. It
-is indeed to be regretted that this actual observer of Corean life,
-people, and customs gave us so little information concerning them.
-
-The fate of the other survivors of the Sparrowhawk crew was never
-known. Perhaps it never will be learned, as it is not likely that the
-Coreans would take any pains to mark the site of their graves. Yet as
-the tomb of Will Adams was found in Japan, by a reader of Hildreth’s
-book, so perhaps some inquiring foreigner in Corea may discover the
-site of the graves of these exiles, and mark their resting-places.
-
-There is no improbability in supposing that other missing vessels,
-previous to the second half of the nineteenth century, shared the fate
-of the Sparrowhawk. The wrecks, burned for the sake of the iron, would
-leave no trace; while perhaps many shipwrecked men have pined in
-captivity, and dying lonely in a strange land have been put in unmarked
-graves.
-
-
-
-At this point, we bring to an end our sketch of the ancient and
-mediæval history of Corea. Until the introduction of Christianity into
-the peninsula, the hermit nation was uninfluenced by any ideas which
-the best modern life claims as its own. As with the whole world, so
-with its tiny fraction Corea, the door of ancient history shut, and the
-gate of modern history opened, when the religion of Jesus moved the
-hearts and minds of men. We now glance at the geography, politics,
-social life, and religion of the Coreans; after which we shall narrate
-the story of their national life from the implanting of Christianity
-until their rivulet of history flowed into the stream of the world’s
-history.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-II.
-
-POLITICAL AND SOCIAL COREA.
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-THE EIGHT PROVINCES.
-
-
-PING-AN, OR THE PACIFIC.
-
-This province bears the not altogether appropriate name of Peaceful
-Quiet. It is the border land of the kingdom, containing what was for
-centuries the only acknowledged gate of entrance and outlet to the one
-neighbor which Corea willingly acknowledged as her superior. It
-contains, probably, the largest area of any province, unless it be
-Ham-kiung. Its northern, and a great part of its western, frontier is
-made by the Yalu River, called also the Ap-nok, the former name
-referring to its sinuous course, meaning “dragon’s windings,” and the
-latter after its deep green color.
-
-The Yalu is the longest river in Corea. Its source is found near the
-40th parallel. Flowing northwardly, for about eighty miles, the stream
-forms the boundary between Ping-an and Ham-kiung. Then, turning to the
-westward, it receives on the Manchurian side twelve tributaries, which
-run down the gorges of the Ever-White Mountains. Each of these streams
-is named, beginning westwardly, after the numerals of arithmetic. The
-waters of so many valleys on the west, as well as on the north and
-east, emptying into the Yalu, make it, in spring and fall, a turbulent
-stream, which sinuates like the writhing of a dragon; whence its name.
-In the summer, its waters are beautifully clear, and blue or green—the
-Coreans having no word to distinguish between these two colors. It
-empties by three mouths into the Yellow Sea, its deltas, or islands,
-being completely submerged during the melting of the snows. It is
-easily navigable for junks to the town of Chan-son, a noted trading
-place, sixty miles from the sea. The valley of the Yalu is extremely
-fertile, and well wooded, and the scenery is superb. Its navigation was
-long interdicted to the Chinese, but steamers and gunboats have entered
-it, and access to the fertile valley and the trade of the region will
-be gained by other nations. The Tong-kia River drains the neutral
-strip.
-
-The town nearest the frontier, and the gateway of the kingdom, is
-Ai-chiu. It is situated on a hill overlooking the river, and surrounded
-by a wall of light-colored stone. The annual embassy always departed
-for its overland journey to China through its gates. Here also are the
-custom-house and vigilant guards, whose chief business it was to
-scrutinize all persons entering or leaving Corea by the high road,
-which traverses the town. A line of patrols and guard-houses picketed
-the river along a length of over a hundred miles.
-
-Nevertheless, most of the French missionaries have entered the
-mysterious peninsula through this loophole, disguising themselves as
-wood-cutters, crossing the Yalu River on the ice, creeping through the
-water-drains in the granite wall, and passing through this town. Or
-they have been met by friends at appointed places along the border, and
-thence have travelled to the capital.
-
-Through this exit also, Corea sent to Peking or Mukden the waifs and
-sailors cast on her shores. A number of shipwrecked Americans, after
-kind treatment at the hands of the Coreans, have thus reached their
-homes by way of Mukden. This prosperous city, having a population of
-over two hundred thousand souls, and noted for its manufactures,
-especially in metal, is the capital of the Chinese province of
-Shing-king, formerly Liao Tong. It is surrounded by a long wall pierced
-with eight gates, one of which—that to the northeast—is called “the
-Corean Gate.” Niu-chwang has also a “Corean Gate.”
-
-Fifty miles beyond the Corean frontier is the “Border Gate” (Pien-mun),
-at which there was a fair held three or four times a year, the chief
-markets being at the exit and return of the Corean embassy to China.
-The value of the products here sold annually averaged over five hundred
-thousand dollars. In the central apartment of a building inhabited at
-either end by Chinese and Corean mandarins respectively, the
-customs-officers sat to collect taxes on the things bartered. The
-Corean merchants were obliged to pay “bonus” or tribute of about four
-hundred dollars to the mandarin of Fung-wang Chang, the nearest Chinese
-town, who came in person to open the gates of the building for the
-spring fair. For the privilege of the two autumn fairs, the Coreans
-were mulcted but half the sum, as the gates were then opened by an
-underling Manchiu official. The winter fair was but of slight
-importance. For the various Chinese goods, and European cottons, the
-Coreans bartered their furs, hides, gold dust, ginseng, and the
-mulberry paper used by Chinese tailors for linings, and for windows.
-
-Ping-an has the reputation of being very rich in mineral and metallic
-wealth. Gold and silver by report abound, but the natives are
-prohibited by the government from working the mines. The neutrality of
-the strip of territory, sixty miles wide and about three hundred miles
-long, and drained by the Tong-kia River, between Chō-sen and Chin, was
-respected by the Chinese government until 1875, when Li Hung Chung, on
-complaint of the king of Corea, made a descent on the Manchiu outlaws
-and squatters settled on the strip. Having despatched a force of
-troops, with gunboats up the Yalu, to co-operate with them, he found
-the region overspread with cultivators. The eyes of the viceroy being
-opened to the fertility of this land, and the navigability of the
-river, he proposed, in a memorial to Peking, that the land be
-incorporated in the Chinese domain, but that a wall and ditch be built
-to isolate Corea, and that all Chinese trespassers on Corean ground be
-handed over to the mandarins to be sent prisoners to Mukden, and to be
-there beheaded, while Chinese resisting capture should be lawfully
-slain by Coreans. To this the Seoul government agreed. By this clever
-diplomacy the Chinese gained back a huge slice of valuable land,
-probably without the labor of digging ditches or building palisades.
-The old wall of stakes still remains, in an extremely dilapidated
-condition. Off the coast are a few islands, and a number of shallow
-banks, around which shell- and scale-fish abound. Chinese junks come in
-fleets every year in the fishing season, but their presence is
-permitted only on condition of their never setting foot on shore. In
-reality much contraband trade is done by the smugglers along the coast.
-A group of islands near the mouth was long the nest of Chinese pirates,
-but these have been broken up by Li Hung Chang’s gunboats. Next to the
-Yalu, the most important river of the province is the Ta-tong or
-Ping-an, which discharges a great volume of fresh water annually into
-the sea. A number of large towns and cities are situated on or near its
-banks, and the high road follows the course of the river. It is the
-Rubicon of Chō-sen history, and at various epochs in ancient times was
-the boundary river of China, or of the rival states within the
-peninsula. About fifty miles from its mouth is the city of Ping-an, the
-metropolis of the province, and the royal seat of authority, from
-before the Christian era, to the tenth century. Its situation renders
-it a natural stronghold. It has been many times besieged by Chinese and
-Japanese armies, and near it many battles have been fought. “The
-General Sherman affair,” in 1866, in which the crew of the American
-schooner were murdered—which occasioned the sending of the United
-States naval expedition in 1871—took place in front of the city of
-Ping-an, Commander J. C. Febiger, in the U. S. S. Shenandoah, visited
-the mouths of the river in 1869, and while vainly waiting for the
-arrest of the murderers, surveyed the inlet, to which he gave the name
-of “Shenandoah.”
-
-By official enumeration, Ping-an contains 293,400 houses, and the
-muster-rolls give 174,538 as the number of men capable of military
-duty. The governor resides at Ping-an.
-
-There is considerable diversity of character between the inhabitants of
-the eight provinces. Those of the two most northern, particularly of
-Ping-an, are more violent in temper than the other provincials. Very
-few nobles or official dignitaries live among them, hence very few of
-the refinements of the capital are to be found there. They are not
-overloyal to the reigning dynasty, and are believed to cherish enmity
-against it. The government keeps vigilant watch over them, repressing
-the first show of insubordination, lest an insurrection difficult to
-quell should once gain headway. It is from these provinces that most of
-the refugees into Russian territory come. It was among these men that
-the “General Sherman affair” took place, and it is highly probable that
-even if the regent were really desirous of examining into the outrage,
-he was afraid to do so, when the strong public sentiment was wholly on
-the side of the murderers of the Sherman’s crew.
-
-
-
-
-THE YELLOW-SEA PROVINCE.
-
-All the eight circuits into which Chō-sen is divided are maritime
-provinces, but this is the only one which takes its name from the body
-of water on which its borders lie, jutting out into the Whang-hai, or
-Yellow Sea, its extreme point lies nearest to Shantung promontory in
-China. Its coast line exceeds its land frontiers. In the period
-anterior to the Christian era, Whang-hai, was occupied by the tribes
-called the Mahan, and from the second to the sixth century, by the
-kingdom of Hiaksai. It has been the camping-ground of the armies of
-many nations. Here, besides the border forays which engaged the troops
-of the rival kingdoms, the Japanese, Chinese, Mongols, and Manchius,
-have contended for victory again and again. The ravages of war, added
-to a somewhat sterile soil, are the causes of Whang-hai being the least
-populated province of the eight in the peninsula. From very ancient
-times the Corean peninsula has been renowned for its pearls. These are
-of superior lustre and great size. Even before the Christian era, when
-the people lived in caves and mud huts, and before they had horses or
-cattle, the barbaric inhabitants of this region wore necklaces of
-pearls, and sewed them on their clothing, row upon row. They amazed the
-invading hordes of the Han dynasty, with such incongruous mixture of
-wealth and savagery; as the Indians, careless of the yellow dust,
-surprised by their indifference to it the gold-greedy warriors of
-Balboa. Later on, the size and brilliancy of Corean pearls became
-famous all over China. They were largely exported. The Chinese merchant
-braved the perils of the sea, and of life among the rude Coreans, to
-win lustrous gems of great price, which he bartered when at home for
-sums which made him quickly rich. In the twelfth century the fame of
-these “Eastern pearls,” as they were then called, and which outrivalled
-even those from the Tonquin fisheries, became the cause of an attempted
-conquest of the peninsula, the visions of wealth acting as a lure to
-the would-be invaders. It may even be that the Corean pearl fisheries
-were known by fame to the story-tellers of the “Arabian Nights
-Entertainments.” Much of the mystic philosophy of China concerning
-pearls is held also by the Coreans. The Corean Elysium is a lake of
-pearls. In burying the dead, those who can afford it, fill the mouth of
-the corpse with three pearls, which, if large, will, it is believed,
-preserve the dead body from decay. This emblem of three flashing
-pearls, is much in vogue in native art The gems are found on the banks
-lying off the coast of this province, as well as in the archipelago to
-the south, and at Quelpart. The industry is, at present, utterly
-neglected. The pearls are kept, but no use seems to be made of the
-brilliant nacre of the mussel-shells, which are exported to Japan, to
-be used in inlaying.
-
-More valuable to the modern people than the now almost abandoned pearl
-mussel-beds, are the herring fisheries, which, during the season,
-attract fleets of junks and thousands of fishermen from the northern
-coast provinces of China. Opposite, at a distance of about eighty miles
-as the crow flies, measuring from land’s end to land’s end, is the
-populous province of Shantung, or “Country east of the mountains.” On
-the edge of this promontory are the cities of Chifu and Teng Chow,
-while further to the east is Tientsin, the seaport of Peking. From the
-most ancient times, Chinese armadas have sailed, and invading armies
-have embarked for Corea from these ports. Over and over again has the
-river Tatong been crowded with fleets of junks, fluttering the
-dragon-banners at their peaks. From the Shantung headlands, also,
-Chinese pirates have sailed over to the tempting coasts and green
-islands of Corea, to ravage, burn, and kill. To guard against these
-invaders, and to notify the arrival of foreigners, signal fires are
-lighted on the hill-tops, which form a cordon of flame and speed the
-alarm from coast to capital in a few hours. These pyrographs or fire
-signals are called “Pong-wa.” At Mok-mie′ san, a mountain south of the
-capital, the fire-messages of the three southern provinces are
-received. By day, instead of the pillars of fire, are clouds of smoke,
-made by heaping wet chopped straw or rice-husks on the blaze. Instantly
-a dense white column rises in the air, which, to the sentinels from
-peak to peak, is eloquent of danger. In more peaceful times, Corean
-timber has been largely exported to Chifu, and tribute-bearing ships
-have sailed over to Tientsin. The Chinese fishermen usually appear off
-the coast of this province in the third month, or April, remaining
-until June, when their white sails, bent homeward, sink from the gaze
-of the vigilant sentinels on the hills, who watch continually lest the
-Chinese set foot on shore. This they are forbidden to do on pain of
-death. In spite of the vigilance of the soldiers, however, a great deal
-of smuggling is done at night, between the Coreans and Chinese boatmen,
-at this time, and the French missionaries have repeatedly passed the
-barriers of this forbidden land by disembarking from Chifu junks off
-this coast. The island of Merin (Merin-to) has, on several occasions,
-been trodden by the feet of priests who afterward became martyrs. At
-one time, in June, 1865, four Frenchmen entered “the lion’s den” from
-this rendezvous. There is a great bank of sand and many islands off the
-coast, the most important of the latter being the Sir James Hall group,
-which was visited, in 1816, by Captains Maxwell and Hall, in the ships
-Lyra and Alceste. These forest-clad and well-cultivated islands were
-named after the president of the Edinburgh Geographical Society, the
-father of the gallant sailor and lively author who drove the first
-British keel through the unknown waters of the Yellow Sea. Eastward
-from this island cluster is a large bay and inlet near the head of
-which is the fortified city of Chan-yon.
-
-In January, 1867, Commander R. W. Shufeldt, in the U. S. S. Wachusett,
-visited this inlet to obtain redress for the murder of the crew of the
-American schooner General Sherman, and while vainly waiting, surveyed
-portions of it, giving the name of Wachusett Bay to the place of
-anchorage. Judging from native maps, the scale of the chart made from
-this survey was on too large a scale, though the recent map-makers of
-Tōkiō have followed it. The southern coast also is dotted with groups
-of islands, and made dangerous by large shoals. One of the approaches
-to the national capital and the commercial city of Sunto, or Kai-seng,
-is navigable for junks, through a tortuous channel which threads the
-vast sand-banks formed by the Han River. Hai-chiu, the capital, is near
-the southern central coast, and Whang-chiu, an old baronial walled
-city, is in the north, on the Ta-tong River, now, as of old, a famous
-boundary line.
-
-Though Whang-hai is not reckoned rich, being only the sixth in order of
-the eight circuits, yet there are several products of importance. Rock,
-or fossil salt, is plentiful. Flints for fire-arms and household use
-were obtained here chiefly, though the best gun-flints came from China.
-Lucifer matches and percussion rifles have destroyed, or will soon
-destroy, this ancient industry. One district produces excellent
-ginseng, which finds a ready sale, and even from ancient times
-Whang-hai’s pears have been celebrated. Splendid yellow varnish, almost
-equal to gilding, is also made here. The native varnishers are expert
-and tasteful in its use, though far behind the inimitable Japanese.
-Fine brushes for pens, made of the hair of wolves’ tails, are also in
-repute among students and merchants.
-
-The high road from the capital, after passing through Sunto, winds
-through the eastern central part, and crosses a range of mountains, the
-scenery from which is exceedingly fine. Smaller roads thread the border
-of the province and the larger towns, but a great portion of Whang-hai
-along its central length, from east to west, seems to be mountainous,
-and by no means densely populated. There are, in all, twenty-eight
-cities with magistrates.
-
-Whang-hai was never reckoned by the missionaries as among their most
-promising fields, yet on their map we count fifteen or more signs of
-the cross, betokening the presence of their converts, and its soil,
-like that of the other provinces, has more than once been reddened by
-the blood of men who preferred to die for their convictions, rather
-than live the worthless life of the pagan renegade. Most of the victims
-suffered at Hai-chiu, the capital, though Whang-chiu, in the north,
-shares the same sinister fame in a lesser degree. The people of
-Whang-hai are said, by the Seoul folks, to be narrow, stupid, and dull.
-They bear an ill name for avarice, bad faith, and a love of lying quite
-unusual even among Coreans. The official enumeration of houses and men
-fit for military duty, is 103,200 of the former and 87,170 of the
-latter.
-
-
-
-
-KIUNG-KEI, OR THE CAPITAL PROVINCE.
-
-Kiung-kei, the smallest of the eight circuits, is politically the royal
-or court province, and physically the basin of the largest river inside
-the peninsula. The tremendous force of its current, and the volume of
-its waters bring down immense masses of silt annually. Beginning at a
-point near the capital, wide sand-banks are formed, which are bare at
-low water, but are flooded in time of rain, or at the melting of the
-spring snows. The tides rise to the height of twenty or thirty feet,
-creating violent eddies and currents, in which the management of ships
-is a matter of great difficulty. The Han is navigable for foreign
-vessels, certainly as far as the capital, as two French men-of-war
-proved in 1866, and it may be ascended still farther in light steamers.
-The causes of the violence, coldness, and rapidity of the currents of
-Han River (called Salt or Salée on our charts), which have baffled
-French and American steamers, will be recognized by a study of its
-sources. The head waters of this stream are found in the distant
-province of Kang-wen, nearly the whole breadth of the peninsula from
-the mouth. Almost the entire area of this province of the
-river-sources, including the western watershed of the mountain range
-that walls the eastern coast, is drained by the tributaries which form
-the river, which also receives affluents from two other provinces.
-Pouring their united volume past the capital, shifting channels and
-ever new and unexpected bars and flats are formed, rendering
-navigation, and especially warlike naval operations, very difficult.
-Its channel is very hard to find from the sea. The French, in 1845,
-attempting its exploration, were foiled. Like most rivers in Chō-sen,
-the Han has many local names.
-
-The city of Han-Yang, or Seoul, is situated on the north side of the
-river, about thirty-five miles from its mouth, measuring by a straight
-line, or fifty miles if reckoned by the channel of the river. It lies
-in 37° 30′ north latitude, and 127° 4′ longitude, east from Greenwich.
-The name Han-yang, means “the fortress on the Han River.” The common
-term applied to the royal city is Seoul, which means “the capital,”
-just as the Japanese called the capital of their country Miako, or Kiō,
-instead of saying Kiōto. Seoul is properly a common noun, but by
-popular use has become a proper name, which, in English, may be
-correctly written with a capital initial. According to the locality
-whence they come, the natives pronounce the name Say´-ool, Shay´-ool,
-or Say´-oor. The city is often spoken of as “the king’s residence,” and
-on foreign maps is marked “King-ki Taö,” which is the name of the
-province. The city proper lies distant nearly a league from the river
-bank, but has suburbs, extending down to the sand-flats. A pamphlet
-lately published in the city gives it 30,723 houses, which, allowing
-five in a house, would give a population of over 150,000 souls. The
-natural advantages of Seoul are excellent. On the north a high range of
-the Ho Mountain rises like a wall, to the east towers the Ridge of
-Barriers, the mighty flood of the Han rolls to the south, a bight of
-which washes the western suburb.
-
-The scenery from the capital is magnificent, and those walking along
-the city walls, as they rise over the hill-crests and bend into the
-valleys, can feast their eyes on the luxuriant verdure and glorious
-mountain views for which this country is noted. The walls of the city
-are of crenellated masonry of varying height, averaging about twenty
-feet, with arched stone bridges spanning the watercourses, as seen in
-the reproduced photograph on page 79. The streets are narrow and
-tortuous. The king’s castle is in the northern part. The high roads to
-the eight points of the compass start from the palace, through the city
-gates. Within sight from the river are the O-pong san, and the Sam-kak
-san or three-peaked mountain, which the French have named Cock’s Comb.
-North of the city is Chō-kei, or tide-valley, in which is a waterfall
-forty feet high. This spot is a great resort for tourists and picnic
-parties in the spring and summer. From almost any one of the hills near
-the city charming views of the island-dotted river may be obtained, and
-the sight of the spring floods, or of the winter ice breaking up and
-shooting the enormous blocks of ice with terrific force down the
-current, that piles them up into fantastic shapes or strews the shores,
-is much enjoyed by the people. Inundations are frequent and terrible in
-this province, but usually the water subsides quickly. Not much harm is
-done, and the floods enrich the soil, except where they deposit sand
-only. There are few large bridges over the rivers, but in the cities
-and towns, stone bridges, constructed with an arch and of good masonry,
-are built. The islands in the river near the capital are inhabited by
-fishermen, who pay their taxes in fish. Another large stream which
-joins its waters with the Han, within a few miles from its mouth near
-Kang-wa Island, is the Rin-chin River, whose head waters are among the
-mountains at the north of Kang-wen, within thirty miles of the
-newly-opened port of Gen-san on the eastern coast. Several important
-towns are situated on or near its banks, and it is often mentioned in
-the histories which detail the movements of the armies, which from
-China, Japan, and the teeming North, have often crossed and recrossed
-it.
-
-Naturally, we expect to find the military geography of this province
-well studied by the authorities, and its strategic points strongly
-defended. An inspection of the map shows us that we are not mistaken.
-Four great fortresses guard the approaches to the royal city. These are
-Suwen to the south, Kwang-chiu to the southeast, Sunto or Kai-seng to
-the north, and Kang-wa to the west. All these fortresses have been the
-scene of siege and battle in time past. On the walls of the first
-three, the rival banners of the hosts of Ming from China and of Taikō
-from Japan were set in alternate succession by the victors who held
-them during the Japanese occupation of the country, between the years
-1592 and 1597. The Manchiu standards in 1637, and the French eagles in
-1866, were planted on the ramparts of Kang-wa. Besides these castled
-cities, there are forts and redoubts along the river banks, crowning
-most of the commanding headlands, or points of vantage. Over these the
-stars and stripes floated for three days, in 1871, when the American
-forces captured these strongholds. In most cases the walls of cities
-and forts are not over ten feet high, though, in those of the first
-order, a height of twenty-five feet is obtained. None of them would
-offer serious difficulty to an attacking force possessing modern
-artillery.
-
-Kai-seng, or Sunto, is one of the most important, if not the chief,
-commercial city in the kingdom, and from 960 to 1392, it was the
-national capital. The chief staple of manufacture and sale is the
-coarse cotton cloth, white and colored, which forms the national dress.
-Kang-wa, on the island of the same name at the mouth of the Han River,
-is the favorite fortress, to which the royal family are sent for safety
-in time of war, or are banished in case of deposition. Kang-wa means
-“the river-flower.” During the Manchiu invasion, the king fled here,
-and, for a while, made it his capital. Kwang-chiu was anciently the
-capital of the old kingdom of Hiaksai, which included this province,
-and flourished from the beginning of the Christian era until the Tang
-dynasty of China destroyed it in the seventh century. Kwang-chiu has
-suffered many sieges. Other important towns near the capital are
-Tong-chin, opposite Kang-wa, Kum-po, and Pupion, all situated on the
-high road. In-chiŭn, situated on Imperatrice Gulf, is the port newly
-opened to foreign trade and residence. The Japanese pronounce the
-characters with which the name is written, Nin-sen, and the Chinese
-Jen-chuan. At this place the American and Chinese treaties were signed
-in June, 1882; Commodore Shufeldt, in the steam corvette Swatara, being
-the plenipotentiary of the United States. Situated on the main road
-from the southern provinces, and between the capital and the sea, the
-location is a good one for trade, while the dangerous channel of the
-Han River is avoided.
-
-Most of the islands lying off the coast are well wooded; many are
-inhabited, and on a number of them shrines are erected, and hermits
-live, who are regarded as sacred. Their defenceless position offers
-tempting inducements to the Chinese pirates, who have often ravaged
-them. Kiung-kei has been the scene of battles and contending armies and
-nations and the roadway for migrations from the pre-historic time to
-the present decade. The great highways of the kingdom converge upon its
-chief city. In it also Christianity has witnessed its grandest triumphs
-and bloodiest defeats. Over and over again the seed of the church has
-been planted in the blood of its martyrs. Ka-pion, east of Seoul, is
-the cradle of the faith, the home of its first convert.
-
-For political purposes, this “home province” is divided into the left
-and right divisions, of which the former has twenty-two, and the latter
-fourteen districts. The kam-sa, or governor, lives at the capital, but
-outside of the walls, as he has little or no authority in the city
-proper. His residence is near the west gate. The enumeration of houses
-and people gives, exclusive of the capital, 136,000 of the former, and
-680,000 of the latter, of whom 106,573 are enrolled as soldiers. The
-inhabitants of the capital province enjoy the reputation, among the
-other provincials, of being light-headed, fickle, and much given to
-luxury and pleasure. “It is the officials of this province,” they say,
-“who give the cue to those throughout the eight provinces, of rapacity,
-prodigality, and love of display.” Official grandees, nobles, literary
-men, and professionals generally are most numerous in Kiung-kei, and
-so, it may be added, are singing and dancing girls and people who live
-to amuse others. When fighting is to be done, in time of war, the
-government usually calls on the northern provinces to furnish soldiers.
-From a bird’s-eye view of the history of this part of Corea, we see
-that the inhabitants most anciently known to occupy it were the
-independent clans called the Ma-han, which about the beginning of the
-Christian era were united into the kingdom of Hiaksai, which existed
-until its destruction by the Tang dynasty of China, in the seventh
-century. From that time until 930 A.D. it formed a part of the kingdom
-of Shinra, which in turn made way for united Korai, which first gave
-political unity to the peninsula, and lasted until 1392, when the
-present dynasty with Chō-sen, or Corea, as we now know it, was
-established. The capital cities in succession from Hiaksai to Chō-sen
-were, Kwang-chiu, Sunto, and Han-yang.
-
-
-
-
-CHUNG-CHONG, OR SERENE LOYALTY.
-
-The province of Serene Loyalty lies mostly between the thirty-sixth and
-thirty-seventh parallel. Its principal rivers are the Keum, flowing
-into Basil’s Bay, and another, which empties into Prince Jerome Gulf.
-Its northeast corner, is made by the Han River bending in a loop around
-the White Cloud (Paik Un) Mountain. Fertile flats and valleys abound.
-The peninsula of Nai-po (within the waters), in the northwestern
-corner, is often called the “Granary of the Kingdom.” Most of the rice
-of the Nai-po, and the province generally, is raised for export to the
-capital and the north. In the other circuits the rice lands are
-irrigated by leading the water from the streams through each field,
-which is divided from the other by little walls or barriers of earth,
-while in this region, and in Chulla, the farmers more frequently make
-great reservoirs or ponds, in which water is stored for use in dry
-weather. The mountains are the great reservoirs of moisture, for in all
-the peninsula there is not a lake of noticeable size. The coast line is
-well indented with bays and harbors, and the run to Shantung across the
-Yellow Sea is easily made by junks, and even in open boats. On this
-account the native Christians and French missionaries have often chosen
-this province as their gate of entry into the “land of martyrs.”
-
-In the history of Corean Christianity this province will ever be
-remembered as the nursery of the faith. Its soil has been most richly
-soaked with the blood of the native believers. With unimportant
-exceptions, every town along its northern border, and especially in the
-Nai-po, has been sown with the seeds of the faith. The first converts
-and confessors, the most devoted adherents of their French teachers,
-the most gifted and intelligent martyrs, were from Nai-po, and it is
-nearly certain that the fires of Roman Christianity still smoulder
-here, and will again burst into flame at the first fanning of favorable
-events. The three great highways from Fusan to the capital cross this
-province in the northeastern portion. Over these roads the rival
-Japanese armies of invasion, led by Konishi and Kato, passed in jealous
-race in 1592, reaching the capital, after fighting and reducing castles
-on the way, in eighteen days after disembarkation. Chion-Chiu, the
-fortress on whose fate the capital depended, lies in the northeast,
-where two of the roads converge. The western, or sea road, that comes
-up from the south, hugs the shore through the entire length of the
-province. Others, along which the Japanese armies marched in 1592, and
-again in 1597, traverse the central part. Along one of these roads, the
-captive Hollanders, almost the first Europeans in Corea, rode in 1663,
-and one of the cities of which Hamel speaks, Kon-sio (Kong-Chiu), is
-the capital and residence of the provincial governor.
-
-The bays and islands, which have been visited by foreign navigators,
-retain their names on European or Japanese charts. Some of these are
-not very complimentary, as Deception Bay, Insult Island, and False
-River. At Basil’s Bay, named after Captain Basil Hall, Gutzlaff also
-landed in 1832, planted potatoes, and left seeds and books. The
-archipelago to the northwest was, in 1866, named after the Prince
-Imperial, who met his death in Zululand in 1878. Prince Jerome’s Gulf
-is well known as the scene of the visits of the Rover and the Emperor,
-with the author of “A Forbidden Land” on board. Haimi, a town several
-times mentioned by him, is at the head of Shoal Gulf, which runs up
-into the Nai-po. Two other bays, named Caroline and Deception, indent
-the Nai-po peninsula.
-
-The large shoal off the coast is called Chasseriau. Other wide and
-dangerous shoals line parts of the coast, making navigation exceedingly
-difficult. Fogs are frequent and very dense, shrouding all landmarks
-for hours. The tides and currents are very strong, rising in some
-places even as high as sixty feet. The international body-snatching
-expedition, undertaken by a French priest, a German merchant, and an
-American interpreter, in 1867, to obtain the bones or ancestral relics
-of the Regent, was planned to take advantage of a certain “nick of
-time.” The river emptying into the Prince Jerome Gulf, runs some thirty
-miles inland, and can be ascended by a barge, or very light-draught
-steamer, only within the period of thirty hours during spring tides,
-when the water rises to a height of three feet at the utmost, while
-during the rest of the month it dries up completely. On account of
-delays, through grounding, miscalculated distances, and the
-burglar-proof masonry of Corean tombs, the scheme failed. The narrative
-of this remarkable expedition is given in a certain book on Corea, and
-in the proceedings of the United States Consular Court at Shanghae,
-China, for the year 1867.
-
-The flora is a brilliant feature of the summer landscape. Tiger-lilies
-and showy compositæ, asters, cactus plants, cruciferæ, labiatæ, and
-many other European species abound side by side with tropical
-varieties. The air is full of insects, and the number and variety of
-the birds exceed those of Japan. Pigeons, butcher-birds, fly-catchers,
-woodpeckers, thrushes, larks, blackbirds, kingfishers, wrens,
-spoonbills, quail, curlew, titmouse, have been noticed. The
-ever-present black crows contrast with the snowy heron, which often
-stand in rows along the watercourses, while on the reefs the cormorant,
-sea-gulls, and many kinds of ducks and diving birds, many of them being
-of species differing from those in Europe, show the abundance of winged
-life. The archipelago and the peninsula alike, are almost virgin soil
-to the student of natural history and the man of science will yet, in
-this secluded nook of creation, solve many an interesting problem
-concerning the procession of life on the globe. So far as known, the
-Coreans seem far behind the Japanese in the study and classification of
-animate nature.
-
-The Coreans are not a seafaring people. They do not sail out from land,
-except upon rare occasions. A steamer is yet, to most Coreans, a
-wonderful thing. The common folks point to one, and call it “a divine
-ship.” The reason of this is, that they think the country of steamships
-so utterly at the ends of the earth, that to pass over ten million
-leagues, and endure the winds and waves, could not be done by human
-aid, and therefore such a ship must have, in some way, the aid of the
-gods. The prow and stern of fishing-boats are much alike, and are
-neatly nailed together with wooden nails. They use round stems of trees
-in their natural state, for masts. The sails are made of straw, plaited
-together with cross-bars of bamboo. The sail is at the stern of the
-boat. They sail well within three points of the wind, and the fishermen
-are very skilful in managing them. In their working-boats, they do not
-use oars, but sculls, worked on a pivot in the gunwale or an outrigger.
-The sculls have a very long sweep, and are worked by two, three, and
-even ten men. For narrow rivers this method is very convenient, and
-many boats can easily pass each other, or move side by side, taking up
-very little room. For fishing among the rocks, or for landing in the
-surf, rafts are extensively used all along the coasts. These rafts have
-a platform, capable of holding eight or ten persons. The boats or
-barges, which are used for pleasure excursions and picnic parties, have
-high bows and ornamental sterns, carved or otherwise decorated. Over
-the centre a canopy stretched on four poles, tufted with horsehair,
-shelters the pleasure-seekers from the sun as they enjoy the river
-scenery. In the cut we see three officials, or men of rank, enjoying
-themselves at a table, on which may be tea, ginseng infusion, or rice
-spirit, with fruits in dishes. They sit on silken cushions, and seem to
-be pledging each other in a friendly cup. Perhaps they will compose and
-exchange a pedantic poem or two on the way. In the long, high bow there
-is room for the two men to walk the deck, while with their poles they
-propel the craft gently along the stream, while the steersman handles
-the somewhat unwieldy rudder. The common people use a boat made of
-plain unpainted wood, neatly joined together, without nails or metal,
-the fastenings being of wood, the cushions of straw matting and the
-cordage of sea grass.
-
-By official reckoning Chung-chong contains 244,080 houses, with 139,201
-men enrolled for military service, in fifty-four districts. It contains
-ten walled cities, and like every other one of the eight provinces is
-divided into two departments, Right and Left.
-
-
-
-
-CHULLA, OR COMPLETE NETWORK.
-
-This province, the most southern of the eight, is also the warmest and
-most fertile. It is nearest to Shang-hae, and to the track of foreign
-commerce. Its island-fringed shores have been the scene of many
-shipwrecks, among which were the French frigates, whose names Glory and
-Victory, were better than their inglorious end, on a reef near Kokun
-Island.
-
-Until the voyage of Captains Maxwell and Basil Hall, in the Alceste and
-Lyra, in 1816, “the Corean archipelago” was absolutely unknown in
-Europe, and was not even marked on Chinese charts. In the map of the
-empire, prepared by the Jesuits at Peking in the seventeenth century,
-the main land was made to extend out over a space now known to be
-covered by hundreds of islands, and a huge elephant—the conventional
-sign of ignorance of the map-makers of that day—occupied the space. In
-these virgin waters, Captain Hall sailed over imaginary forests and
-cities, and straight through the body of the elephant, and for the
-first time explored an archipelago which he found to be one of the most
-beautiful on earth. A later visitor, and a naturalist, states that from
-a single island peak, one may count one hundred and thirty-five islets.
-Stretching far away to the north and to the south, were groups of dark
-blue islets, rising mistily from the surface of the water. The sea was
-covered with large picturesque boats, which, crowded with natives in
-their white fluttering robes, were putting off from the adjacent
-villages, and sculling across the pellucid waters to visit the stranger
-ship.
-
-On these islands, as Arthur Adams tells us, the seals sport, the
-spoonbill, quail, curlew, titmouse, wagtail, teal, crane and
-innumerable birds thrive. The woody peaks are rich in game, and the
-shores are happy hunting-grounds for the naturalist. Sponges are very
-plentiful, and in some places may be gathered in any quantity. There
-are a number of well-marked species. Some are flat and split into
-numerous ribbon-like branches, others are round and finger-shaped, some
-cylindrical, and others like hollow tubes. Though some have dense white
-foliations, hard or horny, others are loose and flexible, and await
-only the hand of the diver. The Corean toilet requisites perhaps do not
-include these useful articles, which lie waste in the sea. The
-coral-beds are also very splendid in their living tints of green, blue,
-violet, and yellow, and appear, as you look down upon them through the
-clear transparent water, to form beautiful flower-gardens of marine
-plants. In these submarine parterres, amid the protean forms of the
-branched corals, huge madrepores, brain-shaped, flat, or headed like
-gigantic mushrooms, are interspersed with sponges of the deepest red
-and huge star-fishes of the richest blue. Seals sport and play unharmed
-on many of the islands, and the sea-beach is at times blue with the
-bodies of lively crabs. An unfailing storehouse of marine food is found
-in this archipelago.
-
-The eight provinces take their names from their two chief cities, as
-Mr. Carles has shown. Whang Hai Dō, for instance, is formed by uniting
-the initial syllables of the largest cities, Whang-chiu and Hai-chiu.
-In the case of Chulla-Dō, the Chon and Nai in Chon-chiu and Nai-chiu
-(or Chung-jiu and Na-jiu) become, by euphony, Chulla or Cholla. Hamel
-tells of the great cayman or “alligator,” as inhabiting this region,
-asserting that it was “eighteen or twenty ells long,” with “sixty
-joints in the back,” and able to swallow a man. [8]
-
-The soil of Chulla is rich and well cultivated, and large quantities of
-rice and grain are shipped to the capital. The wide valleys afford
-juicy pasture for the herds of cattle that furnish the beef diet which
-the Coreans crave more than the Japanese. The visiting or shipwrecked
-foreign visitors on the coast speak in terms of highest praise of fat
-bullocks, and juicy steaks which they have eaten. Considerable
-quantities of hides, bones, horns, leather, and tallow now form a class
-of standard exports to Japan, whose people now wear buttons and leather
-shoes. As a beef market, Corea exceeds either China or Japan—a point of
-importance to the large number of foreigners living at the ports, who
-require a flesh diet. Troops of horses graze on the pasture lands.
-
-Chulla is well furnished with ports and harbors for the junks that ply
-northward. The town of Mopo, in latitude 34° 40′, has been looked upon
-by the Japanese as a favorable place for trade and residence, and may
-yet be opened under the provisions of the treaty of 1876. This region
-does not lack sites of great historic interest. The castle of Nanon, in
-the eastern part, was the scene of a famous siege and battle between
-the allied Coreans and Chinese and the Japanese besiegers, during the
-second invasion, in 1597. The investment lasted many weeks, and over
-five thousand men were slaughtered. It was in this province also that
-the crew of the Dutch ship Sparrowhawk were kept prisoners, some for
-thirteen years, some for life, of whom Hendrik Hamel wrote so graphic a
-narrative. For two centuries his little work afforded the only European
-knowledge of Corea accessible to inquirers. Among other employments,
-the Dutch captives were set to making pottery, and this province has
-many villages devoted to the fictile art. The work turned out consists,
-in the main, of those huge earthen jars for holding water and grains,
-common to Corean households, and large enough to hold one of the forty
-thieves of Arabian Nights story.
-
-Through the labors of the French missionaries, Christianity has
-penetrated into Chulla-dō, and a large number of towns, especially in
-the north, still contain believers who are the descendants or relatives
-of men and women who have exchanged their lives for a good confession.
-The tragedy and romance of the Christian martyrs, of this and other
-provinces, have been told by Dallet. Most of the executions have taken
-place at the capital city of Chon-chiu. Many have been banished to
-Quelpart, or some of the many islands along the coast, where it is
-probable many yet live and pine.
-
-Three large, and several small rivers drain the valleys. Two of these
-flow into the Yellow Sea and one into the sea of Japan. The main
-highway of this province traverses the western portion near the sea,
-the other roads being of inferior importance. Fortified cities or
-castle towns are numerous in this part of Corea, for this province was
-completely overrun by the Japanese armies in 1592–1597, and its soil
-was the scene of many battles. By official enumeration there are
-290,550 houses, and 206,140 males enrolled for service in war. The
-districts number fifty-six. The capital is Chon-chiu, which was once
-considered the second largest city in the kingdom.
-
-If Corea is “the Italy of the East,” then Quelpart is its Sicily. It
-lies about sixty miles south of the main land. It may be said to be an
-oval, rock-bound island, covered with innumerable conical mountains,
-topped in many instances by extinct volcanic craters, and “all bowing
-down before one vast and towering giant, whose foot is planted in the
-centre of the island, and whose head is lost in the clouds.” This peak,
-called Mount Auckland, or Han-ra san, by the people, is about 6,500
-feet high. On its top are three extinct craters, within each of which
-is a lake of pure water. Corean children are taught to believe that the
-three first-created men of the world still dwell on these lofty
-heights.
-
-The whole surface of the island, including plains, valleys, and
-mountain flanks, is carefully and beautifully cultivated. The fields
-are neatly divided by walls of stone. It contains a number of towns and
-three walled cities, but there are no good harbors. As Quelpart has
-long been used as a place for the banishment of convicts, the islanders
-are rude and unpolished. They raise excellent crops of grain and fruit
-for the home provinces. The finely-plaited straw hats, which form the
-staple manufacture, are the best in this land of big hats, in which the
-amplitude of the head-coverings is the wonder of strangers. Immense
-droves of horses and cattle are reared, and one of the outlying islands
-is called Bullock Island. This island has been known from ancient
-times, when it formed an independent kingdom, known as Tam-na. About
-100 A.D., it is recorded that the inhabitants sent tribute to one of
-the states on the main land. The origin of the high central peak, named
-Mount Auckland, is thus given by the islanders. “Clouds and fogs
-covered the sea, and the earth trembled with a noise of thunder for
-seven days and seven nights. Finally the waves opened, and there
-emerged a mountain more than one thousand feet high, and forty ri in
-circumference. It had neither plants nor trees upon it, and clouds of
-smoke, widely spread out, covered its summit, which appeared to be
-composed chiefly of sulphur.” A learned Corean was sent to examine it
-in detail. He did so, and on his return to the main land published an
-account of his voyage, with a sketch of the mountain thus born out of
-the sea. It is noticeable that this account coincides with the ideas of
-navigators, who have studied the mountain, and speculated on its
-origin.
-
-
-
-
-KIUNG-SANG, OR RESPECTFUL CONGRATULATION.
-
-Kiung-sang dō, or the Province of Respectful Congratulation, is nearest
-to Japan, and consists chiefly of the valleys drained by the Nak-tong
-River and its tributaries. It admirably illustrates the principle of
-the division of the country on the lines furnished by the river basins.
-One of the warmest and richest of the eight provinces, it is also the
-most populous, and the seat of many historical associations with Japan,
-in ancient, mediæval, and modern times. Between the court of Kion-chiu,
-the capital of Shinra, and that of Kiōto, from the third to the tenth
-century, the relations of war and peace, letters, and religion were
-continuous and fruitful. When the national capital was fixed at Sunto,
-and later at Seoul, this province was still the gateway of entrance and
-exit to the Japanese. Many a time have they landed near the mouth of
-the Nak-tong River, which opens as a natural pass in the mountains
-which wall in the coast. Rapidly seizing the strategic points, they
-have made themselves masters of the country. The influence of their
-frequent visitations is shown in the language, manners, and local
-customs of southern Chō-sen. The dialect of Kiung-sang differs to a
-marked degree from that of Ping-an, and much more closely resembles
-that of modern Japanese. Kiung-sang seems to show upon its surface that
-it is one of the most ancient seats of civilization in the peninsula.
-This is certainly so if roads and facilities for travelling be
-considered. The highways and foot-paths and the relays and horses kept
-for government service, and for travellers, are more numerous than in
-any other province. It also contains the greatest number of cities
-having organized municipal governments, and is the most densely
-populated of the eight provinces. It is also probable that in its
-natural resources it leads all the others. The province is divided into
-seventy-one districts, each having a magistrate, in which are 421,500
-houses, and 310,440 men capable of military duty. Two officials of high
-rank assist the governor in his functions, and the admirals of the
-“Sam-nam,” or three southern provinces, have their headquarters in
-Kiung-sang. This title and office, one of the most honorable in the
-military service, was created after the Japanese war of 1592–1597, in
-honor of a Corean commander, who had successfully resisted the invaders
-in many battles. There are five cities of importance, which are under
-the charge of governors. Petty officials are also appointed for every
-island, who must report the arrival or visit of all foreigners at once
-to their superiors. They were always in most favor at court who
-succeeded in prevailing upon all foreign callers to leave as soon as
-possible. Fusan has been held by the Japanese from very ancient times.
-Until 1868 it was a part of the fief of the daimiō of Tsushima. It lies
-in latitude 35° 6′ north, and longitude 129° 1′ east from Greenwich,
-and is distant from the nearest point on the Japan coast, by a straight
-line, about one hundred and fifty miles. It was opened to the Japanese
-by the treaty of 1876, and is now a bustling mart of trade. The name
-means, not “Gold Hill,” but Pot or Skillet Mountain.
-
-The approach to the port up the bay is through very fine scenery, the
-background of the main land being mountainous and the bay studded with
-green islands. The large island in front of the settlement, to the
-southward, called Tetsuyé, or the Isle of Enchanting View, has hills
-eight hundred feet high. Hundreds of horses were formerly reared here,
-hence it is often called Maki, or island of green pastures. The
-fortifications of Fusan, on the northern side, are on a hill, and front
-the sea. The soil around Fusan is of a dark ruddy color, and fine fir
-trees are numerous. The fort is distant about a league from the
-settlement, and Tong-nai city and castle, in which the Corean governor
-resides, are about two leagues farther. Tai-ku, the capital, lies in
-the centre of the province. Shang-chiu, in the northwestern part, is
-one of the fortified cities guarding the approach to the capital from
-the southeast. It was captured by Konishi during his brilliant march,
-in eighteen days, to the capital in 1592. In recent years, much
-Christian blood has been shed in Shang-chiu, though the city which
-justly claims the bad eminence in slaughtering Christians is Tai-ku,
-the capital of the province. Uru-san, a few miles south, is a site rich
-in classic memories to all Japanese, for here, in 1597, the Chinese and
-Corean hosts besieged the intrepid Kato and the brave, but not
-over-modest, Ogawuchi for a whole year, during which the garrison were
-reduced, by straits of famine, to eat human flesh. When the Chinese
-retreated, and a battle was fought near by, between them and the
-relieving forces, ten thousand men were slain.
-
-Foreign navigators have sprinkled their names along the shore. Cape
-Clonard and Unkoffsky Bay are near the thirty-sixth parallel. Chō-san
-harbor was named by Captain Broughton, who on asking the name of the
-place in 1797, received the reply “Chō-san,” which is the name of the
-kingdom instead of the harbor. Other names of limited recognition are
-found on charts made in Europe. Many inhabited islands lie off the
-coast, some of which are used as places of exile to Christians and
-other offenders against the law. Christianity in this province seems to
-have flourished chiefly in the towns along the southern sea border.
-Nearly the whole of the coast consists of the slopes of the two
-mountain ranges which front the sea, and is less densely inhabited than
-the interior, having few or no rivers or important harbors. The one
-exception is at the mouth of the Nak-tong River, opposite Tsushima.
-This is the gateway into the province, and the point most vulnerable
-from Japan. The river after draining the whole of Kiung-sang, widens
-into a bay, around which are populous cities and towns, the port of
-Fusan and the two great roads to Seoul. Tsushima (the Twin Islands)
-lies like a stepping-stone between Corea and Japan, and was formerly
-claimed by the Coreans, who call it Tu-ma. Its port of Wani-ura is
-thirty miles distant from Fusan, and often shelters the becalmed or
-storm-stayed junks which, with fair wind and weather, can make the run
-between the two countries in a single day.
-
-From a strategic military point of view, the Twin Islands are
-invaluable to the mikado’s empire, guarding, as they do, the sea of
-Japan like a sentinel. The Russians who now own the long island at the
-upper end of the sea, attempted, in 1859, to obtain a footing on
-Tsushima. They built barracks and planted seed, with every indication
-of making a permanent occupation. The timely appearance on the scene of
-a fleet of British ships, under Sir James Hope, put an end to Russian
-designs on Tsushima.
-
-A Japanese writer reports that the Kiung-sang people are rather more
-simple in their habits, less corrupted in their manners, and their
-ancient customs are more faithfully preserved than in some of the other
-provinces. There is little of luxury and less of expensive folly, so
-that the small estates or property are faithfully transmitted from
-father to son, for many generations, in the same families. Studious
-habits prevail, and literature flourishes. Often the young men, after
-toiling during the day, give the evening to reading and conversation,
-for which admirable practice the native language has a special word.
-Here ladies of rank are not so closely shut up in-doors as in other
-provinces, but often walk abroad, accompanied by their servants,
-without fear of insult. In this province also Buddhism has the largest
-number of adherents. Kion-chiu, the old capital of Shinra, was the
-centre of the scholastic and missionary influences of the Buddha
-doctrine in Corea, and, though burned by the Japanese in 1597, its
-influence still survives.
-
-The people are strongly attached to their superstitions, and difficult
-to change, but to whatever faith they are once converted they are
-steadfast and loyal. The numerous nobles who dwell in this province,
-belong chiefly to the Nam In party.
-
-
-
-
-KANG-WEN, THE RIVER-MEADOW PROVINCE.
-
-Kang-wen fronts Japan from the middle of the eastern coast, and lies
-between Ham-kiung and Kiung-sang. Its name means River Meadow. Within
-its area are found the sources of “the river” of the realm. Though
-perhaps the most mountainous of all the provinces, it contains several
-fertile plains, which are watered by streams flowing mainly to the
-west, forming the Han River, which crosses the entire peninsula, and
-empties into the Yellow Sea. The main mountain chain of the country,
-called here the Makira, runs near the coast, leaving the greater area
-of the province to the westward. The larger part of the population, the
-most important high roads, and the capital city Wen-chiu, are in the
-western division, which contains twenty-six districts, the eastern
-division having seventeen. The official census gives the number of
-houses at 93,000, and of men capable of bearing arms, 44,000.
-
-Some of the names of mountains in this province give one a general idea
-of the geographical nomenclature of the kingdom, reflecting, as it
-does, the ideas and beliefs of the people. One peak is named Yellow
-Dragon, another the Flying Phœnix, and another the Hidden Dragon (not
-yet risen up from the earth on his passage to the clouds or to heaven).
-Hard Metal, Oxhead, Mountain facing the Sun, Cool Valley, Wild Swamp,
-White Cloud, and Peacock, are other less heathenish, and perhaps less
-poetical names. One range is said to have twelve hundred peaks, and
-from another, rivers fall down like snow for several hundred feet.
-These “snowy rivers” are cataracts. Deer are very plentiful, and the
-best hartshorn for the pharmacy of China comes from these parts. Out in
-the sea, about a degree and a half from the coast, lies an island,
-called by the Japanese Matsu-shima, or Pine Island, by the Coreans
-U-lon-to, and by Europeans, Dagelet. This island was first discovered
-by the French navigator, La Perouse, in June, 1787. In honor of an
-astronomer, it was named Dagelet Island. “It is very steep, but covered
-with fine trees from the sea-shore to the summit. A rampart of bare
-rock, nearly as perpendicular as a wall, completely surrounds it,
-except seven sandy little coves at which it is possible to land.” The
-grand central peak towers four thousand feet into the clouds. Firs,
-sycamores, and juniper trees abound. Sea-bears and seals live in the
-water, and the few poor Coreans who inhabit the island dry the flesh of
-the seals and large quantities of petrels and haliotis, or sea-ears,
-for the markets or the main land. The island is occasionally visited by
-Japanese junks and foreign whaling ships, as whales are plentiful in
-the surrounding waters. The Japanese obtained the timber for the public
-and other buildings at their new settlement at Gensan from this island.
-
-The Land of Morning Calm is, by all accounts of travellers, a land of
-beauty, and the customs and literature of the people prove that the
-superb and inspiring scenery of their peninsula is fully appreciated by
-themselves. Not only are picnics and pleasure gatherings, within the
-groves, common to the humbler classes, but the wealthy travel great
-distances simply to enjoy the beauty of marine or mountain views.
-Scholars assemble at chosen seats, having fair landscapes before them,
-poets seek inspiration under waterfalls, and the bonzes, understanding
-the awe-compelling influence of the contemplation of nature’s grandeur,
-plant their monasteries and build their temples on lofty mountain
-heights. These favorite haunts of the lovers of natural beauty are as
-well known to the Coreans as Niagara and Yo Semite are to Americans, or
-Chamouni to all Europe. The places in which the glory of the Creator’s
-works may be best beheld are the theme of ardent discussion and
-competing praise with the people of each province. The local
-guide-books, itineraries, and gazetteers, descant upon the merits of
-the scenery, for which each of the eight divisions is renowned. In the
-River-meadow province, the eight most lovely “sceneries” are all
-located along the coast. Beginning at the south, and taking them in
-order toward the north, they are the following:
-
-1. The house on Uru-chin, a town below the thirty-seventh parallel of
-latitude. The inn is called “The House of the Emerging Sun,” because
-here the sun seems to rise right out of the waters of the ocean. In
-front of the coast lies an island, set like a gem in the sea. The view
-of the rising sun, the tints of sky, river, waves, land, and mountains
-form a vision of gorgeous magnificence.
-
-2. Hion-hai (Tranquil Sea). Out in the sea, in front of this village,
-are many small islands. When the moon rises, they seem to be floating
-in a sea of molten silver. The finest effect is enjoyed just before the
-orb is fully above the horizon. In many of the dwellings of the men of
-rank and wealth, there is a special room set apart for the enjoyment of
-the scenery, upon which the apartment looks. Especially is this the
-case, with the houses of public entertainment. At Hion-hai, one of the
-inns from which the best view may be obtained is called the “House
-Fronting the Moon.” In it are several “looking-rooms.”
-
-3. One of the finest effects in nature is the combination of fresh
-fallen snow on evergreens. The pure white on the deep green is
-peculiarly pleasing to the eye of the Japanese, who use it as a popular
-element in their decorative art, in silver and bronze, in embroidery,
-painting, and lacquer. The Coreans are equally happy in gazing upon the
-snow, as it rests on the deep shadows of the pine, or the delicate hue
-of the giant grass called bamboo. Near the large town of San-cho is a
-tower or house, built within view of a stream of water, which flows in
-winding course over the rocks, sparkling beneath the foliage. It has a
-scene-viewing room to which people resort to enjoy the “chikusetsu,” or
-snow and bamboo effect.
-
-4. From an elevation near the town of Kan-nun, or Bay Hill, one may
-obtain a pretty view of the groves and shrubbery growing upon the
-rocks. During the spring showers, when the rain falls in a fine mist,
-and the fresh vegetation appears in a new rich robe of green, the sight
-is very charming.
-
-5. Beneath the mound at An-an the river flows tranquilly, tinted by the
-setting sun. The sunsets at this place are of exquisite beauty.
-
-6. At the old castle town of Kan-nun, there is a room named “The
-Chamber between the Strong Fortress and the Tender Verdure.” Here the
-valley is steep, and in the bosom of the stream of water lie “floating
-islands”—so called because they seem to swim on the surface of the
-water.
-
-7. Near Ko-sion, or High Fortress, is “Three Days Bay,” to which lovers
-of the picturesque resort on summer mornings, to see the sun rise, and
-on autumnal evenings, to watch the moonlight effects. The fishers’
-boats gliding to and fro over the gleaming waters delight the eye.
-
-8. At Tsu-sen is the “Rock-loving Chamber.” Here, among some steep
-rocks, grow trees of fantastic form. The combination of rock-scenery
-and foliage make the charm of this place, to which scholars, artists,
-and travellers resort. In spring and autumn, literary parties visit the
-chamber dedicated to those who love the rocks. There, abandoning
-themselves to literary revels, they compose poems, hold scholarly
-reunions, or ramble about in search of health or pleasure.
-
-The people of Kang-wen are industrious and intelligent, with less
-energy of body than the southern provincials, but like their northern
-countrymen, they have the reputation of being bold, obstinate, and
-quarrelsome. In time of bad harvests or lax government, “tramps” form
-bands of thirty or fifty, and roam the country, stealing food or
-valuables from the villages. Local thieves are sufficiently abundant.
-During the heavy snows of winter, people travel the mountain paths on
-snow-shoes, and in exceptional places, cut tunnels under the snow for
-communication from house to house. Soldiers test their strength by
-pulling strong bows, and laborers by carrying heavy burdens on their
-shoulders. Strong men shoulder six hundred pounds of copper, or two
-bales of white rice (260 pounds each). The women of this province are
-said to be the most beautiful in Corea. Even from ancient times, lovely
-damsels from this part of the peninsula, sent to the harem of the
-Chinese emperor, were greatly admired. Christianity has made little
-progress in Kang-wen, only a few towns in the southern part being
-marked with a cross on the French missionary map. In the most ancient
-times the Chinhan tribes occupied this portion of Corea. From the
-Christian era, until the tenth century, it was alternately held by
-Kokorai, or Korai, and by Shinra.
-
-
-
-
-HAM-KIUNG, OR COMPLETE VIEW.
-
-Ham-kiung is that part of Corean territory which touches the boundary
-of Russia. Only a few years ago all the neighbors along the land
-frontiers of Chō-sen were Chinese subjects. Now she has the European
-within rifle-shot of her shores. Only the Tumen River separates the
-Muscovites from the once hermits of the peninsula. The southern
-boundary of Russia in Asia, which had been thrown farther south after
-every European war with China, touched Corea in 1858. What was before
-an elastic line, has in each instance become the Czar’s “scientific
-frontier.” By the supplementary treaty of Aigun, March 28, 1858, Count
-Mouravieff “rectified” the far eastern line of the Czar’s domain, by
-demanding and obtaining that vast and fertile territory lying south of
-the Amur River, and between the Gulf of Tartary and the river Usuri,
-having a breadth of one hundred and fifty miles. This remote, but very
-desirable, slice of Asia, is rich in gold and silk, coal and cotton,
-rice and tobacco. With energy and enterprise, the Russian government at
-once encouraged emigration, placed steamers built in New York on the
-Usuri River and Lake Hanka, laid out the ports of Vladivostok, and
-Possiet, constructed a telegraph from the Baltic Sea to the Pacific
-Ocean, and enforced order among the semi-civilized and savage tribes.
-The name of the new Russian territory between the Amur River and the
-Sea of Okhotsk, is Primorskaïa, with Vladivostok for the capital, which
-is finely situated on Peter the Great or Victoria Bay. Immense
-fortifications have been planned, and the place is to be made the
-Sebastopol of the Czar’s Pacific possessions. This gigantic work was
-begun under the charge of the late Admiral Popoff, whose name has been
-given to the iron-turreted war vessels of which he was the inventor,
-and to a mountain in Central Corea. Possiet is within twenty-five miles
-of the Corean frontier. It is connected with Nagasaki by electric
-cable. In the event of a war between China and Russia, or even of
-Anglo-Russian hostilities, the Czar would most probably make Corea the
-basis of operations against China; for Corea is to China as Canada is
-to the United States, or, as the people say, “the lips of China’s
-teeth.”
-
-Russia needs a coast line in the Pacific with seaports that are not
-frozen up in winter, and her ambition is to be a naval power. While
-England checks her designs in the Mediterranean, and in Europe, her
-desire is great and her need is greater to have this defenceless
-peninsula on her eastern borders. The Coreans know too well that the
-possession of their country by “Russia the ravenous” is considered a
-necessity of the absorption policy of Peter the Great’s successors. The
-Tumen River, which rises at the foot of the Ever-White Mountains and
-separates Corea from Russia, is about two hundred miles in length. It
-drains a mountainous and rainy country. Ordinarily it is shallow and
-quiet; but in spring, or after heavy rains, and swollen by a great
-number of tributaries, its current becomes very turbulent and powerful.
-In winter it is frozen over during several months, and hence is easily
-crossed. Thousands of Coreans fleeing from famine, or from the
-oppression of government officials, Christians persecuted for their
-faith, criminals seeking to escape the clutches of the law, emigrants
-desirous of bettering their condition, have crossed this river and
-settled in Primorskaïa, until they now number, in all, about eight
-thousand. The majority of them are peasants from Ham-kiung, and know
-little of the southern parts of their country. There is, however, an
-“underground railroad” by which persecuted Christians can fly for
-refuge to Russian protection. Their houses are built of stout timbers,
-wattled with cane, plastered with mud, and surrounded with a neat
-fencing of interlaced boughs. They cover their houses with strips of
-bamboo, well fastened down by thatching. The chimney is detached from
-the house, and consists of a hollow tree. Under the warmed floor is the
-usual system of flues, by which the house is kept comfortable in
-winter, and every atom of fuel utilized. Their food is millet, corn,
-venison, and beef. They pare and dry melon-like fruits, cutting them up
-in strips for winter use. They dress in the national color, white,
-using quilted cotton clothes. They make good use of bullock-carts, and
-smoke tobacco habitually. The national product—thick strong paper—is
-put to a great variety of uses, and a few sheets dressed with oil,
-serve as windows.
-
-Some of the Russian merchants have married Corean women, who seem to
-make good wives. Their offspring are carefully brought up in the
-Christian faith. Some of these Corean children have been sent to the
-American Home at Yokohama, where the ladies of the Woman’s Union
-Missionary Society of America have given them an education in English.
-Through the Russian possessions, the Corean liberal, Kin Rinshio, made
-his escape. From this man the Japanese officials learned so much of the
-present state of the peninsula, and by his aid those in the War
-Department at Tōkiō were enabled to construct and publish so valuable a
-map of Corea, the accuracy of which astonishes his fellow-countrymen.
-The Russians have taken the pains to educate the people in schools,
-and, judging from the faces and neat costumes, as seen in photographs
-taken on the spot, they enjoy being taught. The object of instruction
-is not only to civilize them as loyal subjects of the Czar, but also to
-convert them to the Russian form of Christianity. In this work the
-priests and schoolmasters have had considerable success. There are but
-few Coreans north of the Tumen who cannot read and write, and the young
-men employed as clerks are good linguists. A number of them are
-fishermen, living near the coast. Most of the converts to the Greek
-church are gathered at Vladivostok.
-
-So great has been the fear and jealousy felt by Corea toward Russia,
-that during the last two generations the land along the boundary river
-has been laid desolate. The banks were picketed with sentinels, and
-death was the penalty of crossing from shore to shore. Many interesting
-relics of the ancient greatness of Corea still abound in Manchuria and
-on Russian soil. Travellers have visited these ruins, now overgrown
-with large forest trees, and have given descriptions and measurements
-of them. One fortification was found to cover six acres, with walls
-over thirty feet in height, protected by a moat and two outer ditches,
-with gateways guarded by curtains. In the ruins were elaborately carved
-fragments of columns, stone idols or statues, with bits of armor and
-weapons. Some of these now silent ruins have sustained famous sieges,
-and once blazed with watch-fires and echoed to battle-shouts. They are
-situated on spurs or ends of mountain chains, commanding plains and
-valleys, testifying to the knowledge of strategic skill possessed by
-their ancient builders.
-
-The Shan-yan Alin, range on range, visible from the Corean side of the
-river, are between eight thousand and twelve thousand feet high, and
-are snow-covered during most of the year. The name means Long-white, or
-Ever-White Mountains, the Chinese Shang-bai, meaning the same thing.
-Two of the peaks are named after Chinese emperors. Paik-tu, or White
-Head, is a sacred mountain famous throughout the country, and is the
-theme of enthusiastic description by Chinese, Japanese, and Corean
-writers, the former comparing it to a vase of white porcelain, with a
-scolloped rim. Its flora is mostly white, and its fauna are reputed to
-be white-haired, never injuring or injured by man. It is the holy abode
-of a white-robed goddess, who presides over the mountain. She is
-represented as a woman holding a child in her arms, after a legendary
-character, known in Corean lore and Chinese historical novels. Formerly
-a temple dedicated to her spirit was built, and for a long time was
-presided over by a priestess. The Corean Buddhists assign to this
-mountain, the home of Manchusri, one of their local deities, or
-incarnations of Buddha. Lying in the main group of the range, over
-eight thousand feet above the sea, is a vast lake surrounded by naked
-rocks, probably an extinct crater. Large portions of the mountain
-consist of white limestone, which, with its snow, from which it is free
-only during two months of the year, gives it its name.
-
-Another imposing range of mountains follows the contour of the coast,
-and thus presents that lofty and magnificent front of forest-clad
-highland which strikes the admiration of navigators. Other conspicuous
-peaks are named by the natives, Continuous Virtue, The Peak of the
-Thousand Buddhas, Cloud-toucher, Sword Mountain, Lasting Peace,
-Heaven-reaching.
-
-Twenty-four rivers water and drain this mountainous province. The coast
-of Ham-kiung down to the fortieth parallel is devoid of any important
-harbors. A glance at a foreign chart shows that numerous French,
-Russian, and English navigators have visited it, and gained precarious
-renown by sprinkling foreign names upon its capes and headlands. At the
-south, Yung-hing, or Broughton’s Bay, so named by the gallant British
-captain in 1797, is well known for its fine harbors and its high tides.
-It contains a small archipelago, while the country around it is the
-most populous and fertile portion of the province. Port Lazareff, east
-of Yon-fun, near the mouth of the Dungan River, and west of Virginie
-Bay, is well known. A large Japanese army under Kato occupied this
-territory during the year 1592.
-
-By the recent treaty with Japan, the port of Gensan, fronting on the
-south of Broughton’s Bay, was opened for trade and commerce, from May
-1, 1880. Gensan lies near the thirty-ninth parallel of latitude. Near
-the shore is the island of Chotoku, and within the twenty-five mile
-circuit allowed to Japanese merchants for general travel, or free
-movement, is the old castle-town of Tokugen. The tomb of the founder of
-the reigning dynasty of Chō-sen is situated near the bay and is a
-highly venerated spot. As the dragon is in native ideas the type of all
-that is strong, mighty, and renowned, the place is named the “Rise of
-the Dragon.” One of the high roads of the kingdom traverses the strip
-of land skirting the sea from north to south throughout the province,
-touching the water at certain places. The greater part of the people
-dwelling in the province live along this road. The interior, being a
-mass of mountains, is thinly inhabited, and the primeval forests are
-populated chiefly by tigers and other beasts of prey.
-
-In the current scouring the coast of Ham-kiung swim unnumbered shoals
-of herring, ribbon fish, and other species inhabiting the open seas.
-After these follow in close pursuit schools of whales, which fatten on
-them as prey. Thousands of natives from the interior and the shore
-villages come down in the season and fish. They often stand knee-deep
-in the water, looking like long rows of the snowy heron of a
-rice-swamp, in their white clothes. They use a kind of catamaran or
-raft for fishing and for surf navigation, which is very serviceable.
-They sometimes hunt the whales at sea, or capture them in shoal water,
-driving them in shore till stranded. Sticking in the bodies of these
-huge creatures have been found darts and harpoons of European whalers.
-This chase of the herring by the whales was noticed, even in the
-extreme south of Corea, by Hamel, and by shipwrecked Dutchmen. Since
-the present year, Japanese whale-hunters have been engaged by Coreans
-to improve their methods of catching this huge sea-mammal.
-
-The capital city of this largest of the provinces, and the residence of
-the governor, is Ham-hung, situated near the fortieth parallel of north
-latitude. According to a native geography this province contains
-103,200 houses, which gives a population varying from 309,600 to
-516,000 souls. There are enrolled and capable of military service (on
-paper) 87,170 men. For administrative purposes the province is divided
-into divisions, the northern and the southern. There are fifteen walled
-cities.
-
-Formerly, and until the Russians occupied the Primorskaia territory, an
-annual or bi-annual fair was held at the Corean city of Kion-wen, which
-lies close to the border. The Manchiu and Chinese merchants bartered
-tea, rice, pipes, gold, and furs for the Corean ginseng, hides, and
-household implements. Furs of a thousand sorts, cotton stuff, silks,
-artificial flowers, and choice woods, changed hands rapidly, the
-traffic lasting but two or three days, and sometimes only one day, from
-noon until sunset. Such was the bustle and confusion that these fairs
-often terminated in a free fight, which reminds one of the famous
-Donnybrook. One of the articles most profitable to the Coreans was
-their cast-off hair. Immense quantities cut from the heads of young
-persons, and especially by those about to be married, were and are
-still sold by the Chinese to lengthen out their “pig-tails”—that mark
-of subjection to their Manchiu conquerors. During the time of trade no
-Chinese or Manchiu was allowed to enter a Corean house, all the streets
-and doorways being guarded by soldiers, who at the end of the fair
-drove out any lingering Chinese, who, if not soon across the border,
-were forced to go at the point of the spear. Any foreigner found inside
-the border at other seasons might be, and often was, ruthlessly
-murdered.
-
-The nearest town beyond the frontier, at which the Chinese merchants
-were wont to assemble, is Hun-chun. [9] This loophole of entrance into
-Corea, corresponded to Ai-chiu at the Yalu River in the west. As at the
-latter place, foreigners and Christian natives have attempted to
-penetrate the forbidden country at Kion-wen, but have been
-unsuccessful.
-
-An outline of the political history of the part of the peninsula now
-called Ham-kiung shows that many masters have in turn been its
-possessors. When the old kingdom of Chō-sen, which comprehended Liao
-Tung and that part of the peninsula between the Ta-tong and the Tumen
-Rivers, was broken up toward the end of the first century, the northern
-half of what is now Ham-kiung was called Oju or Woju, the southern
-portion forming part of the little state of Wei, or Whi. These were
-both conquered by Kokorai, which held dominion until the seventh
-century, when it was crushed by the Chinese emperors of the Han
-dynasty, and the land fell under the sway of Shinra, whose borders
-extended in the ninth and tenth centuries, from Eastern Sea to the
-Tumen River. After Shinra, arose Korai and Chō-sen, the founders of
-both states being sprung from this region and of the hardy race
-inhabiting it. From very ancient times, the boundaries of this
-province, being almost entirely natural and consisting of mountain,
-river, and sea, have remained unchanged.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-THE KING AND ROYAL PALACE.
-
-
-The title of majesty in Chō-sen is Hap-mun. In full robes of state the
-sovereign wears a silken garment, the gift of his suzerain, the Emperor
-of China. It is embroidered with dragons, the emblems of regal power.
-His throne has riong or dragons sculptured around it. The steps leading
-to it are called “the staircase of jade.” The cord which is used to tie
-criminals has a dragon’s head at the ends, to signify that the officers
-act in obedience to the royal command. Chief of the regalia of Corean
-sovereignty is the Great Seal, the possession of which makes the holder
-the actual sovereign of Chō-sen. This seal, of which we shall hear
-again, seems to have been captured by the French in 1866. In time of
-war or public danger, the royal library, archives and regalia are sent
-to Kang-wa Island for safety. Ridel wrote in 1866:
-
-“In another case, they found a marble tortoise, sculptured in perfect
-art, upon the pedestal of which was the great seal of state. This royal
-cartouche was to the simple Corean folk neither visible nor
-approachable, the possession of which has sufficed many times to
-transfer the royal authority and to terminate revolutions. It was the
-regalia of Corean sovereignty. The one which he saw was new and
-appeared never to have been used.”
-
-The sovereign, in speaking of himself, uses the term “Hap-mun,” which
-is the equivalent of the imperial “We” of Asiatic state documents. The
-word is somewhat similar to that employed by, or for, other
-rulers—Pharaoh, Sublime Porte, Mikado, all of which mean the Grand,
-Chief, or First, Gate of all the gates in the country. The first
-character in Hap-mun is, however, different from that in Mikado, or
-Honorable Gate, but the hap is honorific. No other person in the land,
-official or private, is allowed to use this compound word in speech or
-writing as applying to anyone except the king. Even in transcribing the
-term hap, a stroke must be omitted out of respect to the august
-personage to whom alone it is applied. At his death, three cups of rice
-are set out in the households in memoriam. This ceremony must not be
-imitated for any other person. So also, if the character with which the
-name of the ruling emperor of China is written be found in that of a
-public person, a gateway, a palace or edifice in Seoul, the graphic
-sign must be temporarily changed, though the pronunciation remains the
-same. This same system of graduated honors, of which, in Corea, the
-king is the culmination, slopes down to the common people, and is duly
-protected by law.
-
-The sovereign’s person is hedged round with a divinity that has an
-antipathy to iron. This metal must never touch his august body, and
-rather than have an abscess lanced, the king Cheng-jong, in 1800, died
-from the effects of the disease. No ordinary mortal must touch him, and
-if by accident this is done, the individual must ever afterward wear a
-red silk cord. Notwithstanding such regulated veneration for the
-Hap-mun’s person, the royal harem numbers several hundred inmates, duly
-presided over by eunuchs. None but the king can drink out of a cup made
-of gold, and a heavy penalty is visited upon all who presume to do so.
-When outside the palace, the three signs of the sovereign’s power of
-life and death over his subjects, are the axe, sabre, and trident. The
-huge violet fan and red umbrella are likewise borne before him. The
-Chinese envoy is always escorted by soldiers bearing the three emblems,
-and by a band of musicians. When the Hap-mun, or king, is in his
-minority, the queen, who is regent, sits behind a curtain in the
-council of ministers, and takes part in the discussions. When she is
-pregnant, the slaughter of beeves is prohibited during the space of
-three months. This is done in order “to honor heaven by abstinence,”
-and may also be ordered to procure rain. Once every year, the queen
-entertains at her palace some worthy woman in humble life, who has
-reached the advanced age of eighty years. The king likewise shows favor
-to old men in the lower walks of life. Whenever an auspicious event
-happens, or good fortune befalls the kingdom, all the officials over
-seventy, and the common people over eighty years of age, are feasted at
-the expense of the government. When the first male child is born to the
-king, criminals are pardoned, and general festivity is observed. The
-birthdays of the royal pair are celebrated every year. The royal
-princes are supposed to have nothing whatever to do with politics, and
-any activity in matters of government on their part is jealously
-resented by the nobles, who form the political parties.
-
-The Royal Castle contains over three acres (15,202 square yards),
-surrounded by a wall twenty feet high, and formerly by a moat, now
-filled up, measuring fifty feet wide or less. It is crossed by stone
-bridges in several places. This castled palace is called the “Place of
-Government,” and is divided into two parts called the “East and West”
-palace. The East, or Lower Palace, is the residence of the king and is
-so called because situated on level land. The Western palace is used
-for the reception of the Chinese ambassadors. The gates of the outer
-city proper, and inner city, or palace, are named in high-sounding
-phrase, such as “Beneficent Reception,” “Exalted Politeness,” “Perfect
-Change,” “Entrance of Virtue,” and the throne-room is styled “The Hall
-of the Throne of the Humane Government.” The Chinese ambassador of 1866
-spent the night in that part of the royal residence called “The Palace
-Reserved for the South,”—“the south” here evidently referring to the
-imperial favor, or the good graces, of the emperor.
-
-A marked difference concerning “the freedom of the city” is noticed in
-the relative treatment of the two embassies. While the entire body of
-Coreans, dignitaries, servants, merchants, and cart-men enter Peking,
-and all circulate freely in the streets among the people, the Chinese
-envoy to Seoul, must leave his suite at the frontier, and proceed to
-the capital with but a few servants, and while there dwell in
-seclusion. After the long and rough journey through Shin-king and
-Corea, the Chinese envoy in 1866 stayed less than three days in Seoul,
-and most of the time in-doors. The Japanese who, in 1646, were feasted
-in some part of the Eastern palace, describe it as being handsomely
-furnished, with the walls gilded and painted with landscapes, beasts,
-birds, and flowers, with artistic effects in gold-dust and leaf. The
-royal family live each in separate buildings, those above the ninth
-degree of relationship reside inside the enclosure, all others live
-beyond the wall in the city. When the wife of the king has a child, she
-dwells apart in a separate building. The queen is selected from among
-the old and most loyal families of the nobility. The palace pages, who
-attend the king day and night, number thirty. There are also three
-hundred court ladies, and eunuchs are among the regularly-appointed
-officers of the court. The royal archives and library form an
-interesting portion of the royal residence. Part of this library, when
-removed to Kang-wa in 1866, was captured by the French. Bishop Ridel
-wrote of it, “The library is very rich, consisting of two or three
-thousand books printed in Chinese with numerous illustrations upon
-beautiful paper, all well labeled, for the most part in many volumes
-hooped together with copper bands, the covers being of green or crimson
-silk. I notice among other things the ancient history of Corea in sixty
-volumes. What was most curious of all was a book formed of tablets of
-marble, with characters in gold encrusted in the marble, folding upon
-one another like the leaves of a screen, upon hinges of gilded copper,
-and each tablet protected by a cushion of scarlet silk, the whole
-placed in a handsome casket made of copper, which was in its turn
-enclosed in a box of wood painted red, with chased ornaments in gilt
-copper. These square tablets formed a volume of a dozen pages. They
-contain, as some say, the moral laws of the country, but according to
-others, whose opinion is more probable, the honors accorded the kings
-of Corea by the Emperor of China. The Coreans set great store by it.”
-
-A custom, similar to the old “curfew” of England prevails in the
-capital. The great city bell is struck at sunset, after which male
-citizens are not allowed to go out of their houses even to visit their
-neighbors. If such nocturnal prowlers are caught, they run the risk of
-receiving the bastinado on their legs. At eight o’clock another three
-strokes are given on the bell. At the hours of midnight, and at two and
-four A.M. the drum is struck, and the brass cymbals sounded. At these
-signals the watchmen or guards of the palace are relieved. The
-night-watch consists of ten reliefs of eighteen each. Twenty stand
-guard at midnight, thirty at two A.M., twenty at four A.M., and ten at
-six A.M. There are also extra reliefs with their officers ready. The
-sentinels change after giving the pass-word. The military garrison of
-the city is divided into five portions, or four in addition to the
-household or palace troops. This is the modern form of the old division
-of Kokorai, into five tribes or clans.
-
-There are several noted holidays, on which the curfew law is suspended,
-and the people are allowed to be out freely at night. These are the
-first and the last day of the year, the fourteenth and fifteenth day of
-the first month, and the fifteenth of August.
-
-Even under a despotism there are means by which the people win and
-enjoy a certain measure of liberty. The monarch hears the complaints of
-his subjects. Close communication between the palace and populace is
-kept up by means of the pages employed at the court, or through
-officers, who are sent out as the king’s spies all over the country. An
-E-sa, or commissioner, who is to be sent to a distant province to
-ascertain the popular feeling, or to report the conduct of certain
-officers, is also called “The Messenger on the Dark Path.” He receives
-sealed orders from the king, which he must not open till beyond the
-city walls. Then, without even going to his own house, he must set out
-for his destination, the government providing his expenses. He bears
-the seal of his commission, a silver plate having the figure of a horse
-engraved on it. In some cases he has the power of life and death in his
-hands. Yet, even the Messenger of the Dark Path is not free from
-espionage, for after him forthwith follows his “double”—the yashi or
-Night Messenger, who reports on the conduct of the royal inspector and
-also on the affairs of each province through which he passes. The
-whereabouts of these emissaries are rarely discoverable by the people,
-as they travel in strict disguise, and unknown. This system corresponds
-almost exactly to that of the ométsuké (eye-appliers), for many
-centuries in use in Japan, but abolished by the mikado’s government at
-the revolution of 1868. It was by means of these E-sa or spies that
-many of the Corean Christians of rank were marked for destruction. The
-system, though abominable in free countries, is yet an excellent medium
-between the throne and the subject, and serves as a wholesome check on
-official rapine and cruelty.
-
-The king rarely leaves the palace to go abroad in the city or country.
-When he does, it is a great occasion which is previously announced to
-the public. The roads are swept clean and guarded to prevent traffic or
-passage while the royal cortége is moving. All doors must be shut and
-the owner of each house is obliged to kneel before his threshold with a
-broom and dust-pan in his hand as emblems of obeisance. All windows,
-especially the upper ones, must be sealed with slips of paper, lest
-some one should look down upon his majesty. Those who think they have
-received unjust punishment enjoy the right of appeal to the sovereign.
-They stand by the roadside tapping a small flat drum of hide stretched
-on a hoop like a battledore. The king as he passes hears the prayer or
-receives the written petition held in a split bamboo. Often he
-investigates the grievance. If the complaint is groundless the
-petitioner is apt to lose his head. The procession for pleasure or a
-journey, as it leaves the palace, is one of the grandest spectacles the
-natives ever witness. His body-guard and train amount to many thousand
-persons. There are two sedan chairs made exactly alike, and in which of
-them the king is riding no one knows except the highest ministers. They
-must never be turned round, but have a door to open at both ends. The
-music used on such occasions is—to a Corean ear—of a quiet kind, and
-orders are given along the line by signals made with pennons. In case
-of sudden emergencies, when it is necessary to convey an order from the
-rear to the front or far forward of the line, the message is sent by
-means of an arrow, which, with the writing attached, is shot from one
-end of the line to the other.
-
-Five caparisoned horses with embroidered saddles precede the royal
-sedan. The great dragon-flag, which is about fourteen feet square,
-mounted in a socket and strapped on the back of a strong fresh
-horse—with four guy ropes held by footmen, like banner-string boys in a
-parade—forms the most conspicuous object in the procession. Succession
-to the throne is at the pleasure of the sovereign, who may nominate his
-legitimate son, or any one of his natural male offspring, or his
-cousin, or uncle, as he pleases. A son of the queen takes precedence
-over other sons, but the male child of a concubine becomes king when
-the queen is childless, which, in Corean eyes, is virtually the case
-when she has daughters only. Since the founding of the present dynasty
-in 1392, there have been twenty-nine successors to the founder, among
-whom we find nephews, cousins, or younger sons, in several instances.
-Four were kun, princes, or king’s son only, and not successors in the
-royal line. They are not styled wang, or kings, but only kun, or
-princes, in the official light. One of these four kun, degraded from
-the throne, was banished after eleven years, and another was served in
-like manner after fourteen years’ reign. The heir to the throne holds
-the rank of wang (Japanese Ō), king, while the younger sons are kun,
-princes. From 1392 to 1882, the average reign of the twenty sovereigns
-of Corea who received investiture is very nearly sixteen and a half
-years.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-POLITICAL PARTIES.
-
-
-During the past three centuries the nobles have been steadily gaining
-political power, or rather we might say have been regaining their
-ancient prestige at court. They have compelled the royal princes to
-take the position of absolute political neutrality, and the policy of
-the central government is dictated exclusively by them. Those who hold
-no office are often the most powerful in influence with their own
-party.
-
-The origin of the political parties, which have played such an
-influential part in the history of modern Corea, is referred to about
-the time of the discovery of America. During the reign of Sien-chong
-(1469–1494), the eleventh sovereign of the house of Ni, a dispute broke
-out between two of the most powerful of the nobles. The court had
-bestowed upon one of them a high dignity, to which his rival laid equal
-claim. As usual in feudalism everywhere, the families, relatives,
-retainers, and even servants, of either leader took part in the
-quarrel. The king prudently kept himself neutral between the contending
-factions, which soon formed themselves into organized parties under the
-names of “Eastern” and “Western.” Later on, from a cause equally
-trivial to an alien eye, two other parties formed themselves under the
-names “Southern” and “Northern.” Soon the Easterners joined themselves
-to the Southerners, and the Northerners, who were very numerous, split
-into two divisions, called the Great North and the Little North. In one
-of those unsuccessful palace intrigues, called conspiracies, the Great
-North party was mixed up with the plot, and most of its members were
-condemned to death. The survivors hastened to range themselves under
-the banner of the Little North. The next reaction which arranged the
-parties on new lines, occurred during the reign of Suk-chong
-(1676–1720), and well illustrates that fanaticism of pedantry to which
-the literary classes in time of peace formerly devoted their energies.
-The father of a young noble named Yun, who belonged to the Western
-party, having died, the young man composed an epitaph. His tutor, an
-influential man of letters, not liking the production of his pupil,
-proposed another. Unable to agree upon the proper text, a lively
-controversy arose, and out of a literary acorn sprang up a mighty oak
-of politics. The Western party split into the Sho-ron, and No-ron, in
-which were found the adherents of the pupil and master. A free
-translation of the correlative terms sho and no, would be “Old Corea”
-and “Young Corea,” or Conservative and Progressive, or radical. There
-were now four political parties.
-
-The Shi-seik, or “the four parties,” are still in existence, and
-receive illustration better from French than from British politics.
-Every noble in the realm is attached to one or the other of the four
-parties, though “trimmers” are not unknown. These Tuhil-poki, or “right
-and left men,” are ever on the alert for the main chance, and on the
-turn of the political vane promptly desert to the winning side.
-
-However trivial the causes which led to their formation, as Western
-eyes see, the objects kept in view by the partisans are much the same
-as those of parties in European countries and in the United States.
-Nominally the prime purpose of each faction is to advance the interests
-of the country. Actual and very powerful motives have reference to the
-spoils of office. Each party endeavors to gain for its adherents as
-many of the high appointments and dignities as possible. Their
-rallying-point is around the heirs apparent, or possible, to the
-throne. When a strong and healthy king holds the reins of power,
-political activity may be cool. When the sovereign dies and the
-succession is uncertain, when a queen or royal concubine is to be
-chosen, when high ministers of state die or resign, the Corean
-political furnace is at full blast. When king Suk-chong was reigning in
-1720, having no son to succeed him, the four parties coalesced into
-two, the Opposition and the Court or royal party. The former supported
-in this case one who proved the successful candidate, a brother of the
-king; the latter party urged the claims of an expected heir to the
-reigning king, which, however, was not born, as the king died
-childless. To secure the throne to their nominee, the brother of the
-childless king, the opposition secretly despatched a courier to Peking
-to obtain the imperial investiture. The other party sent assassins to
-waylay or overtake the courier, who was murdered before he had crossed
-the frontier.
-
-Yeng-chong, the nominee of the Opposition, mounted the throne after the
-death of his brother, and reigned from 1724 to 1776. He was an able
-ruler, and signalized his reign by abolishing many of the legal
-tortures until then practised, especially the branding of criminals.
-Yet personally he was cruel and unscrupulous. Public rumor credited him
-with having found a road to power by means of a double crime. By the
-use of various drugs he made it impossible for his brother to have an
-heir, after which he poisoned him.
-
-Stung by these reports, he began, as soon as he was made sovereign, to
-send to the block numbers of the opposite party whom he knew to be his
-enemies. Some years after, his eldest son having died, he nominated his
-second son, Sato, to be his heir, and associated him with himself in
-the government of the kingdom. This young and accomplished prince
-endeavored to make his father forget his bitter hatred against the
-Si-pai party, to proclaim general amnesty, and to follow out a frank
-policy of reconciliation. The king, irritated by his son’s reproaches,
-and hounded on by his partisans, resolved to put the prince out of the
-way. By the royal command a huge chest of wood was made, into which the
-young prince was ordered to sleep while living. The ponderous lid was
-put on during one of his slumbers and sealed with the royal seal. They
-then covered this sarcophagus with leaves and boughs, so that in a
-short time the young prince was smothered. This horrible crime served
-only to exasperate the party of the prince, and they demanded that his
-name should be enrolled in the list of sovereigns. Their opponents
-refused, and this question is still a burning one. The king’s
-defenders, to this day decline to rehabilitate the character of the
-smothered prince. The others demand that historic justice be done.
-Though other questions have since arisen, of more immediate moment,
-this particular moot point makes its distinct hue in the opposing
-colors of Corean politics. This, however, does not take on the features
-of an hereditary feud, for oftentimes in the same family, father and
-son, or brothers may hold varying views on this historical dispute, nor
-does it affect marriage between holders of diverse views. The Corean
-Romeo and Juliet may woo and wed without let or danger. In general, it
-may be said that the Piek-pai are radical and fiery, the Si-pai are
-conservative and conciliatory.
-
-Cheng-chong, who ruled from 1776 to 1800, a wise, moderate, and prudent
-prince, and a friend of learning, favored the men of merit among the
-Southern Si-pai, and is also noted for having revised the code of laws.
-
-Among the more radical of the partisans, the object in view is not only
-to gain for their adherents the public offices, but also to smite their
-rivals hip and thigh, and prevent their getting appointments. Hence the
-continual quarrels and the plots, which often result in the death of
-one or other of the leaders. Assassination and murderous attacks are
-among the means employed, while to supplant their enemies the king is
-besought to order them to death or exile. Concessions are made by the
-dominant party to the other only to avoid violent outbreaks, and to
-keep the peace. With such a rich soil for feuds, it is not wonderful
-that Corea is cursed with elements of permanent disturbance like those
-in mediæval Scotland or Italy. As each of the noble families have many
-retainers, and as the feuds are hereditary, the passions of human
-nature have full sway. All manner of envy and malice, with all
-uncharitableness flourish, as in a thicket of interlacing thorns. The
-Southern and No-ron parties have always been the most numerous,
-powerful, and obstinate. Between them marriages do not take place, and
-the noble who in an intrigue with one of his enemies loses caste, his
-honors, or his life, hands down to his son or his nearest relative his
-demand for vengeance. Often this sacred duty is associated with an
-exterior and visible pledge. He may give to his son, for instance, a
-coat which he is never to take off until revenge is had. The kinsman,
-thus clad with vengeance as with a garment, must wear it, it may be
-until he dies, and then put it upon his child with the same vow. It is
-not rare to see noblemen clad in rags and tatters during two or three
-generations. Night and day these clothes call aloud to the wearer,
-reminding him of the debt of blood which he must pay to appease the
-spirits of his ancestors.
-
-In Corea, not to avenge one’s father is to be disowned, to prove that
-one is illegitimate and has no right to bear the family name, it is to
-violate, in its fundamental point, the national religion, which is the
-worship of ancestors. If the father has been put to death under the
-forms of law, it behooves that his enemy or his enemy’s son should die
-the same death. If the father has been exiled, his enemy’s exile must
-be secured. If the parent has been assassinated, in like manner must
-his enemy fall. In these cases, public sentiment applauds the avenger,
-as fulfilling the holy dictates of piety and religion.
-
-The pretext of accusation most often employed by the rival factions is
-that of conspiracy against the life of the king. Petitions and false
-evidence are multiplied and bribery of the court ministers is
-attempted. If, as is often the case, the first petitioners are thrown
-in jail, beaten, or condemned to mulct or exile, the partisans assess
-the fine among themselves and pay it, or manage by new methods, by the
-favor or venality of the court ministers, or the weakness of the king,
-at last to compass their ends, when those of the vanquished party are
-ousted from office, while the victors use and abuse their positions to
-enrich themselves and ruin their enemies, until they in their turn are
-supplanted.
-
-It is no wonder that a Corean liberal visiting in Tōkiō, in 1882,
-declared to a Japanese officer his conviction that Corea’s difficulties
-in the way of national progress were greater than those of which Japan
-had rid herself, mighty as these had been. By the revolutions of 1868,
-and later, the ripened fruits of a century of agitation and the
-presence of foreigners, Japan had purged from her body politic
-feudalism and caste, emancipating herself at once from the thrall of
-the priest and the soldier; but Corea, with her feudalism, her court
-intrigues, her Confucian bigotry, and the effete products of ages of
-seclusion and superstition has even a more hopeless task to attempt.
-The bearing of these phases of home politics will be further displayed
-when the new disturbing force of Christianity enters to furnish a lever
-to ambition and revenge, as well as to affection and philanthropy.
-
-A native caricature, which was published about a generation ago, gives
-even a foreigner a fair idea of the relative position of each party at
-that epoch. At a table gorgeously furnished, a No-ron is seated at his
-ease, disposing of the bountiful fare. A Sho-ron seated beside him, yet
-in the rear, graciously performs the office of servant, receiving part
-of the food as reward for his attendance. The Little North, seeing that
-the viands are not for him, is also seated, but with a more sedate and
-serious visage. Last of all the Southern, covered with rags, keeps far
-in the rear, behind the No-ron, who does not notice him, while he, in
-vexation, grinds his teeth and shakes his fist like a man who means to
-take burning vengeance. Such was the political situation before 1850,
-as some native wit pictured it for the amusement of the Seoulians.
-
-It requires a ruler of real ability to be equal to the pressure brought
-upon him by the diverse and hostile political parties. Nominally
-sovereign of the country, he is held in check by powerful nobles
-intrenched in privileges hoary with age, and backed by all the
-reactionary influences of feudalism. The nobles are the powerful middle
-term in the problem of Corean politics, who control both king and
-commons. The nobles have the preponderance of the government patronage,
-and fill the official positions with their liegemen to an extent far
-beyond what the theory of the law, as illustrated in the literary
-examinations, allows them. A native caricature thus depicts the
-situation. Chō-sen is represented as a human being, of whom the king is
-the head, the nobles the body, and the people the legs and feet. The
-breast and belly are full, while both head and lower limbs are gaunt
-and shrunken. The nobles not only drain the life-blood of the people by
-their rapacity, but they curtail the royal prerogative. The nation is
-suffering from a congestion, verging upon a dropsical condition of
-over-officialism.
-
-The disease of Corea’s near neighbor, old Japan, was likewise a surplus
-of government and an excess of official patronage, but the body politic
-was purged by revolution. The obstructions between the throne and the
-people were cleared away by the removal of the shō-gunate and the
-feudal system. Before the advent of foreigners, national unity was not
-the absolute necessity which it became the instant that aliens fixed
-their dwelling on the soil. Now, the empire of the mikado rejoices in
-true political unity, and has subjects in a strong and not
-over-meddlesome government. The people are being educated in the
-rudiments of mutual obligations—their rights as well as their duties.
-The mikado himself took the oath of 1868, and his own hand shaped the
-august decree of 1881, which will keep his throne unshaken, not because
-it was won by the bows and arrows of his divine ancestors, but because
-it will rest broad-based upon the peoples’ will. So in Chō-sen the work
-of the future for intelligent patriots is the closer union of king and
-people, the curtailment of the power of the nobles, and the excision of
-feudalism. Already, to accomplish this end, there are Coreans who are
-ready to die. During the last decade, the pressure from Japan, the
-jealousy of China, the danger from Russia, the necessity, at first
-shrunk from and then yielded to, of making treaties with foreign
-nations, has altered the motives and objects of Corean politics. Old
-questions have fallen out of sight, and two great parties,
-Progressionists and Obstructionists, or Radical and Conservative, have
-formed for the solution of the problems thrust upon them by the
-nineteenth century.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-ORGANIZATION AND METHODS OF GOVERNMENT.
-
-
-Next in authority to the king are the three chong or high ministers.
-The chief of these (Chen-kun) is the greatest dignitary in the kingdom,
-and in time of the minority, inability, or imbecility of the king,
-wields royal authority in fact if not in name. Another term applied to
-him when the king is unable to govern, is “Foundation-stone Minister,”
-upon whom the king leans and the state rests as a house upon its
-foundation-stone. The title of Tai-wen-kun, which suggests that of the
-“Tycoon” of Japan, seems to have been a special one intended for the
-emergency. It was given to the Regent who is the father of the present
-King, and who ruled with nearly absolute power from 1863 to 1874, when
-the king reached his majority. In the troubles in Seoul in July, 1882,
-his title, written in Japanese as Tai-in kun, became familiar to
-western newspapers.
-
-After the king, and the three prime ministers, come the six ministries
-or boards of government, the heads of which rank next to the three
-chong or ministers forming the Supreme Council. In the six departments,
-the heads are called pan-cho, and these are assisted by two other
-associates, the cham-pan, or substitutes, and the cham-é, or
-counsellor. These four grades and twenty-one dignitaries constitute the
-royal council of dai-jin (great ministers), though the actual authority
-is in the supreme council of the three chong. The six boards, or
-departments of the government, are: 1, Office and Public Employ; 2,
-Finance; 3, Ceremonies; 4, War; 5, Justice; 6, Public Works. The heads
-of these tribunals make a daily report of all affairs within their
-province, but refer all matters of importance to the Supreme Council.
-There are also three chamberlains, each having his assistants, who
-record every day the acts and words of the king. A daily government
-gazette, called the Chō-po, is issued for information on official
-matters. The general cast and method of procedure in the court and
-government is copied after the great model in Peking.
-
-Each of the eight provinces is under the direction of a kam-sa, or
-governor. The cities are divided into six classes (yin, mu, fu, ki,
-ling, and hilu), and are governed by officers of corresponding rank.
-The towns are given in charge of the petty magistrates, there being
-twelve ranks or dignities in the official class. In theory any male
-Corean able to pass the government examinations is eligible to office,
-but the greater number of the best positions are secured by nobles and
-their friends.
-
-From the sovereign to the beggar, the gate, both figuratively and
-actually, is very prominent in the public economy and in family
-relationships. A great deal of etiquette is visible in the gates. At
-the entrance to the royal palace are, or were formerly, two huge
-effigies, in wood, of horses, painted red. Only high officials can pass
-these mute guardians. All persons riding past the palace must dismount
-and walk. To the houses of men of rank there are usually two, sometimes
-three, gates. The magistrate himself enters by the largest, his parents
-and nearer friends by the eastern, and servants by the west or
-smallest. When a visitor of equal grade calls upon an officer or noble,
-the host must come all the way to the great or outer gate to receive
-him, and do likewise on dismissing him. If he be of one degree lower
-rank, the host comes only to the outside of the middle gate. If of
-third or fourth rank, the caller is accompanied only to the space
-inside the middle gate. The man of fifth and sixth rank finds that
-etiquette has so tapered off that the lord of the mansion walks only to
-the piazza. In front of a magistrate’s office, at the gateway, are
-ranged the symbols of authority, such as spears and tridents. The gates
-are daily opened amid the loud cries of the underlings, and their
-opening and closing with a vocal or instrumental blast is a national
-custom, illustrated as well at the city as at the office. The porters
-who close them at sunset and open them at dawn execute a salvo on their
-trumpets, often lasting a quarter of an hour. This acoustic
-devastation, so distressing to foreign ears, is considered good music
-to the native tympanum.
-
-In sitting, the same iron tongue upon the buckle of custom holds each
-man to his right hole in the social strap. People of equal rank sit so
-that the guest faces to the east and the host to the west. In ordinary
-easy style, the visitor’s nose is to the south, as he sits eastward of
-his host. A commoner faces north. In social entertainments, after the
-yup, or bows with the head and hands bent together, have been made,
-wine is sipped or drunk three or five times, and then follows what the
-Coreans call music.
-
-The sumptuary laws of the kingdom are peculiar, at many points amusing
-to occidentals. To commit pem-ram is to violate these curious
-regulations. What may be worn, or sat upon, is solemnly dictated by
-law. Nobles sit on the kan-kio, or better kind of chairs. Below the
-third rank, officers rest upon a bench made of ropes. Chairs, however,
-are not common articles of use, nor intended to be such. At
-entertainments for the aged, in time of rich harvests, local feasts,
-archery tournaments, and on public occasions, these luxuries are
-oftener used. In short, the chair seems to be an article of ceremony,
-rather than a constant means of use or comfort.
-
-Only men above the third rank are allowed to put on silk. Petty
-officials must wear cotton. Merchants and farmers may not imitate
-official robes, but don tighter or more economical coats and trowsers.
-A common term for officials is “blue clouds,” in reference to their
-blue-tinted garments. To their assistants, the people apply the
-nickname, not sarcastic, but honorable, of “crooked backs,” because
-they always bend low in talking to their employers.
-
-The magistrates lay great stress on the trifles of etiquette, and keep
-up an immense amount of fuss and pomp to sustain their dignity, in
-order to awe the common folks. Whenever they move abroad, their
-servants cry out “chii-wa,” “chii-wa,” “get down off your horse,” “get
-down off your horse,” to riders in sight. The Il-san, or large banner
-or standard in the form of an umbrella, is borne at the head of the
-line. To attempt to cross one of their processions is to be seized and
-punished, and anyone refusing to dismount, or who is slow about
-slipping off his horse, is at once arrested, to be beaten or mulcted.
-When permission is given to kill an ox, the head, hide, and feet
-usually become the perquisites of the magistrate or his minions. The
-exuberant vocabulary in Corean, for the various taxes, fines, mulcts,
-and squeezes of the understrappers of the magistrate, in gross and in
-detail, chief and supplementary, testify to the rigors and expenses of
-being governed in Chō-sen.
-
-Overreaching magistrates, through whose injustice the people are goaded
-into rebellion, are sometimes punished. It seems that one of the
-penalties in ancient times was that the culpable official should be
-boiled in oil. Now, however, the condemned man is exiled, and only
-rarely put to death, while a commutation of justice—equivalent to being
-burned in effigy—is made by a pretended boiling in oil. Good and
-upright magistrates are often remembered by mok-pi, or inscribed
-columns of wood, erected on the public road by the grateful people. In
-many instances, this testimonial takes the form of sculptured stone. A
-number of the public highways are thus adorned. These, with the tol-pi,
-or monumental bourne, which marks distances or points out the paths to
-places of resort, are interesting features of travel in the peninsula,
-and more pleasant to the horseman than the posts near temples and
-offices on which one may read “Dismount.” At the funeral of great
-dignitaries of the realm, a life-sized figure of a horse, made of
-bamboo, dragged before the coffin, is burned along with the clothes of
-the deceased, and the ashes laid beside his remains.
-
-As the magistrates are literary men, their official residences often
-receive poetic or suggestive names, which, in most cases, reflect the
-natural scenery surrounding them. “Little Flowery House,” “Rising
-Cloud,” “Sun-greeting,” “Sheet of Resplendent Water,”
-“Water-that-slides-as-straight-as-a-sword Dwelling,” “Gate of
-Lapis-lazuli,” “Mansion near the Whirlpool,” are some of these names,
-while, into the composition of others, the Morning-star, the
-Heaven-touching, the Cave-spirit, and the Changing-cloud Mountain, or
-the Falling-snow Cataract may enter. Passionately fond of nature, the
-Corean gentleman will erect a tablet in praise of the scenery that
-charms his eye. One such reads, “The beauty of its rivers, and of its
-mountains, make this district the first in the country.”
-
-If, as the French say, “Paris is France,” then Seoul is Corea. An
-apparently disproportionate interest centres in the capital, if one may
-judge from the vast and varied vocabulary relating to Seoul, its people
-and things, which differentiate all else outside its wall. Three
-thousand official dignitaries are said to reside in the capital, and
-only eight hundred in all the other cities and provinces. Seoul is “the
-city,” and all the rest of the peninsula is “the country.” A provincial
-having cultivated manners is called “a man of the capital.” “Capital
-and province” means the realm.
-
-The rule of the local authorities is very minute in all its
-ramifications. The system of making every five houses a social unit is
-universal. When a crime is committed, it is easy to locate the group in
-which the offender dwells, and responsibility is fixed at once. Every
-subject of the sovereign except nobles of rank, must possess a passport
-or ticket testifying to his personality, and all must “show their
-tickets” on demand. For the people, this certificate of identity is a
-piece of branded or inscribed wood, for the soldiers of horn, for the
-literary class and government officials of bone. Often, the tablet is
-in halves, the individual having one-half, and the government keeping
-its tally. The people who cannot read or write have their labels
-carefully tied to their clothing. When called upon to sign important
-documents, or bear witness on trial, they make a blood-signature, by
-rudely tracing the signs set before them in their own blood. The name,
-residence of the holder, and the number of the group of houses in which
-he lives, are branded or inscribed on the ho-pai, or passport.
-
-The actual workings of Corean justice will be better understood when
-treating of Christianity—an element of social life which gave the pagan
-tribunals plenty of work. Civil matters are decided by the ordinary
-civil magistrate, who is judge and jury at once; criminal cases are
-tried by the military commandant. Very important cases are referred to
-the governor of the province. The highest court of appeal is in the
-capital. Cases of treason and rebellion, and charges against high
-dignitaries, are tried in the capital before a special tribunal
-instituted by the king.
-
-The two classes of assistants to the magistrate, who are called
-respectively hai-seik and a-chen, act as constables or sheriffs, police
-messengers, and jailers. French writers term them “pretorians” and
-“satellites.” These men have practically the administration of justice,
-and the details and spirit of local authority are in their power. The
-hai-seik, or constables, form a distinct class in the community, rarely
-intermarrying with the people, and handing down their offices,
-implements, and arts from father to son. The a-chen, who are the
-inferior police, jailers, and torturers, are from the very lowest
-classes, and usually of brutal life and temper.
-
-The vocabulary of torture is sufficiently copious to stamp Chō-sen as
-still a semi-civilized nation. The inventory of the court and prison
-comprises iron chains, bamboos for beating the back, a paddle-shaped
-implement for inflicting blows upon the buttocks, switches for whipping
-the calves till the flesh is ravelled, ropes for sawing the flesh and
-bodily organs, manacles, stocks, and boards to strike against the knees
-and shin-bones. Other punishments are suspension by the arms, tying the
-hands in front of the knees, between which and the elbows is inserted a
-stick, while the human ball is rolled about. An ancient but now
-obsolete mode of torture was to tie the four limbs of a man to the
-horns of as many oxen, and then to madden the beasts by fire, so that
-they tore the victim to fragments. The punishment of beating with
-paddles often leaves scars for life, and causes ulcers not easily
-healed. One hundred strokes cause death in most cases, and many die
-under forty or fifty blows. For some crimes the knees and shin-bones
-are battered. A woman is allowed to have on one garment, which is
-wetted to make it cling to the skin and increase the pain. The chief of
-the lictors, or public spanker, is called siu-kiō. With the long,
-flexible handle swung over his head, he plies the resounding blows,
-planting them on the bare skin just above the knee-joint, the victim
-being held down by four gaolers. The method of correction is quite
-characteristic of paternal government, and is often inflicted upon the
-people openly and in public, at the whim of the magistrate. The
-bastinado was formerly, like hundreds of other customs common to both
-countries, in vogue in Japan. As in many other instances, this has
-survived in the less civilized nation.
-
-When an offender in the military or literary class is sentenced to
-death, decapitation is the rather honorable method employed. The
-executioner uses either a sort of native iron hatchet-sword or cleaver,
-or one of the imported Japanese steel-edged blades, which have an
-excellent reputation in the peninsula.
-
-Undoubtedly the severity of the Corean code has been mitigated since
-Hamel’s time. According to his observations, husbands usually killed
-their wives who had committed adultery. A wife murdering her husband
-was buried to the shoulders in the earth at the road side, and all
-might strike or mutilate her with axe or sword. A serf who murdered his
-master was tortured, and a thief might be trampled to death. The acme
-of cruelty was produced, as in old Japan, by pouring vinegar down the
-criminal’s throat, and then beating him till he burst. The criminal
-code now in force is, in the main, that revised and published by the
-king in 1785, which greatly mitigated the one formerly used. One
-disgraceful, but not very severe, mode of correction is to tie a drum
-to the back of the offender and publicly proclaim his transgression,
-while the drum is beaten as he walks through the streets. Amid many
-improvements on the old barbarous system of aggravating the misery of
-the condemned, there still survives a disgraceful form of capital
-punishment, in which the cruelty takes on the air of savage refinement.
-The cho-reni-to-ta appears only in extreme cases. The criminal’s face
-is smeared with chalk, his hands are tied behind him, a gong is tied on
-his back, and an arrow is thrust through either ear. The executioner
-makes the victim march round before the spectators, while he strikes
-the gong, crying out, “This fellow has committed [adultery, murder,
-treason, etc.]. Avoid his crime.” The French missionaries executed near
-Seoul were all put to death in this barbarous manner.
-
-Officials often receive furloughs to return home and visit their
-parents, for filial piety is the supreme virtue in Chinese Asia. The
-richest rewards on earth and brightest heaven hereafter await the
-filial child. Curses and disgrace in this life and the hottest hell in
-the world hereafter are the penalties of the disobedient or neglectful
-child. The man who strikes his father is beheaded. The parricide is
-burned to death. Not to mourn long and faithfully, by retiring from
-office for months, is an incredible iniquity.
-
-Coreans, like Japanese, argue that, if the law punishes crime, it ought
-also to reward virtue. Hence the system which prevails in the mikado’s
-empire and in Chō-sen of publicly awarding prizes to signal exemplars
-of filial piety. These in Japan may be in the form of money, silver
-cups, rolls of silk, or gewgaws. In Corea, they are shown in monumental
-columns, or dedicatory temples, or by public honors and promotion to
-office. Less often are the rewarded instances of devotion to the mother
-than to the father.
-
-Official life has its sunshine and shadows in this land as elsewhere,
-but perhaps one of the hardest tasks before the Corean ruling classes
-of this and the next generation is the duty of diligently eating their
-words. Accustomed for centuries to decry and belittle the foreigner
-from Christendom, they must now, as the people discern the superiority
-of westerners, “rise to explain” in a manner highly embarrassing. In
-intellect, government, science, social customs, manual skill,
-refinement, and possession of the arts and comforts of life, the
-foreigner will soon be discovered to be superior. At the same time the
-intelligent native will behold with how little wisdom, and how much
-needless cruelty, Chō-sen is governed. The Japanese official world has
-passed through such an experience. If we may argue from a common
-ancestry and hereditary race traits, we may forecast the probability
-that to Corea, as to Japan, may come the same marvellous revolution in
-ideas and customs.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-FEUDALISM, SERFDOM, AND SOCIETY.
-
-
-It is remarked by Palladius that the Fuyu race, the ancestors of the
-modern Coreans, was the first to emerge from the desert under feudal
-forms of organization. The various migrations of new nations rising out
-of northern and eastern Asia were westward, and were held together
-under monarchical systems of government. The Fuyu tribes who, by
-turning their face to the rising, instead of the setting sun, were
-anomalous in the direction of their migration, were unique also in
-their political genius. Those emigrants who, descending from the same
-ancestral seats in Manchuria, and through the peninsula, crossed toward
-Nippon, or Sunrise, and settled Japan, maintained their feudalism
-until, through ambitious desire to rival great China, they borrowed the
-centralized system of court and monarchy from the Tang dynasty, in the
-seventh century. The mikado, by means of boards or ministries like the
-Chinese, ruled his subjects until the twelfth century. Then, through
-the pride and ambition of the military clans, which had subdued all the
-tribes to his sway, feudalism, which had spread its roots, lifted its
-head. By rapid growths, under succeeding military regents, it grew to
-be the tree overspreading the empire. It was finally uprooted and
-destroyed only by the revolution of 1868, and the later victories of
-united Japan’s imperial armies, at an awful sacrifice of life and
-treasure.
-
-That branch of the Fuyu migration which remained in the Corean
-peninsula likewise preserved the institution of feudalism which had
-been inherited from their ancestors. In their early history, lands were
-held on the tenure of military service, and in war time, or on the
-accession of a new dynasty, rewards were made by parcelling out the
-soil to the followers of the victor. Provision for a constant state of
-servitude among one class of the political body was made by the custom
-of making serfs of criminals or their kindred. A nucleus of slavery
-being once formed, debt, famine, capture in war, voluntary surrender,
-would serve to increase those whose persons and labor were wholly or
-partly owned by another. To social prosperity, religion, and the
-increase of general intelligence, we may look as elements for the
-amelioration of serfdom and the elevation of certain classes of
-bondsmen into free people. The forms of Corean society, to this day,
-are derived from feudal ranks and divisions, and the powers, status,
-divisions, and practical politics of the nobles have their roots in the
-ancient feudalism which existed even “before the conquest.” Its fruit
-and legacy are seen in the serfdom or slavery which is Corea’s
-“domestic” or “peculiar” institution.
-
-Speaking in general terms, the ladder of society has four rungs, the
-king, nobles, and the three classes of society, in the last of which
-are “the seven low callings.” In detail, the grades may be counted by
-the tens and scores. In the lowest grade of the fourth class are “the
-seven vile callings,” viz.: the merchant, boatman, jailor, postal or
-mail slave, monk, butcher, and sorcerer.
-
-The “four classes of society” include the literary men or officials,
-the farmers, the artisans, and the traders. Among the nobility are
-various ranks, indicated by titles, high offices at court, or nearness
-of relationship to the king. He is “neither ox nor horse” is the native
-slang for one who is neither noble nor commoner. The nobles are usually
-the serf-proprietors or slave-holders, many of them having in their
-households large numbers whom they have inherited along with their
-ancestral chattels. The master has a right to sell or otherwise dispose
-of the children of his slaves if he so choose. The male slave is called
-chong-nom. A free man may marry a female slave, in which case he is
-termed a pi-pu. The male children by this marriage are free, but the
-female offspring belong to the master of the mother, and may be sold. A
-liberated slave is called pal-sin, and he speaks of his former master
-as ku-siang. The native vocabulary for the slave in his various
-relations is sufficiently copious. “Fugitive” slaves, “slave-hunters,”
-and “slave-drivers,” are as common to the Corean ear, as to the
-American in the long-ago days of “before the war.” A pan-no is a
-bondsman trying to escape, and to attempt chiu-ro is to hunt the
-fugitive and bring him back. The in-chang is the public slave of the
-village. Yet such a thing as the bondsman’s servile love of place,
-rising into swollen and oppressive pride that looks down on the poor
-freeman, is a common thing, and cruel and overbearing treatment of the
-peasantry by the minions of a noble is too frequently witnessed in
-Corea. “Tek-pun-ai” (“By your favor,” equivalent to “Let me live, I
-pray you”) is a cry, more than once heard by French missionaries, from
-a man beaten by the swaggering serfs of some nobleman. It is not
-exactly the feeling of the sleek and well-bred black slave of old-time
-Virginia for “the poor white trash,” since in Corea slavery has no
-color-line; yet, in essentials of circumstance, it is the same. Such a
-phase of character is more likely to be developed among the serfs of
-the old barons or landed proprietors who have longest occupied their
-hereditary possessions, and who keep up a petty court within their
-castles or semi-fortified mansions.
-
-Slavery or serfdom in Corea is in a continuous state of decline, and
-the number of slaves constantly diminishing. In the remote provinces it
-is practically at an end. The greater number of serfs are to be found
-attached to the estates of the great noble families of the central
-provinces. The slaves are those who are born in a state of servitude,
-those who sell themselves as slaves, or those who are sold to be such
-by their parents in time of famine or for debt. Infants exposed or
-abandoned that are picked up and educated become slaves, but their
-offspring are born free. The serfdom is really very mild. Only the
-active young men are held to field labor, the young women being kept as
-domestics. When old enough to marry, the males are let free by an
-annual payment of a sum of money for a term of years. Often the slaves
-marry, are assigned a house apart, and bound only to a fixed amount of
-labor. Although the master has the power of life and death over his
-slaves, the right is rarely exercised unjustly, and the missionaries
-report that there were few cases of excessive cruelty practised. An
-unjust master could be cited before the tribunals, and the case
-inquired into. Often the actual condition of the serfs is superior to
-that of the poor villagers, and instances are common in which the poor,
-to escape the rapacity and cruelty of the nobles, have placed
-themselves under the protection of a master known to be a kind man, and
-thus have purchased ease and comfort at the sacrifice of liberty.
-
-Outside of private ownership of slaves, there is a species of
-government slavery, which illustrates the persistency of one feature of
-ancient Kokorai perpetuated through twenty centuries. It is the law
-that in case of the condemnation of a great criminal, the ban of
-Ui-ro-ui-pi shall fall upon his wife and children, who at once become
-the slaves of the judge. These unfortunates do not have the privilege
-of honorably serving the magistrate, but usually pass their existence
-in waiting on the menials in the various departments and magistracies.
-Only a few of the government slaves are such by birth, most of them
-having become so through judicial condemnation in criminal cases; but
-this latter class fare far worse than the ordinary slaves. They are
-chiefly females, and are treated very little better than beasts. They
-are at the mercy not only of the officers but even of their satellites,
-servants, and grooms, or to whomever they are sold for an hour. Nothing
-can equal the contempt in which they are held, and for an honest or an
-innocent woman, such a fate is worse than many deaths. In the earliest
-written account of the Kokorai people, the ancestors of the modern
-Coreans, we find this same feature of ancient feudalism by which a
-class of serfs may be continually provided. To Christian eyes it is a
-horrible relic of barbarism.
-
-The penal settlements on the sea-coast, and notably Quelpart Island,
-are worked by colonies of these male government slaves or convicts. The
-females are not usually sent away from the place of their parents or
-their own crime.
-
-In ancient times of Kokorai and Korai there were only two classes of
-people, the nobles and their free retainers, and the serfs or slaves.
-The nobles were lords of cities and castles, like the daimiōs of Japan,
-and were very numerous. The whole country was owned by them, or at
-least held in the king’s name under tenure of military service—a lien
-which length of time only strengthened. In the long centuries of peace,
-many of these old families—weakly descendants of vigorous founders—have
-died out, and the land reverting to the sovereign, or possessed by the
-people, is now owned by a more numerous and complex class, while nearly
-all the cities and towns are governed by officers sent out by the
-central authority at Seoul. The ancient class of serfs has, by industry
-and intelligence and accumulation of rights vested in their special
-occupations, developed into the various middle classes. The nobles are
-now in a minority, though at present their power is on the increase,
-and their ancestral landholds comprise but a small portion of the soil.
-
-As in mediæval Europe, so in Corea, where feudalism, which rests on
-personal loyalty to a reigning sovereign, or a particular royal line,
-prevails, a more or less complete revolution of titles and possessions
-takes place upon a change of dynasty. On the accession of the present
-royal house in 1392, the old Korai nobility were impoverished and the
-partisans of the founder of the Ni, and all who had aided him to the
-throne, became at once the nobility of the kingdom, and were rewarded
-by gifts of land. To the victors belonged the spoils. The honors,
-riches, and the exclusive right to fill many of the most desirable
-public offices were awarded in perpetuity to the aristocracy. The mass
-of the people were placed or voluntarily put themselves under the
-authority of the nobles. The agricultural class attached to the soil
-simply changed masters and landlords, while the cities and towns people
-and sea-coast dwellers became, only in a nominal sense, the tenantry of
-the nobles. Gradually, however, those who had ability and address
-obtained their full liberty, so that they were in no way bound to pay
-tithe or tax to the nobles, but only to the central government. Under
-peace, with wealth, intelligence, combination, trade-unions, and
-guilds, and especially by means of the literary examinations, the
-various classes of the people emerged into independent existence,
-leaving but a few of the lowest of the population in the condition of
-serfs or slaves. Between the accounts of Hamel in 1653, and of the
-French missionaries in the last decade, there are many indications of
-progress. Laborers, artisans, merchants, soldiers, etc., now have a
-right to their own labor and earnings, and the general division of the
-commonwealth is into three classes—nobles, common people, and serfs or
-slaves.
-
-Speaking generally, the peculiar institution of Chō-sen is serfdom
-rather than slavery, and is the inheritance of feudalism; yet, as
-Russia has had her Alexander, America her Lincoln, and Japan her
-Mutsŭhito, we may hope to see some great liberator yet arise in the
-“Land of Morning Calm.”
-
-Under absolute despotisms, as most Asiatic governments are, it is a
-wonder to republicans how the people enjoy any liberty at all. If they
-have any, it is interesting to study how they have attained it, and how
-they hold it. Politically, they have absolutely no freedom. They know
-nothing of government, except to pay taxes and obey. Their political
-influence is nothing. In Chō-sen, according to law, any person of the
-common people may compete at the public examinations for civil or
-military employment, but, in point of fact, his degree is often
-worthless, for he is not likely to receive office by it. In a country
-where might and wealth make right, and human beings are politically
-naught, being but beasts of burden or ciphers without a unit, how do
-the people protect themselves and gain any liberty? How does it come to
-pass that serfs may win their way to social freedom?
-
-It is by union and organization. The spirit of association, so natural
-and necessary, is spread among the Coreans of all classes, from the
-highest families to the meanest slaves. All those who have any kind of
-work or interest in common form guilds, corporations, or societies,
-which have a common fund, contributed to by all for aid in time of
-need. Very powerful trade-unions exist among the mechanics and
-laborers, such as porters, ostlers, and pack-horse leaders,
-hat-weavers, coffin-makers, carpenters, and masons. These societies
-enable each class to possess a monopoly of their trade, which even a
-noble vainly tries to break. Sometimes, they hold this right by writ
-purchased or obtained from government, though usually it is by
-prescription. Most of the guilds are taxed by the government for their
-monopoly enjoyed. They have their chief or head man, who possesses
-almost despotic power, and even, in some guilds, of life and death. New
-members or apprentices may be admitted by paying their rate and
-submitting to the rules of the guild. In the higher grades of society
-we see the same spirit of association. The temple attendants, the
-servants of the nobles, the gardeners, messengers, and domestics of the
-palace, the supernumeraries and government employes, all have their
-“rings,” which an outsider may not break. Even among the noble families
-the same idea exists in due form. The villages form each a little
-republic, and possess among themselves a common fund to which every
-family contributes. Out of this money, hid in the earth or lent out on
-interest, are paid the public taxes, expenses of marriage and burial,
-and whatever else, by custom and local opinion, is held to be a public
-matter. Foreigners, accustomed to the free competition of
-English-speaking countries, will find in Chō-sen, as they found in
-Japan, and even more so, the existence of this spirit of protective
-association and monopoly illustrated in a hundred forms which are in
-turn amusing, vexatious, or atrocious. A man who in injustice, or for
-mere caprice, or in a fit of temper, discharges his ostler,
-house-servant, or carpenter, will find that he cannot obtain another
-good one very easily, even at higher wages, or, if so, that his new one
-is soon frightened off the premises. To get along comfortably in
-Chinese Asia, one must, willy-nilly, pay respect to the visible or
-invisible spirit of trade-unionism that pervades all society in those
-old countries.
-
-One of the most powerful and best organized guilds is that of the
-porters. The interior commerce of the country being almost entirely on
-the backs of men and pack-horses, these people have the monopoly of it.
-They number about ten thousand, and are divided by provinces and
-districts under the orders of chiefs, sub-chiefs, censors, inspectors,
-etc. A large number of these porters are women, often poor widows, or
-those unable to marry. Many of them are of muscular frame, and their
-life in the open air tends to develop robust forms, with the strength
-of men. They speak a conventional language, easily understood among
-themselves, and are very profuse in their salutations to each other.
-They have very severe rules for the government of their guild, and
-crimes among them are punished with death, at the order of their chief.
-They are so powerful that they pretend that even the government dare
-not interfere with them. They are outside the power of the local
-magistrate, just as a German University student is responsible to the
-Faculty, but not to the police. They are honest and faithful in their
-business, delivering packages with certainty to the most remote places
-in the kingdom. They are rather independent of the people, and even
-bully the officers. When they have received an insult or injustice, or
-too low wages, they “strike” in a body and retire from the district.
-This puts a stop to all travel and business, until these grievances are
-settled or submission to their own terms is made.
-
-Owing to the fact that the country at large is so lacking in the shops
-and stores so common in other countries, and that, instead, fairs on
-set days are so numerous in the towns and villages, the guild of
-peddlers and hucksters is very large and influential. The class
-includes probably 200,000 able-bodied adult persons, who in the various
-provinces move freely among the people, and are thus useful to the
-government as spies, detectives, messengers, and, in time of need,
-soldiers. It was from this class that the Corean battalions which
-figured prominently in the affair of December 4–6, 1887, were
-recruited.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
-SOCIAL LIFE.—WOMAN AND THE FAMILY.
-
-
-According to the opinions of the French missionaries, who were familiar
-with the social life of the people, a Corean woman has no moral
-existence. She is an instrument of pleasure or of labor; but never
-man’s companion or equal. She has no name. In childhood she receives
-indeed a surname by which she is known in the family, and by near
-friends, but at the age of puberty, none but her father and mother
-employ this appellative. To all others she is “the sister” of such a
-one, or “the daughter” of so-and-so. After her marriage her name is
-buried. She is absolutely nameless. Her own parents allude to her by
-employing the name of the district or ward in which she has married.
-Her parents-in-law speak of her by the name of the place in which she
-lived before marriage, as women rarely marry in the same village with
-their husbands. When she bears children, she is “the mother” of
-so-and-so. When a woman appears for trial before a magistrate, in order
-to save time and trouble, she receives a special name for the time
-being. The women below the middle class work very hard. Farm labor is
-done chiefly by them. Manure is applied by the women, rarely by the
-men. The women carry lunch to the laborers in the field, eating what is
-left for their share. In going to market, the women carry the heavier
-load. In their toilet, the women use rouge, white powders, and hair
-oil. They shave the eyebrows to a narrow line—that is, to a perfectly
-clean arch, with nothing straggling. They have luxuriant hair, and, in
-addition, use immense switches to fill out large coiffures.
-
-In the higher classes of society, etiquette demands that the children
-of the two sexes be separated after the age of eight or ten years.
-After that time the boys dwell entirely in the men’s apartments, to
-study and even to eat and drink. The girls remain secluded in the
-women’s quarters. The boys are taught that it is a shameful thing even
-to set foot in the female part of the house. The girls are told that it
-is disgraceful even to be seen by males, so that gradually they seek to
-hide themselves whenever any of the male sex appear. These customs,
-continued from childhood to old age, result in destroying the family
-life. A Corean of good taste only occasionally holds conversation with
-his wife, whom he regards as being far beneath him. He rarely consults
-her on anything serious, and though living under the same roof, one may
-say that husband and wife are widely separated. The female apartments
-among the higher classes resemble, in most respects, the zenanas of
-India. The men chat, smoke, and enjoy themselves in the outer rooms,
-and the women receive their parents and friends in the interior
-apartments. The same custom, based upon the same prejudice, hinders the
-common people in their moments of leisure from remaining in their own
-houses. The men seek the society of their male neighbors, and the
-women, on their part, unite together for local gossip. In the higher
-classes, when a young woman has arrived at marriageable age, none even
-of her own relatives, except those nearest of kin, is allowed to see or
-speak to her. Those who are excepted from this rule must address her
-with the most ceremonious reserve. After their marriage, the women are
-inaccessible. They are nearly always confined to their apartments, nor
-can they even look out in the streets without permission of their
-lords. So strict is this rule that fathers have on occasions killed
-their daughters, husbands their wives, and wives have committed suicide
-when strangers have touched them even with their fingers. The common
-romances or novels of the country expatiate on the merits of many a
-Corean Lucretia. In some cases, however, this exaggerated modesty
-produces the very results it is intended to avoid. If a bold villain or
-too eager paramour should succeed in penetrating secretly the
-apartments of a noble lady, she dare not utter a cry, nor oppose the
-least resistance which might attract attention; for then, whether
-guilty or not, she would be dishonored forever by the simple fact that
-a man had entered her chamber. Every Corean husband is a Cæsar in this
-respect. If, however, the affair remains a secret, her reputation is
-saved.
-
-There is, however, another side. Though counting for nothing in
-society, and nearly so in their family, they are surrounded by a
-certain sort of exterior respect. They are always addressed in the
-formulas of honorific language. The men always step aside in the street
-to allow a woman to pass, even though she be of the poorer classes. The
-apartments of females are inviolable even to the minions of the law. A
-noble who takes refuge in his wife’s room may not be seized. Only in
-cases of rebellion is he dragged forth, for in that case his family are
-reckoned as accomplices in his guilt. In other crimes the accused must
-in some way be enticed outside, where he may be legally arrested. When
-a peddler visits the house to show his wares, he waits until the doors
-of the women’s apartments are shut. This done, his goods are examined
-in the outer apartments, which are open to all. When a man wishes to
-mend, or go up on his roof, he first notifies his neighbors, in order
-that they may shut their doors and windows, lest he risk the horrible
-suspicion of peeping at the women. As the Coreans do not see a “man in
-the moon,” but only a rabbit pounding drugs, or a lady banished there
-for a certain fault, according as they are most familiar with Sanskrit
-or the Chinese story, the females are not afraid of this luminary, nor
-are the men jealous of her, the moon being female in their ideas of
-gender.
-
-Marriage in Chō-sen is a thing with which a woman has little or nothing
-to do. The father of the young man communicates, either by call or
-letter, with the father of the girl whom he wishes his son to marry.
-This is often done without consulting the tastes or character of
-either, and usually through a middle-man or go-between. The fathers
-settle the time of the wedding after due discussion of the contract. A
-favorable day is appointed by the astrologers, and the arrangements are
-perfected. Under this aspect marriage seems an affair of small
-importance, but in reality it is marriage only that gives one any civil
-rank or influence in society. Every unmarried person is treated as a
-child. He may commit all sorts of foolishness without being held to
-account. His capers are not noticed, for he is not supposed to think or
-act seriously. Even the unmarried young men of twenty-five or thirty
-years of age can take no part in social reunions, or speak on affairs
-of importance, but must hold their tongues, be seen but not heard.
-Marriage is emancipation. Even if mated at twelve or thirteen years of
-age, the married are adults. The bride takes her place among the
-matrons, and the young man has a right to speak among the men and to
-wear a hat. The badge of single or of married life is the hair. Before
-marriage, the youth, who goes bareheaded, wears a simple tress, hanging
-down his back. The nuptial tie is, in reality, a knot of hair, for in
-wedlock the hair is bound up on the top of the head and is cultivated
-on all parts of the scalp. According to old traditions, men ought never
-to clip a single hair; but in the capital the young gallants, in order
-to add to their personal attractions—with a dash of fashionable
-defiance—trim their locks so that their coiffure will not increase in
-size more than a hen’s egg. The women, on the contrary, not only
-preserve all their own hair, but procure false switches and braids to
-swell their coiffures to fashionable bulk. They make up two large
-tresses, which are rolled to the back and top of the head, and secured
-by a long pin of silver or copper. The common people roll their plaits
-around their heads, like a turban, and shave the front of the scalp.
-Young persons who insist on remaining single, or bachelors arrived at a
-certain or uncertain age, and who have not yet found a wife, secretly
-cut off their hair, or get it done by fraud, in order to pass for
-married folks and avoid being treated as children. Such a custom,
-however, is a gross violation of morals and etiquette. (See
-illustration, page 161.)
-
-On the evening before the wedding, the young lady who is to be married
-invites one of her friends to change her virginal coiffure to that of a
-married woman.
-
-The bridegroom-to-be also invites one of his acquaintance to “do up”
-his hair in manly style. The persons appointed to perform this service
-are chosen with great care, and as changing the hair marks the
-turning-point in life, the hair-dresser of this occasion is called the
-“hand of honor,” and answers to the bridesmaid and groomsman of other
-countries.
-
-On the marriage-day, in the house of the groom, a platform is set up
-and richly adorned with decorative woven stuffs. Parents, friends, and
-acquaintances assemble in a crowd. The couple to be married—who may
-never have seen or spoken to each other—are brought in and take their
-places on the platform, face to face. There they remain for a few
-minutes. They salute each other with profound obeisance, but utter not
-a word. This constitutes the ceremony of marriage. Each then retires,
-on either side; the bride to the female, the groom to the male
-apartments, where feasting and amusement, after fashions in vogue in
-Chō-sen, take place. The expense of a wedding is considerable, and the
-bridegroom must be unstinting in his hospitality. Any failure in this
-particular may subject him to unpleasant practical jokes.
-
-On her wedding-day, the young bride must preserve absolute silence,
-both on the marriage platform and in the nuptial chamber. Etiquette
-requires this at least among the nobility. Though overwhelmed with
-questions and compliments, silence is her duty. She must rest mute and
-impassive as a statue. She seats herself in a corner clothed in all the
-robes she can bear upon her person. Her husband may disrobe her if he
-wishes, but she must take no part or hinder him. If she utters a word
-or makes a gesture, she is made the butt of the jokes and gossip of her
-husband’s house or neighborhood. The female servants of the house place
-themselves in a peeping position to listen or look through the windows,
-and are sure to publish what they see and hear amiss. Or this may be
-done to discover whether the husband is pleased with his wife, or how
-he behaves to her, as is the case in Japan. A bit of gossip—evidently a
-stock story—is the following from Dallet:
-
-A newly married Corean groom spent a whole day among his male friends,
-in order to catch some words from his wife at their first interview,
-after their hours of separation. His spouse was informed of this, and
-perhaps resolved to be obstinate. Her husband, having vainly tried to
-make her speak, at last told her that on consulting the astrologers
-they had said that his wife was mute from birth. He now saw that such
-was the case, and was resolved not to keep for his wife a dumb woman.
-Now in a Corean wedding, it is quite possible that such an event may
-take place. One of the contracting parties may be deaf, mute, blind, or
-impotent. It matters not. The marriage exists. But the wife, stung by
-her husband’s words, broke out in an angry voice, “Alas, the horoscope
-drawn for my partner is still more true. The diviner announced that I
-should marry the son of a rat.” This, to a Corean, is a great insult,
-as it attaints father and son, and hence the husband and his father.
-The shouts of laughter from the eavesdropping female servants added to
-the discomfiture of the young husband, who had gained his point of
-making his bride use her tongue at a heavy expense, for long did his
-friends jeer at him for his bravado, and chaff him at catching a
-Tartar.
-
-From the language, and from Japanese sources, we obtain some
-side-lights on the nuptial ceremony and married life. In Corean phrase
-hon-sang (the wedding and the funeral) are the two great events of
-life. Many are the terms relating to marriage, and the synonyms for
-conjugal union. “To take the hat,” “to clip the hair,” “to don the
-tuft,” “to sit on the mat,” are all in use among the gentlemen of the
-peninsula to denote the act or state of marriage. The hat and the hair
-play an important part in the transition from single to double
-blessedness. All who wear their locks ta-rai, or in a tress behind, are
-youths and maidens. Those with the tuft or top-knot are married. At his
-wedding and during the first year, the bridegroom wears a cap, made of
-a yellow herb, which is supposed to grow only near Sunto. Other
-honeymoon caps are melon-shaped, and made of sable skin. After the
-chung-mai, or middle-man, has arranged the match, and the day is
-appointed for the han-sa, or wedding, the bride chooses two or three
-maiden friends as “bridesmaids.” If rich, the bride goes to her future
-husband’s house in a palanquin; if poor, she rides on horseback. Even
-the humblest maid uses a sort of cap or veil, with ornaments on the
-breast, back, and at the girdle. When she cannot buy, she borrows. The
-prominent symbolic figure at the wedding is a goose; which, in Corean
-eyes, is the emblem of conjugal fidelity. Sometimes this mok-an is of
-gilded wood, sometimes it is made out of a fish for eating, again it is
-a live bird brought in a cloth with the head visible. If in the house,
-as is usual, the couple ascend the piled mats or dais and the
-reciprocal prostrations, or acts of mutual consent, form the
-sacramental part of the ceremony, and constitute marriage. The bride
-bows four times to her father-in-law and twice to the groom. The groom
-then bows four times to the bride. Other symbolic emblems are the
-fantastic shapes of straw (otsuka) presented to bride and groom alike.
-Dried pheasant is also brought in and cut. A gourd-bottle of rice-wine,
-decorated or tied with red and blue thread, is handed by the bride to
-the groom. The bridesmaids standing beside the couple pour the liquid
-and pass for exchange the one little “cup of the wine of mutual joy,”
-several times filled and emptied.
-
-Then begins the wedding-feast, when the guests drink and make merry.
-The important document certifying the fact of wedlock is called the
-hon-se-chi, and is signed by both parties. When the woman is unable to
-write, she makes “her mark” (siu-pon) by spreading out her hand and
-tracing with a pencil the exact profile of palm, wrist, and fingers.
-Sometimes the groom, in addition to his four prostrations, which are
-significant of fidelity to the bride, gives to his father-in-law a
-written oath of constancy to his daughter. Faithfulness is, however, a
-typical feminine, rather than masculine, virtue in the hermit nation.
-The pong-kang, a kind of wild canary bird, is held up to the wife as
-her model of conjugal fidelity. Another large bird, somewhat exceeding
-a duck in size, and called the ching-kiong, is said never to remate
-after the death of its consort. Corean widows are expected to imitate
-this virtuous fowl. In some places may be seen the vermilion arch or
-monumental gateway erected to some widow of faithful memory who wedded
-but once. Married women wear two rings on the ring finger. Sixty years,
-or a cycle, completes the ideal length of marital life, and “a golden
-wedding” is then celebrated.
-
-Among the most peculiar of women’s rights in Chō-sen is the curious
-custom forbidding any males in Seoul from being out after eight o’clock
-in the evening. When this Corean curfew sounds, all men must hie
-in-doors, while women are free to ramble abroad until one A.M. To
-transgress this law of pem-ya brings severe penalty upon the offender.
-In-doors, the violation of the privacy of the woman’s quarters is
-punishable by exile or severe flagellation.
-
-The following story, from Dallet, further illustrates some phases of
-their marriage customs, and shows that, while polygamy is not allowed,
-concubinage is a recognized institution:
-
-A noble wished to marry his own daughter and that of his deceased
-brother to eligible young men. Both maidens were of the same age. He
-wished to wed both well, but especially his own child. With this idea
-in view he had already refused some good offers. Finally he made a
-proposal to a family noted alike for pedigree and riches. After
-hesitating some time which of the maidens he should dispose of first,
-he finally decided upon his own child. Without having seen his future
-son-in-law, he pledged his word and agreed upon the night. Three days
-before the ceremony he learned from the diviners that the young man
-chosen was silly, exceedingly ugly, and very ignorant. What should he
-do? He could not retreat. He had given his word, and in such a case the
-law is inflexible. In his despair he resolved upon a plan to render
-abortive what he could not avert. On the day of the marriage, he
-appeared in the women’s apartments, and gave orders in the most
-imperative manner that his niece, and not his daughter, should don the
-marriage coiffure and the wedding-dress, and mount the nuptial
-platform. His stupefied daughter could not but acquiesce. The two
-cousins being of about the same height, the substitution was easy, and
-the ceremony proceeded according to the usual forms. The new bridegroom
-passed the afternoon in the men’s apartments, where he met his supposed
-father-in-law. What was the amazement of the old noble to find that far
-from being stupid and ugly, as depicted by the diviners, the young man
-was good-looking, well-formed, intelligent, highly educated, and
-amiable in manners. Bitterly regretting the loss of so accomplished a
-son-in-law, he determined to repair the evil. He secretly ordered that,
-instead of his niece, his daughter should be introduced as the bride.
-He knew well that the young man would suspect nothing, for during the
-salutations the brides are always so muffled up with dresses and loaded
-with ornaments that it is impossible to distinguish their countenances.
-
-All happened as the old man desired. During the two or three days which
-he passed with the new family, he congratulated himself upon obtaining
-so excellent a son-in-law. The latter, on his part, showed himself more
-and more charming, and so gained the heart of his supposed
-father-in-law that, in a burst of confidence, the latter revealed to
-him all that had happened. He told of the diviners’ reports concerning
-him, and the successive substitutions of niece for daughter and
-daughter for niece.
-
-The young man was at first speechless, then, recovering his composure,
-said: “All right, and that is a very smart trick on your part. But it
-is clear that both the two young persons belong to me, and I claim
-them. Your niece is my lawful wife, since she has made to me the legal
-salute, and your daughter—introduced by yourself into my
-marriage-chamber—has become of right and law my concubine.” The crafty
-old man, caught in his own net, had nothing to answer. The two young
-women were conducted to the house of the new husband and master, and
-the old noble was jeered at both for his lack of address and his bad
-faith.
-
-It is the reciprocal salutation before witnesses on the wedding-dais
-that constitutes legitimate marriage. From that moment a husband may
-claim the woman as his wife. If he repudiates or divorces her, he may
-not marry another woman while his former wife is living, but he is free
-to take as many concubines as he can support. It is sufficient that a
-man is able to prove that he has had intimate relations with a maiden
-or a widow; she then becomes his legal property. No person, not even
-her parents, can claim her if the man persists in keeping her. If she
-escape, he may use force to bring her back to his house. Conjugal
-fidelity—obligatory on the woman—is not required of the husband, and a
-wife is little more than a slave of superior rank. Among the nobles,
-the young bridegroom spends three or four days with his bride, and then
-absents himself from her for a considerable time, to prove that he does
-not esteem her too highly. Etiquette dooms her to a species of
-widowhood, while he spends his hours of relaxation in the society of
-his concubines. To act otherwise would be considered in very bad taste,
-and highly unfashionable. Instances are known of nobles who, having
-dropped a few tears at the death of their wives, have had to absent
-themselves from the saloons of their companions to avoid the torrent of
-ribaldry and jeers at such weakness. Such eccentricity of conduct makes
-a man the butt of long-continued raillery.
-
-Habituated from infancy to such a yoke, and regarding themselves as of
-an inferior race, most women submit to their lot with exemplary
-resignation. Having no idea of progress, or of an infraction of
-established usage, they bear all things. They become devoted and
-obedient wives, jealous of the reputation and well-being of their
-husbands. They even submit calmly to the tyranny and unreason of their
-mothers-in-law. Often, however, there is genuine rebellion in the
-household. Adding to her other faults of character, violence and
-insubordination, a Corean wife quarrels with her mother-in-law, makes
-life to her husband a burden, and incessantly provokes scenes of choler
-and scandal. Among the lower classes, in such cases, a few strokes of a
-stick or blows of the fist bring the wife to terms. In the higher
-classes it is not proper to strike a woman, and the husband has no
-other course than that of divorce. If it is not easy for him to marry
-again, he submits. If his wife, not content with tormenting him, is
-unfaithful to him, or, deserting his bed, goes back to her own house,
-he can lead her before the magistrate, who after administering a
-beating with the paddles, gives her as a concubine to one of his
-underlings.
-
-Women of tact and energy make themselves respected and conquer their
-legitimate position, as the following example shows. It is taken by
-Dallet from a Corean treatise on morals for the youth of both sexes:
-
-Toward the end of the last century a noble of the capital, of high
-rank, lost his wife, by whom he had had several children. His advanced
-age rendered a second marriage difficult. Nevertheless, the middle-men
-(or marriage-brokers employed in such cases) decided that a match could
-be made with the daughter of a poor noble in the province of
-Kiung-sang. On the appointed day he appeared at the mansion of his
-future father-in-law, and the couple mounted the stage to make the
-salute according to custom. Our grandee, casting his eyes upon his new
-wife, stopped for the moment thunderstruck. She was very fat, ugly,
-hump-backed, and appeared to be as slightly favored with gifts of mind
-as of body.
-
-But he could not withdraw, and he played his part firmly. He resolved
-neither to take her to his house nor to have anything to do with her.
-The two or three days which it was proper to pass in his
-father-in-law’s house being spent, he departed for the capital and paid
-no further attention to his new relatives.
-
-The deserted wife, who was a person of a great deal of intelligence,
-resigned herself to her isolation and remained in her father’s house,
-keeping herself informed, from time to time, of what happened to her
-husband. She learned, after two or three years, that he had become
-minister of the second rank, and that he had succeeded in marrying his
-two sons very honorably. Some years later, she heard that he proposed
-to celebrate, with all proper pomp, the festivities of his sixtieth
-birthday. Immediately, without hesitation and in spite of the
-remonstrances and opposition of her parents, she took the road to the
-capital. There hiring a palanquin, she was taken to the house of the
-minister and announced herself as his wife. She alighted, entered the
-vestibule, and presented herself with an air of assurance and a glance
-of tranquillity at the women of the united families. Seating herself at
-the place of honor, she ordered some fire brought, and with the
-greatest calmness lighted her pipe before the amazed domestics. The
-news was carried to the outer apartments of the gentlemen, but,
-according to etiquette, no one appeared surprised.
-
-Finally the lady called together the household slaves and said to them,
-in a severe tone, “What house is this? I am your mistress, and yet no
-one comes to receive me. Where have you been brought up? I ought to
-punish you severely, but I shall pardon you this time.” They hastened
-to conduct her into the midst of all the female guests. “Where are my
-sons-in-law?” she demanded. “How is it that they do not come to salute
-me? They forget that I am without any doubt, by my marriage, the mother
-of their wives, and that I have a right, on their part, to all the
-honors due to their own mothers.”
-
-Forthwith the two daughters-in-law presented themselves with a shamed
-air, and made their excuses as well as they were able. She rebuked them
-gently, and exhorted them to show themselves more scrupulous in the
-accomplishment of their duties. She then gave different orders in her
-quality as mistress of the house.
-
-Some hours after, seeing that neither of the men appeared, she called a
-slave to her, and said to him: “My two sons are surely not absent on
-such a day as this. See if they are in the men’s apartments, and bid
-them come here.” The sons presented themselves before her, much
-embarrassed, and blundered out some excuses. “How?” said she, “you have
-heard of my arrival for several hours and have not come to salute me?
-With such bad bringing up, and an equal ignorance of principles of
-action, how will you make your way in the world? I have pardoned my
-slaves and my daughters-in-law for their want of politeness, but for
-you who are men I cannot let this fault pass unpunished.” With this she
-called a slave and bade him give them some strokes on the legs with a
-rod. Then she added, “For your father, the minister, I am his servant,
-and I have not had orders to yield to him; but, as for you, henceforth
-do you act so as not to forget proprieties.” Finally the minister
-himself, thoroughly astonished at all that had passed, was obliged to
-come to terms and to salute his wife. Three days after, the festivities
-being ended, he returned to the palace. The king asked familiarly if
-all had passed off happily. The minister narrated in detail the history
-of his marriage, the unexpected arrival of his wife, and how she had
-conducted herself. The king, who was a man of sense, replied: “You have
-acted unjustly toward your wife. She appears to me to be a woman of
-spirit and extraordinary tact. Her behavior is admirable, and I don’t
-know how to praise her enough. I hope you will repair the wrongs you
-have done her.” The minister promised, and some days later solemnly
-conferred upon his wife one of the highest dignities of the court.
-
-The woman who is legally espoused, whether widow or slave, enters into
-and shares the entire social estate of her husband. Even if she be not
-noble by birth she becomes so by marrying a noble, and her children are
-so likewise. If two brothers, for example, espouse an aunt and a niece,
-and the niece falls to the lot of the elder, she becomes thereby the
-elder sister, and the aunt will be treated as a younger sister. This
-relation of elder and younger sisters makes an immense difference in
-life, position, and treatment, in all Chinese Asia.
-
-It is not proper for a widow to remarry. In the higher classes a widow
-is expected to weep for her deceased husband, and to wear mourning all
-her life. It would be infamy for her, however young, to marry a second
-time. The king who reigned 1469–1494 excluded children of remarried
-widows from competition at the public examinations, and from admittance
-to any official employment. Even to the present day such children are
-looked upon as illegitimate.
-
-Among a people so passionate as Coreans, grave social disorders result
-from such a custom. The young noble widows who cannot remarry become,
-in most cases, secretly or openly the concubines of those who wish to
-support them. The others who strive to live chastely are rudely exposed
-to the inroads of passion. Sometimes they are made intoxicated by
-narcotics which are put in their drink, and they wake to find
-themselves dishonored. Sometimes they are abducted by force, during the
-night, by the aid of hired bandits. When they become victims of
-violence, there is no remedy possible. It often happens that young
-widows commit suicide, after the death of their husbands, in order to
-prove their fidelity and to secure their honor and reputation beyond
-the taint of suspicion. Such women are esteemed models of chastity, and
-there is no end to their praises among the nobles. Through their
-influence, the king often decrees a memorial gateway, column, or
-temple, intended to be a monument of their heroism and virtue. Thus it
-has often happened that Christian widows begged of the missionary
-fathers permission to commit suicide, if attempts were made to violate
-their houses or their persons; and it was with difficulty that they
-could be made to comprehend the Christian doctrine concerning suicide.
-
-The usual method of self-destruction is ja-mun, or cutting the throat,
-or opening the abdomen with a sword. In this the Coreans are like the
-Japanese, neck-cutting or piercing being the feminine, and hara-kiri
-(belly-cutting) the masculine, method of ending life at one’s own
-hands.
-
-Among the common people, second marriages are forbidden neither by law
-nor custom, but wealthy families endeavor to imitate the nobles in this
-custom as in others. Among the poor, necessity knows no law. The men
-must have their food prepared for them, and women cannot, and do not
-willingly die of famine when a husband offers himself. Hence second
-marriages among the lowly are quite frequent.
-
-
-
-Most of the facts stated in this chapter are drawn from Dallet’s
-“History of the [Roman Catholic] Church in Corea.” Making due allowance
-for the statements of celibate priests, who are aliens in religion,
-nationality, and civilization, the picture of the social life of
-Chō-sen is that of abominable heathenism.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX.
-
-CHILD LIFE.
-
-
-Judging from a collection of the toys of Corean children, and from
-their many terms of affection and words relating to games and sports,
-festivals and recreation, nursery stories, etc., the life of the little
-Kim or Ni must be a pleasant one. For the blessings of offspring the
-parents offer rice to the god of the household (sam-sin-hang), whose
-tiny shrine holds a place of honor in some ornamental niche in the best
-room. When the baby begins to grow, cradles being unknown, the mother
-puts the infant to sleep by to-tak, to-tak—patting it lightly on the
-stomach. When it is able to take its first step across the floor—the
-tiger-skin rug being ready to ease its possible fall—this important
-household event, spoken of with joy as the ja-pak, ja-pak, is described
-to the neighbors. As the child grows up and is able to walk and run
-about, the hair is mostly shaved off, so that only a “button of jade”
-is left on the top of the head. This infantile tuft takes its name from
-the badge or togle worn on the top of the men’s caps in winter. A
-child, “three feet high,” very beautiful and well formed, docile and
-strong, if a son, is spoken of “as a thousand-mile horse”—one who
-promises to make an alert and enduring man. A child noted for filial
-piety will even cheerfully commit tan-ji—cutting his finger to furnish
-his blood as a remedy for the sickness of father or mother. Should the
-child die, a stone effigy or statue of itself is set up before his
-grave.
-
-In the capital and among the higher classes, the children’s toys are
-very handsome, ranking as real works of art, while in every class the
-playthings of the tiny Corean humanity form but a miniature copy of the
-life of their elders. Among the living pets, the monkey is the
-favorite. These monkeys are fitted with jackets, and when plump and not
-too mischievous make capital pets for the boys. Puppies share the
-affections of the nursery with the tiger on wheels. Made of paper pulp
-and painted, this harmless effigy of the king of beasts is pulled about
-with a string. A jumping-jack is but a copy of the little boy who pulls
-it. A jerk of the string draws in the pasteboard tongue, and sends the
-trumpet to his mouth. Official life is mirrored in the tasselled
-umbrella, the fringed hats, and the toy-chariot with fancy wheels.
-Other toys, such as rattles, flags, and drums, exactly imitate the
-larger models with which the grown-up men and women amuse themselves.
-All these are named, fashioned, and decorated in a style peculiarly
-Corean. Among the most common of the children’s plays are the
-following: A ring is hidden in a heap of sand, and the urchins poke
-sticks into and through the pile to find it. Whoever transfixes the
-circlet wins the game, suggesting our girls’ game of grace-hoop, though
-often taking a longer time. Rosettes or pinwheels of paper are made and
-fastened on the end of sticks. Running before the breeze, the miniature
-windmills afford hilarious delight.
-
-The children’s way of bringing rain is to move the lips up and down,
-distending the cheeks and pressing the breath through the lips. Playing
-“dinner” with tiny cups and dishes, and imitating the ponderous
-etiquette of their elders, is a favorite amusement. See-saw is rougher
-and more exhilarating. Games of response are often played with hands,
-head, or feet, in which one watches the motions of his rival, opens or
-shuts his hands, and pays a forfeit or loses the game when a false move
-is made. For the coast-dwellers, the sea-shore, with the rocks which
-are the refuge of the shell-fish, is the inexhaustible playground of
-the children. Looking down in the clear deep water of the archipelago
-they see the coral reefs, the bright flower-gardens of marine plants,
-and shoals of striped, banded, crimson-tailed, and green-finned fish,
-which, in the eastern seas, glitter with tints of gold and silver. The
-children, half naked, catch the crabs and lobsters, learning how to
-hold their prizes after many a nab and pinch, which bring infantile
-tears and squalls. One of the common playthings of Corean children, the
-“baby’s rattle,” is the dried leathery egg of the skate, which with a
-few pebbles inside makes the infant, if not its parents, happy with the
-din.
-
-Besides a game of patting and dabbling in the water—chal-pak,
-chal-pak—boys amuse themselves by fishing with hook and line or net.
-One method is to catch fish by means of the yek-kui. This is a plant of
-peppery taste, which poisons or stupefies the fish that bite the
-tempting tip, making them easy prey. More serious indoor games played
-by women and children are pa-tok, or backgammon; sang-pi-yen, dominoes;
-siu-tu-chen, game of eighty cards; and chang-keui, or chess. All these
-pastimes are quite different from ours of the same name, yet enough
-like them to be recognized as belonging to the species named. The
-festivals most intensely enjoyed by the children are those of “Treading
-the Bridges,” “The Meeting of the Star Lovers,” and the “Mouse Fire.”
-There is one evening in the year in which men and children, as well as
-women, are allowed to be out in the streets of the capital. The people
-spend the greater part of the night in passing and repassing upon the
-little bridges of stone. It is a general “night out” for all the
-people. Comedians, singers, harlequins, and merry-makers of all kinds
-are abroad, and it being moonlight, all have a good time in “treading
-the bridges.” On the seventh day of the seventh month, the festival
-honored in China, Corea, and Japan takes place, for which children
-wait, in expectation, many days in advance. Sweetmeats are prepared,
-and bamboos strung with strips of colored paper are the symbols of
-rejoicing. On this night the two stars Capricornus and Alpha Lyra (or
-the Herd-boy and Spinning Maiden) are in conjunction in the milky way
-[10] (or the River of Heaven), and wishes made at this time are
-supposed to come true.
-
-Chu-pul, or the Mouse Fire, occurs in the twelfth month, on the day of
-the Mouse (or rat). Children light brands or torches of dry reeds or
-straw, and set fire to the dry herbage, stubble, and shrubbery on the
-borders of the roads, in order to singe the hair of the various field
-or ground-burrowing animals, or burn them out, so as to obtain a
-plentiful crop of cotton.
-
-At school, the pupils study according to the method all over Asia, that
-is, out loud, and noisily. This kang-siong, or deafening buzz, is
-supposed to be necessary to sound knowledge. Besides learning the
-Chinese characters and the vernacular alphabet, with tongue, ear, eye,
-and pen, the children master the ku-ku (“nine times nine”), or the
-multiplication table, and learn to work the four simple rules of
-arithmetic, and even fractions, involution, and evolution on the
-chon-pan, or sliding numeral frame. A “red mark” is a vermilion token
-of a good lesson, made by the examiner; and for a good examination
-passed rewards are given in the form of a first-rate dinner, or one or
-all of “the four friends of the study table”—pens, ink, paper, and
-inkstand, or brushes, sticks of “India” ink, rolls of unsized paper,
-and an inkstone or water-dropper. Writing a good autograph
-signature—“one’s own pen”—is highly commended. Sometimes money is given
-for encouragement, which the promising lad saves up in an earthen
-savings-bank. Not a few of the youth of the humbler classes, who work
-in the fields by day and study the characters by night, rise to be able
-officers who fill high stations.
-
-The French missionaries assure us that the normal Corean is fond of
-children, especially of sons, who in his eyes are worth ten times as
-much as daughters. Such a thing as exposure of children is almost
-unknown. In times of severe famine this may happen after failure to
-give away or sell for a season, that they may be bought back. Parents
-rarely find their family too numerous.
-
-The first thing inculcated in a child’s mind is respect for his father.
-All insubordination is immediately and sternly repressed. Far different
-is it with the mother. She yields to her boy’s caprices and laughs at
-his faults and vices without rebuke. The child soon learns that a
-mother’s authority is next to nothing. In speaking of his father a lad
-often adds the words “severe,” “terrible,” implying the awe and
-profound respect in which he holds his father. (Something of the same
-feeling prevails as in Japan, where the four dreadful things which a
-lad most fears, and which are expressed in a rhyming proverb, are:
-“Earthquake, wind, fire, and father,” or “daddy.”) On the contrary, in
-speaking of his mother, he adds the words “good,” “indulgent,” “I’m not
-afraid of her,” etc. A son must not play nor smoke in his father’s
-presence, nor assume free or easy posture before him. For lounging,
-there is a special room, like a nursery. The son waits on his father at
-meals and gets his bed ready. If he is old or sickly, the son sleeps
-near him and does not quit his side night or day. If he is in prison
-the son takes up his abode in the vicinity, to communicate with his
-parent and furnish him with luxuries. In case of imprisonment for
-treason, the son at the portal, on bended knees day and night, awaits
-the sentence that will reduce himself to slavery. If the accused is
-condemned to exile, the son must at least accompany his father to the
-end of the journey, and, in some cases, share banishment with him.
-Meeting his father in the street, the son must make profound salute on
-his knees, in the dust, or in the ditch. In writing to him, he must
-make free use of the most exaggerated honorifics which the Corean
-knows.
-
-The practice of adoption is common, as it is abnormally so in all
-countries where ancestral worship is prevalent and underlies all
-religions. The preservation of the family line is the supreme end and
-aim of life. In effect all those persons are descendants of particular
-ancestors who will keep up the ancestral sacrifices, guard the tablets
-and observe the numerous funeral and mourning ceremonies which make
-life such a burden in Eastern Asia. Daughters are not adopted, because
-they cannot accomplish the prescribed rites. When parents have only a
-daughter, they marry her to an adopted son, who becomes head of the
-family so adopted into. Even the consent of the adopted, or of his
-parents, is not always requisite, for as it is a social, as well as a
-religious necessity, the government may be appealed to, and, in case of
-need, forces acceptance of the duty. In this manner, as in the
-patriarchal age of biblical history, a man may be coerced into “raising
-up seed” to defunct ancestors.
-
-Properly, an adoption, to be legal, ought to be registered at the
-office of the Board of Rites, but this practice has fallen into disuse,
-and it is sufficient to give public notice of the fact among the two
-families concerned. An adoption once made cannot be void except by a
-decree from the Tribunal of Rites, which is difficult to obtain. In
-practice, the system of adoption results in many scandals, quarrels,
-jealousies, and all the train of evils which one familiar with men and
-women, as they are, might argue a priori without the facts at hand. The
-iron fetters of Asiatic institutions cannot suppress human nature.
-
-Primogeniture is the rigid rule. Younger sons, at the time of their
-marriage, or at other important periods of life, receive paternal
-gifts, now more, now less, according to usage, rank, the family
-fortune, etc., but the bulk of the property belongs to the oldest son,
-on whom the younger sons look as their father. He is the head of the
-family, and regards his father’s children as his own. In all Eastern
-Asia the bonds of family are much closer than among Caucasian people of
-the present time. All the kindred, even to the fifteenth or twentieth
-degree, whatever their social position, rich or poor, educated or
-illiterate, officials or beggars—form a clan, a tribe, or more exactly
-one single family, all of whose members have mutual interests to
-sustain. The house of one is the house of the other, and each will
-assist to his utmost another of the clan to get money, office, or
-advantage. The law recognizes this system by levying on the clan the
-imposts and debts which individuals of it cannot pay, holding the
-sodality responsible for the individual. To this they submit without
-complaint or protest.
-
-Instead of the family being a unit, as in the west, it is only the
-fragment of a clan, a segment in the great circle of kindred. The
-number of terms expressing relationship is vastly greater and much more
-complex than in English. One is amazed at the exuberance of the
-national vocabulary in this respect. The Coreans are fully as clannish
-as the Chinese, and much more so than the Irish; and in this, as in the
-Middle Kingdom, lies one great obstacle to Christianity or to any kind
-of individual reform. Marriage cannot take place between two persons
-having the same family cognomen. There are in the kingdom only one
-hundred and forty or fifty family, or rather clan names. Yet many of
-these names are widespread through the realm. All are formed of a
-single Chinese letter, except six or seven, which are composed of two
-characters. To distinguish the different families who bear the same
-patronymic, they add the name which they call the pu, or Gentile name,
-to indicate the place whence the family originally came. In the case of
-two persons wishing to marry, if this pu is the same, they are in the
-eyes of the law relatives, and marriage is forbidden. If the pu of each
-is different, they may wed. The most common names, such as Kim and
-Ni—answering to our Smith and Jones—have more than a score of pu, which
-arise from more than twenty families, the place of whose origin is in
-each case different. The family name is never used alone. It is always
-followed by a surname; or only the word so-pang, junior, sang-wen,
-senior, lord, sir, etc.
-
-Male adults usually have three personal names, that given in childhood,
-the common proper name, and the common legal name, while to this last
-is often added the title. Besides these, various aliases, nicknames,
-fanciful and punning appellatives, play their part, to the pleasure or
-vexation of their object. This custom is the source of endless
-confusion in documents and common life. It was formerly in vogue in
-Japan, but was abolished by the mikado’s government in 1872, and now
-spares as much trouble to tongue, types, and pens, as a reform in our
-alphabet and spelling would save the English-speaking world. As in
-Nippon, a Corean female has but one name from the cradle to the grave.
-The titles “Madame,” or “Madame widow,” are added in mature life. As in
-old Japan, the common people do not, as a rule, have distinguishing
-individual names, and among them nicknames are very common. Corean
-etiquette forbids that the name of father, mother, or uncle be used in
-conversation, or even pronounced aloud.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX.
-
-HOUSEKEEPING, DIET, AND COSTUME.
-
-
-Corean architecture is in a very primitive condition. The castles,
-fortifications, temples, monasteries and public buildings cannot
-approach in magnificence those of Japan or China. The country, though
-boasting hoary antiquity, has few ruins in stone. The dwellings are
-tiled or thatched houses, almost invariably one story high. In the
-smaller towns these are not arranged in regular streets, but scattered
-here and there. Even in the cities and capital the streets are narrow
-and tortuous.
-
-In the rural parts, the houses of the wealthy are embosomed in
-beautiful groves, with gardens surrounded by charming hedges or fences
-of rushes or split-bamboo. The cities show a greater display of
-red-tiled roofs, as only the officials and nobles are allowed this
-sumptuary honor. Shingles are not much used. The thatching is of rice
-or barley straw, cut close, with ample eaves, and often finished with
-great neatness.
-
-A low wall of uncemented stone, five or six feet high, surrounds the
-dwelling, and when kept in repair gives an air of neatness and imposing
-solidity to the estate. Often a pretty rampart of flat bamboo or
-rushes, plaited in the herring-bone pattern, surmounts the wall, which
-may be of pebbles or stratified rock and mortared. Sometimes the
-rampart is of wattle, covered with smooth white plaster, which, with
-the gateway, is also surmounted by an arched roofing of tiles. Instead
-of regular slanting lines of gables, one meets with the curved and
-pagoda-like roofs seen in China, with a heavy central ridge and
-projecting ornaments of fire-hardened clay, like the “stirrup” or
-“devil” tiles of Japan. These curves greatly add to the beauty of a
-Corean house, because they break the monotony of the lines of Corean
-architecture.
-
-Doors, windows, and lintels are usually rectangular, and are set in
-regularly, instead of being made odd to relieve the eye, as in Japan.
-Bamboo is a common material for window-frames.
-
-The foundations are laid on stone set in the earth, and the floor of
-the humble is part of the naked planet. People one grade above the
-poorest cover the hard ground with sheets of oiled paper, which serve
-as rugs or a carpet. For the better class a floor of wood is raised a
-foot or so above the earth, but in the sleeping- and sitting-room of
-the average family, the “kang” forms a vaulted floor, bed, and stove.
-
-The kang is characteristic of the human dwelling in northeastern Asia.
-It is a kind of tubular oven, in which human beings, instead of
-potatoes, are baked. It is as though we should make a bedstead of
-bricks, and put foot-stoves under it. The floor is bricked over, or
-built of stone over flues, which run from the fireplace, at one end of
-the house, to the chimney at the other. The fire which boils the pot or
-roasts the meat is thus utilized to warm those sitting or sleeping in
-the room beyond. The difficulty is to keep up a regular heat without
-being alternately chilled or smothered. With wood fuel this is almost
-impossible, but by dint of tact and regulated draught may be
-accomplished. As in the Swedish porcelain stove, a pail of live coals
-keeps up a good warmth all night. The kangs survive in the kotatsù of
-Japan.
-
-The “fire” in sentiment and fact is the centre of the Corean home, and
-the native phrase, “he has put out his fire,” is the dire synonym
-denoting that a man is not only cold and fasting, but in want of the
-necessities of life.
-
-Bed-clothes are of silk, wadded cotton, thick paper, and tiger, wolf,
-or dog skins, the latter often sewn in large sheets like a carpet.
-Comfort, cleanliness, and luxury make the bed of the noble on the warm
-brick in winter, or cool matting in summer; but with the poor, the cold
-of winter, and insects of summer, with the dirt and rags, make sleeping
-in a Corean hut a hardship. Cushions or bags of rice-chaff form the
-pillows of the rich. The poor man uses a smooth log of wood or slightly
-raised portion of the floor to rest his head upon. “Weariness can snore
-upon the flint when resty sloth finds the down pillow hard.”
-
-Three rooms are the rule in an average house. These are for cooking,
-eating, and sleeping. In the kitchen the most noticeable articles are
-the ang-pak, or large earthen jars, for holding rice, barley, or water.
-Each of them is big enough to hold a man easily. The second room,
-containing the kang, is the sleeping apartment, and the next is the
-best room or parlor. Little furniture is the rule. Coreans, like the
-Japanese, sit, not cross-legged, but on their heels. Among the
-well-to-do, dog-skins, or kat-tei, cover the floor for a carpet, or
-splendid tiger-skins serve as rugs. Matting is common, the best being
-in the south.
-
-As in Japan, the meals are served on the floor on low sang, or little
-tables, one for each guest, sometimes one for a couple. The best table
-service is of porcelain, and the ordinary sort of earthenware with
-white metal or copper utensils. The table-cloths are of fine glazed
-paper and resemble oiled silk. No knives or forks are used; instead,
-chopsticks, laid in paper cases, and, what is more common than in China
-or Japan, spoons are used at every meal. The climax of æsthetic taste
-occurs when a set of historic porcelain and faience of old Corean
-manufacture and decoration, with the tall and long-spouted teapot, are
-placed on the pearl-inlaid table and filled with native delicacies.
-
-The walls range in quality of decoration from plain mud to colored
-plaster and paper. The Corean wall-paper is of all grades, sometimes as
-soft as silk, or as thick as canvas. Sa-peik is a favorite reddish
-earth or mortar which serves to rough-cast in rich color tones the
-walls of a room.
-
-Pictures are not common; the artistic sense being satisfied with
-scrolls of handsome Chinese characters containing moral and literary
-gems from the classics, or the caligraphic triumph of some king,
-dignitary, or literary friend. To possess a sign-manual or autograph
-scrap of Yung, Hong, or O, the three most renowned men of Chō-sen, is
-reckoned more than a golden manuscript on azure paper.
-
-The windows are square and latticed without or within, and covered with
-tough paper, either oiled or unsized, and moving in grooves—the
-originals of the Japanese sliding-doors and windows. In every part of a
-Corean house, paper plays an important and useful part.
-
-Very fine Venetian blinds are made of threads split from the
-ever-useful bamboo, which secures considerable variety in window
-decoration. The doors are of wood, paper, or plaited bamboo. Glass was,
-till recently, a nearly unknown luxury in Corea among the common
-people. Even with the nobles, it is rather a curiosity. The windows
-being made of oiled or thin paper, glass is not a necessity. This fact
-will explain the eagerness of the people to possess specimens of this
-transparent novelty. Even old porter and ale bottles, which sailors
-have thrown away, are eagerly picked up, begged, bought, or stolen. An
-old medicine-vial, among the Coreans, used to fetch the price of a
-crystal goblet among us. The possessor of such a prize as a Bass’ ale
-bottle will exhibit it to his neighbor as a rare curio from the Western
-barbarians, just as an American virtuoso shows off his last new Satsuma
-vase or box of Soochow lacquer. When English ship captains, visiting
-the coast, gave the Coreans a bottle of wine, the bottle, after being
-emptied, was always carefully returned with extreme politeness as an
-article of great value. The first Corean visitor to the American
-expedition of 1871, went into ecstacies, and his face budded into
-smiles hitherto thought impossible to the grim Corean visage, because
-the cook gave him an arm-load of empty ale-bottles. The height of
-domestic felicity is reached when a Corean householder can get a morsel
-of glass to fasten into his window or sliding-door, and thus gaze on
-the outer world through this “loophole of retreat.” This not only saves
-him from the disagreeable necessity of punching a finger-hole through
-the paper to satisfy his curiosity, but gives him the advantage of not
-being seen, and of keeping out the draft. When a whole pane has been
-secured, it is hard to state whether happiness or pride reigns
-uppermost in the owner’s bosom.
-
-Candlesticks are either tall and upright, resting on the floor in the
-Japanese style, or dish-lamps of common oil are used.
-
-Flint and steel are used to ignite matches made of chips of wood dipped
-in sulphur, by which a “fire-flower” is made to blossom, or in more
-prosaic English, a flame is kindled. Phosphorus matches, imported from
-Japan, are called by a word signifying “fire-sprite,”
-“will-of-the-wisp,” or ignis-fatuus.
-
-Usually in a gentleman’s house there is an ante-room or vestibule, in
-which neighbors and visitors sit and talk, smoke or drink. In this
-place much freedom is allowed and formalities are laid aside. Here are
-the facilities and the atmosphere which in Western lands are found in
-clubs, coffee- and ale-houses, or obtained from newspapers. One such,
-of which the picture is before us, has in it seats, and looks out on a
-garden or courtyard. On a ledge or window-seat are vases of blossoms
-and cut flowers; a smaller vase holds fans, and another is presumably
-full of tobacco or some other luxury. Short eave-curtains and longer
-drapery at the side, give an air of inviting comfort to these free and
-easy quarters, where news and gossip are exchanged. These oi-tiang, or
-outer apartments, are for strangers and men only, and women are never
-expected or allowed to be present.
-
-The Ching-ja is a small house or room on the bank of a river, or
-overlooking some bit of natural scenery, to which picnic parties
-resort, the Coreans most heartily enjoying out-door festivity, in
-places which sky, water, and foliage make beautiful to the eye.
-
-There are often inscribed on the portals, in large Chinese characters,
-moral mottoes or poetical sentiments, such as “Enter happiness, like
-breezes bring the spring, and depart evil spirit as snow melts in
-water.” Before a new house is finished, a sheet of pure white paper, in
-which are enclosed some nip, or “cash,” with grains of rice which have
-been steeped in wine, is nailed or fastened on the wall, over the door,
-and becomes the good spirit or genius of the house, sacrifices being
-duly offered to it. In more senses than one, the spirit that presides
-over too many Corean households is the alcohol spirit.
-
-The Corean liquor, by preference, is brewed or distilled from rice,
-millet, or barley. These alcoholic drinks are of various strength,
-color, and smell, ranging from beer to brandy. In general their
-beverages are sufficiently smoky, oily, and alcoholic to Western
-tastes, as the fusel-oil usually remains even in the best products of
-their stills. No trait of the Coreans has more impressed their numerous
-visitors, from Hamel to the Americans, than their love of all kinds of
-strong drink, from ale to whiskey. The common verdict is, “They are
-greatly addicted to the worship of Bacchus.” The Corean vocabulary
-bears ample witness to the thorough acquaintance of the people with the
-liquor made from grain by their rude processes. The inhabitants of the
-peninsula were hard drinkers even in the days of Fuyu and Kokorai. No
-sooner were the ports of modern Chō-sen open to commerce than the
-Chinese established liquor-stores, while European wines, brandies,
-whiskeys, and gins have entered to vary the Corean’s liquid diet and
-increase the national drunkenness.
-
-Strange as it may seem, the peasant, though living between the two
-great tea-producing countries of the world—Japan and China—and in the
-latitude of tea-plantations, scarcely knows the taste of tea, and the
-fragrant herb is as little used as is coffee in Japan. The most common
-drink, after what the clouds directly furnish, is the water in which
-rice has been boiled. Infusions of dried ginseng, orange-peel, or
-ginger serve for festal purposes, and honey when these fail; but the
-word “tea,” or cha, serves the Corean, as it does the typical Irishman,
-for a variety of infusions and decoctions. With elastic charity the
-word covers a multitude of sins, chiefly of omission; all that custom
-or euphony requires is to prefix the name of the substance used to
-“cha” and the drink is tea—of some kind.
-
-The staple diet has in it much more of meat and fat than that of the
-Japanese. The latter acknowledge that the average Corean can eat twice
-as much as himself. Beef, pork, fowls, venison, fish, and game are
-consumed without much waste in rejected material. Nearly everything
-edible about an animal is a tidbit, and a curious piece of cookery,
-symbolical of a generous feast, is often found at the board of a
-liberal host. This tang-talk (which often becomes the “town-talk”) is a
-chicken baked and served with its feathers, head, claws, and inwards
-intact. “To treat to an entire fowl” is said of a liberal host, and is
-equivalent to “killing the fatted calf.”
-
-Fish are often eaten raw from tail to head, especially if small, with
-only a little seasoning. Ho-hoi, or fish-bone salad, is a delicacy.
-Dog-flesh is on sale among the common butchers’ meats, and the Coreans
-enjoy it as our Indians do. In the first month of the year, however,
-owing to religious scruples, no dog-meat is eaten, or dishes of canine
-origin permitted.
-
-The state dinner, given to the Japanese after the treaty, consisted of
-this bill of fare: two-inch squares of pastry, made of flour, sugar,
-and oil; heaps of boiled eggs; pudding made of flour, sesame, and
-honey; dried persimmons; “pine-seeds,” honey-like food covered with
-roasted rice colored red and white; macaroni soup with fowl; boiled
-legs of pork, and wine, rice or millet spirit with everything. It is
-customary to decorate the tables on grand occasions with artificial
-flowers, and often the first course is intended more for show than for
-actual eating. For instance, when the Japanese party, feasted at Seoul
-in 1646, first sat down to the table, one of them began to help himself
-to fish, of which he was very fond. The dish seemed to contain a
-genuine cooked carp basted with sauce, but, to the embarrassment of the
-hungry guest, the fish would not move. He was relieved by the servant,
-who told him that it was put on the table only for show. The courses
-brought on later contained more substantial nourishment, such as fish,
-flesh, fowl, vegetables, soups, cakes, puddings and tea. Judging from
-certain words in the language, these show-dishes form a regular feature
-at the opening of banquets. The women cook rice beautifully, making it
-thoroughly soft by steaming, while yet retaining the perfect shape of
-each grain by itself. Other well-known dishes are barley, millet,
-beans, taro (potato cooked in a variety of ways), lily-bulbs,
-sea-weeds, acorns, dai-kon (radishes), turnips, and potatoes. Macaroni
-and vermicelli are used for soups and refreshing lunches. Apples,
-pears, plums, grapes, persimmons, and various kinds of berries help to
-furnish the table, though the flavor of these is inferior to the same
-fruits grown in our gardens.
-
-All kinds of condiments, mustard, vinegar, pepper, and a variety of
-home-made sauces, are much relished. Itinerant food-sellers are not so
-common as in China, but butcher-shops and vermicelli stands are
-numerous. Two solid meals, with a light breakfast, is the rule. Opan,
-or midday rice, is the dinner. Tai-sik is a regular meal. The
-appearance of the evening star is the signal for a hearty supper, and
-the planet a synonym for the last meal of the day. At wakes or funeral
-feasts, and on festal days, the amount of victuals consumed is
-enormous, while a very palatable way of remembering the dead is by the
-yum-pok, or drinking of sacrificial wine. The Coreans understand the
-preservative virtues of ice, and in winter large quantities of this
-substance are cut and stored away for use in the summer, in keeping
-fresh meat and fish. Their ice-houses are made by excavating the ground
-and covering over the store with earth and sod, from which in hot
-weather they use as may be necessary. These ice stores are often under
-the direction of the government, especially when large quantities of
-fish are being preserved for rations of the army in time of war. Those
-who oversee the work are called “Officers of the Refrigerator.”
-
-One striking fault of the Coreans at the table is their voracity, and
-to this trait of their character Japanese, French, Dutch, and Chinese
-bear witness. It might be supposed that a Frenchman, who eats lightly,
-might make a criticism where an Englishman would be silent; but not so.
-All reports concerning them seem to agree. In this respect there is not
-the least difference between the rich and poor, noble or plebeian. To
-eat much is an honor, and the merit of a feast consists not in the
-quality but in the quantity of the food served. Little talking is done
-while eating, for each sentence might lose a mouthful. Hence, since a
-capacious stomach is a high accomplishment, it is the aim from infancy
-to develop a belly having all possible elasticity. Often the mothers
-take their babies upon their knees, and after stuffing them with rice,
-like a wad in a gun, will tap them from time to time with the paddle of
-a ladle on the stomach, to see that it is fully spread out or rammed
-home, and only cease gorging when it is physically impossible for the
-child to swell up more. A Corean is always ready to eat; he attacks
-whatever he meets with, and rarely says, “Enough.” Even between meals,
-he will help himself to any edible that is offered. The ordinary
-portion of a laborer is about a quart of rice, which when cooked makes
-a good bulk. This, however, is no serious hindrance to his devouring
-double or treble the quantity when he can get it. Eating matches are
-common. When an ox is slaughtered, and the beef is served up, a heaping
-bowl of the steaming mess does not alarm any guest. Dog-meat is a
-common article of food, and the canine sirloins served up in great
-trenchers are laid before the guests, each one having his own small
-table to himself. When fruits, such as peaches or small melons, are
-served, they are devoured without peeling. Twenty or thirty peaches is
-considered an ordinary allowance, which rapidly disappears. Such a
-prodigality in victuals is, however, not common, and for one feast
-there are many fastings. Beef is not an article of daily food with the
-peasantry. Its use is regulated by law, the butcher being a sort of
-government official; and only under extraordinary circumstances, as
-when a grand festival is to be held, does the king allow an ox to be
-killed in each village. The Coreans are neither fastidious in their
-eating nor painstaking in their cooking. Nothing goes to waste. All is
-grist that comes to the mill in their mouths.
-
-They equal Japanese in devouring raw fish, and uncooked food of all
-kinds is swallowed without a wry face. Even the intestines pass among
-them for delicate viands. Among the poorer classes, a cooked fish is
-rarely seen on the table; for no sooner is it caught than it is
-immediately opened and devoured. The raw viands are usually eaten with
-a strong seasoning of pepper or mustard, but they are often swallowed
-without condiment of any sort. Often in passing along the banks of a
-river, one may see men fishing with rod and line. Of these some are
-nobles who are not able, or who never wish to work for a living, yet
-they will fish for food and sport. Instead of a bag or basket to
-contain the game, or a needle to string it upon, each fisher has at his
-side a jar of diluted pepper, or a kind of soy. No sooner is a fish
-hooked, than he is drawn out, seized between the two fingers, dipped
-into the sauce, and eaten without ceremony. Bones do not scare them.
-These they eat, as they do the small bones of fowls.
-
-Nationally, and individually, the Coreans are very deficient in
-conveniences for the toilet. Bath-tubs are rare, and except in the
-warmer days of summer, when the river and sea serve for immersion, the
-natives are not usually found under water. The Japanese in the treaty
-expedition in 1876 had to send bath-tubs on shore from their ships.
-Morning ablutions are made in a copper basin. The sponges which grow on
-the west coast seem to find no market at home. This neglect of more
-intimate acquaintance with water often makes the lowest classes “look
-like mulattos,” as Hamel said. Gutzlaff, Adams, and others, especially
-the Japanese, have noted this personal defect, and have suggested the
-need of soap and hot water. It may be that the contrast between costume
-and cuticle tempts to exaggeration. People who dress in white clothing
-have special need of personal cleanliness. Perhaps soap factories will
-come in the future.
-
-The men are very proud of their beards, and the elders very particular
-in keeping them white and clean. The lords of creation honor their
-beard as the distinctive glory and mark of their sex. A man is in
-misery if he has only just enough beard to distinguish him from a
-woman. A full crop of hair on cheek and chin insures to its possessor
-unlimited admiration, while in Corean billingsgate there are numerous
-terms of opprobrium for a short beard. Europeans are contemptuously
-termed “short-hairs”—with no suspicion of the use of the word in New
-York local politics. Old gentlemen keep a little bag in which they
-assiduously collect the combings of their hair, the strokings of their
-beard and parings of their nails, in order that all that belongs to
-them may be duly placed in their coffin at death.
-
-The human hair crop is an important item in trade with China, to which
-country it is imported and sold to piece out the hair-tails which the
-Chinese, in obedience to their Manchiu conquerors, persist in wearing.
-Some of this hair comes from poor women, but the staple product is from
-the heads of boys who wear their hair parted in the middle, and plaited
-in a long braid, which hangs down their backs. At marriage, they cut
-this off, and bind what remains in a tight, round knot on the top of
-the scalp, using pins or not as they please.
-
-The court pages and pretty boys who attend the magnates, usually
-rosy-cheeked, well fed, and effeminate looking youths, do not give any
-certain indication of their sex, and foreigners are often puzzled to
-know whether they are male or female. Their beardless faces and long
-hair are set down as belonging to women. Most navigators have made this
-mistake in gender, and when the first embassy from Seoul landed in
-Yokohama, the controversy, and perhaps the betting, as to the sex of
-these nondescripts was very lively. Captain Broughton declared that the
-whole duty of these pages seemed to be to smooth out the silk dresses
-of the grandees. Officials and nobles cover their top-knots with neat
-black nets of horse-hair or glazed thread. Often country and town
-people wear a fillet or white band of bark or leaves across the
-forehead to keep the loose hair in order, as the ancient Japanese used
-to do. Women coil their glossy black tresses into massive knots, and
-fasten them with pins or golden, silver, and brass rings. The heads of
-the pins are generally shaped like a dragon. They oil their hair, using
-a sort of vegetable pomatum. Among the court ladies and female
-musicians the styles of coiffure are various; some being very pretty,
-with loops, bands, waves, and “bangs,” as the illustration on page 161
-shows.
-
-Corea is decidedly the land of big hats. From their amplitude these
-head-coverings might well be called “roofs,” or, at least, “umbrellas.”
-Their diameter is so great that the human head encased in one of them
-seems but as a hub in a cart-wheel. They would probably serve admirably
-as parachutes in leaping from a high place. Under his wide-spreading
-official hat a magistrate can shelter his wife and family. It serves as
-a numeral, since a company is counted by hats, instead of heads or
-noses. How the Corean dignitary can weather a gale remains a mystery,
-and, perhaps, the feat is impossible and rarely attempted. A slim man
-is evidently at a disadvantage in a “Japanese wind” or typhoon. The
-personal avoirdupois, which is so much admired in the peninsula,
-becomes very useful as ballast to the head-sail. Corean magnates, cast
-away at sea, would not lack material for ship’s canvas. In shape, the
-gentleman’s hat resembles a flower-pot set on a round table, or a
-tumbler on a Chinese gong. Two feet is a common diameter, thus making a
-periphery of six feet. The top or cone, which rises nine inches higher,
-is only three inches wide. This chimney-like superstructure serves as
-ornament and ventilator. Its purpose is not to encase the head, for
-underneath the brim is a tight-fitting skull-cap, which rests on the
-head and is held on by padded ties under the ears. The average rim for
-ordinary people, however, is about six inches in radius. The huge
-umbrella-hat of bleached bamboo is worn by gentlemen in mourning. After
-death it is solemnly placed on the bier, and forms a conspicuous object
-at the funeral. The native name for hat is kat or kat-si.
-
-The usual material is bamboo, split to the fineness of a thread, and
-woven so as to resemble horse-hair. The fabric is then varnished or
-lacquered, and becomes perfectly weather-proof, resisting sun and rain,
-but not wind. The prevalence of cotton clothing, easily soaked and
-rendered uncomfortable, requires the ample protection for the back and
-shoulders, which these umbrella-like hats furnish. In heavy rain, the
-kat-no is worn, that is, a cone of oiled paper, fixed on the hat in the
-shape of a funnel. Indeed, the umbrella in Corea is rather for a symbol
-of state and dignity than for vulgar use, and is often adorned with
-knobs and strips. Quelpart Island is the home of the hatters, whose
-fashionable wares supply the dandies and dignitaries of the capital and
-of the peninsula. The highest officers of the government have the cone
-truncated or rounded at the vertex, and surmounted by a little figure
-of a crane in polished silver, very handsome and durable. This
-long-legged bird is a symbol of civil office. “To confer the hat,”
-means as much to an officer high in favor at the court of Seoul as to a
-cardinal in the Vatican, only the color is black, not red. It is Corean
-etiquette to keep the hat on, and in this respect, as well as in their
-broad brims, the hermits resemble the Quakers. Marriage and mourning
-are denoted also by the hat.
-
-A variety of materials is employed by other classes. Soldiers wear
-large black or brown felt hats, resembling Mexican sombreros, which are
-adorned with red horse-hair or a peacock’s feather, swung on a swivel
-button.
-
-Suspended from the sides, over the ears and around the neck, are
-strings of round balls of blue porcelain, cornelian, amber, or what
-resembles kauri gum. Sometimes these ornaments are tubular, reminding
-one of the millinery of a cardinal’s hat.
-
-For the common people, plaited straw or rushes of varied shapes serve
-for summer, while in winter shaggy caps of lynx, wolf, bear, or
-deer-skin are common, made into Havelock, Astrachan, Japanese, and
-other shapes, some resembling wash-bowls, some being fluted or
-fan-like, winged, sock-shaped, or made like a nightcap. Variety seems
-to be the fashion.
-
-The head-dress of the court nobles differs from that of the vulgar as
-much as the Pope’s tiara differs from a cardinal’s rubrum. It is a
-crown or helmet, which, eschewing brim, rises in altitude to the
-proportions of a mitre. Without earstrings or necklaces of beads, it is
-yet highly ornamental. One of these consists of a cap, with a sort of
-gable at the top. Another has six lofty curving folds or volutes set in
-it. On another are designs from the pa-kwa, or sixty-four mystic
-diagrams, which are supposed to be sacred symbols of the Confucian
-philosophy, and of which fortune-tellers make great use.
-
-The wardrobe of the gentry consists of the ceremonial and the house
-dress. The former, as a rule, is of fine silk, and the latter of
-coarser silk or cotton. These “gorgeous Corean dresses” are of pink,
-blue, and other rich colors. The official robe is a long garment like a
-wrapper, with loose, baggy sleeves. This is embroidered with the stork
-or phœnix for civil, and with the kirin, lion, or tiger for military
-officers. Buttons are unknown and form no part of a Corean’s attire,
-male or female, thus greatly reducing the labor of the wives and
-mothers who ply the needle, which in Corea has an “ear” instead of an
-“eye.” Strings and girdles, and the shifting of the main weight of the
-clothing to the shoulders, take the place of these convenient, but
-fugitive, adjuncts to the Western costume. There are few tailors’
-shops, the women of each household making the family outfit.
-
-Soldiers in full dress wear a sleeveless, open surcoat for display. The
-under dress of both sexes is a short jacket with tight sleeves, which
-for men reaches to the thighs, and for women only to the waist, and a
-pair of drawers reaching from waist to ankle, a little loose all the
-way down for the men, and tied at the ankles, but for the women made
-tight and not tied. The females wear a petticoat over this garment, so
-that the Coreans say they dress like Western women, and foreign-made
-hosiery and under-garments are in demand. Although they have a variety
-of articles of apparel easily distinguishable to the native eye, yet
-their general style of costume is that of the wrapper, stiff, wide, and
-inflated with abundant starch in summer, but clinging and baggy in
-winter. The rule is tightness and economy for the working, amplitude
-and richness of material for the affluent classes. The women having no
-pockets in their dresses, wear a little bag suspended from their
-girdle. This is worn on the right side, attached by cords. These
-contain their bits of jewelry, scissors, knife, a tiger’s claw for
-luck, perfume-bottle or sachet, a tiny chess-board in gold or silver,
-etc. Besides the rings on their fingers the ladies wear hair-pins of
-gold ornamented with bulbs or figures of birds. Many of them dust pun,
-or white powder, on their faces, and employ various other cosmetics,
-which are kept in their kiong-tai, or mirror toilet-stands; in which
-also may be their so-hak, or book containing rules of politeness.
-
-The general type of costume is that of China under the Ming dynasty. To
-a Chinaman a Corean looks antiquated, a curiosity in old clothes; a
-Japanese at a little distance, in the twilight, is reminded of ghosts,
-or the snowy heron of the rice-fields, while to the American the Corean
-swell seems compounded chiefly of bed-clothes, and in his most
-elaborate costume to be still in his under-garments.
-
-Plenty of starch in summer, and no stint of cotton in winter, are the
-needs of the Corean. His white dress makes his complexion look darker
-than it really is. The monotonous dazzle of bleached garments is
-relieved by the violet robes of the magistrate, the dark blue for the
-soldiers, and lighter shades of that color in the garb of the middle
-class; the blue strip which edges the coat of the literary graduates,
-and the pink and azure clothes of the children. Less agreeable is the
-nearness which dispels illusion. The costume, which seemed snowy at a
-distance, is seen to be dingy and dirty, owing to an entire ignorance
-of soap.
-
-The Corean dress, though simpler than the Chinese, is not entirely
-devoid of ornament. The sashes are often of handsome blue silk or
-brocaded stuff. The official girdles, or flat belts a few inches wide,
-have clasps of gold, silver, or rhinoceros horn, and are decorated with
-polished ornaments of gold or silver. For magistrates of the three
-higher ranks these belts are set with blue stones; for those of the
-fourth and fifth grade with white stones, and for those below the fifth
-with a substance resembling horn. Common girdles are of cotton, hemp
-cloth, or rope.
-
-Fans are also a mark of rank, being made of various materials,
-especially silk or cloth, stretched on a frame. The fan is an
-instrument of etiquette. To hide the face with one is an act of
-politeness. The man in mourning must have no other kind than that in
-which the pin or rivet is of cow’s horn. Oiled paper fans serve a
-variety of purposes. In another kind, the ribs of the frame are bent
-back double. The finer sort for the nobility are gorgeously inlaid with
-pearl or nacre.
-
-A kind of flat wand or tablet, seen in the hands of nobles, ostensibly
-to set down orders of the sovereign, is made of ivory for officers
-above, and of wood for those below the fourth grade.
-
-Another badge of office is the little wand, half way between a toy whip
-and a Mercury’s caduceus, of black lacquered wood, with cords of green
-silk. This is carried by civil officers, and may be the original of the
-Japanese baton of command, made of lacquered wood with pendant strips
-of paper.
-
-Canes are carried by men of the literary or official class when in
-mourning. These tall staves, which, from the decks of European vessels
-sailing along the coast, have often looked like spears, are the
-sang-chang, or smooth bamboo staves, expressive of ceremonial grief,
-and nothing more.
-
-As the Coreans have no pockets, they make bags, girdles, and their
-sleeves serve instead. The women wear a sort of reticule hung at the
-belt, and the men a smoking outfit, consisting of an oval bag to hold
-his flint and steel, some fine-cut tobacco, and a long, narrow case for
-his pipe.
-
-Foot-gear is either of native or of Chinese make. The laborer contents
-himself with sandals woven from rice-straw, which usually last but a
-few days. A better sort is of hempen twine or rope, with many strands
-woven over the top of the foot. A man in mourning can wear but four
-cords on the upper part. Socks are too expensive for the poor, except
-in the winter. Shoes made of cotton are often seen in the cities,
-having hempen or twine soles. The low shoes of cloth, or velvet, and
-cowhide, upturned at the toe, worn by officials, are imported from
-China. Small feet do not seem to be considered a beauty, and the
-foot-binding of the Chinese is unknown in Chō-sen, as in Japan.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI.
-
-MOURNING AND BURIAL.
-
-
-The fashion of mourning, the proper place and time to shed tears and
-express grief according to regulations, are rigidly prescribed in an
-official treatise or “Guide to Mourners,” published by the government.
-The corpse must be placed in a coffin of very thick wood, and preserved
-during many months in a special room prepared and ornamented for this
-purpose. It is proper to weep only in this death-chamber, but this must
-be done three or four times daily. Before entering it, the mourner must
-don a special weed, which consists of a gray cotton frock coat, torn,
-patched, and as much soiled as possible. The girdle must be of twisted
-straw and silk, made into a rope of the thickness of the wrist. Another
-cord, the thickness of the thumb, is wound round the head, which is
-covered with dirty linen, each of the rope’s ends falling upon the
-cheek. A special kind of sandals is worn, and a big knotty stick
-completes the costume of woe. In the prescribed weeds the mourner
-enters the death-chamber in the morning on rising, and before each
-meal. He carries a little table filled with food, which he places upon
-a tray at the side of the coffin. The person who is master of the
-mourners presides at the ceremonies. Prostrate, and struck by the
-stick, he utters dolorous groans, sounding “ai-kō” if for a parent. For
-other relatives he groans out “oi, oi.” According to the noise and
-length of the groans and weeping, so will the good opinion of the
-public be. The lamentations over, the mourner retires, doffs the
-mourning robes, and eats his food. At the new and the full moon, all
-the relatives are invited and expected to assist at the ceremonies.
-These practices continue more or less even after burial, and at
-intervals during several years. Often a noble will go out to weep and
-kneel at the tomb, passing a day, and even a night, in this position.
-In some instances, mourners have built a little house before the grave,
-and watched there for years, thus winning a high reputation for filial
-piety.
-
-Among the poor, who have not the means to provide a death-chamber and
-expensive mourning, the coffin is kept outside their houses covered
-with mats until the time of sepulture.
-
-Though cremation, or “burying in the fire,” is known in Chō-sen, the
-most usual form of disposing of the dead is by inhumation. Children are
-wrapped up in the clothes and bedding in which they die, and are thus
-buried. As unmarried persons are reckoned as children, their shroud and
-burial are the same. With the married and adult, the process is more
-costly, and the ceremonial more detailed and prolonged. This, which is
-described very fully in Ross’ “Corea,” and with which Hamel’s curt
-notes agree, consists of minute ceremonial and mourning among the
-living and the washing, combing, nail-paring, robing, and laying out in
-state of the dead, with calling of the spirits, and with screens,
-lights, and offerings, according to Confucian ritual. In many
-interesting features, the most ancient rites of China have survived in
-the peninsula after they have become obsolete in the former country.
-The very old tombs opened, and the painted coffins, coated with many
-layers of silicious paint, dug up near Shanghai recently, are much like
-those of the Coreans.
-
-The coffin, which fits the body, is made air-tight with wax, resin, or
-varnish, and is borne on a bier to the grave by men who make this their
-regular business. Often there are two coffins, one inside the other.
-Sons follow the body of their father on foot, relatives ride in
-palanquins or on horseback. Prominent at the head of the procession is
-the red standard containing the titles and honors of the deceased. This
-banner, or sa-jen, has two points on it to frighten away the spirits,
-and at the funeral of a high officer, a man wears a hideous mask for
-the same purpose. When there are no titles, only the name of the
-deceased is inscribed upon the banner.
-
-The selection of a proper site for a tomb is a matter of profound
-solicitude, time, and money; for the geomancers must be consulted with
-a fee. The pung-sui superstition requires for the comfort of both
-living and dead that the right site should be chosen. Judging from the
-number of times the word “mountain” enters into terms relating to
-burial, most interments are on the hillsides. If these are not done
-properly, trouble will arise, and the bones must then be dug up,
-collected, and reburied, often at heavy expense. Thousands of
-professional cheats and self-duped people live by working upon the
-feelings of the bereaved through this superstition.
-
-The tombs of the poor consist only of the grave and a low mound of
-earth. These mounds, subjected to the forces of nature, and often
-trampled upon by cattle, disappear after the lapse of a few years, and
-oblivion settles over the spot.
-
-With the richer class monuments are of stone, sometimes neat or even
-imposing, sometimes grotesque. Some, as the pi-popi, are shaped like a
-house or miniature temple; or, two stones, cut in the form of a ram and
-a horse respectively, are placed before the sepulchre. The man-tu,
-“gazing headstone,” consists of two monoliths or columns of masonry,
-flanking the tomb on either side, so that the soul of the dead, changed
-into a bird, may repose peacefully. In the graveyards are many tombs
-paved with granite slabs around the temple model, but for the most part
-a Corean cemetery is filled with little obelisks, or tall, square
-columns, either pointed at the top or surmounted with the effigy of a
-human head, or a rudely sculptured stone image, which strangely reminds
-a foreigner of “patience on a monument, smiling at grief.” This
-apparition of a human head rising above the tall grass of the
-burial-ground may be the original of Japanese pictures of the ghosts
-and spirits which seem to rise dark and windblown out of the wet grass.
-Often the carving in Corean grave-yards is so rude as to be almost
-indistinguishable.
-
-Mourning is of many degrees and lengths, and is betokened by dress,
-abstinence from food and business, visits to the tomb, offerings,
-tablets, and many visible indications, detailed even to absurdity.
-Pure, or nearly pure white is the mourning color, as a contrast to red,
-the color of rejoicing. Even the rivets of the fan, the strings on the
-shoes, and the carrying of a staff in addition to the mourning-hat,
-betoken the uniform of woe.
-
-When noblemen don the peaked hat, which covers the face as well as the
-head, they are as dead to the world—not to be spoken to, molested, or
-even arrested if charged with crime. This Corean mourning hat proved
-“the helmet of salvation” to Christians, and explains the safety of the
-French missionaries who lived so long in disguise, unharmed in the
-country where the police were as lynxes and hounds ever on their track.
-The Jesuits were not slow to see the wonderful shelter promised for
-them, and availed themselves of it at once and always.
-
-The royal sepulchres within the peninsula have attracted more than one
-unlawful descent upon the shores of Chō-sen. The various dynasties of
-sovereigns during the epoch of the Three Kingdoms in the old capitals
-of these states, the royal lines of Kokorai at Ping-an, of Korai at
-Sunto, and of the ruling house at Seoul, have made Corea during her two
-thousand years of history rich in royal tombs. These are in various
-parts of the country, and those which are known are under the care of
-the government.
-
-Are these mausoleums filled with gold or jewels? Foreign grave-robbers
-have believed so, and shown their faith by their works, as we shall
-see. French priests in the country have said so. The ancient Chinese
-narratives descriptive of the customs of the Fuyu people, confirm the
-general impression. Without having the facts at hand to demonstrate
-what eager foreigners have believed, we know that vast treasures have
-been spent upon the decoration of the royal sepulchres, and the
-erection of memorial buildings over them, and that the fear of their
-violation by foreign or native outlaws has been for centuries ever
-before the Corean people. That these fears have too often been
-justified, we shall find when we read of that memorable year, A.D.
-1866. The profuse vocabulary of terms relating to burial, mourning, and
-memorial tablets in Corea show their intense loyalty to the Confucian
-doctrines, the power of superstition, and the shocking waste of the
-resources of the living upon the dead.
-
-The voluble Corean envoys when in Tōkiō, visited the Naval College, and
-on learning that in certain emergencies the students from distant
-provinces were not allowed to go home to attend the funeral of their
-parents, nor to absent themselves from duty on account of mourning,
-were amazed beyond measure, and for a few moments literally speechless
-from surprise. It is hard for a Corean to understand the sayings of
-Jesus to the disciple who asked, “Lord, suffer me first to go and bury
-my father,” and “Let the dead bury their dead.”
-
-From the view-point of political economy, this lavish expense of time,
-energy, money, and intellect upon corpses and superstition is
-beneficial. Without knowing of Malthus or his theories, the Chō-senese
-have hit upon a capital method of limiting population, and keeping the
-country in a state of chronic poverty. The question has been asked the
-writer, “How can a people, pent in a little mountainous peninsula like
-Corea, exist for centuries without overpopulating their territory?”
-
-Wars, famine, pestilence, ordinary poverty answer the question in part.
-The absurd and rigorous rules of mourning, requiring frightful expense,
-postponement of marriage to young people—who even when betrothed must
-mourn three years for parents and grandparents, actual and expected,
-the impoverishing of the people, and the frequent hindrances to
-marriage at the proper season, serve to keep down population. This fact
-is an often chosen subject for native anecdotes and romances. The
-vexations and delays often caused by the long periods of idle mourning
-required by etiquette, are well illustrated by the following story,
-from the “Grammaire Coréenne,” which is intended to show the sympathy
-of the king Cheng-chong (1776 to 1800) with his subjects. It is
-entitled “A Trait of Royal Solicitude.”
-
-It was about New Year’s that Cheng-chong walked about here and there
-within the palace enclosure. Having come to the place reserved for the
-candidates at the literary examinations, he looked through a crack in
-the gate. The competitors had nearly all gone away to spend the New
-Year holidays at home, and there remained only two of them, who were
-talking together.
-
-“Well, all the others have gone off to spend New Year’s at home; isn’t
-it deplorable that we two, having no place to go to, must be nailed
-here?”
-
-“Yes, truly,” said the other; “you have no longer either wife,
-children, or house. How is this?”
-
-“Listen to my story,” said the first man. “My parents, thinking of my
-marriage, had arranged my betrothal, but some time before the
-preparations were concluded, my future grandfather died, and it became
-necessary to wait three years. Hardly had I put off mourning, when I
-was called on to lament the death of my poor father. I was now
-compelled to wait still three years. These three years finished, behold
-my mother-in-law who was to be died, and three years passed away.
-Finally, I had the misfortune to lose my poor mother, which required me
-to wait again three years. And so, three times four—a dozen years—have
-elapsed, during which we have waited the one for the other. By this
-time she, who was to be my wife, fell ill. As she was upon the point of
-death, I went to make her a visit. My intended brother-in-law came to
-see me, found me, and said, ‘Although the ceremonies of marriage have
-not been made, they may certainly consider you as married, therefore
-come and see her.’ Upon his invitation I entered her house, but we had
-hardly blown a puff of smoke, one before the other, than she died.
-
-“Seeing this, I have no more wished even to dream at night. I am not
-yet married. You may understand, then, why I have neither wife,
-children, nor home.”
-
-In his turn the other thus spoke: “My house was extremely poor. Our
-diet looked like fasting. We had no means of freeing ourselves from
-embarrassment. When the day of the examination came I presented myself.
-During my absence my wife contrived in such a manner, that putting in
-the brazier a farthing’s worth of charcoal, she set a handful of rice
-to cook in a skillet, and settled herself to wait for me. She served
-this to me every time I came back. But I never obtained a degree. The
-day on which I was at last received as a bachelor of arts, on returning
-after examination, I found that she had as before lighted the charcoal,
-put to boil a dish of soup, and seating herself before the fire, she
-waited. In this position she was dead.
-
-“At sight of this my grief was without bounds. Having no desire to
-contract a new union, I have never re-married.”
-
-Hearing these narratives, Cheng-chong was touched with pity. Entering
-the palace, seating himself upon the throne, and having had the two
-scholars brought in, he said to them:
-
-“All the other scholars have gone to their homes to spend New Year’s.
-Why have not you two gone also?” They answered, “Your servants having
-no house to go to, remained here.”
-
-“What does that mean?” said Cheng-chong. “The fowls and the dogs, oxen
-and horses have shelter. The birds have also a hole to build their
-nests in. Can it be that men have no dwelling? There should be a reason
-for this. Speak plainly.” One of the scholars answered: “Your servant’s
-affairs are so-and-so. I have come even till now without re-marriage.
-It is because I have neither wife, child, nor family.”
-
-The story being exactly like that which he had heard before, the king
-cried out, “Too bad!”
-
-Then addressing the other, he put this question: “And you, how is it
-that you are reduced to this condition?” He answered, “My story is
-almost the same.”
-
-“What do you wish? Speak!” replied the king.
-
-“The circumstances being such and such, I am at this moment without
-wife and without food. That is my condition.”
-
-As there was in all this nothing different from the preceding, the
-king, struck with compassion, bestowed upon them immediately lucrative
-offices.
-
-If he had not examined for himself, how could he have been able to know
-such unfortunate men, and procure for them so happy a position in the
-world? In truth, the goodness of his Majesty Cheng-chong has become
-celebrated.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII.
-
-OUT-DOOR LIFE.—CHARACTERS AND EMPLOYMENTS.
-
-
-Six public roads of the first class traverse the peninsula and centre
-at the capital. They are from twenty to thirty feet in width, with
-ditches at the side for drainage. One of these begins near the ocean,
-in Chulla Dō, and in general follows the shores of the Yellow Sea
-through three provinces to Tong-chin opposite Kang-wa Island, and
-enters the capital by branch roads. Another highway passes through the
-interior of the three provinces bordering the Yellow Sea, and enters
-Seoul by the southern gate. Hamel and his fellow-captives journeyed by
-this road. The road by which the annual embassy reaches Peking, after
-leaving the capital, passes through Sunto and Ping-an and Ai-chiu,
-crosses the Neutral Strip, and enters Manchuria for Peking by way of
-Mukden. This was the beaten track of the French missionaries, and the
-shipwrecked men from the United States and Japan, and is the military
-road from China. It is well described, with a good map, in Koei-Ling’s
-“Journal of a Mission into Corea,” which Mr. F. Scherzer has translated
-for us.
-
-From Fusan and Tong-nai, in the southeast, Seoul is reached by no less
-than three roads. One strikes westward through Chung-chong, and joins
-the main road coming up from the south. Another following the Nak-tong
-River basin, crosses the mountains to Chulla, and enters Seoul by the
-south gate. Eight river crossings must be made by this road, over which
-Konishi marched in 1593. The third route takes a more northerly trend,
-follows the sea-coast to Urusan, and passing through Kion-chiu, enters
-the capital by the east gate.
-
-The fifth great road issuing from the north gate of the capital passes
-into Kang-wen, and thence upward to Gensan, and to the frontiers at the
-Tumen River.
-
-The roads of the second class are eight or nine feet wide, and without
-side ditches. They ramify through all the provinces, but are especially
-numerous in the five southern. The three northern circuits, owing to
-their mountainous character, are but poorly furnished with highways,
-and these usually follow the rivers.
-
-The third class roads, which are nothing more than bridle-paths, or
-trails, connect the villages.
-
-The hilly nature of the country, together with the Asiatic apathy to
-bestowing much care on the public highways, makes travelling difficult.
-Inundations are frequent, though the water subsides quickly. Hence in
-summer the road-beds are dust, and in winter a slough of mud.
-Macadamized, or paved roads, are hardly known, except for short
-lengths. Few of the wide rivers are bridged, which necessitates
-frequent fordings and ferriages. Stone bridges, built with arches, are
-sometimes seen over streams not usually inundated, but few of the
-wooden bridges are over one hundred and eighty feet long.
-
-In one respect the roads are well attended to. The distances are well
-marked. At every ri is a small, and at every three ri a large mound,
-surmounted with an inscribed post or “mile-stone,” called chang-sung.
-They are two, six, and even ten feet in length.
-
-In ancient times, it is said, there was a man named Chang-sung, who
-killed his servant and wife. When punished, his head was placed on a
-small mound. Legend even declares that it was successively exposed on
-all the distance mounds in the kingdom. This is said to be the origin
-of the bournes or distance-mounds, which suggests, as Mr. Adams has
-shown, the termini of the Romans. When of stone, they are called
-pio-sek, but they are often of wood, rudely carved or hacked out of a
-whole tree by an axe into the exaggerated form of a man, and are of a
-ludicrous or absurd appearance. The face is meant to be that of the
-murderer Chang-sung. The author of “A Forbidden Land” mistook these for
-“village idols,” and was surprised to find the boys in some cases
-sacrilegiously kicking about some that had rotted down or fallen. The
-“gods of the roads” may, however, have their effigies, which are
-worshipped or profaned.
-
-All distances in every direction are measured from the front gate of
-the magistrates’ offices, the standard of all being the palace at
-Seoul. Not the least interesting sights to the traveller are the
-memorial stones set up and inscribed with a view to commemorate local
-or national worthies, or the events of war, famine, or philanthropy.
-The Coreans are “idolaters of letters,” and the erection of memorial
-tablets or columns occasionally becomes a passion. Sometimes the
-inscriptions are the means of stirring up patriotism, as the following
-inscription shows. It was graven on a stone in front of a castle
-erected after the French and American expeditions, and was copied by a
-Japanese correspondent.
-
-“It is nothing else than selling the kingdom into slavery, in order to
-avoid war, to make peace without fighting when any Western nation comes
-to attack it; such should never be done even by our descendants
-thousands of years hence.”
-
-In this country, in which sumptuary laws prevent the humbler classes
-from travelling on horseback, and where wagons and steam-roads are
-unknown, the roads are lively with numerous foot-passengers. Palanquins
-are used by the better classes and the wealthy. The rambling life of
-many of the people, the goodly numbers of that character not unknown in
-Christendom—the tramp—the necessities of trade, literary examinations,
-government service, and holy pilgrimages, prevent too many weeds from
-growing in the highways. In travelling over the high roads one meets a
-variety of characters that would satisfy a Corean Dickens, or the
-Japanese author who wrote the Tokaidō Hizakurigé (Leg-hair, i.e.,
-“Shanks’ mare,” on the East Sea Road). Bands of students on their way
-to the capital or provincial literary examinations, some roystering
-youths in the full flow of spirits, are hastening on, others,
-gray-headed and solemn, are wending their way to fail for the twentieth
-time. Pompous functionaries in umbrella-hats, on horseback, before whom
-ordinary folks dismount or kneel or bow, brush past with noisy
-attendants. Pilgrims in pious garb are on their way to some holy
-mountain or famous shrine, men to pray for success in business, women
-to beseech the gods for offspring. Here hobbles along the lame or
-rheumatic, or the pale-faced invalid is borne to the hot springs. Here
-is a party of pic-nickers, or poets intent on the joys of drink, verse,
-and scenery. Here a troop of strolling players or knot of masqueraders
-are in peripatetic quest of a livelihood, toiling fearfully hard in
-order to escape settled industry. Nobles in mourning pass with their
-faces invisible. Postal slaves, women doing the work of express agents
-in forwarding parcels, pass the merchant with his loaded pack-horses
-returning from Sunto, or going to Gensan. There a packman is doing
-horse’s work in transportation. Here an ox laden with brushwood is led
-by a woman. Beggars, corpses, kang-si, or men dead of hunger in times
-of famine, make the lights and shadows of life on the road.
-
-There are other methods of travel besides those of horseback, on foot,
-and sedan chair, for oxen are often straddled by the men, and poor
-women travel on an ox, in a sort of improvised palanquin having four
-poles recurved to centre and covered with robe or cloak. In winter,
-among the mountains not only in the north, but even in Chulla, the
-people go on racquettes or snow-shoes. These are in shape like a
-battledore, and are several feet long. At regular distances are yek, or
-relays or offices, at which sit clerks or managers under government
-auspices, with hereditary slaves or serfs, porters, guides,
-mail-couriers, and pack-horses. These await the service of the
-traveller, especially of official couriers, the finer beasts being
-reserved for journeying dignitaries.
-
-All these throughout a certain district, of which there are several in
-each province, are under the direction of the Tsal-peng, or Director of
-Posts. Kiung-sang, the province having the greatest number of roads,
-has also the best equipment in the way of post-officers, relays, and
-horses. The following table from Dallet shows the equipment of the
-eight provinces:
-
-
- -------------+----------------------+---------+--------
- |Post Superintendents. | Relays. | Horses.
- -------------+----------------------+---------+--------
- Kiung-Kei | 6 | 47 | 449
- Chung-chong | 5 | 62 | 761
- Chulla | 6 | 53 | 506
- Kiung-sang | 11 | 115 | 1,700
- Kang-wen | 4 | 78 | 447
- Wang hei | 3 | 28 | 396
- Ham-kiung | 3 | 58 | 792
- Ping-an | 2 | 30 | 311
- | -- | ---- | -----
- | 40 | 471 | 5,362
- -------------+----------------------+---------+--------
-
-
-Yet with this provision for locomotion, the country is very deficient
-in houses for public accommodation. Inns are to be found only along the
-great highways, and but rarely along the smaller or sequestered roads.
-This want arises, perhaps, not so much from the poverty of the people,
-as from the fact that their proverbial hospitality does away with the
-necessity of numerous inns. The Coreans have been so often represented,
-or rather misrepresented, as inhospitable, fierce, and rude by
-foreigners, that to give an inside view of them as seen through
-information gathered from the French missionaries in Corea is a
-pleasant task. From them we may learn how much the white-coated
-peninsulars are like their cousins, the Japanese, and that human nature
-in good average quantity and quality dwells under the big hats of the
-Coreans. The traveller usually takes his provisions along with him, but
-he need not eat it out-doors. As he sits along the wayside, he will be
-invited into some house to warm his food. When obliged to go some
-distance among the mountains to cut wood or make charcoal, a man is
-sure to find a hut in which he can lodge. He has only to bring his
-rice. The villagers will cook it for him, after adding the necessary
-pickles or sauces. Even the oxen, except during the busy season, are
-easily obtained on loan.
-
-The great virtue of the Coreans is their innate respect for and daily
-practice of the laws of human brotherhood. Mutual assistance and
-generous hospitality among themselves are distinctive national traits.
-In all the important events of life, such as marriages and funerals,
-each one makes it his duty to aid the family most directly interested.
-One will charge himself with the duty of making purchases; others with
-arranging the ceremonies. The poor, who can give nothing, carry
-messages to friends and relatives in the near or remote villages,
-passing day and night on foot and giving their labors gratuitously. To
-them, the event is not a mere personal matter, but an affair of public
-interest.
-
-When fire, flood, or other accident destroys the house of one of their
-number, neighbors make it a duty to lend a hand to rebuild. One brings
-stone, another wood, another straw. Each, in addition to his gifts in
-material, devotes two or three days’ work gratuitously. A stranger,
-coming into a village, is always assisted to build a dwelling.
-
-Hospitality is considered as one of the most sacred duties. It would be
-a grave and shameful thing to refuse a portion of one’s meal with any
-person, known or unknown, who presents himself at eating-time. Even the
-poor laborers, who take their noon-meal at the side of the roads, are
-often seen sharing their frugal nourishment with the passer-by. Usually
-at a feast, the neighbors consider themselves invited by right and
-custom. The poor man whose duty calls him to make a journey to a
-distant place does not need to make elaborate preparations. His stick,
-his pipe, some clothes in a packet hung from his shoulder, some cash in
-his purse, if he has one, and his outfit is complete. At night, instead
-of going to a hotel with its attendant expense, he enters some house,
-whose exterior room is open to any comer. There he is sure to find food
-and lodging for the night. Rice will be shared with the stranger, and,
-at bed-time, a corner of the floor-mat will serve for a bed, while he
-may rest his head on a foot-length of the long log of wood against the
-wall, which serves as a pillow. Even should he delay his journey for a
-day or two, little or nothing to his discredit will be harbored by his
-hosts. In Corea, the old proverb concerning fish and company after
-three days does not seem to hold good.
-
-As may be imagined, such a system is prolific in breeding beggars,
-tramps, blackmailers, and lazy louts, who “sponge” upon the
-benevolently disposed. Rich families are often bored by these
-self-invited parasites, who eat with unblushing cheek at their tables
-for weeks at a time. They do not even disdain—nay, they often clamor
-for—clothing as well. To refuse would only result in bringing down
-calumny and injury. Peddlers, strolling players, astrologers, etc.,
-likewise avail themselves of the opportunities, and act as plundering
-harpies. Often whole bands go round quartering themselves on the
-villages, and sometimes the government is called upon to interpose its
-authority and protect the people.
-
-Corea is full of Micawbers, men who are as prodigal as avaricious, who
-when they have plenty of money, scatter it quickly. When flush they
-care only to live in style, to treat their friends, to satisfy their
-caprices. When poverty comes, they take it without complaint, and wait
-till the wheel of fortune turns again to give them better days. When by
-any process they have made some gain by finding a root of ginseng, a
-bit of gold ore, a vein of crystal, what matters it? Let the future
-take care of itself. Hence it happens that the roads are full of men
-seeking some stroke of luck, hoping to discover at a distance what they
-could not find at home, to light upon some treasure not yet dug up or
-to invent some new means of making money. People forever waiting for
-something to turn up emigrate from one village to another, stop a year
-or two, and then tramp on, seeking better luck, but usually finding
-worse.
-
-Strolling companies of mountebanks, players and musicians, in numbers
-of five, six, or more, abound in Chō-sen. They wander up and down
-through the eight circuits, and, in spring and summer, earn a
-precarious and vagabond livelihood. Their reputation among the
-villagers is none of the best, being about on a par with that of the
-gypsies, or certain gangs of railroad surveyors of our own country.
-They often levy a sort of blackmail upon the people. They are jugglers,
-acrobats, magicians, marionette players, and performers on musical
-instruments. Some of them display an astonishing amount of cleverness
-and sleight of hand in their feats. In the villages crowds of gaping
-urchins are their chief spectators, but in the large cities they are
-invited to private houses to give exhibitions and are paid for it. When
-about to begin a performance, they secure attention by whistling on the
-nail of their little finger. On the occasion of the anniversary of some
-happy event, a public fête day, a marriage or a social company, the
-lack of what we call society—that is, social relations between
-gentlemen and ladies—is made up, and amusement is furnished by these
-players, engaged for an evening or two. The guests fully appreciate the
-“hired music,” and “best talent” thus secured for a variety
-entertainment. The company of one class of these “men of society,” or
-pang-tang, a kind of “professional diner-out,” is so desirable that
-several are taken along by the ambassadors to China to amuse them on
-their long and tedious journey, especially at nights. The chang-pu are
-character-comedians, who serenade the baccalaureates that have passed
-successfully the government examinations. They play the flute and other
-instruments of music, forming the escort which accompanies the graduate
-on his visits to relatives and officials. A band of performers is
-always attached to the suite of ambassadors to China and Japan, or when
-visiting a foreign vessel.
-
-A character common to Corea and Japan is the singing-girl, who is also
-a great aid in making life endurable to the better class of Coreans,
-whose chief business it is to kill time. The singing-girl is the one
-poem and picture in the street life of the humbler classes, whose
-poverty can rarely, if ever, allow them to purchase her society or
-enjoy her charms and accomplishments. Socially, her rank is low, very
-low. She is herself the child of poverty and toil. Her parents are poor
-people, who gladly give up their daughter, if of pretty face and form,
-to a life of doubtful morals, in order that she may thereby earn her
-own support and assist her parents. She herself gladly leaves the
-drudgery of the kitchen, and the abject meanness of the hovel, to shine
-in the palace and the mansion. Her dress is of finest fabric, her
-luxuriant black hair is bound with skill and grace, her skin is
-whitened by artificial cosmetics as far as possible, and with powder,
-paint, and pomatum, she spends much of her life before the
-looking-glass, studying in youth to increase, and in womanhood to
-retain, her charms. At home, she practises her music, occasionally
-enlivening a party of her humble neighbors. As she passes along the
-street, fresh, clean, bright, and pretty, she may dispense smiles for
-popularity’s sake, but her errand is to the houses of the wealthy, and
-especially to the official, who, for his own amusement as he dines
-alone, or for his friends in social gathering, may employ from two to
-twenty geishas (as the Japanese call them). Most Corean cities have
-these geishas, who form themselves into a sort of guild for fixed
-prices, etc. Often they organize complete bands or choirs, by which
-music may be had in mass and volume. At a feast they serve the wine,
-fill and pass the dishes, and preside generally at the table. When
-eating has fairly begun, they sing (chant), play the guitar, recite in
-pantomime or vocally, and furnish general amusement. The dancing is
-usually not of an immoral character. Such a life, however, amid feast
-and revel, wine and flattery, makes sad wreck of many of them, morally
-and physically. A large proportion of the most beautiful girls become
-concubines to wealthy men or officials, or act as ladies of the chamber
-(brevet wives) to young men and widowers. Not a few join the business
-of prostitutes with that of musicians. Nevertheless, it is quite
-possible for a respectable family to enjoy a pleasant and harmless
-evening by the aid of the lively geishas. Of course, Seoul is the chief
-headquarters of the fairest and most accomplished geishas, who are, as
-a class, the best educated of their sex in Corea.
-
-The theatre, proper, does not seem to exist in Corea. The substitute
-and nearest approach to it is recitation in monologue of certain events
-or extracts from the standard or popular histories, a single individual
-representing the successive rôles. The histrionic artist pitches his
-tabernacle of four posts in some popular street or corner. He spreads
-mats for a roof or shade from the sun in front, and for a background in
-the rear. A platform, and a box to squat on, with a small reading-desk,
-and a cup of gingery water to refresh his palate, complete his outfit.
-
-A few rough benches or mats constitute all the accommodation for the
-audience. A gaping crowd soon collects around him, his auditors pull
-out their pipes, and refreshment venders improve the occasion for the
-chance sale of their viands. With his voice trained to various tones
-and to polite and vulgar forms of speech, he will hold dialogues and
-conversations, and mimic the attitude and gestures of various
-characters. The trial of a criminal before a magistrate, the bastinado,
-a quarrel between husband and wife, scenes from high life and low life
-will be in turn rendered. He will imitate the grave tones and visage of
-the magistrate, the piteous appeals, the cries and groans and
-contortions of the victim under torture, the angry or grumbling voice
-of the husband, the shrill falsetto of the scolding shrew or the shower
-of tears and the piteous appeals of the wife. Smiles, frowns, surprise,
-sorrow, and all the emotions are simulated, and the accompaniment of
-voice is kept up with jokes, puns, bon-mots, irony, or well-expressed
-pathos. In short, the reciter is a theatrical stock company, and a band
-of minstrels, rolled into one person. For the use of beginners, and the
-mediocrity of the profession, there are a number of “jest-books,”
-collections of jokes and anecdotes, more or less threadbare, and of
-varying moral quality, from which speakers may prime for the occasion.
-With the advanced of the profession, however, most of the smart sayings
-are original and off-hand. The habitués of the booths have their “star”
-favorite, as theatre-goers with us go into raptures over their actors.
-Able men make a good living at the business, as they “pass round the
-hat” to take up a collection in the audience. This usually comes at the
-most telling point of the narrative, when the interest of the hearers
-is roused to the highest pitch (or when it is to be “continued in our
-next,” as the flash newspapers say). Sometimes the speaker will not go
-on till the collection is deemed by the tyrant a sufficient
-appreciation of his talents. In addition to their public street income,
-the best of them are often invited to perform in private houses, at
-family reunions, social parties, and as a rule, in visits to
-dignitaries by candidates who have won degrees.
-
-The Corean gamut, differing from the scale used in European countries,
-makes a fearful and wonderful difference in effect upon our ears. Some
-of their melodies upon the flute are plaintive and sweet, but most of
-their music is distressing to the ear and desolating to the air. One
-hearer describes their choicest pieces as “the most discordant sounds
-that ever were emitted under the name of music from brass tubes.” Some
-of the flute music, however, is very sweet. As most of the ancient
-music of Japan is of Corean origin, one can get a fair idea of the
-nature of the sounds that delight a Corean ear from the music of the
-imperial band of Tōkiō, which plays the classical scores. Yet it is
-evident that the modern tunes of Seoul are not melodious to Japanese
-auditory nerves. One would think that, as the mikado’s subjects “hear
-themselves as others hear them” when Corean musicians play, they would
-be delighted. On the contrary, Corean music seems to horrify and
-afflict the Japanese ear. Evidently, in the course of centuries the
-musical scales of the two countries, originally identical, have altered
-in tone and interval. Wan-ka is the father of Corean music—though the
-mere fact that he belonged to antiquity would secure his renown. The
-various stringed musical instruments known are the kemunko, a kind of
-large guitar; the kanyakko, mandolin; the ko-siul, or guitar of
-twenty-five strings; and the five-stringed harp or violin. The wind
-instruments comprise a whole battery of flutes, long and short
-trumpets, while cymbals, drums, and other objects of percussion are
-numerous. Ambassadors and other high officers at home, and when on duty
-to foreign countries, are accompanied by a band of musicians. Laborers
-on government works are summoned to begin and end work by music, but
-the full effect of a musical salvo is attained at the opening and
-closing of the city gates. Then the sound is most distressing—or most
-captivating, according as the ears are to the manner born, or receive
-their first experience of what tortures the air may be made to vibrate.
-
-The chief out-door manly sport in Corea is, by excellence, that of
-archery. It is encouraged by the government for the national safety in
-war, and nobles stimulate their retainers to excellence by rewards.
-Most gentlemen have targets and arrow-walks for practice in their
-gardens. At regular times in the year contests of skill are held, at
-which archers of reputation compete, the expense and prizes being paid
-for out of the public purse. Hamel says the great men’s retainers have
-nothing to do but to learn to shoot. The grandees rival each other in
-keeping the most famous archers, as an Englishman might his fox-hounds
-or as the daimiōs of Japan formerly vied with each other in patronizing
-the fattest and most skilful wrestlers. Other manly sports are those of
-boxing and fist-fights. Young men practice the “manly art” in play with
-each other, and at times champions are chosen by rival villages and a
-set-to between the bruisers is the result, with more or less of broken
-heads and pulpy faces. In large cities the contestants may come from
-different wards of the same city. In Seoul, usually in the first month,
-there are some lively tussles between picked champions, with betting
-and cheering of the backers of either party. Often these trials of
-skill degenerate into a free fight, in which clubs and stones are used
-freely; cracked skulls and loss of life are common. The magistrates do
-not usually interfere, but allow the frolic to spend itself.
-
-Another class of men worthy of notice, and identified with out-door
-life, are the sportsmen. The bird-hunters never shoot on the wing. They
-disguise themselves in skins, feathers, straw, etc., and lurk in some
-coigne of vantage to bring down the game that comes within their range.
-The skilled fowler understands perfectly how to imitate the cries of
-the various birds, particularly that of the pheasant calling his mate.
-By this means most of the female pheasants are captured. The call used
-is an iron whistle, shaped like the apricot-stone, and similar to that
-used by the Japanese hunters. The method of hunting the deer is as
-follows: During the months of June and July deer-horn commands a very
-high price, for it is at this season that the deer-horns are
-developing, and the “spike-bucks” are special prizes. A party of three
-or four hunters is formed. They beat up the mountain sides during
-several days, and, at night, when obliged to cease for awhile, they
-have a wonderful instinct for detecting the trail of the game, except
-when the earth is too dry. Usually they come up to their game on the
-third day, which they bring down with a gunshot. The horn is sold to
-the native physicians or is exported to China and Japan, where
-hartshorn and valuable medicines are concocted from it. A successful
-deer-hunt usually enables a hunter to live on his profits for a good
-part of the year, and in some cases individuals make small fortunes.
-Those who hunt bears wait for the occasion when the mother bear leads
-her cubs to the seashore to feast them on the crabs. Then the hunters
-bide their time till they see the mother lifting up the heavy rocks on
-edge, while the little cubs eat the crabs. The hunters usually rush
-forward and assault the bear, which, frightened, lets fall the rock,
-which crushes the cub. When on the open field or shore they do not fire
-at the she-bear, unless sure of killing her. For the various parts of
-the animal good prices await the hunter who sells. In addition to the
-proceeds from hide, flesh, fat, and sinews, the liver and gall of the
-brute, supposed to possess great potency in medicine, are sold for
-their weight in silver. In another chapter we have written of the
-tiger-hunters and their noble game.
-
-Gambling and betting are fearfully common habits in Corea, and
-kite-flying gives abundant occasion for money to change hands. The two
-months of the winter, during which the north wind blows, is “kite
-time.” The large and strong kites are flown with skill, requiring stout
-cords and to be held by young men. A large crowd usually collects to
-witness the battle of the kites, when the kites are put through various
-evolutions in the air, by which one seeks to destroy, tear, or saw off
-the string of the other.
-
-Resources for in-door amusement are chiefly in the form of gossip,
-story-telling, smoking, lounging, and games of hazard, such as chess,
-checkers, and backgammon. The game of chess is the same as that played
-in Japan and China. Card-playing, though interdicted by law, is
-habitual among the common people. The nobles look upon it as vulgar
-amusement beneath their dignity. The people play secretly or at night,
-often gambling to a ruinous extent. It is said that the soldiers,
-especially those on guard, and at the frontiers, are freely allowed to
-play cards, as that is the surest way to keep them awake and alert in
-the presence of enemies, and as safeguards against night attacks. They
-shuffle and cut the cards as we do. Games with the hands and fingers,
-similar to those in Japan, are also well known.
-
-In pagan lands, where a Sabbath, or anything like it, is utterly
-unknown alike to the weary laborer, the wealthy, and the men of
-leisure, some compensation is afforded by the national and religious
-holidays. These in Corea consist chiefly of the festal occasions
-observed in China, the feasts appropriate to the seasons, planting, and
-harvest, the Buddhist saints’ anniversaries, the king’s birthday, and
-the new year.
-
-Among the poorer classes the families celebrate the birthday of the
-head of the family only, but among the noble and wealthy, each member
-of the family is honored with gifts and a festal gathering of friends.
-There are certain years of destiny noticed with extra joy and
-congratulations, but the chief of all is the sixty-first year. With us,
-the days of man are three score years and ten, but in the hermit
-kingdom the limit of life is three score years and one, and the reason
-is this: The Coreans divide time according to the Chinese cycle of
-sixty years, which is made up of two series of ten and twelve each
-respectively. Every year has a name after the zodiacal sign, or one of
-the five elements. The first birthday occurring after the entire
-revolution of the cycle is a very solemn event to a sexagenarian, and
-the festival commemorative of it is called Wan-kap. All, rich and poor,
-noble and vulgar, observe this day, which definitely begins old age,
-when man, having passed the acknowledged limit of life, must remember
-and repose. When it happens—a rare event—that the sixty-first
-anniversary of a wedding finds both parties alive, there are
-extraordinary rejoicings, and the event is celebrated like our “diamond
-weddings.” For both these feasts children and friends must strain every
-nerve, and spend all their cash to be equal to the occasion and to
-spread the table for all comers; for at such a time, not only the
-neighbors, but often the whole country folk round are interested. A
-silk robe for the honored aged, new clothes for themselves, and no end
-of wine and good cheer for friends, acquaintances, hangers-on, country
-cousins, and strangers from afar, must be provided without stint. Poems
-are recited, games and sports enjoyed, minstrels sing and dance, and
-recitations are given. All come with compliments in their mouths—and a
-ravenous appetite. All must be fed and none turned away, and the
-children of the honored one must be willing to spend their last coin
-and economize, or even starve, for a year afterward. It is often as
-dreadful an undertaking as a funeral pageant in other lands. In the
-event of the queen, royal mother, or king, reaching the sixty-first
-birthday the profusion and prodigality of expense and show reaches a
-height of shameful extravagance. All the prisons are opened by general
-amnesty, and the jail-birds fly free. An extraordinary session of
-examiners is held to grant degrees. In the capital all the grandees
-present themselves before the king with gifts and homage. In all the
-rural districts, a large picture of the king is hung up in a noted
-place. The chief magistrate, preceded by music and followed by his
-satellites, and all the people proceed to the place and prostrate
-themselves before the effigy, offering their congratulations. In the
-capital the soldiers receive gifts from the court, and the day is a
-universal holiday for the entire nation.
-
-Almost as matter of course, the festivals are used as means of
-extortion and oppression of the people by the officials, who grind the
-masses mercilessly to provide the necessary resources for the waste and
-luxury of the capital and the court. New Year’s day is not only the
-greatest of all Corean feasts in universal observance, but is also the
-only real Sabbath time of the year, when for days together all regular
-employments cease and rejoicing reigns supreme. All debts must be paid
-and accounts squared up, absentees must return, and children away from
-home must rejoin the family. The magistrates close the tribunals, no
-arrests are made, and prisoners held to answer for slight offences are
-given leave of absence for several days, after which they report again
-as prisoners. All work, except that of festal preparation, ought to
-cease during the last three days of the old year. It is etiquette to
-begin by visits on New Year’s Eve, though this is not universal.
-
-On New Year’s morning salutations or calls are made on friends,
-acquaintances, and superiors. To this rule there must be no exception,
-on pain of a rupture of friendly relations. The chief ceremony of the
-day is the sacrifice at the tablets of ancestors. Proceeding to the
-family tombs, if near the house, or to the special room or shelf in the
-dwelling itself, the entire family make prostrations. Costly
-ceremonies, with incense-sticks, etc., regulated according to the
-family purse, follow. This is the most important filial and religious
-act of the year. In cases where the tombs are distant, the visit must
-not be postponed later than during the first month. After the ancestral
-sacrifices, comes the distribution of presents, which are enclosed in
-New Year’s boxes. These consist of new dresses, shoes, confectionery,
-jewelry for the boys and girls, and various gifts, chiefly cooked
-delicacies, for neighbors, friends, and acquaintances. For five days
-the festivities are kept up by visits, social parties, and
-entertainments of all sorts. The ordinary labors of life are resumed on
-the sixth day of the new year, but with many, fun, rest, and frolic are
-prolonged during the month.
-
-The tenth day of the second month is the great house-cleaning day of
-the year, when mats are taken up and shaken, the pots, kettles, and
-jars scoured, and the clothing renovated.
-
-Tomb-cleaning day occurs in the third month. On this occasion they make
-offerings of food to their ancestors, and cleanse tombs and tablets. It
-is a busy time in the graveyards, to which women transfer their straw
-scrubbers, dippers, and buckets, when monuments and idols are well
-soused and scoured. It is more like a picnic, with fun and work in
-equal proportions.
-
-The third day of the third month comes in spring, and is the great
-May-day and merrymaking. The people go out on the river with food and
-drink, and spend the day in feasting and frolic. Others wander in the
-peach-orchards to view the blossoms. Others so inclined, enjoy
-themselves by composing stanzas of poetry.
-
-On the eighth day of the fourth month the large cities are illuminated
-with paper lanterns of many colors, and people go out on hills and
-rivers to view the gay sights and natural scenery.
-
-The fifth day of the fifth month is a great festival day, on which the
-king presents fans to his courtiers.
-
-On the fifteenth day of the seventh month occurs the ceremony of
-distributing seed. The king gives to his officials one hundred kinds of
-seed for the crops of the next year.
-
-On the fifteenth day of the eighth month sacrifices are offered at the
-graves of ancestors and broken tombs are repaired.
-
-The chrysanthemum festival is one of much popular interest. Among the
-most brilliant flowers of the peninsula are the chrysanthemums, which
-are cultivated with great pride and care by gentlemen and nobles. The
-flower is brought to unusual perfection by allowing but a single flower
-to grow upon one stem. They are often cultivated apart, under oiled
-paper frames. On the ninth day of the ninth month the perfected
-blossoms are in their glory, and the owner of a crop of brilliant
-chrysanthemums invites his friends to his house to feast and enjoy the
-sight of the blooms. The florists exhibit their triumphs, and picnic
-parties enjoy the scenery from the bridges and on the mountains.
-
-The article chiefly used for pastry among oblique-eyed humanity is what
-the Japanese call mochi, a substance made by boiling rice and pounding
-it into a tough mass resembling pie-crust. Like oysters, it may be
-eaten “in every style,” raw, warmed, baked, toasted, boiled, or fried.
-It occupies an important place in ceremonial offerings to the dead, in
-the temple, and in household festal decoration. It is made in immense
-quantities, and eaten especially at New Year’s time, and on the two
-equinoctial days of the year. Another favorite mixed food for festive
-occasions is “red rice” and beans. The Corean housewife takes as much
-pains to color the rice properly as a German lavishes upon his
-meerschaum, and if the color fails, or is poor, it is a sign of bad
-luck.
-
-The fourteenth day of the first month a person who is entering upon a
-critical year of his life makes an effigy of straw, dresses it up with
-his own clothing at evening, and casts it out on the road, and then
-feasts merrily during the whole night. Whatever happens to the man of
-straw thus kicked out of the house, is supposed to happen to the man’s
-former self, now gone into the past; and Fate is believed to look upon
-the individual in new clothes as another man.
-
-The fifth, fifteenth, and twenty-fifth of each month are called “broken
-days,” on which they avoid beginning anything new. These are the
-“Fridays” of Chō-sen. In the beginning of each of the four seasons of
-the year they post up on the doors of their houses slips of paper, on
-which are written mottoes, such as “Longevity is like the South
-Mountain,” “Wealth is like the Eastern Sea,” etc. Certain years in each
-person’s life are supposed to be critical, and special care as to
-health, food, clothing, new ventures, etc., must be taken during these
-years, which are ended with a feast, or, what is more economical, a
-sigh of relief.
-
-The fifteenth day of the first month is called “Stepping on the
-Bridge.” A man and woman go out together over the bridge at the rising
-of the moon and view the moonlit scenery, indulging meanwhile in
-refreshments, both of the solid and liquid sort. It is believed that if
-one crosses over seven bridges on this night, he will be free from
-calamities during the year.
-
-Not the least interesting of the local or national festivals, are those
-held in memory of the soldiers slain in the service of their country on
-famous battle-fields. Besides holding annual memorial celebrations at
-these places, which fire the patriotism of the people, there are
-temples erected to soothe the spirits of the slain. Especially
-noteworthy are these monumental edifices, on sites made painful to the
-national memory by the great Japanese invasion of 1592–97, which keep
-fresh the scars of war. A revival of these patriotic festivals has been
-stimulated by the fanatical haters of Japan, since this neighbor
-country broke away from Asiatic traditions.
-
-
-
-Though much has been written concerning the population of Corea, we
-consider all conjectures of persons alike unfamiliar with the interior
-and the true sources of information as worthless. These random figures
-vary from 250,000 (!) to 6,000,000. Dallet presumes a population of
-10,000,000. A rude enumeration made thirty years ago gives the number
-of houses at 1,700,000, and of the people at 7,000,000. Our own
-opinion, formed after a study of the map and official lists of towns
-and cities, is that there are at least 12,000,000 souls in Chō-sen. A
-Japanese correspondent of the Tōkiō Hochi Shimbun, writing from Seoul,
-states that a census made last year (1881) shows that there are
-3,480,911 houses and 16,227,885 persons in the kingdom.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII.
-
-SHAMANISM AND MYTHICAL ZOÖLOGY.
-
-
-Shamanism is the worship of a large number of primitive North Asiatic
-tribes, having no idols except a few fetishes and some rude ancestral
-images or representations of the spirits of the earth and air. It is a
-gross mixture of sorcery and sacrificial ceremonies for the
-propitiation of evil spirits. These malignant beings are supposed to
-populate the earth, the clouds, and the air, and to be the cause of
-most of the ills suffered by man. They take various forms, chiefly
-those of animals whose structure and anatomy are more or less
-imaginary, each imp or demon being a composite creature, compiled from
-the various powers of locomotion, destruction, and defence possessed by
-the real creatures that inhabit water, earth, and air. Some of them,
-however, are gentle and of lovely form and mien. Their apparition on
-earth is welcomed with delight as the harbinger of good things to come.
-Confucius, the teacher, hailed by the Chinese as their holiest sage,
-and to whom even divine honors are paid, believed firmly in these
-portents and appearances. Chief among these mythic creatures are the
-phœnix, the kirin, the dragon, besides a variety of demons of various
-sizes, colors, habits, and character. Much of the mythology of Chō-sen
-is that common to Chinese Asia. Instead of a gallery of beautiful
-human, or partially human, presences like that of Greece, the mythology
-of China deals largely with mythic animals, though legendary heroes,
-sages, and supernatural beings in human form are not lacking. The four
-chief ideal creatures are the dragon, phœnix, tortoise, and kirin.
-
-There is another animal which, though a living reality, the Coreans
-have idealized and gifted with powers supernatural and supra-animal,
-almost as many in number as those with which the Japanese have endowed
-the white fox. This is the tiger. They not only ascribe to him all the
-mighty forces and characteristics of which he is actually possessed,
-but popular superstition attributes to him the powers of flying, of
-emitting fire and hurling lightning. He is the symbol of strength and
-ubiquity, the standard of comparison with all dangers and dreadful
-forces, and the paragon of human courage. On the war-flags this animal
-is painted or embroidered in every posture, asleep, leaping, erect,
-couchant, winged, and holding red fire in his fore-paw. On works of
-art, cabinets, boxes, and weapons the tiger is most frequently
-portrayed and is even associated as an equal with the four supernatural
-beings. In ancient time he was worshipped.
-
-The riong, or dragon, whose figure, as depicted in Corean art, is
-perhaps nothing more than a highly idealized form of an extinct
-geological species of saurian, is one of the four supernatural or
-spiritually endowed creatures. He is an embodiment of all the forces of
-motion, change, and power for offence and defence in animal life, fin,
-wing, tusk, horn, claws, with the mysterious attributes of the serpent.
-There are many varieties of the species dragon, which is the chief of
-scaly monsters. It possesses the gift of transformation and of
-rendering itself visible or invisible at will. In the spring it ascends
-to the skies and in the autumn buries itself in the watery depths.
-
-It is this terrific manifestation of movement and power which the
-Corean artist loves to depict—always in connection with water, clouds,
-or the sacred jewel of which it is the guardian, and for which it
-battles, causing commotion in heaven and earth. The dragon is
-synonymous in Chinese philosophy with the third of the four creative
-influences and indicative of the East and Springtime, the blue dragon
-being the guardian of the East.
-
-Another cycle of popular notions and artistic ideas is suggested by its
-change of bulk, for this omnipotent monster “becomes at will reduced to
-the size of a silkworm or swollen till it fills the space of heaven and
-earth. It desires to mount, and it rises until it affronts the clouds;
-to sink, and it descends until hidden below the fountains of the deep.”
-The dragon is the embodiment of the watery principle of the atmosphere,
-and its Protean shapes are but the varied ideal expression of the many
-forms and forces of water. Moisture in its fertilizing or destructive
-aspects—from the silent dew to the roaring tempest, from the trickling
-of a rill to the tidal wave that engulphs cities—blessed, terrible,
-gentle, irresistible, is symbolized by the dragon. The functions of the
-celestial dragon are to guard the mansions of the gods in heaven, so
-that they do not fall; of the spiritual, to cause the wind to blow and
-produce rain for the benefit of mankind; of the terrestrial, to mark
-out the courses of rivers and streams, while another watches over the
-hidden treasures concealed from mortals. This last is the dragon that
-presides over mines and gems, and which mortals must propitiate or
-overcome in order to gain the precious metals and minerals out of the
-earth. Intense belief in the dragon is one of the chief reasons why the
-mines in Chō-sen are so little worked, and the metals disturbed. The
-dragon pursuing the invaders of their sanctuaries or fighting each
-other to gain possession of the jewel balls or sacred crystals is a
-favorite subject in all art of Chinese parentage. Rarely is the whole
-figure of the writhing creature exposed. Partly hidden in clouds or
-water, he seems ever in motion. There are also four dragon-kings, who
-have their palaces in the world under the sea, one ruling in the
-northern, one in the eastern, one in the southern, and one in the
-western sea. The ministers and messengers of these four monarchs are
-the terrible dragons whose battles in the air and in the deep are the
-causes of the commotion of the elements. There is also a dragon without
-horns, and another that never ascends to the skies. The yellow dragon
-is reckoned the most honorable of his tribe. In common belief the
-dragon carries on his forehead a pear-shaped pearl, supposed to possess
-wondrous virtues of healing and power. Whoever possesses these jewels
-will be invincible, and the power of his descendants endure.
-
-From its divine origin and character the dragon is symbolical of all
-that pertains to the emperor of Great China. Hence it is made use of
-not only by him, but by his vassal, the king of Chō-sen, and by his
-rival the mikado of Japan. Hence the significance of the trio of these
-sacred jewels on ornaments and instruments belonging to the royal
-family, whether embroidered on the robes of state worn by the king,
-surmounting the large drum of his musicians, or glistening in golden
-embroidery on the banners of his body-guard. The “dragon robe” and
-“dragon’s bed,” “dragon standard,” refer to the mantle, throne, and
-flag of the king. In the popular speech, whatever is most excellent is
-compared to a dragon. A “dragon-child” is a paragon, a “dragon horse”
-is one of extraordinary speed. When “the fish has been metamorphosed
-into the dragon,” some happy change or promotion has taken place—the
-student-competitor has received his degree of doctorate, or the
-office-holder has been told by royal appointment to “come up higher.”
-
-The kirin (kilin or lin) is another of the four supernatural creatures
-of Chinese philosophy and mythology, believed in by the Coreans, and
-depicted in Corean art especially as a symbol of peace and joy, and on
-articles used on auspicious and happy occasions. This beast, which to
-the Corean is a “living creature,” has the body of a deer and the tail
-of an ox, usually highly curled and twisted in a manner to suggest the
-work of a hair-dresser. On its forehead is a single soft horn. It is
-said never to tread on or injure any living being. It is the emblem of
-perfect rectitude, and the incarnate essence of the five primordial
-elements of all things, viz.: water, fire, wood, metal, earth. It is
-considered the noblest form of the animal creation. Its appearance on
-the earth is ever regarded as a happy omen, as the harbinger of good
-government and the birth of good rulers. Hence the wealth of
-association to the Oriental mind in the kirin. The male beast is called
-ki and the female rin or lin. The two words combined form the general
-term kirin.
-
-The tortoise is the centre of a great circle of pleasing superstitions,
-and hence is one of the set of symbols oftenest employed in Corean art.
-The practice of divination is mostly associated with tortoise-shell,
-the figuring of a tortoise’s back having a mystic signification. In
-Chinese legend a divine tortoise emerged from the Yellow River, on the
-shell of which a sage discovered the system of numerals, and thus
-obtained the foundation of mathematics and the rudiments of philosophy.
-This tortoise was said to be the embodiment of the star in Ursa Major,
-and the progenitor of all the tortoise tribe. It can transform itself
-into other forms of life and lives to the age of ten thousand years.
-Hence it is the symbol of long life. It is said to conceive by thought
-alone. There are said to be ten kinds of tortoises, one of them being
-half dragon, half tortoise, and with a tail like a fringe of silver.
-This is the attendant of the god of waters, and hence is often used as
-the top of a well. The tortoise is also the symbol of immortality and
-strength, hence is often used over walls and places of entrance. Many
-Corean gateways are surmounted with huge tortoises sculptured in stone.
-The same idea is expressed in making the representations of this
-creature, cut from a single rock, the base for monumental tablets set
-into its back. The great seal of state, the regalia of sovereignty in
-Chō-sen, has the form of a tortoise. The phœnix is also represented as
-standing upon a tortoise. Closely connected with the Hindoo idea of the
-world resting on an elephant which stands on a tortoise, is the Chinese
-idea of “supporting the earth with the feet of a tortoise.” A common
-idea in Chō-sen, as in China, is the huge tortoise which supports
-mountains on its back, and having a shell which is one thousand leagues
-in circumference.
-
-The phœnix (fung-wang or hōwō), like the kirin, appears on the earth at
-or near the birth of a good ruler, and hence is the emblem of peace and
-good government. The male is called fung, or ho, and the female wang,
-or wō, hence the generic name fung-wang or hōwō. In its marvellous
-plumage the sheen of the five colors may be descried, each of which is
-typical of the five cardinal virtues. In figure it seems to be an ideal
-combination of the peacock and the golden pheasant, but with feathers
-wondrously curled and made into ringlets. It is not only a symbol of
-auspicious government, but of inseparable fellowship, and many stanzas
-of poetry refer to it as typical of courtship and conjugal love. In its
-voice are many intonations, to each of which a name is given. For this
-reason it is a favorite element in the decoration of musical
-instruments.
-
-Another symbol often used is the Chinese lion, with marvellously curled
-hair and mane. Every tuft is a mass of fanciful ringlets, and the beast
-is so pictured as to make a masterpiece of ugliness and terror. The dog
-of the breed called ngao, so named after the earth-supporting tortoise,
-is also liberally furnished with tooth, nail, and hair. It usually cuts
-the figure of guardian on the edge or lid of vessels in which are kept
-treasures which, because they tempt the palate, tempt also the fingers
-that lift to the mouth. The marvellous creature called the Dog of Fo,
-or Buddha, usually associated with Chinese-Buddhist art, is believed to
-be of Corean origin. Jacquemart calls it the “Dog of Corea.”
-
-Other mythical creatures that have their existence in the Corean
-imagination are in the form of fishes and serpents. The in-é (fish-man
-or merman) is a sort of siren that is supposed to inhabit the Sea of
-Japan and the Eastern Sea, but whether partly fabulous or entirely
-real, we are unable to say. It is six or seven feet long, and in its
-head and body resembles a human being, as its nose, mouth, ears, and
-arms, or flippers, are covered with white skin without scales. It has a
-long and slender tail, like that of a horse. It suckles its young, and
-sheds tears when its offspring are captured. It is probable that this
-creature, though called a fish-man by the Coreans, is the animal of
-which we read, in several instances, being presented to the Manchiu
-emperors in Peking. One of them inquired whether such a creature was
-known in Europe, and the Jesuit friar, producing a book, showed an
-engraving of one similar. Perhaps this “fish-man” is the same as a
-reported “dog-fish or shark,” living in the seas around Quelpart, whose
-tears produce pearls.
-
-The i-sium, a colossal marine creature, is purely imaginary, like the
-“earthquake-fish” of the Japanese, which causes the continent to shake.
-The word is pure Corean, and may answer to our symbol of vastness and
-uncertainty—the sea-serpent. Mr. Fergusson would doubtless find a new
-chapter for his “Tree and Serpent Worship” in Chō-sen, for, in the
-peninsula, not only are trees reverenced as the abode of spirits, but
-the sa, or snakes, are rarely, if ever, harmed. The people feed,
-venerate, and even worship them as the guardian genii of their
-households. The epkuron-gi (a pure Corean word) is the name by which
-they call the serpent which presides over their family Edens. Instead
-of being looked upon as the embodiment of the principle of evil, as in
-Semitic lore, their presence is hailed as an omen of blessing. They are
-treated like pets. In their heads they are believed to carry a precious
-jewel after they have lived long. A serpent often lives to be one
-thousand years old, and then bears in his front a glistening gem,
-called ya-kang-chiu, which name the people also apply to any glittering
-stone, especially the diamond. The guardian serpent is represented as
-double-winged, with forked tongue, long and darting, flying among the
-clouds and protecting its worshippers by pursuing their enemies. The
-illustration here given is copied from one of the war-flags carried by
-the Corean mountaineers from their homes to the forts on the Han River,
-in 1871. The staff is tipped with pheasant-feathers and horse-hair.
-
-Their fear of the serpent is the basis of their worship, and the
-average Corean does not fail to take due precaution to guard against
-its sting. In addition to the ordinary osa or black snake, there is the
-venomous viper, salmo, which “kills its mother at birth.” Its bite is
-considered exceedingly dangerous. The tai-mang is a great serpent. The
-flower called kiuk-sa-wa (snake-bane), or Eye of India, is believed by
-Coreans to keep away the reptiles, and hence is highly valued.
-
-Hamel and the French missionaries agree in picturing Corea as a land
-well supplied with reptiles, serpents, and vermin of all sorts, and
-testify to the veneration of them by the people. In the folk-lore of
-the country, the beasts play a conspicuous part.
-
-Another creature to whom wings rightfully belong is the gin-sai. This
-fabulous bird is capable of diffusing so venomous an influence that
-even its shadow poisons food.
-
-Even the brief list of creatures which we have enumerated does not
-exhaust the list of the beings which are real and active to the
-imagination of the people. Science and Christianity are the remedies
-for this delirium tremens of paganism.
-
-The ancient and still lingering belief in the powers of the air and all
-the creatures therein, visible and invisible, is reflected on their
-triangular and streamer-shaped war-banners. They believe that all these
-creatures and all the forces of nature are under the control of the
-spirits, who will give or withhold sunshine or rain, send blasting
-mildew and pestilence, or fertility, plenty and joy, according as they
-are pleased or displeased.
-
-It will be seen at once what a soil the demagogue has for sowing
-dragons’ teeth, and what frightful popular commotion may be stirred up
-by playing upon the fears of the populace. The most recent illustration
-of this is seen in the frightful massacre of the ministers and the
-Japanese, in July, 1882. The long drought having ruined the rice crop,
-the leaders of the anti-foreign faction persuaded the common people
-that the spirits were annoyed at the introduction of foreigners, and
-therefore withheld the rain. In this belief they were strengthened from
-the fact that it rained heavily for many hours after the Japanese had
-been driven out of Seoul.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIV.
-
-LEGENDS AND FOLK-LORE.
-
-
-It is not difficult to appreciate or understand the history of people
-whose psychology is our own. We seem to look through white light in
-gazing at their past as told in the words of a language that grew in
-the same mental sunlight with our own. In eating fruit that grows on
-familiar intellectual soil, we may sometimes recognize a slightly
-strange flavor, but the pulp is good food which our mental stomach does
-not reject, but readily assimilates. Truth, like the moon, usually
-presents one side only, but the mass of mankind do not think of this,
-even if they know it. They go on blissfully imagining they have seen
-all sides, even the full orb.
-
-With the history of the Aryan nations we are familiar, and think it is
-clear to us. We insist that we know we can understand what they did and
-that their thoughts need no translation to us.
-
-A visitor at the American Centennial, or any exposition of the industry
-of all nations, sees before him for comparative study the art, symbols
-of religion, architecture, implements of domestic life, and all the
-outward expressions of inward ideas. They are the clothed or concrete
-soul of man under the varied civilizations of this planet. Standing
-before the exhibits of India—the home of the Aryan nations—the man of
-Western Christendom, as his mind’s eye surveys the vastness of
-difference between him and the Hindoo, is yet able to bridge the gulf.
-The researches into language, art, myths, folk-lore, show him that the
-infancy of the two races was the same, and that modern differences are
-impertinent accidents. At bottom the Aryan and the Hindoo are brothers.
-
-No such reconciliation of ideas is yet demonstrable between the
-Mongolian and the Aryan. Before the art, symbols, ideas, literature,
-language, and physical presence of the man of Cathay, no bridging of
-the gulf seems yet possible. He appears to be a man of another planet.
-Language gives as yet little clue to a common origin; art and symbol
-seem at the other pole, and in psychology the difference at present
-seems total and irreconcilable.
-
-Hence, to attempt to write the history of a Turanian people by simply
-narrating bald facts in an occidental language, seems to be but putting
-another white skeleton in the museum of nations. Even the attempt, by a
-purely destructive method of criticism, to manufacture a body, or
-corpse, rather, of history, by hacking away all legend and tradition to
-get out what the critic is pleased to call “history,” seems at once
-unnatural and false. It is like attempting to correlate the genius of
-Shakspeare with ounces of beef and cheese, or to measure the market
-value of poetry by avoirdupois. A history of an Asiatic people ought to
-be as much a history of mind, of psychology, as of facts or dynasties.
-Hence, in writing of a new and almost unknown people like the Coreans,
-we think it as important to tell what they believe to have happened, as
-to attempt to state what we think actually did happen. To understand a
-people we must know their thoughts, as well as their physical
-environment.
-
-According to Corean tradition, the origin of their country and people
-is thus outlined:
-
-Of old the land had neither prince nor chiefs. A Divine Being descended
-from heaven and took up his abode at the foot of a sandal-wood tree on
-the Ever-White Mountains. The people of the land became his subjects,
-made him their sovereign and called him Dan Kun (the Sandal Prince),
-and his realm Chō-sen (Morning Calm). This took place in the time of
-Tang Ti Yao (2356 B.C.). His first residence was at Ping-an. Later he
-transferred it to Pe-yo, where his descendants remained till the eighth
-year of the emperor Wu Ting of the Chang dynasty (1317 B.C.), when they
-were established in Mount Asstak. His descendants reigned in Chō-sen
-more than one thousand years, but nothing more is known of them after
-the period covered by their reign. Then followed the occupation of the
-country by the Chinese noble Ki Tsze.
-
-The mythical origin and founding of Shinra is thus told in the local
-legends of the place. After the invasion of Chō-sen, by the Chinese
-emperor, many of the original inhabitants fled and scattered over the
-east coast. They made settlements on the mountains, in the valleys, and
-along the sea-shore, some of which in time grew to be cities and large
-towns. One day the attention of the head man of one of the villages was
-attracted by the neighing of horses toward a mountain. He went in the
-direction of the sounds, but instead of a horse he found an egg of
-extraordinary size, shaped like a gourd. Carefully breaking it open, he
-discovered a beautiful rosy boy-baby inside. The old man’s heart was
-touched by the sight, and he took the child to his home and adopted it
-as his own. The boy grew up beloved of all who saw or knew him. When
-but thirteen years old, the elders of the six principal towns gathered
-together and chose him as their lord and master. They gave him a name
-signifying “Coming Out of the West,” and to the country a name meaning
-“Born of the Gourd-egg.” The new king took to wife a fair maiden who
-was reputed to be the offspring of a well-dragon. They reigned for
-sixty years, when their daughter succeeded to the throne.
-
-In the fifth year of her reign she married a youth who had come from
-afar, whose origin was as wonderful as that of her own parents. His
-mother the queen had been delivered of an egg. Her husband, not
-enjoying such a form of offspring, threw the egg away, but the queen
-recovering it, carefully wrapped it in a silk napkin, and with many
-other treasures put it in a box and set it adrift on the sea. After
-many days the box was washed ashore on a distant coast. The fishermen
-who picked it up in their nets thought nothing of it, and threw it into
-the sea again. It drifted into one of the harbors of Shinra. An old
-woman finding it, opened the lid and found a lovely boy with a smile on
-his face. Carefully nourishing him, he grew up to be a man of strength,
-nine feet high. He excelled all other youths in bodily vigor and
-accomplishments. When the old woman first picked up the waif, there
-were a number of crows standing around the shore, and the crone gave
-him a name referring to the presence of these birds—“Opened in Presence
-of the Crows.” Excelling in the knowledge of geomancy, he found a good
-place for a residence and built on it. Hearing of his renown, the queen
-of Shinra married him to her daughter.
-
-One evening the newly made king heard a cock crow in the woods toward
-the west. He sent his servants after it, who found a small golden
-casket suspended from a tree. Under it a white cock was crowing. The
-servant reported the matter to his master. Another servant was
-despatched to the place. He returned with the box, which, being opened,
-was found to contain a boy baby, who was given the name signifying “The
-Golden Boy from the Grove in which the Cock crowed.” The baby boy grew
-up and succeeded his father. In the reign of the twenty-second king of
-the line, the people of the country, then called Shin-han, changed the
-name of their country to Shinra.
-
-
-
-In the “Grammaire Coréenne” there are a number of specimens of
-folk-lore given in Corean and French, from which we extract a few of
-the most characteristic. The first one is an illustration of our
-universal human nature.
-
-
-
-
-THE THREE WISHES.
-
-There were once two old married folks who had not a single child, boy
-or girl. Extremely poor, they lived a pitiable life. One evening, when
-it was very cold in winter, after having supped, they gazed into the
-fire in the brazier, and sitting in their room face to face they warmed
-themselves a moment in silence, when the good old man thus spoke:
-
-“For the rich the winter is an excellent season; their food is prepared
-in advance. Having no toil they have only to take their ease. But for
-the poor, it is a rough time when they have neither food for the mouth
-nor fuel. If they go out over the mountain through the rain or the snow
-to seek wood, they die of cold or frost.”
-
-The good dame replied: “They say that Heaven is just. Why then does he
-permit this? They say, besides, that when you pray to Heaven, it is
-easy to obtain that which you need. If we ask to become rich—” said
-she.
-
-“You are right, do so,” replied the husband.
-
-And both prostrating themselves, prayed fervently to the Deity, when
-suddenly an angel appeared.
-
-“In spite of your sin of murmuring, Heaven having pitied you, accords
-you three things, after which you can ask no more. Reflect well,
-choose, and ask.” Saying this he disappeared.
-
-The old man made this proposition: “If we ask riches, freedom from
-sickness, or long life—”
-
-“No,” said the old woman, “we should not enjoy these things properly if
-we do not have a child. What pleasure will it be?”
-
-“Hold! I have not asked. What shall I do? If he had only said four
-things at the good moment! Why did he say only three? Since we wish to
-have a child, must we forego freedom from sickness, must we renounce
-riches, must we give up long life? It is hard to decide. Think, then,
-seriously this night, and decide to-morrow.”
-
-Breaking off their conversation, both sat plunged in reverie. At the
-moment of lying down to sleep, the old woman, stirring up the fire with
-the tongs, launched out with this reflection, “If we could have three
-or four feet of pudding to set to toast on this brazier, that would be
-royally excellent.”
-
-She spoke, and there was three feet of food placed by her side.
-
-The husband, beside himself with rage, screamed out—
-
-“Oh! what a woman! By one stroke you have lost all our benefits. To
-punish you I wish the pudding would hang itself on the point of your
-nose.”
-
-Immediately the pudding made a leap and attached itself to the old
-dame’s nose.
-
-At this the husband cried out, “Hello! Angry as I am, I have also by my
-fault lost a wish.” Seizing the sausage to detach it, they pulled,
-first one, then the other, almost dislocating the nose, but the sausage
-held on.
-
-“Alas!” said the woman in tears, “if this is always to remain hanging
-here, how can I live?”
-
-The husband, on the contrary, without being at all disturbed, said, “If
-even yet our wish of fortune is fulfilled, we could make a tube of gold
-to hide this sausage, and then drawing it out at length, it will be
-only more beautiful to see.”
-
-The wife, still more miserable, cried out, “Oh, wretched me, only to
-think that fortune should wish to put it there. Well! whether you be
-rich or live long, as for me, I should like to kill myself.”
-
-Saying this she took a cord and went to strangle herself at the end of
-a beam. The husband, struck with fear, and touched with compassion,
-hastened to set her free.
-
-“Stop,” said he, “there remains one wish to us. Have your own way about
-it.”
-
-“If that is so, I wish that what hangs to my nose comes loose. Quick,
-quick, that it may go swift away. That is my chief wish.”
-
-She had hardly finished speaking when the sausage fell plump to the
-ground, and out of the midst of the heaven an angry voice was heard:
-
-“You have obtained the three things which you wished for, and have you
-gained a great advantage? If you wish to enjoy true blessing in this
-world be content to live with what Heaven gives, and do not form vain
-desires.”
-
-The two old folks spitted the pudding, ate it, and from this night they
-abstained from foolish wishes.
-
-On the morrow, agreeably to their supreme ambition, which was to have a
-baby, they found a little fatherless and motherless orphan. Having
-adopted it as their child, they gave him a good education and lived
-happily to extreme old age.
-
-
-The following illustrates official shrewdness and rapacity:
-
-
-
-
-THE HISTORY OF A NOSE.
-
-In the chief city of Chulla, there was a politician who was in debt to
-the government to the amount of ten thousand strings of cash. Unable to
-pay the same, he was condemned to death. Cast into prison, he awaited
-only the orders of the king to carry out the sentence. As he had
-thought hard without discovering any means to get out of the affair, he
-bethought himself of a stratagem. So, addressing the jailer, he said:
-
-“Helloa! you there, you’ll do well to let me go free a little while.”
-
-“Helloa!” answered the jailer, “what wretched talk! After I have set
-free a man who ought to be put to death to-morrow or day after
-to-morrow, what shall I do?”
-
-The prisoner replied, “Are we not friends both of us? If you do not let
-me go, who can save my life? Think over it a little and see. My wife,
-my children, my house, all I have, all my relations and friends being
-here, where shall I fly? If you set me at liberty for some moments not
-only will I not abscond but there will be found means for preserving my
-life safely. Do so.”
-
-As he thus besought him eagerly, the jailer, struck with compassion,
-could not do otherwise than let him go.
-
-So at midnight he presented himself before the door of the room where
-the governor slept, and thus addressed him.
-
-“Are you asleep? Is your excellency sleeping?”
-
-Hearing the sound and astonished at recognizing the voice of the
-officer who had been cast into prison and was to be executed in a short
-time, the governor asked.
-
-“Who are you?”
-
-“Your servant,” answered the officer.
-
-“A scoundrel who is at the point of being executed, how is it you are
-here?”
-
-“If I may be allowed to enter to salute you,” said the officer, “I have
-something particular to say to you.”
-
-“Oh, well, come in and speak.”
-
-The officer entering, approached, sat down, and said:
-
-“I pray your excellency to reflect and consider my purpose. If you put
-your servant to death this will be simply one man of means less in the
-world, and the money I owe will be lost to the government. What
-advantage will you thus derive? If, on the contrary, you preserve my
-life there will be one man more in the world, and I shall repay the
-whole of my debt to the government. Let me then live.”
-
-“If it ought to be so I wish you well in the matter.”
-
-“Your servant will come again, then, to-morrow, during the night, to
-see you.”
-
-“Do as you will.”
-
-The morrow during the night the officer presented himself anew and
-asked to be introduced. Approaching he made the prostrations before the
-governor, drew from his sleeve a packet which he undid and took out a
-sketch representing a human nose. He immediately besought the governor
-to please put his seal upon the sketch.
-
-Agreeing to the proposal the governor imposed his seal.
-
-The officer now associated three companions who were in the plot, and
-they all assembled upon the coast of the Eastern Sea, where they found
-a populous village, in the midst of which rose a high and grand
-mansion. Taking their drink of spirits at a hotel in the suburbs of the
-next village beyond, they prepared to sup. Addressing their host they
-put this question:
-
-“What is the name of the village which is just behind us? Whose is the
-largest house?”
-
-The inn-keeper answered, “That is the house of a very rich noble. Last
-year he received the degree of the doctorate and is eligible to fill
-very soon a very high position under the government.”
-
-The officer taking with him one of his comrades repaired to the
-mansion, where, as he noticed, everything showed abundant means, and
-thus spoke to the son.
-
-“As we have a secret affair to treat of, let us go into another room,”
-said the officer.
-
-They did so. “See here, the king is very sick, and they have called all
-the physicians from all the eight provinces for a consultation. They
-have declared that the only means to obtain healing is to find the nose
-of a man just like this, and to concoct a remedy from it. This is why
-we have been commanded by the Court, where they have said to us,
-putting in our hand this sketch of the nose: ‘Without distinction of
-place or person if you meet a nose similar to this, strike it off and
-produce it before us in this place.’ Obeying this severe order we have
-been out many times without being able to find a nose conforming to the
-sketch, and thus far have made useless journeys, but now, without
-peradventure, your honorable father’s nose exactly resembles this. We
-demand to see him, and wherever he may be we shall not depart till we
-have cut it off.”
-
-The son cried out: “Perhaps they do say such things!”
-
-“Who dare oppose the government business? Hurry, hurry, strike it off
-and we’ll go.”
-
-The son fell into a study and reflected.
-
-“It is an affair of state. This is a matter which we cannot prevent.
-Cut it off, they say, but to cut off the nose of my old father, that is
-altogether impossible. The entire family, men, women, young and old,
-every one will be plunged into woe. You can bear away the half of our
-fortune at least, if you will go away without taking my father’s nose.”
-
-The officer replied, “We had proposed to ourselves to depart only after
-having cut off the nose. However, as this is a matter of a son devoted
-to his father, and that they may not repress filial piety in others, we
-shall not cut off the nose. If you will give us a certain sum we will
-go elsewhere to procure a nose which we shall present to the king.”
-
-He accepted with thanks a sum equal to many times ten thousand strings
-of cash, for which he gave a receipt, told the sender of the money such
-a day, such a place, and on leaving offered this recommendation:
-
-“Upon the whole, say nothing of this affair. If it should leak out, and
-the government comes to know that having found a proper nose we have
-been bribed not to cut it off, we shall be arrested and put to death,
-they will certainly cut off your father’s nose and take your money
-also. Pray then be careful not to divulge this secret.” Upon this they
-took their leave.
-
-Overjoyed at not having his parent’s nose amputated, but believing that
-the king on being informed would send again on this business, the son
-dared let no one know until the day of his father’s death. Then
-breaking the silence he said, “I have bought my father’s nose for ——
-thousand strings of cash.”
-
-
-The story here told explains itself. Cheng-chong was the Haroun al
-Raschid of Corea.
-
-
-
-
-AN INSTANCE OF ROYAL SOLICITUDE.
-
-There was in Chō-sen a king called His Majesty Cheng-chong, who was
-celebrated in all the kingdom for his goodness. One night, disguised as
-a countryman, and accompanied only by a single companion, he started
-out from the midst of the capital to make a circuit in order to inform
-himself of the temper of his subjects, and to become himself acquainted
-with the details of their life.
-
-Arrived at a certain point he looked in the window. There was a
-miserable house, of which the outer dilapidation, extremely pitiable as
-it was, led him to suspect in the interior a state of things difficult
-to imagine. Eagerly wishing to know what it was, he punched a peep-hole
-in the paper door and perceived an old man weeping, a man in mourning
-singing, and a nun or widow dancing. Unable to divine the cause of this
-spectacle, he ordered his companion to call the master of the house.
-The king’s servant doing so, said:
-
-“Is the proprietor of the house at home?”
-
-Hearing this voice the man in mourning made his appearance. His Majesty
-saluting him said:
-
-“We have never before met.”
-
-“True,” said the man in mourning, “but whence are you? How is it that
-you should come to find me at midnight? To what family do you belong?”
-
-Cheng-chong answered, “I am Mr. Ni, living at Tong-ku-an. As I was
-passing before your house, I was attracted by strange sounds. Then by a
-hole which I made in the door, I saw an old man weeping, a nun who
-danced, and a gentleman in mourning who sang. Why did the old man shed
-tears, the nun dance, and the man in mourning sing? Unable to fathom
-the motive I have made my friend call the householder with the purpose
-of informing myself.”
-
-The man in mourning rejoined, “Have you any business to know other
-people’s matters? What is your reason for acting thus when it concerns
-you so little? The night is well gone. Get back as quickly as
-possible.”
-
-“No, not at all. I acknowledge that it is not becoming to pry into the
-affairs of others, but this is such an extraordinary case I beg of you
-give me some light on the matter.”
-
-“Alas!” said the man in mourning, “why is the gentleman so eager to
-know other people’s matters?”
-
-Cheng-chong replied, “It is important that I should be somewhat
-informed.”
-
-“Since the gentleman wishes so much to know, I cannot do other than
-tell. This is why. My family has always been poor. In my hut one could
-never find sufficient grain for a meal and one flea would not have
-enough room upon my land to squat upon. I have no victuals for my old
-father. This is why, morning and evening, in default of all other
-resource, my wife has often cut off a tress of her hair and gone and
-sold it to buy a cup of bean-soup, which she graciously offers to my
-father. This evening she clipped and sold all of her hair that
-remained, and by this she has become bare-headed like a nun. My old
-father, seeing that for his sake his young daughter-in-law has become a
-nun, broke out into mourning in these terms:
-
-“‘Why have I lived to this day? Why am I not dead? Why have I thus
-degraded my daughter-in-law?’ And in saying this he shed tears. To
-console him, my wife said to him, ‘Do not weep,’ and she danced. I,
-also, although in mourning, joined in with my wife. One danced, the
-other sang. This made my old father smile, and perhaps gave him solace.
-There! that is why we behaved so. Do not think it strange, and go
-away.”
-
-Listening to this narrative the king was impressed with such a marked
-supreme devotion on the part of the son and daughter-in-law, even in
-the time of deepest misfortune, and he said, “This is the most
-extraordinary thing in the world. How will it do to present you at the
-examination to-morrow?”
-
-“What examination to-morrow?” asked the man.
-
-“Why, certainly,” said Cheng-chong, “to-morrow there will be an
-examination. By all means don’t fail to be there.”
-
-The man responded, “But I have not heard it said that there is to be an
-examination.”
-
-“Whether you have heard or not,” said the king, “prepare to compete,
-and present yourself. As I shall also present myself to-morrow I shall
-give you a stall in the enclosure.”
-
-Having thus spoken he took his leave, returned to the palace and
-awaited the stroke of the great clock-bell.
-
-No sooner did he hear the vibration of the mighty gong than he
-immediately gave the order to announce promptly the examination in the
-city, and beyond the walls, to the utter astonishment of the literary
-men, who said, “Even until yesterday no one had heard of an
-examination, and behold it was published during the night. What does
-this mean?”
-
-The poor householder on his part made this reflection, “Although I knew
-nothing about it, this man knows perfectly,” and he started out.
-
-On the way he noticed a crowd of candidates. Without hesitation he
-entered the enclosure. The subject of the examination was: “The song of
-a man in mourning, the dance of a nun, the tears of an old man.”
-
-Of all the students not one could derive the sense of such a subject.
-
-This man alone knew it perfectly well, because he had had experience of
-those very things in his own house. He treated the theme clearly and
-sent in his copy. The king having examined the essay and found it
-without a mistake, gave the degree of doctor and sent for him to come
-to him.
-
-When they were in each other’s presence the king said:
-
-“Do you know me? It is I who yesterday recommended you to present
-yourself at the examination. Lift up your head and look.”
-
-Fixing his gaze attentively, the man recognized who he was—in effect
-the same person—and manifested his feelings in appropriate actions of
-gratitude.
-
-“Go quickly,” said the king to him, “go find your old father and wife.”
-
-Forthwith, with high appointment to office joined to magnificent
-treatment, the king recompensed the filial piety of the son and
-daughter-in-law.
-
-The royal renown has been handed down from generation to generation. In
-truth, beyond the goodness of the king, the reward bestowed upon the
-filial devotion of these two married people is known to every one.
-
-
-Evidently the following is a story told by metropolitans to show up the
-bumpkins of the provinces:
-
-
-
-
-THE PRODIGIOUS EFFECTS OF A LOOKING-GLASS.
-
-A young noble of Kiung-sang province was going on a journey to Seoul.
-Just as he was about to depart, his wife called him.
-
-“He! say now, listen to me a little. I have heard the mother of Mr. Kim
-speak of a very lovely thing which looks like glass and pretty metal.
-They say that if you look in it you will see a very curious thing. You
-must bring me one.”
-
-“Is it dear or cheap?” asked the husband.
-
-“It is not dear,” said she. “It will be necessary to spend some money,
-but if you heed the matter at all, it will be easy to pay for it.” This
-is what the husband heard as he set out for the capital.
-
-Having finished his business at Seoul he was on the point of returning,
-having almost lost sight of his wife’s order. At last he recalled it,
-asked the name of the object in question, and made the purchase of a
-mirror through one of his friends. In his eagerness to get home he put
-his wife’s commission in his wallet without even looking at it. When he
-arrived home, she hastened to take out the mirror. At once she
-perceived in it a woman. Immediately she began to weep and to berate
-her husband.
-
-“Oh the villain! not only to play himself the vagabond and debauchee
-but to bring along a concubine! Is it possible? This woman, what is
-she?”
-
-The amazed husband looked in the mirror, and at the side of his wife
-perceived a man. Unable to contain his wrath which made his face first
-dark and then blue, he uttered piercing cries.
-
-“Is this the conduct for the wife of a noble. You have brought a
-libertine here,” cried he.
-
-He was about to murder his wife, when his old mother hearing the
-squabble came in to know what it was. At sight of the old woman the
-quarrel ceased on either side. Pointing at the mirror, the rivals spoke
-both at once. The weeping daughter-in-law raved about a concubine, the
-son, even more angry, talked of a paramour. As the couple had never
-quarrelled before, there was no way of accounting for the mystery.
-
-“Do not be vexed,” said she, and looking in the mirror she saw a woman.
-At once she broke out into a laugh.
-
-“Is it because you see the old woman, your neighbor, that you dispute?
-The widow Pak has come to get some fire,” said she, and she went out to
-speak to her, but she was not there.
-
-Astonished, she called her husband and said to him
-
-“There is in the children’s room a very funny thing. You can see in it
-all kinds of extraordinary things and they are bickering over it. Come
-and see a little.”
-
-The venerable gentleman having entered the room perceived in the mirror
-an aged man.
-
-“Hello! the puppy of the teacher Tsoi has come to collect his fees and
-I have not a penny. That is not very nice.”
-
-The people of the village, one by one, two by two, all without
-exception looked at the mirror, but unable to comprehend anything, they
-made a tumult. Curious to know what should result, they carried it to
-the magistrate. At sight of the instrument, the man of authority more
-astonished than the others, called the policemen and gave them this
-order:
-
-“A new officer has arrived, why have I lost my place? Get ready men and
-horses for him.”
-
-Really believing that he had been cashiered he prepared to leave, when
-a young policeman after a careful examination of the mirror, pointed
-out the manner in which the visage of each individual was reflected.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXV.
-
-PROVERBS AND PITHY SAYINGS.
-
-
-Shut off, as they are, from the rest of the world, like fish in a well,
-the Coreans nevertheless have coined a fair share of homely wisdom,
-which finds ready circulation in their daily speech. Their proverbs not
-only bear the mint-mark of their origin, but reflect truly the image
-and superscription of those who send them forth. Many, indeed, of their
-current proverbs and pithy expressions are of Japanese or Chinese
-origin, but those we have selected are mainly of peninsular birth, and
-have the flavor of the soil.
-
-Do the Coreans place the seat of wisdom as they do the point of
-vaccination, in the nose? They ask, “Who has a nose three feet long?”
-which means, “If one is embarrassed, how can he put others at ease?”
-Evidently they have a wholesome regard for that member. A “nose of
-iron” describes an opinionated man and suggests unlimited “cheek.” A
-common expression of the Christians, meaning to go to church and pray,
-is “to see the long nose of the father”—that feature of the French
-priest’s face being looked upon with awe as the seat of wisdom.
-
-Between the rivals, Japan and China, Corea probably sees herself in
-this proverb of the unhappy cur that wanders boneless between two
-kitchens—the cook in each supposing it has been fed by the other. “The
-dog which between two monasteries gets nothing.”
-
-Corea’s isolation is “like a fish in a well,” or “like a hermit in the
-market-place.” They say of a secluded villager, “He knows nothing
-beyond the place which he inhabits.”
-
-“One stick to ten blind men,” is something very precious.
-
-“The cock of the village in a splendid city mansion,” is the bumpkin in
-the capital.
-
-“To have a cake in each hand,” is to know not which to eat first—to be
-in a quandary.
-
-“A volcano under the snow,” is a man of amiable manners who conceals a
-violent temper.
-
-“The treasure which always circulates without an obstacle,” is “cash,”
-or sapeks.
-
-“An apricot-blossom in the snow,” is said when something rare and
-marvellous happens.
-
-“To blow away the hair to see if there is a scar,” is to look for a
-mote in another man’s eye, and to hunt for defects.
-
-“As difficult as the roads of Thibet,” is evidently a reminiscence
-derived from the ancient Buddhist missionaries who came from that
-region.
-
-“To put on a silk dress to travel at night,” is to do a good action and
-not have it known.
-
-Some pithy sayings show the local gauge of sense. “He does not know
-silver from lead,” “He has round eyes,” “He can’t tell cheese from
-wheat,” He is an idiot. “Doesn’t know lu from yu.” This last refers to
-two Corean letters, jot and tittle.
-
-“As opposed as fire and water.”
-
-“A buckskin man,” is a man of no will or backbone.
-
-“To have a big hand,” means to be liberal.
-
-“A great blue sea,” refers to something very difficult, with no end to
-it and no way out of it.
-
-A man who is “not known in all the eight coasts,” is an utter stranger.
-
-A very sick person is “a man who holds disease in his arms.”
-
-“A bag of diseases,” is a chronic patient
-
-“Who can tell in seeing a crow flying whether it be male or female?” is
-a question referring to the impossible.
-
-The numeral 10,000 (man) plays a great part in proverbial sayings as
-“10,000 times certain.” Corea is a “land of 10,000 peaks.” Certain
-success is “10,000 chances against one.” “To die 10,000 times and not
-be regretted,” is to be “worthy of 10,000 deaths.” Ten thousand sorrows
-means great grief. A mountain is “10,000 heights of a man high.” “Ten
-thousand strings of cash,” is a priceless amount. Man-nin are 10,000
-people—all the people in the universe.
-
-“To lose one’s hands,” is to make a fiasco.
-
-A comet is an “arrow star.”
-
-“A hundred battles make a veteran.”
-
-Almost as poetical as the Greek “anarithma gelasma” (unnumbered
-laughings) is this Corean description of the sea—“Ten thousand
-flashings of blue waves.”
-
-“To lose both at a time,” is a proverb founded on a native love-story.
-
-“When a raven flies from a pear-tree, a pear falls”—appearances are
-deceitful, don’t hazard a guess.
-
-“If one lifts a stone, the face reddens.” The Coreans are fond of rival
-feats of lifting. Heavy stones are kept for that purpose. “Results are
-proportionate to effort put forth.”
-
-Mosquitoes are lively and jubilantly hungry in Chō-sen, yet it does not
-do to fight them with heavy weapons or “seize a sabre to kill a
-mosquito.”
-
-A very poor man is thus described: “He eats only nine times in a
-month,” or “He eats only three times in ten days.” To say he is in the
-depths of poverty is to mention the pathetic fact that “he has
-extinguished his fire;” for “he looks to the four winds and finds no
-friend.”
-
-“The right and left are different,” is said of a hypocrite who does not
-speak as he thinks.
-
-When a man is not very bright he “has mist before his eyes;” or he
-“carries his wits under his arms;” or has “hidden his soul under his
-arm-pits,” or he “goes to the east and goes to the west when he is
-bothered.”
-
-Like Beaconsfield’s dictum—“Critics are men who have failed in
-literature and art,” is this Corean echo, “Good critic, bad worker.”
-
-“On entering a village to know its usages,” is our “When in Rome do as
-the Romans do.”
-
-“To destroy jade and gravel together,” refers to indiscriminate
-destruction.
-
-“Without wind and without cloud,” describes a serene life.
-
-“Go to sea,” is a provincial malediction heavier than a tinker’s, and
-worse than “Go to grass.”
-
-“I am I, and another is another,” is a formula of selfish, and Corean
-for “ego et non ego,” “I and not I.”
-
-“A poor horse has always a thick tail”—talent and capacity are badly
-located.
-
-The large number of morals pointed and tales adorned by the tiger are
-referred to elsewhere.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVI.
-
-THE COREAN TIGER.
-
-
-The one royal quadruped associated with Corea, as the white elephant is
-with Siam, the bison with the United States, or the dromedary with
-Egypt, is the tiger. Unlike his relative in India that roams in the hot
-jungles and along the river bottoms, the Corean “king of the mountains”
-is seen oftenest in the snow and forests of the north, ranging as far
-as the fiftieth parallel.
-
-Both actually and ideally the tiger is the symbol of power and
-fierceness. The flag of the tiger-hunters, from the northern provinces
-of Ping-an or Ham-kiung, who so bravely faced the rifles of the United
-States marines and sailors in “our little war with the heathen,” in
-1871, was a winged tiger rampant, spitting fire, holding the lightnings
-in his lifted fore-claws, and thus embodying the powers of earth, air,
-and heaven. It reminds one of the winged leopard in the vision of
-Daniel, “After this, I beheld, and lo another like a leopard, which had
-upon the back of it four wings of a fowl.” It is the tutelary genius of
-the descendants of the aboriginal worshippers of the tiger, who even
-yet cling to the religion of the soil. [11]
-
-The caps of the body-guard of the sovereign are decorated with the
-cheek and whiskers of the tiger, in order to inspire terror among
-beholders. The Corean beauty carries among the jewelry and “charms” in
-the reticule at her waist, a claw of the dreaded pem or tiger, nor can
-the hardy mountaineer put in the hand of his bride a more eloquent
-proof of his valor than one of these weapons of a man-eater. It means
-even more than the edelweiss of other mountain lands. On the floors of
-the better class of houses the tiger-skin rug not only adorns the best
-room, but makes the children’s play-ground, or the baby’s cushion in
-lieu of cradles, which are unknown. The soft hair of these natural rugs
-is often a finger long. Curious toys are made of the fur.
-
-The most prized articles among the tribute offerings (in these days,
-rather a “bonus” or bribe, than a tax or humiliation) presented at the
-court of Peking, as of old at Kiōto or Yedo, are these gorgeous pelts.
-One of them, which the writer saw recently, the property of a Japanese
-merchant, measured twelve feet long, exclusive of the tail. The symbol
-of military rank in old Japan, as indicative as our shoulder-straps,
-was a tiger-skin scabbard. Especially was it honorable to wear it if
-captured with one’s own hands on “frontier service.” The hair of these
-animals seems to have more of a woolly quality than those from India,
-while the orange tint is far less predominant, white taking its place.
-The black bars are, however, of equal magnificence with the tropical
-product, and the tail seems to be rather longer. Some idea of the great
-numbers and awful ravages of these huge felidæ in the two northern
-provinces of the Peninsular Kingdom, may be gained from the common
-saying of the Chinese that “the Coreans hunt the tiger during one half
-the year and the tigers hunt the Coreans during the other half.” The
-Coreans retort by the proverb born of the desolation that has so often
-followed the presence of a Chinese army on their soil, whether as
-invaders or allies: “After the Chinese, the tigers.” As a single man
-can create the gigantic spectre of the Brocken, so in the national
-literature this one animal seems to have cast a measureless shadow of
-evil influence upon this hermit nation. From the most ancient times it
-has been an object of religious reverence. “They also worshipped the
-tiger, which they looked on as a god,” was written of the people living
-on the sea of Japan before the Christian era. “They had also the
-many-spotted leopard.” A few of the national proverbs will illustrate
-the amount of attention which the subject receives in daily life, in
-art, religion, and language, and how often it serves to point the
-morals and adorn the tales told around Corean hearths. “A wooden
-tiger,” is the ass in the lion’s skin.
-
-“A broken-backed tiger” describes impotent and raging malice.
-
-“To give wings to a tiger,” is to add shrewdness to force.
-
-“If you don’t enter the tiger’s lair, you can’t get her cubs,” is said
-to spur on the faint heart, “to beard the tiger in his cave.”
-
-“A tiger’s repast,” describes excess in eating, or the gorging which
-follows after fasting. “To nourish a tiger, and have him devour you,”
-probably states a common fact of history, as well as it depicts
-ingratitude. “If you tread on the tail of a tiger, you’ll know it,”
-explains itself. “It is hard to let go the tail of a tiger,” suggests
-our “fire” after the “frying-pan,” or the “other horn of the dilemma;”
-while over-cautious people “in avoiding a deer, meet a tiger.” Men of
-irascible temper or violent disposition are given the pet name of
-maing-ho, which means an unusually ferocious tiger or “man-eater.”
-
-Corean shrewdness utilizes the phenomena of local experience, and
-equals the craft of the sellers of Joseph. So common is the
-disappearance of a villager through visitations of the tiger, that the
-standard method of escaping creditors or processes of law is to leave
-bits of one’s torn clothes in the woods, and then to abscond. Obliging
-friends or relatives quickly report, “Devoured by a tiger,” and too
-often it is believed that “Joseph is without doubt rent in pieces.”
-This local substitute for our former G. T. T., or the usual trip to
-Europe, is especially fashionable in places where “tigers as big as a
-mountain” are plentiful. To drive away the dreaded kal-pem, the people
-invoke the aid of the tu-e′, a fabulous monster, which is the enemy of
-the tiger, and which the latter greatly fears. The cry of his name
-tu-e′, tu-e′, is believed to act as a charm, and is often raised by
-villagers at night.
-
-In art, though the native picture-maker may draw a lion in such
-preposterous shape and with such impossible attributes as to show at
-once that no living model was ever before his eyes, yet in those
-pictures of the tiger drawn by Corean artists which we have examined,
-accuracy and vigor of treatment predominate over artistic grace.
-
-The hunters who are familiar with every habit, trait of character, and
-physical detail of the species, carefully distinguish his parts and
-varieties. Ho-rang-i is the generic name for the felis tigris. Kal-pem,
-is a mature fellow in full claw, scratchy and ferocious. Maing-ho is a
-large one of unusual size and in the full rampancy of his vigor.
-Mil-pal is an old brute that can no longer scratch, and is most
-probably mangy, and well gouged and scarred from numerous household
-quarrels and frequent tussles with rivals. Pi-ho is one agile in
-turning tail to escape, rather than in showing teeth to fight—the term
-being sometimes applied to the leopard. San-tol is a huge fellow that
-makes annual visits to one place, making his lightning strike more than
-once in the same spot. Siyo-ho is a little, and hal-pem is a female,
-tiger. A “stone” tigress is sterile. Special terms suggestive, and even
-poetical, for the murders, calamities, or ravages of the beast, for
-traps or ditches, for the skin, tail (used for banners and
-spear-sheaths), beard, moustaches, and the noises of purring, growling,
-nocturnal caterwauling, and even for lashing the tail, enrich and
-vivify the Chō-sen vocabulary.
-
-Tiger-shooting is not a favorite sport among the nobles or young
-bloods. Hunting in general is considered a servile occupation. Nobles,
-except those of a few poor families in the northern provinces, never
-practise it as sport. Yet it is free to all. There are no game laws, no
-proscription of arms, no game preserves, no seasons interdicted.
-
-The only animal which it is forbidden to kill is the falcon, whose life
-is protected by stringent laws. From the most ancient times this bird
-of the golden wing has been held in high honor. The hunting-grounds are
-almost entirely among the mountains, as the valleys are too densely
-occupied with rice and millet fields and cultivated soil, to allow game
-to exist or be hunted. The chief weapon used is the flint-lock,
-imported from Japan. With this a single hunter will attack the huge
-game, although the animal, when not immediately killed, leaps right
-upon his enemy and easily makes him his prey. When a tiger has caused
-great ravages in a district, the local magistrate calls together all
-the professional hunters and organizes a hunt in the mountains. In such
-cases, the chase is usually, and of intent, without results; for the
-skin is the property of the government, and the official always looks
-out for himself, coming in first for the spoils. Hence it is that a
-government hunt is usually a farce. Most of the tiger-hunters prefer to
-meet the royal game alone, for then the prized skin, which they sell
-secretly, is theirs. They eat the meat, and the bones stripped and
-boiled make various medicines.
-
-The number of human lives lost, and the value of property destroyed by
-their ravages, is so great as at times to depopulate certain districts.
-A hungry tiger will often penetrate a village in which the houses are
-well secured, and will prowl around a hovel or ill-secured dwelling,
-during several entire nights. If hunger presses he will not raise the
-siege until he leaps upon the thatched roof. Through the hole thus made
-by tearing through, he bounds upon the terrified household. In this
-case a hand-to-claw fight ensues, in which the tiger is killed or comes
-off victorious after glutting himself upon one or more human victims.
-Rarely, however, need this king of Corean beasts resort to this
-expedient, for such is the carelessness of the villagers that in spite
-of the man-eater’s presence in their neighborhood, they habitually
-sleep during the summer with the doors of their houses wide open, and
-oftentimes even in the sheds in the open fields without dreaming of
-taking the precaution to light a fire.
-
-This sense of security is especially apt to follow after a grand hunt
-successfully pursued. Then the prey is supposed to have been all killed
-off in the vicinity or driven to the distant mountains. The Coreans are
-as careless of tigers as the Japanese are of fires. Sometimes the tiger
-is caught in a snare, without danger and by very simple means. A deep
-pit is covered over with branches, leaves, and earth. At the bottom a
-sharp stake is set up. This, however, is only rarely used. During the
-winter the snow is half frozen over and strong enough to bear the
-weight of a man, but is broken through by the paws of the tiger. The
-beast sinks to the belly, and not being able to move fast, or escape,
-is as helpless as a fly in molasses. It is then apparently quite easy
-to approach the creature at bay, though woe be to the hunter who is too
-sure of his prey. To be well-equipped for this method of mountain
-sport, the hunter must have a short sword, lance, and snow-shoes. These
-sel-mai, or racquettes, are of slightly curved elastic board, well
-fitted with loops and thongs. With dogs, trained to the work, the
-san-chang (lanceman) starts the game, and following up the trail
-usually finishes him with a thrust of his spear; or, in bravado, with a
-sword-stroke. This method of sport was the favorite one pursued by the
-Japanese invaders. Though occasionally a man-at-arms was chewed up, or
-clawed into ribbons, scores of glossy skins were carried back to Nippon
-as trophies by the veterans. Indeed, it may be said, to most Japanese
-children, the nearest country west of them has no other association in
-their minds than as a land of tigers. At Gensan, the merchants from
-Tōkiō had their dreary homesickness, about the time of their first New
-Year’s season in the strange land, rather unpleasantly enlivened by the
-advent of several striped man-eaters. These promenaded the settlement
-at night, and seemed highly desirous of tasting a Japanese, after
-having already feasted on several natives. The prospect of playing
-Little Red Riding Hood to a whiskered man-eater was not a very pleasant
-experience, though a possible one at any time. A tiger ten feet long
-can easily stow away two five-feet Japanese without grievous symptoms
-of indigestion. For an untrained hand, even when armed with a
-Winchester breech-loader, to attempt hunting this Corean emblem of
-power is not attractive sport. The tiger is more apt to hunt the man,
-for elephants are not at hand to furnish the shelter of their backs.
-The Japanese do not seem to hanker after tiger-claws or skins while in
-the flesh, but prefer to buy for cash over their own counters at
-Gensan. The “crop” of these costly pelts averages five hundred a year
-at this one port.
-
-Few experiences tend more to develop all the manly virtues than facing
-a tiger on foot in his native wilds. The Coreans know this, and in
-their lack of drilled troops capable of meeting the soldiers of
-Europe—their “army” consisting almost entirely of archers, spearmen,
-and jingal-firers—they summoned the tiger-hunters from Ping-an to fight
-the Frenchmen of Admiral Roze’s expedition of 1866. Underrating their
-enemy, the Frenchmen, in attempting to storm a fortified monastery
-garrisoned by the hunters, were completely defeated. When the marines
-and sailors of the American naval expedition of 1871 assaulted “Fort
-McKee,” after it had been swept by the shells of the fleet, they were
-amazed at the stern courage of their dark-visaged enemies, who, with
-matchlock, spear, and sword, fought against the shells and
-breech-loaders to the last. The Americans speak admiringly of these
-brave fellows, so worthy of their lead and steel.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVII.
-
-RELIGION.
-
-
-A careful study of the common names applied to the mountains, rivers,
-valleys, caves, and other natural features of the soil and landscape of
-any country will lay bare many of the primitive or hidden beliefs of a
-people. No words are more ancient than the aboriginal names given to
-the natural features of a country amid which the childhood of a nation
-has been spent. With changing customs, civilization, or religion, these
-names still hold their place, reflecting the ancient, and often
-modified, or even vanished, faith.
-
-Even a casual examination of the mountain, river, and other local names
-of places in Corea will give one a tolerably clear outline of the
-beliefs once fully held by the ancient dwellers of this peninsula.
-Against the tenets and influences of Buddhism these doctrines have held
-their sway over the minds of the people and are still the most
-deeply-seated of their beliefs. The statements of ancient Chinese, and
-later of Japanese writers, of foreign castaways, and of the French
-missionaries all concur in showing us that Shamanism is the basis of
-the Corean’s, and especially the northern Corean’s, faith. In the first
-historic accounts of Fuyu, Kokorai, and the Sam-han, we find the
-worship of the spirits of heaven and earth, and of the invisible powers
-of the air, of nature, the guardian genii of hills and rivers, of the
-soil and grain, of caves, and even of the tiger. They worshipped
-especially the morning-star, and offered sacrifice of oxen to heaven.
-From such scanty notices of early Corea, especially of the northern
-parts, we may form some idea of the cultus of the people before
-Buddhism was introduced. From the reports of recent witnesses, Dutch,
-Japanese, and French, and the evidence of language, we incline to the
-belief that the fibres of Corean superstition and the actual religion
-of the people of to-day have not radically changed during twenty
-centuries, in spite of Buddhism. The worship of the spirits of heaven
-and earth, of mountains and rivers and caves, of the morning star, is
-still reflected in the names of these natural objects and still
-continues, in due form, as of old, along with the sacrifices of sheep
-and oxen.
-
-The god of the hills is, perhaps, the most popular deity. The people
-make it a point to go out and worship him at least once a year, making
-their pious trip a picnic, and, as of old, mixing their eating and
-drinking with their religion. Thus they combine piety and pleasure,
-very much as Americans unite sea-bathing and sanctification, croquet
-and camp-meeting holiness, by the ocean or in groves. On mountain tops,
-which pilgrims climb to make a visit for religious merit, may often be
-seen a pile of stones called siong-wang-tang, dedicated to the god of
-the mountain. The pilgrims carry a pebble from the foot of the mountain
-to the top. These pilgrims are among those held in reputation for
-piety.
-
-The other popular gods are very numerous. The mok-sin, the genii of the
-trees, the god of rain and of the harvest, are all propitiated, but the
-robust Corean, blessed with a good appetite, especially honors
-Cho-an-nim, the tutelary genius of the kitchen. To a Corean, the air is
-far from being empty. It is thickly inhabited with spirits and
-invisible creatures. Some of these figments of imagination, and the
-additional powers for good and evil, which the Corean attributes to
-animals of flesh and blood, are treated of in a former chapter on
-Mythical Zoölogy. Even the breezes are the breath of spirits, and “a
-devil’s wind” is a tempest raised by a demon intent on mischief. When a
-person falls dead suddenly, heart-disease is not thought of; he has
-been struck by a devil’s arrow. There are not wanting sorcerers who
-seek to obtain supernatural force by magic, which they use against
-their enemies or for hire, direct the spirits to wreak malignity
-against the enemy of him who fees them. These sorcerers are social
-outcasts, and reckoned the lowest of humanity.
-
-The unlucky days are three in each month, the figure of ill-omen being
-five. They are the fifth, fifteenth, and twenty-fifth. On all
-extraordinary occasions there are sacrifices, ceremonies, and prayers,
-accompanied with tumultuous celebration by the populace. The chief
-sacrifices are to heaven, earth, and to the King or Emperor of Heaven
-[12] (Shang Ti of the Chinese).
-
-The various superstitions concerning the direction of evil, the
-auspicious or the ill-omened lay of the land, the site for the building
-of a house, or the erection of a tomb, will be well understood by those
-who know the meaning of the Chinese term, Fung Shuy, or the Corean
-Pung-siu. This system of superstition has not only its millions of
-believers, but also its priests or professors, who live by their
-expertness and magnify their calling. The native vocabulary relating to
-these pretenders and all their works is very profuse. Among the common
-sights in Corea are little mounds raised on eligible, propitious
-places, in which a pole is planted, from which little bells or cymbals
-are hung. These jingled by the breeze are supposed to propitiate the
-good spirits and to ward off the noxious influences of the demons. The
-same idea is expressed in the festoons of wind-bells strung on their
-pagodas and temples. Pung-siu means literally “wind and water,” but in
-a broad sense is a rude cyclopædia of ideas relating to nature, and
-bears nearly the same relation to natural philosophy as astrology does
-to astronomy. Its ideas color every-day speech, besides having a rich
-terminology for the advanced student of its mysteries.
-
-Upon this system, and perhaps nearly coeval in origin with it, is the
-cult of ancestral worship which has existed in Chinese Asia from
-unrecorded time. Confucius found it in his day and made it the basis of
-his teachings, as it had already been of the religious and ancient
-documents of which he was the editor.
-
-The Corean cult of ancestor-worship seems to present no features which
-are radically distinct from the Chinese. Public celebrations are
-offered at stated times to ancestors, and in every well-to-do house
-will be found the gilt and black tablets inscribed with the names of
-the departed. Before these tablets the smoke of incense and sacrifice
-arises daily. In the temple also are rooms for the preservation of
-duplicates of the tablets in the private houses for greater safety.
-Like the iron atoms in his blood, the belief in ancestral piety and
-worship is wrought into the Corean’s soul. The Christian missionaries
-meet with no greater obstacle to their tenets and progress than this
-practice. It is the source, even among their most genuine converts, of
-more scandals, lapses, and renunciations, than are brought about by all
-other causes.
-
-Confucianism, or the Chinese system of ethics, is, briefly stated, an
-expansion of the root idea of filial piety. It is duty based on
-relation. Given the five great relations, all the manifold duties of
-life follow. The five relations are that of king and subject (prince
-and minister), of parent and child, of husband and wife, of the elder
-brother and the younger brother, and between friends. The cardinal
-virtues inculcated, or “The Five Constituents of Worth,” or constant
-virtues displayed, according to the teachings of Confucius, by the
-perfect man are: 1, Benevolence; 2, Uprightness of Mind; 3, Propriety
-of Demeanor; 4, Knowledge or Enlightenment; 5, Good Faith; or,
-Affection, Justice, Deference, Wisdom, Confidence.
-
-With the ethics of the Chinese came their philosophy, which is based on
-the dual system of the universe, and of which in Corean, yum-yang
-(positive and negative, active and passive, or male and female) is the
-expression. All things in heaven, earth, and man are the result of the
-interaction of the yum (male or active principle) and the yang (female
-or passive principle). Even the metals and minerals in the earth are
-believed to be produced through the yum-yang, and to grow like plants
-or animals.
-
-The Confucian ethics, suiting well a state of feudalism, and being ever
-acceptable to the possessors of authority, found congenial soil in the
-peninsula, as they had already taken root in Kokorai. They nourished
-the spirit of filial piety and personal loyalty, of feud and of
-blood-revenge, by forbidding a man to live under the same heaven with
-the murderer of his father or master. Notwithstanding the doctrines and
-loftier morals of Buddha, the Chinese ethics and ancestor-worship,
-especially in the northern part of the peninsula, underlaid the outward
-adherence of the people to the religion of the Enlightened One. As the
-average Christian, in spite of the spirit of Jesus and the Sermon on
-the Mount, is very apt to base his behavior and legal procedure on the
-code of Justinian, so the Corean, though he may believe in Fo (Buddha),
-practises after the rules of Kong-ja (Confucius).
-
-Official sacrifices are regulated by the government and are offered up
-publicly at the national festivals. Something of the regulated
-subordination in vogue among the Chinese prevails in Chō-sen when
-ancestors are honored. High officials may sacrifice to three ancestors,
-the gentry only to father and grandfather, and the common people to
-father only. In every province, capital, and city ranked as Tai-mu-kan,
-there are buildings containing statues of Confucius and his thirty-two
-disciples, which are maintained at the public expense.
-
-Confucianism overspreads the whole peninsula, but during the prevalence
-of Buddhism, from the fourth to the fourteenth century, was probably
-fully studied and practised only by the learned classes. Under the
-present dynasty, or from the fifteenth century, the religion of China
-has been both the official and popular cult of Chō-sen, long ago
-reaching the point of bigotry, intolerance, and persecution. Taoism
-seems to be little studied.
-
-In Corean mouths Buddha becomes Pul, and his “way” or doctrine Pul-to
-or Pul-chie. Introduced into Hiaksai in the fourth, and into Shinra in
-the sixth century, the new faith from India made thorough conquest of
-the southern half of the peninsula, but has only partially leavened the
-northern portion, where the grosser heathenism prevails. The palmy days
-of Corean Buddhism were during the era of Korai (from 905–1392, A.D.).
-The missionary work had been accomplished, the reigning dynasty were
-professors and defenders of the faith, and for these four centuries it
-was the religion of the state. The few surviving monuments of this era
-of splendor are the grand pagodas, monasteries, and temples that are
-found, especially in the southern provinces. The profusion of legal and
-ecclesiastical terms in the language which relate to lands set apart to
-provide revenues for the temples, and to their boundaries and rents,
-and the privileges of monks and priests, are more probably the relics
-of a past time, being only verbal shells and husks of what were once
-fruit and kernel.
-
-Until the fifteenth or sixteenth century the Japanese Buddhists looked
-to the “Treasure-land of the West,” as they termed Chō-sen, for
-spiritual and even pecuniary aid in their ecclesiastical enterprises.
-The special features of many renowned Japanese temples, libraries,
-collections of books, images, altar furniture, etc., are of Corean
-origin. This is especially noticeable in the old seats of the faith in
-Kiōto. Images in gold, gilt wood, bronze, and some fire-resisting
-material—perhaps platinum—are known and duly certified by genuine
-documents in temples in other cities. In a building at Kamakura is a
-copy of the Buddhist canon in a revolving library, said to have been
-obtained by Sanétomo from Corea in the thirteenth century. Among the
-amusing passages in the letters from Ashikaga in Kamakura, two hundred
-years later, is the hint given to the king of Corea that a contribution
-in aid of the repair of certain Japanese temples would be acceptable.
-
-The site and general surroundings of Corean Buddhist temples and
-monasteries greatly resemble those of China and Japan. They are often
-situated on hills, rising ground, and even high mountains, and walled
-round by lofty and venerable trees which seem to inspire awe and
-veneration in the worshipper, besides acting as extinguishers to sparks
-drifted from neighboring fires. An imposing gateway is usually built at
-some distance before the temple, with massive curved roof of tiles, and
-flanked by a wall of masonry which, in its upper part, consists of
-plaster tiled at the top. On the frieze of the portal, the name of the
-temple is inscribed in large Chinese characters. Sanskrit letters or
-monograms are occasionally seen. Under a roofed shed in front hangs the
-drum on which the bonze beats the hours for prayer, or of the clock. On
-the other side stands the coffer for the cash of the faithful, or a
-well for the manual ablutions of pious worshippers. Boards, on which
-are written the names of those who have contributed money to the
-temple, are suspended near by, and the thatched houses of the neophytes
-and bonzes are close at hand.
-
-The idols seen in a Corean temple are the same as those found
-throughout Buddhist Asia. The chief is that of Shaka Muni, or Buddha,
-the founder of the religion. In their sculpture and artistic treatment
-of this, the central figure of their pantheon, the image-carvers of the
-different countries do not greatly vary, adhering strictly to their
-traditions. The sage in Nirvana sits on his knees with the soles of his
-feet turned upward to the face. His hands touch, thumb to thumb, and
-finger to finger. The folds of the robes, the round bead-like caste
-mark of his forehead, the snails on his crown—which tradition says came
-out to shelter his head from the rays of the sun—and the lop or pierced
-ears, are substantially the same as those seen on idols from India,
-Siam, and Thibet. The eye is only slightly oblique, and the ear-lobes
-are made but slightly bulbous, to satisfy the tastes of worshippers in
-Chinese Asia. The throne, consisting of the fully opened calyx of a
-lotus flower—the symbol of eternity—with the petals around the base and
-seed-holes open, is the same.
-
-In the representation of local deities the artist asserts his
-patriotism and displays his own taste. In the various countries overrun
-by Buddhism, the indigenous heroes, sages, and gods have been renamed
-and accepted by the Buddhists as avatars or incarnations of Buddha to
-these countries before the advent of the teachers of “the true
-religion.” There are also saints and subordinate magnates in the
-Buddhist gallery of worshipped worthies, with whose effigies the artist
-does not scruple to take certain liberties. One can easily recognize an
-idol of Chinese, Corean, Siamese, or Japanese manufacture, though all
-bear the same name. The god of war in Chō-sen holds the double-bladed
-sword, with its tasselled cord, and wears the Chino-Corean armor and
-helmet. In the aureole round the head are three fiery revolving
-thunder-clouds. On the battle-flags captured by the American forces in
-1871 were painted or embroidered the protecting deities of those who
-fought under them. One of these, whether representing a Buddha, as
-seems most probable, or, as is possible, some local hero—perhaps Dan
-Kun or Ki Tsze—deified, rides on one of the curious little ponies,
-stunted and piebald, of Ham-kiung, with which, even in ancient times,
-one could ride under a fruit tree. Evidently it would have been safer
-for Absalom in Corea than in woody Palestine.
-
-The tutelary god on the stunted piebald horse is dressed in the
-peculiar winged head-dress and frilled collar which travellers on
-Ham-kiung soil noticed fifteen centuries ago. His armor is in scales,
-or wrought in the “wave-pattern” characteristic of Corean art. His
-shoes and saddle are of the Chinese type. He rides among the
-conventional clouds, which in the native technique, are different from
-those of either China or Japan. Evidently the Buddha and saints of
-Shaka Muni are portrayed by the native artist according to the strict
-canons of orthodoxy, while in dealing with indigenous deities, artistic
-licence and local color have free play. Most of the artists and
-sculptors of temple work are priests or monks. The principal idols are
-of brass, bronze, or gilded wood, the inferior sorts are of stone. The
-priests dress just like the Japanese bonzes. They attend the sick or
-dying, but have little to do with the burial of the dead, owing to the
-prevalence of the Pung-sui superstition, to which a Corean in life and
-in death is a bond-slave. This all-powerful disease of the intellect is
-the great corrupter of Corean Buddhism, many of its grossest ideas
-being grafted into, or flourishing as parasites on a once pure faith.
-
-In its development Corean Buddhism has frequently been a potent
-influence in national affairs, and the power of the bonzes has at times
-been so great as to practically control the court and nullify decrees
-of the king. With the Fuyu race—that is in Chō-sen and Nihon—the
-history of Buddhism has a decidedly military cast. During the first
-centuries of its sway in the peninsula the ablest intellects were fed
-and the ablest men were developed by it, so that it was the most potent
-factor in Corea’s civilization. Over and over again have the political
-and social revolutions been led by Buddhist priests, who have proved
-agitators and warriors as well as recluses and students. Possessing
-themselves of learning, they have made their presence at court a
-necessity. Here they have acted as scribes, law-givers, counsellors,
-and secretaries. Often they have been the conservers of patriotism. The
-shaven-pated priest has ever been a standard character in the glimpses
-of Corean history which we are allowed to catch.
-
-Not always has this influence been exerted for good, for once possessed
-of influence at court, they have not scrupled to use it for the purpose
-of aggrandizing their sects. Tradition tells of high nobles won from
-the pleasures of the palace to the seclusion of the cloisters, and even
-of Corean queens renouncing the bed of their royal spouses to accept
-the vows of the nuns. As in Japan, the frequent wars have developed the
-formation of a clerical militia, not only able to garrison and defend
-their fortified monasteries but even to change the fortune of war by
-the valor of their exploits and the power of their commissariat. There
-seems to be three distinct classes or grades of bonzes. The student
-monks devote themselves to learning, to study, and to the composition
-of books and the Buddhist ritual, the tai-sa being the abbot. The jung
-are mendicant and travelling bonzes, who solicit alms and contributions
-for the erection and maintenance of the temples and monastic
-establishments. The military bonzes (siung kun) act as garrisons, and
-make, keep in order, and are trained to use, weapons. Many of their
-monasteries are built on the summit or slopes of high mountains, to
-which access is to be gained only with the greatest difficulty up the
-most rocky and narrow passages. Into these fastnesses royal and noble
-professors of the faith have fled in time of persecution, or pious
-kings have retired after abdication. In time of war they serve to
-shelter refugees. It was in attacking one of these strongholds, on
-Kang-wa Island, in 1866, that the French marines were repulsed with
-such fearful loss.
-
-Many temples throughout the country have been erected by the old kings
-of Korai or by noblemen as memorials of events, or as proofs of their
-devotion. The building of one of these at great expense and the
-endowment of others from government funds, sometimes happens, even
-during the present dynasty, as was the case in 1865, when the regent
-was influenced by the bonzes. He rebuilt the temple in an unparalleled
-style of magnificence, and made immense presents to other temples out
-of the public treasury. It has been by means of these royal bounties,
-and the unremitting collection of small sums from the people, that the
-bonzes have amassed the vast property now held by them in
-ecclesiastical edifices, lands, and revenues. Some of these mountain
-monasteries are large and stately, with a wealth of old books,
-manuscripts, liturgical furniture, and perhaps even yet of money and
-land. The great monastery of Tong-to-sa, between Kiung-sang and Chulla,
-is noted for its library, in which will be found the entire sacred
-canon. The probabilities of American or European scholars finding rare
-treasures in the form of Sanskrit MSS. in this unsearched field are
-good, since the country is now opened to men of learning from
-Christendom. As a rule, the company of monks does not number over ten,
-twenty, or thirty, respectively, in the three grades of temples. Hamel
-tells us that they live well and are jolly fellows, though his opinion
-was somewhat biased, since he remarks that “as for religion, the
-Coreans have scarcely any.... They know nothing of preaching or
-mysteries, and, therefore, have no disputes about religion.” There were
-swarms of monastics who were not held in much respect. He describes the
-festivals as noisy, and the people’s behavior at them as boisterous.
-Incense sticks, or “joss” perfumery, seemed very much in vogue. He
-bears witness to their enjoyment in natural scenery, and the delightful
-situation of the famous temples.
-
-Even at the present day, Buddhist priests are made high officers of the
-government, governors of provinces, and military advisers. Like as in
-Japan, Buddhism inculcates great kindness to animals—the logical result
-of the doctrine of the transmigration of souls, and all who kill are
-under its ban. Though beef, pork, and mutton are greedily eaten by the
-people, the trade of the butcher is considered the most degraded of all
-occupations, and the butchers and leather dressers form a caste below
-the level of humanity, like the Etas in Japan. They are beneath the
-slaves. They must live in villages apart from the rest of the people,
-and are debarred from receiving water, food, fire, or shelter at the
-hands of the people. The creation of this class of Corean pariahs and
-the exclusion of these people from the pale of recognized society is
-the direct result of the teachings of the bonzes. Like the Chinese, and
-unlike the Japanese bonze, the devotees will often mutilate themselves
-in the frenzy of their orgies, in order to gain a character for
-holiness or in fulfilment of a vow. One of these bonzes, appointed by
-the magistrate to dispute publicly with a Christian, had lost four
-fingers for the sake of manufacturing a reputation. The ceremony of
-pul-tatta, or “receiving the fire,” is undergone upon taking the vows
-of the priesthood. A moxa or cone of burning tinder is laid upon the
-man’s arm, after the hair has been shaved off. The tiny mass is then
-lighted, and slowly burns into the flesh, leaving a painful sore, the
-scar of which remains as a mark of holiness. This serves as initiation,
-but if vows are broken, the torture is repeated on each occasion. In
-this manner, ecclesiastical discipline is maintained.
-
-In the nunneries are two kinds of female devotees, those who shave the
-head and those who keep their locks. The po-sal does not part with her
-hair, and her vows are less rigid. Hamel mentions two convents in
-Seoul, one of which was for maidens of gentle birth, and the other for
-women of a lower social grade.
-
-Excepting in its military phases, the type of Corean Buddhism
-approaches that of China rather than of Japan. In both these countries
-its history is that of decay, rather than of improvement, and it would
-be difficult indeed for Shaka Muni to recognize the faith which he
-founded, in the forms which it has assumed in Chō-sen and Nippon; nor
-did it ever succeed in making the thorough missionary conquest of the
-former, which it secured in the latter, country. The priority of the
-Confucian teachings and the thorough indoctrination of the people in
-them, the nearness of China, the close copying of Chinese manners,
-customs, and materialistic spirit, the frequency of Chinese conquests,
-and perhaps the presence of an indigenous religion even more strongly
-marked than that of Shintō in Japan, were probably the potent reasons
-why Buddhism never secured so strong a hold on the Corean intellect or
-affections as upon the Japanese. Nevertheless, since Buddhism has
-always been largely professed, and especially if Confucianism be
-considered simply an ethical system and not a religion proper, Corea
-may be classed among Buddhist countries. Among the surprises of history
-is the fact that, in 1876, the Shin, or Reformed sect of Japanese
-Buddhists, sent their missionaries to Corea to preach and convert.
-Among their conquests was a young native of ability, who came to Kiōto,
-in 1878, to study the reformed Buddhism, and who later returned to
-preach among his own people. In 1880 five more young Coreans entered
-the Shin theological school in Kiōto, and a new and splendid Shin
-temple, dedicated to Amida Buddha, has been built at Gensan. Evidently
-this vigorous sect is resolutely endeavoring, not only to recoup the
-losses which Christianity has made in its ranks in Japan, but is
-determined to forestall the exertions of Christian missionaries in the
-peninsula.
-
-
- So thoroughly saturated is the Corean mind with Chinese philosophy
- (p. 329) that when of necessity a national emblem or flag must be
- made, the symbol expressive of the male and female, or active and
- passive principles dominating the universe, was selected. Though
- Corea excels in the variety of her bunting and the wealth of
- symbolism upon her flags and streamers, yet the national flag, as
- now floated from her ships, custom-houses, and Legations in the
- United States and Europe, has an oblong field, in the centre of
- which are the two comma-shaped symbols, red and black, of the two
- universal principles. In each of the four corners of the flag is
- one of the Pak-wa or eight diagrams, consisting of straight and
- broken lines, which Fu-hi, the reputed founder of Chinese
- civilization, read upon the scroll on the back of the dragon-horse
- which rose out of the Yellow River, and on the basis of which he
- invented the Chinese system of writing. In these diagrams the
- learned men in Chinese Asia behold the elements of all metaphysical
- knowledge, and the clue to all the secrets of nature, and upon them
- a voluminous literature, containing divers systems of divination
- and metaphysical exegesis, has been written. The eight diagrams may
- be expanded to sixty-four combinations; or, are reducible to four,
- and these again to their two primaries. The continuous straight
- line, symbol of the yum principle, corresponds to light, heaven,
- masculinity, etc. The broken line symbolizes the yang principle,
- corresponding to darkness, earth, femininity, etc. These two lines
- signify the dual principle at rest, but when curved or
- comma-shaped, betoken the ceaseless process of revolution in which
- the various elements or properties of nature indicated by the
- diagrams mutually extinguish or give birth to one another, thus
- producing the phenomena of existence.
-
- Professor Terrien de Lacouperie sees in the Pak-wa a link between
- Babylonia and China, a very ancient system of phonetics or
- syllabary explaining the pronunciation of the old Babylonian
- characters and their Chinese derivatives. It is not likely that
- Morse derived the idea of his magneto-electric telegraphic alphabet
- from the Chinese diagrams. Possibly the Corean literati who
- suggested the design for a national flag intended to show, in the
- brightly colored and actively revolving germs of life set
- prominently in the centre, and contrasted with the inert and
- immovable straight lines in the background of the corners, the
- progressive Corea of the present and future as contrasted with
- Corea of the past and her hermit-like existence. Significantly, and
- with unconscious irony of the Virginia advertisers, the new Corean
- flag was first published to the Western world at large on the
- covers of cigarette packages. For centuries the energies of Coreans
- have been wasted in tobacco smoke, and the era of national decay is
- almost synchronous with the introduction of tobacco.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVIII.
-
-EDUCATION AND CULTURE.
-
-
-Corea received her culture from China, and gave it freely to Japan. If
-we may believe the doubtful story of Ki Tsze, then the Coreans have
-possessed letters and writing, or, what is the equivalent thereto, they
-have had “civilization,” during three thousand years. It is certain
-that since about the opening of the Christian era, the light of China’s
-philosophy has shone steadily among Corean scholars. Japanese early
-tradition—unworthy of credence in the matter of chronology—claims that
-literature was brought to Nippon as early as the period 157–30 B.C. The
-legend of Jingu bringing back books and manuscripts from Shinra is more
-probable; while the coming of Wani from Hiaksai, to teach the Chinese
-characters and expound the classics, is a historic fact, though the
-real date may be uncertain, or later than the accepted one, which is
-285 A.D. While the Kokorai people may have brought letters with them,
-as they migrated southward, in Hiaksai the Confucian analects were not
-studied until the fourth century, when official recognition of
-education was made by the appointment of Hanken as master of Chinese
-literature. This is said to have been the first importation of learning
-into the peninsula. It was so in the sense of being formally introduced
-from China into the country south of the Ta-tong River.
-
-As in most of the Asiatic countries, into which Chinese culture
-penetrated, popular education was for centuries a thing unthought of.
-Learning was the privilege of a few courtiers, who jealously guarded it
-from the vulgar, as an accomplishment for those about the royal person,
-or in the noble families. The classics and ethical doctrines seem in
-every case to have penetrated the nations surrounding the Middle
-Kingdom, and formed the basis of courtly and aristocratic education.
-
-Buddhism furnished the popular or democratic element, which brought
-learning to the lower strata of society. Neophytes were usually taken
-from the humbler classes, and thus culture was diffused. Even the
-idols, pictures, and scrolls, with the explanations and preaching in
-the vernacular, served to instruct the people and lift their thoughts
-out of the rut of every-day life—a result which is in itself true
-education. Wherever Buddhism penetrated, there was more or less
-literature published in the speech of the unlearned, and often the
-first books for the people were works on religion. China gave her
-language and ideographs; India sent Sanskrit and phonetic letters, from
-which syllabaries or alphabets were constructed, not only for
-vernacular writing and printing, but as aids to the easier apprehension
-and more popular understanding of the tenets of Confucius.
-
-The Corean syllabary seems to have been first invented by Chul-chong,
-one of the ministers at the court of the king of Shinra, in the seventh
-century. This was the Nido; like the kana of the Japanese, purely a
-collection of syllables and not a true alphabet. The Nido was made by
-giving to some of the commoner Chinese characters a phonetic value,
-though the idea of having a vernacular system of writing was most
-probably suggested by the Sanskrit letters, [13] some of which
-accurately represented Corean sounds. The true alphabet of the Coreans,
-called Unmun (common language), was invented by a Buddhist priest named
-Syel-chong, or Sye′-chong, who is regarded as one of the ablest
-scholars in the literary annals of Corea. The “Grammaire Coréenne”
-states that this took place under the dynasty of Wang, at Sunto,
-“toward the end of the eighth or ninth century of the Christian era.”
-This is a palpable mistake, as the dynasty of Wang was not established
-at Sunto until the tenth century. Mr. Aston, whose researches are based
-on the statements of Corean and Japanese writers, believes that the
-Unmun, or true Corean alphabet, “was invented not earlier than the
-first half of the fifteenth century.” Yet, in spite of their national
-system of writing, the influence of the finished philosophy and culture
-of China, both in form and spirit, has been so great that the
-hopelessness of producing a copy equal to the original became at once
-apparent to the Corean mind. Stimulating to the receptive intellect, it
-has been paralyzing to all originality. The culture of their native
-tongue has been neglected by Corean scholars. The consequence is, that
-after so many centuries of national life, Chō-sen possesses no
-literature worthy of the name. Only in rare cases are native books
-translated into either Chinese or Japanese.
-
-At present, Corean literary men possess a highly critical knowledge of
-Chinese. Most intelligent scholars read the classics with ease and
-fluency. Penmanship is an art as much prized and as widely practised as
-in Japan, and reading and writing constitute education. From the fifth
-to the seventeenth century the Corean youth of gentle blood went to
-Nanking to receive or complete their education. Since Peking has been
-the Chinese capital (under the Mongols from 1279, and under the Ming
-emperors from 1410) few young men have gone abroad to study until
-within the last year, when numbers of Corean lads have entered the
-naval, military, and literary schools of the imperial government.
-
-The practical democratic element pervading China was long absent from
-the nations which were her pupils and vassals. Of all these borrowers,
-Corea has most closely imitated her teacher. She fosters education by
-making scholastic ability, as tested in the literary examination, the
-basis of appointment to office. This “Civil Service Reform” was
-established in Chō-sen by the now ruling dynasty early in the fifteenth
-century. Education in Corea is public, and encouraged by the government
-only in this sense, that it is made the road to government employ and
-official promotion. By instituting literary examinations for the civil
-and military service, and nominally opening them to all competitors,
-and filling all vacancies with the successful candidates, there is
-created and maintained a constant stimulus to culture.
-
-Corean culture resembles that in mediæval Europe. It is
-extra-vernacular. It is in Latin—the Latin of Eastern Asia—the classic
-tongue of the oldest of living empires. This literary instrument of the
-learned is not the speech of the modern Chinamen, but the condensed,
-vivid, artificial diction of the books, which the Chinese cannot and
-never did speak, and which to be fully understood must be read by the
-eye of the mind. The accomplished scholar of Seoul who writes a
-polished essay in classic style packs his sentences with quotable
-felicities, choice phrases, references to history, literary prismatics,
-and kaleidoscopic patches picked out here and there from the whole
-range of ancient Chinese literature, and imbeds them into a
-mosaic—smooth, brilliant, chaste, and a perfect unity. This is the acme
-of style. So in the Corean mind, the wise saws and ancient instances,
-the gnomic wisdom, quotations and proverbs, political principles,
-precedents, historical examples, and dynasties, are all Chinese, and
-ancient Chinese. His heaven, his nature, his history, his philosophy,
-are those of Confucius, and like the Chinaman, he looks down with
-infinite contempt upon the barbarians of Christendom and their
-heterodox conceptions of the universe. Meanwhile his own language,
-literature, and history are neglected. The Corean child begins his
-education by learning by voice, eye, and pen, the simple and beautiful
-native alphabet of twenty-five letters, and the syllabary of one
-hundred and ninety or more combinations of letters. He learns to read,
-and practises writing in both the book or square style and the script
-form or running hand. The syllabary is not analyzed, but committed to
-memory from sight and sound. Spelling is nearly an unknown art, as the
-vowel changes and requirements of euphony—so numerous as to terrify the
-foreign student of Corean—are quickly acquired by ear and example in
-childhood. With this equipment in the rudiments, which is all that
-nearly all the girls, and most of the boys learn, the young reader can
-master the story-books, novels, primers of history, epistles, and the
-ordinary communications of business and friendship. If the lad is to
-follow agriculture, cattle-raising, trade, mining, or hunting, he
-usually learns no more, except the most familiar Chinese characters for
-numbers, points of the compass, figures on the clock-dial, weights,
-measures, coins, and the special technical terms necessary in his own
-business. Thus it often happens that a Corean workman, like a Chinese
-washerman, may be perfectly familiar with the characters even to the
-number of hundreds relating to his trade or occupation, and yet be
-utterly unable to read the simplest book, or construct one Chinese
-sentence. With the Chinese characters, one can write English as well as
-Corean or Japanese, but a thorough knowledge of the terms necessary to
-a sailor, a jeweller, a farmer, or a lumber merchant would not enable
-one to read Ivanhoe or Wordsworth.
-
-If the Corean lad aspires to government service, he begins early the
-study of the “true letters” or “great writing.” The first book put into
-his hands is, “The Thousand Character Classic.” This work is said to
-have been composed by a sage in one night—a labor which turned the hair
-and beard of the composer to whiteness. In it no character is repeated,
-and all the phrases are in two couplets, making four to a clause. The
-copies for children are printed from wooden blocks in very large type.
-At the right side of each character is its pronunciation in Corean, and
-on the left the equivalent Corean word. The sounds are first learned,
-then the meaning, and finally the syntax and the sense of the passages.
-Meanwhile the brush-pen is kept busily employed until the whole text of
-the author is thoroughly mastered by eye, ear, hand, and memory. In
-this manner, the other classics are committed. Education at first
-consists entirely of reading, writing, and memorizing. Etiquette is
-also rigidly attended to, but arithmetic, mathematics, and science
-receive but slight attention.
-
-After this severe exercise of memory and with the pen, the critical
-study of the text is begun. Passages are expounded by the teacher, and
-the commentaries are consulted. Essays on literary themes are written,
-and a style of elegant composition in prose and verse is striven for.
-For the literary examinations in the capital and provinces, the
-government appoints examiners, who give certificates to those who pass.
-Those who succeed at the provincial tests, are eligible only to
-subordinate grades of employ in the local magistracies. The aspirants
-to higher honors, armed with their diplomas, set out to Seoul to attend
-at the proper time the national examination. The journey of these lads,
-full of the exultation and lively spirit born of success, moving in
-hilarious revelry over the high roads, form one of the picturesque
-features of out-door life in Corea. The young men living in the same
-district or town go together. They go afoot, taking their servants with
-them. Pluming themselves upon the fact that they are summoned to the
-capital at the royal behest, they often make a roystering, noisy, and
-insolent gang, and conduct themselves very much as they please. The
-rustics and villagers gladly speed their parting. At the capital they
-scatter, putting up wherever accommodations in inns or at the houses of
-relatives permit.
-
-Though young bachelors form the majority at these examinations, the
-married and middle-aged are by no means absent. Gray-headed men try and
-may be rejected for the twentieth time, and grandfather, father, and
-son occasionally apply together.
-
-On the appointed day, the several thousand or more competitors assemble
-at the appointed place, with the provisions which are to stay the inner
-man during the ordeal. The hour preparatory to the assignment of themes
-is a noisy and smoky one, devoted to study, review, declamation, or to
-eating, drinking, chatting, or sleeping, according to the inclination
-or habit of each. The examination consists of essays, and oral and
-written answers to questions. During the silent part of his work, each
-candidate occupies a stall or cell. The copious, minute, and complex
-vocabulary of terms in the language relating to the work, success and
-failure, the contingencies, honest and dishonest shifts to secure
-success, and what may be called the student’s slang and folk-lore of
-the subject, make not only an interesting study to the foreigner, but
-show that these contests subtend a large angle of the Corean
-gentleman’s vision during much of his lifetime.
-
-Examination over, the disappointed ones wend their way home with what
-resignation or philosophy they may summon to their aid. The successful
-candidates, on horseback, with bands of musicians, visit their patrons,
-relatives, the examiners and high dignitaries, receiving
-congratulations and returning thanks. Then follows the inevitable
-initiation, which none can escape—corresponding to the French “baptism
-of the line,” the German “introduction to the fox,” the English
-“fagging,” and the American “hazing.”
-
-One of the parents or friends of the new graduate, an “alumnus,” or one
-who has taken a degree himself, one also of the same political party,
-acts as godfather, and presides at the ceremony. The graduate presents
-himself, makes his salute and takes his seat several feet behind the
-president of the party. With all gravity the latter proceeds, after
-rubbing up some ink on an ink-stone, to smear the face of the victim
-with the black mess, which while wet he powders thickly over with
-flour. Happy would the new graduate be could he escape with one layer
-of ink and flour, but the roughness of the joke lies in this, that
-every one present has his daub; and when the victim thinks the ordeal
-is over new persons drop in to ply the ink-brush and handful of flour.
-Meanwhile a carnival of fun is going on at the expense, moral and
-pecuniary, of the graduate. Eating, drinking, smoking, and jesting are
-the order of the day. It is impossible to avoid this trial of purse and
-patience, for unless the victim is generous and good-natured, other
-tricks and jokes as savage and cruel as those sometimes in vogue in
-American and British colleges follow. After this farce, but not until
-it has been undergone, is the title recognized by society.
-
-The three degrees, corresponding somewhat to our B.A., M.A., and Ph.D.,
-are cho-si, chin-sa, kiup-chiei. The diplomas are awarded in the king’s
-name, the second written on white paper, and the third on red adorned
-with garlands of flowers. The degrees are not necessarily successive.
-The highest, or the second, may be applied for without the first. The
-holder of the second degree may obtain office in the provinces, and
-after some years may become a district magistrate or guardian of one of
-the royal sepulchres. The highest degree qualifies one to fill
-honorable posts at the palace and in the capital, in one of the
-ministries, or to be the governor of a province, or of a great city.
-Properly, the place of a “doctor” is in Seoul. The usual term of office
-is two years.
-
-The examinations for civil titles and offices attract students of the
-highest social grade. The military studies are chiefly those of archery
-or horsemanship, the literary part of their exercises being slight. But
-one degree, the lowest, is awarded, and if the holder is of gentle
-blood, and has political influence, he may rise to lucrative office and
-honors, but if from the common people, he usually gets no more than his
-title, or remains a private or petty officer.
-
-The system of literary examinations which, when first established, and
-during two or three centuries, was vigorously maintained with
-impartiality, is said to be at present in a state of decay, bribery and
-official favor being the causes of its decline.
-
-The special schools of languages, mathematics, medicine, art, etc., are
-under the patronage of the government. The teachers and students in
-these branches of knowledge form a special class midway between the
-nobles and people, having some of the privileges of the former. They
-may also attend the examinations, gain diplomas, and fill offices.
-Their professions are usually hereditary, and they marry only among
-themselves. In most respects, these bodies of learned men resemble the
-old guilds of scholars in Yedo, and the privileged classes, like
-physicians, astronomers, botanists, etc., in Japan.
-
-There are eight distinct departments of special knowledge. The Corps of
-Interpreters include students and masters of the Chinese, Manchiu,
-Mongol, and Japanese languages. These attend the embassy to Peking,
-have posts on the frontier, or live near Fusan. The treaties recently
-made with the United States and European powers will necessitate the
-establishment of schools of foreign languages, as in Tōkiō and Peking.
-
-The School of Astronomy, geoscopy, and the choice of fortunate days for
-state occasions is for the special service of the king. Corea, like
-China, has not yet separated astrology from astronomy, but still keeps
-up official consultation with the heavenly bodies for luck’s sake. The
-School of Medicine trains physicians for the royal, and for the public,
-service. The School of Charts or documents has charge of the archives
-and the preparation of the official reports sent to Peking. In the
-School of Design, the maps, sketches, plans and graphic work required
-by the government are made, and the portraits of the king are painted.
-The School of Law is closely connected with the Ministry of Justice,
-and serves for the instruction of judges, and as a court of appeals.
-The School of Mathematics or Accounts assists the Treasury Department,
-audits accounts, appraises values, and its members are often charged
-with the task of overseeing public works. The School of Horology at
-Seoul keeps the standard time and looks after the water-clock. Beside
-these eight services, there is the band of palace musicians.
-
-It is evident from all the information gathered from sources within and
-without the hermit nation, that though there is culture of a certain
-sort among the upper classes, there is little popular education worthy
-of a name. The present condition of Chō-sen is that of Europe in the
-Middle Ages. The Confucian temples and halls of scholars, the memorial
-stones and walls inscribed with historical tablets and moral maxims,
-the lectures and discussions of literary coteries, and the poetry
-parties concentrate learning rather than diffuse it. The nobles and
-wealthy scholars, the few monasteries and the government offices
-possess libraries, but these are but dead Chinese to the common people.
-Nothing like the number of book stores, circulating libraries, private
-schools, or ordinary means of diffusing intelligence, common in China
-and Japan, exists in Corea. Science and the press, newspapers and
-hospitals, clocks and petroleum, and, more than all, churches and
-school-houses, have yet a mighty work to do in the Land of Morning
-Calm.
-
-
-
-Paganism and superstition, Confucianism and Buddhism, having taken root
-in Chō-sen, each with its educational influence, Christianity entered
-within the last century to plant an acorn within the narrow bottle of
-the Corean intellect. It is needless to say that the receptacle was
-shattered by the spreading of the oak. The Corean body-politic,
-confronted by this rooted and growing influence, must be transformed.
-How the seed was dropped, how the tiny stem grew, how the trunk
-received into its bosom the lightning bolts of persecution, how the
-boughs were riven, and how life yet remains, will now be narrated.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-III.
-
-MODERN AND RECENT HISTORY.
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIX.
-
-THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY—1784–1794.
-
-
-Christianity entered Corea through the gates of Rome and Peking. Though
-some writers have supposed that Christianity was introduced into the
-Corean peninsula by the Japanese, in 1592, yet it is nearly certain
-that this religion was popularly unknown until near the end of the
-eighteenth century. Then it entered from the west, and not from the
-east. It was not brought by foreigners, but grew up from chance seed
-wafted from the little garden of the church in Peking.
-
-The soil upon which the exotic germ first lighted was in the mind of a
-student well-named by his father, “Stonewall,” on account of his
-character in choosing a literary career, instead of the hereditary
-profession which his family wished him to adopt. During the winter of
-1777, Stonewall was invited to form one of a party of students who were
-to spend a season of literary dalliance in company with the famous
-Confucian professor, Kwem.
-
-The conference, held in a secluded temple, lasted ten days, during
-which time the critical study of the texts of Confucius and Mencius was
-indulged in with keen delight, and the profoundest problems that can
-interest man were earnestly discussed; but most fertilizing to their
-minds were some tracts on philosophy, mathematics, and religion just
-brought from Peking. These were translations of the writings, or
-original compositions in Chinese of the Jesuits in the imperial
-capital. Among these publications were some tracts on the Christian and
-Roman Catholic Religion, treating of the Existence of God, Divine
-Providence, the Immortality of the Soul, the Conduct of Life, the Seven
-Capital Sins, and the Seven Contrary Virtues. Surprised and delighted,
-they resolved to attain, if possible, to a full understanding of the
-new doctrines.
-
-They began at once to practise what they knew, and morning and evening
-they read and prayed. They set apart the 7th, 14th, 21st and 28th days
-of the month as periods of rest, fasting, and meditation. How long they
-continued this course of life is not known.
-
-Stonewall, well knowing that his ideas of this new religion were
-imperfect and confused, turned his thoughts longingly toward Peking,
-hoping to get more books or information through a living teacher. For
-several years all his attempts were fruitless; though study,
-discussion, and practice of the new life were continued. In 1782, he
-moved to Seoul to live, and in 1783, to his joy, his friend Senghuni,
-son of the third ambassador to Peking, proceeded thither through
-Shing-king (Liao Tung), with a message to the bishop, Alexander de
-Gorla, a Portuguese Franciscan.
-
-Senghuni himself became a docile pupil, and was, with the consent of
-his father, baptized. With the hope that he would become the first
-stone of the church in Chō-sen, he was named Peter. [14] He pledged
-himself to suffer all torments rather than abandon his faith, to have
-but one wife, to renounce worldly vanities, and finally to send his
-foreign friends tidings every year.
-
-Safely passing the sentinels at Ai-chiu, he reached Seoul. Stonewall,
-eagerly receiving his share, gave himself for a time up to fresh
-reading and meditation, and then began to preach. Some of his friends
-in the capital, both nobles and commoners, embraced the new doctrines
-with cheering promptness and were baptized.
-
-It is interesting to note the choice of baptismal names. As Stonewall
-had been the forerunner, he was named John the Baptist. Another called
-himself Francis Xavier, intending to make this saint his protector and
-patron. Other names of these primitive confessors are Ambrose, Paul,
-Louis, Thomas, Augustine, and later, among the women, Agatha, Marie,
-Madeleine, Barbe, etc. The adoption of these foreign names excited
-bitter feelings among the patriotic, and became a cause of intense
-hatred against the Christians, who were stigmatized as
-“foreigner-Coreans.”
-
-A counterblast soon followed. The first, and as they were destined to
-be the last and most bitter enemies were the literati, who saw at once
-that the new faith sapped at the base their national beliefs and their
-most cherished customs. In the contest of discussion which followed,
-Senghuni came off victor. The pagan champions retired from the conflict
-uttering memorable and prophetic words, with a final question, that
-became a by-word to Americans nearly a century later: “This [Christian]
-doctrine is magnificent, it is true, but it will bring sorrow to those
-who profess it. What are you going to do about it?”
-
-Among the converts were the lecturer Kwem and his brother, both of whom
-propagated the faith in their district of Yang-kun, thirty miles east
-of Seoul, now justly called “the cradle of the faith.” One of their
-converted students from the Nai-po returned home to labor in the new
-cause, and from first to last, in the history of Roman Christianity in
-Corea, Nai-po has ever been a nursery of fervent confessors and
-illustrious martyrs. A second convert of the Kwem brothers laid the
-foundations of the faith in Chulla. At the capital, a learned
-interpreter, on becoming a believer, multiplied with his own facile pen
-copies of the books brought from Peking; and it is believed translated
-from the Chinese the “Explanation of the Gospels of the Sabbaths and
-Feasts”—the first Christian book in the Corean language.
-
-Thus from small beginnings, but rapidly, were the Christian ideas
-spread, but soon the arm of the law and the power of the pen were
-invoked to crush out the exotic faith. The first victim, Thomas Kim,
-was tried on the charge of destroying his ancestral tablets, tortured,
-and sent into exile, in which he soon after died. The scholar now took
-up weapons, and in April, 1784, the king’s preceptor fulminated the
-first public document officially directed against Christianity. In it
-all parents and relatives were entreated to break off all relations
-with the Christians. The names of the leaders were published; and the
-example of Kim was cited. Forthwith began a violent pressure of
-entreaty and menace upon the believers to renounce their faith. Instead
-of peace, the sword was brought into the household. Then began an
-exhibition alike of glorious confession and shameful apostasy, but
-though even Stonewall lapsed, the work went on in Nai-po, and in 1787,
-[15] persecution slackened.
-
-Meanwhile, in order to cement more closely their bonds, the leaders
-formed a hierarchy after the model which Peter had seen in Peking, and
-to which their liturgical books so often referred. Francis Xavier was
-made bishop and others were chosen as priests. Separating to their
-various posts, they baptized, confessed, confirmed, and distributed the
-sacred elements in communion, all of which infused a new glow of faith
-among the converts. They robed themselves in rich Chinese silk, and
-erected platform confessionals. For ordinary faults confessed by the
-kneeling penitents alms were ordered, but for graver derelictions the
-priests administered one or two smart blows on the legs—a mild
-imitation of the national punishment, which so suggests Western methods
-of nursery discipline.
-
-In perfect good faith and harmony, this curious hierarchy, so strange
-and even comical to a believer in the so-called “apostolical
-succession”—continued for two years; but in 1789, certain passages in
-their books suggested doubts as to the validity of their ministry.
-After earnest thought, and even at the risk of public ridicule, and of
-troubling the consciences of the faithful, they resigned their offices
-and took their places among the laity. A letter of inquiry was written,
-and sent in 1790 by the convert Paul to Peking. Surprised and overjoyed
-at the news from Corea, the fathers baptized and confirmed Paul,
-explained to him the Roman dogma of validity of ordination, and gave
-him a letter written on silk, to be concealed in his clothes, directed
-to Peter and Francis Xavier. His godfather Pansi, being an artist,
-painted Paul’s portrait in oil, which was sent on to Paris.
-
-The Christians at Seoul graciously submitted to the Episcopal rebuke
-and explanation, giving them the right only to baptize, yet they
-yearned to receive the sacraments. Inflamed by the accounts of Paul,
-who pictured before them the ritual splendors, in the Peking cathedral,
-of altars, lights, vestments, solemn masses, music, processions, and
-all that enchants the eye and fires the imagination in the Roman form
-of Christianity, they indited another letter to the bishop, beseeching
-that an ordained priest should be sent them. This letter, carried by
-Paul, who left with the special embassy sent to congratulate the
-renowned emperor Kien-lung, which left Seoul September 17, 1790,
-contained a whole catechism of vexed questions of discipline and faith
-which had begun to disturb the little church.
-
-While in Peking, Paul’s companion was baptized, receiving the name of
-John the Baptist. The fathers gave them a chalice, a missal, a
-consecrated stone, some altar ornaments, and everything necessary for
-the celebration of the eucharist, with a recipe for making wine out of
-grapes, in order that all might be ready on the arrival of a priest
-among them. Paul and John the Baptist, after the return journey of a
-thousand miles through Shing-king, arrived safely in Seoul. All were
-filled with joy at the idea of having a priest sent them, but the
-episcopal decision against the worship of ancestors proved to many a
-stone of stumbling and a cause of apostasy. Hitherto, in simple
-ignorance and good faith, they had honored their ancestral shades and
-burnt incense at their shrines. Henceforth, all participation in such
-rites was impossible. After the authoritative declaration from Peking,
-that the worship of God and the worship of ancestors were contrary and
-impossible, no Corean could be a Christian while he burned incense
-before the tablets.
-
-This tenet of the bishop was in the eyes of the Corean public a blow at
-the framework of society, the base of the family, and the foundation of
-the state. From this time forward, many of the feeble adherents began
-to fall away. In the conflict of filial and religious duty, many a soul
-was torn with remorse. In frequent instances the earnest believer who,
-for conscience sake, despoiled the family oratory and piling the
-ancestral tablets in his garden set them on fire, saw his aged parents
-sink with sorrow to the grave. For this crime Paul and Jacques Kim were
-put upon public trial, at which, for the first time, a clear and
-systematic presentation of Christian doctrine and the Roman cultus was
-elicited. The case, after condemnation of the prisoners, was submitted
-to the king, who was prevailed upon by the premier to approve the
-finding of the local tribunal. On December 8, 1791, the two Christians,
-after publicly refusing to recant, and reading aloud the sentence
-inscribed upon the board to be nailed over their pillory, were
-decapitated, while invoking the names of Jesus and Mary. Their ages
-were thirty-three and forty-one.
-
-Thus was shed the first blood for Corean Christianity—the first drops
-of the shower to come, and the seed of a mighty church. The headless
-trunks, frozen to a stony rigidity which kept even the blood fresh and
-red, lay unburied on the ground for nine days, until devout men carried
-them to burial. A number of handkerchiefs dipped in their blood and
-preserved kept long alive the memory of these first martyrs of bloody
-persecution. The Nai-po now became a hunting-ground for the minions of
-the magistrates, who sought out all who professed themselves Christians
-and threw them in prison. There the tortures, peculiarly Corean, were
-set to work to cause apostasy. The victims were beaten with rods and
-paddles on the flesh and shin-bones, or whipped till the flesh hung in
-bloody rags. In many cases their bones were disjointed until the limbs
-dangled limp and useless. One man, Francis Xavier, after prolonged
-agonies was exiled to Quelpart, and on being removed to another place,
-died on the way. Peter, 61 years old, after wearying his torturers with
-his endurance, was tied round with a cord, laid on the icy ground at
-night, while pails of water were poured over him, which freezing as it
-fell, covered his body with a shroud of ice. In this Dantean tomb, the
-old martyr, calling on the name of Jesus, was left to welcome death,
-which came to him at the second cock-crow on the morning of January 29,
-1793.
-
-In the ten years following the baptism of Peter at Peking, in spite of
-persecution and apostasy, it is estimated that there were four thousand
-Christians in Corea. [16]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XL.
-
-PERSECUTION AND MARTYRDOM—1801–1834.
-
-
-The first attempt of a foreign missionary to enter the hermit kingdom
-from the west was made in February, 1791. Jean dos Remedios, a
-Portuguese priest from Macao, offered himself, was accepted, and left
-Peking for the Border Gate with some Chinese guides. After a twenty
-days’ journey in midwinter, he arrived on the frontier, and there
-awaited the precarious chances of recognition, according to certain
-signs agreed upon. For ten days he scanned the faces of the noisy
-crowd, hoping every moment to light upon friends, but in vain. The
-Christians, kept at home by the violence of the persecution, feared to
-venture to the border. The fair closed, the embassy crossed the Yalu
-River, while the foreigner and his Chinese guides returned to Peking.
-There the disappointed priest soon after died.
-
-About the same time, the Bishop of Peking addressed a letter to the
-Pope detailing the origin, development, and condition of the new-born
-church in Corea.
-
-Hearing no word from the Corean Christians during the next two years,
-it was determined to send succor. For this perilous mission, a young
-Chinese priest named Jacques Tsiu, twenty-four years old, of good
-bodily strength and pronounced piety, whose visage closely resembled a
-Corean’s, was selected. Fortified with extraordinary ecclesiastical
-powers, he left Peking in February, 1794, and in twenty days arrived on
-the neutral ground. There he met the Christians, who urged him to wait
-nearly a year, on account of the vigilance of the sentinels. This he
-did among his fellow Christians in Shing-king, and on the night of
-December 23, 1794, crossed the Yalu, reached Seoul in safety, and at
-once began his labors. All went on well till June, when, through a
-treacherous visitor, the official spies were put upon his track. In
-spite of his removal to another place, three Christians—two who had
-guided him to Seoul, and one an interpreter, who in sublime
-self-sacrifice tried to pass himself off as the Chinaman—were seized
-and tortured. With arms and legs dislocated, and knees crushed, they
-refused to betray their brother in the faith, and were put to death in
-prison, June 18. The three headless and battered trunks were flung in
-the Han River, which for the first, but not for the last time was
-streaked with martyr blood.
-
-Meanwhile, the Chinese priest was at first hidden for many days under a
-wood-pile by a Christian lady, who, having gained over her
-mother-in-law, sheltered him in her house, where, protected by the law
-which forbids a noble’s dwelling to be invaded, he remained three
-years. In September, 1796, he wrote a letter in Latin to the Bishop of
-Peking, and the native Christians writing in Chinese, the copies on
-silk were sewed into the garments of two believers, who, having bought
-positions as servants in the embassy, arrived in Peking, January 28,
-1797. Among other things Jacques proposed that the King of Portugal
-should send an embassy to the King of Chō-sen to obtain a treaty of
-friendship, and allow the residence of physicians, astronomers, and
-scientific men in Corea.
-
-Though no Portuguese envoy was sent out to treat with the court of
-Seoul, [17] a foreign vessel appeared in the autumn of this same year,
-off the eastern coast, floating the British flag. It was the sloop of
-war Providence, carrying sixteen guns, commanded by Captain W. R.
-Broughton, who cast anchor in Yung-hing Bay, October 4th, and touched
-at Fusan. [18] One of the natives who visited the ship was suspected by
-the government and arrested; though the English visitors were ignorant
-of the existence of Christians in Corea, and the local magistrates were
-equally uninformed as to the difference in religion and nationality
-between Britons and Portuguese.
-
-The four political parties into which the Corean nobility was at this
-time divided, as described in Chapter XXV., were ranged into two
-general groups, the Si-pai and the Piek-pai, “the government” and “the
-opposition.” The Si-pai were devoted to the king, and ready to second
-his views, the Piek-pai were more attached to their special views. The
-king, Cheng-chong, who had ruled since 1776, was opposed to persecution
-of the Christians, and had done much to restrain the bitterness of
-partisans. The Si-pai included the Nam-in, or “Southern” wing, in which
-were the Christian nobles, while all their enemies belonged to the
-Piek-pai. So long as the king lived, the sword of persecution slept in
-its scabbard, but in 1800 [19] the king died, and was succeeded by his
-son, Sunchō, a boy still under the care of his grandmother. This lady
-at once assumed the conduct of national affairs, [20] and no sooner
-were the five months of public mourning decently over, than the queen
-regent dismissed the ministers then in office, and installed three
-others of the No-ron group, all of whom were bitter enemies of the
-Christians. A decree of general persecution was issued a few days
-after, in the name of the king. Two converts of noble rank were at once
-arrested, and during 1801, the police were busy in haling to prison
-believers of every rank, age, and sex. Alexander Wang, who had written
-a book in his native language on “The Principal Articles of the
-Christian Religion,” and had begun another on systematic theology, was
-arrested. From the reading of these works, the magistrates imagined the
-essence of Christianity was in hatred of one’s parents and the king,
-and the destruction of the human race. [21] The Church Calendar was
-also seized.
-
-The Chinese priest was outlawed by the government, in a public
-proclamation. On reading this, the brave man left the house of the
-noble lady in which he had been sheltered, and refusing to endanger
-longer the lives of his friends, voluntarily surrendered himself, and
-received the death-stroke, May 31, 1801, at the age of thirty-two. His
-hostess, Colombe, thrown in prison herself, while awaiting death wrote
-out his life and works on the silk skirt of her dress. At her execution
-the noble lady begged that she might not be stripped of her clothes, as
-were other malefactors, but die in her robes. Her request was granted,
-and with the grace of the English Lady Jane Grey, she laid her head on
-the block. Four other women, formerly attendants in the palace, and an
-artist, who for painting Christian subjects was condemned, were
-beheaded by the official butchers, who made the “Little Western Gate”
-of Seoul—where a Christian church may yet be built—a Golgotha. The
-policy of the government was shown in making away with the Christians
-of rank and education, who might be able to direct affairs in the
-absence of the foreign priests, and in letting the poor and humble go
-free.
-
-From a letter written on silk in sympathetic ink to the Bishop of
-Peking by Alexander Wang, and, with the aid of treachery, deciphered by
-the magistrates, they suspected a general conspiracy of the Christians;
-for in his letter this Corean proposed an appeal to the Christian
-nations of Europe to send sixty or seventy thousand soldiers to conquer
-Corea! [22] The bearer of this letter was immediately beheaded, and his
-body cut into six pieces; while the visitor to Captain Broughton’s ship
-in 1799, for having said that “one such ship as that could easily
-destroy one hundred Corean vessels of war,” was put to the torture and
-condemned. Alexander Wang, who had witnessed a good confession, before
-the king, a year before, and bore on his wrist the cord of crimson silk
-showing that he had touched the royal person, was likewise decapitated.
-
-It now devolved upon the king of Chō-sen to explain to his suzerain the
-execution of a Chinese subject. In a letter full of Confucian
-orthodoxy, he declares that Chō-sen from the time of Ki Tsze, had
-admitted no other dogmas than those taught by the sages of China—“all
-other doctrine is strange to the Little Kingdom.” He describes the
-Christians as “the monstrous, barbarous, and infamous” “sect of
-brigands” “who live like brutes and birds of the vilest sort,” and who
-in their plot, “have interlaced themselves as a serpent and knotted
-themselves together like a cord.” The plan to conquer “the Little
-Kingdom at the corner of the earth” by myriads of men and vessels from
-Europe is detailed, with an apology for the execution of Jacques, not
-as a Chinese subject, but as chief conspirator. Dallet suggests that,
-in answer to this letter, the Dragon Monarch read the king a tart
-lecture, and hinted that a rich stream of silver would soothe his
-ruffled scales. “China had not been China had she lost so fair an
-occasion to fleece her cowering vassal.”
-
-A fresh edict, made up of the usual fixed ammunition of Corean
-rhetoric, was fulminated against “the evil sect,” January 25, 1802. The
-result was to advertise the outlawed faith in every corner of the
-realm. Nevertheless, the condition of the Christians scattered in the
-mountains and northern forests, or suffering poverty, hunger, and cold
-at home, was deplorable, under the stress of political as well as
-religious hatred.
-
-The first exchange of Muscovite and Corean courtesies took place in
-1808, when several of the commissioners from Seoul were in Peking. [23]
-Presents were mutually given, which in both cases were products of the
-then widely separated countries, which were destined within fifty years
-to be next-door neighbors.
-
-Out of the modern catacombs of Roman Christianity, the Corean converts
-addressed two letters, dated December 9 and 18, 1811, to the Pope—“the
-Very High, Very Great Father, Chief of the whole Church”—in which they
-invited help, not only of a spiritual nature, but aid in ships and
-envoys to treat with their king. They were willing even to leave their
-native land and colonize the islands in the sea, for the sake of
-worship and conscience. Signed with fictitious names, copied on silk,
-and sewn in the clothing of the messenger, they reached Peking and
-Rome, but the bishop of neither city could afford succor. His Holiness
-was then a prisoner at Fontainebleau, and the Roman propaganda was
-nearly at a standstill. With a goodly supply of medals and crosses, the
-messenger returned, and the church in Corea enjoyed peace, and new
-converts were made until 1815, when a non-political persecution broke
-out for a while in Kang-wen and Kiung-sang.
-
-In 1817, the king and court were terrified by the appearance off the
-west coast of the British [24] vessels Alceste and Lyra. They suspected
-that the good captain and jolly surgeon, who have given us such
-fascinating narratives of their cruise, were in active connection with
-“the evil sect;” but beyond some surveys, purchases of beef, and
-interviews with local magistrates, the foreigners departed without
-further designs against the throne.
-
-In 1823 several of the Christians, encouraged by hopes held out by the
-Bishop of Peking, went to the Border Gate to meet a foreign priest, but
-to their dismay found none. In 1826, [25] they were troubled by a
-report that the shō-gun of Japan had requested their king to return six
-Japanese adherents of the interdicted “Jesus sect,” who had fled the
-empire in a boat. Shortly after, in Chulla, through a quarrel
-instigated by a drunken potter, a convert, which led to information
-given in spite, a severe persecution broke out, lasting three months.
-
-The year 1832 was noted for its rainfall and inundations. To propitiate
-Heaven’s favor the king recalled many exiles, among whom were
-Christians. In this year also the British ship, Lord Amherst, was sent
-out by the East India Company on a voyage of commercial exploration,
-and to open, if possible, new markets for the fabrics of England and
-India. On board was a Prussian gentleman, the Rev. Charles Gutzlaff,
-under the patronage of the Netherlands Missionary Society, though
-travelling at his own cost. Reaching the coast of Chulla, July 17th, he
-remained one month. Being a good Chinese scholar, and well equipped
-with medical knowledge, he landed on several of the islands and on the
-mainland, he distributed presents of books, buttons, and medicines,
-planted potatoes and taught their cultivation. Through an officer he
-sent the king presents of cut glass, calicoes, and woollen goods, with
-a copy of the Bible and some Protestant Christian tracts. These, after
-some days of negotiation, were refused. A few of the more intelligent
-natives risked their heads, and accepted various gifts, among which
-were Chinese translations of European works on geography and
-mathematics. Mr. Gutzlaff could discover no trace of Christianity [26]
-or the converts, though he made diligent inquiry. The lying magistrates
-denied all knowledge of even the existence of the Christian faith.
-Deeply impressed with their poverty, dirt, love of drink, and
-degradation, the Protestant, after being nearly a month among the
-Coreans, left their shores, fully impressed with their need of soap and
-bibles.
-
-The year 1834 closed the first half century of Corean Christianity.
-
-
-
-In this chapter, the moral weakness of Roman Catholic methods of
-evangelization in Corea, and elsewhere in Asia, has been revealed. It
-must be remembered that the Corean converts were taught to believe not
-only in the ecclesiastical supremacy of the Pope, but also in the
-righteousness of his claim to temporal power as the Vicar of Heaven.
-Untaught in the Scriptures of the New Testament, and doubtless ignorant
-of the words of Jesus—“My kingdom is not of this world; if my kingdom
-were of this world, then would my servants fight”—the Coreans suspected
-no blasphemy in the papal claim. Seeing the Pope’s political power
-upheld by the powerful European nations then under Bourbon rule, the
-Corean Christians, following the ethics of their teachers, played the
-part of traitors to their country; they not only deceived the
-magistrates, and violated their country’s laws, but, as the letter of
-Alexander Wang shows, actually invited armed invasion. Hence from the
-first Christianity was associated in patriotic minds with treason and
-robbery. The French missionary as the forerunner of the French soldier
-and invader, the priest as the pilot of the gunboat, were not mere
-imaginings, but, as the subsequent narrative shows, strict logic and
-actual fact. It is the narrative of friends, not foes, that, later,
-shows us a bishop acting as spy and pilot on a French man-of-war, a
-priest as guide to a buccaneering raid; and, after the story of papal
-Christianity, the inevitable “French expedition.”
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLI.
-
-THE ENTRANCE OF THE FRENCH MISSIONARIES—1835–1845.
-
-
-The French Revolution, and the wars of Napoleon following, which
-distracted all Europe for a period of over twenty years, completely
-disorganized the missionary operations of the Holy See and French Roman
-Catholic Church. On the restoration of the Bourbons, and the
-strengthening of the papal throne by foreign bayonets, the stream of
-religious activity flowed anew into its old channels, and with an added
-volume. Missionary zeal in the church was kindled afresh, and the
-prayers of the Christians in the far East were heard at the court of
-St. Peter. It was resolved to found a mission in Corea, directly
-attached to the Holy See, but to be under the care of the Society of
-Foreign Missions of Paris.
-
-Barthelemy Brugiere, then a missionary at Bangkok, Siam, offered as a
-volunteer, and in 1832 was nominated apostolic Vicar of Corea. He
-reached Shing-king, but was seized with sudden illness, and died
-October 20, 1835. Pierre Philibert Maubant, his host, stepped into the
-place of his fallen comrade, and with five Corean Christians left
-Fung-Wang Chang, crossed the neutral strip, and the Yalu River on the
-ice. Dodging the sentinels at Ai-chiu, he entered Corea as a thread
-enters the needle’s eye. They crawled through a water-drain in the
-wall, and despite the barking of a dog, got into the city. Resting
-several hours, they slid out again through another drain, reaching the
-country and friends beyond. Two days’ journey on horses brought them to
-Seoul, from which Maubant, the first Frenchman who had penetrated the
-hermit kingdom, or who, in Corean phrase, had committed pem-kiong
-(violation of the frontier), wrote to his friends in Paris.
-
-Maubant’s first duty was to order back a Chinese priest who refused to
-learn Corean, or to obey any but the Bishop of Peking. With the
-couriers who escorted the refractory Chinaman to the frontier, went
-three young men to study at the college in Macao. At the Border Gate
-they met Jacques Honore Chastan a young French priest, who, on the dark
-night of January 17, 1837, passed the custom-house of Ai-chiu disguised
-as a Corean widower in mourning, and joined Maubant in Seoul. Nearly
-one year later, December 19, 1838, Laurent Marie-Joseph Imbert, a
-bishop, ran the gauntlet of wilderness, ice, and guards, and took up
-his residence under the shadow of the king’s palace.
-
-Visits, masses, and preaching now went on vigorously. The Christians at
-the end of 1837 numbered 6,000, and in 1838, 9,000. Up to January 16,
-1839, the old regent being averse from persecution, the work went on
-unharmed, but on that day, the court party in favor of extirpating
-Christianity, having gained the upper hand, hounded on the police in
-the king’s name. The visitation of every group of five houses in all
-the eight provinces was ordered. Hundreds of suspects were at once
-seized and brought to trial. In June, before the death of the old
-regent, the uncle of the young king (Hen-chong, 1834–1849) and the
-implacable enemy of the Christians obtained control of power, and at an
-extraordinary council of the ministers, held July 7, 1839, a new decree
-was issued in the regent’s name. The persecution now broke out with
-redoubled violence. In a few days, three native lay leaders were
-beheaded, and a score of women and children suffered death. To stay the
-further shedding of blood, Bishop Imbert, who had escaped to an island,
-came out of his hiding-place, and on August 10th delivered himself up
-and ordered Maubant and Chastan to do the same. The three willing
-martyrs met in chains before the same tribunal. During three days they
-were put to trial and torture, thence transferred to the Kum-pu, or
-prison for state criminals of rank. They were again tried, beaten with
-sixty-six strokes of the paddle, and condemned to die under the sword,
-September 21, 1839.
-
-On that day, the inspector and one hundred soldiers took their place on
-the execution ground, not near the city gate, but close to the river. A
-pole fixed in the earth bore a flag inscribed with the death-sentence.
-Pinioned and stripped of their upper clothing, a stick was passed
-between the elbows and backs of the prisoners, and an arrow, feather
-end up, run through the flesh of each ear. Their faces were first wet
-with water and then powdered with chalk. Three executioners then
-marched round, brandishing their staves, while the crowd raised a yell
-of insult and mockery. A dozen soldiers, sword in hand, now began
-prancing around the kneeling victims, engaging in mock combat, but
-delivering their blows at the victims. Only when weary of their sport,
-the human butchers relieved the agony of their victims by the
-decapitating blow. The heads were presented to the inspector on a
-board, and the corpses, after public exposure during three days, were
-buried in the sand by the river banks.
-
-On the day after the burial, three Christians attempted to remove the
-bodies, but the government spies lying in wait caught them. As of old
-in Rome, when the primitive Christians crawled stealthily at night
-through the arches of the Coliseum, into the arena, and groping about
-in the sand for the bones of Ignatius left after the lion’s feast, bore
-them to honored sepulture, so these Corean Christians with equal faith
-and valor again approached the bloody sand by the Han River. Twenty
-days after the first attempt, a party of seven or eight men succeeded
-in bearing away the bodies of the martyrs to Noku, about eight miles
-north of Seoul.
-
-Thus died the first European missionaries who entered “the forbidden
-land.” As in the old fable of the lion’s den, the footprints all
-pointed one way.
-
-With the foreign leaders there perished no less than one hundred and
-thirty of their converts, seventy by decapitation, and the others by
-strangulation, torture, or the result of their wounds. [27] In
-November, 1839, a new edict in the vernacular was posted up all over
-the country. Six bitter years passed before the Christians again had a
-foreign pastor.
-
-Great events now began to ripen in China. The opium war of 1840–42
-broke out. The “Western Barbarians” held the chief cities of the China
-coast from Hong-Kong to Shanghae, and the military weakness of the
-colossal empire was demonstrated. The French, though having nothing to
-do with this first quarrel of China with Europe, were on the alert for
-any advantage to be gained in the far East. In 1841, Louis Philippe
-sent out the war vessels Erigone and Favorite, to occupy if possible
-some island to the south of Japan, which would be valuable for
-strategic and commercial purposes, and to make treaties of trade and
-friendship with Japan, and especially with Corea.
-
-The Erigone cast anchor at Macao, September 7, 1841, and Captain Cecile
-awaited events. Moving north in February, 1842, with Andrew Kim the
-Corean student, as interpreter, on the Erigone, and Thomas Tsoi, his
-companion, on the Favorite, the French captains, hearing of the sudden
-conclusion of the war, gave up the idea of opening Corea.
-
-The two Coreans, with two French priests, engaged a Chinese junk, and
-landed on the coast of Shing-king, October 25, 1842. On December 23d,
-Kim set out for the Border Gate, and within two leagues of it met the
-outward-bound embassy. Each of the three hundred persons had his
-passport at his girdle. Stopping to see them file past, he saluted one
-who was a Christian, and had in his belt letters from Maubant and
-Chastan, written before their execution, and from the natives. Unable
-to go back with Andrew to Ai-chiu, as every name on the embassy’s list
-was registered, the man went on to Peking. Andrew Kim, by mingling
-among the drovers and huge cattle returning from the fair, ran the
-blockade at Ai-chiu; but on the next day, having walked all night, he
-applied for lodgings at an inn for shelter, and was recognized as a
-stranger. Fearful of being arrested as a border-ruffian from the
-neutral strip, he took to his heels, recrossed the Yalu, and after
-resting at Fung-Wang Chang, rejoined his friends at Mukden.
-
-On December 31, 1843, Jean Joseph Ferreol was consecrated Bishop of
-Corea, and resolved to cross the frontier, not at Ai-chiu, but at
-Hun-chun, on the Tumen. Andrew Kim exploring the way, after a month’s
-journey through ice and snow, mountains and forests, reached Hun-chun,
-February 25, 1845. The native Christians, having been duly instructed,
-had arrived at Kion-wen a month before. For recognition, Andrew was to
-hold a blue kerchief in his hand and have a little red bag of tea at
-his girdle. At the fair which opened at Kion-wen on the 28th, the
-Christians met. The result of their conference was that Ai-chiu was
-declared safer even than Kion-wen.
-
-Since 1839, the government had tripled its vigilance, and doubled the
-guards on the frontier. No one could pass the gate at Ai-chiu who had
-not a passport stamped with the chief inspector’s seal, bestowed only
-after the closest scrutiny and persistent cross-questioning. On it was
-written the name and place of birth and residence of the holder, and
-after return from China or the fair it must be given up. The result of
-these stringent regulations was to drive the missionaries to find a
-path seaward. In December, 1844, of seven converts from Seoul,
-attempting to get to the Border Gate, to meet Ferreol, only three were
-able to pass Ai-chiu. The other four, who had the wig, hair pins, and
-mourning costume of a widower for Ferreol, were unable to satisfy their
-questioners, and so returned. At the Border Gate, Ferreol, after seeing
-the caravan pass, ordered Andrew Kim to enter alone, while he returned
-and sailed soon after to Macao. Andrew, with the aid of his three
-friends, who met him at a lonely spot at some distance from Ai-chiu,
-reached Seoul, January 8, 1845.
-
-As soon as resources and opportunity would permit, Andrew collected a
-crew of eleven fellow-believers, only four of whom had ever seen the
-sea, and none of whom knew their destination, and equipped with but a
-single compass, put to sea in a rude fishing-boat, April 24, 1845.
-Despite the storms and baffling winds, this uncouth mass of firewood,
-which the Chinese sailors jeeringly dubbed “the Shoe,” reached Shanghae
-in June. Andrew Kim, never before at sea except as a passenger, had
-brought this uncalked, deckless and unseaworthy scow across the entire
-breadth of the Yellow Sea.
-
-After the ordeal of the mandarin’s questions, [28] and visits and
-kindly hospitality from the British naval officers and consul, he
-reached his French friends at the Roman Catholic mission.
-
-The beacon fires were now blazing on Quelpart, and from headland to
-headland on the mainland, telegraphing the news of “foreign ships” to
-Seoul. From June 25th until the end of July, Captain Edward Belcher,
-[29] of the British ship Samarang, was engaged in surveying off
-Quelpart and the south coast. Even after the ship left for Nagasaki,
-the magistrates of the coast were ordered to maintain strict watch for
-all seafarers from strange countries. This made the return of Andrew
-Kim doubly dangerous.
-
-Bishop Ferreol came up from Macao to Shanghae, and on Sunday, August
-17th, Andrew Kim was ordained to the priesthood. On September 1st, with
-Ferreol and Marie Antoine Nicholas Daveluy, another French priest, he
-set sail in “the Shoe,” now christened the “Raphael,” and turned toward
-the land of martyrdom. It was like Greatheart approaching Giant
-Despair’s Castle.
-
-The voyage was safely, though tediously, made past Quelpart, and
-through the labyrinth of islands off Chulla. On October 12th, the
-Frenchmen, donning the garb of native noblemen in mourning, and
-baffling the sentinels, landed at night in an obscure place on the
-coast. Soon after this Daveluy was learning the language among some
-Christian villagers, who cultivated tobacco in a wild part of the
-country. The bishop went to Seoul as the safest place to hide and work
-in, while the farmer-sailors, after seven months’ absence, returned to
-their hoes and their native fields.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLII.
-
-THE WALLS OF ISOLATION SAPPED.
-
-
-While the three priests were prosecuting their perilous labors, Thomas
-Tsoi, the Corean student from Macao with Maistre, a new missionary,
-were on their way through Manchuria to Hun-chun. Arriving after a
-seventeen days’ march, they were seized by Manchiu officers,
-reprimanded, and sent back to Mukden.
-
-Andrew Kim, by order of Bishop Ferreol, went to Whang-hai by water, to
-examine into the feasibility of making that province a gateway of
-entrance. The sea was full of Chinese junks, the herring fishery being
-at its height. Watch-towers dotted the hills, and the beach was
-patrolled by soldiers to prevent communication with shore. Andrew,
-coming ostensibly to buy a cargo of fish, was enabled to sail among the
-islands, to locate the rocks and sandspits, and to make a chart of the
-coast. Deeming the route practicable, he hailed a Chinese junk, and
-after conference, confided to the captain the mail-bag of the mission,
-which contained also the charts and two maps of Corea. Unfortunately
-these documents were seized by the spies, and Andrew Kim, delayed while
-the cargo of fish was drying, was arrested on the suspicion of being a
-Chinaman. He was sent to Seoul, and while in prison heard of the French
-ships which were at that moment vainly trying to find the mouth of the
-Han River and the channel to the capital. Meanwhile, from his
-hiding-place, Ferreol wrote to Captain Cecile, who commanded the fleet
-of three war-vessels.
-
-The object of this visit was to hold a conference with the king’s
-ministers, and demand satisfaction for the murder of Imbert Chastan and
-Maubant in 1839. After some coast surveys made, and the despatch of a
-threatening letter, the ships withdrew. Ferreol’s note arrived too
-late, and Andrew Kim’s fate was sealed.
-
-While in prison, Andrew was employed in coloring, copying, and
-translating two English maps of the world, one of which was for the
-king, and composing a summary of geography. In a letter in Latin to
-Ferreol, dated August 26th, he narrated his capture and trial. On
-September 16th, he was led out to trial. The sentence-flag bore the
-inscription: “Put to death for communicating with the western
-barbarians,” and the full programme of cruelty was carried out. Four
-women and four men were put to death in the persecution which followed.
-
-Maistre and Thomas Tsoi went to Macao and there found the French
-frigates La Gloire and La Victorieuse, ready to sail north for an
-answer to Captain Cecile’s letter. Gladly welcomed by Captain Pierre,
-they went aboard July 12th. On August 10th, while under sail in a group
-of islands off Chulla, in latitude 35° 45′ and longitude 124° 8′, in
-water which the English charts marked at twelve fathoms deep, both
-vessels grounded simultaneously. The high tides for which this coast is
-noted falling rapidly, both vessels became total wrecks. The largest of
-the La Gloire’s boats was at once sent to Shanghae for assistance, and
-the six hundred men made their camp at Kokun Island. Kindly treated and
-furnished with provisions as they were, the Frenchmen during their stay
-were rigidly secluded, and at night cordons of boats with lanterns
-guarded against all communication with the mainland. Thomas Tsoi acted
-as dumb interpreter, with pencil, in Chinese, and though hearing every
-word of the Corean magistrates was not recognized. Though meeting
-fellow Christians, he was unable to get inland, and Ferreol’s
-messengers to the sea-shore arrived after an English ship from Shanghae
-had taken the crews away.
-
-The Corean government, fearing [30] further visits of the outside
-barbarians, sent an answer to Admiral Cecile, directing it to Captain
-Pierre at Macao, by way of Peking. [31] They explained why they treated
-Frenchmen shipwrecked kindly; but sent Frenchmen disguised to
-execution. [32] When Admiral Cecile reached Paris in 1848, one of the
-periodical French revolutions had broken out in Paris, and a war at the
-ends of the earth was out of the question. The French government
-neglected to send a vessel to take away the effects saved from the
-wreck. The Coreans promptly put the cannon to use, and from them, as
-models, manufactured others for the forts built to resist “the Pepins”
-in 1866, and the Americans in 1871.
-
-Once more Maistre and Thomas Tsoi essayed to enter the guarded
-peninsula, by sailing early in 1848 in a Chinese junk from Macao to
-Merin Island off Whang-hai, but no Christians met them. By way of
-Shanghae, they then went into Shing-king, and in December to the Border
-Gate, meeting couriers from Bishop Ferreol. On a fiercely cold, windy,
-and dark night, which drove the soldiers indoors to the more congenial
-pleasure of the long pipe, cards, and cup on the oven-warmed floors,
-Thomas Tsoi got safely through Ai-chiu, and in a few days was in Seoul,
-and later in Chulla. The work of propagation now took a fresh start. A
-number of religious works composed or translated into the vulgar tongue
-were printed in pamphlet form from a native printing press, and widely
-circulated. In 1850, the Christians numbered eleven thousand, and five
-young men were studying for the priesthood. Regular mails, sewn into
-the thick cotton coats of men in the embassy, were sent to and brought
-from China. A French whaler having grounded off the coast, the French
-consul at Shanghae, with two Englishmen, came to reclaim the vessel’s
-effects, and meeting three young men sent by the ever-alert Thomas
-Tsoi, took them back to Shanghae, the third remaining to meet his
-comrades on their return with fresh missionaries to come. After still
-another failure to enter Corea, Maistre set foot in Chulla-dō, by way
-of Kokun Island, even while the fire-signals were blazing on the
-headlands on account of the presence of Russian ships. [33]
-
-Ferreol, worn out with his labors, after lying paralytic for many
-months, died February 3, 1853; but in March, 1854, Janson, making a
-second attempt, entered Corea, having crossed the Yellow Sea in a junk,
-which immediately took back three native students for Macao. Janson
-died in Seoul, of cerebral fever, June 18, 1854.
-
-In these years, 1853 and 1854, Commodore Perry and the American
-squadron were in the waters of the far East, driving the wedge of
-civilization into Japan, and sapping her walls of seclusion. The
-American flag, however, was not yet seen in Corean waters, though the
-court of Seoul were kept informed of Perry’s movements.
-
-A fresh reinforcement of missionaries to storm the citadel of paganism,
-Bishop Simeon, François Berneux, with two young priests, Michel
-Alexandre Petitnicholas and Charles Antoine Pourthie, set sail from
-Shanghae in a junk, and, after many adventures, arrived at Seoul via
-Whang-hai, while Feron (of later buccaneering fame) followed on a
-Corean smuggling vessel, standing unexpectedly before his bishop in the
-capital, March 31, 1857. A synod of all the missionaries was now held,
-at which Berneux consecrated Daveluy as his fellow bishop. Maistre died
-December 20th. The faith was now spread to Quelpart by a native of that
-island, who, having been shipwrecked on the coast of China, was carried
-by an English ship to Hong-Kong, where he met a Corean student from
-Macao and was converted. The Roman Catholic population of Corea in 1857
-was reckoned at 16,500.
-
-Communication with the native Christians living near Nagasaki, and then
-under the harrow of persecution, took place. The cholera imported from
-Japan swept away over 400,000 victims in Corea. Thus does half the
-world not know how the other half lives. How many Americans ever heard
-of this stroke of pestilence in the hermit nation?
-
-In 1860, war with China broke out, the French and English forces took
-the Peiho forts, entered Peking, sacked the summer palace of the Son of
-Heaven, a few thousand European troops destroying the military prestige
-of the Chinese colossus. The Chinese emperor fled into Shing-king,
-toward Corea. The news produced a lively effect in Chō-sen, especially
-at court. [34]
-
-The utter loss of Chinese prestige struck terror into all hearts. For
-six centuries, China, the Tai-kuk (Great Empire), had been, in Corean
-eyes, the synonym and symbol of invincible power, and “the Son of
-Heaven, who commands ten thousand chariots,” the one able to move all
-the earth. Copies of the treaty made between China and the allies,
-granting freedom of trade and religion, were soon read in Corea,
-causing intense alarm.
-
-But the after-clap of news, that turned the first storm of excitement
-into a tempest of rage and fear, was the treaty with Russia. General
-Ignatieff, the brilliant and vigorous diplomatist then but twenty-eight
-years old and fresh on the soil of Cathay, obtained, in 1860, after the
-allied plenipotentiaries had gone home, the signature of Prince Kung to
-the cession of the whole Ussuri province. The tread of the Great Bear
-had been so steadily silent, that before either Great Britain or
-Chō-sen knew it, his foot had been planted ten degrees nearer the
-temperate zone. A rich and fertile region, well watered by the Amoor
-and Sungari Rivers, bordered by the Pacific, with a coast full of
-harbors, and comprising an area as large as France, was thus ceded to
-Russia. The Manchiu rulers of China had actually surrendered their
-ancestral homeland to the wily Muscovites. The boundaries of Siberia
-now touched the Tumen. The Russian bear jostled the Corean tiger.
-
-With France on the right, Russia on the left, China humbled, and Japan
-opened to the western world, what wonder that the rulers in Seoul
-trembled?
-
-The results to Corean Christianity were that, in less than a decade,
-thousands of natives had fled their country and were settled in the
-Russian villages.
-
-At the capital all official business was suspended, and many families
-of rank fled to the mountains. The nobles or officials who could not
-quit their posts sent off their wives and children. All this turned to
-the temporary advantage of the missionaries. In many instances, people
-of rank humbly sought the good favor and protection of the Christians.
-Medals, crosses, and books of religion were bought in quantities. Some
-even publicly wore them on their dress, hoping for safety when the
-dreaded invasion should come. The government now proceeded to raise
-war-funds, levying chiefly on the rich merchants, who were threatened
-with torture and death in case of refusal. A conscription of
-able-bodied men was ordered, and bombs, called “French pieces,” and
-small-bore cannon were manufactured. In a foundry in the capital heavy
-guns were cast after the model of those left by the wreck of the La
-Gloire. The Kang-wa forts were built and garrisoned. In the midst of
-these war preparations, the missionary body was reinforced by the
-arrival of four of their countrymen, who, by way of Merin Island, set
-foot on the soil of their martyrdom October, 1861. Their names were
-Landre, Joanno, Ridel, and Calais. This year the number of Christians
-reached 18,000.
-
-Indirect attempts to insert the crowbars of diplomacy in the chinks of
-Corea’s wall of seclusion were made about this time by France and
-England, and by Russia at another point. Japan was in each case the
-fulcrum. On account of the petty trade between Tsushima and Fusan, Earl
-Russell wished to have Great Britain included as a co-trader with the
-peninsula. The Russians the same year occupied a station on Tsu Island,
-commanding the countries on either side; but under protest from Yedo,
-backed by British men-of-war, abandoned their purpose. In 1862, while
-the members of the Japanese embassy from the Tycoon were in Paris, the
-government of Napoleon III. requested their influence in the opening of
-Corea to French trade and residence. At this time, however, the
-Japanese had their hands full of their own troubles at home, nor had
-the court at Seoul sent either envoys or presents since 1832. They
-should have done so in 1852, at the accession of the new shō-gun, but
-not relishing the humiliation of coming only to Tsushima, and knowing
-the weakened state of their former conquerors, they were now ready to
-defy them.
-
-One new missionary and two returned native students entered in March,
-1863. The Ni dynasty, founded in 1392, came to an end on January 15,
-1864, by the King Chul-chong, who had no child, dying before he had
-nominated an heir. This was the signal for fresh palace intrigues, and
-excitement among the nobles and political parties. The three widows of
-the kings who had reigned since 1831 were still living. The oldest of
-these, Queen Chō, at once seized the royal seal and emblems of
-authority, which high-handed move made her the mistress of the
-situation. Craftily putting aside her nephew Chō Sung, she nominated
-for the throne a lad then but twelve years old, and son of Ni Kung, one
-of the royal princes. This latter person was supposed to be indifferent
-to politics, but no sooner was his son made the sovereign, than his
-slumbering ambition woke to lion-like vigor. This man, to use a Corean
-phrase, had “a heart of stone, and bowels of iron.” He seemed to know
-no scruple, pity, or fear. Possessing himself of the seal and royal
-emblems, he was made Tai-wen Kun (Lord of the Great Court—a rare title
-given to a noble when his son is made king) and became actual regent.
-This Corean mayor of the palace held the reins of government during the
-next nine years, ruling with power like that of an absolute despot. He
-was a rabid hater of Christianity, foreigners, and progress.
-
-In spite of the new current of hostility that set steadily in, the
-Christians began to be bold even to defiance. In Kiung-sang a funeral
-procession carrying two hundred lanterns, bore aloft a huge cross, and
-chanted responsive prayers. In the capital, the converts paraded the
-signs of the Romish cult. A theological training school was established
-in the mountains, four new missionaries entered the kingdom through
-Nai-po, 1976 baptisms were made during the year, and, with much
-literary work accomplished, the printing-press was kept busy.
-
-The year 1866 is phenomenal in Corean history. It seemed as if the
-governments and outlaws alike, of many nations, had conspired to pierce
-or breach the walls of isolation at many points. Russians, Frenchmen,
-Englishmen, Americans, Germans, authorized and unauthorized, landed to
-trade, rob, kill, or, what was equally obnoxious to the regent and his
-court, to make treaties.
-
-In January the Russians, in a war-vessel, again appeared in Broughton’s
-Bay, and demanded the right of trade. At the same time they stated that
-some Russian troops were to pass the frontier of Ham-kiung to enforce
-the demand. The usual stereotyped response was made, that Corea was a
-vassal of China, and could not treat with any other nation without
-permission of that Power, and that a special ambassador charged with
-the matter would be immediately despatched to Peking, etc.
-
-The advent of the double-headed eagle was the signal for lively feeling
-and action among the Christians at Seoul. The long-cherished project of
-appealing to England and France to make an alliance to secure liberty
-of religion was revived. The impulsive converts now forwarded the
-scheme, under the plea of patriotic defense against the Russians, with
-all the innocent maladdress which characterizes men who are adults in
-age but children in politics. In their exhilaration they already
-dreamed of building a cathedral in Seoul of imposing proportions, and
-finished in a style worthy alike of their religion and their country.
-Three Christian nobles, headed by Thomas Kim, composed a letter
-embodying their ideas of an anti-Russian Franco English alliance, and
-had it presented to the regent, who blandly sent Thomas Kim to invite
-the bishops, then absent to a conference in the capital. On his return
-to Seoul, Kim was coldly received, and no further notice was taken of
-him. The anti-Christian party, now in full power at court, clamored for
-the enforcement of the old edict against the foreign religion, while a
-letter from one of the Corean embassy in Peking, arriving late in
-January, added fuel to the rising flame. It stated that the Chinese
-were putting to death all the Christians found in the empire. That lie,
-“as light as a feather” in its telling, was “as heavy as a mountain” in
-Corea. Such an illustrious example must be followed. Vainly the regent
-warned the court of the danger from Europe. The Russian ship, too, had
-disappeared, and the French seemed afraid to take vengeance for the
-massacre of 1839. The cry of “Death to all the Christians, death to the
-western barbarians” now began to be heard. Forced by the party in
-power, the regent signed the death-warrants of the bishops and priests,
-promulgated anew the old laws of the realm against the Christians, and
-proceeded “to make very free with the heads of his subjects.” The
-minions of the magistrates sallied forth like bloodhounds unleashed.
-Berneux was seized on February 23d, and brought to trial successively
-before three tribunals, the last being the highest of the realm.
-
-In his interview with the regent, who had formed a high idea of the
-Frenchman, Berneux failed to address his Highness in the punctilious
-form of words demanded by court etiquette. Forthwith the official made
-up his mind that the Frenchman was a man of slight attainments, and of
-no personal importance—so sensitive is the Corean mind in the matter of
-etiquette. From the highest class prison, the bishop, after undergoing
-horrible tortures with club, paddle, and pointed sticks thrust into his
-flesh, was cast into a common dungeon, where, in a few days, he was
-joined by three of his fellow missionaries with several converts,
-faithful to their teachers even in the hour of death.
-
-All suffered the fierce and savage beatings, and on March 8th were led
-out to death. An immense crowd of jeering, laughing, curious people
-followed the prisoners, who were tied by their hair to the chair so as
-to force them to hold up their faces, that the crowd might see them.
-Four hundred soldiers marched out with the doomed men to the sandy
-plain near the river. The lengthened programme of brutal torture and
-insult was duly carried out, after which the four heads were presented
-for inspection.
-
-One day afterward, two other French missionaries and their twelve
-students for the priesthood were led captives into Seoul, marked with
-the red cord and yellow caps betokening prisoners soon to die. With
-like tortures, and the same shameful details of execution, they
-suffered death on March 11th. On this day, also, Daveluy and two other
-priests were seized, and on March 30th, Good Friday, decapitated,
-together with two faithful natives. In the case of Daveluy, the
-barbarity of the proceeding was increased by the sordid executioner,
-who, after delivering one blow, and while the blood was spouting out
-from the wound, left the victim to bargain with the official for the
-sum due him for his work of blood.
-
-In a little over a month all missionary operations had come to a
-standstill. Scores of natives had been put to death; hundreds more were
-in prison. Ridel, while hiding between two walls, wrote to Peking,
-describing the state of affairs. Feron and Ridel met on May 8th,
-travelling all night, and on June 15th they found that Calais was still
-alive. Hearing that a foreign steam-vessel was cruising off the Nai-po,
-Ridel sent a letter begging for help. This ship was the Rona, Captain
-Morrison, belonging to a British firm in China, on its way back from
-Niu-chwang, under the direction of Mr. Ernest Oppert. The native
-Christians were unable to get on board the Rona; but when the same
-Oppert visited Haimi in the Nai-po, some months later, in the steamer
-Emperor, this letter was put in his hands. Meanwhile Ridel had reached
-the sea-coast, and in spite of the vigilant patrols, put off in a boat
-constructed without an ounce of iron, and manned by a crew of eleven
-Christian fishermen. He reached Chifu July 7th. Going at once to
-Tien-tsin, he informed the French Admiral Roze of the recent events in
-Corea, and then returning to Chifu, waited till mid-August. Feron and
-Calais, hearing of the presence of French ships in the Han River,
-reached the coast, after great straits, to find them gone. They put to
-sea, however, and got upon a Chinese smuggler, by which they reached
-Chifu, October 26th—while the French expedition was in Corea. Not one
-foreign priest now remained in the peninsula, and no Christian dared
-openly confess his faith, while thousands were banished, imprisoned, or
-put to death.
-
-Thus after twenty years of nearly uninterrupted labors, the church was
-again stripped of her pastors, and at the end of the eighty-two years
-of Corean Christianity, the curtain fell in blood. Of four bishops and
-nineteen priests, all except four were from France, and of these only
-three remained alive. Fourteen were martyrs, and four fell victims to
-the toils and dangers of their noble calling.
-
-
-
-In the foregoing story of papal Christianity in Chō-sen, which we have
-drawn from Dallet—a Roman Catholic writer—we have the spectacle of a
-brave band of men, mostly secular priests educated in French seminaries
-of learning, doing what they believed it was right to do. Setting the
-laws of this pagan country at defiance, they, by means of dissimulation
-and falsehood, entered the country in disguise as nobles in mourning.
-Fully believing in the dogma of salvation by works, they were sublimely
-diligent in carrying on their labors of conversion, ever in readiness
-for that crown of martyrdom which each one coveted, and which so many
-obtained; but the nobleness of their calling was disfigured by the foul
-and abominable teaching that evil should be done in order that good
-might come—a tenet that insults at once the New Testament and the best
-casuistry of the Roman Catholic Church. According to the code of any
-nation, their converts were traitors in inviting invasion; but if
-worthy to be set down as Arnolds and Iscariots, then their teachers
-have the greater blame in leading them astray. It is to be hoped that
-the future Christian missionaries in Corea, whether of the Greek,
-Roman, or Reformed branch, will teach Christianity with more of the
-moral purity inculcated by its Founder.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIII.
-
-THE FRENCH EXPEDITION.
-
-
-The preliminaries of the French expedition to Corea in 1866 may be
-gathered from the letters which passed between the French chargé
-d’affairs at Peking and Prince Kung, the Chinese premier, as published
-in the United States Diplomatic Correspondence, 1867–68. [35] The
-pyrotechnic bombast of the Frenchman may be best understood by
-remembering that he lived in the palmy days of Louis Napoleon and the
-third empire. His violent language and behavior may be contrasted with
-the calm demeanor and firm temper of the astute Chinaman, the greatest
-of the diplomats of the Middle Kingdom.
-
-“Unfortunately for the interests of his country, M. H. Bellonet had
-carried into diplomacy the rude customs and unmeasured language of the
-African Zouaves, in whose ranks he had served at one period of his
-career.”
-
-The best commentary upon this boast of an irate underling, dressed in
-the brief authority of his superior, will be found in the events of the
-expedition, notably in the reduction to ashes of the city of Kang-wa,
-which rendered 10,000 people homeless, and in the repulse of the
-reckless invaders even before Bellonet at Peking was settling the fate
-of the king.
-
-With Bishop Ridel as interpreter, and three of his converts as pilots,
-three vessels were sent to explore the Han River. Equipped with charts
-made by Captain James of the Emperor, who had examined the western
-entrance one month before, the despatch-boat Déroulède leaving her
-consorts in Prince Jerome Gulf, steamed up the river on September 21st,
-as far as the narrows between Kang-wa and the mainland. The French
-officers were charmed with the beauty of the autumnal scenery. On the
-cultivated plain, checkered into a thousand squares of tiny
-rice-fields, all well irrigated, the golden-tinted grain, now full
-ripe, awaited the sickle and the sheaf-binder. Numerous villages dotted
-the landscape, and to the northwest rose the green hills on which sat,
-like a queen, the city of Kang-wa. A number of forts, as yet unmounted
-with cannon, were already built. Others, in process of construction,
-were rising on well-chosen sites commanding the river. No garrison or a
-single soldier was as yet seen. The simple villagers, at first
-frightened at the sight of a mighty black ship, moving up the river
-against a strong current without sails or oars, collected in crowds
-along the banks to see this fire-pulsing monster from the western
-ocean.
-
-On the 23d the Déroulède and Tardif, leaving the Primauguet at Boisée
-(Woody) Island, moved up the Han River to the capital, the Corean
-pilots at the bow, and Ridel with the men at the wheel. One or two
-forts fired on the vessels as they steamed along, and in one place a
-fleet of junks gathered to dispute their passage. A well-aimed shot
-sunk two of the crazy craft, and a bombshell dropped among the
-artillerists in the redoubt silenced it at once. The rocks were safely
-avoided, and on the evening of the 25th, the two ships cast anchor, and
-the flag of France floated in front of the Corean capital. The hills
-environing the city and every point of view were white with gazing
-thousands, who for the first time saw a vessel moving under steam.
-
-The ships remained abreast of the city several days, the officers
-taking soundings and measurements, computing heights and making plans.
-M. Ridel went on shore in hopes of finding a Christian and hearing some
-news, but none dared to approach him.
-
-While the French remained in the river, not a bag of rice nor a fagot
-of wood entered Seoul. Eight days of such terror, and a famine would
-have raged in the city. Seven thousand houses were deserted by their
-occupants.
-
-Returning to Boisée Island, having surveyed the river, two converts
-came on board. They informed Ridel of the burning of a “European” ship
-[the General Sherman] at Ping-an, the renewal of the persecution, and
-the order that Christians should be put to death without waiting for
-instructions from Seoul. Ridel in vain urged Admiral Roze to remain
-with his fleet, in order to intimidate the government. Sailing away,
-the ships arrived at Chifu, October 3d.
-
-Tai-wen kun, now thoroughly alarmed, began to stir up the country to
-defense. The military forces in every province were called out. Every
-scrap of iron was collected, and the forges and blacksmith shops were
-busy day and night in making arms of every known kind; even the
-farmer’s tools were altered into pikes and sabres. Loaded junks were
-sunk in the channel of the Han to obstruct it Through the Japanese at
-Fusan, and the daimiō of Tsushima, word was sent to the Tycoon of
-Japan, informing him of his straits, and begging for assistance. The
-Yedo government, being at that time in great straits between the
-pressure of foreigners on one hand, and of the “mikado-reverencers” on
-the other, could not then, had it been right to do so, afford any
-military assistance against the French, with whom a treaty had been
-made. Instead of this, two commissioners were appointed to go to Seoul,
-and recommend that Chō-sen open her ports to foreign commerce, as Japan
-had done, and thus choose peace instead of war with foreigners. Before
-the envoys could leave Japan, the Tycoon had died, and the next year
-Japan was in the throes of civil war, the shō-gunate was abolished, and
-Corea was for the time utterly forgotten.
-
-The object of the French expedition and the blockade of the Salée (Han)
-River were duly announced from the French legation in China to the
-Chinese and foreign representatives in Peking. Without waiting to hear
-from his government at home, Bellonet despatched the fleet and made war
-on his own responsibility. The squadron which sailed October 11th, to
-distribute thrones and decapitate prime ministers, consisted of the
-frigate Guerrière, the corvettes Laplace and Primauguet, the
-despatch-vessels Déroulède and Kien-chan, and the gunboats Tardif and
-Lebrethon, with 600 soldiers, including a detachment of 400 marines
-from the camp at Yokohama.
-
-One would have thought 600 men rather too small a force to root up
-thrones with, seeing that the days of Cortez and Pizarro were past. The
-Coreans were not like the Mexicans, who thought a horse and his rider
-were one animal. They had smelt powder and fought tigers.
-
-On October 13th the admiral cast anchor off Boisée Island. The next day
-the gunboats steamed up the river, landing the marines in camp, a
-little over half a mile from the city. On the 15th, before any attempt
-was made to communicate with the government, a reconnoissance was made
-in force, toward Kang-hoa (Kang-wa), during which a small fort,
-mounting two guns, was captured.
-
-Kang-wa was, to a modern eye, probably one of the best fortified cities
-in the kingdom. It was surrounded by a crenelated wall, nearly fifteen
-feet high! Behind this defense the native soldiery stood ready with
-flails, arrows, matchlocks, and jingals.
-
-The royal residence, for pleasure in summer, and refuge in war-time,
-was beautifully situated on a wooded hill, from which a glorious view
-of the island, sea, and mainland was visible. The fertile island itself
-lay like a green emerald upon a greener sea. Crops of rice, barley,
-tobacco, sorghum, maize, various root foods, Chinese cabbage,
-chestnuts, persimmons, with here and there a great camellia tree just
-entering into bloom, greeted the view of the invaders. Kang-wa was well
-named “The Flower of the River.”
-
-At eight o’clock on the morning of October 16th an attack was made in
-force on the main gate. At the distance of one hundred yards, the
-infantry charged on a run, to the cry of “Vive l’Empereur.” The hot
-fire of the jingals checked them not a moment. Reaching the wall, they
-set up the scaling ladders, and in a few moments hundreds of Frenchmen
-were inside, shooting down the flying white-coats, or engaging in a
-hand to hand encounter, though only a few natives were killed. The gate
-was soon crushed in with axes, and the main body entered easily. Firing
-was soon over, and the deserted city was in the victors’ hands. About
-eighty bronze and iron cannon, mostly of very small calibre, over six
-thousand matchlocks, and the official archives of the city were found
-and made trophies of.
-
-Kang-wa was the military headquarters for western Corea and the chief
-place of gunpowder manufacture. Large magazines of food supplies had
-been collected in it. Eighteen boxes of silver, containing ingots to
-the value of nearly thirty eight thousand dollars, and a great many
-books and manuscripts were found, besides spoil of many kinds from the
-shops and houses. Immense stores of bows and arrows, iron sabres
-without scabbards, helmets, and breastplates, beautifully wrought, but
-very heavy and clumsy, were found.
-
-The cannon had no carriages, but were fastened to logs or fixed
-platforms. They were breech-loaders, in that the powder, fixed in an
-iron cartridge, was introduced at the breech, while the ball seemed to
-be put in simultaneously at the muzzle. These double-ended cannon
-reminded one of a tortoise. A curious or rather comical thing about
-these cannon was that many of them had several touch-holes in a row,
-the cannonier firing them by applying his match rapidly along the line
-of vents—an “accelerating gun,” of a rude kind. The Corean gunpowder is
-said to burn so slowly that a charge has to be lighted at both ends—a
-type of the national policy.
-
-As the Coreans were fortifying Tong-chin with unusual care, the admiral
-sent out, October 26th, a reconnoitering party of one hundred and
-twenty men, who were landed on the mainland, opposite Kang-wa Island,
-whence the high road runs direct to the capital. Here was a village,
-with fortifications clustered around a great gate, having a pointed
-stone arch surmounted by the figure of a tortoise and a pagoda. To
-force this gate was to win the way to the capital.
-
-As the marines were disembarking, the Coreans poured in a heavy fire,
-which killed two and wounded twenty-five Frenchmen. Nevertheless the
-place was stormed and seized, but as the Corean forces were gathering
-in the vicinity, the marines returned to the ships to await
-reinforcements.
-
-Toward evening a party of Coreans defiled at the foot of the plain in
-gallant array, evidently elated with supposed victory. Suddenly, as
-they came within range, the French ships opened on them with shell,
-which exploded among them.
-
-Terrified at such unknown war missiles, they broke and fled to the
-hill-tops, where, to their surprise, they were again enveloped in a
-shower of iron. Finally they had to take shelter in the distant ravines
-and the far plains, which at night were illumined by their bivouac
-fires.
-
-Weak men and nations, in fighting against stronger enemies, must, like
-the weaker ones in the brute creation, resort to cunning. They try to
-weary out what they cannot overcome. The Coreans, even before rifled
-cannon and steamers, began to play the same old tricks practised in the
-war with the Japanese in the sixteenth century. They made hundreds of
-literal “men of straw,” and stuck them within range of the enemy’s
-artillery, that the Frenchmen might vainly expend their powder and
-iron. The keen-eyed Frenchmen, aided by their glasses, detected the
-cheat, and wasted no shot on the mannikins.
-
-Meanwhile the invaded nation was roused to a white heat of wrath. The
-furnace of persecution and the forges of the armorers were alike heated
-to their utmost. Earnest hands plied with rivalling diligence the
-torture and the sledge. In the capital it was written on the gate-posts
-of the palace that whoever should propose peace with the French should
-be treated as a traitor and immediately executed.
-
-On October 19th, Ni, the Corean general commanding, had sent the French
-admiral a long letter stuffed with quotations from the Chinese
-classics, the gist of which was that whoever from outside broke through
-the frontiers of another kingdom was worthy of death—a sentiment well
-worthy of a state of savagery.
-
-The French admiral, with equal national bombast, but in direct and
-clearest phrase, demanded the surrender of the three high ministers of
-the court, else he would hold the Corean government responsible for the
-miseries of the war.
-
-The Coreans in camp were ceaselessly busy in drilling raw troops and
-improving their marksmanship. Soldiers arrived from all quarters, and
-among them was a regiment of eight hundred tiger-hunters from the
-north, every man of whom was a dead shot either with bow or matchlock.
-These men, who had faced the tiger and many of whom had felt his claws,
-were not likely to fear even French “devils.” They garrisoned a
-fortified monastery on the island which was situated in a valley in the
-centre of a circle of hills which were crowned by a wall of uncemented
-masonry. It could be approached only by one small foot-path in a deep
-ravine. The entrance was a gateway of heavy hewn stone, arched in a
-full semicircle, the gate being in one piece. The walls were mounted
-with home-made artillery.
-
-On the same day on which this information reached the admiral, the
-natives attacked a French survey boat, whereupon he at once resolved to
-capture the monastery. For this purpose he detached 160 men, without
-artillery, who left at six o’clock in the morning of October 27th, with
-their luncheon packed on horses. The invaders, with their heads turned
-by too many easy victories, went in something like picnic order,
-frequently stopping to rest and enjoy the autumnal scenery. On several
-occasions they saw squads of men marching over the hills toward the
-same destination, but this did not hurry the Frenchmen, though a native
-informed them that the monastery, ordinarily inhabited only by a dozen
-priests, was now garrisoned and full of soldiers.
-
-At 11.30 they arrived near the fortress, when some one proposed lunch.
-Others jauntily declared it would be very easy to capture “the pagoda,”
-and then dine in the hall of Buddha himself; this advice was not,
-however, followed. Having arranged three parties, they advanced to
-within three hundred yards of the gate. All within was as silent as
-death. Suddenly a sheet of flame burst from the whole length of the
-wall, though not a black head nor a white coat was visible. In a minute
-the French columns were shattered and broken, and not a man was on his
-feet. The soldiers, retreating in a hail of lead, found refuge behind
-rocks, sheaves of rice, piles of straw, and in the huts near by. There
-the officers rallied their men lest the garrison should make a sally.
-The wounded were then borne to the rear. They numbered thirty-two. Only
-eighty fighting men were left, and these soon became conscious of being
-weak and very hungry, for they had been cruelly tantalized by seeing
-the lunch-horse kick up his heels at the first fire, and trot over to
-the Coreans. They learned that one of the slips ’twixt the cup and the
-lip might be caused by a horse in Chō-sen. Perhaps some native poet
-improvised a poem contrasting the patriotic nag with the steed of
-Kanko, which led a hungry army home.
-
-It being madness or annihilation for eighty Frenchmen to attempt to
-storm a stone fortress, garrisoned by five or ten times their number of
-enemies, and guarded with artillery, retreat was resolved on. The
-wounded were hastily cared for and the mournful march began. The
-stronger men carried their severely injured comrades on their shoulders
-with brotherly kindness. The unwounded who were free formed the
-rear-guard. Three times the little band had to face about and fire with
-effect at the Coreans, who thrice charged their foes with heavy loss to
-themselves. They then mounted the hills, and with savage yells
-celebrated their victory over the western barbarians. It was not till
-night, hungry and tired, that reinforcements were met a half league
-from camp. They had been sent out by the admiral, to whom had come
-presentiment of failure.
-
-There was gloom in the camp that night and at headquarters. The near
-sky and the horizon, notched by the hills, seemed to glare with unusual
-luridness, betokening the joy and the deadly purpose of the invaded
-people.
-
-The next morning, to the surprise of all, and the anger of many, orders
-were given to embark. The work on the fortifications begun around the
-camp was left off. The troops in Kang-wa set fire to the city, which,
-in a few hours, was a level heap of ashes. The departure of the
-invaders was so precipitate that the patriots to this day gloat over it
-as a disgraceful retreat.
-
-A huge bronze bell, from one of the temples in Kang-wa, which had been
-transported half way to the camp, was abandoned. The Coreans recaptured
-this, regarding it as a special trophy of victory. The French embarked
-at night, and at six o’clock next morning dropped down to the anchorage
-at Boisée Island. On the way, every fort on the island seemed to be
-manned and popping away at the ships, but hurting only the paint and
-rigging. To their great disgust, the men repulsed two days before,
-discovered the walls of the monastery from deck, and that the distance
-was only a mile and a half from the river side. There was considerable
-silent swearing among the officers, who believed it could be easily
-stormed and taken even then. Orders must be obeyed, however, and in
-rage and shame they silently gazed on the grim walls. The return of the
-expedition was a great surprise to the fleet at Boisée Island. On his
-return to China, the admiral found, to his mortification, that his
-government did not approve of the headlong venture of Bellonet. [36]
-
-In the palace at Seoul, the resolve was made to exterminate
-Christianity, root and branch. Women and even children were ordered to
-the death. Several Christian nobles were executed. One Christian, who
-was betrayed in the capital by his pagan brother, and another unknown
-fellow-believer were taken to the river side in front of the city, near
-the place where the two French vessels had anchored. At this historic
-spot, by an innovation unknown in the customs of Chō-sen, they were
-decapitated, and their headless trunks held neck downward to spout out
-the hot life-blood, that it might wash away the stain of foreign
-pollution. “It is for the sake of these Christians,” said the official
-proclamation, “that the barbarians have come just here. It is on
-account of these only that the waters of our river have been denied by
-western ships. It behooves that their blood should wash out the stain.”
-Upon the mind of the regent and court at Seoul, the effect was to swell
-their pride to the folly of extravagant conceit. Feeling themselves
-able almost to defy the world, they began soon after to hurl their
-defiance at Japan. The dwarf of yesterday had become a giant in a day.
-
-In spite of foreign invaders and war’s alarms, one peaceful event
-during this same year, and shortly after the French fleet had gone
-away, sent a ripple of pleasure over the surface of Corean society. The
-young king, now but fourteen years old, who had been duly betrothed to
-Min, [37] a daughter of one of the noble families, was duly married.
-Popular report credits the young queen with abilities not inferior to
-those of her royal husband.
-
-According to custom, the Chinese emperor sent an ambassador, one
-Koei-ling, a mandarin of high rank, to bear the imperial
-congratulations and investiture of the queen. This merry Chinaman,
-cultivated, lively, poetic in mood, and susceptible to nature’s
-beauties, wrote an account of his journey between the two capitals. His
-charming impressions of travel give us glimpses of peaceful life in the
-land of Morning Calm, and afford a delightful contrast to the grim
-visage of war, with which events in Corea during the last decade have
-unhappily made us too familiar.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIV.
-
-AMERICAN RELATIONS WITH COREA.
-
-
-America became a commercial rival to Chō-sen as early as 1757, when the
-products of Connecticut and Massachusetts lay side by side with Corean
-imports in the markets of Peking and Canton. Ginseng, the most precious
-drug in the Chinese pharmacopœia, had been for ages brought from
-Manchuria and the neighboring peninsula, where, on the mountains, the
-oldest and richest roots are found.
-
-The Dutch traders, at once noticing the insatiable demand for the famed
-remedy, sought all over the world for a supply. The sweetish and
-mucilaginous root, though considered worthless by Europeans, was then
-occasionally bringing its weight in gold, and usually seven times its
-weight in silver, at Peking, and the merchants in the annual embassy
-from Seoul were reaping a rich harvest. Besides selling the younger and
-less valuable crop in its natural condition, they had factories in
-which the two-legged roots—which to the Asiatic imagination suggested
-the figure of the human body they were meant to refresh—were so
-manipulated as to take on the appearance of age, thus enhancing their
-price in the market.
-
-Suddenly the Corean market was broken. Stimulated by the Dutch
-merchants at Albany, the Indians of Massachusetts had found the fleshy
-root growing abundantly on the hills around Stockbridge in
-Massachusetts. Taking it to Albany, they exchanged it for hardware,
-trinkets, and rum. While the Dutch domines were scandalized at the
-drunken revels of the “Yankee” Indians, who equalled the Mohawks in
-their inebriation, good Jonathan Edwards at Stockbridge was grieving
-over the waywardness of his dusky flock, because they had gone wild
-over ginseng-hunting.
-
-The Hollanders, shipping the bundled roots on their galliots down the
-Hudson, and thence to Amsterdam and London, sold them to the British
-East India Company at a profit of five hundred per cent. Landed at
-Canton, and thence carried to Peking, American ginseng broke the
-market, forced the price to a shockingly low figure, and dealt a heavy
-blow to the Corean monopoly.
-
-Henceforth a steady stream of ginseng—now found in limitless quantities
-in the Ohio and Mississippi valleys—poured into China. Though far
-inferior to the best article, it (Aralia quinquefolia) is sufficiently
-like it in taste and real or imaginary qualities to rival the root of
-Chō-sen, which is not of the very highest grade.
-
-Less than a generation had passed from the time that the western end of
-Massachusetts had any influence on Corea or China, before there was
-brought from the far East an herb that influenced the colony at her
-other end, far otherwise than commercially. Massachusetts had sent
-ginseng to Canton, China now sent tea to Massachusetts. The herb from
-Amoy was pitched into the sea by men dressed and painted like the
-Indians, and the Revolution followed.
-
-The war for independence over, Captain John Greene, in the ship Empress
-of China, sailed from New York, February 22, 1784. Major Samuel Shaw,
-the supercargo, without government aid or recognition, established
-American trade with China, living at Canton during part of the year
-1786 and the whole of 1787 and 1788. Having been appointed consul by
-President Washington in 1789, while on a visit home, Major Shaw
-returned to China in an entirely new ship, the Massachusetts, built,
-navigated, and owned by American citizens. At Canton he held the office
-of consul certainly until the year 1790, and presumably until his death
-in 1794. This first consul of the United States in China received his
-commission from Congress, on condition that he should “not be entitled
-to receive any salary, fees, or emoluments whatever.”
-
-Animated by the spirit of independence, and a laudable ambition, the
-resolute citizen of the New World declared that “the Americans must
-have tea, and they seek the most lucrative market for their precious
-root ginseng.” [38]
-
-It was ginseng and tea—an exchange of the materials for drink, a barter
-of tonics—that brought the Americans and Chinese, and finally the
-Americans and Coreans together.
-
-Cotton was the next American raw material exported to China, beginning
-in 1791. In 1842 the loaded ships sailed direct from Alabama to Canton,
-on the expansion of trade after the Opium War.
-
-The idea now began to dawn upon some minds that it was high time that
-Japan and Corea should be opened to American commerce.
-
-The first public man who gave this idea official expression was the
-Honorable Zadoc Pratt, then member of the House of Representatives from
-the Eleventh (now the Fifteenth) Congressional District of New York. As
-chairman of the Committee on Naval Affairs, he introduced in Congress,
-February 12, 1845, a proposition for the extension of American commerce
-by the despatch of a mission to Japan and Corea as follows:
-
-“It is hereby recommended that immediate measures be taken for
-effecting commercial arrangements with the empire of Japan and the
-kingdom of Corea,” etc. (Congressional Globe, vol. xiv., p. 294).
-
-The Mexican war was then already looming as a near possibility, and
-under its shadow, the wisdom of sending even a part of our little navy
-was doubted, and Mr. Pratt’s bill failed to pass.
-
-None of the American commanders, Glyn, Biddle, John Rodgers, or even
-Perry, seem to have ventured into Corean waters, and Commodore Perry
-has scarcely mentioned the adjacent kingdom in the narrative of the
-treaty expedition which he wrote, and his pastor, the Rev. Francis L.
-Hawks, edited. In truth, the sealed country was at that time almost as
-little known as that of Corea or Coreæ, which Josephus mentions, or
-that province of India which bears the same name.
-
-The commerce which sprang up, not only between our country and China
-and Japan, but also that carried on in American vessels between
-Shanghae, Chifu, Tien-tsin, and Niu-chwang in North China, and the
-Japanese ports, made the navigation of Corean waters a necessity.
-Sooner or later shipwrecks must occur, and the question of the humane
-treatment of American citizens cast on Corean shores came up before our
-government for settlement, as it had long before in the case of Japan.
-
-When it did begin to rain it poured. Within one year the Corean
-government having three American cases to deal with, gave a startling
-illustration of its policy—with the distressed, kindness; with the
-robber, powder and iron; with the invader, death and annihilation.
-
-On June 24, 1866, the American schooner Surprise was wrecked off the
-coast (of Whang-hai?). The approach of any foreign vessel was
-especially dangerous at this time, as the crews might be mistaken for
-Frenchmen and killed by the people from patriotic impulses.
-Nevertheless Captain McCaslin and his men with their Chinese cook,
-after being first well catechised by the local magistrate, and secondly
-by a commissioner sent from Seoul, were kindly treated and well fed,
-and provided with clothing, medicines, and tobacco. By orders of
-Tai-wen Kun, they were escorted on horseback to Ai-chiu, and, after
-being feasted there, were conducted safely to the Border Gate. Thence,
-after a hard journey via Mukden, they got to Niu-chwang and to the
-United States consul. A gold watch was voted by Congress to the Rev.
-Père Gillie for his kindness to these men while in Mukden.
-
-From a passage in one of the letters of the Corean Government, we
-gather that the crew of still another American ship were hospitably
-treated after shipwreck, but of the circumstances we are ignorant. Of
-the General Sherman affair more is known.
-
-The General Sherman was an American schooner, owned by a Mr. Preston,
-who was making a voyage for health. She was consigned to Messrs.
-Meadows & Co., a British firm in Tien-tsin, and reached that port July,
-1866. After delivery of her cargo, an arrangement was made by the firm
-and owner to load her with goods likely to be saleable in Corea, such
-as cotton cloth, glass, tin-plate, etc., and despatch her there on an
-experimental voyage in the hope of thus opening the country to
-commerce.
-
-Leaving Tien-tsin July 29th, the vessel touched at Chifu, and took on
-board Mr. Hogarth, a young Englishman, and a Chinese shroff, [39]
-familiar with Corean money. The complement of the vessel was now five
-white foreigners, and nineteen Malay and Chinese sailors. The owner,
-Preston, the master, Page, and the mate, Wilson, were Americans. The
-Rev. Mr. Thomas, who had learned Corean from refugees at Chifu, and had
-made a trip to Whang-hai on a Chinese junk, went on board as a
-passenger to improve his knowledge of the language. [40]
-
-From the first the character of the expedition was suspected, because
-the men were rather too heavily armed for a peaceful trading voyage. It
-was believed in China that the royal coffins in the tombs of Ping-an,
-wherein more than one dynasty of Chō-sen lay buried, were of solid
-gold; and it was broadly hinted that the expedition had something to do
-with these.
-
-The schooner, whether merchant or invader, leaving Chifu, took a
-west-northwest direction, and made for the mouth of the Ta Tong River.
-There they met the Chinese captain of a Chifu junk, who agreed to pilot
-them up the river. He continued on the General Sherman during four
-tides, or two days. Then leaving her, he returned to the river’s mouth,
-and sailed back to Chifu, where he was met and questioned by the firm
-of Meadows & Co.
-
-No further direct intelligence was ever received from the unfortunate
-party.
-
-The time chosen for this “experimental trading voyage” was strangely
-inopportune. The whole country was excited over the expected invasion
-of the French, and to a Corean—especially in the north, where not one
-in ten thousand had ever seen a white foreigner—any man dressed in
-foreign clothes would be taken for a Frenchman, as were even the
-Japanese crew of the gunboat Unyo Kuan in 1875. An armed vessel would
-certainly be taken for a French ship, and made the object of patriotic
-vengeance.
-
-According to one report, the hatches of the schooner were fastened
-down, after the crew had been driven beneath, and set on fire.
-According to another, all were decapitated. The Coreans burned the wood
-work for its iron, and took the cannon for models.
-
-During this same month of August, 1866, the Jewish merchant Ernest
-Oppert, in the steamer Emperor, entered the Han River, and had secret
-interviews with some of the native Christians, who wrote to him in
-Latin. Communications were also held with the governor of Kang-wa, and
-valuable charts were made by Captain James. One month later, in
-September, the French war-vessels made their appearance.
-
-The U. S. steamship Wachusett, despatched by Admiral Rowan to inquire
-into the Sherman affair, reached Chifu January 14, 1867, and is said to
-have taken on board the Chinese pilot of the General Sherman, and the
-Rev. Mr. Corbett, an American missionary, to act as interpreter.
-Leaving Chifu January 21st, they cast anchor, January 23d, at the mouth
-of the large inlet opposite Sir James Hall group, which indents
-Whang-hai province. This estuary they erroneously supposed to be the Ta
-Tong River leading to Ping-an city, whereas they were half a degree too
-far south, as the chart made by themselves shows.
-
-A letter was despatched, through the official of Cow Island, near the
-anchorage, to the prefect of the large city nearest the place of the
-Sherman affair, demanding that the murderers be produced on the deck of
-the Wachusett. The city of Ping-an was about seventy-five miles
-distant. The letter probably went to Hai-chiu, the capital of the
-province. Five days elapsed before the answer arrived, during which the
-surveying boats were busy. Many natives were met and spoken to, who all
-told one story, that the Sherman’s crew were murdered by the people,
-and not by official instigation. [41]
-
-On the 29th, an officer from one of the villages of the district
-appeared, “whose presence inspired the greatest dread among the
-people.” An interview was held, during which Commander Shufeldt
-possessed his soul in patience.
-
-To the polished American’s eye, the Corean’s manner was haughty and
-imperious. He was utterly beyond the reach of reason and of argument.
-In his person he seemed “the perfect type of a cruel and vindictive
-savage.” The Corean’s impressions of the American, not being in print,
-are unknown.
-
-It is unnecessary to give the details of the fruitless interview. The
-American could get neither information nor satisfaction; the gist of
-the Corean reiteration was, “Go away as soon as possible.” Commander
-Shufeldt, bound by his orders, could do nothing more, and being
-compelled also by stress of weather, came away.
-
-In 1867, Dr. S. Wells Williams, Secretary of the Legation of the United
-States at Peking, succeeded in obtaining an interview with a member of
-the Corean embassy, who told him that after the General Sherman got
-aground, she careened over, as the tide receded, and her crew landed to
-guard or float her. The natives gathered around them, and before long
-an altercation took place between the two parties, which soon led to
-blows and bloodshed. A general attack began upon the foreigners, in
-which every man was killed by the mob. About twenty of the natives lost
-their lives. Dr. Williams’ comment is, “The evidence goes to uphold the
-presumption that they invoked their sad fate by some rash or violent
-act toward the natives.” Dr. Williams also met a Chinese pilot, Yu
-Wautai, who reported that in 1867 he had seen the hull of a foreign
-vessel lying on the south bank of the river, about ten miles up from
-the sea. The hull was full of water. A Corean from Sparrow Island had
-told him that the murder of the Sherman’s crew was entirely the work of
-the people and farmers, and not of the magistrates or soldiery.
-
-Still determined to learn something of the fate of the Sherman’s crew,
-since reports were current that two or more of them were still alive
-and in prison, Admiral Rowan, in May, 1867, despatched another vessel,
-which this time got into the right river. Commander Febiger, in the U.
-S. steamship Shenandoah, besides surveying the “Ping Yang Inlet,”
-learned this version of the affair:
-
-A foreign vessel arrived in the river two years before. The local
-officials went on board and addressed the two foreign officers of the
-ship in respectful language. The latter grossly insulted the native
-dignitaries, i.e., “they turned round and went to sleep.”
-
-A man on board, whom they spoke of as “Tony, [42] a Frenchman,” used
-violent and very impolite language toward them. The Coreans treated
-their visitors kindly, but warned them of their danger, and the
-unlawfulness of penetrating into, or trading in the country.
-Nevertheless, the foreigners went up the river to Ping-an city, where
-they seized the “adjutant-general’s” ship, put him in chains, and
-proceeded to rob the junks and their crews. The people of the city
-aroused to wrath, attacked the foreign ship with fire-arms and cannon;
-they set adrift fire-rafts, and even made a hand-to-hand fight with
-pikes, knives, and swords. The foreigners fought desperately, but the
-Coreans overpowered them. Finally, the ship, having caught fire, blew
-up with a terrific report.
-
-This story was not of course believed by the American officers, but
-even the best wishers and friends of the Ping-an adventurers cannot
-stifle suspicion of either cruelty or insult to the natives. Knowing
-the character of certain members of the party, and remembering the
-kindness shown to the crew of the Surprise, few of the unprejudiced
-will believe that the General Sherman’s crew were murdered without
-cause.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLV.
-
-A BODY-SNATCHING EXPEDITION.
-
-
-Early in May, 1867, the foreign settlement at Shanghae was thrown into
-excitement by the report of the return of an unsuccessful piratical
-expedition from Corea. The ennui of Eurasian port life was turned into
-a lively glow of excitement. Conversation at the clubs and tea-tables,
-which had wilted down to local gossip, Wade’s policy, paper hunts, and
-the races, now turned upon the politics and geography, methods of royal
-sepulture, mortuary architecture, antiquities, customs, and costumes in
-the mysterious peninsula. The pleasures of wheelbarrow rides, and
-visits to the bubbling springs, now palled before the pending trial at
-the United States consular court.
-
-An American citizen was charged with making an “unlawful and scandalous
-expedition” to Corea, and of violently attempting to land in a country
-with which the United States had no treaty relations. It was further
-stated that he had gone to exhume the bones of a defunct king in order
-to hold them for sale or ransom. In plain English, it was said to be a
-piratical and body-snatching descent upon the grave-yards of Chō-sen,
-to dig up royal remains, not for the purpose of dissection, nor in the
-interests of science or of archæology, but for the sake of money, which
-money was to be extorted from the regent and court of Seoul.
-
-The idea, of course, awoke merriment as well as interest. One may well
-understand why Professor Marsh should make periodical descents upon the
-bone-yards of Red Cloud’s territory, and exhibit his triumphs—skeletons
-of toothed birds and of geological horses as small as Corean ponies—in
-a museum under glass cases, well mounted with shining brass springs and
-iron joints. Even a school-boy can without laughing think of Dr.
-Schliemann rooting among the tombs of Mycenæ, and Di Cesnola sifting
-the dust of Kurium for its golden treasures. Even the night picture of
-resurrectionists, emptying graves in a Scotch kirk-yard for subjects to
-sell at a pound sterling apiece, has few elements of humor about it.
-
-But to conceive of civilized “Christians,” or Israelites, chartering a
-steamer to exhume and steal the carcase and mouldering bones of a
-heathen king, to hold them in pawn to raise money on them, created more
-laughter than frowns or tears. It was thought that the sign under which
-the ship sailed, instead of being the flag of the North German
-Confederation, should have been the three golden balls, such as hang
-above a pawnbroker’s windows.
-
-The person on trial was formerly an interpreter at the United States
-consulate, and, having learned Chinese from childhood, was able to
-speak the language fluently, and thus converse, by means of tongue or
-pencil, with the many Coreans who know the standard of communication in
-Eastern Asia either by sound or sight. It was he also who furnished the
-cash for the expedition, the commander-in-chief of which was one
-Oppert, a North German subject; the guide was a French Jesuit priest
-named Farout (evidently a fictitious name) who spoke Corean, having
-been in the country as a missionary. These three were the leaders of
-the expedition.
-
-Before going, the American had told Consul Seward that his object was
-to take a Corean embassy to Europe, to negotiate treaties, and to
-explain to the governments of France and the United States the murder
-of their subjects in Corea. Four Coreans, with the French missionary
-Bishop Ridel, had been in Shanghae a short time before, April 24, 1867;
-and the defendant declared that it was from these four persons, whom he
-styled “commissioners,” that he got his information as to the desire of
-the Corean government for treaties, etc. He also stated that this
-knowledge was held only by the four Coreans, himself, and a Jewish
-peddler, who had several times penetrated into Corea, and by whom the
-Corean “commissioners,” had been brought to Shanghae. These
-“commissioners,” he averred, had a new and correct version of the
-General Sherman affair. According to their report, some of the crew had
-become embroiled in a row growing out of the improper treatment of some
-native women, and were arrested. The crew went to rescue them. They
-succeeded, and took also two native officers on board for hostages.
-This so enraged the people that they attacked the crew, killed eight at
-once, and made prisoners of the others who were still alive.
-
-Readers of our narrative will smile at discovering the poor fishermen
-who brought their bishop across the Yellow Sea in their boat thus
-transformed into “ambassadors.”
-
-One thing seemed to be on the surface—that this modern Jason and his
-argonauts had gone out to find a golden fleece, but came back shorn.
-
-On the return of the expedition, Mr. Seward questioned the American
-closely, sifted the matter, and finally, being satisfied that something
-was wrong, put him on trial, eliciting the facts which seem to be the
-following:
-
-Oppert, who had been at the Naipo, and up the Han River in the Emperor
-and Rona, secured a steamer named the China, of six hundred and eighty
-tons, with a steam tender, the Greta, of sixty tons, and run the North
-German flag up at the fore. The complement of the ship was eight
-Europeans, twenty Malays from Manila, and about one hundred Chinamen,
-these last were a motley crew of sailors, laborers, and coolies—the
-riff-raff of humanity, such as swarm in every Chinese port. With
-muskets in their hands—it is doubtful whether a dozen of them had ever
-fired off a gun—they were to form the “forces” or military escort of
-the expedition, which was to negotiate “treaties,” embark an embassy to
-travel round the globe, and introduce the Hermit Nation to the world.
-
-The “fleet” left Shanghae April 30, 1867, and steamed to Nagasaki; in
-which Japanese port she remained two days, taking on board coal, water,
-and ten cases of muskets. The prow was then headed for Chung-chong
-province. They arrived in Prince Jerome Gulf at 10 P.M. on Friday, May
-8th. The next day at 10 A.M. they moved farther in the river. In the
-afternoon they succeeded in getting two small boats, or sampans, partly
-by persuasion and pay, partly by force. The expedition was then
-organized, Oppert commanding. The mate, engineer, and regular Chinese
-manned the tender which was to tow the boats. The muskets were unpacked
-and distributed on deck, and the coolies were armed, equipped, taught
-the difference between the butt and muzzle of their weapons, and given
-their orders. Four men carried spades or coal shovels to exhume the
-bones and treasure.
-
-The French priest who had been in Corea acted as guide and interpreter.
-Shortly after midnight, and very early on Sunday morning, the steam
-tender began to move up the river, stopping at a point about forty
-miles from the sea. The armed crowd landed, and the march across the
-open country to the tomb was begun. As they proceeded, the neighborhood
-became alive with curious people, and the hills were white with people
-gazing at the strange procession. A few natives being met on the way,
-the French priest stopped to speak with them. The party rested for a
-while at a temple, for the march was getting tiresome, having already
-occupied several hours.
-
-Reaching the burial-place [near Totta-san?], they found a raised mound
-with a slab of stone on each side at the base. Beneath this tomb was
-the supposed treasure. Was it bones or gold?
-
-The four men with spades now began their work, and soon levelled the
-mound. They had dug out a considerable quantity of earth, when their
-shovels struck on a rocky slab, which seemed to be the lid of the tomb
-proper, or the sarcophagus. This they could not move. All efforts to
-budge or pry it up were vain. Having no crowbars they were, after much
-useless labor, with perhaps not a little swearing, compelled to give up
-their task.
-
-On their return march, the exasperated Coreans, plucking up courage,
-attempted to molest them, but the marauders, firing their guns in the
-air, kept their assailants at a respectful distance. The party and
-tender dropped down the river and rejoined the steamer at noon, the
-weather being foggy.
-
-Further proceedings of the expedition are known only in outline. The
-steamer weighed anchor and left for Kang-wa Island. They put themselves
-in communication with the local magistrate during three days. On the
-third day a party landed from the ship, and while on shore were fired
-upon. Two men were killed and one wounded.
-
-The expedition remained in Corea ten days, returning to Shanghae after
-two weeks’ absence.
-
-In the foregoing trial it is most evident that many details were
-concealed. The quantity of truth divulged was probably in proportion to
-the whole amount, as the puffs of steam from a safety-valve are to the
-volume in the boiler. The accused let out just enough to save them from
-conviction and to secure their acquittal.
-
-The defendant was discharged with the Scotch verdict “not proven.” Mr.
-George F. Seward, however, wrote to the State Department at Washington
-his opinion, that the expedition was “an attempt to take from their
-tombs the remains of one or more sovereigns of Corea, for the purpose,
-it would seem, of holding them to ransom.”
-
-Whether any great amount of treasure is ever buried with the sovereigns
-or grandees of Chō-sen is not known to us. Certain it is that the
-national sentiment is that of horror against the disturbance or rifling
-of sepulchres. Now they had before their eyes a fresh confirmation of
-their suspicions that the chief purpose of foreign invaders was to rob
-the dead and violate the most holy instincts of humanity. The national
-mind now settled into the conviction that, beyond all doubt, foreigners
-were barbarians and many of them thieves and robbers. With such eyes
-were they ready to look upon the flag and ships of the United States
-when they came in 1871.
-
-
-Note.—Nearly every word of the above was written in December, 1877, the
-information having been derived from the United States Diplomatic
-Correspondence. At that time we suspected that “Farout” was the
-fictitious name of Feron, the French Roman Catholic missionary, who had
-escaped the persecutions of 1866. It seems that three countries and
-three religions were represented in this body-snatching expedition,
-which was of a truly international character.
-
-In March, 1880, there was published in London and New York the English
-translation of “Ein Verschlossenes Land,” a work printed in Germany. As
-we read “A Forbidden Land: Voyages to the Corea,” it dawned upon us
-that the author was none other than “the needy Hamburgh trader,” “the
-Jewish peddler,” of the Consular Court trial of 1867. It was even so.
-Coolly and without denial, the author tells us that the main object of
-his last voyage was to “remove” some buried relics held in great
-veneration by that “blood-thirsty tyrant,” the Tai-wen Kun, or regent.
-The project was first suggested to him by the French priest, who, as
-the author takes pains to tell us, was not a Jesuit, nor had ever
-belonged to that order (p. 295), though he gives Feron’s proposition in
-his own words (p. 299), the italics being ours:
-
-“If the project I am going to lay before you (i.e., to rob the grave)
-will at first sight appear to you strange and out of the common,
-remember that a great aim can never be gained by small means, and that
-we must look at this affair from another point of view than that which
-may be taken by narrow-minded people.”
-
-The details of the landing, march [to near Totta-san?], excavation, and
-retreat are duly narrated, the blame of failure being laid upon one
-unlucky wight who was “the only disreputable character we had with us!”
-
-After leaving Prince Jerome Gulf, the China proceeded up the Han River
-to Tricault Island (see map, page 379), “about twenty minutes’ steam
-below Kang-wha.” There the leader received a note from the Taiouen-goon
-(the Tai-wen Kun, or regent), the gist of which was, “Corea has no need
-of foreign intruders.” While holding a parley near the wall of a town
-on Tricault Island, “the only disreputable character” in the party
-again got them into trouble. This black sheep was a German sailor, who,
-hungering after fresh veal, had stolen a calf; an act which drew the
-fire of the native soldiery on the city wall. The thief received a ball
-in his arm, which compelled him to drop the calf and run, while one
-Manilaman was shot dead. It is not known how far the statistics of a
-Corean warfare diverge from those elsewhere, nor how many tons of lead
-are required to kill one man, but owing to the incredibly bad aim of
-the jingal shooters, the remainder of the party of twenty or more
-escaped their deserts and reached the tender. The next morning the
-expedition set out on the return to Shanghae.
-
-After a review of this book (in The Nation of April 7, 1880), which the
-author issued after his imprisonment, the following note appeared in
-the same paper of April 21st:
-
-
- OPPERT’S COREAN OUTRAGE.
-
- To the Editor of The Nation:
-
- Sir: The notice of Oppert’s book on Corea recalls some curious
- incidents to my mind. The raid on the King’s tomb was one of the
- most extraordinary affairs ever known. Its inception and failure
- might have been concealed but for the Coreans, when they attacked
- the ghouls, killing an unfortunate Manilaman. Hearing of this, the
- Spanish consul applied to Mr. Seward (United States Consul-General
- at Shanghae), who at once arrested Jenkins. I was one of the four
- “associates” summoned to sit with the consul-general in the trial,
- and well remember what a perfect burlesque it was. The Chinese, who
- had told a plain and coherent story on preliminary examination,
- were as dumb as oysters on the stand. When all had been called, the
- defendant’s counsel said that he would rest his case on their
- testimony. Conviction was impossible, but in the minds of those
- informed on the subject, the wickedness of this buccaneering
- expedition was remembered as surpassing even the absurdity of an
- attempt to destroy a granite mausoleum with coal shovels. There is
- a monstrous impertinence in Oppert’s publishing an account of a
- piratical fiasco which is reported to have cost him a term of
- imprisonment at home.
-
- A. A. Hayes, Jr. New York, April 15, 1880.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLVI.
-
-“OUR LITTLE WAR WITH THE HEATHEN.”
-
-
-The representations made to the Department of State at Washington by
-Dr. S. Wells Williams, concerning the General Sherman, and by
-Consul-General George F. Seward, in the matter of the China, affair,
-directed the attention of the Government to the opening of Corea to
-American commerce. The memorial of Mr. Seward, dated October 14, 1868,
-reviewed the advantages to be gained and the obstacles in the way. The
-need of protection to American seamen was pointed out, and as Japan had
-been opened to international relations by American diplomacy, why
-should not a smaller nation yield to persuasion? American merchants in
-China having seconded Mr. Seward’s proposal, the State Department took
-the matter into serious consideration, and, in 1870, resolved to
-undertake the difficult enterprise.
-
-The servants of the United States who were charged with this delicate
-mission were, Mr. Frederick F. Low, Minister of the United States to
-Peking, and Rear-Admiral John Rodgers, Commander-in-Chief of the
-Asiatic squadron. Mr. Low was directed by Secretary Fish to gain all
-possible knowledge from Peking, and then proceed on the admiral’s
-flag-ship to the Corean capital. He was to make a treaty of commerce if
-possible, but his chief aim was to secure provision for the protection
-of shipwrecked mariners. He was to avoid a conflict of force, unless it
-could not be avoided without dishonor. “The responsibility of war or
-peace” was to be left with him and not with the admiral. [43]
-
-There was at this time, all over the far East, a feeling of uncertainty
-and alarm among foreigners, and many portentious signs seemed to
-indicate a general uprising, both in China and Japan, against
-foreigners. The example of Corea in expelling or beheading the French
-priests acted as powerful leaven in the minds of the fanatical
-foreigner-haters in the two countries adjoining. The
-“mikado-reverencers,” who in Japan had overthrown the “Tycoon” and
-abolished the dual system of government, made these objects only
-secondary to the expulsion of all aliens. The cry of “honor the mikado”
-was joined to the savage yell of the Jo-i (alien-haters), “expel the
-barbarians.” In China the smothered feelings of murderous animosity
-were almost ready to burst. The air was filled with alarms, even while
-the American fleet was preparing [44] for Corea.
-
-Rear-Admiral Rodgers, [45] who had taken command, and relieved Admiral
-Rowan, August 20, 1869, began his preparations with vigor.
-
-In a consultation held at Peking during November, 1870, between the
-admiral, minister, and consul general, the time for the expedition was
-fixed for the month of May, 1871. Mr. Seward then left for a visit to
-India, and Mr. Low despatched, through the Tribunal of Rites at Peking,
-a letter to the King of Corea. After vast circumlocution, it emerged
-from the mazes of Chinese court etiquette, and by a special courier
-reached the regent at Seoul. In this, however, the Chinese were doing a
-great favor. No answer was received from Seoul before the expedition
-sailed.
-
-Meanwhile the German minister to Japan (now in Peking), Herr M. Von
-Brandt, had landed from the Hertha at Fusan, and attempted to hold an
-interview with the governor of Tong-nai. He was accompanied by the
-Japanese representatives at Fusan, who politely forwarded his request.
-A tart lecture to the mikado’s subject for his officiousness, and a
-rebuff to the Kaiser’s envoy were the only results of his mission.
-After sauntering about a little, Herr Von Brandt, who arrived June 1,
-1878, left June 2d, and the era of commercial relations between the
-Central European Empire [46] and Chō-sen was postponed.
-
-During the year 1870, Bishop Ridel, who had gone back to France,
-returned to China and prepared to rejoin his converts. Having
-communicated with them, they awaited his coming with anxiety, and we
-shall hear of them on board of the flag-ship Colorado.
-
-Mr. Low, having gathered all possible information, public and private,
-concerning “the semi-barbarous and hostile people” of “the unknown
-country” which he expected to fail of entering, sailed from Shanghae,
-May 8th, arriving at Nagasaki, May 12th. On the 13th he wrote to the
-Secretary of State, Mr. Hamilton Fish. He declared that “Corea is more
-of a sealed book than Japan was before Commodore Perry’s visit.”
-Evidently he looked upon the pathway of the duty laid upon him as
-unusually thorny. The rose if plucked at all would be held in smarting
-fingers. While granting a faithful servant of the nation the virtue of
-modesty, one cannot fail to read in his letter more of an expectation
-to redress wrongs than to conciliate hostility.
-
-The whole spirit of the expedition was not that reflected in the
-despatches of the State Department, but rather that of the clubs and
-dinner-tables of Shanghae. The minister went to Corea with his mind
-made up, and everything he saw confirmed him in his fixed opinion. Of
-the admiral, it is not unjust to say that the warrior predominated over
-the peace-maker. He had an eye to the victories of war more than those,
-not less renowned, of peace. The sword was certainly more congenial to
-his nature than the pen.
-
-The fleet made rendezvous at Nagasaki, in Kiushiu—that division of
-Japan whence warlike expeditions to Chō-sen have sailed from the days
-of Jingu to those of Taikō, and from Taikō to Rodgers. This time, as in
-the seventh century, the landing was to be made not near the eastern,
-but on the remote western, coast. The cry was, “On to Seoul.”
-
-The squadron, consisting of the flag-ship Colorado, the corvettes
-Alaska and Benicia, and the gun-boats Monocacy and Palos, sailed
-gallantly out of the harbor on May 16th, and, making an easy run,
-anchored off Ferrières Islands on the 19th, and, after a delay of fogs,
-Isle Eugenie on the 23d.
-
-In spite of the formidable appearance of our navy, the vessels were of
-either an antiquated type or of too heavy a draught, their timbers too
-rotten or not strong enough for shotted broadsides, and their armament
-defective in breech-loading firearms, while the facilities for landing
-a force were inadequate. The Palos and Monocacy were the only ships
-fitted to go up the Han River. The others must remain at the mouth.
-They were little more than transports. All the naval world in Chinese
-waters wondered why so wide-awake and practical a people as the
-Americans should be content with such old-fashioned ships, unworthy of
-the gallant crews who manned them. However, the fleet and armament were
-better than the Corean war-junks, or mud-forts armed with jingals. In
-gallant sailorly recognition of his predecessor, yet with unconscious
-omen of like failure, the brave Rodgers named the place of anchorage
-Roze Roads. The French soundings were verified and the superb scenery
-richly enjoyed. All navigators of the approaches to Seoul are alike
-unanimous in showering unstinting praise upon their natural beauty.
-Here for the first time the natives beheld the “flowery” flag of the
-United States.
-
-Next morning the Palos and four steam-launches were put under the
-command of Captain Homer C. Blake, to examine the channel beyond Boisée
-Island. Four days were peaceably spent in this service, a safe return
-being made on the evening of the 28th. Meanwhile boat parties had
-landed and been treated in a friendly manner by the people, and the
-usual curiosity as to brass buttons, blue cloth, and glass bottles
-displayed. The customary official paper without signature, of
-interrogations as to who, whence, and why of the comers was displayed,
-and the answers, “Americans,” “Friendly,” and “Interview” returned in
-faultless Chinese. It was announced that the fleet would remain for
-some time.
-
-On the following day, May 30th, the fleet anchored between the Isles
-Boisée and Guerrière. A stiff breeze had blown away the fogs and
-revealed the verdure and the features of a landscape which struck all
-with admiration for its luxuriant beauty. Approaching the squadron in a
-junk, some natives made signs of friendship, and came on board without
-hesitation. They bore a missive acknowledging the receipt of the
-Americans’ letter, and announcing that three nobles had been appointed
-by the regent for conference. These junk-men were merely messengers,
-and made no pretence of being anything more. They were hospitably
-treated, shown round the ship, and dined and wined until their good
-nature broke out in broad grins and redolent visages. They stood for
-their photographs on deck, and some fine pictures of them were
-obtained. One of them, after being loaded with an armful of spoil in
-the shape of a dozen or so of Bass’ pale ale bottles, minus their
-corks, and a copy of Every Saturday, a Boston illustrated newspaper,
-was told in the stereotyped photographer’s phrase to “assume a pleasant
-expression of countenance, and look right at this point.” He obeyed so
-well, and in the nick of time, that a wreath of smiles was the result.
-“Our first Corean visitor” stands before us on the page.
-
-Strange coincidence! Strange medley of the significant symbols of a
-Christian land! The first thing given to the Corean was alcohol, beer,
-and wine. In the picture, plainly appearing, are the empty pale ale
-bottles, with their trade-mark, the red triangle—“the entering wedge of
-civilization.” But held behind the hands clasping the bottles is a copy
-of Every Saturday, on the front page of which is a picture of Charles
-Sumner, the champion of humanity, and of the principle that “nations
-must act as individuals,” with like moral responsibility!
-
-Promptly on May 31st, a delegation of eight officers, of the third and
-fifth rank, came on board evidently with intent to see the minister and
-admiral, to learn all they could, and to gain time. They had little or
-no authority and no credentials, but they were sociable, friendly, and
-in good humor.
-
-“Mr. Low would not lower himself,” nor would Admiral Rodgers see them.
-They were received by the secretary, Mr. Drew. They were absolutely
-non-committal on all points and to all questions asked, and naturally
-so, since they had no authority whatever [47] to say “yes” or “no” to
-any proposition of the Americans.
-
-A golden opportunity was here lost. The Corean envoys were informed
-that soundings would be taken in the river, and the shores would be
-surveyed. It was hoped that no molestation would be offered, and,
-further, that twenty-four hours would elapse before the boats began
-work.
-
-“To all this they (the Coreans) made no reply which could indicate
-dissent.” [Certainly not! They had no power to nod their heads, or say
-either “yes” or “no.”] “So, believing that we might continue our
-surveys while further diplomatic negotiations were pending, an
-expedition was sent to examine and survey the Salée [Han] River.” [48]
-
-The survey fleet consisted of the Monocacy, Palos, the only ships fit
-for the purpose, and four steam-launches, each of the latter having a
-howitzer mounted in the bow. Captain H. C. Blake, the commander, was on
-board the Palos. The old hero understood the situation only too well.
-As he started to obey orders he remarked: “In ten minutes we shall have
-a row.”
-
-Exactly at noon of June 2d, the four steam-launches proceeded in line
-abreast up the river, the Palos and Monocacy following. The tide was
-running up, and neither of the large vessels could be kept moving at a
-rate slow enough to allow the survey work to be done well, so that this
-part of their work is of little value.
-
-Yet everything seemed quiet and peaceful; the bluffs and high banks
-along the water were densely covered with green woods, with now
-meadows, now a thatched-roof village, anon a rice-field in the
-foreground. Occasionally people could be seen in their white dresses
-along the banks, but not a sign of hostility or war until, on reaching
-the lower end of Kang-wa Island, a line of forts and fluttering flags
-suddenly become visible. In a few minutes more long lines of
-white-garbed soldiery were seen, and through a glass an interpreter
-read on one of the yellow flags the Chinese characters meaning “General
-Commanding.” In the embrasures were a few pieces of artillery of
-32-pound calibre, and some smaller pieces lashed together by fives, or
-nailed to logs in a row. On the opposite point of the river was a line
-of smaller earthworks, freshly thrown up, armed only with jingals.
-Around the bend in the river was “a whirlpool as bad as Hell Gate,”
-full of eddies and ledges, with the channel only three hundred feet
-wide. The fort (Du Condè) was situated right on this elbow. Hundreds of
-mats and screens were ranged within and on the works, masking the
-loaded guns. As the boats passed nearer, glimpses into the fort became
-possible, by which it was seen that the cannon “lay nearly as thick
-together as gun to gun and gun behind gun on the floor of an arsenal.”
-(See map, page 415.)
-
-For a moment the silence was ominous—oppressive. The hearts of the men
-beat violently, their teeth were set, and calm defiance waited in the
-face of certain death. The rapid current bore them on right into the
-face of the frowning muzzles. It seemed impossible to escape. Were the
-Coreans going to fire? If so, why not now? Immediately? Now is their
-opportunity. The vessels are abreast the forts.
-
-The Corean commander was one moment too late. From the parapet under
-the great flag a signal gun was fired. In an instant mats and screens
-were alive with the red fire of eighty pieces of artillery. Then a hail
-of shot from all the cannon, guns, and jingals rained around the boats.
-Forts, batteries, and walls were hidden for a moment in smoke. The
-water was rasped and torn as though a hailstorm was passing over it.
-Many of the men in the boats were wet to the skin by the splashing of
-the water over them. Old veterans of the civil war had never seen so
-much fire, lead, iron, and smoke of bad powder concentrated in such
-small space and time. “Old Blake,” who had had two ships shot under him
-by the Confederates, declared he could remember nothing so sharp as
-this.
-
-The fire was promptly returned by the steam-launch howitzers. The Palos
-and Monocacy, which had forged ahead, turned back, and “Old Blake came
-round the point a-flying, and let drive all the guns of the Palos at
-them. The consequence was that they kicked so hard as to tear the bolts
-out of the side of the ship and render the bulwarks useless during the
-remainder of the fight.” The Monocacy also anchored near the point, and
-sent her ten-inch shells into the fort. During her movements, she
-struck a rock and began to leak badly. After hammering at the forts
-until everything in them was silenced, the squadron returned down the
-river, sending their explosive compliments into the forts and redoubts
-as they passed. All were quiet and deserted, however, but the
-commander’s flag was still flying unharmed and neglected. Strange to
-say, out of the entire fleet only one of our men was wounded and none
-was killed; nor did any of the ships or boats receive any damage from
-the batteries. Two hundred guns had been fired on the Corean side. The
-signal coming too late, the immovability of their rude guns, the
-badness of the powder, and the poor aim of the unskilled gunners, were
-the causes of such an incredibly small damage. It was like the
-bombardment of Fort Sumter in 1861, or like those battles which
-statistics reveal to us, in which it requires a ton of lead to kill a
-man.
-
-However, it was determined by the chief representatives of the civil
-and naval powers to resent the insult offered to our “flag” in the
-“unprovoked” attack on our vessels, “should no apology or satisfactory
-explanation be offered for the hostile action of the Corean
-government.”
-
-Ten days were now allowed to pass before further action was taken. They
-were ten days of inaction, except preparation for further fight and
-some correspondence with the local magistrate. What a pity these ten
-days had not been spent before, and not after, June 2d! Some civilians,
-not to say Christians, might also be of the opinion that ample revenge
-had already been taken, enough blood spilled, the “honor” of the flag
-fully “vindicated,” a delicate diplomatic mission of “peace” spoiled
-beyond further damage, and that further vengeance was folly, and more
-blood spilled, murder. But not so thought the powers that be.
-
-The chastising expedition consisted of the Monocacy, Palos, four
-steam-launches, and twenty boats, conveying a landing force of six
-hundred and fifty-one men, of whom one hundred and five were marines.
-The Benicia, Alaska, and Colorado remained at anchor. The total force
-detailed for the work of punishing the Coreans was seven hundred and
-fifty-nine men. These were arranged in ten companies of infantry, with
-seven pieces of artillery. The Monocacy had, in addition to her regular
-armament, two of the Colorado’s nine-inch guns. Captain Homer C. Blake,
-who was put in charge of the expedition, remained on the Palos.
-
-The squadron proceeded up the river at 10 o’clock, on the morning of
-the 10th of June, two steam-launches moving in advance of the Monocacy.
-The boats were in tow of the Palos, which moved at 10.30. The day was
-bright, clear, and warm. A short distance above the isle Primauguet a
-junk was seen approaching, the Coreans waving a white flag and holding
-a letter from one of the ministers of the court. One of the
-steam-launches met the junk, and the letter was received. It was
-translated by Mr. Drew, but as it contained nothing which, in the
-American eyes, seemed like an apology, the squadron moved on. At 1
-o’clock the Monocacy arrived within range of the first fort and opened
-with her guns, which partly demolished the walls and emptied it in a
-few seconds.
-
-The landing party, after a two minutes’ pull at the oars, reached the
-shore, and disembarked about eight hundred yards below the fort. The
-landing-place was a mud-flat, in which the men sunk to their knees in
-the tough slime, losing gaiters, shoes, and even tearing off the legs
-of their trousers in their efforts to advance. The howitzers sank to
-their axles in the heavy ooze.
-
-Once on firm land, the infantry formed, the marines deploying as
-skirmishers. Unarmed refugees from the villages were not harmed, and
-the first fort was quietly entered. The work of demolition was begun by
-firing everything combustible and rolling the guns into the river. Day
-being far spent when this was finished, the whole force went into camp
-and bivouacked, taking every precaution against surprise. Four
-companies of infantry were first detailed to drag the howitzers out of
-the mud, a task which resembled the wrenching of an armature off a
-twenty-horse power magnet.
-
-Our men lay down to sleep under the stars. All was quiet that Saturday
-night, except the chatting round the camp-fires and the croaking of the
-Corean frogs, as the men cleaned themselves and prepared for their
-Sunday work. Toward midnight a body of white-coats approached, set up a
-tremendous howling, and began a dropping fire on our main pickets. As
-they moved about in the darkness, they looked like ghosts. When the
-long roll was sounded, our men sprang to their arms and fell in like
-old veterans. A few shells were scattered among the ghostly howlers,
-and all was quiet again. The marines occupied a strong position half a
-mile from the main body, a rice-field dividing them, with only a narrow
-foot-path in the centre. They slept with their arms at their side, and,
-divided into three reliefs, kept watch.
-
-While at the anchorage off Boisée Island that evening, twelve native
-Christians, approaching noiselessly in the dark, made signs of a desire
-to communicate. They had come in a junk from some point on the coast to
-inquire after their pastor, Ridel, and two other French missionaries
-whom they expected. To their great distress, the Americans could give
-them no information. Fearing lest the government might know, from the
-build of their craft, from what part of the country they came, and
-punish them for communicating with the foreigners, they burned their
-boat and returned home.
-
-Next day was Sunday. The reveille was sounded in the camps, breakfast
-eaten, and blankets rolled up. Company C and the pioneers were sent
-into the fort to complete its destruction, by burning up the rice,
-dried fish, and huts still standing.
-
-The march began at 7 A.M. The sun rolled up in a cloudless sky and the
-weather was very warm. It was a rough road, if, indeed, it could be
-called such, being but a bridle-path over hills and valleys, and
-through rice fields. Whole companies were required to drag the
-howitzers up the hills and through the narrow defiles. The marines led
-the advance. The next line of fortifications, the “middle fort,” was
-soon entered. The guns were found loaded, as they had been deserted as
-soon as the fort was made a target by the Monocacy, every one of whose
-shots told. The work of dismantling was here thoroughly done. The sixty
-brass pieces of artillery, all of them insignificant breech-loaders of
-two-inch bore, were tumbled into the river, and the fort appropriately
-named “Fort Monocacy.”
-
-The difficult march was resumed under a blazing sun and in steaming
-heat. A succession of steep hills lay before them. Sappers and miners,
-with picks, shovels, and axes, went ahead levelling and widening the
-road, cutting bushes and filling hollows. The guns had to be hauled up
-and lowered down the steep places by means of ropes. Large masses of
-white coats and black heads hovered on their flanks, evidently
-purposing to get in the rear. Their numbers were increasing. The danger
-was imminent. The fort must be taken soon or never.
-
-A detachment of five howitzers and three companies were detailed to
-guard the flanks and rear under Lieutenant-Commander Wheeler. The main
-body then moved forward to storm the fort (citadel). This move of our
-forces checkmated the enemy and made victory sure, redeeming a critical
-moment and turning danger into safety.
-
-Hardly were the guns in position, when the Coreans, massing their
-forces, charged the hill in the very teeth of the howitzers’ fire. Our
-men calmly took sure aim, and by steadily firing at long range, so
-shattered the ranks of the attacking force that they broke and fled,
-leaving a clear field. The fort was now doomed. The splendid practice
-of our howitzers effectually prevented any large body of the enemy from
-getting into action, and made certain the capture of the citadel.
-
-Meanwhile the Monocacy, moving up the river and abreast of the land
-force, poured a steady fire of shell through the walls and into the
-fort, while the howitzers of the rear-guard on the hill behind,
-reversing their muzzles, fired upon the garrison over the heads of our
-men in the ravine. The infantry and marines having rested awhile after
-their forced march, during which several had been overcome by heat and
-sunstroke, now formed for a charge.
-
-The citadel to be assaulted was the key to the whole line of
-fortifications. It crowned the apex of a conical hill one hundred and
-fifty feet high, measuring from the bottom of the ravine. It mounted,
-with the redoubt below, one hundred and forty-three guns. The sides of
-the hill were very steep, the walls of the fort joining it almost
-without a break. Up this steep incline our men were to rush in the face
-of the garrison’s fire. Could the white-coats depress the jingals at a
-sufficiently low angle, they must annihilate the blue-jackets. Should
-our men reach the walls, they could easily enter through the breaches
-made by the Monocacy’s shells. As usual, slowness, and the national
-habit of being behind time, saved our men and lost the day for Corea.
-
-A terrible reception awaited the Americans. Every man inside was bound
-to die at his post, for this fort being the key to all the others, was
-held by the tiger-hunters, who, if they flinched before the enemy, were
-to be put to death by their own people.
-
-All being ready, our men rose up with a yell and rushed for the
-redoubt, officers in front. A storm of jingal balls rained over their
-heads, but their dash up the hill was so rapid that the garrison could
-not depress their pieces or load fast enough. Their powder burned too
-slowly to hurt the swift Yankees. Goaded to despair the tiger-hunters
-“chanted their war-dirge in a blood-chilling cadence which nothing can
-duplicate.” They mounted the parapet, fighting with furious courage.
-They cast stones at our men. They met them with spear and sword. With
-hands emptied of weapons, they picked up dust and threw in the
-invaders’ eyes to blind them. Expecting no quarter and no relief, they
-contested the ground inch by inch and fought only to die. Scores were
-shot and tumbled into the river. Most of the wounded were drowned, and
-some cut their own throats as they rushed into the water.
-
-Lieutenant McKee was the first to mount the parapet and leap inside the
-fort. For a moment, and only a moment, he stood alone fighting against
-overwhelming odds. A bullet struck him in the groin, a Corean brave
-rushed forward, and, with a terrible lunge, thrust him in the thigh,
-and then turned upon Lieutenant-Commander Schley, who had leaped over
-the parapet. The spear passed harmlessly between the arm and body of
-the American as a carbine bullet laid the Corean dead.
-
-The fort was now full of officers and men, and a hand to hand fight
-between the blue and white began to strew the ground with corpses.
-Corean sword crossed Yankee cutlass, and clubbed carbine brained the
-native whose spear it dashed aside. The garrison fought to the last
-man. Within the walls those shot and bayoneted numbered nearly one
-hundred. Not one unwounded prisoner was taken. The huge yellow cotton
-flag, which floated from a very short staff in the centre, was hauled
-down by Captain McLane Tilton and two marines. Meanwhile a desperate
-fight went on outside the fort. During the charge, some of the Coreans
-retreated from the fort, a movement which caught the eye of Master
-McLean. Hastily collecting a party of his men, he moved to the left on
-the double quick to cut off the fugitives. He was just in time. The
-fugitives, forty or fifty in all, after firing, attempted to rush past
-him. They were driven back in diminished numbers. Hemmed in between the
-captured fort and their enemy, McLean charged them with his handful of
-men. Hiding behind some rocks, they fought with desperation until they
-were all killed, only two or three being made prisoners. Another party
-attempting to escape were nearly annihilated by Cassel’s battery, which
-sent canister into their flying backs, mowing them down in swaths.
-Moving at full speed, many were shot like rabbits, falling heels over
-head. At the same time Captain Tilton passed to the right of the fort
-and caught another party retreating along the crest of the hill joining
-the two forts, and, with a steady carbine fire, thinned their numbers.
-At 12.45 the stars and stripes floated over all the forts. A
-photographer came ashore and on his camera fixed the horrible picture
-of blood.
-
-The scene after the battle smoke cleared away, and our men sat down to
-rest, was of a kind to thoroughly satisfy those “who look on war as a
-pastime.” It was one from which humanity loves to avert her gaze. Two
-hundred and forty-three corpses in their white garments lay in and
-around the citadel. Many of them were clothed in thick cotton armor,
-wadded to nine thicknesses, which now smouldered away. A sickening
-stench of roasted flesh filled the air, which, during the day and
-night, became intolerable. Some of the wounded, fearing their captors
-worse than their torture, slowly burned to death; choosing rather to
-suffer living cremation than to save their lives as captives. Our men,
-as they dragged the smoking corpses into the burial trench, found one
-man who could endure the torture no longer. Making signs of life, he
-was soon stripped of his clothes, but died soon after of his wounds and
-burns. Only twenty prisoners, all wounded, were taken alive. At least a
-hundred corpses floated or sunk in the river, which ran here and there
-in crimson streaks. At this one place probably as many as three hundred
-and fifty Corean patriots gave up their lives for their country.
-
-On the American side, the gallant McKee, who fell as his father fell in
-Mexico, at the head of his men, the first inside the stormed works, was
-mortally wounded, and died soon after. One landsman of the Colorado and
-one marine of the Benicia were killed. Five men were severely, and five
-slightly, wounded.
-
-The other two forts below the citadel being open to the rear from the
-main work were easily entered, no regular resistance being offered. The
-results of the forty-eight hours on shore, eighteen of which were spent
-in the field, were the capture of five forts—probably the strongest in
-the kingdom—fifty flags, four hundred and eighty-one pieces of
-artillery, chiefly jingals, and a large number of matchlocks. Of the
-artillery eleven pieces were 32,– fourteen were 24,– two were 20,– and
-the remaining four hundred and fifty-four were 2- and 4-pounders. The
-work of destruction was carried on and made as thorough as fire, axe,
-and shovel could make it. A victory was won, of which the American navy
-may feel proud. Zeal, patience, discipline, and bravery characterized
-men and officers in all the movements.
-
-The wounded were moved to the Monocacy. The forts were occupied all
-Sunday night, and early on Monday morning the whole force was
-re-embarked in perfect order, in spite of the furious tide, rising
-twenty feet. The fleet moved down the stream with the captured colors
-at the mast-heads and towing the boats laden with the trophies of
-victory. Reaching the anchorage at half past ten o’clock, they were
-greeted with such ringing cheers of their comrades left behind as made
-the woodlands echo again.
-
-Later in the day, Dennis Hendrin (or Hanrahan) and Seth Allen, the two
-men slain in the fight, were buried on Boisée Island, and the first
-American graves rose on Corean soil. At 5.45 P.M. McKee breathed his
-last. [49]
-
-Yet the odds of battle were dreadful—three graves against heaps upon
-heaps of unburied slain. Well might the pagan ask: “What did Heaven
-mean by it?”
-
-The native wounded were kindly cared for, and their broken bones
-mended, by the fleet surgeon, Dr. Mayo. Admiral Rodgers, in a letter to
-the native authorities, offered to return his prisoners. The reply was
-in substance: “Do as you please with them.” The prisoners were
-therefore set ashore and allowed to dispose of themselves.
-
-Admiral Rodgers having obeyed to the farthest limit the orders given
-him, and all hope of making a treaty being over, two of the ships,
-withal needing to refit, the fleet sailed from the anchorage off Isle
-Boisée the day before the fourth of July, arriving in Chifu on the
-morning of July 5th, after thirty-five days’ stay in Corean waters. He
-arrived in time to hear of the Tientsin massacre, which had taken place
-June 20th. “Our little war with the heathen,” as the New York Herald
-styled it, attracted slight notice in the United States. A few columns
-of news and comment from the metropolitan press, a page or two of
-woodcuts in an illustrated newspaper, the ringing of a chime of jests
-on going up Salt River (Salée), and the usual transmission of official
-documents, summed up the transient impression on the American public.
-
-In China the expedition was looked upon as a failure and a defeat. The
-popular Corean idea was, that the Americans had come to avenge the
-death of pirates and robbers, and, after several battles, had been so
-surely defeated that they dare not attempt the task of chastisement
-again. To the Tai-wen Kun the whole matter was cause for personal
-glorification. The tiger-hunters and the conservative party at court
-believed that they had successfully defied both France and America, and
-driven off their forces with loss. When a Scotch missionary in
-Shing-king reasoned with a Corean concerning the power of foreigners
-and their superiority in war, the listener’s reply, delivered with
-angry toss of the head and a snap of the fingers, was: “What care we
-for your foreign inventions? Even our boys laugh at all your weapons.”
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLVII.
-
-THE PORTS OPENED TO JAPANESE COMMERCE.
-
-
-The walls of Corean isolation, so long intact, had been sapped by the
-entrance of Christianity and the French missionaries, and now began to
-crumble. With the Russians on the north, and the sea no longer a
-barrier, the Japanese began to press upon the east, while China broke
-through and abolished the neutrality of the western border. The fires
-of civilization began to smoke out the hermit.
-
-The revolutions of 1868 in Japan, culminating after a century of
-interior preparation, abolished the dual system and feudalism, and
-restored the mikado to supreme power. The capital was removed to Tōkiō,
-and the office of Foreign Affairs—a sub-bureau—was raised to a
-department of the Imperial administration. One of the first things
-attended to was to invite the Corean government to resume ancient
-friendship and vassalage.
-
-This summons, coming from a source unrecognized for eight centuries,
-and to a regent swollen with pride at his victory over the French and
-his success in extirpating the Christian religion, and irritated at
-Japan for adopting western principles of progress and cutting free from
-Chinese influence and tradition, was spurned with defiance. An insolent
-and even scurrilous letter was returned to the mikado’s government,
-which stung to rage the military classes of Japan, who began to form a
-“war-party,” which was headed by Saigo of Satsuma. Waiting only for the
-return of the embassy from Europe, and for the word to take up the gage
-of battle, they nourished their wrath to keep it warm.
-
-It was not so to be. New factors had entered the Corean problem since
-Taiko’s time. European states were now concerned in Asiatic politics.
-Russia was too near, China too hostile, and Japan too poor; she was
-even then paying ten per cent. interest to London bankers on the
-Shimonoséki Indemnity loan. Financial ruin, and a collision with China
-might result, if war were declared. In October, 1873, the cabinet
-vetoed the scheme, and Saigo, the leader of the war party, resigned and
-returned to Satsuma, to nourish schemes for the overthrow of the
-ministry and the humiliation of Corea. “The eagle, even though
-starving, refuses to eat grain;” nor would anything less than Corean
-blood satisfy the Japanese veterans.
-
-In 1873, the young king of Corea attained his majority. His father,
-Tai-wen Kun, by the act of the king backed by Queen Chō, was relieved
-of office, and his bloody and cruel lease of power came to an end. The
-young sovereign proved himself a man of mental vigor and independent
-judgment, not merely trusting to his ministers, but opening important
-documents in person. He has been ably seconded by his wife Min, through
-whose influence Tai-wen Kun was shorn of influence, nobles of
-progressive spirit were reinstated to office, and friendship with Japan
-encouraged. In this year, 1873, an heir to the throne was born of the
-queen; another royal child, the offspring of a concubine, having been
-born in 1869.
-
-The neutral belt of land long inhabited by deer and tiger, or traversed
-by occasional parties of ginseng-hunters, had within the last few
-decades been overspread with squatters, and infested by Manchiu
-brigands and Corean outlaws. The depredations of these border ruffians
-both across the Yalu, and on the Chinese settlements—like the raids of
-the wild Indians on our Texas frontier—had become intolerable to both
-countries. In 1875, Li Hung Chang, sending a force of picked Chinese
-troops, supported by a gunboat on the Yalu, broke up the nest of
-robbers, and imbibed a taste both for Corean politics and for
-rectifying the frontiers of Shing-king. He proceeded at once to make
-said frontier “scientific” by allowing the surveyor and plowman to
-enter the no longer debatable land. In 1877, the governor of Shing-king
-proposing, the Peking Government shifted the eastern frontier of the
-empire twenty leagues nearer the rising sun, on the plea that “the
-width of the tract left uncultivated was of less moment than the
-efficiency of border regulations.” By this act the borders of China and
-Corea touched, and were written in Yalu water. The last vestige of
-insulation was removed, and the shocks of change now became more
-frequent and alarming. By contact with the living world, comatose Corea
-was to be galvanized into new life.
-
-Nevertheless the hostile spirit of the official classes, who tyrannize
-the little country, was shown in the refusal to receive envoys of the
-mikado because they were dressed in European clothes, in petty
-regulations highly irritating to the Japanese at Fusan, and by the
-overt act of violence which we shall now narrate.
-
-Since 1868 the Japanese navy, modelled after the British, and
-consisting of American and European iron-clads and war vessels, has
-been manned by crews uniformed in foreign style. On September 19, 1875,
-some sailors of the Unyo Kuan, which had been cruising off the mouth of
-the Han River, landing near Kang-wa for water, were fired on by Corean
-soldiers, under the idea that they were Americans or Frenchmen. On the
-21st the Japanese, numbering thirty-six men, and armed with breech
-loaders, stormed the fort. Most of the garrison were shot or drowned,
-the fort dismantled, and the spoil carried to the ships. Occupying the
-works two days, the Japanese returned to Nagasaki on the 23d.
-
-The news of “the Kokwa [Kang-wa] affair” brought the wavering minds of
-both the peace and the war party of Japan to a decision. Arinori Mori
-was despatched to Peking to find out the exact relation of China to
-Corea, and secure her neutrality. Kuroda Kiyotaku was sent with a fleet
-to the Han River, to make, if possible, a treaty of friendship and open
-ports of trade. By the rival parties, the one was regarded as the
-bearer of the olive branch, the other of arrows and lightning. With
-Kuroda went Inouyé Bunda of the State Department, and Kin Rinshiō, the
-Corean liberal.
-
-General Kuroda sailed January 6, 1876, amid salvos of the artillery of
-newspaper criticism predicting failure, with two men-of-war, three
-transports, and three companies of marines, or less than eight hundred
-men in all, and touching at Fusan, anchored within sight of Seoul,
-February 6th. About the same time, a courier from Peking arrived in the
-capital, bearing the Imperial recommendation that a treaty be made with
-the Japanese. The temper of the young king had been manifested long
-before this by his rebuking the district magistrate of Kang-wa for
-allowing soldiers to fire on peaceably disposed people, and ordering
-the offender to degradation and exile. Arinori Mori, in Peking, had
-received the written disclaimer of China’s responsibility over “the
-outpost state,” by which stroke of policy the Middle Kingdom freed
-herself from all possible claims of indemnity from France, the United
-States, and Japan. The way for a treaty was now smoothed, and the new
-difficulties were merely questions of form. Nevertheless, while Kuroda
-was unheard from, the Japanese war preparations went vigorously on.
-
-Kuroda, making Commodore Perry’s tactics his own, disposed his fleet in
-the most imposing array, made his transports look like men-of-war, by
-painting port-holes on them, kept up an incredible amount of fuss,
-movement, and bustle, and on the 10th landed a dazzling array of
-marines, sailors, and officers in full uniform, who paraded two miles
-to the treaty-house, on Kang-wa Island, where two high commissioners
-from Seoul, Ji Shinken and In Jiahō, aged respectively sixty-five and
-fifty, awaited him.
-
-One day was devoted to ceremony, and three to negotiation. A written
-apology for the Kang-wa affair was offered by the Coreans, and the
-details of the treaty settled, the chief difficulties being the titles
-to be used. [50] Ten days for consultation at the capital were then
-asked for and granted, at the end of which time, the two commissioners
-returned, declaring the impossibility of obtaining the royal signature.
-The Japanese at once embarked on their ships in disgust. They returned
-only after satisfactory assurances; and on February 27th the treaty, in
-which Chō-sen was recognized as an independent nation, was signed and
-attested. The Japanese then made presents, mostly of western
-manufacture, and after being feasted, returned March 1st. Mr. Inouyé
-Bunda then proceeded to Europe, visiting, on his way, the Centennial
-Exposition at Philadelphia, at which also, it is said, were one or more
-Corean visitors.
-
-The first Corean Embassy, which since the twelfth century had been
-accredited to the mikado’s court, sailed in May, 1876, from Fusan in a
-Japanese steamer, landing at Yokohama May 29th, at 8 A.M. Two
-Neptune-like braves with the symbols of power—huge iron tridents—led
-the procession, in which was a band of twenty performers on metal
-horns, conch-shells, flutes, whistles, cymbals, and drums.
-Effeminate-looking pages bore the treaty documents. The chief envoy
-rode on a platform covered with tiger-skins, and resting on the
-shoulders of eight men, while a servant bore the umbrella of state over
-his head, and four minor officers walked at his side. The remainder of
-the suite rode in jin-riki-shas, and the Japanese military and civil
-escort completed the display. They breakfasted at the town hall, and by
-railroad and steam-cars reached Tōkiō. At the station, the contrast
-between the old and the new was startling. The Japanese stood “with all
-the outward signs of the Civilization that is coming in.” “On the other
-side, were all the representatives of the Barbarism that is going out.”
-On the following day, the Coreans visited the Foreign Office, and on
-June 1st, the envoy, though of inferior rank, had audience of the
-mikado. For three weeks the Japanese amused, enlightened, and startled
-their guests by showing them their war ships, arsenals, artillery,
-torpedoes, schools, buildings, factories, and offices equipped with
-steam and electricity—the ripened fruit of the seed planted by Perry in
-1854. All attempts of foreigners to hold any communication with them,
-were firmly rejected by the Coreans, who started homeward June 28th.
-The official diary, or report by the ambassador of this visit to Japan,
-was afterward published in Seoul. It is a colorless narrative carefully
-bleached of all views and opinions, evidently satisfying the scrutiny
-even of enemies at court.
-
-During the autumn of this year, 1876, and later on, in following years,
-the British war-vessels, Sylvia and Swinger, were engaged in surveying
-portions of the coast of Kiung-sang province. Captain H. C. Saint John,
-who commanded the Sylvia, and had touched near Fusan in 1855—long
-enough to see a native bastinadoed simply for selling a chicken to a
-foreigner—now found more hospitable treatment. His adventures are
-narrated in his chatty book, “The Wild Coasts of Nipon.” An English
-vessel, the Barbara Taylor, having been wrecked on Corean shores, an
-attaché of the British Legation in Tōkiō was sent to Fusan to thank the
-authorities for their kind treatment of the crew.
-
-The Japanese found it was not wise to hasten in taking advantage of
-their new liberties granted by treaty. Near Fusan, are thousands of
-graves of natives killed in the invasion of 1592–97, over which the
-Coreans hold an annual memorial celebration. Hitherto the Japanese had
-been rigorously kept within their guarded enclosure. Going out to
-witness the celebration, they were met with a shower of stones, and
-found the road blockaded. After a small riot in which many words and
-missiles were exchanged, matters were righted, but the temper of the
-people showed that, as in old Japan, it would be long before ignorant
-hermits, and not over-gentle foreigners could live quietly together.
-
-Saigo, of Satsuma, dissatisfied with the peaceful results of Kuroda’s
-mission, and the “brain victory” over the Coreans, organized, during
-1877, “The Satsuma Rebellion,” to crush which cost Japan twenty
-thousand lives, $50,000,000, and seven months of mighty effort, the
-story of which has been so well told in the lamented A. H. Mounsey’s
-perspicuous monograph. Yet out of this struggle, with which Corea
-manifested no sympathy, the nation emerged with old elements of
-disturbance eliminated, and with a broader outlook to the future. A
-more vigorous policy with Chō-sen was at once inaugurated.
-
-Under the new treaty, Fusan (Corean, Pu-san) soon became a bustling
-place of trade, with a population of two thousand, many of whom,
-however, were poor people from Tsushima. Among the public buildings
-were those of the Consulate, Chamber of Commerce, Bank, Mitsu Bishi
-(Three Diamonds) Steamship Company, and a hospital, under care of Dr.
-Yano, in which, up to 1882, four thousand Coreans and many Japanese
-have been treated. A Japanese and Corean newspaper, Chō-sen Shimpo,
-restaurants, places of amusements of various grades of morality, and a
-variety of establishments for turning wits and industry into money,
-have been established. The decayed gentry of Japan, starting in
-business with the capital obtained by commuting their hereditary
-pensions, found it difficult to compete with the trained merchants of
-Tōkiō and Ozaka. Great trouble from the lock of a gold and silver
-currency has been experienced, as only the copper and iron sapeks, or
-‘cash,’ are in circulation. In Corean political economy to let gold go
-out of the country is to sell the kingdom; and so many rogues have
-attempted the sale of brass or gilt nuggets that an assaying office at
-the consulate has been provided. The government of Tōkiō has urged upon
-that of Seoul the adoption of a circulating medium based on the
-precious metals; and, perhaps, Corean coins may yet be struck at the
-superb mint at Ozaka. While gold in dust and nuggets has been exported
-for centuries, rumor credits the vaults at Seoul with being full of
-Japanese gold koban, the mountains to be well packed with auriferous
-quartz, and the rivers to run with golden sands.
-
-Among the callers, with diplomatic powers, from the outside world in
-1881, each eager and ambitious to be the first in wresting the coveted
-prize of a treaty, were two British captains of men-of-war, who arrived
-on May 21st and 28th; a French naval officer, June 16th, who sailed
-away after a rebuff June 18th; while at Gensan, June 7th, the British
-man-of-war, Pegasus, came, and saw, but did not conquer.
-
-After six years of mutual contact at Fusan, the Coreans, though finding
-the Japanese as troublesome as the latter discovered foreigners to be
-after their own ports were opened, have, with much experience learned,
-settled down to endure them, for the sake of a trade which undoubtedly
-enriches the country. The Coreans buy cotton goods, tin-plate, glass,
-dyes, tools, and machinery, clocks, watches, petroleum, flour,
-lacquer-work, iron, hollow-ware, and foreign knick-knacks. A good sign
-of a desire for personal improvement is a demand for bath-tubs. Soap
-will probably come next.
-
-The exports are gold dust, silver, ox hides and bones, beche-de-mer,
-fish, rice, raw silk, fans, cotton, and bamboo paper, ginseng, furs of
-many kinds, tobacco, shells for inlaying, dried fish, timber, beans and
-peas, hemp, jute, various plants yielding paper-stock, peony-bark,
-gall-nuts, varnishes and oils, and a variety of other vegetable
-substances having a universal commercial value.
-
-Even Riu Kiu has seen the benefits of trade, and five merchants from
-what is now the Okinawa ken of the mikado’s empire—formerly the Loo
-Choo island kingdom—came to Tōkiō in February, 1882, to form a company
-with a view to establishing an agency in Fusan, and exchanging Corean
-products for Riu Kiu sugar, grain, and fish.
-
-Gensan (Corean, Won-san) was opened May 1, 1880. In a fertile region,
-traversed by two high roads, with the fur country near, and a
-magnificent harbor in front, the prospects of trade are good. The
-Japanese concession, on which are some imposing public buildings,
-includes about forty-two acres. An exposition of Japanese, European,
-and American goods was established which was visited by 25,000 people,
-its object being to open the eyes and pockets of the natives, who
-seemed, to the Tōkiō merchants, taller, stouter, and better looking
-than those of Fusan. One twenty-sixth of the goods sold was Japanese,
-the rest, mostly cotton goods and ‘notions,’ were American and
-European. The busy season of trade is in autumn and early winter. For
-the first three months the settlers were less troubled by tigers than
-by continual rumors of the approach of a band of a thousand
-“foreigner-haters,” who were sworn to annihilate the aliens on the
-sacred soil of Chō-sen. The bloodthirsty braves, however, postponed the
-execution of their purpose. The Japanese merchants, so far from finding
-the Coreans innocently verdant, soon came in contact with monopolies,
-rings, guilds, and tricks of trade that showed a surprising knowledge
-of business. Official intermeddling completed their woe, and loud and
-long were the complaints of the mikado’s subjects. Yet profits were
-fair, and the first anniversary of the opening of the port was
-celebrated in grand style. Besides dinners and day fireworks, the
-police played the ancient national game of polo, to the great amusement
-of the Coreans. Among the foreign visitors in May, 1881, was Doctor
-Frank Cowan, an American gentleman, and surgeon on the Japanese steamer
-Tsuruga Maru, who made a short journey in the vicinity among the
-good-natured natives. Besides spying out the land, and returning well
-laden with trophies, he records, in a letter to the State Department at
-Washington, this prophecy: “Next to the countries on the golden rim of
-the Pacific, ... to disturb the monetary equilibrium of the world, will
-be Corea.” “The geological structure is not incompatible with the
-theory that the whole region [east coast] is productive of the precious
-metal.”
-
-To regulate some points of the treaty, and if possible postpone the
-opening of the new port of In-chiŭn (Japanese, Nin-sen) a second
-embassy was despatched to Japan, which arrived at Yokohama, August 11,
-1880. The procession of tall and portly men dressed in green, red, and
-pink garments of coarse cloth, with Chinese shoes, and hats of mighty
-diameter, moved through the streets amid the rather free remarks of the
-spectators, who commented in no complimentary language on the general
-air of dinginess which these Rip Van Winkles of the orient presented.
-The Coreans remained in Tōkiō until September 8th. Perfect courtesy was
-everywhere shown them, as they visited schools and factories, and
-studied Japan’s modern enginery of war and peace. The general attitude
-of the Tōkiō press and populace was that of condescending familiarity,
-of generous hospitality mildly flavored with contempt, and tempered by
-a very uncertain hope that these people might develop into good
-pupils—and customers.
-
-Chō-sen did not lack attentions from the outside world—Russia, England,
-France, Italy, and the United States—during the year 1880. Whether
-missionaries of the Holy Synod of Russia attempted to cross the Tumen,
-we do not know; but in the spring of 1880, a Muscovite vessel appeared
-off one of the ports of Ham-Kiung, to open commercial relations. The
-offer was politely declined. The Italian war-vessel Vettor Pisani,
-having on board H. R. H. the Duke of Genoa, arrived off Fusan, August
-1, 1880, at 1 P.M.—a few hours after the Corean embassy had left for
-Japan. One survivor of the Italian ship, Bianca Portia, wrecked near
-Quelpart in 1879, had been kindly treated by the Corean authorities and
-sent to Nagasaki. The duke, through the Japanese consul, forwarded a
-letter of thanks to the governor of Tong-nai, who, however, returned
-the missive, though with a courteous answer. After seven days, the
-Vettor Pisani sailed northward, and avoiding Gensan and the Japanese
-consul, anchored off Port Lazareff, where, during his six days’ stay,
-he was visited by the local magistrate, to whom he committed a letter
-of application for trade. Some native cards of silk-worm’s eggs were
-also secured to test their value for Italy. After a three days’ visit
-to Gensan the ship sailed away, the Italian believing that negotiations
-with the Coreans would succeed better without Japanese aid, and
-congratulating himself upon having been more successful than the
-previous attempts by the British, and especially by the French (Captain
-Fourmier, of the Lynx) and American (Commodore Shufeldt) diplomatic
-agents, whose letters were returned unread.
-
-The Government of the United States had not forgotten Corea, and Japan
-had signified her willingness to assist in opening the hermit nation to
-American commerce. On April 8, 1878, Senator Sargent, of California,
-offered a resolution that President Hayes “appoint a commissioner to
-represent this country in an effort to arrange, by peaceful means and
-with the aid of the friendly offices of Japan, a treaty of peace and
-commerce between the United States and the Kingdom of Corea.” The bill
-passed to a second reading, but, the Senate adjourning, no action was
-taken. In 1879, the U. S. steamship Ticonderoga, under Commodore R. W.
-Shufeldt, was sent on a cruise around the world in the interests of
-American commerce, and to make, if possible, a treaty with Corea.
-Entering the harbor of Fusan, May 14, 1880, Commodore Shufeldt begged
-the Japanese consul, who visited the ship, to forward his papers to
-Seoul. The consul complied, but, unfortunately, neither the
-interpreters nor the governor of Tong-nai—preferring present pay and
-comfort to possible future benefit—would have anything to do with such
-dangerous business. Japanese rumor asserts that the Coreans seeing the
-letter addressed on the outside to “the King of Corea,” declined to
-receive it, partly because their sovereign was “not King of Korai” but
-“King of Chō-sen.” Under the circumstances, the American could do
-nothing more than withdraw, which he did amid the usual salute from a
-Corean fort near by. A second visit being equally fruitless, the
-Ticonderoga again turned her stern toward “the last outstanding and
-irreconcilable scoffer among nations at western alliances,” and her
-prow homeward.
-
-The Corean embassy, failing in their attempts to have the Japanese go
-slowly, Hanabusa, the mikado’s envoy at Seoul, now vigorously urged the
-opening of the third port, and, after much discussion, In-chiŭn, [51]
-twenty-five miles from Seoul, was selected; in December, 1880, Hanabusa
-and his suite, crossing the frozen rivers, went thither, and selected
-the ground for the Japanese concession.
-
-The old questions upon which political parties in the hermit nation had
-formed themselves, now sank out of sight, and the new element of
-excitement was the all-absorbing question of breaking the seals of
-national seclusion. The “Civilization Party,” or the Progressionists,
-were opposed to the Exclusionists, Port-closers, and Foreigner-haters.
-Heading the former or liberal party were the young king and queen, Bin
-Kenko, Bin Shoshoko, Ri Saiwo, and other high dignitaries, besides Kin
-Giokin and Jo Kohan, former envoys to Japan. The leader of the
-Conservatives was the Tai-wen-kun, father of the king and late regent.
-The neutrals clustered around Kin Koshiu.
-
-Physically speaking, the Coreans see the sun rise over Japan and set
-over China, but morally, and in rhetoric, their sun of prosperity has
-ever risen and set in China. Some proposed to buy all machinery, arms,
-and government material in China, and imitate her plans and policy, and
-conform to the advice of her statesmen. The other side urged the
-adoption of Japanese methods and materials. The pro-Chinese gentry
-imitated the Peking mandarins in details of dress, household
-decoration, and culture; while all their books conveying Western
-science must be read from Chinese translations. The pro-Japanese
-Coreans had their houses furnished with Japanese articles, they read
-and studied Japanese literature and translations of European books, and
-when out of Corea the most radical among them wore coats and
-pantaloons. The long and hot disputes between the adherents of both
-parties seriously hampered the government, while precipitating a
-revolution in the national policy; for serious debate in a despotic
-country is a sign of awakening life.
-
-About this time, early in 1881, a remarkable document, composed by
-Kwo-in-ken, adviser to the Chinese Minister to Japan, had a lively
-effect upon the court of Seoul. It was entitled “Policy for Corea.” It
-described the neighbors of Chō-sen, and pointed out her proper attitude
-to each of them. From Russia, devoted as she is to a policy of
-perpetual aggrandizement at the expense of other countries, and
-consumed by lust for land, Corea is in imminent danger. China, on the
-contrary, is Corea’s natural ally and friend, ever ready with aid in
-men and money; both countries need each other, and their union should
-be as close as lips and teeth. For historical and geographical reasons,
-Corea and Japan should also be one in friendship, and thus guard
-against “Russia the ravenous.” The next point treated is the necessity
-of an alliance between Corea and the United States, because the
-Americans are the natural friends of Asiatic nations. Pointing out the
-many advantages of securing the friendship of the Americans, and making
-a treaty with them first, the memorialist urges the Coreans to seize
-the golden opportunity at once.
-
-About the same time, Li Hung Chang, China’s liberal statesman, wrote a
-letter to a Corean gentleman, in which the advice to seek the
-friendship of China and the United States was strongly expressed, and a
-treaty with the Americans urged as a matter of national safety. Many,
-though not all, of the members of the embassies to Japan returned full
-of enthusiasm for Western civilization. It soon became evident that the
-king and many of his advisers were willing to make treaties. In Peking,
-the members of the embassy, before the winter of 1881 was over, began
-diplomatic flirtations with the American Legation. At that time,
-however, neither Minister J. B. Angell, in Peking, nor John A. Bingham,
-in Tōkiō, had any authority to make a treaty with Corea. While the way
-was thus made ready, the representations of Messrs. Bingham and Angell
-to the State Department at Washington impressed upon our Government the
-necessity of having a diplomatic agent near at hand to take advantage
-of the next opportunity. Hitherto the only avenue of entrance seemed
-through the Japanese good offices; but the apparent willingness of
-Coreans in Peking, the experience of the Italians in the Vettor Pisani
-at Fusan and Port Lazareff, the advice of Chinese statesmen to Corea to
-have faith in the United States, and to open her ports to American
-commerce, convinced the American minister at Peking that China, rather
-than Japan, would furnish the better base of diplomatic operations for
-breaking down the Corean repulsive policy.
-
-The Government at Washington responded to the suggestion, and in the
-spring of 1881, Commodore Shufeldt was sent by the State Department to
-Peking as naval attaché to the Legation, so as to be near the American
-Minister and be ready with his experience, should a further attempt “to
-bring together the strange States of the Extreme Sea” be made.
-
-Shortly after the presentation of Kwo-in-ken’s memorial in Seoul, a
-party of thirty-four prominent men of the civilization party, led by
-Giō Inchiu and Kio Yeichoku, set out from Seoul to visit Japan and
-further study the problem of how far Western ideas were adapted to an
-oriental state.
-
-The proposition to open a port so near the capital to the Japanese, and
-to treat with the Americans, was not left unchallenged. The
-ultra-Confucianists, headed by Ni Mansun, stood ready to oppose it with
-word and weapon. In swelling Corean rhetoric, this bigoted patriot from
-Chung-chong proved to his own satisfaction that all the nations except
-China and Corea were uncivilized, and that the presence of foreigners
-would pollute the holy land. Gathering an array of seven hundred of his
-followers, he dressed in mourning to show his grief, and with the
-figure of an axe on his shoulders, in token of risking his life by his
-act, he presented his memorial to the king, and sat for seven days in
-front of the royal palace. He demanded that In-chiŭn should not be
-opened, the two Bin should be deposed, and all innovations should
-cease.
-
-The popular form of the dread of foreigners was shown in delegations of
-country people, who came into Seoul to forward petitions and
-protestations. Placards were posted on or near the palace gates, full
-of violent language, and prophesying the most woful results of Western
-blight and poison upon the country which had ever been the object of
-the special favor of the spirits.
-
-Another party of two thousand literary men, fanatical patriots, had
-assembled at Chō-rio to go up to Seoul to overawe the progressive
-ministers, but were met by messengers from the court and turned back by
-the promise that the party about to visit Japan under royal patronage
-should be recalled. For a moment the king had thrown a sop to these
-cerberian zealots, whose three heads of demand would keep Chō-sen as
-inaccessible as Hades.
-
-The order came too late, the progressionists had left the shores, and
-were in Nagasaki. Thence to Ozaka, where some remained to study the
-arts and sciences; the majority proceeded to Tōkiō to examine modern
-civilization in its manifold phases. Unlike Peter the Great, some of
-these reformers began with themselves, clothing mind and body with the
-nineteenth century. Dropping the garments of picturesque mediævalism,
-they put on the work-suit of buttoned coat and trousers and learned the
-value of minutes from American watches. The cutting off their badge of
-nationality—the top-knot—was accompanied with emotions very similar to
-those of bereavement by death.
-
-Giō Inchiu [52] after his return from Japan was despatched on a mission
-to China, where his conference was chiefly with Li Hung Chang. He
-returned home by way of Fusan, December 29, 1881. He had now a good
-opportunity of judging the relative merits of Japan and China. His
-patriotic eye saw that the first need of Corean reform was in
-strengthening the army; though the poverty of the country gave slight
-hope of speedy success.
-
-The results of this mission were soon apparent, for shortly after,
-eighty young men, of the average age of twenty, were sent to Tientsin,
-where they are now, 1882, diligently pursuing their studies; some in
-the arsenal, learning the manufacture of firearms, others learning the
-English language. A returned Chinese student—one of the number lately
-recalled from New England—while severely sarcastic at the Corean
-government’s “poor discrimination in selecting the country from which
-her students could profit most,” added, “they possess a far better
-physique for the navy than any of our future imperial midshipmen.”
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLVIII.
-
-THE YEAR OF THE TREATIES.
-
-
-The year 1882 opened ominously. A fire broke out in the royal palace in
-Seoul, on January 27th, in which two buildings, nearly completed for
-the heir apparent, were burned down. The fire was at first believed to
-have political significance, and the tension of the public mind was not
-relaxed until it was shown that the fire was the result of pure
-accident.
-
-The spirit of progress made advance, but discussion reached fever-heat
-in deciding whether the favor of Japan or China should be most sought,
-and which foreign nation, the United States, France, or England, should
-be admitted first to treaty rights. Bin, opposed to the arbitrary
-spirit of the Japanese, edged his argument by proposing an alliance
-with foreigners in order to checkmate the designs of Japan.
-
-An event not unlooked for increased the power of the progressionists.
-One Kozaikai urged the plea of expulsion of foreigners in such
-intemperate language that he was accused of reproaching the sovereign.
-At the same time, a conspiracy against the life of the king, involving
-forty persons, was discovered, and the sword and torture came into
-play. Kozaikai was put to death, many of the conspirators were exiled,
-and the ringleaders were sentenced to be broken alive on the wheel, the
-revolutions of which tore off hands and feet in succession. Six of
-those doomed to death were spared, through the intercession of a
-minister, and one, the king’s cousin, who delivered himself up, was
-pardoned by his sovereign on the ground of the prisoner’s insanity. The
-Progressionists had now the upper hand, and early in the spring Giō
-Inchiu and Riōsen left on a mission to Tientsin, to acquaint the
-Americans and Chinese with the information that the Corean government
-was ready to make treaties, and that the proper officer would be at
-In-chiŭn to sign the compact and complete the negotiations.
-
-Meanwhile the reforms in military affairs were begun with energy.
-Japanese officers, at the head of whom was Lieutenant Horimoto, drilled
-picked men in Seoul, with creditable success, in spite of their
-unwieldy hats and costume, and the jeers of the anti-foreign people, in
-public as well as in private. Substantial proof of the adoption of
-Japan’s military system was shown in an order sent to Tōkiō for a few
-hundred Snider rifles with equipments—the weapon of the British
-army—and one for twenty thousand of the rifles made at the Japanese
-arsenal in Tōkiō, which, combining the merits of the best-known
-military fire-arm, contained improvements invented and patented by
-Colonel Murata, of the mikado’s army. Two Corean notables later again
-visited Japan in April of this year, and were annoyed to find a report
-spread abroad in Nagasaki that they had come to raise a money loan.
-Nevertheless, they proceeded to Kiōto and Tōkiō. Some of their suite
-went into the printing-offices and silk-worm breeding establishments to
-learn these arts, while type, presses, and printing material were
-ordered for use at home.
-
-Affairs had so shaped themselves that even to outsiders it became
-evident that the Corean apple was ripe even to falling. By March 4th it
-was known at the American Legation in Peking that “Barkis was willin’,”
-while to the Japanese envoy then in Tōkiō it became certain that,
-unless he made all haste to In-chiŭn, the American commodore would have
-his treaty signed and be off without even waiting for a call. Hastily
-bidding his friends good-by, he left in the Japanese steamer, Iwaki
-Kuan, and arrived in the harbor just one hour before the American
-corvette Swatara arrived with Commodore Shufeldt on board. With the
-Swatara were three Chinese men-of-war, one of them an iron-clad.
-
-The American diplomatic agent, Commodore R. W. Shufeldt, having spent
-nearly a year in China, surmounting difficulties that few will know of
-until the full history of the American treaty with Corea is written,
-arrived in the Swatara off Chimulpo, May 7th. Accompanied by three
-officers, Commodore Shufeldt went six miles into the interior to the
-office of the Corean magistrate to formulate the treaty. Though
-surrounded every moment by curious crowds, no disrespect was shown in
-any way. Two days afterward, the treaty document was signed on a point
-of land in a temporary pavilion opposite the ship. Thus, in the most
-modest manner the negotiations were concluded, and a treaty with the
-United States was, after repeated failures, secured by the gallant
-officer who, by this act of successful diplomacy, closed a long and
-brilliant professional career. [53]
-
-Both on the American and Corean side the results had been brought about
-only after severe toil. The Corean nobleman Bin, a cousin of the queen,
-had so labored in Seoul night and day to commit the government to the
-policy of making treaties with the Americans, that, when the messengers
-had been despatched with the order for Commodore Shufeldt to appear in
-Imperatrice Gulf, he fell ill, and was unable to appear at In-chiŭn.
-The American envoy was so worn out with anxiety and toil by his efforts
-to have Corea opened under Chinese auspices, that on landing at San
-Francisco, he retired to the naval hospital at Mare’s Island to recover
-his exhausted strength.
-
-Four days after the signing of the American and Chinese treaties, the
-Corean capital was full of mirth and gayety, on account of a wedding in
-the royal family. The crown prince, a lad of nine years old, was wedded
-to the daughter of Jun, a nobleman of high rank, who had postponed a
-visit to Japan until the nuptials were accomplished. A brilliant
-procession in the streets of Seoul marked the event, and for a moment
-the excitement concerning foreigners was forgotten. None foresaw the
-bloody ending of this honeymoon so happily begun.
-
-The British minister at Tōkiō, Sir Harry Parkes, who had left no stone
-unturned to secure a personal interview with the ambassador in 1876,
-and, since that time, British trade with Corea, was still on the alert.
-He at once ordered Admiral Willes to proceed to In-chiŭn. Leaving his
-large fleet in Japanese waters, Admiral Willes left Nagasaki in the
-Vigilant, May 27th, while Mr. William G. Aston, the accomplished
-linguist and Corean scholar, received orders to follow. The Admiral’s
-business was soon despatched, a treaty was made, and his return to
-Yokohama was accomplished June 14th, the U. S. steamship Ashuelot
-saluting him on his arrival. The French and Germans were the next to
-improve the long-awaited opportunity. The German admiral left Japan in
-the man-of-war Stosch, on May 31st, while a vessel of the French navy
-entered the port of In-chiŭn June 5th. There had thus appeared in this
-sequestered nook of creation, within a few days, two American, three
-British, one French, one Japanese, and five Chinese armed vessels. All
-of them, except the French, had left by June 8th, to the great relief
-of the country folks and old men and women, many of whom, with the
-children, had fled to the hills when the big guns began to waste their
-powder in salutes, to the detriment of the thatched roofs of the
-houses.
-
-China lost no time in taking advantage of the position secured her by
-treaty. No vexatious delays of ratification troubled her. Everything
-had been arranged beforehand with the Coreans, so that, on the return
-of the vessels from In-chiŭn, officers were despatched to Shanghae to
-sail for Gensan and Fusan, and select land for public buildings.
-
-During the present year the Japanese legation in Seoul has numbered
-about forty persons, including secretaries, interpreters, military
-officers, policemen, students, and servants. Notwithstanding their
-precarious situation, amid the turbulent elements at work around them,
-they seemed to enjoy the spectacle before their eyes of a repetition of
-the history of their own country after Perry’s arrival in 1853. The
-young men of the legation visited the historic sites near the capital,
-enjoyed the mountain and river scenery, and studied the Corean language
-and literature. At first the common people believed that their visitors
-sucked the blood of the children lured away by them; and so carefully
-guarded their little ones. By and by, however, as more liberty was
-afforded them, the occasional pelting with vegetables and pebbles
-became less frequent, and even the women would talk with them.
-
-The light-hearted Japanese seemed to suspect no imminent danger,
-although the old fanatic and tyrant Tai-wen Kun was still alive and
-plotting. To insure perfect secrecy for his plans, it is said that he
-employed two or three mutes to wait on him, and act as his messengers.
-He was the centre of all the elements hostile to innovation, and being
-a man of unusual ability, was possessed of immense influence. The
-populace of Seoul and of the country had been taught to believe that
-“the Japanese were inebriated with the manners of Christian nations,
-and were enchanted by the Western devils, and that as a Europeanized
-country of the devil was being created in their immediate neighborhood,
-they must expel the barbarians.” Every means had been used to inflame
-the people against foreigners. Stone monuments had been set up on the
-high roads and market-places which bore this inscription—“The Western
-barbarians will come to invade our soil, there are but two alternatives
-for Chō-sen; to go to war, or to maintain peace. To submit peacefully
-means to sell the country; therefore we Coreans must resort to arms.”
-Many thousands of these inscribed stones had been set up, and an edict
-had been issued, commanding the ink-makers to inscribe their sticks of
-ink with this inflammatory declaration. When nobles of high rank would
-advocate progresssive views, Tai-wen Kun would sneeringly dare them to
-remove these anti-foreign monuments.
-
-During the nine years of his nominal retirement from office, from 1873
-to 1882, this bigoted Confucianist, who refused to know anything of the
-outer world, bided his time and waited his opportunity, which came
-during the summer of the present year. Just when the populace was most
-excited over the near presence of the Americans and other foreigners at
-In-chiŭn, the usual rainfall was withheld, the wells dried up, and in
-the consequent drouth, the rice crop was threatened with total failure.
-The diviners, sorcerers, and anti-foreign party took advantage of the
-situation to play on the fears of the superstitious people. The
-spirits, displeased at the intrusion of the Western devils, were angry
-and were cursing the land. At the same time the soldiery of the capital
-were disaffected, as some say on account of arrearages of wages, or as
-others aver, because the old warriors of the bow and arrow hated the
-Japanese method of drilling as a foreign innovation insulting to the
-gods. A more probable reason is that on account of the failure of the
-rice-harvest, the soldiers’ rations were cut down, and they were
-deprived of this choice cereal for food. Among the first Corean
-officers killed was the superintendent of the rice storehouses, which
-were pillaged by the hungry mob.
-
-On July 23d, while the king was out in the open air praying for rain, a
-mob of sympathizers with Tai-wen Kun attempted to seize his person. The
-king escaped to the castle. According to one account, some
-mischief-maker then started the report in the city that the Japanese
-had attacked the royal castle, and had seized the king and queen, and
-that the prime minister with the palace-guards in vainly endeavoring to
-beat back the assailants, had been defeated; and that every Corean
-should take up arms. Forthwith the mob rushed with frantic violence
-upon the legation, murdering the Japanese policemen and students whom
-they met in the streets and the Japanese military instructors in the
-barracks. Not satisfied with this, the rioters, numbering 4,000 men,
-attacked and destroyed the houses of the ministers favoring foreign
-intercourse. Before quiet was restored, the queen, Min, the heir
-apparent and his wife, the chief ministers of the government, Min Thai
-Ho and Min Yong Ik, were, as was supposed, murdered; but all these
-emerged alive. Many of the Mins and seven Japanese were killed.
-
-The Japanese, by their own account, had suspected no danger until the
-day of the riot, when they noticed great excitement among the people,
-and that crowds were assembling and rushing to and fro. They sent out a
-policeman to inquire into the nature of the disturbance, and at two
-o’clock P.M. they learned from a native that the mob would attack the
-legation. Word was also sent to the Japanese by the Corean officer in
-charge of the drill-ground where the troops were trained by Lieutenant
-Horimoto, saying that the troops drilled in Japanese tactics had been
-attacked, and the legation would next be in danger. Hanabusa and his
-suite then arranged a plan of defence. While thus engaged, a Corean
-employed at the legation informed them that the mob had destroyed the
-houses of the two ministers Bin, and were attacking three Japanese
-students. Three policemen well armed then left to succor the students,
-but nothing was heard from either policemen or students again. A Corean
-officer now appeared and warned the Japanese to escape to the hill back
-of the legation; and being requested by Hanabusa to ask the government
-for soldiers, he left on this errand. At 5.50 P.M. the mob reached the
-legation, and raising a united yell, fired volleys of bullets, arrows,
-and big stones at the legation, but dared not enter the gate to face
-the revolvers of the policemen. In hurling stones the ruffians showed
-remarkable skill. The mob set on fire a house, near by, and in the
-rising wind—then boding a coming storm—two out-houses of the legation
-were burned, the police shooting down the incendiaries when they could
-see them. It was now about ten o’clock, and the ruffians having thrown
-up barricades to hem in their victims and to shield their cowardly
-carcases while shooting, the Japanese fired the remaining buildings,
-and armed only with swords and pistols, formed themselves into a
-circle, charged the mob, and cut their way through to the house of the
-chief magistrate, which they found empty. Finding no one in the
-official residence, they marched to the southern gate of the royal
-castle. Instead of opening it, the soldiers on the wall above pelted
-them with stones.
-
-Hanabusa now resolved to cross the river with his party and make his
-way to In-chiŭn. Turning their backs on the flames, they arrived at the
-river and, on the ferryman refusing to convey them across, they seized
-the boat and crossed safely to the other side. It was now past midnight
-and the rain began to fall heavily, and with occasional thunderstorms
-continued to pour down all night. The refugees plunged on through the
-darkness, often losing their way, but next day at ten o’clock, they
-procured some raw barley to eat, and through the pelting rain pushed
-on, reaching In-chiŭn at 3 P.M. The governor received them kindly and
-supplied food and dry clothing. The Japanese officers slept in the
-official residence, and the servants, police, and others in a
-guard-house about fifteen yards distant. The governor posted his own
-sentinels to watch so that the Japanese could get some rest. In a few
-minutes the tired men were sleeping the sleep of exhaustion.
-
-About five o’clock, Hanabusa and his officers were suddenly awakened by
-the shouting of a mob outside; and in a moment more a Japanese entered
-covered with blood, and with a drawn sword in his hand with which he
-had cut his way. The mob had attacked them while they were asleep, and
-the soldiers of the local garrison were joining the rioters, firing
-from behind fences. All the Japanese now hurried on their clothes, and
-charging a body of about forty soldiers, armed with swords and spears,
-who were blocking the gateway, made for Chi-mul-po seaport, having lost
-three killed and two missing.
-
-Meeting two Japanese on horseback from the port, who reported that the
-road was free from ambuscades, they put the wounded man on one horse,
-and by another despatched one of their number to hasten forward and
-have a boat ready. They reached Chi-mul-po, the port, about seven
-o’clock, and immediately crossed over to Roze Island for safety. About
-midnight, having procured a junk, they put to sea, toward Nanyo Bay,
-where they knew the British gunboat Flying Fish was then on survey.
-Encountering a southerly wind, they made little or no progress, and on
-the 26th a dense fog set in; but at 11.30 A.M., it cleared up and the
-welcome sight of a three-masted vessel greeted their eyes. Hoisting the
-flag of Japan, they saw their signal answered, and soon the party of
-twenty-six half-naked, hungry, and cold refugees were on board the
-ship, where kindest treatment awaited them. That night at ten o’clock
-the Flying Fish sailed for Nagasaki. On August 3d a religious service
-in memory of their slain comrades was held by the survivors, at
-Shimonoséki. “The deep silence was only broken by the sobbing of the
-audience, overcome by deep sympathy for the murdered men.” On the 8th
-Hanabusa had an audience with the mikado in Tōkiō.
-
-Without hesitation, the Japanese government ordered the army to
-assemble at Shimonoséki and Tsushima, with naval forces to co-operate.
-Hanabusa and his suite were sent back, escorted by a military force. He
-re-entered Seoul, August 16th, and was received with courtesy. A fleet
-of Chinese war-vessels with a force of four thousand troops was also at
-hand. Apparently everything was under the control of Tai-wen Kun, who
-professed to be friendly to foreigners, and to ascribe the recent riot
-to a sudden uprising of the unpaid soldiery, which the government had
-not force at hand to suppress. Two Corean officers coming on board the
-Flying Fish, August 10th, informed Captain Hoskyn that the soldiery,
-dissatisfied with the unfair treatment of their superiors, had incited
-the peasantry to rebellion; that by orders of Tai-wen Kun, who bitterly
-regretted the recent outrages, the dead Japanese had been honorably
-buried; that the old regent while usurping the royal power, had
-professed a total change of views and was in favor of a progressive
-policy.
-
-At his audience with the king, August 20th, Hanabusa presented the
-demands of his government. These were nominally agreed to, but several
-days passing without satisfactory action, Hanabusa having exhausted
-remonstrance and argument, left Seoul August 25th and returned to his
-ship. This unexpected move—a menace of war—brought the usurper to
-terms. On receipt of Tai-wen Kun’s apologies, the Japanese envoy
-returned to the capital August 30th and full agreement was given to the
-demands of Japan, at which time it would appear, Tai-wen Kun, forcibly
-kidnapped by the envoy of China, had begun his travels into the country
-of Confucius.
-
-The following telegram to the New York Tribune of October 2d,
-summarizes the news from Yokohama up to September 13th:
-
-
- The Corean Government pledged itself to the following conditions:
- To arrest the insurgents within twenty days and inflict due
- punishment upon them, Japanese delegates to be present at the
- trial; to bury properly the bodies of those murdered and pay 50,000
- yen (dollars) to their families; to pay Japan 500,000 yen as
- indemnity for expenditure, etc., in five yearly instalments; to
- allow Japanese troops in Seoul for the protection of the legation,
- and to provide proper accommodations for them; to send an apology
- by a special embassy to Japan; to extend gradually privileges to
- the Japanese residents and traders; to afford proper conveniences
- for travel throughout Corea for the Japanese Government officials.
-
- While this was going on the Chinese envoy, who had remained
- inactive with his escort until August 25th, suddenly called up the
- full body of his troops, about three or four thousand, to the
- capital. What degree of pressure he may have exercised is not yet
- known, but it is certain that the chief rebel and assassin, the
- Tai-wen Kun, was taken on board a Chinese ship and carried to
- Tien-tsin. It is alleged that his departure was by no means
- voluntary, and that some physical effort was required to get him
- ashore on arriving at his destination. Whatever was the object of
- this proceeding, it must have been dictated by Li Hung Chang, the
- Chinese Viceroy at Tien-tsin, who seems to have quite abandoned his
- demeanor of calm stolidity during these active Corean transactions.
- It is declared by one Chinese party that the only purpose was to
- rescue the Tai-wen Kun from the dangers that threatened him, and by
- another that the intent was still to maintain the theory of
- sovereign control over Corea’s rulers, which Li Hung Chang has been
- straining for throughout.
-
- During the recent prospect of trouble with Corea, the Japanese
- Government received offers of military service from twenty thousand
- volunteers, and of money gifts to the value of 200,000 yen.
-
-
-At this stage of affairs, when Corea ceases to be a “hermit nation,”
-and stands in the glare of the world’s attention, we bring our
-imperfect story to a close. The pivot of the future history of Eastern
-Asia is Corea. On her soil will be decided the problem of supremacy, by
-the jealous rivals China, Japan, and Russia. The sudden assumption of
-self-imposed tutelary duties by China proves her lively interest in the
-little country, which has been called both “her right arm of defense,”
-and “her gloved hand”—the one to force back the ravenous Muscovite, the
-other to warn off the ambitious Japanese. Whether the Middle Kingdom
-has deliberately chosen the Land of Morning Calm to affront and
-humiliate “the neighbor-disturbing nation,” that twice humbled her
-pride in the fairest islands of the sea—Formosa and Riu Kiu—the events
-of the not distant future will soon determine. Whether the hoary empire
-shall come in collision with the young northern giant, and the dragon
-and the bear tear each other in the slime of war in Corean valleys, may
-be a question the solution of which is not far off. We trust that amid
-all dangers, the integrity of the little kingdom may be preserved; but
-whatever be the issue upon the map of the world, let us hope that
-paganism, bigotry, and superstition in Corea, and in all Asia, may
-disappear; and that in their places, the religion of Jesus, science,
-education, and human brotherhood may find an abiding dwelling-place.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIX.
-
-THE ECONOMIC CONDITION OF COREA.
-
-
-For nearly a quarter of a century Corea, the once hermit nation, has
-been opened to intercourse with the world, and the student has had
-facilities for understanding the country and people and realizing what
-are the social and political problems of humanity in the peninsula.
-
-As in most old Asiatic states, so in Corea, there is an almost total
-absence of an intelligent middle class, which in the West is the
-characteristic of progressive nations. In the Land of Morning Radiance
-there is a governing minority consisting of about one-tenth of the
-whole population. These, the Yangban (civil and military), living in
-ancient privilege and prerogative and virtually paying no taxes or
-tolls, prey upon the common people. The great bulk, that is,
-nine-tenths of the population, is agricultural and is gathered in
-hamlets and villages.
-
-The typical Corean tills the soil, in which occupation, after ages of
-unprogressive routine, he has come to his present mental status. There
-is not even a distinct manufacturing class in Corea, for nearly all
-industry is still in the cottage. The few articles needed by the
-laborer for the floor, the wall, and the kitchen are made by the farmer
-during his winter hours, and his women-folk weave and make up the
-clothing. The average carpenter, blacksmith, and stone mason is simply
-a laborer on the land with added skill in a special line. Even the
-fisherman cultivates the soil. The village schoolmaster is a son of the
-farmer of the better class. There are groups of
-population-office-holders and their retainers and hangers-on,
-shopkeepers and traders, butchers, porters, miners, junk-sailors, and
-innkeepers, sorcerers, gamblers, and fortune-tellers, but, all told,
-the number of men who do not live on the soil form but a decimal
-fraction in the national household.
-
-For these compelling reasons the problems of internal government relate
-almost wholly to the woe or weal of the tillers of the soil. During the
-summer of six months the average Corean stands bare-legged in the mud,
-planting or cultivating grain. His wife and children, especially his
-daughters, help him in the raising of rice, barley, wheat, and beans,
-and in the harvesting and securing of the final products. During the
-four cold months of the year he is at work gathering fuel or making
-mats, sandals, screens, or thatch. During the first and seventh moons
-he enjoys an easy time, doing little or nothing, and these two months
-are like holiday. The average income of a Corean farmer is about thirty
-dollars a year. The average house in Corea consists only of mud, straw,
-twine, and wood, above a foundation of earth faced with stone and worth
-but a few dollars. The price of waste land is from one to five dollars
-an acre, and of cultivated fertile soil from ten to sixty dollars an
-acre. The lots are poorly marked and boundary quarrels are incessant.
-The Corean farmer knows little about scientific irrigation or variety
-in fertilizers, dried grass being his chief manure. The mountains are
-greatly denuded of their forests, and alternate droughts and floods
-work awful disasters. With a naturally good soil and fine climate,
-agriculture is yet in a backward condition. It is said that the
-Japanese in the sixteenth century taught the Coreans the cultivation of
-rice, millions of bushels of which, under stimulus from the same
-source, they are now able to export annually. In recent years the
-Japanese have attempted to secure control of the waste lands of Corea
-so as to develop them, not only for the production of cereals,
-vegetable wax, paper fibre, and stuff for weaving, but also for cotton
-to supply the demands of the Osaka mills. Their demands, pressed too
-severely in July, 1904, were the cause of vigorous native protest in
-great public meetings.
-
-The Corean rustic is, as a rule, illiterate. Probably only about four
-out of ten males of the farming class can read either Chinese or
-Corean, but counting in the women it is estimated that about
-eighty-five per cent of the people can neither read nor write, though
-the percentage varies greatly with the locality. As a general thing,
-there is more acquaintance with books and writing in the southern than
-in the northern provinces. It is pitiful to find in the Budget for 1904
-that but $27,718 are appropriated for schools outside of Seoul, the
-latter receiving $135,074, of which the sum of $44,220 goes to foreign
-teachers in the English, French, German, Russian, Chinese, and Japanese
-language schools. Although since 1895 the old civil-service
-examinations have been abolished and there has been a Department of
-Education, it has thus far had little influence upon the country at
-large. In the central office in 1904, out of $28,617 appropriated,
-$19,857 went for salaries and office expenses, $6,500 being for
-text-book printing.
-
-The Corean farmer is simple in his dress, food, and habits. He does not
-journey far from home. Although the high-roads are lively with
-travellers, one sees not the farmer but the literati, the traders, and
-the porters. Few country folks ever visit the large cities, and in
-regions near the capital few have seen Seoul. Custom is the eternal law
-to the rustic, who is patient, bearing extortion until flesh and blood
-can stand it no longer, when he rises in revolt against his oppressor.
-Yet it is against the bad man, not the system itself, that he protests.
-After the obnoxious officer has been recalled or driven away and
-temporary relief is obtained, the Corean farmer settles down into a
-good tax-paying subject as of yore, and unless something like the Tong
-Hak movement stirs him, his wheel of life quickly slips again into the
-rut of routine. As long as he can get enough to eat he is content. When
-oppression and robbery are joined to Nature’s niggardliness, he and his
-comrades are transformed into a howling mob of starving malcontents,
-ready for bloody vengeance.
-
-The son of the soil is superstitious to the last degree. He lives in
-constant terror of the demons and spirits that overpopulate earth, air,
-and water, for he is without the protection that the certainties of
-science or the strength of pure religion furnishes. No unifying,
-uplifting, and inspiring knowledge of one God is his. His thatched hut
-or mud-floored hovel is a museum of fetiches. Often he will give the
-best fruits of the fields to what seems to an alien a mass of straw or
-rags. The sorceress thrives like a fat parasite on the farmer, getting
-well paid for her songs, dances, incantations, and presence at the
-feasts. Yet the Corean enjoys the religious festivals. He is at least
-just to himself, while professing generosity to the spirits. He honors
-the gods but ultimately puts the well-cooked offerings far from
-them—even into his own interior; for above all things, the worshipper
-is orthodox in his belief in a well-filled stomach.
-
-With such a people, both Confucianism and Buddhism become the grossest
-of superstitions. The Corean’s face is toward the past. He invokes and
-worships the dead, and to him the graveyard contains more than the
-future can bring him. Besides the extortions of the nobles, officials,
-and other parasitic or predatory classes, the expense of offerings to
-his dead ancestors amounts to many millions of dollars a year, far
-exceeding in their total the national revenue. In Seoul alone there are
-three thousand sorceresses, each earning at least $7.50 a month. The
-farmer is poor, but he is hospitable and liberal. He has untold
-reverence for learning and for rank, he loves flowers and beautiful
-scenery, but he is stupid in the presence of an innovation. His area of
-vision is bounded by the hills within the circle of which he was born.
-His chief recreation is in going to market, for, generally speaking,
-there are few shops in the peninsula, but there is a market every five
-or six days, where the natives exchange their products and their
-opinions. According to the state of weather conditions, the native is
-happy or suffers, a large harvest making all smile, a scant crop
-causing famine and hunger and the outbreak of banditti and rapine.
-Besides buying and selling, huckstering and gossiping, there are at the
-markets plenty of fighting and drunkenness as diversions. Going out for
-wool the farmer frequently comes home shorn, but he has had his fun, or
-rather a variation of deadly monotony. Furthermore, he is fond of a
-joke and loves to chaff his fellows.
-
-As the country itself is governed out of the graveyard, and sovereign,
-court, and people are driven by imaginary demons and spirits, so the
-farmers, both as individuals, as families, and as clans, guard
-jealously and in fear the ancestral mounds with superstitious
-reverence. Hence one large element of village excitement is in
-quarrelling and fighting over graves. About fifty per cent of the cases
-brought before the country magistrates are said to be connected with
-these grave fights. These bitter struggles involve whole clans and
-result in bloodshed and loss of life. Even the dead are not allowed to
-rest in peace. The digging up of corpses and the tumbling of them
-beyond the limits in dispute is a common occurrence. This ghoulish
-activity is varied by an occasional abduction of widows or by other
-infractions of the law. Another large element of anxiety to the farmer
-is the protection of the water supply for his rice-swamp. The damming
-of the stream above or the draining off of the water below may ruin his
-crop. The breaking of the mud boundaries, and the stealing of water
-from a neighbor’s field is mirrored in proverbs and folk-lore. It is
-sufficiently habitual to furnish a plentiful supply of pretexts for
-quarrels and fighting.
-
-There are four classes of agriculturists. The lowest tiller of the soil
-is a serf, owning no land, working by the day or contract, and
-virtually bound to the glebe. The men of the next class, though owning
-no lands, work the farms of others on shares. These farm-hands and
-farm-tenants make up the great mass of the Corean people. They live in
-thatched mud huts, with enough plain food to keep them alive and often
-fat, but with scanty change of garments and few or no comforts of life.
-They are occupied during the working months from daybreak to twilight
-in unremitting toil. The third class consists of the small owners with
-possessions worth from five hundred to five thousand dollars and
-numbering three per cent of the farming population. In the fourth or
-highest class are the landed proprietors, the aristocracy of the land,
-the richest member being worth as much as four or five million dollars,
-with an annual income of at least a quarter of a million. Insignificant
-in numbers, they are mighty in power, for it is these great landowners
-who rule the realm, and most of them live in Seoul.
-
-To the great mass of the people in Corea there is no motive for much
-industry beyond danger of starvation, and but little incentive to
-enterprise. Under old normal conditions now being slowly ameliorated,
-the official, the yangban, and the landed aristocracy, in a word, the
-predatory classes, seize upon the common man’s earnings and
-accumulations, so that it seems to him useless and even foolish to work
-for more than enough to support life, while as for the “civilization
-nonsense,” does it not mean more taxation? On the 13th of November,
-1902, the announcement was made of the increase in land tax from $10
-per measure of ground to $16 per measure. So argues the average man in
-Corea, the land long ruled by real oppressors and imaginary demons.
-
-The researches of scholars have also revealed the actual economic
-conditions of the nation in the days of hermitage. Old Corea was not,
-as in feudal Japan, straitened in its production of food. In the island
-empire only about one-twelfth of the soil was or could be cultivated.
-Hence Japan was rigidly limited in her food-producing area, so that the
-population, besides being kept down through such natural checks as
-famine, pestilence, storm and flood, was further diminished to fit the
-food supply by such artificial means as sumptuary laws, licensed
-prostitution, infanticide, cruel punishments, and frequent
-decapitation. In Corea, also, where the fertile earth, though formed to
-be inhabited and abundant in area of plain and valley, was neither
-properly replenished nor subdued, many checks upon population existed.
-Local famines were frequent and often long continued, and neither
-religion nor the means of transportation furnished the means of saving
-life to any large amount. Artificial checks on too rapid multiplication
-of humanity operated powerfully. The lesser care and kindness given to
-female children resulted in a heavy death-rate as compared with that of
-the boys, the cruel punishments and frequent torture and decapitation
-and the lack of incentive to industry all wrought together to make both
-the land and the human life on it of comparatively slight value.
-
-The whole situation was changed when Corea ceased to be a hermit land
-and began to be fertilized by foreign commerce and ideas. Confronted by
-new methods of trade, science, and religion, the thinking native was
-summoned to thought and action. Into the Corean mind, long held in
-bondage by Confucianism, which degrades woman and narrows man’s
-intellect, the universal religion entered to compel the Corean man to
-think of other lands and people besides his own, to search his own
-heart, to attempt to make himself and his neighbors better, and to take
-a new outlook on the universe. The new doctrines delivered believers
-from the paralyzing thrall of demons and evil spirits, from ancestor
-worship, and from the sceptre held by the hand rising out of the grave.
-Into the Corea clamped as in iron bands by false economic notions
-entered the spirit of free competition. Into a land that knew no such
-thing as a foreign market the railway brings an eager purchaser to the
-farmer’s door, and by carrying his goods to the seaports it enables him
-to give to and receive manifold benefits from the world at large.
-
-Already, through the energy of the canny islanders from the east, the
-crops in Corea have quadrupled, though under native mismanagement this
-does not necessarily mean immediate benefit to the man on the soil, but
-rather to the official class, or to the landholder in the capital. It
-has been computed that the production of sixty million bushels of grain
-have thus been developed in Corea through the Japanese demand. Between
-the feverish enterprise of the Japanese on the one side and the
-tireless thrift of the Chinese on the other, “the good old days” of
-primitive routine are gone forever. Corea has 4,500,000 acres under
-cultivation, or about eight and a half per cent of her 82,000 square
-miles of area, so that 3,500,000 available acres await the plough. From
-her arable soil six millions more of population might easily find
-subsistence, and nearly ten millions of dollars of crops could be
-raised. The peninsula needs in every great valley the railway, which
-“quadruples the value of every foot of land within twenty miles of its
-line.” The line from Fusan to Seoul has already raised the value of
-town property in elect places hundreds of per cent and measurably all
-along between the terminals. This railway was begun in August, 1901,
-but though the work slackened for lack of capital, by December 1, 1903,
-thirty-one miles at either end had been built. The outbreak of the war
-with Russia revealed its military value and promise was at once given
-that by Japanese Government aid it would be completed with its
-thirty-one tunnels and 20,500 feet of bridges by the end of 1904. This
-Fusan-Seoul railway, 287 miles long, will traverse four provinces in
-the richest part of Corea, wherein are seven-tenths of all the houses
-and five-sevenths of all the cultivated area in the empire. Here also
-are the sites of the great fairs held six times monthly, the
-thirty-nine stations of the road being located at or near these places
-of trade, the total business of which amounts to over sixty-five per
-cent of the internal trade of the empire.
-
-The Corean social and political system, sufficiently weak in hermit
-days, has shown itself unable to withstand the repeated shock of attack
-by eager and covetous foreigners, nor will it ever be able, even in a
-measure, to defend itself against the fierce and unrelenting greed of
-the strong nations intrenched upon its soil, except by complete
-reorganization. Both the outward forms and the inward spirit must
-change if the Coreans are to preserve their national identity. The
-nation has been the bone of contention between jealous and greedy
-rivals. One foreign government by crafty diplomacy secures the right of
-cutting timber valued at millions of dollars, another gets mining
-concessions, others propose this or that industry or supposed line of
-production which depleted the treasury. The impoverished kingdom has
-not only wasted many millions of treasure in foolish enterprises, but
-is deprived of its natural assets in timber, metals, fisheries, and
-industries.
-
-The problem of bringing Corea into harmony with her modern environment
-is only in some features like that of Japan, for there have been
-wanting in the peninsula what was so effective in Japan’s case. In the
-island empire, the long previous preparation by means of the
-infiltration of Western ideas during two centuries of communication
-with Europe through the Dutch merchants, the researches of her own
-scholars furnishing inspiration from their national history, the
-exercise during many generations of true patriotism and self-sacrifice
-for the public good prepared the island nation to cope with new
-conditions and situations. In the clash with the West, Japan came out
-victor. Corea has no samurai. She lacks what Japan has always had—a
-cultured body of men, superbly trained in both mind and body, the
-soldier and scholar in one, who held to a high ideal of loyalty,
-patriotism, and sacrifice for country. The island samurai enjoying the
-same prerogative and privilege as the Corean yangban (civil and
-military) not only abolished feudalism, but after giving up their
-hereditary pensions and privileges, joined the productive classes,
-while at the same time the Japanese merchants and mechanics were raised
-in the social scale, the pariahs given citizenship, and then all lines
-of promotion opened to all in the army, navy, schools, courts, and
-civil service. The fertilizing streams of foreign commerce, the
-inspiration that comes from brotherhood with other nations, and above
-all, the power brought to Nippon through the noble labors and object
-lessons of the Christian missionaries, enabled the Japanese to take
-equal place in the world with the nations of the West. Corea, on the
-contrary, by still allowing the existence of predatory classes—nobles,
-officials, and great landowners—by denying her people education, by
-being given to superstition from palace to hut and from sovereign to
-serf, remains still in weakness and poverty. What Corea above all
-needs, is that the lazy yangban cut their long finger-nails and get to
-work.
-
-Yet dark as is the situation, it is not without hope. Slowly and
-painfully the Coreans are learning that no nation is born in a day.
-Under the training of Christian teachers, a generation with new motives
-to action and new mental horizons, and fed with food to sustain the
-spirit, is coming on. Christianity is, with a remnant at least, making
-headway against the vices so common to this mild-mannered nation—skill
-in lying, stealing, gambling, drunkenness, and the social evil.
-
-For ages and until Japan humbled China in 1894, Corea was so thoroughly
-and in all things the vassal and pupil of the Middle Kingdom, from
-which most of the elements of her civilization had been borrowed, that
-in the tributary kingdom there could be no patriotism in its highest
-sense, nor could political parties and cliques have any reason for
-existence except as they were concerned with aims that ended in
-selfishness. With the people in general, there was only anxiety to pay
-taxes, win the favor of the local magistrate, and escape the clutches
-of the law. With masters and rulers, there was ever pitiful fear of the
-great country China, and, under Confucianism, a desire to keep things
-as they were, mixed with impotent dread of change. Of pure love of
-country, of willingness to make sacrifices for their native land—that
-is almost a new thought as yet nourished by a few far-seeing patriots.
-In the evolution of the Corean, social and psychic, his present ethical
-stage is not beyond that of the group, clan, or neighborhood. It has
-not yet reached the individual. The majority of the people have that
-kind of patriotism which means the instinctive desire to preserve
-national identity. The one thing which they now fear, being in the
-vortex of the great storm of war and in the centre of the economic
-typhoon of the twentieth century, is national extinction. Even to-day
-the Coreans feel that they would rather live without the new things of
-civilization, such as railways, education, public hygiene, or even of
-righteous government, than be subject to an alien Power. History to the
-peninsular gives no uncertain sound as to what foreign intervention has
-always meant, that is, more oppression and even rapine. Seeing what has
-happened in half a lifetime, through the coming of the alien to Corea,
-the native does not want civilization at the hands of foreigners,
-though it may be that he will have to take it. Possibly through
-education and a new outlook upon the universe he will be glad to get
-it, even struggling for it until by assimilation it becomes his own. In
-ancient history and the old days of the separation of nations, there
-were many civilizations and varying standards. In these latter days of
-the world’s brotherhood there is but one standard of civilization, and
-but one body of international law, which all must obey. The nation or
-kingdom that will not serve and obey this standard will pass out of
-history and perish. The signs that Corea realizes this truth and that
-her best men are seeking fraternity with their fellows for help and
-uplift are not wanting. Naturally they turn to the great republic,
-which since its beginning has steadfastly followed the policy of
-healing, helping, teaching, and uplifting the Asiatic nations.
-
-Corea sent a delegate to the International Postal Union, which met in
-Washington, and in 1896 a postal system with stamps of four kinds was
-established, and under French auspices has been working in excellent
-condition. The stamps, as well as the national flag and documents,
-coins and other expressions of what is essentially representative of
-the Coreans as a nation, illustrate their repertoire of symbolism. The
-flag in blue, red, black, and white contains the two great emblems of
-the primitive Chinese philosophy and theory of the universe. Through
-these, the Corean sees all things visible and invisible produced as the
-results of their endless working and counteraction in combination and
-dissolution. The forces of heaven and earth, light and darkness, the
-positive and the negative, the male and the female, the in and the yo,
-are represented as two germs or commas in constant embrace or movement.
-This figure occupies the centre of the field and in each corner are the
-broken lines of the Pal Kwai, or eight diagrams of primitive Chinese
-tradition concerning the origin of language and writing. On the stamps
-we read the Chinese characters Tai han and Corea. Like China, old
-Japan, Russia, Turkey and other church nations, which unite more or
-less closely Church and State and are governed, in spite of all outward
-development and manifestations, by primitive or mediæval notions, Corea
-is a “Tei Koku,” or “divinely governed” realm, and so makes profession
-in Chinese characters, as does even modern Japan, though furnished with
-a Constitution and Diet. Besides these Chinese ideographs, we read in
-English, “Imperial Corean Post,” and in the en-mun or native script, a
-sentence to the same effect. The national flower is the plum blossom,
-and is figured with its leaves on either side of the stem. The value or
-denomination of the stamp is given below both in English with Roman
-letters, and in Corean or en-mun. The date-mark made by the ink-stamp
-shows in the French spelling of the name of the country and capital the
-international character of the postal system. The national colors, as
-judged by the hangings in the royal palace, are yellow, red, and green.
-
-Imitating other things imperial in adjoining or Western nations, the
-Government at Seoul established a Bureau of Decorations. These baubles,
-being liberally distributed, have helped handsomely to deplete the
-treasury of the little empire, most of whose people live in a state of
-semi-starvation or righteous discontent. The Emperor himself and his
-generals and ministers have had their breasts liberally adorned with
-various marks of the regard of the rulers of Japan, Great Britain,
-Russia, France, and Belgium, while between August 5, 1900, and December
-20, 1902, the Corean Government had bestowed forty-two decorations,
-requiring a liberal outlay of bullion and artistic workmanship. To the
-Emperor of Japan, Queen Victoria, the Czar of Russia, the Kaiser of the
-German Empire, the President of the French Republic, the King of Italy,
-the King of the Belgians, the Emperor of Austria, and the Crown Prince
-of Japan, the Great Decoration of the Golden Measure was awarded. This
-contains the emblem in the centre of the flag. No Americans have been
-thus officially adorned, but the Great Decoration of the Golden Measure
-was offered to President McKinley, only to be declined; he having,
-happily for the American people, nothing to offer in return. The Great
-Decoration of the Plum Blossom has been given to Prince Kwacho of Japan
-and the Russian Prince Cyril, while the other decorations, containing
-the Pal Kwai of the eight mystic diagrams and the plum blossom or the
-national flower, in several grades or classes, have been offered to
-various servants or guests of the Government. Along with this
-brilliancy on foreign coat breasts, it is suggestive to read in the
-imperial budget for 1904 that of $19,560 appropriated to the bureau of
-decorations, the amount expended on bullion, medals, etc., was $7,431,
-and for salaries $10,130. Another interesting item, illuminating
-economic methods in Seoul, is that of $10,453 appropriated for the
-Mining Bureau. Of this amount the sum of $8,173 was spent for salaries
-and travelling, all the rest, except one item marked “miscellaneous
-$744,” being for office expenses. In the Ceremonial Bureau $19,000 were
-used on salaries and office expenses out of a total of $21,508. Similar
-titbits of economic information are frequent under the heads of the
-Board of Generals (who supervise an army supposed to be five thousand
-strong) and that of Imperial Sacrifices, and others, explain very
-clearly the condition of a country in which there is no clear line of
-demarcation between the palace and the Government or administration,
-while eloquent in suggestions as to the reason why the larger part of
-Corea remains in a state of more or less chronic insurrection.
-
-The budget for 1904 shows a total revenue of $14,214,573 made up of the
-following items: land tax, $9,703,591; house tax, $460,295; taxes on
-salt, fish, etc., $210,000; poll tax, $850,000; miscellaneous taxes,
-$200,000; arrears from 1903, $2,790,687.
-
-The items of disbursement are as follows: Imperial privy purse,
-$1,013,359; imperial sacrifices, $186,641; household department,
-$327,541; war department, $5,180,614; finance department, $42,741,999;
-communications, $637,648; incidentals and extras, $1,843,503. Other
-items, of which the police bureau, $406,925, and the foreign
-department, $287,367, and educational, $205,673, are the more
-important, are pension bureau, board of generals, the cabinet
-government records, bureau of decorations, law department, department
-of agriculture, privy council, and special palace guard. It is pleasant
-to note that there is a surplus of $275, but the amount given for
-education and expended under the head of agriculture seems pitiful. The
-large items of the budget deal almost wholly with the salaries of
-native officials. One interesting and redeeming item among the “extras”
-is that “for helping shipwrecked men, $5,000.”
-
-The greatest immediate need of Corea is a uniform and stable currency.
-Added to ancient evils was the action of Japan in adopting the gold
-standard in 1899, which threw all things commercial in Corea into dire
-confusion. On the 15th of December, 1901, the coinage law was
-published, by which Corea adopted the gold standard; but this law was
-never put into effect. The Japanese have frequently endeavored by
-various means to secure a standard currency.
-
-Under the stimulus and pressure of foreign trade, Corea has now at
-least nine ports open to the residence and business of foreigners
-besides the three or four inland places of traffic. Wonsan (Gensan),
-Fusan, and Chemulpo were opened by the treaties of 1876 and 1882, and
-have thriving settlements. The ginseng crop exported from these places
-is usually bought by Japanese, whose usual practice is that, for
-example, of May, 1902, when of the fifty thousand catties, ten thousand
-catties were burnt at Chemulpo, in order to keep up the price. On the
-1st of October, 1898, Chinnampo and Mokpo were added to the list of
-open ports. The former lies on the northern shore of Ping-an inlet,
-twenty miles from the sea and forty miles from Ping-an city. It is now
-a thriving town with well laid-out streets. As the river leading to
-Ping-an is for ten miles or so below the city not navigable even by
-very small sea-going steamers, it can never be “a port” in the ordinary
-sense, but the returns of its trade are tabulated with those of
-Chinnampo, its outlet. Wiju (Ai-chiu) and Anju are almost the only
-other ports of value in the province of Ping-an. Anju is the landing
-stage of the American Mining Company for its mining materials and
-explosives.
-
-Yongampo is in north latitude 38° 52′ and east longitude 126° 04′. When
-it was opened in 1898, Russians and Japanese took up land so eagerly
-that a collision seemed imminent. Later it came very near being made a
-Russian fortress as “Port Nicholas.” Mokpo, in the southwestern part of
-Chullado, is the natural maritime outlet of “the Garden of Corea.” Soon
-after it was made port of entry and trade, the wisdom shown in its
-selection was justified, for its growth has been healthy and rapid.
-From this point, in the autumn of 1902, a Boston gentleman went into
-the interior for a hunting trip of two months, during which time he
-killed three large tigers, besides deer and wild boar.
-
-On May 1, 1899, Kunsan, Masampo, and Songchin were thrown open to
-foreign trade and residence. Kunsan is on the west coast, and like
-Mokpo, long famous for its abundant export of rice paid as revenue. It
-lies at the mouth of the river dividing the two rich and warm provinces
-of Chulla and Chung Chong, about half-way between Chemulpo and Mokpo,
-whence the rice, wheat, beans, hides, grasscloth, paper, manufactured
-articles in bamboo, fans, screens, mats, and marine products of many
-kinds are exported. Masampo, a few miles to the southwest of Fusan, in
-north latitude 35° 09′ and east longitude 128° 40′, has one of the
-finest harbors in the world, which, when well fortified, might command
-the entrance to the Sea of Japan. In the negotiations between Japan and
-Russia, in 1903, this spot was jealously coveted by both Powers as the
-prize of the future, as the party possessing it might make it a
-Dardanelles, closing the sea between the island empire and the
-continent and making this body of water a Euxine. Russia tried to bind
-Japan not to fortify this or any other place on the east coast of
-Corea. Japanese, Russians, Chinese, and Coreans soon flocked to this
-favored port and have made business lively. Songchin, once the seat of
-an old stronghold, in the large northeastern province of Ham Kiung,
-bordering on Russia, which has no long navigable rivers, as in the
-south, lies about 120 miles from Wonsan and sends most of its products
-thither. It has a poor harbor in a foggy region, but fertile soil, fat
-cattle, and mineral riches are within reach. The Customs Reports for
-1903 show a growing trade of $328,891. Eleven other landing stages
-bring up the total value of trade in Ham Kiung province to $1,676,714.
-In 1902 the total imports were nearly balanced by the exports from all
-Corea. Cotton is becoming an important item of sale abroad. Gold in
-1902 was exported to the amount of $2,532,053. The total value of
-foreign trade has doubled during the past decade. So far the steamer
-tonnage is, like the general foreign trade, over three-fourths
-Japanese. Most emphatically and luminously does the modern economic as
-well as political history of the peninsula prove that the best
-interests of Japan and Corea are closely interwoven. Mutual benefit
-follows unity and friendship, reciprocal injury results from
-estrangement.
-
-All these open ports are the gateways of a commerce that must steadily
-and healthfully increase, and which under stable and just government
-would rapidly enlarge. So long as there is uncertainty as to the
-political status of the Land of Morning Calm, the chief importance of
-the maritime gateways into the country will be strategic and military,
-rather than commercial. A permanent settlement of the political
-question, in debate ever since the modern renascence of Japan, ought to
-act on the development of the natural resources of Corea as the warm
-spring rains act upon soil long chilled and fallow under winter’s
-frost. Few regions, whether we consider its geographical location for
-commerce, the fertility of its soil, its animal wealth, the richness of
-its mineral deposits, or the abundance of its treasures in the sea, are
-more highly favored than Corea. When man, society, and government in
-the peninsula answer Nature’s challenge and match the opportunity, the
-world will find that history’s storehouse of surprises has not been
-empty. Toward the development of the kind of man needed, the Christian
-missionaries are, above all other teachers and forces, working, and
-with every sign of promise.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER L.
-
-INTERNAL POLITICS: CHINESE AND JAPANESE.
-
-
-The preponderating influence of China was the mainspring in the
-intricate machinery of old Corean politics, though within the two
-clearly defined parties in Seoul there are also factional and family
-differences. “From 1834 to 1864 the royal clan was shorn of much of its
-power, all offices were in the hands of the Kim clan, whose head, Kim
-Pyong-gi, was virtually ruler of the land for the years ending that
-epoch.” The Kims hoped to continue the lease of their power, but the
-Tai-wen Kun humbled this clan and exalted his own, meanwhile doing much
-for the common people and compelling the yangban to bear a share of the
-burdens of government in paying a house tax. In his whole course toward
-these predatory gentry, he was “a blundering anticipator” of the great
-reforms of 1894. He began the suppression of the Tong-haks. He was a
-great builder of public edifices, not only in Seoul, but in the
-provinces. He protected the country against the foreigner. He meant
-well in his ignorance, but he knew nothing of the world at large. His
-first lease of power came to an end in 1873.
-
-The first Corean noblemen, Kim and Pom, left their homes in 1875 to
-travel in lands beyond China. They went to Japan, and coming back,
-boldly told the King what they had seen and advocated the adoption of
-Western civilization. They tried to win over the powerful Min clan and
-the Queen to a liberal policy, but this to the Regent, Tai-wen Kun,
-meant nothing else than Christianity and radical reform, which involved
-popular education. That is exactly the sort of reform that every
-Confucian mandarin in any country of Asia hates most heartily, because
-he sees in the general enlightenment of the people the end of the power
-of the literati. The bold and crafty statesman, who, as Prince Parent,
-held his son the King as his puppet and had already shed the blood of
-thousands of native Christians, nearly succeeded in putting the two
-young champions of Western civilization to death. When the American
-treaty negotiations were impending, the Min clansmen held aloof until
-China, as represented by Li Hung Chang, gave the nod. Then they showed
-so much energy in the matter as to seem to foreigners the party of
-progress. This roused the wrath of the Regent, who determined to crush
-the Min clan and to nullify the treaty. We have seen how, in July,
-1882, by a masterly appeal to local bigotry and superstition, he
-directed the soldiers’ riot into a revolt against the pro-Chinese clan.
-After destroying, as he imagined, their leading men and the Queen, he
-seized the government himself, enjoying for a few days full lease of
-power.
-
-When the news of the usurpation reached China and Japan, a fleet with
-soldiers was despatched from each country. The Chinese force landed
-first, marched to Seoul, built forts to command the river against the
-Japanese, and established their camp inside the walls. By this move
-China held a new lien on her “vassal state.” The Chinese general made
-his formal call on the Tai-wen Kun, and when this lord of the land
-returned the courtesy, he was seized and deported to China. Meanwhile
-the Queen, for whom a palace maid had suffered vicarious death,
-together with some of her chief helpers and advisers, re-entered the
-palace October 9, 1882. The star of the Min clan was again in the
-ascendant.
-
-Thus the results of the Regent’s smart trickery were not pleasant for
-the Coreans, for now they had both the Chinese and the Japanese
-soldiers encamped in the capital and on the ground where nearly three
-hundred years before they had met in battle. By good discipline on both
-sides, collision between the soldiers was avoided, but the Government
-at once made provision to replace the foreign soldiery by native
-troops. Four battalions of Corean infantry were organized and put under
-Chinese drill masters, introduced by the Min leaders. Fourteen young
-men, mostly members of Progressive families, were sent to Tokio to
-study in the military school.
-
-The treaty negotiated by Commodore Shufeldt was promptly ratified by
-the United States Senate, and on February 26th President Chester A.
-Arthur sent in the name of General Lucius H. Foote as Minister to
-Corea. Reaching Chemulpo May 13th in the U.S.Ss. Monocacy, the formal
-ratifications of the treaty were exchanged in the capital May 19th. The
-same cannon, and served by some of the same sailors that in 1871 had
-shelled the Han forts, [54] peacefully saluted the new national flag,
-emblazoned with the proofs of Corea’s intellectual servitude to Chinese
-philosophy and fantastic traditions. Keeping clear of the native
-factions, Mr. Foote dealt as directly as possible with the sovereign.
-He made an earnest plea for the toleration of religion, a promise to
-proclaim which was secured from the King.
-
-The Corean Government responded to the American courtesy by despatching
-a special mission, consisting of eleven persons headed by Min Yong Ik,
-which arrived in San Francisco September 2d. President Arthur being
-then in New York, these quaintly apparelled Oriental strangers were
-given audience in the parlor of the Fifth Avenue Hotel. After three
-months’ stay in the eastern cities, one part of the embassy, headed by
-Han Yong Sik, returned home by way of San Francisco. A few days later,
-on the U.S.Ss. Trenton (afterward lost at Samoa) with Ensign G. C.
-Foulke (afterward of the Doshisha University, Kioto) and Lieutenant J.
-G. Bernadou, U.S.N. (afterward distinguished in the Spanish-American
-War of 1898, on the U.S.Ss. Winslow), as naval attachés to the American
-legation in Seoul, Min Yong Ik and two other Coreans returned home by
-way of Europe and the Suez Canal.
-
-On November 27th, at the Victoria Hotel in the city of New York, I had
-the pleasure of spending an agreeable evening with the three Corean
-gentlemen, Min Yong Ik, So Kuang Pom, and Pien Su, the two latter being
-able to talk Japanese. [55] Though many of my questions were answered
-and a number of subjects discussed, nothing could be learned of Corean
-Christianity, or of the relics or reminders of Hendrik Hamel and his
-Dutchmen. [56] Before leaving, Min Yong Ik, like a true Corean
-gentleman, brought out a large package of choicest ginseng roots,
-without which no well-to-do native of the Land of Morning Calm would
-think of travelling abroad. He presented me with several choice
-specimens of the man-shaped drug, each wrapped up in its own “arms” and
-“legs.”
-
-On the same evening in Seoul, November 27th, a banquet was spread in
-the English-language-school building to celebrate the signing on the
-day before of two treaties, one with Great Britain and the other with
-the German Empire, the negotiator of the English treaty being Sir Harry
-Parkes. [57] The music was furnished by the band of the German
-man-of-war Leipsic. Seoul now began to be the residence of foreigners
-from Christendom, nine of whom were already in the city.
-
-New Year’s Day, January 20, 1884, dawned brightly. The little children
-who during the summer are “dressed in a hair ribbon,” made the streets
-brilliant with their bright clothes of many colors, and the sky was gay
-with kites. In the royal palace audience was given to the envoys of
-China, Japan, and the United States. On February 28th the electric
-submarine cable between Nagasaki and Fusan was completed and messages
-from the once hermit nation were sent into the outside world. Han Yong
-Sik was appointed postmaster with power to organize a national postal
-system, stamps for which were engraved in Tokio. From this Japanese
-base of supplies many novelties from the Western world poured in, and
-the body politic, long insulated from other nations, thrilled with new
-currents of life. Treaties were made with Russia and Italy, June 25th
-and 26th. Later on, telegraph lines connecting Seoul with Peking and
-with Fusan were completed. The year following the arrival home of the
-first Coreans who had gone round the world was a year of progress, such
-as Corea had never known before or has known since.
-
-Through the advice of Ensign Foulke, several reformatory measures,
-political and industrial, were promulgated. The most ardent member of
-the reform party, Pak Yong Hio, being made mayor of Seoul, immediately
-set to work at sanitary and municipal improvement. Some progress was
-made in dress improvement. A model farm, for which California live
-stock had been ordered, was sown by American seeds liberally given in
-Washington. Edison electric lights, American rifles and Gatling guns, a
-powder mill, a mint, a printing office for the dissemination of useful
-literature for the people, together with Japanese artisans to establish
-or improve properties, paper factories, and other industries, not
-excepting the fisheries and whale hunting, gave indications of the new
-path of national progress upon which Corea had entered. Altogether the
-early days of 1884 were as a morning of bright promise, for public
-opinion, so far as it existed, that is, among the nobles and gentry,
-seemed to be entirely in favor of progress. The most hopeful felt that
-the Corean Government, having begun lo relay the foundations of the
-kingdom, would persevere and possibly even excel Japan.
-
-On the other hand, with the tide of Confucian bigotry rising and the
-Conservatives encouraged by Chinese reactionaries on the soil, how
-could there be any real advance? Yuan, the Chinese commissioner, living
-at the barracks in front of the palace, was ceaselessly active in the
-interests of his own Government, which meant active support of the
-Conservative party and opposition to reform. Over against enlightened
-liberalism, several incidents stood out in dark contrast, showing the
-inherent barbarism, the low state of Corean humanity, and the slight
-value set on human life. When the Chinese soldiery arrived, they seized
-ten of the rioters of 1882, court-martialled them, tied their limbs to
-bullocks, and tore them to pieces. Even after these men in office had
-returned from civilization they had eight more men, suspected of
-complicity with the Regent, executed by poison. Furthermore, the Kwang
-Wang temple was built, devoted to the interests of three thousand or
-more sorcerers and exorcists in Seoul, who enjoyed the direct patronage
-of the Queen, and sucked the vitals of the nation, making respectable
-government impossible.
-
-The innovations effected by the Progressives, who thought that they had
-the King and Queen in full sympathy with them, led them to hope that
-they would be able soon to reorganize the Government, to differentiate
-the Court from the Administration, and to make Corea a modern state.
-But according to the measure of their success, so also was the
-suspicion and hostility of the Conservatives. Min Yong Ik while abroad
-might be a Liberal, an individual with personal convictions and
-opinions, but once back in the bosom of his family and under pressure
-of his clan, he lost interest in reform. The Progressive leaders began
-to look upon him as a traitor to their cause. He took his stand with
-the Conservatives and it was soon evident that the Queen was
-withdrawing her sympathy and support from the Liberals, whose hopes
-seemed about to be dashed to the ground. These men therefore turned
-more and more to the Japanese and to their methods and spirit. They saw
-the revenues for the promised industries and enterprise diverted to
-warlike enterprises. It looked as if Corea, as tributary vassal, was to
-help China against France in the Tonkin complication. Added to the
-fears of the Liberals was the local irritation caused by the insolent
-behavior of the ill-disciplined native troops who had been recruited
-almost wholly from the peddlers and hucksters of the country fairs. The
-peddler’s guilds in Corea hold a truly feudal relation to the
-Government, often preparing the roads and escorting officials on their
-journeys, acting as detectives, and forming militia according to the
-occasion. Some astonishing proofs of their power and discipline,
-especially in mountain regions, were given by Min Yong Ik to Lieutenant
-Foulke. Instead of their being independent, as they had hoped for under
-the American treaty, it seemed to the progressive men that the Chinese
-were more than ever ruling their country, and that the Mins were their
-tools.
-
-It was about October 25th that the Liberals, feeling that their heads
-were likely to remain on their shoulders only so long as it pleased
-their enemies to bring no charge against them, declared to their
-American friend that “for the sake of Corea, about ten of the prominent
-Conservatives would have to be killed.” They proposed to play the same
-old Asiatic game of first seizing the person of the sovereign and then
-in his name proclaiming their own measures and reforms. The
-preliminaries would be a fire and a riot. Then, in the confusion, the
-man with a programme, knowing just what to do, would direct affairs.
-They believed that the Powers would condone and approve their action,
-make new and more favorable treaties, and loan money for national
-improvement. Though the Conservatives had at their call a rabble of
-rapacious militia eager to try their new tools of war upon their
-hereditary enemies, the Japanese, the Liberals knew full well the
-sterling qualities of the little body of Japanese infantry then in the
-capital, most of whom were from northern Japan and many of them deer
-hunters and dead shots with the rifle. There were fifteen hundred
-Chinese soldiers still in camp, under Yuan Shi Kai, then the lieutenant
-and later the successor of Li Hung Chang, but the Progressive plotters
-in their craft expected to secure the employment of the two hundred or
-more Japanese soldiers for their own purposes. The moment for action
-seemed to be propitious for early December. A Japanese man-of-war was
-expected to arrive in Chemulpo on the 5th or 6th of that month. China,
-pressed by France, had withdrawn half her troops. Japan with a view to
-strengthening her influence in Corea had, a few days before, remitted
-$400,000 of the indemnity exacted for the riot of 1882. The golden
-moment to strike off forever the chains of political slavery to China
-was approaching. The date was set for the 7th of December.
-
-When, however, news arrived that the Japanese gunboat had broken down
-and was delayed and it was known that the Conservatives had got some
-intimation of what was coming, it was decided to start the fire, the
-riot, the coup d’état a few days earlier. On the night of the 4th of
-December, Han Yong Sik, the Postmaster-General, gave a dinner at the
-new post-office, situated in the very heart of the city. The guests
-were three Chinese, Yuan, Chin, and Wang, two Americans, General Foote
-and his secretary, Mr. Scudder, the British Consul-General, W. G.
-Aston, the German Foreign Adviser, Von Möllendorf, and a dozen or more
-Corean high officers, both Conservatives and Progressives, Han Yong
-Sik, Kim Ok Kiun, Min Yong Ik, Pak Yong Hio, and So Kwang Pom. Others
-also were present. The Japanese minister was absent on the plea of
-ill-health.
-
-It was noticed that Kim Ok Kiun rose and left the table several times,
-going out into the courtyard, but nothing was thought of this action.
-The guests sat down at six. At seven a fire broke out, a house just in
-front of the post-office being in flames. Min Yong Ik, who had charge
-of the city fire-brigade, rose from the table, and calling on his
-servants to follow him, passed out. As he did so, a man dressed in
-Japanese clothes leaped out of the shadow of the gateway and struck at
-him fiercely with a sword. Min Yong Ik fell heavily, but though wounded
-in head and body he recovered through the skilful surgery of Dr. Horace
-N. Allen. The assassin escaped, and the Corean guests, instead of
-leaving by the door, got away over the back wall. Hastening immediately
-to the old palace, the leaders of the conspiracy reached the royal
-presence, announced that the Chinese were coming to seize the King’s
-person and that he must hasten to a place of safety. Reaching the small
-gate leading into the Kiong-u Palace, Kim Ok Kiun requested the King to
-send to the Japanese minister for a body-guard, but his Majesty
-refused. Thereupon So Kwang Pom drew out a piece of foreign note-paper
-and a pencil and wrote in Chinese the words “Let the Japanese minister
-come and give me his help.” [58] This was despatched by a servant.
-
-When the little company reached the Kiong-u Palace, the King was
-saluted by the Japanese minister and his interpreter, the twelve
-students who had been in Japan, and two hundred soldiers under Captain
-Murakami drawn up in line, who by some magic were all waiting there.
-Here then was the new Government, king, army, and counsellors. Word was
-sent to three of the Corean Liberals to come and receive office under
-the reconstructed authority. With amazing promptness they were present
-within half an hour. The programme had thus far been carried out with
-the precision of actors on a well-regulated theatrical stage. The
-“summoning tablet” was sent early in the morning by royal messenger to
-six of the Conservative leaders. Going to the palace in the expectation
-of losing their lives, they first sent word to the Chinese Yuan,
-warning him of the state of affairs and asking his help. As soon as
-they had passed inside the palace gates their heads were chopped off.
-The royal eunuch was put to death in spite of the entreaties and
-remonstrances of the King himself. While the Japanese surrounded the
-gates of the palace, Kim Ok Kiun gave passes to those who were to be
-allowed to go in and out. In the reconstructed Government Yo Cha Wun
-and Han Yong Sik were prime ministers, Pak Yong Hio was made
-General-in-Chief, So Kwang Pom Minister of Foreign Affairs, Kim Ok Kiun
-Minister of Finance, and Su Ja Pil Lieutenant-General. The young men
-who had studied in Tokio were also given official positions. All these
-proceedings simply illustrate the Corean method of the Opposition’s
-moving a vote of censure of the Government.
-
-The Chinese “resident” Yuan took no immediate action, but the next
-morning, December 5th, great surging crowds of Coreans begged that he
-would interfere, because they said the Japanese were holding the King
-as a prisoner in his palace. Yuan sent a messenger to the Japanese
-minister, inquiring why he had surrounded the King with soldiers and
-killed the ministers, demanding that he immediately evacuate the
-palace. After three hours had passed, and no answer coming, Yuan moved
-with his Chinese troops and the Corean military, making a force of four
-or five thousand men, toward the old palace. He found the entrance
-strongly guarded with the Japanese. The battle which ensued lasted from
-about 3 to 4 P.M., several score of the combatants being killed. As
-darkness drew near, the Japanese made their way to the northeastern
-part of the palace grounds, whence the King escaped from them with a
-few of the Progressive leaders and the party of students. The Corean
-soldiers carried the King to the north temple, where he was saved, but
-Han Yong Sik and seven of the students were hacked to pieces by the
-mob. About 8 P.M. Captain Murakami led off his soldiers and making a
-masterly retreat reached the Japanese legation after forty-eight hours
-of absence. Pak Yong Hio, Kim Ok Kiun, So Kwang Pom, Su Ja Pil, and a
-half dozen or so of the military students accompanied the Japanese.
-
-All day long on December 6th, with the cry of “Death to the Japanese,”
-the Corean militia and the ruffians were let loose on a wild revelry of
-outrage, butchery, and incendiarism. The nine white foreigners in
-Seoul, of whom three were ladies, together with twenty-two Japanese who
-had escaped bullets, stones, and knives, found refuge in the American
-legation, which was put in a state of defence by Lieutenant Bernadou.
-The twenty soldiers left behind in the Japanese legation, aided by a
-hundred or more of their fellow refugee countrymen, defended the walled
-enclosure from the mob. On the afternoon of the 7th, provisions being
-exhausted, the Japanese with admirable coolness, discipline, and
-success began the march to Chemulpo. The women, children, and refugees
-were put inside of a hollow square formed by the soldiers, the legation
-buildings were fired, and despite hostile soldiers, Chinese and Corean
-with rifles and cannon, and armed men firing from roof and wall, they
-unbarred the city gates and with their wounded crossed the river.
-Reaching Chemulpo on the 8th, they were fed by the sailors on the
-Japanese man-of-war, which had happily arrived. A Japanese steamer
-carried the news to Nagasaki.
-
-The short-lived Liberal Government came to an end after forty-eight
-hours’ existence. The conspirators fled to Japan, whence most of them
-reached America. A month later Count Inouye, with a guard of six
-hundred troops, took up his quarters outside the west gate in Seoul and
-negotiations were opened. On January 9th a convention was signed by
-which the Corean Government agreed to pay an indemnity of six hundred
-thousand yen, and Herr Von Möllendorf and Su Sang Yu were sent to Japan
-to arrange terms for the renewal of friendly relations. The Coreans, to
-show their regret, chopped up and distributed around the streets the
-flesh and bones of eleven human beings supposed to have been active in
-the killing of defenceless Japanese in Seoul. At Tientsin, May 7, 1885,
-the Marquis Ito and Li Hung Chang signed a convention, by which it was
-agreed that the troops of both countries should be withdrawn and that
-neither government should land a military force in Corea without
-notifying the other. Early in the spring the Japanese legation was
-built at Corean expense in Occidental style, this being the first of
-the many foreign edifices which now adorn Seoul. The Chinese and
-Japanese troops embarked for their respective countries at Chemulpo on
-the 21st of May. On October 5, 1885, the Tai-wen Kun, fresh and rosy
-after his sojourn in Tientsin, re-entered Seoul. He was escorted by
-Chinese warriors and many thousands of Coreans. Most of his immediate
-followers being dead or in exile, his name was not often mentioned
-during the decade of years following. He lived in comparative seclusion
-until the outbreak of the Chino-Japanese war.
-
-The Progressives of 1884 were in too much of a hurry. They had tried to
-hatch the egg of reform by warming it in the fire. The affair of
-December, in its origin an anti-Chinese uprising of Radicals, became at
-its end an anti-Japanese demonstration in which about three hundred
-lives were lost. Yet as if to show that revolutions never go backward,
-this bloody business pushed open the gateway through which science and
-Christianity entered to hasten the exit of barbarism. Dr. Horace N.
-Allen, an American missionary physician, had arrived in Seoul in
-September, 1884. When called on the night of December 4th to minister
-to the Min Yong Ik, he found the native doctors stopping up the sword
-wounds with wax. Dr. Allen, by treating the injured man in scientific
-fashion, saved his life. The superiority of Western methods having been
-demonstrated, the wounded Chinese soldiers and Coreans, with their
-shattered bones and torn flesh, over which they had plastered the
-reeking hides cut from living dogs, or had utilized other appliances of
-helpless ignorance, came to him in crowds. Unable to attend to all
-these sufferers, application was made for a hospital. The Government at
-once set apart the dwelling occupied by Han Yong Sik and, naming it the
-House of Civilized Virtue, established April 10, 1885, a hospital.
-
-Following this event, American missionaries arrived in increasing
-numbers. The Government engaged three American young men, Messrs. D. A.
-Bunker, G. W. Gilmore, and H. B. Hurlbert, as teachers, who with
-thirty-five sons of noble families as their pupils opened a school
-September 23, 1885. Missionaries with unquenchable patience began the
-instruction of a people much better acquainted with malevolent demons
-than with beneficent beings or with one living and true God, whose only
-idea of sin is that it is a civil offence, and whose language has no
-word for the love of a superior to an inferior. In apathetic faces they
-were to light the fire of a new hope. To become a Christian in Corea
-means a complete revolution in a man’s life, especially in that of a
-yangban, who has the intellectual power of a man with only the actual
-knowledge of a child. Nevertheless, with orphanages, Sunday-schools,
-Christian women’s work in the home, organized Christian churches,
-hospitals, schools for boys and girls, and a printing establishment,
-most of the forms of active Christianity were soon visible in Corea,
-the country which, in 1904, with its tens of thousands of believers, is
-the most hopeful of missionary fields.
-
-A treaty with France, negotiated in the summer of 1886 and ratified May
-30, 1887, enabled the French Roman Catholic missionaries to come forth
-into open day. They at once made preparations for the erection of a
-cathedral, which, when completed and dedicated, May 29, 1897, was the
-tallest and most imposing edifice in the capital. It is 202 feet long
-and from 60 to 90 feet wide, and cost $60,000. The French minister
-endeavored to secure the same magisterial rights for the bishops and
-priests in Corea which have been long enjoyed by prelates of the Roman
-form of Christianity in China. Although at first the Government
-resisted, yet these claims have been virtually validated, and France
-acts in Corea, as elsewhere in Asia, as the protector of Roman
-Catholics. Much disquiet and local disorder in various parts of the
-country, especially in Quelparte and the provinces of Whang Hai, may be
-traced to popular notions and the procedure of the priests based on
-this peculiarity of French foreign policy.
-
-Corea soon found that diplomacy could not be one-sided. Having dealings
-with foreign nations, it was not sufficient that Western governments
-should have their representatives in Seoul, while there were no Corean
-legations or consulates abroad. An episode arising from international
-jealousies soon caused this desire to take tangible form, despite
-active opposition from China. On April 14, 1885, the British
-Government, in view of eventualities with Russia, ordered the temporary
-occupation of Port Hamilton in the Nan How group of islands, about
-thirty-five miles from the northeastern end of Quelparte. Corea at once
-protested against this seizure of territory, and, in spite of all
-offers of gold for purchase, and all diplomatic pressure, she secured,
-after voluminous correspondence and the assurance that Russia would not
-occupy any part of Corea, the evacuation of Port Hamilton by the
-British. The flag of the double cross was hauled down February 27,
-1887. At once the Government at Seoul prepared to send embassies to
-Japan, Europe, and the United States to establish permanent legations.
-This plan was of course opposed by Yuan Shi Kai, the Chinese
-“resident,” as he called himself, in an active, impudent, and
-villainous manner, he acting at the beck of his chief, Li Hung Chang.
-The right to make a treaty carries with it the right of a legation
-abroad, and the American minister, the Honorable Hugh N. Densmore, by
-order of the Government of the United States, invited the embassy to
-take passage in the U.S.Ss. Omaha, which was done. With his secretary,
-Dr. H. N. Allen, Pak Chung Wang, envoy plenipotentiary, arrived in
-Washington and had audience of President Cleveland in January, 1888. A
-minister of equal rank went also to Europe and another to Japan. The
-Chinese “resident” then planned, by transferring his headquarters three
-miles from Seoul, to get all other foreigners removed from Seoul in
-order to have more power, but the scheme was frustrated in good season.
-
-The road out of fetichism, superstition, and ignorance into light and
-civilization was not an easy one and had many a drawback. Until schools
-dispel ignorance, and the certainties of science dominate the minds of
-the natives terrorized by superstition, Corea, long intoxicated with
-sorcery, will suffer from continual attacks of the delirium tremens of
-paganism. Even the importation of condensed milk acted on the diseased
-imagination of the people to develop the disease. In 1888 what is known
-as the “baby war” agitated the people. The report was spread abroad
-that Americans and Europeans were stealing children and boiling them in
-kettles for food, and that foreigners caught women and cut off their
-breasts. The absence of cows led the Coreans to believe that the
-condensed milk, so much used among them, came wholly from a human
-source. For a time there was imminent danger of an uprising, but a
-proclamation from the King couched in strong language calmed the
-excitement, which gradually died away. The local revolts against unjust
-taxation and dishonest officials occurred with the usual regularity of
-such events in Corea.
-
-Provision was made for a stable revenue in a system which was organized
-under Herr Von Möllendorf on an independent Corean basis, but after his
-dismissal in July, 1885, the customs service was put under the
-management of Sir Robert Hart, and an entirely new staff of men was
-sent from China. Mr. H. N. Merrill was made chief commissioner and the
-three open ports were given in charge of men directly from the Chinese
-customs staff, one of the most able and valuable among whom was Dr.
-McLeavy Brown. Financially promising as this movement seemed and has
-proved, it gave China her great prestige and furnished the strongest
-lever for carrying out her ambitious plans in the peninsula, which some
-Coreans suspected of going even so far as to dethrone the King and to
-set up a new heir—a plot which Min Yong Ik exposed. Yuan, the Chinese
-resident, made himself practically a Chinese mayor of the palace. In
-ostentatious display of gorgeous costume, palanquin and retinue, as he
-vibrated between the royal residence and the Chinese legation, he and
-his procession formed one of the notable sights of the Corean capital.
-In a word, Li Hung Chang’s policy, working in conjunction with the Mins
-at court, headed by the Queen, resulted in a vigorous and undisputed
-reassertion of Chinese control, so that in the emergency which was soon
-to arise, the Peking Government felt perfectly safe in speaking of
-Corea as “our tributary state.” Apparently the influence of Japan had
-become a cipher, while that of the United States had dwindled into a
-merely academic theory of Corean independence. Potentially Japan was
-insulted and defied by her old rival and modern enemy. To make her grip
-on Corea sure, China massed her forces on the frontier, bought large
-quantities of Nagasaki coal for her steel-clad fleet at Port Arthur,
-and with her German-drilled army and great fortresses on the
-promontories guarding the sea-gates to the capital, she seemed herself
-defiantly ready to maintain her prestige regained in the peninsula
-which she called her “tributary state.”
-
-Thus stood, or rather, thus crouched, in the early days of 1894, the
-pigmy, Corea, between the continental colossus on the one hand and the
-insular athlete on the other. To add to troubles imported from abroad,
-the long-standing intestine disturbances again broke out and the Tong
-Hak rebellion culminated in civil war, at the local causes of which we
-may now glance. This uprising of sectarians became not the cause, but
-the occasion of the clash between China and Japan, which ended in the
-destruction of China’s claim of suzerainty over Corea, and the
-independence of the peninsular state.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER LI.
-
-THE WAR OF 1894: COREA AN EMPIRE.
-
-
-In Asia and in semi-civilized states, as in the old European world,
-each sovereignty is a church nation. Religion and the state are one.
-China, Corea, and Japan, in their normal oriental condition, are all
-acute illustrations of the evils of the union of church and state. Like
-Turkey and Russia, they are persecuting nations, allowing no freedom of
-conscience to the subject. Any attempt to think differently from the
-orthodox and established cult, or philosophy, is sure to call down
-persecution, torture, and death. Modern Japan, by ceasing to be
-oriental and adopting freedom of conscience, has simplified the
-relations between ruler and ruled. China still persecutes in bigotry,
-and during the course of her history has shed more blood in the name of
-religion and government than probably the mediæval states of Europe.
-[59] In all Asiatic countries in which religious despotism still
-flourishes, practical Christianity, especially that form of it which is
-founded on the Bible in the vernacular, is the great disturbing force,
-even as it is the hope of the future. It comes at once into collision
-with the theory of the union of Church and State. Giving the common man
-a new outlook on the universe makes him exactly the kind of man that
-despots and men of privilege and prerogative most bitterly fear, hate,
-and oppose. Of this truth Corea is a striking illustration.
-
-The religious history of the people in the Corean peninsula is first
-that of fetichism and shamanism, then of Buddhism, which brought in
-culture and made a nation, giving also to the land its permanent
-monuments, its art, manners, and most of its folk-lore and general
-traditions. In the intellectual clash which, in every country in
-eastern Asia, has at one time or another taken place between
-Confucianism and Buddhism, Buddhism remained victorious. Running a
-splendid career for over a thousand years, it finally reached
-corruption through wealth, worldliness, and political ambition. Yet
-intrenched in office and revenue, it held its own until overthrown with
-the dynasty in 1392, when Confucianism, after a long struggle, became
-the state church system. Buddhism, left to stagnation and decay, and as
-the religion of the peasants, remained in a frightfully corrupt form,
-while the scholars and thinking men were almost wholly devoted to
-Confucianism. As this system of Chinese ethics lends itself most
-admirably to despotism and the continuance in power of the privileged
-classes over the masses, so also under stereotyped Confucianism,
-Corea’s type of civilization, as we see it to-day, seems to mean for
-the nation at large only a general degradation as compared with the
-splendor of the mediæval Buddhist age. Allied with Chinese bigotry of
-race and ignorance of the world, Corean Confucianism degenerated still
-further into the savagery of conceit, of which the Tai-wen Kun seemed
-an incarnation, and made Chō-sen, as a body politic, a country eaten up
-with parasites—one-tenth of the population living on the other
-nine-tenths. In the persecution of the Christian converts to that form
-of Christianity which entered in 1777, Corean Confucianism showed
-itself as barbarous and as devilish as the Spanish Inquisition, or
-anything else in history which masks man’s lower nature under the garb
-of noble pretexts. Nevertheless, the very patience of the Christians
-under their tortures, the zeal and consecration of both the natives and
-their foreign priests, so impressed a Corean scholar named Choi, that
-in 1859 he set himself to ponder the question whether, after all,
-Christianity, though foreign, were not the true religion.
-
-After severe sickness and a revelation, as he believed, from the Lord
-of Heaven, Choi felt himself called to found a new religion. He
-proceeded to do so after the time-honored manner most fashionable in
-China, Corea, and Japan, where originality is not too common, that is,
-make an eclectic system. From the ethics of Confucius and the
-philosophy of his commentators, from the writings of Lao-tsze and his
-interpreters, and from the Buddhist sutras and their accretions, he
-composed a book entitled the Great Holy Scripture and wrote out the
-brief prayer which his followers still daily repeat. As Christianity
-was a Western sect, he gave to his new religion the name of Tong Hak,
-Eastern Doctrine or Culture. Many, perhaps most, of his followers laid
-their emphasis in the new religion upon the idea of maintaining
-Orientalism as against Occidentalism. Beginning in the town of Kion
-Chiu, forty-five miles north of Fusan, the movement spread quickly into
-the provinces of Chung Chong and Chullado. Entering the sphere of
-politics, it gave the downtrodden peasants hope and new life, in the
-midst of the awful night of ever-increasing official corruption and
-oppression. It was about this time that the tenure of office by the
-provincial governors was changed from three years to one year. This
-move, made in the interests of the official class, vastly increased the
-burdens laid upon the people, since the political spoilsman, who
-usually bought his office, having now less time wherein to recoup and
-fill his own chest, became threefold more grasping than before.
-
-The influence of Christianity is very manifest in the history of the
-Tong Haks and in the literary, dogmatic, and devotional manifestations
-of their leader. Within six years, under the fierce initiative of the
-Tai-wen Kun, Choi and his disciples were officially charged with being
-“foreigner Coreans” and followers of the Lord of Heaven, that is, Roman
-Catholic Christians. Choi was tried, tortured, and beheaded, and his
-doctrines were outlawed. As with the Boxer and other common delusions
-among the ignorant, the Tong Haks believed that “by the influence of
-their god they could dance the sword dance and ascend into the air.”
-The sect kept on spreading year after year, its animus blending with
-that spirit of revolution and resistance to intolerable official
-oppression then rampant in the southern provinces, the two movements
-melted into each other and became one.
-
-Early in 1893, before the palace gate at Seoul, there was a wonderful
-sight. With pathetic ceremonies and long and patient waiting, fifty of
-Choi’s followers presented a petition that their founder be
-rehabilitated and their sect be tolerated even as the Christians were.
-They intimated that if they were kept under ban they would drive all
-aliens out of the country. Their prayer for toleration was refused, and
-they were driven away by the palace guards. In the springtime the Tong
-Haks led a great uprising of the peasantry in the southern provinces.
-The soldiers sent to Seoul to put down the insurrection were scattered
-like chaff before the wind. The insurgents occupied the chief city of
-Chullado and the danger seemed to threaten the whole kingdom. The
-Corean general, Hong, notified the Court of his inability to cope with
-the situation. Then the pro-Chinese faction in Seoul, instigated by
-Yuan, applied to Peking asking for military aid to put down the Tong
-Hak rebels. According to the Li-Ito convention of May 7, 1885, neither
-China or Japan could send soldiers into Corea without first notifying
-the other Power.
-
-Meanwhile Kim Ok Kiun was in Japan. Though the Government at Seoul
-repeatedly demanded his extradition and both in Corea and Japan
-assassins continually plotted to kill him, he received the same asylum
-and protection which, under the laws of civilization, the Government in
-Tokio gave to all foreigners. Finally, in 1894 Kim Ok Kiun was lured to
-Shanghai by a false telegram and a forged bank-draft. On his arrival at
-the hotel he was promptly murdered. His assassin was rewarded with
-honor, fame, and money from Seoul, and in China looked on as a hero.
-With indecent haste, but following its ancient barbarous traditions,
-the Chinese Government made itself the express company which carried
-the victim’s body in a man-of-war to Corea, where it was cut to pieces
-and the head and limbs exposed on the public highway. This action of
-China raised a storm of popular wrath in Japan, while about the same
-time, China, first on June 7th forwarding her troops into Corea, in
-violation of the treaty of 1885, sent a defiant insult to the Tokio
-Government. Following this action, a despatch was sent to the Japanese
-legation in Peking, in which were the words which we italicize: “It is
-in harmony with our constant practice to protect our tributary states
-by sending our troops to assist them.... General Weh has been ordered
-to proceed to Zenra ... to restore the peace of our tributary state.”
-Thus by force of arms China defied Western diplomacy, and, trampling on
-the treaties, asserted her ancient claims of suzerainty over Corea as
-her vassal state.
-
-The reply of the Tokio Government was the announcement, on June 12,
-1894, of the despatch of a body of the Mikado’s troops under strict
-discipline to Chō-sen. On June 17th China was invited to co-operate
-with Japan in financial and administrative reforms in Corea, in order
-to preserve the peace of the Far East. China curtly refusing this
-request, demanded the immediate return to Japan of her soldiers, at the
-same time ordering her Tartar forces in Manchuria to cross that ancient
-Rubicon of Eastern Asia—the Yalu River. Chartering the British ship Kow
-Shing, she put on board eleven hundred soldiers with ammunition and
-artillery to reinforce the Chinese camp at Asan in the northwest of
-Chung Chong province. The reply from Tokio was, that, pending an
-amicable settlement of the questions in dispute, any further despatch
-of Chinese troops into Corea would mean war.
-
-As soon as it was known in Tokio that the Tartar forces had been
-mobilized and that the Kow Shing was being loaded, the Japanese fleet
-sailed and orders were given to the troops, railways, and steamers to
-be ready for the embarking of an army. Within twelve days a Japanese
-army corps was landed at Chemulpo, marched to Seoul, the Han River
-bridged by pontoons in twenty minutes, and the military cordon around
-Seoul completed. On the 20th of July Yuan fled the Corean capital,
-leaving his nationals to shift for themselves. On the 23d Mr. Hoshi
-Toru, envoy of the Mikado, with a military guard entered the palace and
-demanded of the King an answer to the question of Corea’s independence
-and willingness to stand by her treaty with Japan. The royal answer was
-in the affirmative. The King called in the Tai-wen Kun to allay his
-fears and aid him in the formation of a new cabinet, to which he
-invited, for the most part, the Liberals exiled in 1884. Prince Pak
-Yong Hio, who had been declared an arch-traitor and his house razed to
-the ground, was again received into royal favor.
-
-On July 25th the Japanese cruiser Naniwa, under Captain, now Admiral,
-Togo, met the Kow Shing. After four hours of parley and refusal to
-surrender, the transport was sunk by the guns of the Naniwa. On July
-29th and 30th the Japanese met the Chinese forces at Asan, routed them
-and occupied their stronghold. The declarations of war between the
-emperors of China and Japan, the old rival Sons of Heaven, were
-published to the world on the same day, August 1, 1894. The former was
-full of arrogance and ignorance, the latter was clear in phrase and
-temperate in tone. The Chinese lady then on the throne called on her
-soldiers to “root the pigmies out of their lair.” With the conceit and
-stupidity of the giant, China went to war against the intelligent and
-splendidly armed Jack of the islands. In results it was an affair of
-Goliath and David over again. Ancient and overweening orthodoxy met
-culture and intelligence in the field and on the wave, to be confronted
-by what was despised as too small to do harm. At bottom the
-Chino-Japanese war meant the right of a nation to change its
-civilization. Japan, already a signatory to the Geneva Convention and
-her officers trained in the ways of civilization, even though her
-people were dubbed heathen by some semi-enlightened folks of the West,
-went to war in Christian style. The Japanese had a superb Red Cross
-organization, a corps of surgeons, and a body of fifteen hundred
-trained nurses, while their hospitals were equipped according to
-scientific ideas. With each army corps and fleet went a lawyer versed
-in international law, to see that nothing should be done against the
-laws of nations. The literary fruits of these precautions and this
-loyalty to the high standards of civilization are seen in Mr.
-Takahashi’s masterly work “International Law During the Chino-Japanese
-War,” and in Mr. Ariga’s “La guerre Sino-Japonaise au point de vue du
-droit internationale.” The Chinese had not yet (or before the year
-1904) recognized the laws of civilization and had scarcely the
-beginning of hospital corps, hospitals, or surgeons. It was not
-wonderful, therefore, that her wounded usually crawled away to die like
-dogs, or that her ignorant soldiers frequently fired upon those
-bringing succor to the wounded. The official organization of the
-Chinese was honeycombed with corruption, but with their thirty thousand
-drilled troops and fleet, including battle-ships, of which the Japanese
-had none, they expected easy victory. Occupying Ping-an, they built
-between fifty and sixty forts. At sea their fleets were busy in
-convoying transports full of soldiers to the mouth of the Yalu River to
-prevent the Japanese from advancing beyond Corea and in the hope of
-overwhelming them at one onset. On the site of their previous victory
-three centuries before, they expected to rout the Japanese and then to
-drive them southward and out of Corea.
-
-The Japanese, centuries ago, learned the difference between bulk and
-brain, and are but slightly overawed in the presence of mere weight or
-size. They knew that the military reputation of China only existed on
-paper, and their excellent system of jiu-jitsu had taught them how to
-turn an enemy’s strength against himself. Her soldiers had grown up in
-the new era of ideas which had come to fruit under Christian
-civilization. Borrowing these ideas and forces and combining them with
-their own resources and informing them with their own genius, they gave
-the world a surprise. They had long grieved in spirit over their
-non-recognition by the world at large of their peaceful ambitions and
-of the principles that lie at the basis of their civilization. They
-mourned that war and bloodshed were necessary to impress the world and
-secure respect. Within six months they humbled China and compelled her
-to sue for peace.
-
-In three divisions, up from the south, eastward from the mouth of the
-Ta Tong River, and westward from Gensan, the three columns of the
-Japanese army marched and met at Ping-an (Ping Yang). After two days’
-fighting, September 15th and 16th, the Chinese hosts were routed. The
-next day, at sea, off the mouth of the Yalu River, the Chinese fleet,
-in the first great battle of modern steel ships, was disabled and was
-never afterward able to resume the offensive. Before October 1st Corea
-was entirely cleared of Chinese. On the continent of Asia, chiefly in
-Manchuria, they held an area larger than their own empire. Port Arthur
-fell on November 21st, and the great fortress of Wei-hai-wei was
-surrendered January 31, 1895.
-
-Then Russia unmasked. Calling to her aid France and Germany, this
-triple alliance compelled Japan to give up all claims upon the
-continent and to be content with an indemnity and the island of
-Formosa. Had the Japanese possessed a fleet of battle-ships, they would
-have refused this insolent demand and declared war on Russia. As it
-was, the treaty of Shimonoséki, between Li Hung Chang and Ito and
-Mutsu, was signed. The Japanese spent the indemnity money on a new navy
-and proceeded to gird themselves for their next war with another giant,
-and to show again the difference between bulk and brain.
-
-Corea suffered surprisingly little from the presence of two great
-armies on her soil. Her people were paid liberally for labor and
-materials which they so grudgingly furnished to the Japanese, who were
-not, in this instance, sufferers on account of their own excess of
-politeness, while the Chinese troops were within her borders too short
-a time to be a very heavy tax. Only around Ping-an was there much
-public or private suffering.
-
-In Seoul, the Mikado’s envoy, as early as August, began to insist upon
-a programme of reforms, which, had they been carried out, would have
-amounted virtually to a new constitution.
-
-In the reconstruction of the administration of the seven departments,
-that of Public Works was broadened to include Agriculture and Commerce,
-and in place of the Department of Ceremonies there was created one of
-Education co-ordinate with the others. A mighty programme of reforms,
-twenty-three in number, was prepared, but enough to make up several
-social tornadoes, some of which were possible, while others seemed too
-radical and absurd on their faces. A new mint began to issue coins in
-European form.
-
-The second son of the King was sent to Tokio to bear the thanks of the
-nation and Government for having secured the independence of Chō-sen.
-The Corean sovereign, on January 8, 1895, with tremendous
-picturesqueness of procession, pomp, and circumstance, proceeded to the
-temple of his ancestors and with imposing ceremonies solemnly adjured
-all vassalage and dependence upon China. The official name of the new
-empire is Dai Han or Ta Han, that is, the Great Han, single and
-sovereign, as contrasted with the three (San Han) of ancient history.
-With this royal act vanished from history the strangest anomaly in
-diplomacy, and one of the last of the dual sovereignties in Asia.
-Furthermore, from this time forth, the whole tissue and complexion of
-Corean politics altered. The native scholars began to seek a new
-intellectual climate and the culture of the West. Scores of students
-were sent abroad and many foreigners were employed, as in the new Japan
-of 1868.
-
-When, however, Count Inouye, one of the purest and best statesmen in
-Japan, in co-operation with the Reform Committee of the Corean
-Government began his labors, the old chronic difficulties at once
-presented themselves and in legions. There seemed to be no real
-patriotism in the country. Rare indeed was the native of ability who
-was not hopelessly inoculated with the vices of the old clans and noble
-families, whose only idea of the relation between government and office
-holders was that of the udder and the sucking pig. Plots and jealousies
-continually hampered reform. The real problem was to separate the
-functions of the Court from those of the Government, which in Corea, as
-in China, had never been fully done. In Japan the holding of office by
-females in the palace had been abolished. In the palace at Seoul their
-influence could secretly nullify public business. The question of
-succession to the throne without Court intrigue through the influence
-of the Queen and the mob of palace underlings, and the reconstruction
-of the military system and that of civil and criminal law were grappled
-with. Over one hundred young men were sent to Japan to study. On June
-20, 1895, a royal ordinance was issued dividing the kingdom into
-thirteen prefectures, five of the large provinces being divided into
-two parts, with 151 districts and 339 magistracies. A cabinet, with
-nine boards of administration, was organized, and a judiciary system
-for the entire country formed, a postal system inaugurated, and the
-army, consisting of 5,000 men, was put under the instruction of
-Japanese and American officers. For all these enterprises, money was of
-the first necessity. Attempts, therefore, were made to reform the
-revenue, making taxes payable in money instead of in kind, while lands
-illegally seized were restored to their rightful owners.
-
-All seemed to promise well, notwithstanding that many of the old-style
-gentry, who saw in the change a lessening of their income, still
-opposed what they called the “civilization nonsense.” The Chinese
-merchants gradually returned after the war and resumed business.
-Foreign trade in 1895 amounted to nearly thirteen million dollars.
-Commercial prosperity seemed to be general and increasing. A fitful
-insurrection of the Tong Haks, in the summer of 1895, was completely
-subdued by Japanese troops. All was proceeding auspiciously until Count
-Inouye left Corea for a visit home. The Queen, who feared that her
-father-in-law, the Regent, might make a bad use of the Japanese troops,
-was anxious. Count Inouye assured her that the Mikado’s Government
-“would not fail to protect the royal house of Corea.” Thus allaying her
-well-grounded suspicions, Count Inouye left Seoul about September 15th.
-
-There were still living in the peninsula the two ablest characters, man
-and woman, in modern Corean history; the Queen, bound to overcome, and
-nullify by her craft and the power of the Min clan, the reforms begun
-by the Japanese, and the old Regent, who was bent on getting his son’s
-wife out of the way, by fire, sword, poison, or dynamite. Nominally
-about seventeen thousand useless persons in Government employ and pay
-had been discharged, and the Queen’s palace attendants reduced from
-hundreds to a dozen. But after Inouye had gone away, these parasites
-gradually returned at her invitation, until the palace was crowded
-again as of old with her women, eunuchs, servants, and underlings of
-all sorts, while her clansfolk prepared for another of those plots so
-characteristic of unregenerated Corea. At the signs of danger, Prince
-Pak Yong Hio, minister of Home Affairs, fled the capital. It looked to
-the Japanese as if all their work and influence were to come to
-nothing. They had been foiled by a woman.
-
-The Tokio Government had appointed as its envoy, in place of Count
-Inouye, a military officer named Miura, who, like the French Zouave de
-Bellonet, of whom we have read before, brought to his work in Seoul the
-habits of the camp and the methods of the soldier, rather than the
-patience, tact, and civil abilities of his immediate predecessor. About
-this time there were in Seoul many Japanese, of all grades of
-character, especially soshi, political bullies or “heelers” from Tokio,
-angry at the Queen, who, as they professed to believe, was the friend
-of Russia. These men gathered many other spirits like unto themselves
-from among the native soldiers who had been discharged through the
-Queen’s influence. Soon both the native and the foreign worthies
-concluded, with the Tai-wen Kun, that for the good of Corea the Queen
-would have to be killed. On the early morning of October 8th the
-Japanese troops were conveniently and purposely posted so as to make
-possible the entrance into the palace of a motley band of ruffians,
-some sixty in number. Seizing the Queen in her own apartments, they
-murdered her, dragged her corpse into one of the areas outside, poured
-petroleum over the rice straw mats and clothing and set the heap on
-fire. Thus perished one of the ablest women in Corean annals. A new
-Government was quickly formed under the instigation of the Tai-wen Kun.
-A radical programme of reforms was published, new officers were
-appointed at home and envoys sent abroad. With horrible mockery of
-history and justice, this “rebel cabinet”—as the King later stigmatized
-it in public documents—pretended that the Queen was alive and forthwith
-conducted an absurd travesty of publicly trying some native accused of
-her murder. In the name of his Majesty a proclamation was forged
-degrading the Queen to the level of a servant. All this was done by
-men, some of whom, it seems impossible to doubt, were implicated in the
-palace slaughter. When on November 27th some ultra-patriotic Coreans,
-opposed to the Japanese and the policy of the Tai-wen Kun, made an
-effort to drive out their new rulers by an attack on the palace and
-failed, the chief participants, as well as those alleged on trumped-up
-charges to have been in the affair of October 8th, were executed
-December 8th. Meanwhile there were anti-Japanese riots in many parts of
-the country.
-
-On hearing of the strange use of the Mikado’s soldiery in Seoul, the
-Japanese Government promptly recalled Miura and arrested forty-seven
-persons supposed to have taken part in the assault on the palace in
-Seoul. Nevertheless, in the court at Hiroshima, technical evidence
-against them was lacking and the whole band of this new I-ro-ha of
-modern Japanese heroism was discharged free of blame, or at least
-without the stigma of condemnation. It is probable that the whole
-affair of October 8th was connived at by a reckless diplomatic
-blunderer, to the regret and mortification of the Mikado’s ministers
-and the national sentiment of Japan. In any event, it proved the
-death-blow, for a time at least, of Japanese prestige in Corea. In
-December the troops of Japan evacuated the country.
-
-This was almost the last appearance in public of “Yi Ha-eung, Prince of
-Heung Song,” the Tai-wen Kun, or Prince Parent. He emerged fitfully on
-one occasion before the police authorities to secure the release of one
-of his retainers, and then retired to his estate in Kiodang. He died
-peacefully, on the 22d of February, 1898, and was buried with due
-ceremonies. His mausoleum, made according to all the proprieties of
-Corean taste and mortuary art, makes an attractive sight on the
-landscape of Corea. On August 18, 1900, Corea being now an empire, he
-was by imperial decree raised to the rank of Wang, or King. He will
-ever be remembered by the Coreans as one of the most powerful
-personalities in the modern history of their nation. According to
-traditional usage, Corean princes cannot hold office, and for that
-reason many of them decline the title, in order to avoid the poverty
-which acceptance of it brings, and get Government appointments to
-office with salary. The Tai-wen Kun, born in Seoul, January 22, 1811,
-made good use of his opportunity, which came both with his title and
-his office. Besides doing a great many bad things, to the injury of his
-country, he made some great improvements. He was, according to his
-lights, a statesman and a patriot, and he foresaw to some extent the
-designs of Russia. In methods he never rose above the atmosphere of the
-environment within which he had been educated. In person he was five
-feet six inches in height, but looked a leader of men. He was the
-great-grandson of one king, the nephew of another, and the father of a
-third. “He became the leader of the small remnant of the imperial clan
-left, and really preserved it from extinction.” [60]
-
-The passing away of these two eminent characters, Queen Min and Tai-wen
-Kun, marked the end of an era.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER LII.
-
-JAPAN AND RUSSIA IN CONFLICT.
-
-
-From the night of the murder of his consort until his escape, four
-months later, to the Russian legation, the sovereign of Corea was to
-all intents and purposes a prisoner in his own palace. Unable to trust
-anybody and feeling in constant danger, he sought the American
-missionaries for food, for companionship, and even for protection. [61]
-To him the new Government consisted of his jailers. The Corean people,
-sympathizing with their King, hated the Japanese all the more, for they
-felt that their sovereign was a virtual prisoner in the hands of the
-Tai-wen Kun and the pro-Japanese conspirators. Under these
-circumstances, he determined to break the palace jail. On the morning
-of February 11, 1896, according to a plan elaborated by the women and
-arranged with the Russians, he entered one of the ordinary box chairs
-in which female servants are carried. A few minutes later, pale and
-trembling, the King of Corea knocked at the north gate of the legation
-of Russia and was promptly admitted. It has been insisted that “no
-Russian had been to the palace or near it, nor had any Russian been to
-any of the public offices,” yet by some curious coincidence the Russian
-legation guards had been increased on the evening of the 10th by nearly
-one hundred men from the Czar’s men-of-war at Chemulpo. Furthermore,
-the Russians welcomed not only the King but later also the Crown Prince
-and the Queen Dowager.
-
-His Majesty was scarcely within the walls of his new shelter before he
-issued an edict against his “rebel cabinet,” ordering his soldiers to
-“cut off their heads at once and bring them,” but in the afternoon
-another edict decreed that the six traitors should be degraded and
-delivered to the courts for trial. This royal order was the signal for
-another outburst of riot, savagery, and bloodshed. The Corean prime
-minister and the Minister of Agriculture were killed and their corpses
-mutilated and dragged round the streets. The prisons were emptied and
-the innocent and guilty alike released. Sixty-six Japanese, mostly
-workmen on the telegraphs, were murdered and the line partially
-destroyed.
-
-The pro-Japanese party, beginning with the bloody morning of October 8,
-1895, when Queen Min was murdered, had been in power during four
-months, during which time a tremendous blow was dealt to the prestige
-of Japan in Corea. For eleven months the King transacted the national
-business in the Russian legation buildings, going only occasionally to
-the palace to give audiences to the foreign envoys. One of these from
-the Mikado presented a claim of indemnity for $146,000 for his subjects
-slain during the riot.
-
-The flight of Corea’s sovereign was like that pictured in the proverb
-“from the frying pan into the fire.” In fierce reality, it was escape
-from bloody to inky tyranny, from an iron to a silken chain; but in
-both cases it was humiliation and slavery. While the guest of the
-Russians, the King paid well his bill as tenant by signing a concession
-to his hosts, permitting them to cut timber “in the Yalu valley.” The
-Russian Government liberally interpreted this document, according to
-the vast scale of Muscovite geography, as meaning the whole basin
-drained by the Yalu and its tributaries, that is, a region half as
-large as Corea. The Russians thus obtained for a year’s rent of part of
-their legation buildings a lien on Corean property valued at fifty
-millions of dollars.
-
-Revolutions do not go backward, and the general proceeding of the
-Government was along the line of progress. The external reforms are
-particularly noticeable in the capital, in which Corean officers
-trained in Washington have greatly improved the streets, the methods of
-cleaning and the drainage. The police and soldiery were uniformed and
-disciplined, and preparations made for a national census. The
-untrustworthy “census” of Seoul showed a population of 144,626 in
-27,527 houses, and in the suburbs 75,189 in 18,093 houses, or a total
-of 219,815, and of houses 45,350, in which district are 36 Buddhist
-temples with 442 priests and 204 nuns. The original width of the
-streets, as laid out in 1392, of 55 feet, has been regained over many
-miles of the city thoroughfares. Foreign trade steadily increased.
-American capital and energy helped to make what was once one of the
-filthiest and most unprogressive cities of the Far East a clean and
-attractive place, bright with electric lights and railway and modern
-water-works. A railroad was built from the seaport to the capital and
-opened for traffic September 1, 1899. The steel bridge, made at
-Chattanooga, Tenn., spanning the Han River is nearly a mile long. The
-electroliers give light to the palace and to part of the city of Seoul.
-The trolley line, besides traversing the city, runs to the mausoleum of
-the Queen, which has been built in superb style. There her scant
-remains, escorted by a vast procession characterized in all its
-features by the old barbaric grandeur of Corea, were laid with
-appropriate ceremonies.
-
-In the spring of 1896 the Independence Club, with a membership of over
-2,000, was formed. It was composed entirely of natives actively
-interested in social and material development as well as in the
-independence of Corea. On October 21st the cornerstone of Independence
-Arch was laid on a site but a few yards distant from the old Chinese
-Gate under which the ambassadors of China had for centuries received
-the vassalage of the Corean sovereign. It is a structure in stone,
-alike of architectural beauty and of political significance. The
-subsequent history of this club and of the general movement, in which
-the publication of a daily newspaper in both English and native script,
-The Korean Independent, were prominent features, is not a happy one. It
-showed clearly that independence or freedom must be something more than
-a word, in order to bring forth the fruits seen in America or among the
-nations that have most cultivated liberty, safeguarded by law. In this
-Seoul movement the seed may have been good, but good and well prepared
-soil did not exist. Rock, brambles, and the beaten road of bad
-precedent, in which Corea is so rich, received the sower’s hopes. The
-movement ended in sedition or evaporated. Nevertheless, it was vastly
-better than the Seoul mobs that so often dictated imperial policy to
-the ministers of the Government. As late as May, 1902, the former
-members of the Independence Club were being arrested and executed. More
-promising in ultimate results was the celebration on September 2d of
-the forty-fifth birthday of the King by a great gathering of Corean
-Christians in the pavilion near the old Chinese Gate.
-
-After a stay of one year and nine days, the King left his Russian
-quarters and took up his residence in the new palace of Kyeng-wun,
-built in 1896 in the western part of the city, where are gathered the
-foreign legations and residences, some of them very handsome and
-substantial.
-
-Corea, being now free and independent, between the two great empires of
-Japan and China, and Corean conceit of national history and antiquity,
-real or supposed, being never at any time lacking, it was thoroughly
-appropriate and financially very profitable for the yangban and palace
-officials to take measures to proclaim the once “little outpost state”
-an “empire,” and their sovereign an “emperor.” Besides suffering from
-imperialism in an acute form, the Corean office-holders knew well the
-significance of this nominally political act, in relation to their own
-fortunes; for in the assumption of the King of Corea of the title of
-Emperor, $100,000 was taken out of the treasury to celebrate the event,
-most of which, as a matter of course, went into the pockets of the
-King’s faithful servants. His Majesty protested in vain against the
-proceedings, but finally yielded gracefully. At 3 A.M. on October 12,
-1896, with great pomp and state, before the altars of the Spirits of
-the Land, the King assumed the title of Emperor of Ta Han, or the Great
-Han—in distinction from the ancient San Han. “The King is dead, long
-live the Emperor.”
-
-This, too, was the time of Russia’s political dominance, when a Russian
-military commission of fourteen were drilling the Corean military and
-when the Minister of Foreign Affairs at Seoul and the Russian envoy,
-Mr. Speyer, signed an agreement, November 5th, by which Dr. McLeavy
-Brown, the Englishman in charge of the national finances—able,
-faithful, and unterrified—should be ousted and a Russian, Mr. Kuril
-Alexieff, put in his place. Mr. Brown’s contract not having expired, he
-refused to vacate his post, and a large British and Japanese fleet
-having appeared off Chemulpo, he was able to maintain his ground. The
-three countries, Russia, Great Britain, and Japan, made an agreement
-that Mr. Brown should remain in office and that a Russian and a
-Japanese commissioner of customs should share in the collection of
-foreign duties at the ports. On December 23, 1897, a telegram was
-received from the Czar of Russia recognizing the Emperor of Corea,
-whereat the imperial party in Seoul was greatly elated. This whole
-incident illustrates the rather theatrical methods of Russian diplomacy
-in Corea during the past twenty years, showing how entirely her
-interests were military and strategic, but not commercial, she having
-usually scarcely a score, and never at any time a hundred, of subjects
-in the empire commercially engaged, and only a few fishermen who are
-whale hunters on the coast. One Baron Guntzburg was busy as a promoter
-of Russian interests, and the wife of the Russian minister was not
-inactive in social affairs and even as an influencer of political
-action.
-
-It was not long before there were signs of a popular reaction against
-Russia. On January 22, 1898, an attempt was made to assassinate Kim,
-the native Russian interpreter. By March 10th this feeling had taken
-form in a great anti-Russian demonstration, which ended in the
-apparently total though not real withdrawal of Russian influence in the
-peninsula. The military commission soon after departed and the
-Russo-Corean Bank was closed. After much excitement, Russia and Japan,
-on April 25th, agreed on a modus vivendi, both recognizing the
-sovereignty of Corea and engaging to refrain from direct interference
-in her internal affairs. No military or financial adviser was to be
-nominated without mutual agreement, and Russia bound herself not to
-impede the commercial relations between Japan and Corea. It was evident
-(probably in large measure on account of Russia’s new interests in
-Manchuria) that she considered Corea for the present beyond her sphere
-of influence. No serious revival of the claims of Russia to any part of
-Corea were made again openly until 1903. When the correspondence
-between Tokio and St. Petersburg, leading to the war of 1904, opened,
-the ambitions of Russia were seen to be serious and all-embracing.
-
-The first year of the Corean empire was completed after the celebration
-of the King’s birthday with unusual demonstrations of loyalty. The
-founder’s day (that of Ki-tsze, or Ki-ja, whose tomb and temple are at
-Ping-an and which suffered during the war of 1894) and the 506th
-anniversary of the establishment of the dynasty, as well as the
-celebration of the coronation, were honored with unusual
-demonstrations, including the illumination of the capital. This year
-was noted for a revival of Confucianism among the yangban, Buddhism
-having already enjoyed a “recrudescence”—both systems being galvanized
-into a similitude of life by the powerful induction, and evidences,
-both in leaven and bloom, of the new faith. On the whole, the year 1898
-was characterized by an intense conservative reaction in the Government
-and by an absence of important diplomatic or political events, except
-the chronic local rebellions in the provinces and the plots of rivals
-and partisans in the capital. Notwithstanding that the solar calendar
-had been adopted in 1895, and had been officially observed, the people
-still celebrate New Year’s Day with a fortnight of oldtime rejoicings,
-merrymakings, and customs according to the lunar calendar.
-
-The year 1899 was one of comparative quiet in the capital and
-provinces. During the Boxer agitation in China, there was danger of
-eruptions across the border which were duly guarded against, and a
-Russian escort of fifty soldiers to the refugee Danish missionaries
-from China was given free passage. Corea virtually joined the allies
-marching to Peking, by giving aid and comfort in the form of a thousand
-bags of cleaned rice, two thousand bags of flour, and several hundred
-cases of cigarettes.
-
-In August, 1899, the written constitution of the kingdom was issued,
-the nine articles of which declare the absolute power of the King. It
-cannot be said that either the Coreans, the foreign diplomatic corps,
-or the world at large took this giving of a constitution as a very
-serious matter. To the special “imperial” envoy despatched from Seoul
-to Tokio, Japan flatly refused to promise the complete neutrality of
-Corea. Nevertheless, Corean subjects are expected to bow down and
-worship (either in the old English sense of the term or with more
-profound significance) the picture of the Emperor as in other pagan or
-semi-civilized countries. A memorial tablet and pagoda “to commemorate
-the virtues of his Majesty” was begun—on a day significant in the
-West—April 1, 1902. These will be in the main street at the junction of
-Palace Street in Seoul.
-
-It was noted as a great event in the history of a country that has
-never given very serious attention to its high-roads, that Dr. W. B.
-Magill, an American missionary, drove a horse and carriage from Gensan
-to Seoul. A system of lighthouses was decided upon October 31, 1901.
-
-The fiftieth anniversary of the Emperor’s birthday was celebrated
-December 7th, silver commemorative medals being given to each guest at
-the palace. A Corean band of musicians, trained by Mr. Franz Eckhart, a
-German, who arrived in the country February 19, 1901, played two pieces
-of foreign music very creditably to themselves and their instructor. On
-July 1, 1902, the Corean national hymn, an adaptation by Franz Eckhart,
-was published. This German musician had already made a good record in
-Japan.
-
-On May 30, 1902, the Emperor entered the Society of the Hall of Aged
-Men, having completed the first year of the sixth decade of his life
-(51 years), the foreign representatives being entertained at breakfast.
-Prominent among these, in influence and ability, was the American
-minister, Dr. Horace Newton Allen, born in Delaware, Ohio, in 1868, and
-resident in Corea since the summer of 1884, when he introduced modern
-methods of healing and surgery. He accompanied the first legation of
-Chō-sen in Washington. There he was appointed secretary to the American
-legation in Seoul, and since 1890 has been the chief guardian of
-American interests in Corea, being made minister in July, 1896. During
-the time of the Boxer insurrection in China, when the movement
-threatened to spread into Corea, he was especially alert in
-precautionary measures of safety. Previous to the outbreak of the
-Russo-Japanese war, he secured the presence of a guard of American
-marines in Seoul by which American rights, personal and commercial,
-were thoroughly secured.
-
-Events during the year 1903 showed a steady movement toward an
-inevitable end and pointed to the impending crisis between Russia and
-Japan. The situation in Seoul was dominated by Yi Yong Ik and Yi Keun
-Tak, who were in close communication with Port Arthur and the Russian
-authorities at that place. Their high-handed financial and other
-schemes, in opposition to the Japanese efforts at securing a stable
-currency, came to naught after severe pecuniary loss to natives and
-foreigners and the serious disturbance of trade. The Russians, on April
-11, 1901, had secured a twenty-year extension of timber cutting and
-prosecuted vigorously their advances in the north. They now refused to
-allow the Corean Government any supervision over their work of denuding
-the forests in the Yalu valley. In May one of the Czar’s gunboats
-anchored in the harbor of Yongampo, which the Russians called Port
-Nicholas, and soon after began what were believed to be fortifications.
-A guard of twenty-six Russian marines reinforced the legation in Seoul,
-shortly after the violation by Russia of her pledge to evacuate
-Manchuria. A serious riot in November between Nipponese and Muscovite
-soldiers at Chemulpo foreshadowed the impending clash on a large scale
-in 1904. During December Russia’s influence at Seoul blocked all
-attempts of the foreign representatives to have Wiju (Ai-chiu) opened
-as a port of trade.
-
-At this stage in the nation’s history, the once white-coated hermits
-who had hitherto lived under their own top-knots, and often under hats
-that were as big as a haycock, began numerously to go abroad as
-students. Scores of them have been in America and Europe and hundreds
-in Japan. In December, 1902, a party of nearly one hundred emigrants,
-men, women, and children, started for Hawaii. All of these were
-admitted, except eight who were sent back because of contagious eye
-disease. Other incidents showed healthful movement in a long-stagnant
-mass of population. Light and vision are coming to a people blind to
-nearly everything modern.
-
-Of all the moral and reformatory forces at work, that of active
-Christianity leads. The missionary pioneers, Allen, Underwood,
-Scranton, Appenzeller, Heron, Gale, Jones, Hulbert, and others,
-mastered the language and opened the treasures of native literature and
-history. Already the list of aids to the vernacular and of their
-writings descriptive of country and people is a very respectable one.
-These works, the fruit of earnest toil, contrast superbly in the
-quality of truthfulness with the sketchy and ephemeral writings of
-tourists and hasty travellers. With other scholars and civil servants
-of various governments, they sustain the editor in furnishing the
-richly freighted pages of the Korea Review, and have formed the Korea
-Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, from which already several
-creditable volumes of “Transactions” have appeared to delight the
-serious student, who values perspective and tone in his mind-pictures
-of this once hermit nation.
-
-Already the representatives of the Christian brotherhoods of
-English-speaking peoples have their row of graves in which sleep
-heroes, veterans, and some who “fell at the first fire.” Beginning in
-1884, their prospective celebration of a double decennial, in
-September, 1904, was postponed under the clouds of war. Besides healing
-and helping, translating the Scriptures, and teaching the great
-uplifting truths which centre around the idea of one living and true
-God, gathering thousands of souls into churches and furnishing Gospel
-nurture, they have taught the natives the grand lesson of self-support
-and self-propagation through a first-hand knowledge of the Bible. War,
-persecution, and manifold trials have tested and proved the quality of
-the converts, who in sincerity and power to stand in the midst of
-temptations are perhaps second to none in any field.
-
-It was evident at the opening of the year 1904 that Japanese armies
-were once again to tread the soil of Corea, this time the war being not
-between China and Japan, but between Japan and Russia. Against the
-Colossus of the North and Russian rapacity, the Island Empire had a
-long list of grievances. As far back as 1861 a Russian man-of-war had,
-not without shedding the blood of its defenders, landed marines on the
-Island of Tsushima. There they had planted seed and begun the formation
-of a settlement looking to permanent occupation. In those days of
-hermitage, weakness, and fear, nothing could be done by the Japanese
-authorities at Yedo; but Katsu Awa, the Shogun’s most far-seeing
-statesman, called the attention of the British minister at Peking to
-this invasion, and a British naval force was sent to compel the
-Russians to retire. A few years later Russia took possession of
-Saghalien, after the usual preliminary of “joint occupation,”
-compelling the Japanese to be satisfied with the Kurile Islands below
-50° 56′ of north latitude. This was in the year 1875, but long before
-that, Japanese statesmen, especially Okubo, had penetrated the designs
-of Russia. The formation, out of feudal elements, of her national army
-in 1871 and the first of this character since the twelfth century, was
-largely with a view of defending Japan against Russian and other
-aggressions. On the return of the Japanese embassy from its trip round
-the world in 1873, Okubo, Kido, and others opposed the Corean war
-project (as we have seen in Chapter XLVII), because a war with Corea
-then meant playing into Russia’s hands. Something of the popular fear
-of Russia over the Japanese nation, which hung like an advancing black
-cloud, was seen in the attack by a fanatical policeman on the Crown
-Prince, now the Czar of Russia, during his visit to Japan in 1891, but
-the Government in Tokio, even in the person of the Mikado, besides
-making ample apology, scrupulously maintained propriety in all dealings
-with Russia, at home and in Corea, living on terms of perfect
-friendship. It was therefore a stunning disappointment, though a not
-wholly unexpected procedure, when Russia, in 1895, summoning to her aid
-the French and Germans, deprived the Japanese of the fruits of their
-victories in the war with China, by compelling the islanders to
-relinquish all territory on the mainland of Asia, and to be content
-with Formosa and an indemnity. Exhausted as they were by the war with
-China, yet had the Japanese been possessed of five battle-ships, they
-would have declared war upon Russia as an abominable intermeddler and
-aggressor. The force of circumstances required them to swallow their
-humiliation, but as the Japanese, any more than certain Christian
-nations, never forgive an injury, they began immediately to gird
-themselves for the coming and inevitable struggle with the Power that
-seemed bent upon their destruction. When the Boxer uprising in 1899
-called forth the military energies of eight nations, the Japanese
-Government at first held back, lest its motives in being too forward
-might be questioned. When finally urged to lead the van of the allied
-armies of rescue, Japan sent 21,000 of her ablest and best equipped
-soldiers into the campaign. Their experiences on the march to Peking
-were invaluable to the Japanese, for through becoming comrades with the
-mujiks in the camps and on the battle-field, they learned that they had
-nothing to fear from such foes when arrayed against them in anything
-like an equality of numbers in war. The Japanese officer found himself
-a modern man in the presence of his equals, who were men steeped in
-mediæval methods of thought.
-
-Steadily enlarging their navy and perfecting in every detail arms,
-ammunition, field equipment, army hygiene, and the physical development
-of their soldiers, the Japanese determined to stand for their rights,
-even though this might seem like Jack challenging the giant. No longer
-hermits on an island, which, having but a small fraction of arable
-fertile soil, could not feed its inhabitants, so that population had to
-remain stationary, the Japanese had become a nation of traders and
-manufacturers, with an annual increase of population of over 500,000 a
-year, with a total population of fifty millions, and with a foreign
-trade that had increased 543 per cent since 1890, with a total export
-trade consisting of 84.6 per cent of manufactured articles. With nearly
-thirty thousand Japanese subjects in Corea, most of them married and
-with homes, and with 10,000 of their people in Manchuria, they took an
-interest in the affairs of Corea and Manchuria which was not like that
-of the Russians, chiefly military and strategic, but which, on the
-contrary, was commercial and vital. During the Boxer troubles, Russia
-sent a large army into Manchuria and finally took possession of the
-whole of that portion of the Chinese Empire. She promised solemnly to
-all the governments interested, to vacate the country on the 9th of
-October, 1903.
-
-The world knows how this promise was broken. The correspondence between
-Tokio and St. Petersburg reveals the exasperating delays of the Russian
-Government, and its intention not only to remain permanently in
-Manchuria but to prevent if possible Japan from having anything to do
-with the matter. Russia even desired “recognition by Japan that
-Manchuria is outside her sphere of special interest” and requested a
-mutual engagement to establish “a neutral zone on the Corea-Manchuria
-frontier, extending fifty kilometers each side into which neutral zone
-neither of the contracting parties shall introduce troops without the
-consent of the other,” and “the engagement on the part of Japan not to
-undertake on the coast of Corea any military works capable of menacing
-the freedom of navigation in the straits of Corea.”
-
-In a word, what Japan claimed is, that “Japan has a perfect right to
-demand that the independence and territorial integrity of China shall
-be respected and the rights and interests of Japan in that region shall
-be formally guaranteed.”
-
-After innumerable delays and the situation growing more serious every
-day, the Russians continually reinforcing their naval and military
-forces in the far East, Mr. Kurino, the Mikado’s minister to St.
-Petersburg, having waited for an answer since the 13th of January,
-called on Count Lamsdorff at 8 P.M. February 4th for a definite reply,
-which was not forthcoming. Finding that in all probability there would
-be no changes in Russia’s claims of control over Manchuria and her
-demand for “a buffer region between confines of direct influence and
-action of the two countries in the far East,” being out of the
-question, the Japanese legation was on the 10th of February withdrawn
-from St. Petersburg and war began.
-
-The Russians were already on Corean soil with three hundred Cossacks
-guarding their timber cutters on the left bank of the Yalu River. Since
-June, 1903, they had reinforced their army with 40,000 men and their
-navy with 26 vessels, ranging from battle-ship to torpedo boat, thus
-adding 83,000 tons to their sea power. Five days before, the Russian
-commander at Vladivostok had notified the Japanese commercial agent
-that a state of siege might be declared at any moment. With steam up,
-decks cleared for action, and search-lights in use for night work, the
-Russian seamen instantly replied to the fire and torpedoes of Admiral
-Togo’s attack. The Japanese thus anticipated a naval raid from the
-Russians, which was afterwards successfully carried out from
-Vladivostok. To the Czar’s advisers in Europe actual war may have come
-as a surprise. It did not come thus to his servants in the far East.
-Nevertheless, within three days after the rupture of peaceful relations
-the Russian war ships Variag and Koreetz had been sunk outside of the
-harbor of Chemulpo by the guns of Admiral Uriu and an army landed to
-begin its march northward. At Port Arthur three battle-ships and four
-cruisers had been sunk or damaged by Admiral Togo’s torpedoes. The
-first idea of the Japanese was to eliminate the sea power of Russia
-from the scene of the seat of war. Landing her armies in Corea, at
-Chemulpo, the march was made without serious opposition, until near
-Wiju, the Mikado’s hosts once more stood on the banks of the Yalu, the
-Rubicon of eastern Asia, confronting the forces of the White Czar.
-
-Meanwhile, a new protocol between Japan and Corea was signed, in March,
-1904, in which the stronger Power bound itself to reform the weaker
-country without annexing it and to protect it without impairing its
-sovereignty. Corea pledged herself, as distinctly under Japan’s
-protection, to repose confidence in and to accept advice from the
-Japanese Government, and to make no agreement with a third Power which
-might seem to contravene the principles of the protocol. This document
-made Japan the champion of Corean independence, and is in spirit and
-letter the antipodes of Russia’s action in Manchuria.
-
-The new model army in Asia, and the most modern of all armies, was in
-its fitness of body and mind to cope with the problems of war in the
-twentieth century, the creation of the public schools of Japan. These
-soldiers, both veterans and youth, set a new standard of resourceful
-valor, celerity of movement, temperance in living, ability to endure
-hunger and hardship, and of self-abnegation in the presence of death.
-To a Japanese patriot, life, apart from duty, has no value. On the 1st
-of May, this “public school army,” under Kuroki, having crossed the
-Yalu under fire, won a brilliant victory, capturing many guns and
-prisoners. They had met European troops and beaten them in fair fight.
-
-Then began the Japanese march through the old Border Gate and Feng-Wang
-Chang or Phœnix Castle, and over the mountain range dividing the Yalu
-from the Liao valley. The fortified passes were one after the other
-carried in victorious assault, and in the early days of September both
-Russian and Japanese main armies were marshalled before Liao Yang city,
-southwest of the ruins of the ancient Corean stronghold, for one of the
-great decisive battles of modern times and perhaps of human history.
-
-During this time other armies were landed in Manchuria and by May 15th
-Oku was in possession of the railway leading to Port Arthur. Dalny was
-occupied May 26th, and later Yinkow and Niu Chwang came under the sun
-banner. On August 25th Field-Marshal Oyama took command of all the
-Japanese forces and the armies of Kuroki, Nodzu, and Oku.
-
-After the great pitched battle in the early days of September, the
-Mikado’s flag floated over Liao Yang, and Kuropatkin fell back on
-Mukden, in masterly retreat.
-
-From Port Arthur, girdled by a wall of fire and under a rain of shells,
-the Czar’s battle-ships and cruisers made desperate efforts to escape,
-only to be sunk, driven back, or, torn and riven, to seek shelter in
-the ports of China, and elsewhere, their presence giving rise to
-perplexing questions in international diplomacy.
-
-As we close again, in the autumn of A.D. 1904, our story of the once
-“hermit nation,” the Japanese, confronted with the practical
-difficulties of assuming a real protectorate over Corea, while
-nominally but sincerely striving to maintain her independence, are
-still determined to control the peninsula as a vital possession. One
-hundred miles of the Seoul-Fusal railway are in operation. The sound of
-the blasting night and day in the deep rock-cuts near Seoul announce
-their purpose to finish speedily a highway of steel to the Chinese
-frontier. The real purpose of the war is the integrity of China, upon
-which depends the safety of Japan, perhaps even the political salvation
-of Asia.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER LIII.
-
-COREA A JAPANESE PROTECTORATE.
-
-
-Having been responsible for two great foreign wars fought by Japan, it
-was natural that at the end of each campaign the position of Corea
-among nations should be notably altered. The war with the Middle
-Kingdom blew to pieces the Chinese doctrine of universal sovereignty,
-besides making the once vassal state independent. In name, at least,
-Corea was made an empire. The war with Russia annihilated the dogma so
-long held in Europe, that Asiatic nations exist for conquest and
-spoliation, with the corollary that “the break-up of China” was
-imminent. Japanese success in the war of 1894–95 was a vindication of
-the American doctrine as expounded by men from the United States during
-a century, and formulated by John Hay—“China for the Chinese.”
-
-Had Corea been a state fitted, by the power of unselfish patriotism and
-love of industry among her leaders, to survive amid modern political
-and economic conditions, Japan’s triumph over Russia would have made
-her all the stronger. Her independence would have been assured, had the
-virtue of her own sons responded to the opportunity.
-
-On the contrary, the history of Corea since 1866, as outlined on these
-pages, reveals the fatal weakness of the ruling class in Corea. Instead
-of giving themselves to patriotic sacrifice and personal industry, the
-yang-ban, or men of privilege, have made their capital a hot-bed of
-intrigue and Corea the storm centre of the Far East. Instead of
-developing their own strength and the nation’s resources, they have
-plied the arts of cunning and the crafts of the weak. Yet modern
-civilization, rich in powerful governments, has no place for the weak.
-Least of all is self-chosen weakness allowable.
-
-Being neither skilful merchants like the Chinese, nor brave warriors
-like the Japanese, the Corean noblemen—on whom lies the burden of
-responsibility—might at least have imitated the good example of their
-island neighbors. In Japan the outstanding event of modern times was
-the renunciation, in 1871, by 400,000 knights or gentry, of their
-hereditary pensions paid out of the public treasury. [62] After this
-sacrifice, made in the interests of true patriotism, they put off their
-swords and silk petticoats, got to work, paid taxes, and began to earn
-an honest living. Even China has broken with her unsocial past and
-conceit of perfection, and has entered upon the path of modern
-civilization.
-
-The Corean yang-ban abused their independence by intrigue. They failed
-to discern that the petty arts of the plotter endangered their
-existence as a nation. After her second great war, Japan saw clearly
-that to allow her neighbor state, wherein there was no sharp
-distinction between the Court and the Government, to remain, as of old,
-the hot-bed of intrigue, would jeopard her own existence. She therefore
-did for Corea what Great Britain has done for Egypt, the United States
-for Cuba, and the French for Annam. Corea is now numbered among
-protectorates.
-
-When our narrative closed in September, 1904, the Japanese were
-building a trunk line of railroad, nearly six hundred miles long, which
-should traverse the whole peninsula from Fusan to Wiju (Ai-chiu, pp.
-181, 364). Port Arthur had not surrendered. The real goal of the
-Japanese armies, the city of Mukden, containing the mausoleums of the
-Manchiu dynasty now ruling in Peking, “the possession of which would
-put the heart of China in the palm of Japan’s hand,” was yet unreached.
-Yet those who in the early seventies had helped to train the boys who
-made the public-school army of Japan, had no fear of its ultimate
-triumph.[62]
-
-On the 3d of January, 1905, Port Arthur was formally surrendered, and
-its evacuation completed January 7th. The main Japanese army fronting
-Mukden was quickly reënforced by Nogi’s division on the left, or west,
-and by Kawamura’s army, out of Corea, on the right, or east. The great
-campaign of hard fighting, destined to last nearly a month, opened amid
-a snow-storm on the 23d of February. By the 28th the fighting was
-general along the whole front of nearly one hundred miles. On the 10th
-of March Oku’s columns entered, by the southern gate, the city of
-Mukden. The Russians lost nearly thirty thousand in dead and over forty
-thousand prisoners. The Japanese pursuit northward lasted until April
-14th.
-
-On the 27th and 28th of March “the battle of The Sea of Japan” took
-place, in which the Russian armada of thirty-eight modern ships of war
-was, “by the grace of Heaven and the help of the gods,” annihilated.
-
-By invitation of President Roosevelt, the envoys of the two warring
-nations, de Witte and Rosen for Russia, and Komura and Takahira for
-Japan (both of the latter the writer’s former pupils in Tokio), met at
-Portsmouth, N. H.; whence, in the thirties, had sailed Captain Edmund
-Roberts, commissioned by President Jackson, and the first American
-diplomatist in the Far East. The Japanese won a signal diplomatic
-victory, securing the main points of their contention.
-
-The peace treaty which was signed recognized in the first article
-Japan’s predominant position in Corea, political, military, economic,
-as well as her right to supervise that country’s affairs and to protect
-it, Russia agreeing not to obstruct Japan’s proceedings in any respect.
-One of the first and worst results for Corea was the immediate entrance
-within her borders of a horde of low-class, insolent Japanese
-adventurers, who, by their cruelties and spoliations of natives, nearly
-neutralized the well-meant plans of good men in Tokio.
-
-Following up the results of the decisive war, the Mikado sent his
-highly honored servant, Baron Komura, to Peking to arrange matters
-amicably with China, and then turned his attention to Corea. The
-protocol of March, 1904 (p. 495), had been quickly followed by the
-abolition of the Peddlers’ Guild (so long used by pro-Russian
-intriguers) and by the visit of Marquis Ito, who bore a reassuring
-message of fraternity and good-will. Mr. I. Megata, one of the most
-experienced and skilful officers of the Treasury Department in Tokio,
-was sent to Seoul as financial adviser, and Mr. Durham Dwight Stevens,
-an American gentleman, who united ability and tact to long and varied
-experience in diplomacy in the Far East, accepted the post of assistant
-at the Corean Foreign Office. These gentlemen, like all their
-predecessors, encountered insuperable difficulties in dealing with a
-government that was nominally carried on at the Council Board, but in
-reality directed from the harem or by clan factions in secret intrigue.
-
-Occupied so seriously with other matters, few attempts were made at
-first by the Japanese Government in the interest of real reforms that
-could benefit the Corean people. Meanwhile, it must be repeated, tens
-of thousands of the Mikado’s subjects, many of them of the most
-truculent temper and disreputable character, crowded into the
-peninsula, committing acts of rapine and brutality which neutralized
-many of the best measures of wise statesmen. When the proposition,
-approved of in Tokio, was made that all uncultivated land in the
-peninsula should be open to Japanese occupation and enterprise, and the
-water rights and supply be shared by these aliens, the Corean people,
-as a body, made systematic protest. All the circumstances considered,
-this sudden act of virtual spoliation was a colossal blunder. In the
-eyes of the Coreans it was not only “stealing water from another man’s
-field”—so terrible a crime in lands of rice culture, where irrigation
-is a vital necessity—but the theft of the very soil itself. At once a
-storm of opposition arose that swept the peninsula from end to end. The
-Corean Emperor was besieged with petitions to resist the Japanese
-demands. A society called Po-an, for the preservation of safety and
-peace, was formed, which met in Seoul in excited discussion, and began
-the propagation of what seemed to the Japanese authorities a campaign
-of sedition. The meetings of the Po-an were broken up by the police,
-and the Japanese garrison of Seoul was augmented to six thousand men.
-Though other Corean societies were formed, the excitement died out, the
-Japanese not pushing their scheme, the Corean noblemen showing little
-or no real patriotism, and the people little power of persistent unity.
-On October 13, 1904, General Hasegawa took control of the military
-situation.
-
-Yet it is the simple truth to state that while the Japanese soldier,
-superb in discipline and noble in human qualities, is respected by the
-Corean, the low Japanese, who so often proves himself a rascal, is
-feared and despised. It is unfortunate that these disreputable
-characters were so long under such slight control from Tokio. On the
-other hand, notwithstanding that Japan, in the treaty of 1904, had
-guaranteed the independence of Corea, yet the Government in Seoul,
-choked by palace cliques, languished in chronic feebleness. Unable to
-keep order at home, to pay its legation bills abroad, or to separate
-itself from that “Forbidden Interior” of mystery in the boudoir
-inhabited by a mob of women, eunuchs and hangers-on, which curses
-China, Corea, and so long cursed old Japan in both Yedo and Kioto, what
-guarantee was there for the peace of Asia and the world? For the
-preservation of this, the Mikado’s Government was responsible, while
-every complication in Corea involved Japan also.
-
-After long deliberation, the statesmen in Tokio agreed that the surest
-exit out of the labyrinthine difficulty was to take charge of Corea’s
-foreign relations and place a controller-general at the capital, with
-subordinates at the chief cities and seaports, leaving internal affairs
-to be directed from Seoul. The Mikado despatched Marquis Ito—“patient,
-able, and authoritative”—to Seoul.
-
-On the 17th of November, 1905, the Corean Emperor’s minister, Pak Che
-Soon, and the Mikado’s representative, Hayashi, signed a treaty, of
-which the following is the official translation into English:
-
-
- The Governments of Japan and Corea, desiring to strengthen the
- principle of solidarity which unites the two Empires, have with
- that object in view agreed upon and concluded the following
- stipulations to serve until the moment arrives when it is
- recognized that Corea has attained national strength:—
-
- Article I. The Government of Japan, through the Department of
- Foreign Affairs at Tokio, will hereafter have control and direction
- of the external relations and affairs of Corea, and the diplomatic
- and consular representatives of Japan will have the charge of the
- subjects and interests of Corea in foreign countries.
-
- Art. II. The Government of Japan undertake to see to the execution
- of the treaties actually existing between Corea and other Powers,
- and the Government of Corea engage not to conclude hereafter any
- act or engagement having an international character, except through
- the medium of the Government of Japan.
-
- Art III. The Government of Japan shall be represented at the Court
- of His Majesty the Emperor of Corea by a Resident General, who
- shall reside at Seoul, primarily for the purpose of taking charge
- of and directing matters relating to diplomatic affairs. He shall
- have the right of private and personal audience of His Majesty the
- Emperor of Corea. The Japanese Government shall also have the right
- to station Residents at the several open ports and such other
- places in Corea as they may deem necessary. Such Residents shall,
- under the direction of the Resident General, exercise the powers
- and functions hitherto appertaining to Japanese Consuls in Corea,
- and shall perform such duties as may be necessary in order to carry
- into full effect the provisions of this agreement.
-
- Art. IV. The stipulations of all treaties and agreements existing
- between Japan and Corea not inconsistent with the provisions of
- this agreement shall continue in force.
-
- Art. V. The Government of Japan undertake to maintain the welfare
- and dignity of the Imperial House of Corea.
-
- In faith whereof the undersigned, duly authorized by the
- Governments, have signed this agreement and affixed their seals.
-
-
- [Signed] Hyashi Gonsuke,
- Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
-
- [Signed] Pak Che Soon,
- Minister for Foreign Affairs.
-
- November 17, 1905.
-
-
-Whatever may be the real history of the transfer thus made or the means
-taken to secure the document, it is certain that the governments of
-Europe and America were very prompt in withdrawing their legations from
-Seoul and in acknowledging Japan’s supremacy. In Washington the minds
-of the President and Secretary of State were quickly made up, because
-of the local eccentricities of Corean envoys, unable to pay their
-grocery bills, and despite the representations of more than one private
-emissary. On the accession of Theodore Roosevelt to the presidency by
-the election of the people and his change of diplomatic assistants,
-Minister Horace N. Allen, long our able representative in Seoul, was
-succeeded, in 1905, by Mr. Edwin Vernon Morgan, who had had experience
-in Samoa, Corea, Russia, and China. He being appointed to another
-position, the American legation in Seoul ceased, while the
-consul-general and consuls were retained as before.
-
-Meanwhile, under the energetic action of the Resident General Ito, real
-reforms were inaugurated and disorderly Japanese characters arrested
-and either sent out of the country or made to give pledges for good
-behavior. The whole prospect of things brightened.
-
-At a banquet given in his honor by his countrymen in Seoul, April 8,
-1906, the Marquis Ito spoke as follows:
-
-“According to what His Corean Majesty has repeatedly condescended to
-say to me, I may be permitted to believe that I have the honor to enjoy
-his confidence and trust in no small measure. He has on more than one
-occasion been pleased to assure me that he wished to rely upon my loyal
-services for the regeneration of the Corean Administration. His Majesty
-has also given orders to his Ministers to carry out this work of
-regeneration under my direction and guidance. As for the Corean
-Ministers, they have assured me of their determination to do their
-utmost to this end; they say that an opportunity like the present will
-not occur again, and, as a matter of fact, they are now actively
-engaged in the work of regeneration.”
-
-Apparently these words were as honestly applauded by the Corean
-Emperor’s servants as they were believed to be true by the speaker
-himself. In mutual confidence, Corean military officers were duly
-appointed, and both General Hasegawa and the Marquis Ito left with them
-for Japan, to witness the grand review of the returning victorious
-Japanese armies from Manchuria, which was held in Tokio April 30th.
-
-The opportunity for intrigue and conspiracy created by the absence of
-the two great men was too tempting to be lost by the factions of the
-boudoir and its inmates. The Corean Conservative and Progressive
-parties kept warring among themselves, hatching plots in which even the
-emperor’s privy councillors, palace eunuchs, and officers of the
-Imperial household were active. Two lines of policy looking to domestic
-and foreign disturbance were mapped out by the conspirators. One
-utilized the distress and almost chronic troubles in the southwestern
-provinces, the other was based on the hope of Russian intervention. The
-plot was planned by yang-ban in the palace itself.
-
-In Chung Chong Do (p. 194) a Min and in Chulla Do (p. 199) a Choi
-nobleman led the insurrections. Antiquated muskets, matchlocks, swords,
-and spears were laid in store against the Japanese. In Kang-wen Do (p.
-208), also, troubles were reported. Four police (out of the 350 then in
-all Corea) were sent from the Residency in Seoul, but they were killed
-or driven away. The Corean provincial troops being supine, two
-companies of Japanese infantry were sent to the city. Attacking in
-daylight in order to spare the peaceful non-combatants, the soldiers
-blew up the gates with dynamite. After some street fighting the city
-was in the hands of the military, 69 Coreans being killed and 145 made
-prisoners. It was hoped that this affair would end further
-insurrection.
-
-But in a land so long governed by the sorcerer, where the means of
-communication are slight and the people lack education and mental
-initiative, news travels slowly. Choi, in the more southern city, held
-out. Murderous attacks on Japanese settlers and fishermen continued.
-The Wi-pion party, representing inveterate conservatism, sided with the
-insurgents, while the Il Ching-hoi, or Liberal Progressive, set to work
-to unearth evidence and expose the Conservative plotters. Giving
-information at the Residency in Seoul, five high officers, Kim, Choi,
-Min, Hong, etc., of the Corean Court or Government, including a eunuch,
-were arrested. The twofold plan, first, to make the world believe that
-the whole Corean people was opposed to the Japanese protectorate, and
-second, to enlist Russian cooperation, was exposed. One immediate
-result of forcing the Japanese military hand was the quick surrender of
-Choi to Corean soldiers in Chulla Do. In his camp was found
-authorization from Seoul, sealed with the vermilion seal of the palace,
-to raise troops. Thus collapsed the plot for internal disturbance. [63]
-
-The prospect of drawing Russia again into hostilities which might free
-Corea from the Japanese yoke shows the weak spot in the Russo-Chinese
-negotiations of Ignatieff in 1860 (p. 371). In the delimitation of
-frontiers then made, a strip of country containing nearly 3,000 square
-miles, called Han-do, or Island Circuit, between the Tumen and its
-affluent, the Hai-lan River, which, beginning about seventy-five miles
-from the sea, flows nearly parallel, was left as neutral territory to
-be uninhabited. This region is shown on the maps (pp. 210, 365), and
-though the Chinese characters describe an island, it is interfluvial
-only. In reality the land, being very fertile, did in course of time
-attract many settlers, both Chinese and Corean. When Russia began to
-assert her strenuous policy in the Far East, she demanded that this
-neutral strip should be cleared of Coreans, or that all settlers in
-this region between the rivers should be enrolled as Chinese subjects.
-The Japanese War coming on in 1904, nothing further was done. Since
-Russia, by the Portsmouth treaty, controls the railways of Kirin, she
-may by holding this region control the trade routes to the seaboard.
-
-Here then was the bait to make the Russian bear bite. One of the Kims,
-an anti-Japanese ultra-conservative, secured a commission from the
-Corean Emperor appointing him virtually governor of this Hai-lan
-region. At Vladivostok, through the infamous pro-Russian Li Yong Ik and
-M. Pavloff, the late envoy of the Czar in Corea, the Court of St.
-Petersburg was to be sounded on the possibility of gaining control of
-this strategic territory.
-
-If it be asked, what ground of hope Kim Hseung-mun had of success, it
-must be remembered that while all other foreign consuls in Corea, under
-the new order of things, had received their exequaturs, or
-authorizations, from the Emperor of Japan, the new Russian
-Consul-General, M. Plancon, claimed that he should be recognized by the
-Corean and not the Japanese emperor, thus ignoring Corea’s denunciation
-of her old treaty with China and the convention of November 17, 1905.
-The Russian envoy, for a little while or until he withdrew his
-contention, consciously or unconsciously, gave encouragement to the
-Corean conspirator, Kim. This whole plot to embroil Russia and Japan
-was frustrated, getting no further than the palace, while the surrender
-of Choi in Chulla Do was made sure by the arrest, on the night of June
-8th, of the chief conspirators as they were leaving the palace. The
-Liberals had turned state’s evidence.
-
-Without impeaching the Corean Emperor, the Japanese Government removed
-his evil advisers and resolved to persevere in using what authority he
-still possesses for the good of the Corean people—as their protectors
-see it.
-
-That policy requires the public finance of Corea to be known in ledgers
-and budgets, with strict accountability for every dollar; the purging
-of the palace, and the thorough differentiation of Court and
-Government, and of the “boudoir” from the council table; the creation
-of a public school system; the building of a railway from Ping An to
-Gen san; a coinage and stable monetary system; the reform of prison
-methods and the judiciary; the reclamation of the vast quantities of
-waste land; the encouragement of all moral forces; the development of
-trade, commerce, and industry; and last, but not least, the severe
-handling of unprincipled and truculent Japanese; or, in general, a
-policy of righteousness and conciliation that must overcome the
-traditional hatred between the Coreans and the Japanese. To make the
-yang-ban get to work and earn their own living will be the great
-blessing to this long-oppressed land. If Japan can satisfy the
-enlightened judgment of the world that Corea is exploited for the good
-primarily of the Coreans and not the Japanese, humanity will approve
-and rejoice. The accomplished author of “The Passing of Korea,” which
-contains the severest arraignment of the Japanese thus far made, passes
-this verdict on the situation:
-
-“The Koreans have awakened to the fact that this, which should have
-been their first consideration many years ago, is now their last
-resort, and they are clamoring for education.... Korea can gain nothing
-by holding back and offering to the plans of Japan a sulky resistance.
-They are face to face with a definite condition, and theories as to the
-morality of the forces which brought about the condition are wholly
-academic.”
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER LIV.
-
-CHŌ-SEN: A PROVINCE OF JAPAN.
-
-
-Chō-sen is the official name of the country described in this volume
-and now a province of Japan, as declared in the Act of Annexation of
-August, 1910. Thus its oldest name, now to be better known to the
-world, is also its newest. Since 1392 the natives have known no other.
-The Chinese characters for Chō-sen, or Morning Calm, were stamped on
-the first and earlier editions of this book. The Japanese name of the
-capital is Kéijo.
-
-By the Russo-Japanese war, Corea was saved from being a Russian
-province and the king and court given the supreme occasion of reform,
-which, if carried out, would mean new national life. Corea would have
-remained a sovereign state, had the chief ruler and the governing
-classes risen to their opportunity.
-
-It was not to be. With despotism in the palace and a lettered class
-bound in cast-iron traditions, but profoundly ignorant of the world and
-the century, there lay beneath an oppressed populace, steeped in
-superstition, for which the Government did nothing. Lacking an
-intelligent middle class between, reform in Corea, except from without,
-was perhaps morally impossible.
-
-Old Corea, an unreformed Oriental state, with all the features
-inseparably associated with such a society, was thus described by Lord
-Curzon in 1894:
-
-“A royal figure-head, enveloped in the mystery of the palace and the
-harem, surrounded by concentric rings of eunuchs, Ministers of State,
-officials and retainers, and rendered almost intangible by the
-predominant atmosphere of intrigue; a hierarchy of office-holders and
-office-seekers, who are leeches in the thinnest disguise; a feeble and
-insignificant army, an impecunious exchequer, a debased currency, and
-an impoverished people—these are the invariable symptoms of the
-fast-vanishing régime of the older and unredeemed Oriental type. Add to
-these the first swarming of the flock of foreign practitioners who
-scent the enfeebled constitution from afar and from the four winds of
-Heaven come pressing their pharmacopœia of loans, concessions, banks,
-mints, factories, and all the recognized machinery for filling Western
-purses at the expense of Eastern pockets, and you have a fair picture
-of Korea as she stands after ten years of emergence from her long
-seclusion and enjoyment of the intercourse of the nations.”
-
-Corea as represented by the yang-ban, or ruling class, numbering with
-their families 200,000 souls, was dragged suddenly out into the world’s
-light and confronted with vital problems. Without that long interior
-intellectual preparation which enabled Japan in the nick of time to
-meet her new duties, the Coreans were neither able nor willing to
-grapple with the colossal tasks awaiting them. Yet this was no fault of
-the plain people, for it is to their credit that they welcomed
-foreigners. Except a morbid curiosity as to alien persons and ways,
-they have ever shown kindness, and politeness so far as they knew it.
-With amazing promptness the spiritually hungry and thirsty masses have
-responded with grateful appreciation to what their foreign teachers
-brought them. One secret of their readiness and docility lies in the
-fact that they were glad to be delivered from the oppression of rulers,
-whose one idea of government meant the grinding of the people for
-private benefit.
-
-After the treaty of November 17, 1905, by which a Resident-General from
-Japan was established in Seoul, and which took control of the foreign
-relations and affairs of the little kingdom, it was found that few of
-those who could have effected national reform gave any indication of
-their desire to do so. In 1907 a fresh agreement was made, “with the
-object of speedily providing for the wealth of Corea and of promoting
-its welfare,” and the Japanese Government spent millions of dollars in
-schemes of practical advantage to the Coreans. When, after four years,
-it was found that the age-old abuses continued, and reform by natives
-seemed impossible, the formal annexation of Corea was consummated on
-August 29, 1910. The full text of the treaty, in eight articles, with
-preamble, etc., and English translation, is printed in the Journal of
-International Law (Revue de Droit International) for December, 1910,
-published in Tokio.
-
-The Amalgamation Convention provides: [64]
-
-“(1) The Emperor of Corea shall concede to the Emperor of Japan the
-Corean sovereignty, together with all territorial rights.
-
-“(2) The Sovereign Imperial Household is to be treated as a
-quasi-Imperial Family of Japan, continuing to have the annual allowance
-of 1,500,000 yen, while members of the Imperial Family and meritorious
-persons of the country are to be created peers, or endowed with certain
-grants.
-
-“(3) The name Corea shall be changed into ‘Chō-sen.’
-
-“(4) The Corean Cabinet being abolished, the Residency-General shall be
-changed into a government of Governor-General, while as to the
-administrative business and customs tariff, there will be no change for
-the present.”
-
-The cost to Japan of the amalgamation is estimated at yen, 30,000,000,
-or $15,000,000. Seventy-five Coreans of distinguished families were
-created peers of Japan, and the monetary grants in yen were conferred
-as follows: to a baron, 50,000; to a viscount, 100,000; to a count,
-150,000; and to a marquis, 200,000. As with the kugé, or court nobles,
-to prevent waste, the principal is retained in the Imperial Treasury,
-and the interest promptly paid at frequent intervals. Provision has
-been made for other meritorious persons, and the military conscription
-will not be put in force for ten years yet. Meanwhile, besides
-thousands of Corean students in Tokio, delegations of leading men and
-women of Chō-sen have visited and travelled in Japan.
-
-It has always been a sore spot with the Coreans that the United States
-refused to intervene, though in the first article of the treaty of May
-22, 1882, promise was made that “if other Powers deal unjustly or
-oppressively with either Government, the other will exert their good
-offices, on being informed of the case, to bring about an amicable
-arrangement, thus showing their friendly feeling.” Yet apart from the
-settled policy of non-intervention in the affairs of foreign nations,
-the United States was but one of several nations that, with a
-significant promptness and unanimity, gladly called home their
-legations and handed over the control of Corea to Japan.
-
-There is nothing mysterious to the student in the loss of Corea’s
-sovereignty and her absorption in the Japanese Empire. A survey of her
-history and a view of the world’s movement since 1866 shows inexorably
-the law of cause and effect. It was the weakness of Corea to be not
-only shut off from the world, but in her hermitage so to exaggerate
-antiquity and its importance as to leave the nation helpless in the
-modern clash of civilizations, when Orient and Occident are meeting to
-merge into one world society. The first infirmity of the Coreans of
-insular mind arises from long contact with the history and literature
-of the Chinese. Stimulating to the intellect, this has paralyzed mental
-initiative and swamped originality. The Corean imagined that China’s
-was the beginning and end of all wisdom. Added to this was the delusion
-that a knowledge of letters was in itself sufficient to preserve both
-society and national sovereignty.
-
-Old Japan suffered frightfully, but not fatally, from the same disease.
-In Corea’s case, this insanity of literary pride was exaggerated into a
-crime when, after 1392, the popular religion was ruthlessly destroyed,
-the people robbed of their teachers, and the country given over to
-superstition and ignorance by a Government which Lieutenant Foulk, in
-1883, after prolonged tours within the country and study of the details
-of administration, declared was but armed robbery.
-
-There was no political or social unity in the Corean peninsula until
-the tenth century. The chief force in welding together the various
-tribes and peoples into the astonishing unity and similarity now
-visible among the people and villages from Quelpart to the Ever White
-Mountain was Buddhism. The missionaries of this faith, coming from
-Thibet and China, gave the peninsulars art, architecture, literature,
-folk-lore, a noble path of morals for guidance in this life, vast
-consolations for the future, and pretty much everything that means
-culture, refinement, and civilization. In very early days, before
-Mikadoism in Japan was formulated into a militant dogma, the islanders
-and the peninsulars, the Japanese and the Coreans, were virtually one
-and the same people, and in about the same stage of civilization. In
-the reaction of nature upon man and of man upon nature, during ten
-centuries, the two peoples were differentiated, and the two
-languages—almost exactly the same in structure, thus proving their
-common origin—developed their vocabulary and local pronunciation. The
-two nations, according to their ethnic mixtures, heredity and
-environment, grew further and further apart. Nevertheless, to-day,
-after a millennium of separation, the underlying elements are so much
-greater than the surface differences that the prospects of an
-amalgamation of the two peoples are decidedly promising.
-
-In the main, the history of Corea is like its landscape. Her political
-annals, as thus far studied, seem like monotonous undergrowth among
-which loom indistinct figure-heads. As bare as her desolated coast or
-denuded mountains, the scene in historic perspective reminds one of the
-peninsula’s lava beds, her square leagues of disintegrated granite, or
-her waste lands, out of which rise sculptured rocks, and whence emerge
-the Miryeks, or stone colossi, amid ruins surrounded with forests. To a
-native scholar his nation’s chronicles are not without a rugged
-grandeur of their own, besides a rich coloring that recalls the
-rock-scenery of Corea when looked at in the sunlight.
-
-To the alien student, Buddhism looms as the chief civilizer and the
-mother of popular culture. It is certain that during its thousand years
-of growth and prosperity in the peninsula the people were as one flock
-led by one shepherd. They were trained in what was at least beautiful
-and human. Corea’s debt to Buddhism is unspeakable. Even to-day, in the
-land so often invaded, desolated, peeled, and scraped by Tartar,
-Chinese, and Japanese marauders, and raided by men from countries
-called Christian, almost everything that remains to touch the
-imagination, whether in architecture, rock sculpture, stone colossus,
-pagoda, in art, and even in literature, apart from erudition, is of
-Buddhist origin.
-
-When, after A.D. 1392, the popular faith was banned, its temples,
-schools, monasteries, and works of art destroyed or doomed to decay,
-its priesthood socially outlawed and oppressed even to beggary, the
-people were left to ignorance and superstition and were as sheep
-without shepherds. They became the prey alike of the ruling classes and
-of sorcerers and fortune-tellers, who, though densely ignorant, lived
-by their wits and wickedness. Parasitic spoilers of all sorts, from the
-palace to the hovel, thrived, while the people, the foundation of the
-state, existed on life’s narrowest margins. Confucianism, as made into
-a state ritual since 1392, and as interpreted and developed by the
-yang-ban, or educated and office-holding classes, meant neglect of the
-land, the grinding of the people’s faces, the permanent destruction of
-popular wealth and comfort, the paralysis of the motives to industry,
-and the creation of a standing army of inquisitors, office-seekers, and
-office-holders, and their satellites and hangers-on, with headquarters
-in Seoul. In place of the spiritual bread of Buddhism, the new régime
-offered a stone. In government, instead of the egg for nourishment,
-they proffered a scorpion—even chronic extortion. A great gulf was
-fixed socially between the men to whom education meant the stifling of
-original thought, a ban on mental initiative and the oppression of the
-people. Monopoly of office and privilege, as held by one class, meant
-systematic robbery of the populace, the Government itself being an
-engine of oppression by which fewer than one-quarter million yang-ban
-subsisted upon eleven million of the common folk.
-
-When reform was called for which meant public benefit, apart from
-private rapine or individual advantage, manual as well as clerkly
-labor, continuous and unselfish toil with only slight pecuniary reward,
-the average high-class native proved a total failure. Despite the
-purging from the palace of several hundred women, and over a thousand
-male persons who drew salaries, the remainder within, or parasitic to
-royalty, proved worthless for the remaking of the nation.
-
-Ever under the spell of the Chinese characters, saturated with the
-ideas of Confucianism run to seed, having only one ideal of
-life—selfish advantage and the subordination of the lower
-classes—devoted to their sensual enjoyments, their long pipes, and
-their liquor, to checker-playing, gossip, and elaborate idleness, the
-yang-ban during five centuries did nothing to develop the soil or the
-resources of the country. On the contrary, the office-holding class
-systematically hindered the development of wealth, or even thrift, by
-extortion, unjust taxes, and dishonest manipulation of imposts, which
-were paid in kind instead of in coin, by exactions or forced loans
-never repaid—usually under the menace and reality of beating, torture,
-and imprisonment. One innovation under the Japanese rule, which made
-taxes payable in cash and not in kind, wrought infinite blessing to the
-people and carried consternation to the army of extortioners.
-
-In the modern world-life, Japan and Corea are as necessary to each
-other as are man and woman. It soon became evident to the Tokio
-Government, after every step, that some stronger remedy than advice
-would be necessary to heal the age-old and deep-seated Corean disease
-that seemed as incurable as leprosy. Hence the measures of 1907, which
-put into the hands of the Mikado’s Resident-General still greater
-powers.
-
-To this work of reforming Corea, Nippon gave her ablest son, one who,
-both in feudal and constitutional Japan, had dedicated his life to
-promoting the evolution of the modern man. The statesmanship of Ito was
-that of a lover of humanity, who might well, after long and
-multifarious labors, have taken the rest which he craved and which his
-physical condition demanded. Nevertheless, with his unique experience
-and amazing abilities, he applied himself with unremitting toil to lead
-the once hermit nation into the twentieth century. According to Ito’s
-motto, “The secret of statesmanship consists in securing the
-contentment of the people.” He was all the better fitted for his
-colossal task by having known so well the late feudal Nippon with its
-political diseases. Neglect of the people and of the soil, official
-falsehood, and class oppression were characteristic of both countries.
-Ito took all the more encouragement because life in Chō-sen was but the
-mirror of that in old Japan. Having fought belated feudalism and
-grappled with the new problems of a modern state in Asia, none was
-better equipped than he for the task of making a progressive nation out
-of a people whose mental eyes were set even further back in their heads
-than those of the Chinese.
-
-For while China boasts of Confucius, Corea penetrates further into the
-primitive. She hails as the founder of her social order, Kija (Ki-Tsze,
-or Kishi, pp. 11–15), the distant ancestor of the Chinese sage. On this
-nursery fairy tale of the nation—since the peninsulars knew nothing of
-writing until, long after the Christian era, they obtained the Chinese
-ideographs—every Corean for a thousand years or more has been brought
-up. The early mythology and legend of the peninsulars are about as
-trustworthy as those of the neighboring islanders, whose conceit of
-antiquity was once fully as great and whose official and orthodox
-chronology was fixed and published so long ago as A.D. 1872!
-
-This myth of Kija, as the actual founder of civilization east of the
-Yalu, took its literary form only in the eighth century, when the
-Coreans had become saturated with Chinese ideas. Then the peninsulars,
-made acquainted with Chinese historiography, and having but one model
-before them, faithfully followed it (as did the Japanese also), the
-Coreans surpassing even the greater nation in pride of antiquity and in
-the glorification of heroes, who loom up in vaster proportions
-according as the unrecorded centuries multiply and recede into the
-past. Historical science has already begun to change this perspective
-of antiquity as surely as hospitals have furnished object-lessons in
-the law of cause and effect. Corean gods and demons, more numerous even
-than old Japan’s mythical menagerie and pantheon, are being steadily
-banished to the realms of fairy-land. [65]
-
-Ito, scorning delights and living laborious days, continued the labors,
-but vastly enlarged the plans of his predecessors. First of all, having
-deported hundreds of the bad subjects of the Mikado and curbed the
-rapacity and brutality of his own countrymen, he applied himself
-unceasingly to healing the wounds of war, to indemnifying the unjustly
-impoverished natives, and to giving Corea what she never had—or, if
-possessed of, had allowed to lapse during the five hundred years of the
-dynasty that had destroyed the people’s religion and had done nothing
-for national development. A system of good roads, honest coinage and
-currency, courts and justice, popular education, afforestation of the
-mountains, improvement of the soil through scientific agriculture and
-reclamation of waste land, preventive hygiene, honest taxation and
-collection now exists. Ito cleansed the palace, separating the
-functions of Court and Government, lessening by fifty per cent. the
-number of persons paid from the public treasury, both male and female,
-removing as far as possible the king and his advisers from the great
-mob of sorcerers, fortune-tellers, geomancers, and others who prey upon
-the Corean people. The deposition of the incompetent emperor and the
-installation of his son in power were followed by the education of the
-crown prince in Tokio.
-
-The difficulties in the way of reform were appalling. The principal
-obstacles existed in the two classes of which Corean society is
-composed—oppressors and oppressed. The yang-ban, or privileged men,
-with more or less scholarship of a Chinese kind, seemed to have no
-conception of patriotism apart from pelf. Their chief trait was
-political vampirism. On the other hand, the supine attitude of the
-common people, accustomed for centuries to systematic oppression, was
-discouraging. To them even decent government, that is, the kind which
-could be tolerated to the point of rebellion, meant the grace of their
-masters and rule without robbery. One of the striking features of
-nearly every Corean town or city is seen in the long rows of tablets in
-stone or iron that celebrate the merits of “good,” that is, fairly
-decent, governors. A collection of all the local instruments of
-torture, stacked in one museum, would be impressive and furnish fuel
-for a vast conflagration.
-
-In education, progress was hampered by the general prevalence of
-fanaticism on the subject of “race suicide” and in the absurd measures
-taken for its prevention—measures that largely tend to hinder the end
-in view. In Corea the marriage and birth rate may possibly be in excess
-of that of any country in the world, while, almost as matter of course,
-and as a scientific corollary, the same may be said of the death rate,
-which, owing to superstition, ignorance, and dirt, is appalling. Corea,
-despite shining white clothes, is not a land of bath-tubs. In the
-schools, nearly all the boys were found to be married, and to girls
-older than themselves. These over-mature youths, of antediluvian frame
-of mind, too often seem to have eyes set too far back in their heads,
-which fix their gaze on duties appropriate to the time of Confucius
-rather than of the twentieth century.
-
-We have glanced at this subject before. Yet even to-day, with all the
-advantages afforded them, there is danger. Expecting, like their
-fathers before them, to be verse-makers, to quote from the ancient
-Chinese, to be literary, and to hold office, because of a knowledge of
-the characters, the young Corean yang-ban are indifferent to useful
-progress and scorn manual labor. Having already lost nearly everything,
-they will, unless radically changed in mind, lose all. The one hope of
-Chō-sen is the raising up in a generation, now under new influences, of
-a new type of humanity. The Christian schools and churches are
-supplying this need.
-
-Indeed, the fall of yang-banism and the extinction of Corea’s
-sovereignty means Buddhism’s opportunity. It will be both logical and
-natural that one of the first effects of Christian missions will be, as
-in Japan, to quicken the spirit and improve the form and power of the
-older religion. Nor ought missionaries fear its vigorous competition,
-should it become potent for the abolition of demon-worship and the
-moral uplift of the masses otherwise neglected, especially in
-out-of-the-way places.
-
-Unfortunately, Corea of mediæval mind, like barbarous Japan of not so
-many years ago, sought a remedy for supposed wrongs in assassination.
-Rashly unintelligent, sword and bullet were resorted to in order to
-stop the car of progress. Quick to misjudge and impatient to wait for
-results, the assassin selected as his first victims his country’s best
-friends. The weak and disappointed tried suicide as a remedy and
-deterrent. The insurgents in the so-called Righteous Army, too often
-were robbers of their own people. In the name of patriotism they
-attempted redress, seeking to turn back “modern civilization which
-rides on a powder cart.” The list of Coreans who in cowardice or
-discouragement died by their own hands, who were slaughtered by their
-own compatriots, who fell beneath the bullets or the swords of rebels
-in civil strife, or who were mown down by the resistless fire of the
-Japanese infantry, is sadly great. [66]
-
-The Mikado’s soldiers were perhaps frequently unable to distinguish
-between the deserving and the undeserving. Their actions are not
-absolutely free from criticism. Yet with unrestrained frankness the
-statistics of the military operations are given in the Annual Reports
-on Reforms and Progress in Korea, in 1907, 1908–9, and 1909–10. From
-July, 1907, when the riots broke out in Seoul, on account of the
-disbanding of the Corean army, to the end of 1908, there were of
-Japanese soldiers 179 killed and 277 wounded, besides 67 Japanese
-residents killed in 1907 and 16 in 1908. Of Corean insurgents, 14,566
-were “killed.” Besides positive military measures, the Corean Emperor’s
-rescripts urging those in arms to submit quietly were effective, and
-the total of those who surrendered and were pardoned to December 13,
-1907, was 8,728. During the fiscal year 1909 the Japanese lost 38 men,
-but the number of insurgents killed (3,001), wounded, captured, or
-surrendered was 6,131. Those in arms who yielded or asked pardon were
-given employment in road-making and other useful occupations. By 1911,
-most of the activity of native insurgent bands had degenerated into the
-work of mere banditti. Military movements on a large scale were not
-required, and much of the desolation of villages was repaired with
-better hope of more comfortable existence. Frightful as is this frank
-showing, it is doubtful whether more lives were lost in the suppression
-of rebellion, from 1907 to 1911, than in the nearly chronic anarchy
-that prevailed in the southern provinces during the previous decade and
-a half.
-
-The Annual Reports above referred to show by text, pictures, and
-statistics, not only the purpose and results of the Japanese
-Government, but also the fearful cost of restoring order, a cost of
-life and treasure aggravated both by natives who have not scrupled to
-use the torch, the mulct, and the assassin’s weapon on their own native
-soil, and by foreigners who, in the name of liberty, abused the freedom
-of the press and kept the useless and dangerous embers of sedition in a
-flame. Not satisfied with murder at home, Coreans have made the United
-States, already the happy hunting ground of the Black Hand and the
-lyncher, the arena of their cowardly exploits.
-
-After Mr. Durham White Stevens, an American of long experience in the
-Far East, and Diplomatic Adviser to the Corean Government, had been
-shot and killed in San Francisco by a Corean, the most shining mark was
-Corea’s best friend, Ito. Made a prince and rewarded with every mark of
-honor possible to a subject by the Emperor of Japan, this man who, in
-unquailing discharge of his duty, had already braved the Japanese
-feudal sword wielded by cowards in Choshiu, and the infuriated Tokio
-mob in constitutional Japan, and who seemed immune from the assassins
-of which old Japan raised such a luxuriant crop, fell in Manchuria at
-the Harbin railway station, on October 26, 1909, before the bullets of
-the petty revenger, who shot from behind. Amid the grief and the honor
-of the whole world, on November 4, 1909, Ito was given a State funeral
-such as has been bestowed upon few subjects of Japan. Ito shed his
-blood in the cause of peace. Whether these assassinations hastened the
-absorption of Corea by Japan, and the blotting out of a sovereignty
-unknown to the world until Japan, by peaceful diplomacy, conferred it
-in 1876, is not known. The Emperor at once appointed General Viscount
-Terauchi, then Minister of War, and already famous for his brilliant
-military record and notable organizing abilities, to be the successor
-of Ito in Corea. The record for energetic action, consummate tact, and
-ceaseless toil already made by Terauchi places his name very near that
-of Ito as a modern civilizer and lover of the victories of peace even
-more than those of war.
-
-Despite all the instances of individual wrong, private injustices, and
-public mistakes made by the Japanese in Corea, and in view of the
-severe criticisms of Terauchi by such leading Japanese newspapers as
-the Kokumin and Kochi, it is nevertheless manifest that the policy of
-the Tokio Government is antipodally the reverse of that of Hidéyoshi.
-Instead of the Ear-tomb, and the scooping of Corea clean of her
-artists, artisans, potters, and art treasures, there rise to-day the
-school, the hospital, and the temples of justice and finance. Plans are
-being perfected for the development of the soil and of the wealth of
-the nation, in the interest of the people, while to the missionary and
-alien philanthropist is given all encouragement. A new land survey is
-in operation for the equalization of taxes. Light-houses have reduced
-the dangers of a foggy and treacherous coast. Harbor works are in
-course of construction; well-made common roads are decreasing the
-difficulty of transport; while these and the highways of steel
-continually increase the value of the arable lands and of town lots.
-Rivers, even the wide Yalu and Han, are spanned by bridges. Many a
-place, historic because of war, is now famous for its commercial and
-industrial development. Piracy gives way before policemen in steam
-launches, and chronic brigandage is dying out. In all that relates
-directly to humanity, the reform of the judiciary methods of justice,
-prison procedure, the codification of laws, etc., the progress is
-marvellous. At the head of the judicial department is a Christian,
-Judge Watanabé, and many men of this faith, Japanese and Corean, fill
-other high offices. Special schools, of medicine, surgery, nursing,
-scientific agriculture, forestry, live-stock improvement and manual
-training, are preparing young men and women to raise the standard of
-human life in Chō-sen and to reclaim the sixty-six per cent. of the
-arable land in the peninsula which has lain waste.
-
-The absorption of Corea by Japan has given the astonishingly successful
-Christian missionary work a new environment, and one for the better,
-despite the manifest dangers of misunderstanding arising temporarily
-from the political situation and the eager readiness of a few Japanese
-press correspondents to misrepresent. With full religious liberty, and
-under the protection of a firm, orderly, and impartial government, the
-great work of raising up the new type of man and woman in Chō-sen, now
-one of the most promising of mission fields, proceeds. In the Christian
-household, numbering roughly about 200,000, we discern the best promise
-for Chō-sen’s future. Into his new world of hope and cheer, the native,
-when enlightened and converted, brings the richest inheritances of the
-national culture, the best results of his training, and the most
-winning traits of his character. This is strikingly shown in the
-general eagerness to read and study the Holy Scriptures, in the
-wonderful powers of memory, and in the committing of large portions of
-the Bible, which is now accessible in the vernacular. The native’s
-generosity, good-nature, power of self-support, mutual desire and
-practice of helpfulness, patience, and power to endure persecution of
-any and all sorts fit him admirably for Christian service.
-
-Christianity has come to Corea to reveal the national treasures that
-are enduring. For centuries the beautiful phonetic alphabet, en-mun,
-and syllabary Nido (p. 47), lay neglected and scorned by the learned.
-Yet this was but one of many elements of potency for good that lay
-unused like barren rocks. At the smiting of the missionaries’ hand of
-faith gushed forth the waters of life and healing. The new messages of
-hope and salvation came to the people not only in their own tongue, but
-in their own script. Christian teachers, after long years of
-discouragement, have made, through the patience of hope, of love and
-sympathy, a real conquest of the Corean heart. The faces of men and
-women are lighted up with a new glow of interest in life here and
-hereafter as they find both body and soul ministered to by their
-friends from afar. With this spiritual invitation and challenge to
-enter into the promised land fully accepted by the Coreans, it is not
-too wild a dream to imagine even the strong conqueror conquered by the
-weaker. Samson’s experience and his riddle may be the Corean’s. Chō-sen
-may yet be to Nippon what Palestine was to Greece and Rome. Bereft of
-political sovereignty, from the land of the Hebrews went forth that
-salvation which “is of the Jews” to conquer Europe and the world.
-Already, by closer contact of the humbler classes of the two nations on
-Corean soil, the paganism of rustic Japan—hitherto almost untouched by
-the gospel—begins to disintegrate and ferment because of the leaven
-brought from Christian Chō-sen. This has the Corean left—and perhaps
-more abundantly than ever before—“power to become” the spiritual
-regenerator of Japan.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-NOTES
-
-
-[1] There are colossal stone images at Pe-chiu (Pha-jiu) in the capital
-province, and at Un-jin in Chung-chong Dō. The former, discovered by
-Lieutenant J. G. Bernadon, U.S.N., are in the midst of a fir-wood, and
-are carved in half-figure out of bowlders in place, the heads and caps
-projecting over the tops of the trees. One wears a square cap and the
-other a round one, from which Mr. G. W. Aston conjectures that they
-symbolize the male and female elements in nature (p. 329). At Un-jin in
-Chung-chong Dō Mr. G. C. Foulke, U.S.N., saw, at a distance of fifteen
-miles, what seemed to be a lighthouse. On approach, this half-length
-human figure proved to be a pinnacle of white granite, sixty-four feet
-high, cut into a representation of Buddha. Similar statues may perhaps
-be discovered elsewhere. Coreans call such figures miryek (stone men,
-as the Chinese characters given in the French-Corean dictionary read),
-or miriok, from the Chinese Mi-lē, or Buddha. (In Japanese, the Buddha
-to come is Miroku-butsu—a verbal coincidence.) Professor Terrien de
-Lacouperie has written upon this theme with great learning. Besides the
-lop-ears, forehead-mark, and traditional countenance seen in the
-Buddhas of Chinese Asia, there is on the Un-jin figure a very high
-double cap, on which are set two slabs of stone joined by a central
-column, suggesting both the ceremonial cap of ancient Chinese ritual
-and the Indian pagoda-like umbrella. These miriok stand in what was
-once Hiaksai. In his “Life in Corea,” Mr. Carles gives a picture of the
-one at Un-jin. Smaller ones exist near monasteries and temples.
-
-[2] The story, told in full in the Heiké Monogatari, is given in
-English in “Japanese Fairy World.”
-
-[3] The Mikado’s Empire, Chapters XIII. and XIV.
-
-[4] The Identity of the Great Conqueror, Genghis Khan, with the
-Japanese Hero Yoshitsuné, by K. Suyematz of Japan. London, 1879.
-
-[5] See Howorth’s History of the Mongols, London, 1876.
-
-[6] Beginning at the most northern and eastern, and following the sea
-line south around up to the northeast, they are:
-
- Corean. Japanese. English.
-1. Ham-kiung, or Kan-kiō dō. Perfect Mirror, or Complete View
- Province.
-2. Kang-wen, or Ko-gen dō. Bay Meadow Province.
-3. Kiung-sang, or Kei-shō dō. Respectful Congratulation
- Province.
-4. Julla, or Zen-ra dō. Completed Network Province.
-5. Chung-chong, or Chiu-sei dō. Serene Loyalty Province.
-6. Kiung-kei, or Kei-ki dō. The Capital Circuit, or Home
- Province.
-7. Whang-hai, or Ko-kai dō. Yellow Sea Province.
-8. Ping-an, or Hei-an dō Peace and Quiet Province.
-
-In this table we have given the names in English which approximate the
-sounds of the Chinese characters, with which names of the provinces are
-written, and as they are heard to-day in Chō-sen. The modern Coreans
-use the modern Chinese sounds of the characters, while the Japanese
-cling to the ancient Chinese pronunciation of the same characters as
-they received them through Hiaksai and Shinra, eleven or twelve
-centuries ago. The old pure Corean sounds were Teru-ra tai for Zen-ra
-dō, Tsiku-shaku tai for Chiu-sei dō, Keku-shaku tai for Kei-ki dō, etc.
-
-[7] Their line of march, as shown in the Japanese histories, was to
-Sen-ken, October 11th; to Kumu-san, where they experienced the first
-frost; to Kumui, October 12th; to Chin-zon; to Funki; to Shaku-shiu; to
-Koran; to Chin-zen. These are names of places in Chulla and
-Chung-chong, expressed in the Japanese and old Corean pronunciation.
-
-[8] Mr. Pierre L. Jouy, of the Smithsonian Institute, who in 1884 spent
-six months in Corea in zoological collecting and research, says: “No
-monkeys or alligators are found in Corea. I am at a loss to understand
-how the alligator story originated.” Was the alleged animal the giant
-salamander, or the aké? Japanese art and legend refer often to
-alligators.
-
-[9] Hun-chun is in Chinese Manchuria. The Russian possessions south of
-Victoria Bay extend but a few miles from the mouth of the Tumen.
-
-[10] See “The Meeting of the Star Lovers,” in Japanese Fairy World.
-
-[11] This flag was presented by its captors to Commodore Homer C.
-Blake, by whose courtesy the writer had the sketch made for the cut
-given above.
-
-[12] This word, pronounced in a slightly different way in Corean, is
-the term which Dr. James Legge, in his “Religions of China,” and many
-missionaries of Reformed Christianity, translate God (Jehovah, Theos),
-but which the Roman Catholic missionaries are forbidden to use. Dr.
-Legge holds that Shang Ti is the most ancient title of Deity in the
-language of the Chinese, and was used by their ancestors when they held
-to primitive monotheism. “In the ceremonies at the altars of heaven and
-earth, they served God” (Confucius).
-
-[13] Dr. D. Bethune McCartee, a well-known American scholar, writing on
-Riu Kiu, says: “The art of spelling was invented neither by the Chinese
-nor by the Japanese. Its introduction into both these countries (and,
-as we are convinced, into Corea as well) was the result of the labors
-of ... the early Buddhist missionaries. In all the three countries ...
-the system of spelling is most undoubtedly of Sanskrit origin.”
-
-[14] The equipment of this first native missionary propagandist of
-Roman Christianity in Corea, deserves notice, as it brings out in sharp
-contrast the differing methods of Roman and Reformed Christianity. The
-convert brought back numerous tracts, didactic and polemic treatises,
-catechisms and commentaries, prayer-books, lives of the saints, etc.,
-etc. These were for the learned, and those able to master them. For the
-simple, there was a goodly supply of crosses and crucifixes, images,
-pictures, and various other objects to strike the eye. It is not stated
-that the Bible, or any part of the Holy Scriptures, was sent for the
-feeding of hungry souls.
-
-[15] It was during the summer of this year, 1787, that La Perouse
-sailed along the eastern coast of Chō-sen, discovered the straits which
-bear his name, between Yezo and Saghalin, demonstrated that the Gulf of
-Tartary divided Saghalin from the Asian mainland, and that Corea was
-not sea-girt, and named Dagelet Island and its companion Boussole. He
-had a copy of Hamel’s book with him. He noticed the signal-fires along
-the coast, which from headland to headland, telegraphed to the capital
-the news of the stranger with his “black ships.” Not as yet, however,
-as afterward, did the government connect the appearance of European
-vessels with the activity of the Christians within the realm, although
-La Perouse sailed under the flag which ever afterward was indissolubly
-associated in Corean minds with Christianity.
-
-[16] This rapid spread of Christian ideas may be understood if we
-consider, as Dallet points out, the customs of the people. In every
-house there is the room open to the street, where everybody, friend or
-stranger, known or unknown, may come and talk or hear the news and
-discuss events. Nothing is kept secret, and being a nation of gossips
-and loungers, the news of any event, or the expression of a fresh idea,
-spreads like fire on the prairie. A doctrine so startlingly new, and
-preached as it was by men already famous for their learning, would at
-once excite the public curiosity, set all tongues running, and fire
-many hearts. Though in most cases the new flame would soon die out,
-leaving hardly enough ashes to mark a fire, yet the steady glow of
-altered lives would not pale even before torture and death.
-
-[17] “Some priests proposed to the late Queen of Portugal to send an
-embassy hither [to Corea] with some gentlemen versed in mathematics,
-that they might benefit the country both in a religious and scientific
-way.... This plan never succeeded.” Gutzlaff, 1834. Voyages to China,
-page 261.
-
-[18] Captain Broughton was impressed with “the gorgeous Corean
-dresses,” and the umbrella-hats, a yard in diameter. He asked for beef,
-but they gave him only wood, and he was tantalized with the sight of
-fat cattle grazing near by, which he was unable to get or purchase. He
-cruised in the Sea of Japan and the Gulf of Tartary, naming several
-places on the Corean coast. See p. 203.
-
-[19] See page 226.
-
-[20] Or, as the natives say, “she proceeded to pull down the blinds.”
-This phrase, which is highly suggestive of American street slang,
-refers to the curtain of bamboo which veils the sovereign of Chō-sen;
-as in Old Japan the mikado was thus screened from the vulgar, and even
-noble, gaze during state councils. Whoever, therefore, is “behind the
-curtain,” is on the throne.
-
-[21] This highly logical conclusion was reached by pondering upon the
-doctrine of Romanism that celibacy is a more perfect state than
-marriage; and that “the world,” which, with the flesh and the devil,
-was to be regarded as one of the true believers’ enemies, could mean
-only the king and country of Chō-sen. To this day, most of the pagans
-accept the magistrates’ decision as a complete epitome of the gospel of
-Christ.
-
-[22] Dallet, vol. i., p. 205.
-
-[23] Timkowski’s Travels of the Russian Mission through Mongolia to
-China, and Residence in Peking, London, 1827.
-
-[24] In 1793, the first British and the first European vessel entered
-the Yellow Sea. It was the ship of the line Lion, on board of which was
-Lord Macartney, the ambassador of King George III. to Peking, the first
-English envoy to China. The ship did not visit or approach Corean
-shores.
-
-[25] This date is that given by Dallet, who perhaps refers to the
-uprising in 1829 at Ozaka, of suspected believers in the “Jesus
-doctrine,” when six men and one old woman were crucified by the
-Japanese authorities. The leader of the so-called conspiracy fled to
-sea with his companions.
-
-[26] While off the island of Wen-san, according to Dallet, some of the
-native Christians, attracted by the legend in Chinese characters on the
-flag “The Religion of Jesus Christ,” came on board. “A Protestant
-minister saluted them with the words which are sacramental among the
-pagans, ‘May the spirits of the earth bless you!’ At these words the
-neophytes, seeing that they had been deceived, and that a snare had
-been laid for their good faith, retired in all haste without ever
-returning the salute, and made no further visits to the ships.”
-
-[27] By poetic justice, the chief instigators of this persecution came
-each to a bad end. Of the court ministers, one, having provoked the
-king’s jealousy, was obliged by royal order to poison himself at a
-banquet, in December, 1845, and the other, falling into disgrace, was
-sent to exile, in which he shortly died. The chief informer, who had
-hoped for reward in high office, obtained only a minor position, with
-little honor and less salary. He was afterward exiled, and in 1862,
-having headed a local uprising, was put to death, his body was minced
-up, and the fragments were exhibited through the provinces.
-
-[28] So fearless and generous a soul as Andrew Kim, who could yet
-follow the ethics and example of his teachers in repeatedly practising
-deception and violating his country’s laws at Ai-chiu, scrupled not to
-lie to the mandarin at Shanghae, and tell him that he and his crew had
-been accidentally driven out to sea. As in the later case of the
-robbery of the regent’s tomb, “the end justified the means.”
-
-[29] The voyage of this officer, which added so much to science,
-resulted in making Quelpart and Beaufort Islands, Port Hamilton, and
-Mount Auckland as well known in geography as the names of Her Majesty’s
-servants were known in British politics. The visitors were treated with
-courtesy, and even their survey-marks, stakes, and whitewashed stones
-were carefully set up when washed away by the storm, or disturbed by
-cattle. The Coreans, however, drove their beeves well away from the
-Englishmen, who longed for fresh meat.
-
-[30] These were the first official relations of France with Corea; or,
-as a native would say, between Tai-pep-kuk and Chō-sen; the expression
-for France being Tai-pep, and for a Frenchman—curiously enough—Pepin.
-
-[31] Inside the country, the frequent appearance of the foreign ships
-was the subject of everyday talk, and the news in this nation of
-gossips spread like a prairie fire, or a rolling avalanche. By the time
-the stories reached the northern provinces whole fleets of French ships
-lay off the coast. Their moral effect was something like that among the
-blacks in the Southern States during the civil war, when the “Lincoln
-gunboats” hove in sight. The people jestingly called the foreign
-vessels “The authorities down the River.”
-
-[32] For changing their name and garments, sleeping by day, going
-abroad at night, associating with rebels, criminals and villains, and
-entering the kingdom clandestinely, the missionaries were put to death;
-and no comparison could be drawn to mitigate their sentence between
-them and innocent shipwrecked men.
-
-[33] Other nations besides France now began to learn something of the
-twin hermits of the East, Chō-sen and Nippon. During 1852, the Russian
-frigate Pallas sailed along the east coast up to the Tumen River,
-making no landing, but keeping at a distance of from two to five miles
-from the shore in order to avoid shoals and rocks. The object of the
-Pallas was to trace and map the shore line. In 1855, the French
-war-vessel Virginie continued the work begun by the Pallas, and at the
-end of her voyage the whole coast from Fusan to the Tumen was known
-with some accuracy, and mapped out with European names, at once
-numerous and prophetic. The coast line of Tartary or Manchuria—at that
-time a Chinese province—was also surveyed, mapped, and made ready for
-the Czar’s use and that of his ambassador in 1860.
-
-Pallas and Virginie! The names are suggestive of the maiden diplomatic
-victory of General Ignatieff, of whom more anon.
-
-[34] A noble of high rank presented to the council of ministers a
-memorial, setting forth the dangers that then menaced Chō-sen, and
-urging that extraordinary means be put forth to meet the emergencies.
-He proposed that the national policy of armed neutrality should be
-preserved, that the conquered emperor of China should not enter
-Chō-sen, that the frontier should be strengthened against a possible
-invasion of the border-ruffians inhabiting the neutral strip. Taking
-advantage of the situation, these men, banding together with Chinese
-adventurers and Corean refugees, might make a descent in force into the
-kingdom. Finally, the supreme danger that filled all minds was the
-threatened invasion of the French. He recommended that the castle of
-Tong-nai, near Fusan, and the western strongholds of Nam-an, Pu-pion,
-and In-chiŭn (the port opened in 1882), should be strongly garrisoned
-and strengthened; and that a new citadel be built on the island of
-Kang-wa, to command the river and the entrance to the capital. (See
-map, page 190.)
-
-[35] July 13, 1866.
-
-M. de Bellonet to Prince Kung.
-
-Sir: I grieve to bring officially to the knowledge of your Imperial
-Highness a horrible outrage committed in the small kingdom of Corea,
-which formerly assumed the bonds of vassalage to the Chinese empire,
-but which this act of savage barbarity has forever separated from it.
-
-In the course of the month of March last, the two French bishops who
-were evangelizing Corea, and with them nine missionaries and seven
-Corean priests, and a great multitude of Christians of both sexes and
-of every age, were massacred by order of the sovereign of that country.
-
-The government of His Majesty cannot permit so bloody an outrage to be
-unpunished. The same day on which the king of Corea laid his hands upon
-my unhappy countrymen was the last of his reign; he himself proclaimed
-its end, which I, in turn, solemnly declare to-day. In a few days our
-military forces are to march to the conquest of Corea, and the Emperor,
-my august Sovereign, alone has now the right and the power to dispose,
-according to his good pleasure, of the country and the vacant throne.
-
-The Chinese government has declared to me many times that it has no
-authority over Corea, and it refused on this pretext to apply the
-treaties of Tien-tsin to that country, and give to our missionaries the
-passports which we have asked from it. We have taken note of these
-declarations, and we declare now that we do not recognize any authority
-whatever of the Chinese government over the kingdom of Corea.
-
-I have, etc.,
-H. de Bellonet.
-
-
-His Imperial Highness, Prince Kung.
-
-Spurning with irritating, not to say insulting, language, the
-suggestion of Prince Kung that Bellonet might do well to inquire into
-the causes and merits of the execution of the missionaries, the
-representative of France, November 11th, again addressed the Chinese
-statesman. In this missive occurs the following: “As for the fate of
-the former king of Corea, it is now subject to the decision of the
-Emperor, my august Sovereign.”
-
-Monsieur Bellonet’s method is one specimen of the manner in which the
-envoys of European nations are accustomed to bully the governments of
-Asiatic countries. In a long communication to Prince Kung, dated
-November 11, 1866, Mr. Bellonet charges upon the Chinese government:
-1st. Complicity with Corea. 2d. That the Corean embassy, during the
-previous winter, had stated the project of the massacre, and had
-received the tacit official authorization of the Chinese government.
-3d. The direct approval of several high members of it. 4th. That the
-recruiting and mobilization of Mauchiu troops, beyond the Great Wall,
-was for the purpose of assisting Corea against the French. He writes,
-in addition to the above, an amazing amount of nonsense, which shows of
-what magnifying powers the human eye is capable when enlarged by
-suspicion.
-
-Among other tidbits of rodomontade, is this one—which is a truthful
-picture of the France of Napoleon III.—“War for us is a pleasure which
-the French passionately seek;” and this—“The people of Corea address us
-as deliverers, ... we shall inaugurate the reign of order, justice, and
-prosperity.”
-
-[36] The results of this expedition were disastrous all over the East.
-Happening at a time when relations between foreigners and Chinese were
-strained, the unexpected return of the fleet filled the minds of
-Europeans in China with alarm. It was the unanimous verdict of press
-and people that the return of the French in sufficient force to Corea
-in the spring was a measure of absolute safety to foreigners in the far
-East. If not, since both British and American citizens were among the
-crew of the General Sherman, murdered at Ping-an, the fleets of Great
-Britain and the United States should proceed to Seoul. This, however,
-was not done; the English let well enough alone, the French soon had
-their hands full in attending to the Germans at home, and the Americans
-went later only to follow Admiral Roze’s example. Meanwhile the
-smothered embers of hostility to foreign influence steadily gathered
-vigor, as the report spread like a gale through China that the hated
-Frenchmen had been driven away by the Coreans. The fires at length
-broke out in the Tien-tsin massacre, June 21, 1870. “It is believed by
-many thoughtful observers in China that this frightful event gained its
-first serious impetus from the unfortunate issue of Admiral Roze’s
-campaign in Corea.”
-
-[37] The Min or Ming family is largely Chinese in blood and origin,
-and, besides being pre-eminent among all the Corean nobility in social,
-political, and intellectual power, has been most strenuous in adherence
-to Chinese ideas and traditions, with the purpose of keeping Corea
-unswerving in her vassalage and loyalty to China. Their retainers
-constitute a large portion of the population of Seoul. Besides the
-queen, the king on his mother’s side, the wife of the heir apparent,
-and several of the highest officers of the government belong to the
-house of Min. For centuries this family has practically governed the
-kingdom. Their social and personal influence in Peking has always been
-very great, while at home their relations to the treasury and the army
-have been very close. The plot of 1882 was in effect an ineffectual
-attempt to destroy their power. When China commanded, they approved of
-the treaty with the United States.
-
-[38] The Honorable Gideon Nye, of China, from whose article in “The Far
-East” these facts are drawn concerning the first consul of the United
-States to China, has effectually disproved the oft-quoted statement of
-Sir John Davis in his “History of China,” that “It was in the year 1802
-that the American flag was first hoisted at Canton.” Dr. William Speer
-in his excellent book—fair to the Chinese as well as to foreigners—has
-told the story of Jonathan Edwards and his troubles over ginseng and
-the drink which his Indian pupils bought with it.
-
-[39] These shroffs are experts in handling money. They can detect
-counterfeits by the touch, and, with incredible celerity, can reckon
-amounts to thousandths of a cent on the abacus. One or more of them are
-found in nearly every one of the banks and hongs in Eurasian ports.
-
-[40] Some weeks before, he had offered to penetrate the peninsula as
-missionary and agent of the Scottish National Bible Society. The
-Coreans who had accompanied Bishop Ridel to Chifu, and who had met Dr.
-Williamson, volunteered to be his guides, and he had decided to go with
-them. When the opportunity of going by the American vessel offered
-itself, he changed his plan. Against the advice of his friends, who
-suspected the character of the expedition, he joined the party.
-
-[41] A broad streak of light was thrown upon at least one possible
-cause of the Sherman tragedy, by the statement of the natives that
-Chinese pirates frequently descend on the coast and kill and rob the
-Coreans. During the previous year, several natives had been killed by
-Chinese pirates near the Wachusett’s anchorage. As ten of the crew of
-the Sherman were Canton Chinamen, it is probable that the very sight of
-them on an armed vessel would inflame the Coreans to take their
-long-waited for revenge.
-
-[42] In 1884, Lieutenant J. B. Bernadon, U.S.N., made a journey from
-Seoul to Ping-an, and, being able to speak Corean, learned the
-following from native Christians. The Sherman, arriving during the
-heavy midsummer rains, which make the river impassable to native boats,
-was seen from the city walls and caused great excitement. When the
-waters subsided the governor sent officers to inquire her mission.
-Unfortunately, to gratify their curiosity, the common people set out
-also in a large fleet of boats, which the Sherman’s crew mistook for a
-hostile demonstration, and fired guns in the air to warn them off. Then
-all the boats returned. When the river fell the Sherman grounded and
-careened over, which being seen from the city walls a fleet of boats
-set out with hostile intent and were fired upon. Officers and people,
-now enraged, started fire-rafts, and soon the vessel, though with white
-flag hoisted, was in flames. Of those who leaped in the river most were
-drowned. Of those picked up one Tchoi-nan-un (Rev. Mr. Thomas), who was
-able to talk Corean, explained the meaning of the white flag, and
-begged to be surrendered to China. His prayer was in vain. In a few
-days all the prisoners were led out and publicly executed.
-
-[43] Mr. Low, who had served one term in Congress and as governor of
-California from 1864 to 1868, had been chosen by President Grant to be
-minister to China the year before, 1869, was new to his duties. He was
-in the prime of life, being fifty-two years of age. All his despatches
-show that Chō-sen was as unknown to him as Thibet or Anam, and from the
-first he had scarcely one ray of hope in the success of the mission.
-
-[44] Admiral Rodgers left New York, April 9, 1869, with the Colorado
-and Alaska. The Benicia had left Portsmouth March 2d, and the Palos set
-sail from Boston June 20th. These vessels, with the Monocacy and
-Ashuelot, were to form the Asiatic squadron of Admiral Rodgers. Of our
-vessels on the station during the previous year, two had returned home,
-two had been sold, the rotten Idaho was moored at Yokohama as a
-store-ship, and the Oneida, which had been sunk by the British
-mail-steamer Bombay, lay with her uncoffined dead untouched and
-neglected by the great Government of the United States. Admiral Rodgers
-was so delayed by repairs to the Ashuelot, that finally, in order to
-gain the benefit of the spring tides, had to sail without this vessel.
-
-[45] Rear-Admiral John Rodgers, who commanded the fleet, was a veteran
-in war, in naval science, and in polar research. He had served in the
-Seminole and Mexican campaigns, and through the civil war on the
-iron-clad monitors. He had visited the Pacific in 1853, when in command
-of the John Hancock. He had cruised in the China seas and sailed
-through Behring’s Straits. He, too, was in the prime of life, being at
-this time fifty-eight years of age. His whole conduct of the expedition
-displayed consummate skill, and marked him in this, as in his many
-other enterprises, as “one of the foremost naval men of the age.” Yet
-princes in naval science are not always princes in diplomacy.
-
-[46] The first appearance of the flag of North Germany in Corean waters
-was at the mast-head of the China, when plunder and dead men’s bones
-were the objects sought. Its second appearance, on the Hertha
-man-of-war, was in peace and honorable quest of friendly relations. Its
-third appearance, in May, 1871—while, or shortly before, the American
-fleet were in the Han River—was on the schooner Chusan, which was
-wrecked on one of the islands of Sir James Hall group, the Chinese crew
-only, it appears, being saved. On June 6th, a party of three foreigners
-left Chifu in a junk to bring back salvage from the wreck. These men
-were not heard from until July 6th, when the Chinese crew returned
-without them. On the same day the British gunboat Ringdove, with the
-consul of Chifu, left for the Hall group. It was found that the
-foreigners had landed to bring away the crew of the Chusan, when the
-Chinamen, pretending or thinking that they had been taken prisoners,
-put off to sea without them. The consul found them in good health and
-spirits, and the Ringdove brought away for them whatever was worth
-saving from the Chusan. Again the Corean policy of kindness toward the
-shipwrecked was illustrated. The two foreigners—a Scotchman and a
-Maltese—had been well fed and kindly treated.
-
-[47] These men simply acted as the catspaws for the monkey in the
-capital to pull out as many hot chestnuts from the fire as possible. It
-is part of Asiatic policy to send official men of low rank and no
-authority to dally and prelude, and, if possible, hoodwink or worry out
-foreigners. Their chief weapons are words; their main strength,
-cunning. When these are foiled by kindness, and equal patience,
-firmness, and address, the Asiatics yield, and send their men of first
-rank to confer and treat. Perry knew this, so did Townsend Harris in
-Japan; so have successful diplomats known it in China. Was it done in
-the American expedition to Corea in 1871? Let us see.
-
-These Coreans had no right to say either “yes” or “no” to any
-proposition of the Americans. Had they committed themselves to anything
-definite, degradation, crushed shin-bones, and perhaps death, might
-have been their fate. The only thing for the Americans to do—who came
-to ask a favor which the Coreans were obstinately bent on not
-giving—was to feast them, treat them with all kindness, get them in
-excellent good humor, send them back, and wait till accredited envoys
-of high rank should arrive. In the light of the French failure, this
-was the only course to pursue. There were even men of influence in the
-American fleet who advised this policy of patience. As matter of fact,
-such a course was urged by Captain H. S. Blake.
-
-In such an emergency, patience, kindness, tact, the absence of any
-burning idea of “wiping out insults to the flag,” and an antiseptic
-condition toward fight were most needed—the higher qualities, of
-resolution and self-conquest rather than valor. Even if it had been
-possible to inflict ten times the damage which was afterward actually
-inflicted, and win tenfold more “glory,” the rear-admiral must have
-known that nature and his “instructions” were on the side of the
-Coreans, and that the only end of the case must be a retreat from the
-country. And the only possible interpretation the people could put upon
-the visit of the great American fleet would be a savage thirst for
-needless vengeance, a sordid greed of gain, and the justification of
-robbers and invaders. In spite of all the slaughter of their
-countrymen, they would read in the withdrawal of their armies, defeat,
-and defeat only.
-
-[48] These are the rear-admiral’s own words. Here was the mistake! From
-what may be easily known of the Corean mind, it must have seemed to
-them that the advance of such an armed force up the river, leading to
-the capital—following exactly the precedent of the French—was nothing
-more than a treacherous beginning of war in the face of assurances of
-peace. To enter into their waters seemed to them an invasion of their
-country. To do it after fair words spoken in friendship seemed basest
-treachery. Had a Corean officer counselled peace in the face of the
-advancing fleet, he would undoubtedly have been beheaded at once as a
-traitor. There were men on the American side who saw this. Some spoke
-out loud of it to others, but it was not “theirs to make reply.”
-
-[49] In the chapel of the Naval Academy, at Annapolis, a tasteful mural
-tablet, “Erected by his brother officers of the Asiatic squadron,” with
-the naval emblems—sword, belt, anchor, and glory-wreath—in medallion,
-and inscription on a shield beneath, keeps green the memory of an
-unselfish patriot and a gallant officer.
-
-[50] The Japanese refused to have the Mikado designated by any title
-but that of Whang Ti (Japanese Kōtei) showing that he was peer to the
-Emperor of China; while the Coreans would not, in the same document,
-have their sovereign written down as Wang (Japanese Ō) because they
-wished him shown to be an equal of the Mikado, though ceremonially
-subordinate to the Whang Ti or Emperor of China. The poor Coreans were
-puzzled at there being two suns in one heaven, and two equal and
-favorite Sons of Heaven.
-
-The commissioners from Seoul attempted to avoid the dilemma by having
-the treaty drawn up in the names of the respective envoys only; this
-the Japanese refused to do. A compromise was attempted by having the
-titles of the Mikado of Japan, and the Hap-mun of Chō-sen inserted at
-the beginning; and, in every necessary place thereafter, “the
-government” of Dai Nippon (Great Japan), or of Dai Chō-sen (Great
-Corea); this also failed. Finally, neither ruler was mentioned by name
-or title, nor was reference made to either, and the curious document
-was drawn up in the name of the respective “Governments.”
-
-[51] This fu city, called by the Japanese Ninsen, or Nii-gawa, was well
-known by the Japanese, as is shown on their maps of the sixteenth
-century. The name means Two Rivers. The rise and fall of the tides here
-is very great, sometimes amounting to a difference of twenty-nine feet;
-and in winter the shore-water is frozen. Large vessels cannot anchor
-within a mile of the shore. The port Chi-mul-po is at some distance
-from the city.
-
-[52] In this and the following chapter the names of Corean noblemen
-have been given in their Japanese form, i.e., Bin for Min, etc., but in
-the Supplementary Chapter according to Corean pronunciation.
-
-[53] Commodore B. W. Shufeldt was born in Dutchess County, New York, in
-1822, and entered the navy in 1839, serving ten years on foreign
-stations and in the coast survey. One cruise to the west coast of
-Africa interested him in the negro colony of Liberia, in which he has
-ever since felt concern. From 1850 to 1860, our navy being in a
-languishing state, he was engaged in the mercantile marine service, and
-in organizing a transit route across the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. In
-1860 an article of his on the slave trade between the Island of Cuba
-and the coast of Africa, drew the attention of the government to him,
-and led to his appointment of Consul-General at Havana. The slave-trade
-was soon effectually broken up, and through the trying period of the
-first half of the civil war, he was occupied in his civil duties, at
-one time going to Mexico on a confidential mission to President Juarez,
-passing unrecognized through the French lines. He was on blockade duty
-during the last two years of the civil war. In 1865 he went to China,
-as flag-captain of the Hartford, and commanding the Wachusett visited
-Corea. In 1870 he organized a party for the survey of the Isthmus of
-Tehuantepec, his report being made the basis of Captain Eads’
-ship-railway project. The official history of the semi-diplomatic
-cruise of the Ticonderoga round the world (1878–1880) has been written,
-but has not yet been published.
-
-[54] On which tablets erected to the memory of the slain have been
-erected by the Coreans. See the article, Kang-wha, by Rev. M. N.
-Trollope, (Corean) Asiatic Society Transactions, Vol. II, Part I.
-
-[55] At that time I was engaged in editing and annotating Hamel’s
-Narrative, which is the first account in any European language of
-Corea. Hamel and his party of Dutchmen were shipwrecked and spent
-fourteen years in Corea (see pp. 167–76). I have examined and read
-several copies in the original Dutch editions, printed in cheap
-pamphlet form at Rotterdam in Holland in 1668, and now preserved in the
-Royal Library at The Hague. The full narrative in English is given in
-the book Corea Without and Within. Philadelphia, 1884. Mr. Percival
-Lowell, the Secretary of the Corean Special Mission, returned with Han
-Yong Sik, and as the guest of the king spent a winter in Seoul, the
-literary fruit of which is the charming volume Chosen, the Land of
-Morning Calm, in which the proper names are transliterated according to
-Aston’s Manual of Corean Geographical and Other Proper Names Romanized.
-Yokohama, 1883.
-
-[56] Nevertheless, in 1886 there were unearthed in Seoul two Dutch
-vases, as described in Mr. Scott’s paper in Vol. XXVIII, 1893–94, of
-the Transactions of the North China Branch of the Royal Asiatic
-Society. The figures of Dutch farm-life told their own story, and the
-well-worn rings of the handles bore evidence of constant use for years.
-Mr. Scott suggests that the presence of these Dutchmen might perhaps
-explain the anomaly often noticed in Corea—namely, blue eyes and fair
-hair.
-
-[57] See his biography by Lane-Poole and Dickens, 1894.
-
-[58] See the forthcoming Korean History, by Homer B. Hulbert, in the
-Korean Review (April, 1904, p. 180). This work is a complete survey of
-the story of Chō-sen from prehistoric to recent times.
-
-[59] See Sectarianism and Religious Persecution in China, by J. J. de
-Groot. Amsterdam, 1904.
-
-[60] See in the Korean Repository for July, 1898, a sketch of his life
-by Rev. G. H. Jones.
-
-[61] See Fifteen Years Among the Topknots, by L. H. Underwood (1904).
-
-[62] See “The Mikado’s Empire,” pp. 533–535, and p. 682, of the
-eleventh edition, 1906, for the five points of prediction made at
-Hartford, Conn., February 8, 1904.
-
-[63] See the long letter in the London Times of August 8, 1906, from an
-unimpeachable authority—the author of the Oriental Series, nearly forty
-years in the Far East.
-
-[64] The Japan Mail, August 27, 1910.
-
-[65] See “The Unmannerly Tiger and Other Korean Fairy Tales,” by W. E.
-Griffis, New York, 1911.
-
-[66] See also “The Tragedy of Korea,” by H. A. McKenzie, London, 1908.
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Corea, by William Elliot Griffis</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Corea</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>The Hermit Nation</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: William Elliot Griffis</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 10, 2022 [eBook #67141]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net/ for Project Gutenberg (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COREA ***</div>
-<div class="front">
-<div class="div1 cover"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divBody">
-<p class="first"></p>
-<div class="figure cover-imagewidth"><img src="images/new-cover.jpg" alt="Newly Designed Front Cover." width="480" height="720"></div><p>
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 advertisement ad"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main"><span class="sc"><i>Works by Wm. Elliot Griffis</i></span></h2>
-<ul class="xd31e96">
-<li>THE MIKADO’S EMPIRE
-</li>
-<li>JAPANESE FAIRY WORLD
-</li>
-<li>COREA, THE HERMIT NATION
-</li>
-<li>MATTHEW CALBRAITH PERRY
-</li>
-<li>THE LILY AMONG THORNS
-</li>
-<li>HONDA, THE SAMURAI
-</li>
-<li>SIR WILLIAM JOHNSON
-</li>
-<li>JAPAN: IN HISTORY, FOLK-LORE, AND ART
-</li>
-<li>BRAVE LITTLE HOLLAND
-</li>
-<li>THE RELIGIONS OF JAPAN
-</li>
-<li>TOWNSEND HARRIS</li>
-</ul>
-<p></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 frontispiece"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divBody">
-<p class="first"></p>
-<div class="figure frontispiecewidth" id="frontispiece"><img src="images/frontispiece.jpg" alt="A CITY IN COREA." width="720" height="482"><p class="figureHead">A CITY IN COREA.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 titlepage"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divBody">
-<p class="first"></p>
-<div class="figure titlepage-imagewidth"><img src="images/titlepage.png" alt="Original Title Page." width="467" height="720"></div><p>
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="titlePage">
-<div class="docTitle">
-<div class="mainTitle">COREA</div>
-<div class="subTitle"><span class="sc">The Hermit Nation</span></div>
-<div class="subTitle xd31e127">I.—ANCIENT AND MEDIÆVAL HISTORY<br>
-II.—POLITICAL AND SOCIAL COREA<br>
-III.—MODERN AND RECENT HISTORY</div>
-</div>
-<div class="byline">BY<br>
-<span class="docAuthor">WILLIAM ELLIOT GRIFFIS</span><br>
-FORMERLY OF THE IMPERIAL UNIVERSITY OF TOKIO, JAPAN<br>
-AUTHOR OF “THE MIKADO’S EMPIRE”</div>
-<div class="docImprint">NINTH EDITION, REVISED AND ENLARGED
-<br>
-NEW YORK<br>
-CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS<br>
-<span class="docDate">1911</span></div>
-</div>
-<p></p>
-<div class="div1 copyright"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divBody">
-<p class="first xd31e153"><span class="sc">Copyright</span>, 1882, 1888, 1897, 1904, 1907, 1911<br>
-<span class="sc">By</span> CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure logowidth"><img src="images/scribner-logo.png" alt="Publisher’s logo." width="114" height="129"></div><p>
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 dedication"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divBody">
-<p class="first xd31e168">TO<br>
-<span class="xd31e172">ALL COREAN PATRIOTS:</span><br>
-WHO SEEK<br>
-BY THE AID OF SCIENCE, TRUTH, AND PURE RELIGION,<br>
-TO ENLIGHTEN<br>
-THEMSELVES AND THEIR FELLOW-COUNTRYMEN,<br>
-TO RID<br>
-THEIR LAND OF SUPERSTITION, BIGOTRY, DESPOTISM, AND<br>
-PRIESTCRAFT—BOTH NATIVE AND FOREIGN—<br>
-AND TO PRESERVE<br>
-THE INTEGRITY, INDEPENDENCE, AND HONOR, OF THEIR COUNTRY;<br>
-THIS UNWORTHY SKETCH<br>
-OF<br>
-THEIR PAST HISTORY AND PRESENT CONDITION<br>
-IS DEDICATED.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb.v">[<a href="#pb.v">v</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 preface"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main">PREFACE TO THE NINTH EDITION.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The year 1910 saw the Land of the Plum Blossom and the Islands of the Cherry Blooms
-united. In this ninth edition of a work which for nearly thirty years has been a useful
-hand-book of information—having, by their own unsought confession, inspired not a
-few men and women to become devoted friends and teachers of the Corean people—I have
-made some corrections and added a final chapter, “Chō-sen: A Province of Japan.” Besides
-outlining in brief the striking events from 1907 to 1911, I have analyzed the causes
-of the extinction of Corean sovereignty, aiming in this to be a disinterested interpreter
-rather than a mere annalist.
-</p>
-<p>Although the sovereignty of Corea, first recognized and made known to the world by
-the Japanese in their treaty of 1876, has been, through the logic of events, destroyed,
-I doubt not that the hopes of twelve millions of people will be increasingly fulfilled
-under the new arrangement. Not in haste, but only after long compulsion, did the statesmen
-of Japan assume a responsibility that may test to the full their abilities and those
-of their successors. The severe criticisms, in Japan itself, of the policy of the
-Tokio government bear witness to the sensitiveness of the national conscience in regard
-to the treatment of their colonies. In this respect, as in so many other points of
-public ethics, the Japanese are ranging themselves abreast with the leading nations
-that are making a world-conscience.
-</p>
-<p>In sending forth what may be the final edition of a work, with the title of which
-time has had its revenges, while the contents are still of worth, the author thanks
-heartily all who, from 1876, when the work was planned, until the present time, have
-assisted in making this book valuable to humanity.
-</p>
-<p class="signed">W.&nbsp;E. G.
-</p>
-<p class="dateline"><span class="sc">Ithaca, N. Y.</span>, June 27, 1911.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb.vii">[<a href="#pb.vii">vii</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 preface"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main">PREFACE TO THE EIGHTH EDITION.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">When in October, 1882, the publishers of “Corea the Hermit Nation” presented this
-work to the public of English-speaking nations, they wrote:
-</p>
-<p>“Corea stands in much the same relation to the traveller that the region of the pole
-does to the explorer, and menaces with the same penalty the too inquisitive tourist
-who ventures to penetrate its inhospitable borders.”
-</p>
-<p>For twenty-four years, this book, besides enjoying popular favor, has been made good
-use of by writers and students, in Europe and America, and has served even in Corea
-itself as the first book of general information to be read by missionaries and other
-new comers. In this eighth edition, I have added to the original text, ending with
-Chapter XLVIII (September, 1882), five fresh chapters: on The Economic Condition of
-Corea; International Politics: Chinese and Japanese; The War of 1894: Corea an Empire;
-Japan and Russia in Conflict; and Corea a Japanese Protectorate, bringing the history
-down to the late autumn of 1906.
-</p>
-<p>Within the brief period of time treated in these new chapters, the centre of the world’s
-politics has shifted from the Atlantic and the Mediterranean to the waters surrounding
-Corea, the strange anomaly of dual sovereignty over the peninsular state has been
-eliminated, and the military reputation of China ruined, and that of Russia compromised.
-The rise of Japan, within half a century of immediate contact with the West, to the
-position of a modern state, able first to humiliate China and then to grapple successfully
-with Russia, has vitally affected Corea, on behalf of whose independence Japan a second
-time went to war with a Power vastly greater in natural resources than herself. In
-this period <span class="pageNum" id="pb.viii">[<a href="#pb.viii">viii</a>]</span>also, the United States of America has become one of the great Powers interested in
-the politics of Asia, and with which the would-be conquerors of Asiatic peoples must
-reckon.
-</p>
-<p>The present or eighth edition shows in both text and map, not only the swift, logical
-results both of Japan’s military and naval successes in Manchuria and on the sea of
-Japan and of her signal diplomatic victory at Portsmouth, but more. It makes clear
-the reasons why Corea, as to her foreign relations, has lost her sovereignty.
-</p>
-<p>The penalty laid upon the leaders of the peninsular kingdom for making intrigue instead
-of education their work, and class interests instead of national welfare their aim,
-is also shown to be pronounced—less by the writer than by the events themselves—in
-the final failure of intriguing Yang-banism, in May, 1906. The Japanese, in the administration
-of Corea, are like the other protecting nations, British, American, French, German,
-now on a moral trial before the world.
-</p>
-<p>In again sending forth a work that has been so heartily welcomed, I reiterate gladly
-my great obligations to the scholars, native and foreign, who have so generously aided
-me by their conversation, correspondence, criticism, and publications, and the members
-of the Korean Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, who have honored me with membership
-in their honorable body. My special obligations are due to our late American Minister,
-H.&nbsp;N. Allen, for printed documents and illustrative matter; to Professor Homer B.
-Hulbert, Editor of <i>The Korea Review</i>, from the pages of which I have drawn liberally, and to the Editor of <i>The Japan Mail</i>, the columns of which are rich in correspondence from Corea. I would call attention
-also to the additions made upon the map at the end of the volume.
-</p>
-<p>I beg again the indulgence of my readers, especially of those who by long residence
-upon the soil, while so thoroughly able to criticize, have been so profuse in their
-expression of appreciation. From both sides of the Atlantic and Pacific have come
-these gratifying tokens, and to them as well as to my publishers, I make glad acknowledgments
-in sending forth this eighth edition.
-</p>
-<p class="signed">W.&nbsp;E. G.
-</p>
-<p class="dateline"><span class="sc">Ithaca, N. Y.</span>, December 12, 1906.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb.ix">[<a href="#pb.ix">ix</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 preface"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main">PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">In the year 1871, while living at Fukui, in the province of Echizen, Japan, I spent
-a few days at Tsuruga and Mikuni, by the sea which separates Japan and Corea. Like
-“the Saxon shore” of early Britain, the coast of Echizen had been in primeval times
-the landing-place of rovers, immigrants, and adventurers from the continental shore
-opposite. Here, at Tsuruga, Corean envoys had landed on their way to the mikado’s
-court. In the temple near by were shrines dedicated to the Corean Prince of Mimana,
-and to Jingu Kōgō, Ojin, and Takénouchi, whose names in Japanese traditions are associated
-with “The Treasure-land of the West.” Across the bay hung a sweet-toned bell, said
-to have been cast in Corea in <span class="asc">A.D.</span> 647; in which tradition—untested by chemistry—declared there was much gold. Among
-the hills not far away, nestled the little village of Awotabi (Green Nook), settled
-centuries ago by paper-makers, and visited a millenium ago by tribute-bearers, from
-the neighboring peninsula; and famous for producing the crinkled paper on which the
-diplomatic correspondence between the two nations was written. Some of the first families
-in Echizen were proud of their descent from Chō-sen, while in the villages, where
-dwelt the Eta, or social outcasts, I beheld the descendants of Corean prisoners of
-war. Everywhere the finger of tradition pointed westward across the waters to the
-Asian mainland, and the whole region was eloquent of “kin beyond sea.” Birds and animals,
-fruits and falcons, vegetables and trees, farmers’ implements and the potter’s wheel,
-names in geography and <span class="corr" id="xd31e247" title="Source: thing">things</span> <span class="pageNum" id="pb.x">[<a href="#pb.x">x</a>]</span>in the arts, and doctrines and systems in religion were in some way connected with
-Corea.
-</p>
-<p>The thought often came to me as I walked within the moss-grown feudal castle walls—old
-in story, but then newly given up to schools of Western science and languages—why
-should Corea be sealed and mysterious, when Japan, once a hermit, had opened her doors
-and come out into the world’s market-place? When would Corea’s awakening come? As
-one diamond cuts another, why should not Chō-ka (Japan) open Chō-sen (Corea)?
-</p>
-<hr class="tb"><p>
-</p>
-<p>Turning with delight and fascination to the study of Japanese history and antiquities,
-I found much that reflected light upon the neighbor country. On my return home, I
-continued to search for materials for the story of the last of the hermit nations.
-No master of research in China or Japan having attempted the task, from what Locke
-calls “the roundabout view,” I have essayed it, with no claim to originality or profound
-research, for the benefit of the general reader, to whom Corea “suggests,” as an American
-lady said, “no more than a sea-shell.” Many ask “What’s in Corea?” and “Is Corea of
-any importance in the history of the world?”
-</p>
-<p>My purpose in this work is to give an outline of the history of the Land of Morning
-Calm—as the natives call their country—from before the Christian era to the present
-year. As “an honest tale speeds best, being plainly told,” I have made no attempt
-to embellish the narrative, though I have sought information from sources from within
-and without Corea, in maps and charts, coins and pottery, the language and art, notes
-and narratives of eye-witnesses, pencil-sketches, paintings and photographs, the standard
-histories of Japan and China, the testimony of sailor and diplomatist, missionary
-and castaway, and the digested knowledge of critical scholars. I have attempted nothing
-more than a historical outline of the nation and a glimpse at the political and social
-life of the people. For lack of space, the original manuscript of “Recent and Modern
-History,” part III., has been greatly abridged, and many topics of interest have been
-left untouched.
-</p>
-<p>The bulk of the text was written between the years 1877 and <span class="pageNum" id="pb.xi">[<a href="#pb.xi">xi</a>]</span>1880; since which time the literature of the subject has been enriched by Ross’s “Corea”
-and “Corean Primer,” besides the Grammar and Dictionary of the Corean language made
-by the French missionaries. With these linguistic helps I have been able to get access
-to the language, and thus clear up doubtful points and obtain much needed data. I
-have borrowed largely from Dallet’s “<span lang="fr">Histoire d’Eglise de Corée</span>,” especially in the chapters devoted to Folk-lore, Social Life, and Christianity.
-In the Bibliography following the Preface is a list of works to which I have been
-more or less indebted.
-</p>
-<p>Many friends have assisted me with correspondence, advice, or help in translation,
-among whom I must first thank my former students, Haségawa, Hiraii, Haraguchi, Matsui,
-and Imadatté, and my newer Japanese friends, Ohgimi and Kimura, while others, alas!
-will never in this world see my record of acknowledgment—K. Yaye′ and Egi Takato—whose
-interest was manifested not only in discussion of mooted points, but by search among
-the book-shops in Kiōto and Tōkiō, which put much valuable standard matter in my hands.
-I also thank Mr. Charles Lanman, Secretary of the Legation of Japan in Washington,
-for four ferrotypes taken in Seoul in 1878 by members of the Japanese embassy; Mr.
-D.&nbsp;R. Clark, of the United States Transit of Venus Survey, for four photographs of
-the Corean villages in Russian Manchuria; Mr. R. Idéura, of Tōkiō, for a set of photographs
-of Kang-wa and vicinity, taken in 1876, and Mr. Ozawa Nankoku, for sketches of Corean
-articles in Japanese museums. To Lieutenant Wadhams, of the United States Navy, for
-the use of charts and maps made by himself while in Corea in 1871, and for photographs
-of flags and other trophies, now at Annapolis, captured in the Han forts; to Fleet-Surgeon
-H.&nbsp;O. Mayo, and other officers of the United States Navy, for valuable information,
-I hereby express my grateful appreciation of kindness shown. I would that Admiral
-John Rodgers, Commodore H.&nbsp;C. Blake, and Minister F.&nbsp;F. Low were living to receive
-my thanks for their courtesies personally shown me, even though, in attempting to
-write history, I have made criticisms also. To Lieutenant N.&nbsp;Y. Yanagi, of the Hyrographic
-Bureau, of the Japanese Navy, for a <span class="pageNum" id="pb.xii">[<a href="#pb.xii">xii</a>]</span>set of charts of the coast of Corea; to Mr. Metcalfe, of Milwaukee, for photographs
-of Coreans; to Miss Marshall, of New York, for making colored copies of the battle-flags
-captured by our naval battalion in 1871, and for the many favors of correspondents—in
-St. Petersburg, Mr. Hoffman Atkinson; in Peking, Jugoi Arinori Mori; in Tōkiō, Dr.
-D.&nbsp;B. McCartee, Hon. David Murray, Rev. J.&nbsp;L. Amerman, and others whose names I need
-not mention. To Gen. George W. McCullum, Vice-President, and to Mr. Leopold Lindau,
-Librarian, of the American Geographical Society, I return my warmest thanks; as well
-as to my dear wife and helpmeet, for her aid in copying, proof-reading, suggestions,
-and criticism during the progress of the work.
-</p>
-<p>In one respect, the presentation of such a subject by a compiler, while shorn of the
-fascinating element of personal experience, has an advantage even over the narrator
-who describes a country through which he has travelled. With the various reports of
-many witnesses, in many times and places, before him, he views the whole subject and
-reduces the many impressions of detail to unity, correcting one by the other. Travellers
-usually see but a portion of the country at one time. The compiler, if able even in
-part to control his authorities, and if anything more than a tyro in the art of literary
-appraisement, may be able to furnish a hand-book of information more valuable to the
-general reader.
-</p>
-<p>In the use of my authorities I have given heed to Bacon’s advice—tasting some, chewing
-others, and swallowing few. In ancient history, original authorities have been sought,
-and for the story of modern life, only the reports of careful eye-witnesses have been
-set down as facts; while opinions and judgments of alien occidentals concerning Corean
-social life are rarely borrowed without due flavoring of critical salt.
-</p>
-<p>Corean and Japanese life, customs, beliefs, and history are often reflections one
-of the other. Much of what is reported from Corea, which the eye-witnesses themselves
-do not appear to understand, is perfectly clear to one familiar with Japanese life
-and history. China, Corea, and Japan are as links in the same chain of civilization.
-Corea, like Cyprus between Egypt and Greece, will yet <span class="pageNum" id="pb.xiii">[<a href="#pb.xiii">xiii</a>]</span>supply many missing details to the comparative student of language, art, science,
-the development of civilization, and the distribution of life on the globe.
-</p>
-<p>Some future writer, with more ability and space at command than the undersigned, may
-discuss the question as to how far the opening of Corea to the commerce of the world
-has been the result of internal forces; the scholar, by his original research, may
-prepare the materials for a worthy history of Corea during the two or three thousand
-years of her history; the geologist or miner may determine the question as to how
-far the metallic wealth of Corea will affect the monetary equilibrium of the world.
-The missionary has yet to prove the full power of Christianity upon the people—and
-before Corean paganism, any form of the religion of Jesus, Roman, Greek or Reformed,
-should be welcomed; while to the linguist, the man of science, and the political economist,
-the new country opened by American diplomacy presents problems of profound interest.
-</p>
-<p class="signed">W.&nbsp;E. G.
-</p>
-<p class="dateline"><span class="sc">Schenectady, N. Y.</span>, October 2, 1882.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb.xv">[<a href="#pb.xv">xv</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 bibliography"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main">BIBLIOGRAPHY.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The following is a list of books and papers containing information about Corea. Those
-of primary value to which the compiler of this work is specially indebted are marked
-with an asterisk (*); those to which slight obligation, if any, is acknowledged with
-a double asterisk; and those which he has not consulted, with a dagger (†). See also
-under <span class="sc">The Corean Language</span> and <span class="sc">Cartography</span>, in the Appendix.
-</p>
-<p>* History of the Eastern Barbarians. “Book cxv. contains a sketch of the tribes and
-nations occupying the northeastern seaboard of China, with the territory now known
-as Manchuria and Corea.” This extract from a History of the Later Han Dynasty (25–220
-<span class="asc">A.D.</span>), by a Chinese scholar of the fifth century, has been translated into English by
-Mr. Alexander Wylie, and printed in the <span lang="fr">Revue de l’Extrême Orient</span>, No. 1, 1882. Du Halde and De Mailla, in French, and Ross, in English, have also
-given the substance of the Chinese writer’s work, which also furnishes the basis of
-Japanese accounts of Corean history previous to the fourth century.
-</p>
-<p>† The Subjugation of Chaou-seen, by A. Wylie. (<span lang="it">Atti del IV. Cong. int. degli Orient</span>, ii., pp. 309–315, 1881.) This fragment is a translation of the 95th book of the
-History of the Former Han Dynasty of China.
-</p>
-<p lang="fr">* Empire de la Chine et la Tartarie Chinoise, par P. du Halde.
-</p>
-<p>* The Kōjiki and Nihongi, written in Japan during the eighth century, throws much
-light on the early history of Corea.
-</p>
-<p>* Wakan-San-sai Dzuyé. Article on Chō-sen in this great Japanese Encyclopædia.
-</p>
-<p>† Tong-Kuk Tong-Kan (General View of the Eastern Kingdom), a native Corean history
-written in Chinese.
-</p>
-<p>* Zenrin Koku Hoki (Precious Jewels from a Neighboring Country), by Shiuho. Japan,
-1586.
-</p>
-<p>* Corea, its History, Manners, and Customs, by John Ross. 1 vol., pp. 404. Illustrations
-and maps. Paisley, 1880.
-</p>
-<p>* The Chinese Reader’s Manual, by W. Fred. Mayers. 1 vol., pp. 440. Shanghae, 1874.
-An invaluable epitome of Chinese history, biography, chronology, bibliography, and
-whatever is of interest to the student of Chinese literature.
-</p>
-<p>* Kō-chō Rekidai Enkaku Zukai. Historical Periods and Changes of the Japanese Empire,
-with maps and notes, by Otsuki Tōyō.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb.xvi">[<a href="#pb.xvi">xvi</a>]</span></p>
-<p>** San Koku Tsu-ran To-setsu. Mirror of the Three [Tributary] Kingdoms, Chō-sen, Riu
-kiu, and Yezo, by Rin Shihei, 1785. This work, with its maps, was translated into
-French by J. Klaproth, and published in Paris, 1832. 1 vol. 8vo, pp. 288, of which
-pp. 158 relate to Chō-sen. Digested also in Siebold’s <span lang="de">Archiv</span>.
-</p>
-<p>** <span lang="de">Archiv zur <span class="corr" id="xd31e329" title="Source: Bescriebung">Beschreibung</span> von Japan</span>, by Franz von Siebold. This colossal work contains much matter in text and illustrations
-relating to Corea, and the digest of several Japanese books, in the part entitled
-<span lang="de">Nachrichten <span class="corr" id="xd31e335" title="Source: uber">über</span> Korai, Japan’s Bezüge mit der Koraischen Halbinsel und mit Schina.</span>
-</p>
-<p>** <span lang="de">Corea und dessen Einfluss auf die Bevölkerung Japans. Zeit. für Ethnologie, Zitzungbericht
-VIII</span>. p. 78, 1876. P. Kempermann.
-</p>
-<p>** O Dai Ichi Ran. This work, containing the annals of the emperors of Japan, is a
-bird’s-eye view of the principal events in Japanese history, written in the style
-of an almanac, which Titsingh copied down from translations made by Japanese who spoke
-Dutch. Klaproth revised and corrected Titsingh’s work, and published his own version
-in 1834. Paris and London, 8vo, pp. 460. This work contains many references to Corea
-and the relations of the two countries, transcribed from the older history.
-</p>
-<p>** <span lang="fr">Tableaux Historiques de l’Asie, depuis la monarchie de Cyrus jusque nos jours, accompagnes
-de recherches historiques et ethnographiques, etc. Par J. Klaproth, Paris, 1826. Avec
-un atlas in folio.</span> This manual of the political geography of Asia is very useful, but not too accurate.
-</p>
-<p>† A Heap of Jewels in a Sea of Learning (Gei Kai Shu Jin; Jap. pron.). A chapter from
-this Chinese book treats of Corea.
-</p>
-<p>† Chō-sen Hitsu Go-shin. A collection of conversations with the pen, with a Corean
-who could not speak Japanese. By Ishikawa Rokuroku Sanjin, Yedo.
-</p>
-<p>* The Classical Poetry of the Japanese. By Basil Hall Chamberlain. London, 1880.
-</p>
-<p>** An Outline History of Japanese Education, New York, 1876. This monograph, prepared
-for the Centennial Exposition at Philadelphia, reviews the educational influences
-of Corea upon Japan. The information given is, with other data, from Klaproth, utilized
-in Pickering’s Chronological History of Plants, by Charles Pickering, <abbr title="Medicinae Doctor">M.D.</abbr>, Boston, 1879.
-</p>
-<p>* Japanese Chronological Tables. By William Bramsen, Tōkiō, 1880. An invaluable essay
-on Japanese chronology, which was, like the Corean, based on the Chinese system. We
-have used this work of the lamented scholar (who died a few months after it was published)
-in rendering dates expressed in terms of the Chinese into those of the Gregorian or
-modern system.
-</p>
-<p>** History of the Mongols. 3 vols. pp. 1827. London, 1876. By Henry Howorth. This
-portly work is full of the fruits of research concerning the people led by Genghis
-Khan. It contains excellent maps of Asia, and of Mongolia, and Manchuria, illustrating
-the Mongol conquests.
-</p>
-<p>† Chō-sen Ki-che. (Memorandum upon Corean Affairs.) The Chinese ambassador sent by
-the Ming emperor in 1450, gives in this little work an account of his journey, which
-throws light upon the political and geographical situation of Chō-sen and China at
-that time. Quoted by M. Scherzer, but not translated.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb.xvii">[<a href="#pb.xvii">xvii</a>]</span></p>
-<p>* Nihon Guaishi. Military History of Japan, by Rai Sanyo. This is the Japanese standard
-history. It was published in 1827 in twenty-two volumes. It covers the period from
-the Taira and Minamoto families to that of the Tokugawa in the seventeenth century.
-The first part of this work was translated into English by Mr. Ernest Satow, and published
-in The Japan Mail at Yokohama, 1872–74. In the latter portion the invasion of Chō-sen,
-1592–97, is outlined.
-</p>
-<p>* Chō-sen Seito Shimatsŭki. A work in five volumes, giving an account of the embassies,
-treaties, documents relating to the invasion of 1592–97, with an outline of the war,
-geographical notes, with nine maps by Yamazaki Masanagi and Miura Katsuyoshi.
-</p>
-<p>* Illustrated History of the Invasion of Chō-sen. Written by Tsuruminé Hikoichiro.
-Illustrations by Hashimoto Giokuron. 20 vols. Yedo, 1853. This popular work, besides
-an outline of Corean history from the beginning, condensed from local legends and
-Chinese writers, details the operations of war and diplomacy relating to Hidéyoshi’s
-invasion. It is copiously illustrated with first-class wood engravings. It has not
-been translated.
-</p>
-<p>* Chō-sen Monogatari. A Diary and Narrative of the Japanese Military Operations in
-Chō-sen during the Campaign of 1594–97, by Okoji Hidémoto. Copied out and published
-in 1672, and again in 1849. This narrative of an eye-witness was written by the author
-at the time of the events described, and afterward copied by his own son and deposited
-in the temple at which his ancestors worshipped. This vivid and spirited story of
-the second invasion of Chō-sen by Hidéyoshi has been translated into German by Dr.
-A. Pfizmaier, under the title <span lang="de">Der Feldzug der Japaner gegen Corea, im Jahre, 1597</span>. 2 vols. Vienna, 1875: 4to, pp. 98; 1876: 4to, pp. 58.
-</p>
-<p>** Chohitsuroku. History of the Embassies, Treaties, and War Operations during the
-Japanese Invasion. This work is by a Corean author, who was one of the ministers of
-the king throughout the war. It is written in Chinese, has a map, and gives the Corean
-side of the history of affairs from about 1585 to 1598. 3 vols.
-</p>
-<p>* Three Severall Testimonies Concerning the mighty Kingdom of Coray, tributary to
-the Kingdom of China, and bordering upon her Northeastern Frontiers, and called by
-the Portugales, Coria, etc., etc., collected out of Portugale yeerely Japonian Epistles,
-dated 1590, 1592, 1594. In Hakluyt, London, 1600.
-</p>
-<p>* Hidéyoshi’s Invasion of Korea. Trans. Asiatic Society of Japan. By W.&nbsp;G. Aston.
-In these papers Mr. Aston gives the results of a study of the campaign of 1592–97,
-as found in Japanese and Corean authors.
-</p>
-<p>** <span lang="fr">Lettre Annuelle de Mars 1593, ecrite par le P. Pierre Gomez au P. Claude Acquavira,
-general de la Compagnie de Jesus. Milan, 1597, p. 112 et suiv.</span> In Hakluyt.
-</p>
-<p>* <span lang="fr">Histoire de la Religion Chrétienne au Japon. Par Leon Pages.</span> 2 vols., text and documents. Paris, 1869.
-</p>
-<p>** <span lang="fr">Histoire des deux Conquerans Tartares, qui ont subjugé la Chine, par le R.&nbsp;P. Pierre
-Joseph D’Orliens.</span>
-</p>
-<p>* Chō-sen Monogatari (Romantic Narrative of Travels in Corea), by two Men from Mikuni,
-in Echizen, cast ashore in Tartary in 1645. This work is digested in Siebold’s <span lang="de">Archiv</span>.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb.xviii">[<a href="#pb.xviii">xviii</a>]</span></p>
-<p>* Narrative of an Unlucky Voyage and Imprisonment in Corea, 1653–1667 In Astley’s
-and Pinkerton’s Voyages. By Hendrik Hamel.
-</p>
-<p>* Imperial Chinese Atlas, containing maps of China and each of the Provinces, including
-Shing-king and the neutral strip.
-</p>
-<p>* <span lang="fr">Histoire de l’Eglise de Corée, par Ch. Dallet.</span> 2 vols. 8vo, pp. 982. Paris, 1874. This excellent work contains 192 pages of introduction,
-full of accurate information concerning the political social life, geography, and
-language of Corea, and a history of the introduction and progress of Roman Christianity,
-and the labors of the French missionaries, from 1784–1866. It contains also a map
-and four charts of Corean writing.
-</p>
-<p>* <span lang="fr">Une Expedition en Corée</span>. In <span lang="de">la Tour du Monde</span> for 1873 there is an article of 16 pp. (401–417) with illustrations, by M.&nbsp;H. Zuber,
-a French naval officer, who was in Corea in 1866 under Admiral Roze. An excellent
-descriptive paper by an eye-witness.
-</p>
-<p>* Diary of a Chinese Envoy to Corea (Journal d’une Mission en Corée), by Koei Ling,
-Ambassador of his Majesty the Emperor of China, to the court of Chō-sen in 1866. Translated
-from the Chinese into French by F. Scherzer, Interpreter to the French Legation at
-Peking. 8vo, pp. 77. Paris, 1882. This journal of the last Chinese ambassador to Seoul
-is well rendered, and is copiously supplied with explanatory notes, and a colored
-map of the author’s route from Peking through Chili, <span class="corr" id="xd31e414" title="Source: Shing-King">Shing-king</span>, <i>via</i> Mukden, and through three provinces of Corea to Seoul.
-</p>
-<p>† Many memoirs and special papers prepared by French officers in the expedition to
-Corea in 1866 were prepared and read before local societies at Cherbourg, Lyons, etc.
-</p>
-<p>† <span lang="fr">Expedition de Corée. Revue maritime et coloniale</span>, February, 1867, pp. 474–481.
-</p>
-<p>† <span lang="fr">Paris Moniteur</span>, 1866–67.
-</p>
-<p>** <span lang="fr">Lettre sur la Corée et son Eglise Chrétienne. Bulletin de la Société Geographique
-de Lyon</span>, 1876, pp. 278–282, and June, 1870, pp. 417–422, and map.
-</p>
-<p>** The Corean Martyrs. By Canon Shortland. 1 vol., pp. 115. London. Compiled from
-the letters of the French missionaries.
-</p>
-<p>** <span lang="fr">Nouvelle Geographie Universelle</span>. This superb treasury of geographical science, still unfinished, contains a full
-summary of our knowledge of Corea, especially showing the prominent part which French
-navigators, scholars, and missionaries have taken in its exploration. Paris.
-</p>
-<p>** Voyage of Discovery to the North Pacific Ocean and Round the World. By William
-R. Broughton. 2 vols. 4to, with atlas. London, 1804.
-</p>
-<p>** Voyage Round the World. By Jean François de Gallou de La Perouse. London, 1799.
-</p>
-<p>** Voyages to the Eastern Seas in the year 1818. By Basil Hall. New York, London,
-and revised by Captain Hall in 1827. Jamaica, N. Y.
-</p>
-<p>* Narrative of a Voyage in His Majesty’s late Ship Alceste, to the Yellow Sea, along
-the Coast of Corea, and through its numerous hitherto undiscovered Islands, etc.,
-etc. By John McLeod, Surgeon of the Alceste. 1 vol., pp. 288 (see pp. 38–53). London,
-1877. A witty and lively narrative.
-</p>
-<p>** Voyages along the Coast of China (Corea), etc. By Charles Gutzlaff. 1 vol., pp.
-332. New York, 1833. (From July 17, to August 17, 1832; pp. 254–287.)
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb.xix">[<a href="#pb.xix">xix</a>]</span></p>
-<p>* Narrative of the Voyage of <abbr title="Her Majesty’s Ship">H.M.S.</abbr> Samarang, during the years 1843–46. By Captain Sir E. Belcher. 2 vols. 8vo, pp. 574–378.
-London, 1848. Vol. i. pp. 324–358; vol. ii., pp. 444–466, relate to Corea.
-</p>
-<p>* American Commerce with China. By Gideon Nye, Esq. In the Far East. Shanghae, 1878.
-A history of the commercial relations of the United States with China, especially
-before 1800.
-</p>
-<p>* Diplomatic Correspondence of the United States, China, and Japan, 1866–81.
-</p>
-<p>* Report of the Secretary of the Navy to Congress, pp. 275–313. 1872.
-</p>
-<p>* Private Notes, Charts, and Maps of Officers of the United States Navy who were in
-Corea in 1871.
-</p>
-<p>** A Summer Dream of ’71. A Story of Corea. By T.&nbsp;G. The Far East. Shanghae, April,
-1878.
-</p>
-<p>* Journey through Eastern Mantchooria and Korea. By Walton Grinnell. Journal American
-Geographical Society, 1870–71, pp. 283–300.
-</p>
-<p>* Japan and Corea. A valuable monograph in six chapters, by Mr. E.&nbsp;H. House, in The
-Tōkiō Times, 1877.
-</p>
-<p>** On a Collection of Crustacea made in the Corean and Japanese Seas. J. Muirs, 1879.
-London Zoological Society’s Proceedings (pp. 18–81, pls. 1–113). Reviewed by J.&nbsp;S.
-Kingsley. Norwich, N.&nbsp;Y. American Naturalist.
-</p>
-<p>** A Private Trip in Corea. By Frank Cowan, M.D. The Japan Mail, 1880.
-</p>
-<p>† The Leading Men of Japan. By Charles Lanman. Boston, 1882. Contains a chapter on
-Corea.
-</p>
-<p>* Manuscript volume of pencil notes made by Kawamura Kuanshiu, an officer on the Japanese
-gunboat Unyo-kuan, during her cruise and capture of the Kang-wa Fort, 1875. Partly
-printed in the Japan Mail.
-</p>
-<p>* Journals of Japanese Military and Diplomatic Officers who have visited Corea, and
-Correspondence of the Japanese newspapers, from Seoul, Fusan, Gensan, etc. These have
-been partly translated for the English press at Yokohama.
-</p>
-<p>* Correspondence, Notes, Editorials, etc., in the English and French newspapers published
-in China and Japan.
-</p>
-<p>** Maru-maru Shimbun (Japanese Punch).
-</p>
-<p>* Chō-sen: Its Eight Administrative Divisions. 1 vol. Tōkiō, Japan, 1882.
-</p>
-<p>* Chō-sen Jijo. A short Account of Corea, its History, Productions, etc. 2 vols. Tōkiō,
-1875.
-</p>
-<p>* Chō-sen Bunkenroku (Things Seen and Heard concerning Corea). By Sato Hakushi. 2
-vols. Tōkiō, 1875.
-</p>
-<p>* Travels of a Naturalist in Japan [Corea] and Manchuria. By Arthur Adams. 1 vol.,
-pp. 334. London, 1870. See chaps, x., xi., pp. 125–166.
-</p>
-<p>** <span lang="de">Ueber die Reise der Kais. Corvette Hertha, in besondere nach Corea. Kramer, Marine
-Prediger. Zeit. für Ethnologie, 1873. Verhandlungen</span>, pp. 49–54.
-</p>
-<p>** A Forbidden Land. By Ernest Oppert. 1 vol., pp. 349. Illustrations, charts, etc.
-New York, 1880.
-</p>
-<p>** Journeys in North China. By Rev. A. Williamson. 2 vols. 16mo. London, 1870. Besides
-a chapter on Corea, this work contains an excellent map of the country north and east
-of Chō-sen
-</p>
-<p>** The Middle Kingdom. By S. Wells Williams.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb.xx">[<a href="#pb.xx">xx</a>]</span></p>
-<p>** Consular Reports in the Blue Books of the British Government, especially the Reports
-of Mr. McPherson, Consul at Niu-chwang. January, 1866.
-</p>
-<p>* Handbook for Central and Northern Japan, with maps and plans. Satow and Hawes. 1
-vol. 16mo, pp. 489. This work, which leaves nothing to be desired as a guide-book,
-contains several references to Corean art and history.
-</p>
-<p>** The Wild Coasts of Nipon. By Captain H.&nbsp;C. St. John (who surveyed some parts of
-Southern Corea in <abbr title="Her Britannic Majesty’s Ship">H.B.M.S.</abbr> Sylvia). See chap, xii., pp. 235–255, with a map of Corea.
-</p>
-<p>** <span lang="de"><span class="corr" id="xd31e495" title="Source: Darlegun">Darlegung</span> aus der Geschichte und Geographie Coreas. Pfizmaier.</span> 8vo, pp. 56. Vienna, 1874.
-</p>
-<p>† <span lang="de">Petermann’s Mittheilungen</span>, No. 1, Carte No. 19, 1871.
-</p>
-<p lang="de">** Das Konigreich Korea. Von Kloden. Aus allen Welth., x., Nos. 5 u. 6.
-</p>
-<p>† Corea. Geographical Magazine. (S. Mossman.) vi. p. 148, 1877.
-</p>
-<p>† Corea. By Captain Allen Young, Royal Geographical Society. Vol. ix., No. 6, pp.
-296–300.
-</p>
-<p>** China, with an Appendix on Corea. By Charles Eden. 1 vol., pp. 281–322. London.
-A popular compilation.
-</p>
-<p>** Korea and the Lost Tribes, and Map and Chart of Korea. Text and illustrations.
-The title of this work is sufficient. Even the bibliography of Corea has a comic side.
-</p>
-<p>** Chi-shima (Kurile Islands) and Russian Invasion. A lecture delivered in Japanese,
-before the Tōkiō United Geographical Society, February 24, 1882. By Admiral Enomoto.
-This valuable historical treatise, translated for the Japan Mail and Japan Herald,
-contains much information about Russian operations in the countries bordering the
-North Pacific and the Coreans north of the Tumen.
-</p>
-<p>† <span lang="fr">Bulletin de la Société Geographique</span>, 1875. Corean villages in the Russian possessions described.
-</p>
-<p>** Ravensteins, The Russians on the Amoor. London, 1861.
-</p>
-<p lang="de">† Die Insel Quelpart. Deutsche Geogr. Blätter, 1879. iii., No. 1, S. 45–46.
-</p>
-<p>† A Trip to Quelpaert. Nautical Magazine, 1870, No. 4, p. 321–325.
-</p>
-<p>** The Edinburgh Review of 1872, and Fortnightly Review of 1875, contain articles
-on Corea.
-</p>
-<p>* The Missionary Record of the United Presbyterian Church of Scotland, Edinburgh,
-containing the Correspondence and Notes of the Missionaries laboring among the Chinese
-and Coreans, and who have translated the New Testament into Corean.
-</p>
-<p>† <span lang="fr">La Corée, par M. Paul Tournafond</span>, editor of <span lang="fr">L’Exploration</span>, a geographical journal published in Paris, which contains frequent notes on Corea.
-</p>
-<p lang="fr">† La Corée, ses Ressources, son avenir commercial, par Maurice Jametel. L’Economiste
-Français, Juillet 23, 1881.
-</p>
-<p>* The Japan Herald, The Japan Mail, The Japan Gazette, L’Echo du Japan, of Yokohama,
-and North China Herald, Shanghae, have furnished much information concerning recent
-events in Corea.
-</p>
-<p>Corea, the Last of the Hermit Nations. Sunday Magazine, New York, May, 1878.
-</p>
-<p>Corea and the United States. The Independent, New York, Nov. 17, 1881.
-</p>
-<p>Corea, the Hermit Nation. Bulletin of the American Geographical Society, New York,
-1881, No. 3.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb.xxi">[<a href="#pb.xxi">xxi</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Chautauqua Text-Books, No. 34. Asiatic History; China, Corea, Japan. 16mo, pp. 86.
-New York, 1881.
-</p>
-<p>Library of Universal Knowledge, articles Corea, Fusan, Gensan, Kang-wa, etc. New York,
-1880.
-</p>
-<p>Cyclopædia of Political Science, etc., article Corea. Chicago, 1881.
-</p>
-<p>The Corean Origin of Japanese Art. Century Magazine. December, 1882. By Wm. Elliot
-Griffis.
-</p>
-<div class="div2 section"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main">ORTHOGRAPHY AND PRONUNCIATION.</h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">In the transliteration of Corean names into English, an attempt has been made to render
-them in as accurate and simple a manner as is, under the circumstances, possible.
-The Coreans themselves have no uniform system of spelling proper names, nor do the
-French missionaries agree in their renderings—as a comparison of their maps and writings
-shows. Our aim in this work has been to use as few letters as possible.
-</p>
-<p>Japanese words are all pronounced according to the European method—<i>a</i> as in <i>father</i>, <i>é</i> as in <i>prey</i>, <i>e</i> as in <i>men</i>, <i>i</i> as in <i>machine</i>, <i>o</i> as in <i>bone</i>, <i>u</i> as in <i>tune</i>, <i>ŭ</i> as in <i>sun</i>; <i>ai</i> as in <i>aisle</i>, <i>ua</i> as in <i>quarantine</i>, <i>ei</i> as in <i>feign</i>, and <i>iu</i> is sounded as <i>yu</i>; <i>g</i> is always hard; and <i>c</i> before a vowel, <i>g</i> soft, <i>l</i>, <i>q</i>, <i>s</i> used as <i>z</i>, <i>x</i>, and the combinations <i>ph</i> and <i>th</i> are not used. The long vowel, rather diphthong <i>o</i>, or <i>oho</i>, is marked <i>ō</i>.
-</p>
-<p>The most familiar Chinese names are retained in their usual English form.
-</p>
-<p>Corean words are transliterated on the same general principles as the Japanese, though
-ears familiar with Corean will find the obscure sound between <i>o</i> and short <i>u</i> is written with either of these letters, as Chan-yon, or In-chiŭn, or Kiung-sang.
-<i>Ch</i> may sometimes be used instead of <i>j</i>; and <i>e</i> where <i>o</i> or <i>a</i> or <i>u</i> might more correctly be used, as in Kang-wen, or Wen-chiu. Instead of the French
-ou, or ho, we have written <i>W</i>, as in Whang-hai, Kang-wa, rather than Hoang-hai, Kang-hoa, Kang-ouen, Tai-ouen Kun,
-etc.; and in place of <i>ts</i> we have used <i>ch</i>, as Kwang-chiu rather than Kwang-tsiu, and Wen-chiu than Ouen-tsiu.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb.xxii">[<a href="#pb.xxii">xxii</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 contents"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main">MAPS AND PLANS.</h2>
-<table class="tocList">
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"> </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum xd31e657">PAGE</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p025">Ancestral Seats of the Fuyu Race</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">25</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p030">Sam-han</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">30</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p056">Ancient Japan and Corea</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">56</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p085">The Neutral Territory</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">85</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p099">The Japanese Military Operations of 1592</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">99</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p107">The Campaign in the North, 1592–1593</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">107</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p131">The Operations of the Second Invasion</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">131</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p138">Plan of Uru-san Castle</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">138</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p155">Home of the Manchius and their Migrations</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">155</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p165">The Jesuit Survey of 1709</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">165</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p181">Ping-an Province</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">181</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p185">The Yellow Sea Province</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">185</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p188">The Capital Province</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">188</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p190">Military Geography of Seoul</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">190</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p194">Chung-chong Province</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">194</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p199">Chulla-dō</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">199</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p204">The Province Nearest Japan</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">204</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p208">Kang-wen Province</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">208</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p210">Corean Frontier Facing Manchuria and Russia</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">210</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p215">Southern Part of Ham-kiung</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">215</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p364">The Missionary’s Gateway into Corea</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">364</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p365">Border Towns of Northern Corea</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">365</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p379">The French Naval and Military Operations, 1866</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">379</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p393">Map Illustrating the “General Sherman” Affair</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">393</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p400">Map Illustrating the “China” Affair</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">400</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p415">Map of the American Naval Operations in 1871</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">415</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><span class="sc">General Map of Corea at the End of 1906</span> <i>At end of volume.</i></td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="pageNum" id="pb.xxiii">[<a href="#pb.xxiii">xxiii</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="toc" class="div1 contents"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main">CONTENTS.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first"><i>PART I.</i>
-</p>
-<p><a href="#pt1">ANCIENT AND MEDIÆVAL HISTORY</a>.
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER I.
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum xd31e657">PAGE</span>
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch1" id="xd31e839">The Corean Peninsula</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">1</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER II.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch2" id="xd31e847">The Old Kingdom of Chō-sen</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">11</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER III.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch3" id="xd31e855">The Fuyu Race and their Migrations</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">19</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER IV.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch4" id="xd31e863">Sam-han, or Southern Corea</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">30</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER V.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch5" id="xd31e872">Epoch of the Three Kingdoms.—Hiaksai</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">35</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER VI.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch6" id="xd31e880">Epoch of the Three Kingdoms.—Korai</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">40</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER VII.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch7" id="xd31e888">Epoch of the Three Kingdoms.—Shinra</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">45</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER VIII.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch8" id="xd31e896">Japan and Corea</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">51</span>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb.xxiv">[<a href="#pb.xxiv">xxiv</a>]</span></p>
-<p>CHAPTER IX.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch9" id="xd31e905">Korai, or United Corea</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">63</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER X.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch10" id="xd31e914">Cathay, Zipangu, and the Mongols</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">70</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XI.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch11" id="xd31e922">New Chō-sen</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">76</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XII.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch12" id="xd31e930">Events Leading to the Japanese Invasion</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">88</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XIII.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch13" id="xd31e938">The Invasion—On to Seoul</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">95</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XIV.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch14" id="xd31e946">The Campaign in the North</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">104</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XV.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch15" id="xd31e954">The Retreat from Seoul</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">115</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XVI.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch16" id="xd31e963">Cespedes, the Christian Chaplain</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">121</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XVII.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch17" id="xd31e971">Diplomacy at Kiōto and Peking</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">124</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XVIII.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch18" id="xd31e979">The Second Invasion</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">129</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XIX.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch19" id="xd31e987">The Siege of Uru-san Castle</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">137</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XX.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch20" id="xd31e995">Changes after the Invasion</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">145</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XXI.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch21" id="xd31e1004">The Issachar of Eastern Asia</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">154</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XXII.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch22" id="xd31e1012">The Dutchmen in Exile</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">167</span>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb.xxv">[<a href="#pb.xxv">xxv</a>]</span></p>
-<p><i>PART II.</i>
-</p>
-<p><a href="#pt2">POLITICAL AND SOCIAL COREA</a>.
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XXIII.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch23" id="xd31e1028">The Eight Provinces</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">179</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XXIV.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch24" id="xd31e1036">The King and Royal Palace</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">218</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XXV.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch25" id="xd31e1044">Political Parties</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">224</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XXVI.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch26" id="xd31e1053">Organization and Methods of Government</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">230</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XXVII.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch27" id="xd31e1061">Feudalism, Serfdom, and Society</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">237</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XXVIII.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch28" id="xd31e1069">Social Life—Woman and the Family</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">244</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XXIX.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch29" id="xd31e1077">Child Life</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">256</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XXX.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch30" id="xd31e1085">Housekeeping, Diet, and Costume</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">262</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XXXI.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch31" id="xd31e1094">Mourning and Burial</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">277</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XXXII.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch32" id="xd31e1102">Out-door Life.—Characters and Employments</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">284</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XXXIII.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch33" id="xd31e1110">Shamanism and Mythical Zoölogy</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">300</span>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb.xxvi">[<a href="#pb.xxvi">xxvi</a>]</span></p>
-<p>CHAPTER XXXIV.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch34" id="xd31e1119">Legends and Folk-lore</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">307</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XXXV.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch35" id="xd31e1127">Proverbs and Pithy Sayings</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">317</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XXXVI.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch36" id="xd31e1135">The Corean Tiger</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">320</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XXXVII.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch37" id="xd31e1144">Religion</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">326</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XXXVIII.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch38" id="xd31e1152">Education and Culture</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">337</span>
-</p>
-<p><i>PART III.</i>
-</p>
-<p><a href="#pt3">MODERN AND RECENT HISTORY</a>.
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XXXIX.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch39" id="xd31e1167">The Beginnings of Christianity—1784–1794</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">347</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XL.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch40" id="xd31e1175">Persecution and Martyrdom—1801–1834</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">353</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XLI.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch41" id="xd31e1184">The Entrance of the French Missionaries—1835–1845</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">361</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XLII.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch42" id="xd31e1192">The Walls of Isolation Sapped</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">367</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XLIII.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch43" id="xd31e1200">The French Expedition</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">377</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XLIV.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch44" id="xd31e1208">American Relations with Corea</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">388</span>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb.xxvii">[<a href="#pb.xxvii">xxvii</a>]</span></p>
-<p>CHAPTER XLV.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch45" id="xd31e1217">A Body-Snatching Expedition</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">396</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XLVI.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch46" id="xd31e1225">Our Little War with the Heathen</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">403</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XLVII.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch47" id="xd31e1234">The Ports Opened to Japanese Commerce</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">420</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XLVIII.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch48" id="xd31e1242">The Year of the Treaties</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">433</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER XLIX.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch49" id="xd31e1250">The Economic Condition of Corea</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">443</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER L.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch50" id="xd31e1258">Internal Politics: Chinese and Japanese</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">458</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER LI.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch51" id="xd31e1266">The War of 1894: Corea an Empire</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">472</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER LII.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch52" id="xd31e1275">Japan and Russia in Conflict</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">484</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER LIII.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch53" id="xd31e1283">Corea a Japanese Protectorate</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">497</span>
-</p>
-<p>CHAPTER LIV.
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ch54" id="xd31e1291">Chō-sen: A Province of Japan</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">507</span>
-</p>
-<p><a href="#ix" id="xd31e1298">INDEX</a>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPageNum">521</span>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb.xxix">[<a href="#pb.xxix">xxix</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div1 contents"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.</h2>
-<table class="tocList">
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7">
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum xd31e657">PAGE</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#frontispiece">A City in Corea</a>,
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum"><i>Frontispiece.</i></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p010">Corean Coin</a>,
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">10</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p018">Coin of Modern Chō-sen</a>,
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">18</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p020">The Founder of Fuyu Crossing the Sungari River</a>,
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">20</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p034">Coin of the Sam-han, or the Three Kingdoms</a>,
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">34</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p069">Coin of Korai</a>,
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">69</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p075">Two-masted Corean Vessel</a>,
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">75</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p079">The Walls of Seoul</a>,
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">79</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p081">Magistrate and Servant</a>,
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">81</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p101">Corean Knight of the Sixteenth Century</a>,
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">101</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p161">Styles of Hair-dressing in Corea</a>,
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">161</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p196">A Pleasure-party on the River</a>,
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">196</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p211">Corean Village in Russian Territory</a>,
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">211</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p264">Table Spread for Festal Occasions</a>,
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">264</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p275">Gentlemen’s Garments and Dress Patterns</a>,
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">275</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p282">Thatched House near Seoul</a>,
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">282</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p305">Battle-flag Captured by the Americans in 1871</a>,
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">305</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p320">Battle-flag Captured in the Han Forts, 1871</a>,
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">320</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p355">House and Garden of a Noble</a>,
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">355</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p382">Breech-loading Cannon of Corean Manufacture</a>,
-</td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">382</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
-<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="7"><a href="#p407">The Entering Wedge of Civilization</a>, </td>
-<td class="tocPageNum">407</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="pageNum" id="pb.xxxi">[<a href="#pb.xxxi">xxxi</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="body">
-<div id="pt1" class="div0 part">
-<h2 class="label">I.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">ANCIENT AND MEDIÆVAL HISTORY</h2>
-<p><span class="pageNum" id="pb1">[<a href="#pb1">1</a>]</span></p>
-<div id="ch1" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e839">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="super">COREA:
-<br>
-THE HERMIT NATION.</h2>
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER I.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE COREAN PENINSULA.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Corea, though unknown even by name in Europe until the sixteenth century, was the
-subject of description by Arab geographers of the middle ages. Before the peninsula
-was known as a political unit, the envoys of Shinra, one of the three Corean states,
-and those from Persia met face to face before the throne of China. The Arab merchants
-trading to Chinese ports crossed the Yellow Sea, visited the peninsula, and even settled
-there. The youths of Shinra, sent by their sovereign to study the arts of war and
-peace at Nanking, the mediæval capitol of China, may often have seen and talked with
-the merchants of Bagdad and Damascus. The Corean term for Mussulmans is <i>hoi-hoi</i>, “round and round” men. Corean art shows the undoubted influence of Persia.
-</p>
-<p>A very interesting passage in the chronicles of Japan, while illustrating the sensitive
-regard of the Japanese for the forms of etiquette, shows another point of contact
-between Corean and Saracen civilization. It occurs in the Nihon O Dai Ichi Ran, or
-“A View of the Imperial Family of Japan.” “In the first month of the sixth year of
-Tempiō Shōhō [February, 754 <span class="asc">A.D.</span>], the Japanese nobles Ohan no Komaro and Kibi no Mabi returned from China, in which
-country they had left Fujiwara no Seiga. The former reported that at the audience
-which they had of the Emperor Gen-sho, on New Tear’s Day [January 18th], the ambassadors
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb2">[<a href="#pb2">2</a>]</span>of Towan [Thibet] occupied the first place to the west, those from Shinra the first
-place to the east, and that the second place to the west had been destined for them
-(the Japanese envoys), and the second place to the east for the ambassadors of the
-Kingdom of Dai Shoku [Persia, then part of the empire of the Caliphs]. Komaro, offended
-with this arrangement, asked why the Chinese should give precedence over them to the
-envoys of Shinra, a state which had long been tributary to Japan. The Chinese officials,
-impressed alike with the firmness and displeasure exhibited by Komaro, assigned to
-the Japanese envoys a place above those of Persia and to the envoys of Shinra a place
-above those of Thibet.”
-</p>
-<p>Thus the point at issue was settled, by avoiding it, and assigning equal honor to
-Shinra and Japan.
-</p>
-<p>This incident alone shows that close communications were kept up between the far east
-and the west of Asia, and that Corea was known beyond Chinese Asia. At that time the
-boundaries of the two empires, the Arab and the Chinese, touched each other.
-</p>
-<p>The first notice of Corea in western books or writings occurs in the works of Khordadbeh,
-an Arab geographer of the ninth century, in his Book of Roads and Provinces. He is
-thus quoted by Richthofen in his work on China (p. 575, note):
-</p>
-<p>“What lies on the other side of China is unknown land. But high mountains rise up
-densely across from Kantu. These lie over in the land of Sila, which is rich in gold.
-Mussulmans who visit this country often allow themselves, through the advantages of
-the same, to be induced to settle here. They export from thence ginseng, deerhorn,
-aloes, camphor, nails, saddles, porcelain, satin, zimmit (cinnamon?) and galanga (ginger?).”
-</p>
-<p>Richthofen rightly argues that Sila is Shinra and Kantu is the promontory province
-of Shantung. This Arabic term “Sila” is a corruption of Shinra—the predominant state
-in Corea at the time of Khordadbeh.
-</p>
-<p>The name of this kingdom was pronounced by the Japanese, Shinra, and by the Chinese,
-Sinlo—the latter easily altered in Arabic mouths to Sila.
-</p>
-<p>The European name Corea is derived from the Japanese term Korai (Chinese Kaoli), the
-name of another state in the peninsula, rival to Shinra. It was also the official
-title of the nation from the eleventh to the fourteenth century. The Portuguese, who
-were the first navigators of the Yellow Sea, brought the name to Europe, calling the
-country Coria, whence the English Corea.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb3">[<a href="#pb3">3</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The French Jesuits at Peking Gallicized this into <span lang="fr">Corée</span>. Following the genius of their language, they call it <span lang="fr">La Corée</span>, just as they speak of England as <span lang="fr">L’Angleterre</span>, Germany as <span class="corr" id="xd31e1507" lang="fr" title="Source: L’Allemande">L’Allemagne</span>, and America as <span class="corr" id="xd31e1510" lang="fr" title="Source: L’Amerique">L’Amérique</span>. Hence has arisen the curious designation, used even by English writers, of this
-peninsula as “the Corea.” But what is good French in this case is very bad English,
-and we should no more say “the Corea” than “the Germany,” “the England,” or “the America.”
-English usage forbids the employment of the definite article before a proper name,
-and those writers who persist in prefixing the definite article to the proper name
-Corea are either ignorant of the significance of the word, or knowingly violate the
-laws of the English language. The native name of the country is Chō-sen (Morning Calm
-or Fresh Morning), which French writers, always prodigal in the use of vowels, spell
-Tsio-sen, Teo-cen, or Tchao-sian. The Chinese call it Tung-kwo (Eastern Kingdom),
-and the Manchius, Sol-ho or Solbo.
-</p>
-<p>The peninsula, with its outlying islands, is nearly equal in size to Minnesota or
-to Great Britain. Its area is between eighty and ninety thousand square miles. Its
-coast line measures 1,740 miles. In general shape and relative position to the Asian
-Continent it resembles Florida. It hangs down between the Middle Kingdom and the Sunrise
-Land, separating the sea of Japan and the Yellow Sea, between the 34th and 43d parallels
-of north latitude. In its general configuration, when looked at from the westward
-on a good map, especially the magnificent one made by the Japanese War Department,
-Chō-sen resembles the outspread wings of a headless butterfly, the lobes of the wings
-being toward China, and their tops toward Japan.
-</p>
-<p>Legend, tradition, and geological indications lead us to believe that anciently the
-Chinese promontory and province of Shantung and the Corean peninsula were connected,
-and that dry land once covered the space filled by the waters joining the Gulf of
-Pechili and the Yellow Sea. These waters are so shallow that the elevation of their
-bottoms but a few feet would restore their area to the land surface of the globe.
-On the other side, also, the sea of Japan is very shallow, and the straits of Corea,
-at their greatest depth, have but eighty-three feet of water. That portion of the
-Chinese province of Shing King, or Southern Manchuria, bordering the sea, is a great
-plain, or series of flats elevated but a few feet above tide water, which becomes
-nearly impassable during heavy rains.
-</p>
-<p>A marked difference is noted between the east and west coasts <span class="pageNum" id="pb4">[<a href="#pb4">4</a>]</span>of the peninsula. The former is comparatively destitute of harbors, and the shore
-is high, monotonous, and but slightly indented or fringed with islands. It contains
-but three provinces. On the west coast are five provinces, and the sea is thickly
-strewn with islands, harbors and landing places, while navigable rivers are more numerous.
-The “Corean Archipelago” contains an amazing number of fertile and inhabited islands
-and islets rising out of deep water. They are thus described by the naturalist Arthur
-Adams:
-</p>
-<p>“Leaving the huge, cone-like island of Quelpaert in the distance, the freshening breeze
-bears us gallantly toward those unknown islands which form the Archipelago of Korea.
-As you approach them you look from the deck of the vessel and you see them dotting
-the wide, blue, boundless plain of the sea—groups and clusters of islands stretching
-away into the far distance. Far as the eye can reach, their dark masses can be faintly
-discerned, and as we close, one after another, the bold outlines of their mountain
-peaks stand out clearly against the cloudless sky. The water from which they seem
-to arise is so deep around them that a ship can almost range up alongside them. The
-rough, gray granite and basaltic cliffs, of which they are composed, show them to
-be only the rugged peaks of submerged mountain masses which have been rent, in some
-great convulsion of nature, from the peninsula which stretches into the sea from the
-main land. You gaze upward and see the weird, fantastic outline which some of their
-torn and riven peaks present. In fact, they have assumed such peculiar forms as to
-have suggested to navigators characteristic names. Here, for example, stands out the
-fretted, crumbling towers of one called Windsor Castle, there frowns a noble rock-ruin,
-the Monastery, and here again, mounting to the skies, the Abbey Peak.
-</p>
-<p>“Some of the islands of this Archipelago are very lofty, and one was ascertained to
-boast of a naked granite peak more than two thousand feet above the level of the sea.
-Many of the summits are crowned with a dense forest of conifers, dark trees, very
-similar in appearance to Scotch firs.”
-</p>
-<p>The king of Corea may well be called “Sovereign of Ten Thousand Isles.”
-</p>
-<p>Almost the only striking feature of the inland physical geography of Chō-sen, heretofore
-generally known, is that chain of mountains which traverses the peninsula from North
-to South, not in a straight line, but in an exceedingly sinuous course, similar to
-the <span class="pageNum" id="pb5">[<a href="#pb5">5</a>]</span>tacking of a ship when sailing in the eye of the wind. As the Coreans say, “it winds
-out and in ninety-nine times.”
-</p>
-<p>Striking out from Manchuria it trends eastward to the sea at Cape Bruat on the 41st
-parallel, thence it strikes southwest about eighty miles to the region west of Broughton’s
-Bay (the narrowest part of Corea), whence it bears westward to the sea at the 37th
-parallel, or Cape Pelissier, where its angle culminates in the lofty mountain peaks
-named by the Russians Mount Popoff—after the inventor of the high turret ships. From
-this point it throws off a fringe of lesser hills to the southward while the main
-chain strikes southwest, and after forming the boundary between two most southern
-provinces reaches the sea near the Amherst Isles. Nor does its course end here, for
-the uncounted islands of the Archipelago, with their fantastic rock-ruins and perennial
-greenery, that suggest deserted castles and abbeys mantled with ivy, are but the wave-worn
-and shattered remnants of this lordly range.
-</p>
-<p>This chief feature in the physical geography of the peninsula determines largely its
-configuration, climate, river system and watershed, political divisions, and natural
-barriers. Speaking roughly, Eastern Corea is a mountainous ridge of which Western
-Corea is but the slope.
-</p>
-<p>No river of any importance is found inside the peninsula east of these mountains,
-except the Nak-tong, which drains the valley formed by the interior and the sea-coast
-ranges, while on the westward slope ten broad streams collect the tribute of their
-melted snows to enrich the valleys of five provinces.
-</p>
-<p>Through seven parallels of latitude this range fronts the sea of Japan with a coast
-barrier which, except at Yung-hing Bay, is nearly destitute of harbors. Its timbered
-heights present a wall of living green to the mariner sailing from Vladivostok to
-Shanghai.
-</p>
-<p>Great differences of climate in the same latitude are observed on opposite sides of
-this mountain range, which has various local epithets. From their height and the permanence
-of their winter covering, the word “white” forms an oft-recurring part of their names.
-</p>
-<p>The division of the country into eight <i>dō</i>, or provinces, which are grouped in southern, central, and northern, is based mainly
-on the river basins. The rainfall in nearly every province finds an outlet on its
-own sea-border. Only the western slopes of the two northeastern provinces are exceptions
-to this rule, since they discharge part of their waters into streams emptying beyond
-their <span class="pageNum" id="pb6">[<a href="#pb6">6</a>]</span>boundaries. The Yalu, and the Han—“the river”—are the only streams whose sources lie
-beyond their own provinces. In rare instances are the rivers known by the same word
-along their whole length, various local names being applied by the people of different
-neighborhoods. On the maps in this work only the name most commonly given to each
-stream near its mouth is printed.
-</p>
-<p>In respect to the sea basins, three provinces on the west coast form one side of the
-depression called the Yellow Sea Basin, of which Northeastern China forms the opposite
-rim. The three eastern dō, or circuits, lining the Sea of Japan, make the concave
-in the sea basin to which Japan offers the corresponding edge. The entire northern
-boundary of the peninsula from sea to gulf, except where the colossal peak Paik-tu
-(‘White Head’) forms the water-shed, is one vast valley in which lie the basins of
-the Yalu and Tumen.
-</p>
-<p>Corea is, in reality, an island, as the following description of White Head Mountain,
-obtained from the Journal of the Chinese Ambassador to Seoul, shows. This mountain
-has two summits, one facing north, the other east. On the top is a lake thirty ri
-around. In shape the peak is that of a colossal white vase open to the sky, and fluted
-or scolloped round the edge like the vases of Chinese porcelain. Its crater, white
-on the outside, is red, with whitish veins, inside. Snow and ice clothe the sides,
-sometimes as late as June. On the side of the north, there issues a runnel, a yard
-in depth, which falls in a cascade and forms the source of the (Tumen) river. Three
-or four <i>ri</i> from the summit of the mountain the stream divides into two parts; one is the source
-of the Yalu River.
-</p>
-<p>In general, it may be said to dwellers in the temperate zone that the climate of Corea
-is excellent, bracing in the north, and in the south tempered by the ocean breezes
-of summer. The winters in the higher latitudes are not more rigorous than in the State
-of New York; while, in the most southern, they are as delightful as those in the Carolinas.
-In so mountainous and sea-girt a country there are, of course, great climatic varieties
-even in the same provinces.
-</p>
-<p>As compared with European countries of the same latitude, Corea is much colder in
-winter and hotter in summer. In the north, the Tumen River is usually frozen during
-five months in the year. The Han River at Seoul may be crossed on ice during two or
-three months. Even in the southern provinces, deep snows cover the mountains, though
-the plains are usually free, rarely <span class="pageNum" id="pb7">[<a href="#pb7">7</a>]</span>holding the snow during a whole day. The lowest point to which the mercury fell, in
-the observation of the French missionaries, was at the 35th parallel of latitude 8°
-and at the 37th parallel 15° (F.). The most delightful seasons in the year are spring
-and autumn. In summer, in addition to the great heat, the rain falls often in torrents
-that blockade the roads and render travelling and transport next to impossible. Toward
-the end of September occurs the period of tempests and variable winds.
-</p>
-<p>A glance at the fauna of Corea suggests at once India, Europe, Massachusetts, and
-Florida. In the forests, especially of the two northern circuits, tigers of the largest
-size and fiercest aspect abound. When food fails them, they attack human habitations,
-and the annual list of victims is very large. The leopard is common. There are several
-species of deer, which furnish not only hides and venison, but horns which, when “in
-velvet,” are highly prized as medicine. In the fauna are included bears, wild hogs
-and the common pigs of stunted breed, wild cats, badgers, foxes, beavers, otters,
-several species of martens. The salamander is found in the streams, as in western
-Japan.
-</p>
-<p>Of domestic beasts, horses are very numerous, being mostly of a short, stunted breed.
-Immense numbers of oxen are found in the south, furnishing the meat diet craved by
-the people who eat much more of fatty stuff than the Japanese.
-</p>
-<p>Goats are rare. Sheep are imported from China only for sacrificial purposes. The dog
-serves for food as well as for companionship and defence. Of birds, the pheasant,
-falcon, eagle, crane, and stork, are common.
-</p>
-<p>Corea has for centuries successfully carried out the policy of isolation. Instead
-of a peninsula, her rulers have striven to make her an inaccessible island, and insulate
-her from the shock of change. She has built not a Great Wall of masonry, but a barrier
-of sea and river-flood, of mountain and devastated land, of palisades and cordons
-of armed sentinels. Frost and snow, storm and winter, she hails as her allies. Not
-content with the sea-border she desolates her shores lest they tempt the mariner to
-land. Between her Chinese neighbor and herself, she has placed a neutral space of
-unplanted, unoccupied land. This strip of forests and desolated plains, twenty leagues
-wide, stretches between Corea and Manchuria. To form it, four cities and many villages
-were suppressed three centuries ago, and left in ruins. The soil of these solitudes
-is very good, the roads easy, and the hills not high.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb8">[<a href="#pb8">8</a>]</span></p>
-<p>For centuries, only the wild beasts, fugitives from justice, and outlaws from both
-countries, have inhabited this fertile but forbidden territory. Occasionally, borderers
-would cultivate portions of it, but gather the produce by night or stealthily by day,
-venturing on it as prisoners would step over the “dead line.” Of late years, the Chinese
-Government has respected the neutrality of this barrier less and less. One of those
-recurring historical phenomena peculiar to Manchuria—the increase and pressure of
-population—has within a generation caused the occupation of large portions of this
-neutral strip. Parts of it have been surveyed and staked out by Chinese surveyors,
-and the Corean Government has been too feeble to prevent the occupation. Though no
-towns or villages are marked on the map of this “No-man’s land,” yet already, a considerable
-number of small settlements exist upon it.
-</p>
-<p>As this once neutral territory is being gradually obliterated, so the former lines
-of palisades and stone walls on the northern border which, two centuries and more
-ago, were strong, high, guarded and kept in repair, have year by year, during a long
-era of peace, been suffered to fall into decay. They exist no longer, and should be
-erased from the maps.
-</p>
-<p>The pressure of population in Manchuria upon the Corean border is a portentous phenomenon.
-For Manchuria, which for ages past has, like a prolific hive, swarmed off masses of
-humanity into other lands, seems again preparing to send off a fresh cloud. Already
-her millions press upon her neighbors for room.
-</p>
-<p>The clock of history seems once more about to strike, perhaps to order again another
-dynasty on the oft-changed throne of China.
-</p>
-<p>From mysterious Mongolia, have gone out in the past the various hordes called Tartars,
-or Tâtars, Huns, Turks, Kitans, Mongols, Manchius. Perhaps her loins also are already
-swelling with a new progeny. This marvellous region gave forth the man-children who
-destroyed the Roman Empire; who extinguished Christianity in Asia and Africa, and
-nearly in Europe; who, after conquering India and China threatened Christendom, and
-holding Russia for two centuries, created the largest empire ever known on earth;
-and finally reared “the most improvable race in Asia” that now holds the throne and
-empire of China.
-</p>
-<p>Chō-sen since acting the hermit policy of ancient Egypt and mediæval China, has preserved
-two loopholes at Fusan and Ai-chiu, the former on the sea toward Japan, and the latter
-in the northwest, on the Chinese border. What in time of peace is a needle’s <span class="pageNum" id="pb9">[<a href="#pb9">9</a>]</span>eye, is in time of war a flood-gate for enemies. From the west, the invading armies
-of China have again and again marched around over the Gulf of Liao Tung and entered
-the peninsula to plunder and to conquer, while Chinese fleets from Shan-tung have
-over and over again arched their sails in the Yellow Sea to furl them again in Corean
-Rivers. From the east, the Japanese have pushed across the sea to invade Corea as
-enemies, to help as allies against China, to levy tribute and go away enriched, or
-anon to send their grain-laden ships to their starving neighbors.
-</p>
-<p>From a political point of view the geographical position of this country is most unfortunate.
-Placed between two rival nations, aliens in blood, temper, and policy, Chō-sen has
-been the rich grist between the upper and nether millstones of China and Japan. Out
-of the north, rising from the vast plains at Manchuria, the conquering hordes, on
-their way to the prize lying south of the Great Wall, have over and over again descended
-on Corean soil to make it their granary. From the pre-historic forays of the tribes
-beyond the Sungari, to the last new actors on the scene, the Russians, who stand with
-their feet on the Tumen, looking over the border on her helpless neighbor, Corea has
-been threatened or devastated by her eager enemies.
-</p>
-<p>Nevertheless Corea has always remained Corea, a separate country; and the people are
-Coreans, more allied to the Japanese than the Chinese, yet in language, politics,
-and social customs, different from either. As Ireland is not England or Scotland,
-neither is Chō-sen China nor Japan.
-</p>
-<p>In her boasted history of “four thousand years,” the little kingdom has too often
-been the Ireland of China, so far as misgovernment on the one side, and fretful and
-spasmodic resistance on the other, are considered. Yet ancient Corea has also been
-an Ireland to Japan, in the better sense of giving to her the art, letters, science,
-and ethics of continental civilization. As of old, went forth from Tara’s halls to
-the British Isles and the continent, the bard and the monk to elevate and civilize
-Europe with the culture of Rome and the religion of Christianity, so for centuries
-there crossed the sea from the peninsula a stream of scholars, artists, and missionaries
-who brought to Japan the social culture of Chō-sen, the literature of China, and the
-religion of India. A grateful bonze of Japan has well told the story of Corea’s part
-in the civilization of his native country in a book entitled “Precious Jewels from
-a Neighbor Country.<span class="corr" id="xd31e1568" title="Source: ’">”</span>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb10">[<a href="#pb10">10</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Corea fulfils one of the first conditions of national safety in having “scientific
-frontiers,” or adequate natural boundaries of river, mountain, and sea. But now what
-was once barrier is highway. What was once the safety of isolation, is now the weakness
-of the recluse. Steam has made the water a surer path than land, and Japan, once the
-pupil and anon the conqueror of the little kingdom, has in these last days become
-the helpful friend of Corea’s people, and the opener of the long-sealed peninsula.
-</p>
-<p>Already the friendly whistle of Japanese steamers is heard in the harbors of two ports
-in which are trading settlements. At Fusan and Gensan, the mikado’s subjects hold
-commercial rivalry with the Coreans, and through these two loopholes the hermits of
-the peninsula catch glimpses of the outer world that must waken thought and create
-a desire to enter the family of nations. The ill fame of the native character for
-inhospitality and hatred of foreigners belongs not to the people, nor is truly characteristic
-of them. It inheres in the government which curses country and people, and in the
-ruling classes who, like those in Old Japan, do not wish the peasantry to see the
-inferiority of those who govern them.
-</p>
-<p>Corea cannot long remain a hermit nation. The near future will see her open to the
-world. Commerce and pure Christianity will enter to elevate her people, and the student
-of science, ethnology, and language will find a tempting field on which shall be solved
-many a yet obscure problem. The forbidden land of to-day is, in many striking points
-of comparison, the analogue of Old Japan. While the last of the hermit nations awaits
-some gallant Perry of the future, we may hope that the same brilliant path of progress
-on which the Sunrise Kingdom has entered, awaits the Land of Morning Calm.
-</p>
-<p>We add a postscript. As our manuscript turns to print, we hear of the treaty successfully
-negotiated by Commodore Shufeldt.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p010width" id="p010"><img src="images/p010.png" alt="Corean Coin—“Eastern Kingdom, Precious Treasure.”" width="177" height="177"><p class="figureHead">Corean Coin—“Eastern Kingdom, Precious Treasure.”</p>
-</div><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb11">[<a href="#pb11">11</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch2" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e847">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER II.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE OLD KINGDOM OF CHŌ-SEN.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Like almost every country on earth, whose history is known, Corea is inhabited by
-a race that is not aboriginal. The present occupiers of the land drove out or conquered
-the people whom they found upon it. They are the descendants of a stock whose ancestral
-seats were beyond those ever white mountains which buttress the northern frontier.
-</p>
-<p>Nevertheless, for the origins of their national history, we must look to one whom
-the Coreans of this nineteenth century still call the founder of their social order.
-The scene of his labors is laid partly within the peninsula, and chiefly in Manchuria,
-on the well watered plains of Shing-king, formerly called Liao Tung.
-</p>
-<p>The third dynasty of the thirty-three or thirty-four lines of rulers who have filled
-the oft-changed throne of China, is known in history as the Shang (or Yin). It began
-<span class="asc">B.C.</span> 1766, and after a line of twenty-eight sovereigns, ended in Chow Sin, who died <span class="asc">B.C.</span> 1122. He was an unscrupulous tyrant, and has been called “the Nero of China.”
-</p>
-<p>One of his nobles was Ki Tsze, viscount of Ki (or Latinized, Kicius). He was a profound
-scholar and author of important portions of the classic book, entitled the Shu King.
-He was a counsellor of the tyrant king, and being a man of upright character, was
-greatly scandalized at the conduct of his licentious and cruel master.
-</p>
-<p>The sage remonstrated with his sovereign hoping to turn him from his evil ways. In
-this noble purpose he was assisted by two other men of rank named Pi Kan and Wei Tsze.
-All their efforts were of no avail, and finding the reformation of the tyrant hopeless,
-Wei Tsze, though a kinsman of the king, voluntarily exiled himself from the realm,
-while Pi Kan, also a relative of Chow Sin, was cruelly murdered in the following manner:
-</p>
-<p>The king, mocking the wise counsellor, cried out, “They say <span class="pageNum" id="pb12">[<a href="#pb12">12</a>]</span>that a sage has seven orifices to his heart; let us see if this is the case with Pi
-Kan.” This Chinese monarch, himself so much like Herod in other respects, had a wife
-who in her character resembled Herodias. It was she who expressed the bloody wish
-to see the heart of Pi Kan. By the imperial order the sage was put to death and his
-body ripped open. His heart, torn out, was brought before the cruel pair. Ki Tsze,
-the third counsellor, was cast into prison.
-</p>
-<p>Meanwhile the people and nobles of the empire were rising in arms against the tyrant
-whose misrule had become intolerable. They were led on by one Wu Wang, who crossed
-the Yellow River, and met the tyrant on the plains of Muh. In the great battle that
-ensued, the army of Chow Sin was defeated. Escaping to his palace, and ordering it
-to be set on fire, he perished in the flames.
-</p>
-<p>Among the conqueror’s first acts was the erection of a memorial mound over the grave
-of Pi Kan, and an order that Ki Tsze should be released from prison, and appointed
-Prime Minister of the realm.
-</p>
-<p>But the sage’s loyalty exceeded his gratitude. In spite of the magnanimity of the
-offer, Ki Tsze frankly told the conqueror that duty to his deposed sovereign forbade
-him serving one whom he could not but regard as a usurper. He then departed into the
-regions lying to the northeast. With him went several thousand Chinese emigrants,
-mostly the remnant of the defeated army, now exiles, who made him their king. It is
-not probable that in his distant realm he received investment from or paid tribute
-to King Wu. Such an act would be a virtual acknowledgment of the righteousness of
-rebellion and revolution. It would prove that the sage forgave the usurper. Some Chinese
-historians state that Ki Tsze accepted a title from Wu Wang. Others maintain that
-the investiture “was a euphemism to shield the character of the ancestor of Confucius.”
-The migration of Ki Tsze and his followers took place 1122 <span class="asc">B.C.</span>
-</p>
-<p>Ki Tsze began vigorously to reduce the aboriginal people of his realm to order. He
-policed the borders, gave laws to his subjects, and gradually introduced the principles
-and practice of Chinese etiquette and polity throughout his domain. Previous to his
-time the people lived in caves and holes in the ground, dressed in leaves, and were
-destitute of manners, morals, agriculture and cooking, being ignorant savages. The
-divine being, Dan Kun, had partially civilized them, but Kishi, who brought 5,000
-Chinese colonists with <span class="pageNum" id="pb13">[<a href="#pb13">13</a>]</span>him, taught the aborigines letters, reading and writing, medicine, many of the arts,
-and the political principles of feudal China. The Japanese pronounce the founder’s
-name Kishi, and the Coreans Kei-tsa or Kysse.
-</p>
-<p>The name conferred by Kishi, the civilizer, upon his new domain is that now in use
-by the modern Coreans—Chō-sen or Morning Calm.
-</p>
-<p>This ancient kingdom of Chō-sen, according to the Coreans, comprised the modern Chinese
-province of Shing-king, which is now about the size of Ohio, having an area of 43,000
-square miles, and a population of 8,000,000 souls. It is entirely outside and west
-of the limits of modern Corea.
-</p>
-<p>In addition to the space already named, the fluctuating boundaries of this ancient
-kingdom embraced at later periods much territory beyond the Liao River toward Peking,
-and inside the line now marked by the Great Wall. To the east the modern province
-of Ping-an was included in Chō-sen, the Ta-tong River being its most stable boundary.
-“Scientific frontiers,” though sought for in those ancient times, were rather ideal
-than hard and fast. With all due allowance for elastic boundaries, we may say that
-ancient Chō-sen lay chiefly within the Liao Tung peninsula and the Corean province
-of Ping-an, that the Liao and the Ta-tong Rivers enclosed it, and that its northern
-border lay along the 42d parallel of latitude.
-</p>
-<p>The descendants of Ki Tsze are said to have ruled the country until the fourth century
-before the Christian era. Their names and deeds are alike unknown, but it is stated
-that there were forty-one generations, making a blood-line of eleven hundred and thirty-one
-years. The line came to an end in 9 <span class="asc">A.D.</span>, though they had lost power long before this time.
-</p>
-<p>By common consent of Chinese and native tradition, Ki Tsze is the founder of Corean
-social order. If this tradition be true, the civilization of the hermit nation nearly
-equals, in point of time, that of China, and is one of the very oldest in the world,
-being contemporaneous with that of Egypt and Chaldea. It is certain that the natives
-plume themselves upon their antiquity, and that the particular vein of Corean arrogance
-and contempt for western civilization is kindred to that of the Hindoos and Chinese.
-From the lofty height of thirty centuries of tradition, which to them is unchallenged
-history, they look with pitying contempt upon the upstart nations of yesterday, who
-live beyond the sea under some other heaven. When the American Admiral, John Rodgers,
-in <span class="pageNum" id="pb14">[<a href="#pb14">14</a>]</span>1871, entered the Han River with his fleet, hoping to make a treaty, he was warned
-off with the repeated answer that “Corea was satisfied with her civilization of four
-thousand years, and wanted no other.” The perpetual text of all letters from Seoul
-to Peking, of all proclamations against Christianity, of all death-warrants of converts,
-and of the oft-repeated refusals to open trade with foreigners is the praise of Ki
-Tsze as the founder of the virtue and order of “the little kingdom,” and the loyalty
-of Corea to his doctrines.
-</p>
-<p>In the letter of the king to the Chinese emperor, dated November 25, 1801, the language
-following the opening sentence is as given below:
-</p>
-<p>“His Imperial Majesty knows that since the time when the remnants of the army of the
-Yin dynasty migrated to the East [1122 <span class="asc">B.C.</span>], the little kingdom has always been distinguished by its exactness in fulfilling
-all that the rites prescribe, justice and loyalty, and in general by fidelity to her
-duties,” etc., etc.
-</p>
-<p>In a royal proclamation against the Christian religion, dated January 25, 1802, occurs
-the following sentence:
-</p>
-<p>“The kingdom granted to Ki Tsze has enjoyed great peace during four hundred years
-[since the establishment of the ruling dynasty], in all the extent of its territory
-of two thousand ri and more,” etc.
-</p>
-<p>These are but specimens from official documents which illustrate their pride in antiquity,
-and the reverence in which their first law giver is held by the Coreans.
-</p>
-<p>Nevertheless, though Kishi may possibly be called the founder of ancient Chō-sen,
-and her greatest legislator, yet he can scarcely be deemed the ancestor of the people
-now inhabiting the Corean peninsula. For the modern Coreans are descended from a stock
-of later origin, and quite different from the ancient Chō-senese. From Ki Tsze, however,
-sprang a line of kings, and it is possible that his blood courses in some of the noble
-families of the kingdom.
-</p>
-<p>As the most ancient traditions of Japan and Corea are based on Chinese writings, there
-is no discrepancy in their accounts of the beginning of Chō-sen history.
-</p>
-<p>Ki Tsze and his colonists were simply the first immigrants to the country northeast
-of China, of whom history speaks. He found other people on the soil before him, concerning
-whose origin nothing is known in writing. The land was not densely populated, but
-of their numbers, or time of coming of the aborigines, or <span class="pageNum" id="pb15">[<a href="#pb15">15</a>]</span>whether of the same race as the tribes in the outlying islands of Japan, no means
-yet in our power can give answer.
-</p>
-<p>Even the story of Ki Tsze, when critically examined, does not satisfy the rigid demands
-of modern research. Mayers, in his “Chinese Reader’s Manual” (p. 369), does not concede
-the first part of the Chow dynasty (1122 <span class="asc">B.C.</span>–255 <span class="asc">A.D.</span>) to be more than semi-historical, and places the beginning of authentic Chinese history
-between 781 and 719 <span class="asc">B.C.</span>, over four centuries after Ki Tsze’s time. Ross (p. 11) says that “the story of Kitsu
-is not impossible, but it is to be received with suspicion.” It is not at all improbable
-that the Chō-sen of Ki Tsze’s founding lay in the Sungari valley, and was extended
-southward at a later period.
-</p>
-<p>It is not for us to dissect too critically the tradition concerning the founder of
-Corea, nor to locate exactly the scene of his labors. Suffice it to say that the general
-history, prior to the Christian era, of the country whose story we are to tell, divides
-itself into that of the north, or Chō-sen, and that of the south, below the Ta-tong
-River, in which region three kingdoms arose and flourished, with varying fortunes,
-during a millennium.
-</p>
-<p>We return now to the well-established history of Chō-sen. The Great Wall of China
-was built by Cheng, the founder of the Tsin dynasty (<span class="asc">B.C.</span> 255–209), who began the work in 239 <span class="asc">A.D.</span> Before his time, China had been a feudal conglomerate of petty, warring kingdoms.
-He, by the power of the sword, consolidated them into one homogeneous empire and took
-the title of the “First Universal Emperor” (Shi Whang Ti). Not content with sweeping
-away feudal institutions, and building the Great Wall, he ordered all the literary
-records and the ancient scriptures of Confucius to be destroyed by fire. Yet the empire,
-whose perpetuity he thought to secure by building a rampart against the barbarians
-without, and by destroying the material for rebellious thought within, fell to pieces
-soon after, at his death, when left to the care of a foolish son, and China was plunged
-into bloody anarchy again.
-</p>
-<p>One of these petty kingdoms that arose on the ruins of the empire was that of Yen,
-which began to encroach upon its eastern neighbor Chō-sen.
-</p>
-<p>In the later days of the Ki Tsze family, great anarchy prevailed, and the last kings
-of the line were unable to keep their domain in order, or guard its boundaries.
-</p>
-<p>Taking advantage of its weakness, the king of Yen began boldly and openly to seize
-upon Chō-sen territory, annexing thousands of <span class="pageNum" id="pb16">[<a href="#pb16">16</a>]</span>square miles to his own domain. By a spasmodic effort, the successors of Ki Tsze again
-became ascendant, reannexing a large part of the territory of Yen, and receiving great
-numbers of her people, who had fled from civil war in China, within the borders of
-Chō-sen for safety and peace.
-</p>
-<p>Thus the spoiler was spoiled, but, later on, the kingdom of Yen was again set up,
-and the rival states fixed their boundaries and made peace. The Han dynasty in <span class="asc">B.C.</span> 206 claimed the imperial power, and sent a summons to the king of Yen to become vassal.
-On his refusing, the Chinese emperor despatched an army against him, defeated his
-forces in battle, extinguished his dynasty, and annexed his kingdom.
-</p>
-<p>One of the survivors of this revolt, named Wei-man, with one thousand of his followers,
-fled to the east. Dressing themselves like wild savages they entered Chō-sen, pretending,
-with Gibeonitish craft, that they had come from the far west, and begged to be received
-as subjects.
-</p>
-<p>Kijun, the king, like another Joshua, believing their professions, welcomed them and
-made their leader a vassal of high rank, with the title of ‘Guardian of the Western
-Frontier.’ He also set apart a large tract of land for his salary and support.
-</p>
-<p>In his post at the west, Wei-man played the traitor, and collecting a number of his
-former countrymen from the Yen province, suddenly sent to Kijun a messenger, informing
-him that a large Chinese army of the conquering Han was about to invade Chō-sen. At
-the same time, he suggested that he should be called to the royal side and be made
-Protector of the Capital. His desire being granted, he hastened with his forces and
-suddenly appearing before the royal castle, attacked it. Kijun was beaten, and fled
-by sea, escaping in a boat to the southern end of the peninsula.
-</p>
-<p>Wei-man then proclaimed himself King of Chō-sen, 194 <span class="asc">B.C.</span> He set out on a career of conquest and seized several of the neighboring provinces,
-and Chō-sen again expanded her boundaries to cover an immense area. Wei-man built
-a city somewhere east of the Ta-tong River. It was named Wang-hien.
-</p>
-<p>Two provinces of modern Corea were thus included within Chō-sen at this date. The
-new kingdom grew in wealth, power, and intelligence. Many thousands of the Chinese
-gentry, fleeing before the conquering arms of the Han “usurpers,” settled within the
-limits of Chō-sen, adding greatly to its prosperity.
-</p>
-<p>During the reign of Yukio (Chinese, Yow Jin), the grandson of <span class="pageNum" id="pb17">[<a href="#pb17">17</a>]</span>Wei-man, he received a summons to become vassal to the Chinese emperor, who sublimely
-declared that henceforward the eastern frontier of China should be the Ta-tong River—thus
-virtually wiping out Chō-sen with a proclamation. In <span class="asc">B.C.</span> 109, a Chinese ambassador sailed over from China, entered the Ta-tong River, and
-visited Yukio in his castle. He plead in vain with Yukio to render homage to his master.
-</p>
-<p>Nevertheless, to show his respect for the emperor and his envoy, Yukio sent an escort
-to accompany the latter on his way. The sullen Chinaman, angry at his defeat, accepted
-the safe conduct of the Chō-sen troops until beyond the Ta-tong River, and then treacherously
-put their chief to death. Hurrying back to his master, he glossed over his defeat,
-and boasted of his perfidious murder. He was rewarded with the appointment of the
-governorship of Liao Tung.
-</p>
-<p>Smarting at the insult and menace of this act, Yukio, raising an army, marched to
-the west and slew the traitor. Having thus unfurled the standard of defiance against
-the mighty Han dynasty, he returned to his castle, and awaited with anxious preparation
-the coming of the invading hosts which he knew would be hurled upon him from China.
-</p>
-<p>The avenging expedition, that was to carry the banners of China farther toward the
-sunrise than ever before, was despatched both by land and sea, <span class="asc">B.C.</span> 108. The horse and foot soldiers took the land route around the head of Liao Tung
-Gulf, crossed on the ice of the Yalu River, and marched south to the Ta-tong, where
-the Chō-sen men attacked their van and scattered it.
-</p>
-<p>The fleet sailed over from Shantung, and landed a force of several thousand men on
-the Corean shore, in February or March, <span class="asc">B.C.</span> 107. Without waiting for the entire army to penetrate the country, Yukio attacked
-the advance guards and drove them to the mountains in disorder.
-</p>
-<p>Diplomacy was now tried, and a representative of the emperor was sent to treat with
-Yukio. The latter agreed to yield and become vassal, but had no confidence in the
-general whom he had just defeated. His memory of Chinese perfidy was still so fresh,
-that he felt unable to trust himself to his recently humbled enemies, and the negotiations
-ended in failure. As usual, with the unsuccessful, the Chinaman lost his head.
-</p>
-<p>Recourse was again had to the sword. The Chinese crossed the Ta-tong River on the
-north, and defeating the Chō-sen army, <span class="pageNum" id="pb18">[<a href="#pb18">18</a>]</span>marched to the king’s capital, and laid siege to it in conjunction with the naval
-forces. In spite of their superior numbers, the invaders were many months vainly beleaguering
-the fortress. Yet, though the garrison wasted daily, the king would not yield. Knowing
-that defeat, with perhaps a cruel massacre, awaited them, four Chō-sen men, awaiting
-their opportunity, during the fighting, discharged their weapons at Yukio, and leaving
-him dead, opened the gates of the citadel, and the Chinese entered.
-</p>
-<p>With the planting of the Han banners on the city walls, <span class="asc">B.C.</span> 107, the existence of the kingdom of Chō-sen came to an end. Henceforth, for several
-centuries, Liao Tung and the land now comprised within the two northwestern provinces
-of Corea, were parts of China.
-</p>
-<p>The conquered territory was at once divided into four provinces, two of which comprised
-that part of Corea north of the Ta-tong River. The other two were in Liao Tung, occupying
-its eastern and its western half. Within the latter was the district of Kokorai, or
-Kaokuli, at whose history we shall now glance.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p018width" id="p018"><img src="images/p018.png" alt="Coin of Modern Chō-sen. “Chō-sen, Current Treasure.”" width="188" height="184"><p class="figureHead">Coin of Modern Chō-sen. “Chō-sen, Current Treasure.”</p>
-</div><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb19">[<a href="#pb19">19</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch3" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e855">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER III.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE FUYU RACE AND THEIR MIGRATIONS.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Somewhere north of that vast region watered by the Sungari River, itself only a tributary
-to the Amur, there existed, according to Chinese tradition, in very ancient times,
-a petty kingdom called Korai, or To-li. Out of this kingdom sprang the founder of
-the Corean race. Slightly altering names, we may say in the phrase of Genesis: “Out
-of Korai went forth Ko and builded Corea,” though what may be sober fact is wrapped
-up in the following fantastic legend.
-</p>
-<p>Long, long ago, in the kingdom called To-li, or <i>Korai</i> (so pronounced, though the characters are not those for the Korai of later days),
-there lived a king, in whose harem was a waiting-maid. One day, while her master was
-absent on a hunt, she saw, floating in the atmosphere, a glistening vapor which entered
-her bosom. This ray or tiny cloud seemed to be about as big as an egg. Under its influence,
-she conceived.
-</p>
-<p>The king, on his return, discovered her condition, and made up his mind to put her
-to death. Upon her explanation, however, he agreed to spare her life, but at once
-lodged her in prison.
-</p>
-<p>The child that was born proved to be a boy, which the king promptly cast among the
-pigs. But the swine breathed into his nostrils and the baby lived. He was next put
-among the horses, but they also nourished him with their breath, and he lived. Struck
-by this evident will of Heaven, that the child should live, the king listened to its
-mother’s prayers, and permitted her to nourish and train him in the palace. He grew
-up to be a fair youth, full of energy, and skilful in archery. He was named “Light
-of the East,” and the king appointed him Master of his stables.
-</p>
-<p>One day, while out hunting, the king permitted him to give an exhibition of his skill
-This he did, drawing bow with such unerring aim that the royal jealousy was kindled,
-and he thought of <span class="pageNum" id="pb20">[<a href="#pb20">20</a>]</span>nothing but how to compass the destruction of the youth. Knowing that he would be
-killed if he remained in the royal service, the young archer fled the kingdom. He
-directed his course to the southeast, and came to the borders of a vast and impassable
-river, most probably the Sungari. Knowing his pursuers were not far behind him he
-cried out, in a great strait,
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p020width" id="p020"><img src="images/p020.png" alt="The Founder of Fuyu Crossing the Sungari River. (Drawn by G. Hashimoto, Yedo, 1853.)" width="702" height="684"><p class="figureHead">The Founder of Fuyu Crossing the Sungari River. (Drawn by G. Hashimoto, Yedo, 1853.)</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>“Alas! shall I, who am the child of the Sun, and the grandson of the Yellow River,
-be stopped here powerless by this stream.”
-</p>
-<p>So saving he shot his arrows at the water.
-</p>
-<p>Immediately all the fishes of the river assembled together in a thick shoal, making
-so dense a mass that their bodies became a floating bridge. On this, the young prince
-(and according to the <span class="pageNum" id="pb21">[<a href="#pb21">21</a>]</span>Japanese version of the legend, three others with him), crossed the stream and safely
-reached the further side. No sooner did he set foot on land than his pursuers appeared
-on the opposite shore, when the bridge of fishes at once dissolved. His three companions
-stood ready to act as his guides. One of the three was dressed in a costume made of
-sea-weeds, a second in hempen garments, and a third in embroidered robes. Arriving
-at their city, he became the king of the tribe and kingdom of Fuyu, which lay in the
-fertile and well-watered region between the Sungari River and the Shan Alyn, or Ever-White
-Mountains. It extended several hundred miles east and west of a line drawn southward
-through Kirin, the larger half lying on the west.
-</p>
-<p>Fuyu, as described by a Chinese writer of the Eastern Han dynasty (25 <span class="asc">B.C.</span>–190 <span class="asc">A.D.</span>), was a land of fertile soil, in which “the five cereals” (wheat, rice, millet, beans,
-and sorghum) could be raised. The men were tall, muscular, and brave, and withal generous
-and courteous to each other. Their arms were bows and arrows, swords, and lances.
-They were skilful horsemen. Their ornaments were large pearls, and cut jewels of red
-jade. They made spirits from grain, and were fond of drinking bouts, feasting, dancing,
-and singing. With many drinkers there were few cups. The latter were rinsed in a bowl
-of water, and with great ceremony passed from one to another. They ate with chopsticks,
-out of bowls, helping themselves out of large dishes.
-</p>
-<p>It is a striking fact that the Fuyu people, though living so far from China, were
-dwellers in cities which they surrounded with palisades or walls of stakes. They lived
-in wooden houses, and stored their crops in granaries.
-</p>
-<p>In the administration of justice, they were severe and prompt. They had regular prisons,
-and fines were part of their legal system. The thief must repay twelve-fold. Adultery
-was punished by the death of both parties. Further revenge might be taken upon the
-woman by exposing her dead body on a mound. Certain relatives of a criminal were denied
-burial in a coffin. The other members of the family of a criminal suffering capital
-punishment were sold as slaves. Murderers were buried alive with their victims.
-</p>
-<p>The Fuyu religion was a worship of Heaven, their greatest festival being in the eleventh
-month, when they met joyfully together, laying aside all grudges and quarrels, and
-freeing their prisoners. Before setting out on a military expedition they worshipped
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb22">[<a href="#pb22">22</a>]</span>Heaven, and sacrificed an ox, examining the hoof, to obtain an omen. If the cloven
-part remained separated, the portent was evil, if the hoof closed together, the omen
-was auspicious.
-</p>
-<p>The Fuyu chief men or rulers were named after the domestic beasts, beginning with
-their noblest animal, the horse, then the ox, the dog, etc. Rulers of cities were
-of this order. Their king was buried at his death in a coffin made of jade.
-</p>
-<p>Evidently the Fuyu people were a vigorous northern race, well clothed and fed, rich
-in grain, horses and cattle, possessing the arts of life, with considerable literary
-culture, and well advanced in social order and political knowledge. Though the Chinese
-writers classed them among barbarians, they were, in contrast with their immediate
-neighbors, a civilized nation. Indeed, to account for such a high stage of civilization
-thus early and so far from China, Mr. Ross suggests that the scene of the Ki Tsze’s
-labors was in Fuyu, rather than in Chō-sen. Certain it is that the Fuyu people were
-the first nation of Manchuria to emerge from barbarism, and become politically well
-organized. It is significant, as serving to support the conjecture that Ki Tsze founded
-Fuyu, that we discern, even in the early history of this vigorous nation, the institution
-of feudalism. We find a king and nobles, with fortified cities, and wealthy men, with
-farms, herds of horses, cattle, and granaries. We find also a class of serfs, created
-by the degradation of criminals or their relatives. The other Manchurian people, or
-barbarians, surrounding China, were still in the nomadic or patriarchal state. Why
-so early beyond China do we find a well-developed feudal system and high political
-organization?
-</p>
-<p>It was from feudal China, the China of the Yin dynasty, from which Ki Tsze emigrated
-to the northeast. Knowing no other form of government, he, if their founder, doubtless
-introduced feudal forms of government.
-</p>
-<p>Whatever may be thought of the theory there suggested, it is certainly surprising
-to find a distinctly marked feudal system, already past the rudimentary stage, in
-the wilderness of Manchuria, a thousand miles away from the seats of Chinese culture,
-as early as the Christian era.
-</p>
-<p>As nearly the whole of Europe was at some time feudalized, so China, Corea, and Japan
-have each passed through this stage of political life.
-</p>
-<p>The feudal system in China was abolished by Shi Whang Ti, <span class="pageNum" id="pb23">[<a href="#pb23">23</a>]</span>the first universal Emperor, <span class="asc">B.C.</span> 221, but that of Japan only after an interval of 2,000 years, surviving until 1871.
-It lingers still in Corea, whose history it has greatly influenced, as our subsequent
-narrative will prove. In addition to the usual features of feudalism, the existence
-of serfdom, in fact as well as in form, is proved by the testimony of Dutch and French
-observers, and of the language itself. The richness of Corean speech, in regard to
-every phase and degree of servitude, would suffice for a Norman landholder in mediæval
-England, or for a Carolina cotton-planter before the American civil war.
-</p>
-<p>Out of this kingdom of Fuyu came the people who are the ancestors of the modern Coreans.
-In the same Chinese history which describes Fuyu, we have a picture of the kingdom
-of Kokorai (or Kao-ku-li), which had Fuyu for its northern and Chō-sen for its southern
-neighbor. “The land was two thousand li square, and contained many great mountains,
-and deep valleys.” There was a tradition among the Eastern barbarians that they were
-an offshoot from Fuyu. Hence their language and laws were very much alike. The nation
-was divided into five families, named after the four points of the compass, with a
-yellow or central tribe.
-</p>
-<p>Evidently this means that a few families, perhaps five in number, leaving Fuyu, set
-out toward the south, and in the valleys west of the Yalu River and along the 42d
-parallel, founded a new nation. Their first king was Ko, who, perhaps, to gain the
-prestige of ancient descent, joined his name to that of Korai (written however with
-the characters which make the sound of modern Korai) and thus the realm of Kokorai
-received its name.
-</p>
-<p>A Japanese writer derives the term Kokorai from words selected out of a passage in
-the Chinese classics referring to the high mountains. The first character Ko, in Kokorai,
-means high, and it was under the shadows of the lofty Ever White Mountains that this
-vigorous nation had its cradle and its home in youth. Here, too, its warriors nourished
-their strength until their clouds of horsemen burst upon the frontiers of the Chinese
-empire, and into the old kingdom of Chō-sen. The people of this young state were rich
-in horses and cattle, but less given to agriculture. They lived much in the open air,
-and were fierce, impetuous, strong, and hardy. They were fond of music and pleasure
-at night. Especially characteristic was their love of decoration and display. At their
-public gatherings they decked themselves in <span class="pageNum" id="pb24">[<a href="#pb24">24</a>]</span>dresses embroidered with gold and silver. Their houses were also adorned in various
-ways. Their chief display was at funerals, when a prodigal outlay of precious metals,
-jewels, and embroideries was exhibited.
-</p>
-<p>In their religion they sacrificed to Heaven, to the spirits of the land, and of the
-harvests, to the morning star, and to the celestial and invisible powers. There were
-no prisons, but when crimes were committed the chiefs, after deliberation, put the
-criminal to death and reduced the wives and children to slavery. In this way serfs
-were provided for labor. In their burial customs, they made a cairn, and planted fir-trees
-around it, as many Japanese tombs are made.
-</p>
-<p>In the general forms of their social, religious, and political life, the people of
-Fuyu and Kokorai were identical, or nearly so; while both closely resemble the ancient
-Japanese of Yamato.
-</p>
-<p>The Chinese authors also state that these people were already in possession of the
-Confucian classics, and had attained to an unusual degree of literary culture. Their
-officials were divided into twelve ranks, which was also the ancient Japanese number.
-In the method of divination, in the wearing of flowery costumes, and in certain forms
-of etiquette, they and the Japanese were alike. As is now well known, the ancient
-form of government of the Yamato Japanese (that is, of the conquering race from Corea
-and the north) was a rude feudalism and not a monarchy. Further, the central part
-of Japan, first held by the ancestors of the mikado, consists of <i>five</i> provinces, like the Kokorai division, into five clans or tribes.
-</p>
-<p>At the opening of the Christian era we find the people of Kokorai already strong and
-restless enough to excite attention from the Chinese court. In 9 <span class="asc">A.D.</span> they were recognized as a nation with their own “kings,” and classified with Huentu,
-one of the districts of old Chō-sen. One of these kings, in the year 30, sent tribute
-to the Chinese emperor. In 50 <span class="asc">A.D.</span> Kokorai, by invitation, sent their warriors to assist the Chinese army against a
-rebel horde in the northwest. In <span class="asc">A.D.</span> 70 the men of Kokorai descended upon Liao Tung, and having now a taste for border
-war and conquest, they marched into the petty kingdom of Wei, which lay in what is
-now the extreme northeast of Corea. Absorbing this little country, they kept up constant
-warfare against the Chinese. Though their old kinsmen, the Fuyu men, were at times
-allies of the Han, yet they gradually spread themselves eastward and southward, so
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb26">[<a href="#pb26">26</a>]</span>that by 169 <span class="asc">A.D.</span> the Kokorai kingdom embraced the whole of the territory of old Chō-sen, or of Liao
-Tung, with all the Corean peninsula north of the Ta-tong, and even to the Tumen River.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p025width" id="p025"><img src="images/p025.png" alt="Fuyu and Manchiu." width="470" height="720"><p class="figureHead">Fuyu and Manchiu.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>This career of conquest suffered a check for a time, when a Chinese expedition, sailing
-up the Yalu River, invested the capital city of the king and defeated his army. The
-king fled beyond the Tumen River. Eight thousand people are said to have been made
-prisoners or slaughtered by the Chinese. For a time it seemed as though Kokorai were
-too badly crippled to move again.
-</p>
-<p>Anarchy broke out in China, on the fall of the house of Han, <span class="asc">A.D.</span> 220, and lasted for half a century. That period of Chinese history, from 221 to 277,
-is called the “Epoch of the Three Kingdoms.” During this period, and until well into
-the fifth century, while China was rent into “Northern” and “Southern” divisions,
-the military activities of Kokorai were employed with varying results against the
-petty kingdoms that rose and fell, one after the other, on the soil between the Great
-Wall and the Yalu River. During this time the nation, free from the power and oppression
-of China, held her own and compacted her power. In the fifth century her warriors
-had penetrated nearly as far west as the modern Peking in their cavalry raids. Wily
-in diplomacy, as brave in war, they sent tribute to both of the rival claimants for
-the throne of China which were likely to give them trouble in the future. Dropping
-the family name of their first king, they retained that of their ancestral home-land,
-and called their nation Korai.
-</p>
-<p>Meanwhile, as they multiplied in numbers, the migration of Kokorai people, henceforth
-known as Korai men, set steadily southward. Weakness in China meant strength in Korai.
-The Chinese had bought peace with their Eastern neighbors by titles and gifts, which
-left the Koraians free to act against their southern neighbors. In steadily displacing
-these, they came into collision with the little kingdom of Hiaksai, whose history
-will be narrated farther on. It will be seen that the Korai men, people of the Fuyu
-race, finally occupied the territory of Hiaksai. Already the Koraians, sure of further
-conquest southward, fixed their capital at Ping-an.
-</p>
-<p>In 589 <span class="asc">A.D.</span> the house of Sui was established on the dragon throne, and a portentous message was
-sent to the King of Korai, which caused the latter to make vigorous war preparations.
-Evidently the Chinese emperor meant to throttle the young giant of the north, while
-the young giant was equally determined to live. <span class="pageNum" id="pb27">[<a href="#pb27">27</a>]</span>The movement of a marauding force of Koraians, even to the inside of the Great Wall,
-gave the bearded dragon not only the pretext of war but of annexation.
-</p>
-<p>For this purpose an army of three hundred thousand men and a fleet of several hundred
-war-junks were prepared. The latter were to sail over from Shantung, and enter the
-Ta-tong River, the goal of the expedition being Ping-an city, the Koraian capital
-</p>
-<p>The horde started without provisions, and arrived in mid-summer at the Liao River
-in want of food. While waiting, during the hot weather, in this malarious and muddy
-region, the soldiers died by tens of thousands of fever and plague. The incessant
-rains soon rendered the roads impassable and transport of provisions an impossibility.
-Disease melted the mighty host away, and the army, reduced to one-fifth its numbers,
-was forced to retreat The war-junks fared no better, for storms in the Yellow Sea
-drove them back or foundered them by the score.
-</p>
-<p>Such a frightful loss of life and material did not deter the next emperor, the infamous
-Yang (who began the Grand Canal), from following out the scheme of his father, whom
-he conveniently poisoned while already dying. In spite of the raging famines and losses
-by flood, the emperor ordered magazines for the armies of invasion to be established
-near the coast, and contingents of troops for the twenty-four corps to be raised in
-every province. All these preparations caused local famines and drove many of the
-people into rebellion.
-</p>
-<p>This army, one of the greatest ever assembled in China, numbered over one million
-men. Its equipment consisted largely of banners, gongs, and trumpets. The undisciplined
-horde began their march, aiming to reach the Liao River before the hot season set
-in. They found the Koraian army ready to dispute their passage. Three bridges, hastily
-constructed, were thrown across the stream, on which horse and foot pressed eagerly
-toward the enemy. The width of the river had, however, been miscalculated and the
-bridges were too short, so that many thousands of the Chinese were drowned or killed
-by the Koraians, at unequal odds, while fighting on the shore. In two days, however,
-the bridges were lengthened and the whole force crossed over. The Chinese van pursued
-their enemy, slaughtering ten thousand before they could gain the fortified city of
-Liao Tung. Once inside their walls, however, the Korai soldiers were true to their
-reputation of being splendid garrison fighters. Instead of easy victory the <span class="pageNum" id="pb28">[<a href="#pb28">28</a>]</span>Chinese army lay around the city unable, even after several months’ besieging, to
-breach the walls or weaken the spirit of the defenders.
-</p>
-<p>Meanwhile the other division had marched northward and eastward, according to the
-plan of the campaign. Eight of these army corps, numbering 300,000 men, arrived and
-went into camp on the west bank of the Yalu River. In spite of express orders to the
-contrary, the soldiers had thrown away most of the hundred days’ rations of grain
-with which they started, and the commissariat was very low. The Koraian commander,
-carrying out the Fabian policy, tempted them away from their camp, and led them by
-skirmishing parties to within a hundred miles of Ping-an. The Chinese fleet lay within
-a few leagues of the invading army, but land and sea forces were mutually ignorant
-of each other’s vicinity. Daring not to risk the siege of a city so well fortified
-by nature and art as Ping-an, in his present lack of supplies, the Chinese general
-reluctantly ordered a retreat, which began in late summer, the nearest base of supplies
-being Liao Tung, four hundred miles away and through an enemy’s country.
-</p>
-<p>This was the signal for the Koraians to assume the offensive, and like the Cossacks,
-upon the army of Napoleon, in Russia, they hung upon the flanks of the hungry fugitives,
-slaughtering thousands upon thousands.
-</p>
-<p>When the Chinese host were crossing the Chin-chion River, the Koraian army fell in
-full force upon them, and the fall of the commander of their rear-guard turned defeat
-into a rout. The disorderly band of fugitives rested not till well over and beyond
-the Yalu River. Of that splendid army of 300,000 men only a few thousand reached Liao
-Tung city. The weapons, spoil, and prisoners taken by the Koraians were “myriads of
-myriads of myriads.” The naval forces in the river, on hearing the amazing news of
-their comrades’ defeat, left Corea and crept back to China. The Chinese emperor was
-so enraged at the utter failure of his prodigious enterprise, that he had the fugitive
-officers publicly put to death as an example.
-</p>
-<p>In spite of the disasters of the previous year, the emperor Yang, in 613, again sent
-an army to besiege Liao Tung city. On this occasion scaling ladders, 150 feet long,
-and towers, mounted on wheels, were used with great effect. Just on the eve of the
-completion of their greatest work and tower the Chinese camp was suddenly abandoned,
-the emperor being called home to put <span class="pageNum" id="pb29">[<a href="#pb29">29</a>]</span>down a formidable rebellion. So cautious were the besieged and so sudden was the flight
-of the besiegers, that it was noon before a Koraian ventured into camp, and two days
-elapsed before they discovered that the retreat was not feigned. Then the Koraian
-garrison attacked the Chinese rear-guard with severe loss.
-</p>
-<p>The rebellion at home having been put down the emperor again cherished the plan of
-crushing Korai, but other and greater insurrections broke out that required his attention;
-for the three expeditions against Corea had wasted the empire even as they had sealed
-the doom of the Sui dynasty. Though no land forces could be spared, a new fleet was
-sent to Corea to lay siege to Ping-an city. Even with large portions of his dominions
-in the hands of rebels, Tang never gave up his plan of humbling Korai. This project
-was the cause of the most frightful distress in China, and seeing no hope of saving
-the country except by the murder of the infamous emperor, coward, drunkard, tyrant,
-and voluptuary, a band of conspirators, headed by Yü Min, put him to death and Korai
-had rest.
-</p>
-<p>To summarize this chapter. It is possible that Ki Tsze was the founder of Fuyu. The
-Kokorai tribes were people who had migrated from Fuyu, and settled north and west
-of the upper waters of the Yalu River. They entered into relations with the Chinese
-as early as 9 <span class="asc">A.D.</span>, and coming into collision with them by the year 70, they kept up a fitful warfare
-with them, sustaining mighty invasions, until the seventh century, while in the meantime
-Korai, instead of being crushed by China, grew in area and numbers until the nation
-had spread into the peninsula, and overrun it as far as the Han River.
-</p>
-<hr class="tb"><p>
-</p>
-<p>Thus far the history of Corea has been that of the northern and western part of the
-peninsula, and has been derived chiefly from Chinese sources. We turn now to the southern
-and eastern portions, and in narrating their history we shall point out their relations
-with Japan as well as with China, relying largely for our information upon the Japanese
-annals.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb30">[<a href="#pb30">30</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch4" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e863">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER IV.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">SAM-HAN, OR SOUTHERN COREA.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">At the time of the suppression of Chō-sen and the incorporation of its territory with
-the Chinese Empire, <span class="asc">B.C.</span> 107, all Corea south of the Ta-tong River was divided into three han, or geographical
-divisions. Their exact boundaries are uncertain, but their general topography may
-be learned from the map.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p030width" id="p030"><img src="images/p030.png" alt="Map of Sam-han in Southern Corea." width="675" height="700"><p class="figureHead">Map of Sam-han in Southern Corea.</p>
-</div><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb31">[<a href="#pb31">31</a>]</span></p>
-<div class="div2 section"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main">MA-HAN AND BEN-HAN.</h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">This little country included fifty-four tribes or clans, each one independent of the
-other, and living under a sort of patriarchal government. The larger tribes are said
-to have been composed of ten thousand, and the smaller of a thousand, families each.
-Round numbers, however, in ancient records are worth little for critical purposes.
-</p>
-<p>South of the Ma-han was the Ben-han, in which were twelve tribes, having the same
-manners and customs as the Ma-han, and speaking a different yet kindred dialect. One
-of these clans formed the little kingdom of Amana, from which came the first visit
-of Coreans recorded in the Japanese annals.
-</p>
-<p>After the overthrow of his family and kingdom by the traitor Wei-man, Kijun, the king
-of old Chō-sen escaped to the sea and fled south toward the archipelago. He had with
-him a number of his faithful adherents, their wives and children. He landed among
-one of the clans of Ma-han, composed of Chinese refugees, who, not wishing to live
-under the Han emperors, had crossed the Yellow Sea. On account of their numbering,
-originally, one hundred families, they called themselves Hiaksai. Either by conquest
-or invitation Kijun soon became their king. Glimpses of the manner of life of these
-early people are given by a Chinese writer.
-</p>
-<p>The Ma-han people were agricultural, dwelling in villages, but neither driving nor
-riding oxen or horses, most probably because they did not possess them. Their huts
-were made of earth banked upon timber, with the door in the roof. They went bareheaded,
-and coiled or tied their hair in a knot. They set no value on gold, jewels, or embroidery,
-but wore pearls sewed on their clothes and hung on their necks and ears. Perhaps the
-word here translated “pearl” may be also applied to drilled stones of a cylindrical
-or curved shape, like the <i>magatama</i>, or “bent jewels,” of the ancient Japanese. They shod their feet with sandals, and
-wore garments of woven stuff. In etiquette they were but slightly advanced, paying
-little honor to women or to the aged. Like our Indian bucks, the young men tested
-their endurance by torture. Slitting the skin of the back, they ran a cord through
-the flesh, upon which was hung a piece of wood. This was kept suspended till the man,
-unable longer to endure it, cried out to have it taken off.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb32">[<a href="#pb32">32</a>]</span></p>
-<p>After the field work was over, in early summer, they held drinking bouts, in honor
-of the spirits, with songs and dances. Scores of men, quickly following each other,
-stamped on the ground to beat time as they danced. In the late autumn, after harvests,
-they repeated these ceremonies. In each clan there was a man, chosen as ruler, to
-sacrifice to the spirits of heaven. On a great pole they hung drums and bells for
-the service of the heavenly spirits. Perhaps these are the originals of the tall and
-slender pagodas with their pendant wind-bells at the many eaves and corners.
-</p>
-<p>Among the edible products of Ma-han were fowls with tails five feet in length. These
-“hens with tails a yard long” were evidently pheasants—still a delicacy on Corean
-tables. The large apple-shaped pears, which have a wooden taste, half way between
-a pear and an apple, were then, as now, produced in great numbers. The flavor improves
-by cooking.
-</p>
-<p>As Kijun’s government was one of vigor, his subjects advanced in civilization, the
-Hiaksai people gradually extended their authority and influence. The clan names in
-time faded away or became symbols of family bonds instead of governmental authority,
-so that by the fourth century Hiaksai had become paramount over all the fifty-four
-tribes of Ma-han, as well as over some of those of the other two <i>han</i>.
-</p>
-<p>Thus arose the kingdom of Hiaksai (called also Kudara by the Japanese, Petsi by the
-Chinese, and Baiji by the modern Coreans), which has a history extending to the tenth
-century, when it was extinguished in name and fact in united Corea.
-</p>
-<p>Its relations with Japan were, in the main, friendly, the islanders of the Sunrise
-Kingdom being comrades in arms with them against their invaders, the Chinese, and
-their hostile neighbors, the men of Shinra—whose origin we shall now proceed to detail.
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div2 section"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main">SHIN-HAN.</h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">After the fall of the Tsin dynasty in China, a small body of refugees, leaving their
-native seats, fled across the Yellow Sea toward the Sea of Japan, resting only when
-over the great mountain chain. They made settlements in the valleys and along the
-sea-coast. At first they preserved their blood and language pure, forming one of the
-twelve clans or tribes into which the han or country was divided.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb33">[<a href="#pb33">33</a>]</span></p>
-<p>This name Shin (China or Chinese), which points to the origin of the clan, belonged
-to but one of the twelve tribes in eastern Corea. As in the case of Hiaksai, the Shin
-tribe, being possessed of superior power and intelligence, extended their authority
-and boundaries, gradually becoming very powerful. Under their twenty-second hereditary
-chief, or “king,” considering themselves paramount over all the clans, they changed
-the name of their country to Shinra, which is pronounced in Chinese Sinlo.
-</p>
-<p>Between the years 29 and 70 <span class="asc">A.D.</span>, according to the Japanese histories, an envoy from Shinra arrived in Japan, and
-after an audience had of the mikado, presented him with mirrors, swords, jade, and
-other works of skill and art. In this we have a hint as to the origin of Japanese
-decorative art. It is evident from these gifts, as well as from the reports of Chinese
-historians concerning the refined manners, the hereditary aristocracy, and the fortified
-strongholds of the Shinra people, that their grade of civilization was much higher
-than that of their northern neighbors. It was certainly superior to that of the Japanese,
-who, as we shall see, were soon tempted to make descents upon the fertile lands, rich
-cities, and defenceless coasts of their visitors from the west.
-</p>
-<p>How long the Chinese colonists who settled in Shin-han preserved their language and
-customs is not known. Though these were lost after a few generations, yet it is evident
-that their influence on the aborigines of the country was very great. From first to
-last Shinra excelled in civilization all the petty states in the peninsula, of which
-at first there were seventy-eight. Unlike the Ma-han, the Shin-han people lived in
-palisaded cities, and in houses the doors of which were on the ground and not on the
-roof. They cultivated mulberry-trees, reared the silk-worm, and wove silk into fine
-fabrics. They used wagons with yoked oxen, and horses for draught, and practised “the
-law of the road.” Marriage was conducted with appropriate ceremony. Dancing, drinking,
-and singing were favorite amusements, and the lute was played in addition to drums.
-They understood the art of smelting and working iron, and used this metal as money.
-They carried on trade with the other <i>han</i>, and with Japan. How far these arts owed their encouragement or origin to traders,
-or travelling merchants from China, is not known. Evidently Shinra enjoyed leadership
-in the peninsula, largely from her culture, wealth, and knowledge of iron. The curious
-custom, so well known among <span class="pageNum" id="pb34">[<a href="#pb34">34</a>]</span>American savages, of flattening the heads of newly born infants, is noted among the
-Shin-han people.
-</p>
-<p>Neither Chinese history nor Japanese tradition, though they give us some account of
-a few hundred families of emigrants from China who settled in the already inhabited
-Corean peninsula, throws any light on the aborigines as to whence or when they came.
-The curtain is lifted only to show us that a few people are already there, with language
-and customs different from those of China. The descendants of the comparatively few
-Chinese settlers were no doubt soon lost, with their language and ancestral customs,
-among the mass of natives. These aboriginal tribes were destined to give way to a
-new people from the far north, as we shall learn in our further narrative. The Japanese
-historians seem to distinguish between the San Han, the three countries or confederacies
-of loosely organized tribes, and the San Goku, or Three Kingdoms. The Coreans, however,
-speak only of the Sam-han, meaning thereby the three political divisions of the peninsula,
-and using the word as referring rather to the epoch. The common “cash,” or fractional
-coin current in the country, bears the characters meaning “circulating medium of the
-Three Kingdoms,” or Sam-han. These were Korai in the north, Shinra in the southeast,
-and Hiaksai in the southwest. Other Japanese names for these were respectively Komé,
-Shiriaki, and Kudara, the Chinese terms being Kaoli, Sinlo, and Pe-tsi.
-</p>
-<p>Like the three kingdoms of England, Scotland, and Wales, called also Britannia, Caledonia,
-and Cambria, these Corean states were distinct in origin, were conquered by a race
-from without, received a rich infusion of alien blood, struggled in rivalry for centuries,
-and were finally united into one nation, with one flag and one sovereign.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p034width" id="p034"><img src="images/p034.png" alt="Coin of the Sam-han or the Three Kingdoms. “Sam-han, Current Treasure.”" width="174" height="173"><p class="figureHead">Coin of the Sam-han or the Three Kingdoms. “Sam-han, Current Treasure.”</p>
-</div><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb35">[<a href="#pb35">35</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch5" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e872">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER V.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">EPOCH OF THE THREE KINGDOMS.—HIAKSAI.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The history of the peninsular states from the time in which it is first known until
-the tenth century, is that of almost continuous civil war or border fighting. The
-boundaries of the rival kingdoms changed from time to time as raid and reprisal, victory
-or defeat, turned the scale of war. A series of maps of the peninsula expressing the
-political situation during each century or half-century would show many variations
-of boundaries, and resemble those of Great Britain when the various native and continental
-tribes were struggling for its mastery. Something like an attempt to depict these
-changes in the political geography of the peninsula has been made by the Japanese
-historian, Otsuki Tōyō, in his work entitled “Historical Periods and Changes of the
-Japanese Empire.”
-</p>
-<p>Yet though our narrative, through excessive brevity, seems to be only a picture of
-war, we must not forget that Hiaksai, once lowest in civilization, rapidly became,
-and for a while continued, the leading state in the peninsula. It held the lead in
-literary culture until crushed by China. The classics of Confucius and Mencius, with
-letters, writing, and their whole train of literary blessings, were introduced first
-to the peninsula in Hiaksai. In 374 <span class="asc">A.D.</span> Ko-ken was appointed a teacher or master of Chinese literature, and enthusiastic
-scholars gathered at the court. Buddhism followed with its educational influences,
-becoming a focus of light and culture. As early as 372 <span class="asc">A.D.</span> an apostle of northern Buddhism had penetrated into Liao Tung, and perhaps across
-the Yalu. In 384 <span class="asc">A.D.</span> the missionary Marananda, a Thibetan, formally established temples and monasteries
-in Hiaksai, in which women as well as men became scholastics. Long before this new
-element of civilization was rooted in Shinra or Korai, the faith of India was established
-and flourishing in the little kingdom of Hiaksai, so that its influences were felt
-as far as Japan. The first <span class="pageNum" id="pb36">[<a href="#pb36">36</a>]</span>teacher of Chinese letters and ethics in Nippon was a Corean named Wani, as was also
-the first missionary who carried the images and sutras of northern Buddhism across
-the Sea of Japan. To Hiaksai more than to any other Corean state Japan owes her first
-impulse toward the civilization of the west.
-</p>
-<p>Hiaksai came into collision with Kokorai as early as 345 <span class="asc">A.D.</span>, at which time also Shinra suffered the loss of several cities. In the fifth century
-a Chinese army, sent by one of the emperors of the Wei dynasty to enforce the payment
-of tribute, was defeated by Hiaksai. Such unexpected military results raised the reputation
-of “the eastern savages” so high in the imperial mind, that the emperor offered the
-King of Hiaksai the title of “Great Protector of the Eastern Frontier.” By this act
-the independence of the little kingdom was virtually recognized. In the sixth century,
-having given and received Chinese aid and comfort in alliance with Shinra against
-Korai, Hiaksai was ravaged in her borders by the troops of her irate neighbor on the
-north. Later on we find these two states in peace with each other and allied against
-Shinra, which had become a vassal of the Tang emperors of China.
-</p>
-<p>From this line of China’s rulers the kingdoms of Korai and Hiaksai were to receive
-crushing blows. In answer to Shinra’s prayer for aid, the Chinese emperor, in 660,
-despatched from Shantung a fleet of several hundred sail with 100,000 men on board.
-Against this host from the west the Hiaksai army could make little resistance, though
-they bravely attacked the invaders, but only to be beaten. After a victory near the
-mouth of the Rin-yin River, the Chinese marched at once to the capital of Hiaksai
-and again defeated, with terrible slaughter, the provincial army. The king fled to
-the north, and the city being nearly empty of defenders, the feeble garrison opened
-the gates. The Tang banners fluttered on all the walls, and another state was absorbed
-in the Chinese empire. For a time Hiaksai, like a fly snapped up by an angry dog,
-is lost in China.
-</p>
-<p>Not long, however, did the little kingdom disappear from sight. In 670 a Buddhist
-priest, fired with patriotism, raised an army of monks and priests, and joining Fuku-shin
-(Fu-sin), a brave general, they laid siege to a city held by a large Chinese garrison.
-At the same time they sent word to the emperor of Japan praying for succor against
-the “robber kingdom.” They also begged that Hōsho (Fung), the youthful son of the
-late king, then a hostage and pupil at the mikado’s court, might be invested <span class="pageNum" id="pb37">[<a href="#pb37">37</a>]</span>with the royal title and sent home. The mikado despatched a fleet of 400 junks and
-a large body of soldiers to escort the royal heir homeward. On his arrival Hōsho was
-proclaimed king.
-</p>
-<p>Meanwhile the priest-army and the forces under Fuku-shin had reconquered nearly all
-their territory, when they suffered a severe defeat near the sea-coast from the large
-Chinese force hastily despatched to put down the rebellion. The invaders marched eastward
-and effected a junction with the forces of Shinra. The prospects of Hiaksai were now
-deplorable.
-</p>
-<p>For even among the men of Hiaksai there was no unity of purpose. Fuku-shin had put
-the priest-leader to death, which arbitrary act so excited the suspicions of the king
-that he in turn ordered his general to be beheaded. He then sent to Japan, appealing
-for reinforcements. The mikado, willing to help an old ally, and fearing that the
-Chinese, if victorious, might invade his own dominions, quickly responded. The Japanese
-contingent arrived and encamped near the mouth of the Han River, preparatory to a
-descent by sea upon Shinra. Unsuspecting the near presence of an enemy, the allies
-neglected their usual vigilance. A fleet of war-junks, flying the Tang streamers,
-suddenly appeared off the camp, and while the Japanese were engaging these, the Chinese
-land forces struck them in flank. Taken by surprise, the mikado’s warriors were driven
-like flocks of sheep into the water and drowned or shot by the Chinese archers. The
-Japanese vessels were burned as they lay at anchor in the bloody stream, and the remnants
-of the beaten army got back to their islands in pitiable fragments. Hōsho, after witnessing
-the destruction of his host, fled to Korai, and the country was given over to the
-waste and pillage of the infuriated Chinese. The royal line, after thirty generations
-and nearly seven centuries of rule, became extinct. The sites of cities became the
-habitations of tigers, and once fertile fields were soon overgrown. Large portions
-of Hiaksai became a wilderness.
-</p>
-<p>Though the Chinese Government ordered the bodies of those killed in war and the white
-bones of the victims of famine to be buried, yet many thousands of Hiaksai families
-fled elsewhere to find an asylum and to found new industries. The people who remained
-on their fertile lands, as well as all Southern Corea, fell under the sway of Shinra.
-</p>
-<p>The fragments of the beaten Japanese army gradually returned to their native country
-or settled in Southern Corea. Thousands <span class="pageNum" id="pb38">[<a href="#pb38">38</a>]</span>of the people of Hiaksai, detesting the idea of living as slaves of China, accompanied
-or followed their allies to Japan. On their arrival, by order of the mikado, 400 emigrants
-of both sexes were located in the province of Omi, and over 2,000 were distributed
-in the Kuantō, or Eastern Japan. These colonies of Coreans founded potteries, and
-their descendants, mingled by blood with the Japanese, follow the trade of their ancestors.
-</p>
-<p>In 710 another body of Hiaksai people, dissatisfied with the poverty of the country
-and tempted by the offers of the Japanese, formed a colony numbering 1,800 persons
-and emigrated to Japan. They were settled in Musashi, the province in which Tōkiō,
-the modern capital, is situated. Various other emigrations of Coreans to Japan of
-later date are referred to in the annals of the latter country, and it is fair to
-presume that tens of thousands of emigrants from the peninsula fled from the Tang
-invasion and mingled with the islanders, producing the composite race that inhabit
-the islands ruled by the mikado. Among the refugees were many priests and nuns, who
-brought their books and learning to the court at Nara, and thus diffused about them
-a literary atmosphere. The establishment of schools, the awakening of the Japanese
-intellect, and the first beginnings of the literature of Japan, the composition of
-their oldest historical books, the Kojiki and the Nihongi—all the fruits of the latter
-half of the seventh and early part of the eighth century—are directly traceable to
-this influx of the scholars of Hiaksai, which being destroyed by China, lived again
-in Japan. Even the pronunciation of the Chinese characters as taught by the Hiaksai
-teachers remains to this day. One of them, the nun Hōmiō, a learned lady, made her
-system so popular among the scholars that even an imperial proclamation against it
-could not banish it. She established her school in Tsushima, <span class="asc">A.D.</span> 655, and there taught that system of [Chinese] pronunciation [<i>Go-on</i>] which still holds sway in Japan, among the ecclesiastical literati, in opposition
-to the <i>Kan-on</i> of the secular scholars. The Go-on, the older of the two pronunciations, is that
-of ancient North China, the Kan-on is that of mediæval Southern China (Nanking). Corea
-and Japan having phonetic alphabets have preserved and stereotyped the ancient Chinese
-pronunciation better than the Chinese language itself, since the Chinese have no phonetic
-writing, but only ideographic characters, the pronunciation of which varies during
-the progress of centuries.
-</p>
-<p>Hiaksai had given Buddhism to Japan as early as 552 <span class="asc">A.D.</span>, but <span class="pageNum" id="pb39">[<a href="#pb39">39</a>]</span>opposition had prevented its spread, the temple was set on fire, and the images of
-Buddha thrown in the river. In 684 one Sayéki brought another image of Buddha from
-Corea, and Umako, son of Inamé, a minister at the mikado’s court, enshrined it in
-a chapel on his own grounds. He made Yeben and Simata, two Coreans, his priests, and
-his daughter a nun. They celebrated a festival, and henceforth Buddhism<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e1952src" href="#xd31e1952">1</a> grew apace.
-</p>
-<p>The country toward the sunrise was then a new land to the peninsulars, just as “the
-West” is to us, or Australia is to England; and Japan made these fugitives welcome.
-In their train came industry, learning, and skill, enriching the island kingdom with
-the best infusion of blood and culture.
-</p>
-<p>Hiaksai was the first of the three kingdoms that was weakened by civil war and then
-fell a victim to Chinese lust of conquest.
-</p>
-<p>The progress and fall of the other two kingdoms will now be narrated. Beginning with
-Korai, we shall follow its story from the year 613 <span class="asc">A.D.</span>, when the invading hordes of the Tang dynasty had been driven out of the peninsula
-with such awful slaughter by the Koraians.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb40">[<a href="#pb40">40</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e1952">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e1952src">1</a></span> There are colossal stone images at Pe-chiu (Pha-jiu) in the capital province, and
-at Un-jin in Chung-chong Dō. The former, discovered by Lieutenant J.&nbsp;G. Bernadon,
-<abbr title="United States Navy">U.S.N.</abbr>, are in the midst of a fir-wood, and are carved in half-figure out of bowlders in
-place, the heads and caps projecting over the tops of the trees. One wears a square
-cap and the other a round one, from which Mr. G.&nbsp;W. Aston conjectures that they symbolize
-the male and female elements in nature (p. 329). At Un-jin in Chung-chong Dō Mr. G.&nbsp;C.
-Foulke, U.S.N., saw, at a distance of fifteen miles, what seemed to be a lighthouse.
-On approach, this half-length human figure proved to be a pinnacle of white granite,
-sixty-four feet high, cut into a representation of Buddha. Similar statues may perhaps
-be discovered elsewhere. Coreans call such figures <i>miryek</i> (stone men, as the Chinese characters given in the French-Corean dictionary read),
-or <i>miriok</i>, from the Chinese <i>Mi-lē</i>, or Buddha. (In Japanese, the Buddha to come is <i>Miroku-butsu</i>—a verbal coincidence.) Professor Terrien de Lacouperie has written upon this theme
-with great learning. Besides the lop-ears, forehead-mark, and traditional countenance
-seen in the Buddhas of Chinese Asia, there is on the Un-jin figure a very high double
-cap, on which are set two slabs of stone joined by a central column, suggesting both
-the ceremonial cap of ancient Chinese ritual and the Indian pagoda-like umbrella.
-These <i>miriok</i> stand in what was once Hiaksai. In his “Life in Corea,” Mr. Carles gives a picture
-of the one at Un-jin. Smaller ones exist near monasteries and temples.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e1952src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch6" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e880">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER VI.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">EPOCH OF THE THREE KINGDOMS.—KORAI.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">After the struggle in which the Corean tiger had worsted the Western Dragon, early
-in the seventh century, China and Korai were for a generation at peace. The bones
-of the slain were buried, and sacrificial fires for the dead soothed the spirits of
-the victims. The same imperial messenger, who in 622 was sent to supervise these offices
-of religion, also visited each of the courts of the three kingdoms. So successful
-was he in his mission of peaceful diplomacy, that each of the Corean states sent envoys
-with tribute and congratulation to the imperial throne. In proof of his good wishes,
-the emperor returned to his vassals all his prisoners, and declared that their young
-men would be received as students in the Imperial University at his capital. Henceforth,
-as in many instances during later centuries, the sons of nobles and promising youth
-from Korai, Shinra, and Hiaksai went to study at Nanking, where their envoys met the
-Arab traders.
-</p>
-<p>Korai having been divided into five provinces, or circuits, named respectively the
-Home, North, South, East, and West divisions, extended from the Sea of Japan to the
-Liao River, and enjoyed a brief spell of peace, except always on the southern border;
-for the chronic state of Korai and Shinra was that of mutual hostility. On the north,
-beyond the Tumen River, was the kingdom of Pu-hai, with which Korai was at peace,
-and Japan was in intimate relations, and China at jealous hostility.
-</p>
-<p>The Chinese court soon began to look with longing eyes on the territory of that part
-of Korai lying west of the Yalu River, believing it to be a geographical necessity
-that it should become their scientific frontier, while the emperor cherished the hope
-of soon rectifying it. Though unable to forget the fact that one of his predecessors
-had wasted millions of lives and tons of treasure in vainly attempting to humble Kokorai,
-his ambition and pride <span class="pageNum" id="pb41">[<a href="#pb41">41</a>]</span>spurred him on to wade through slaughter to conquest and revenge. He waited only for
-a pretext.
-</p>
-<p>This time the destinies of the Eastern Kingdom were profoundly influenced by the character
-of the feudalism brought into it from ancient times, and which was one of the characteristic
-institutions of the Fuyu race.
-</p>
-<p>The Government of Korai was simply that of a royal house, holding, by more or less
-binding ties of loyalty, powerful nobles, who in turn held their lands on feudal tenure.
-In certain contingencies these noble land-holders were scarcely less powerful than
-the king himself.
-</p>
-<p>In 641 one of these liegemen, whose ambition the king had in vain attempted to curb
-and even to put to death, revenged himself by killing the king with his own hands.
-He then proclaimed as sovereign the nephew of the dead king, and made himself prime
-minister. Having thus the control of all power in the state, and being a man of tremendous
-physical strength and mental ability, all the people submitted quietly to the new
-order of things, and were at the same time diverted, being sent to ravage Shinra,
-annexing all the country down to the 37th parallel. The Chinese emperor gave investiture
-to the new king, but ordered this Corean Warwick to recall his troops from invading
-Shinra, the ally of China. The minister paid his tribute loyally, but refused to acknowledge
-the right of China to interfere in Corean politics. The tribute was then sent back
-with insult, and war being certain to follow, Korai prepared for the worst. War with
-China has been so constant a phenomenon in Corean history that a special term, Ho-ran,
-exists and is common in the national annals, since the “Chinese wars” have been numbered
-by the score.
-</p>
-<p>Again the sails of an invading fleet whitened the waters of the Yellow Sea, carrying
-the Chinese army of chastisement that was to land at the head of the peninsula, while
-two bodies of troops were despatched by different routes landward. The Tang emperor
-was a stanch believer in Whang Ti, the Asiatic equivalent of the European doctrine
-of the divine right of kings to reign—a tenet as easily found by one looking for it
-in the Confucian classics, as in the Hebrew scriptures. He professed to be marching
-simply to vindicate the honor of majesty and to punish the regicide rebel, but not
-to harm nobles or people. The invaders soon overran Liao Tung, and city after city
-fell. The emperor himself accompanied the army and burned his bridges after the crossing
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb42">[<a href="#pb42">42</a>]</span>of every river. In spite of the mud and the summer rains he steadily pushed his way
-on, helping with his own hands in the works at the sieges of the walled cities—the
-ruins of which still litter the plains of Liao Tung. In one of these, captured only
-after a protracted investment, 10,000 Koraians are said to have been slain. In case
-of submission on summons, or after a slight defence, the besieged were leniently and
-even kindly treated. By July all the country west of the Yalu was in possession of
-the Chinese, who had crossed the river and arrived at Anchiu, only forty miles north
-of Ping-an city.
-</p>
-<p>By tremendous personal energy and a general levy in mass, an army of 150,000 Korai
-men was sent against the Chinese, which took up a position on a hill about three miles
-from the city. The plan of the battle that ensued, made by the Chinese emperor himself,
-was skilfully carried out by his lieutenants, and a total defeat of the entrapped
-Koraian army followed, the slain numbering 20,000. The next day, with the remnant
-of his army, amounting to 40,000 men, the Koraian general surrendered. Fifty thousand
-horses and 10,000 coats of mail were among the spoils. The foot soldiers were dismissed
-and ordered home, but the Koraian leaders were made prisoners and marched into China.
-</p>
-<p>After so crushing a loss in men and material, one might expect instant surrender of
-the besieged city. So far from this, the garrison redoubled the energy of their defence.
-In this we see a striking trait of the Corean military character which has been noticed
-from the era of the Tangs, and before it, down to Admiral Rodgers. Chinese, Japanese,
-French, and Americans have experienced the fact and marvelled thereat. It is that
-the Coreans are poor soldiers in the open field and exhibit slight proof of personal
-valor. They cannot face a dashing foe nor endure stubborn fighting. But put the same
-men behind walls, bring them to bay, and the timid stag amazes the hounds. Their whole
-nature seems reinforced. They are more than brave. Their courage is sublime. They
-fight to the last man, and fling themselves on the bare steel when the foe clears
-the parapet. The Japanese of 1592 looked on the Corean in the field as a kitten, but
-in the castle as a tiger. The French, in 1866, never found a force that could face
-rifles, though behind walls the same men were invincible. The American handful of
-tars kept at harmless distance thousands of black heads in the open, but inside the
-fort they met giants in bravery. No nobler foe ever met American steel. Even when
-disarmed <span class="pageNum" id="pb43">[<a href="#pb43">43</a>]</span>they fought their enemies with dust and stones until slain to the last man. The sailors
-found that the sheep in the field were lions in the fort.
-</p>
-<p>The Coreans themselves knew both their forte and their foible, and so understood how
-to foil the invader from either sea. Shut out from the rival nations on the right
-hand and on the left by the treacherous sea, buttressed on the north by lofty mountains,
-and separated from China by a stretch of barren or broken land, the peninsula is easily
-secure against an invader far from his base of supplies. The ancient policy of the
-Coreans, by which they over and over again foiled their mighty foe and finally secured
-their independence, was to shut themselves up in their well-provisioned cities and
-castles, and not only beat off but starve away their foes. In their state of feudalism,
-when every city and strategic town of importance was well fortified, this was easily
-accomplished. The ramparts gave them shelter, and their personal valor secured the
-rest. Reversing the usual process of starving out a beleaguered garrison, the besiegers,
-unable to fight on empty stomachs, were at last obliged to raise the siege and go
-home. Long persistence in this resolute policy finally saved Corea from the Chinese
-colossus, and preserved her individuality among nations.
-</p>
-<p>Faithful to their character, as above set forth, the Koraians held their own in the
-city of Anchiu, and the Chinese could make no impression upon it. In spite of catapults,
-scaling ladders, movable towers, and artificial mounds raised higher than the walls,
-the Koraians held out, and by sorties bravely captured or destroyed the enemy’s works.
-Not daring to leave such a fortified city in their rear, the Chinese could not advance
-further, while their failing provisions and the advent of frost showed them that they
-must retreat.
-</p>
-<p>Hungrily they turned their faces toward China.
-</p>
-<p>In spite of the intense chagrin of the foiled Chinese leader, so great was his admiration
-for the valor of the besieged that he sent the Koraian commander a valuable present
-of rolls of silk. The Koraians were unable to pursue the flying invaders, and few
-fell by their weapons. But hunger, the fatigue of crossing impassable oceans of worse
-than Virginia mud, cold winds, and snow storms destroyed thousands of the Chinese
-on their weary homeward march over the mountain passes and quagmires of Liao Tung.
-The net results of the campaign were great glory to Korai; <span class="pageNum" id="pb44">[<a href="#pb44">44</a>]</span>and besides the loss of ten cities, 70,000 of her sons were captives in China, and
-40,000 lay in battle graves.
-</p>
-<p>According to a custom which Californians have learned in our day, the bones of the
-Chinese soldiers who died or were killed in the campaign were collected, brought into
-China, and, with due sacrificial rites and lamentations by the emperor, solemnly buried
-in their native soil. Irregular warfare still continued between the two countries,
-the offered tribute of Korai being refused, and the emperor waiting until his resources
-would justify him in sending another vast fleet and army against defiant Korai. While
-thus waiting he died.
-</p>
-<p>After a few years of peace, his successor found occasion for war, and, in 660 <span class="asc">A.D.</span>, despatched the expedition which crushed Hiaksai, the ally of Korai, and worried,
-without humbling, the latter state. In 664 Korai lost its able leader, the regicide
-prime minister—that rock against which the waves of Chinese invasion had dashed again
-and again in vain.
-</p>
-<p>His son, who would have succeeded to the office of his father, was opposed by his
-brother. The latter, fleeing to China, became guide to the hosts again sent against
-Korai “to save the people and to chastise their rebellious chiefs.” This time Korai,
-without a leader, was doomed. The Chinese armies having their rear well secured by
-a good base of supplies, and being led by skilful commanders, marched on from victory
-to victory, until, at the Yalu River, the various detachments united, and breaking
-the front of the Korai army, scattered them and marched on to Ping-an. The city surrendered
-without the discharge of an arrow. The line of kings of Korai came to an end after
-twenty-eight generations, ruling over 700 years.
-</p>
-<p>All Korai, with its five provinces, its 176 cities, and its four or five millions
-of people, was annexed to the Chinese empire. Tens of thousands of Koraian refugees
-fled into Shinra, thousands into Pu-hai, north of the Tumen, then a rising state;
-and many to the new country of Japan. Desolated by slaughter and ravaged by fire and
-blood, war and famine, large portions of the land lay waste for generations. Thus
-fell the second of the Corean kingdoms, and the sole dominant state now supreme in
-the peninsula was Shinra, an outline of whose history we shall proceed to give.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb45">[<a href="#pb45">45</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch7" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e888">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER VII.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">EPOCH OF THE THREE KINGDOMS.—SHINRA.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">When Shinra becomes first known to us from Japanese tradition, her place in the peninsula
-is in the southeast, comprising portions of the modern provinces of Kang-wen and Kiung-sang.
-The people in this warm and fertile part of the peninsula had very probably sent many
-colonies of settlers over to the Japanese Islands, which lay only a hundred miles
-off, with Tsushima for a stepping-stone. It is probable that the “rebels” in Kiushiu,
-so often spoken of in old Japanese histories, were simply Coreans or their descendants,
-as, indeed, the majority of the inhabitants of Kiushiu originally had been. The Yamato
-tribe, which gradually became paramount in Japan, were probably immigrants of old
-Kokorai stock, that is, men of the Fuyu race, who had crossed from the north of Corea
-over the Sea of Japan, to the land of Sunrise, just as the Saxons and Engles pushed
-across the North Sea to England. They found the Kumaso, or Kiushiu “rebels,” troublesome,
-mainly because these settlers from the west, or southern mainland of Corea, considered
-themselves to be the righteous owners of the island rather than the Yamato people.
-At all events, the pretext that led the mikado Chiu-ai, who is said to have reigned
-from 192 to 200 <span class="asc">A.D.</span>, to march against them was, that these people in Kiushiu would not acknowledge his
-authority. His wife, the Amazonian queen Jingu, was of the opinion that the root of
-the trouble was to be found in the peninsula, and that the army should be sent across
-the sea. Her husband, having been killed in battle, the queen was left to carry out
-her purposes, which she did at the date said to be 202 <span class="asc">A.D.</span> She set sail from Hizen, and reached the Asian mainland probably at the harbor of
-Fusan. Unable to resist so well-appointed a force, the king of Shinra submitted and
-became the declared vassal of Japan. Envoys from Hiaksai and another of the petty
-kingdoms also came to the Japanese camp and made friends with the invaders. After
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb46">[<a href="#pb46">46</a>]</span>a two months’ stay, the victorious fleet, richly laden with precious gifts and spoil,
-returned.
-</p>
-<p>How much of truth there is in this narrative of Jingu it is difficult to tell. The
-date given cannot be trustworthy. The truth seems at least this, that Shinra was far
-superior to the Japan of the early Christian centuries. Buddhism was formally established
-in Shinra in the year 528; and as early as the sixth century a steady stream of immigrants—traders,
-artists, scholars, and teachers, and later Buddhist missionaries—passed from Shinra
-into Japan, interrupted only by the wars which from time to time broke out. The relations
-between Nippon and Southern Corea will be more fully related in another chapter, but
-it will be well to remember that the Japanese always laid claim to the Corean peninsula,
-and to Shinra especially, as a tributary nation. They supported that claim not only
-whenever embassies from the two nations met at the court of China, but they made it
-a more or less active part of their national policy down to the year 1876. Many a
-bloody war grew out of this claim, but on the other hand many a benefit accrued to
-Japan, if not to Shinra.
-</p>
-<p>Meanwhile, in the peninsula the leading state expanded her borders by gradual encroachments
-upon the little “kingdom” of Mimana to the southwest and upon Hiaksai on the north.
-The latter, having always considered Shinra to be inferior, and even a <span class="corr" id="xd31e2034" title="Source: dependant">dependent</span>, war broke out between the two states as soon as Shinra assumed perfect independence.
-Korai and Hiaksai leagued themselves against Shinra, and the game of war continued,
-with various shifting of the pieces on the board, until the tenth century. The three
-rival states mutually hostile, the Japanese usually friends to Hiaksai, the Chinese
-generally helpers of Shinra, the northern nations beyond the Tumen and Sungari assisting
-Korai, varying their operations in the field with frequent alliances and counter-plots,
-make but a series of dissolving-views of battle and strife, into the details of which
-it is not profitable to enter. Though Korai and Hiaksai felt the heaviest blows from
-China, Shinra was harried oftenest by the armies of her neighbors and by the Japanese.
-Indeed, from a tributary point of view, it seems questionable whether her alliances
-with China were of any benefit to her. In times of peace, however, the blessings of
-education and civilization flowed freely from her great patron. Though farthest east
-from China, it seems certain that Shinra was, in many respects, the most highly civilized
-of the three states. Especially was this <span class="pageNum" id="pb47">[<a href="#pb47">47</a>]</span>the case during the Tang era (618–905 <span class="asc">A.D.</span>), when the mutual relations between China and Shinra were closest, and arts, letters,
-and customs were borrowed most liberally by the pupil state. Even at the present time,
-in the Corean idiom, “Tang-yang” (times of the Tang and Yang dynasties) is a synonym
-of prosperity. The term for “Chinese,” applied to works of art, poetry, coins, fans,
-and even to a certain disease, is “Tang,” instead of the ordinary word for China,
-since this famous dynastic title represents to the Corean mind, as to the student
-of Kathayan history, one of the most brilliant epochs known to this longest-lived
-of empires. What the names of Plantagenet and Tudor represent to an Anglo-Saxon mind,
-the terms Tang and Sung are to a Corean.
-</p>
-<p>During this period, Buddhism was being steadily propagated, until it became the prevailing
-cult of the nation. Reserving the story of its progress for a special chapter, we
-notice in this place but one of its attendant blessings. In the civilization of a
-nation, the possession of a vernacular alphabet must be acknowledged to be one of
-the most potent factors for the spread of intelligence and culture. It is believed
-by many linguists that the Choctaws and Coreans have the only two perfect alphabets
-in the world. It is agreed by natives of Chō-sen that their most profound scholar
-and ablest man of intellect was Chul-chong, a statesman at the court of Kion-chiu,
-the capital of Shinra. This famous penman, a scholar in the classics and ancient languages
-of India as well as China, is credited with the invention of the Nido, or Corean syllabary,
-one of the simplest and most perfect “alphabets” in the world. It expresses the sounds
-of the Corean language far better than the <i>kata-kana</i> of Japan expresses Japanese. Chul-chong seems to have invented the <i>Nido</i> syllabary by giving a phonetic value to a certain number of selected Chinese characters,
-which are ideographs expressing ideas but not sounds. Perhaps the Sanskrit alphabet
-suggested the model both for manner of use and for forms of letters. The Nido is composed
-almost entirely of straight lines and circles, and the letters belonging to the same
-class of labials, dentals, etc., have a similarity of form easily recognized. The
-Coreans state that the Nido was invented in the early part of the eighth century,
-and that it was based on the Sanskrit alphabet. It is worthy of note that, if the
-date given be true, the Japanese kata-kana, invented a century later, was perhaps
-suggested by the Corean.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb48">[<a href="#pb48">48</a>]</span></p>
-<p>One remarkable effect of the use of phonetic writing in Corea and Japan has been to
-stereotype, and thus to preserve, the ancient sounds and pronunciation of words of
-the Chinese, which the latter have lost. These systems of writing outside of China
-have served, like Edison’s phonographs, in registering and reproducing the manner
-in which the Chinese spoke, a whole millennium ago. This fact has already opened a
-fertile field of research, and may yet yield rich treasures of discovery to the sciences
-of history and linguistics.
-</p>
-<p>Certainly, however, we may gather that the Tang era was one of learning and literary
-progress in Corea, as in Japan—all countries in pupilage to China feeling the glow
-of literary splendor in which the Middle Kingdom was then basking. The young nobles
-were sent to obtain their education at the court and schools of Nanking, and the fair
-damsels of Shinra bloomed in the harem of the emperor. Imperial ambassadors frequently
-visited the court of this kingdom in the far east. Chinese costume and etiquette were,
-for a time, at least, made the rigorous rule at court. On one occasion, in 653 <span class="asc">A.D.</span>, the envoy from Shinra to the mikado came arrayed in Chinese dress, and, neglecting
-the ceremonial forms of the Japanese court, attempted to observe those of China. The
-mikado was highly irritated at the supposed insult. The premier even advised that
-the Corean be put to death; but better counsels prevailed. During the eighth and ninth
-centuries this flourishing kingdom was well known to the Arab geographers, and it
-is evident that Mussulman travellers visited Shinra or resided in the cities of the
-peninsula for purposes of trade and commerce, as has been shown before.
-</p>
-<p>Kion-chiu, the capital of Shinra, was a brilliant centre of art and science, of architecture
-and of literary and religious light. Imposing temples, grand monasteries, lofty pagodas,
-halls of scholars, magnificent gateways and towers adorned the city. In campaniles,
-equipped with water-clocks and with ponderous bells and gongs, which, when struck,
-flooded the valleys and hill-tops with a rich resonance, the sciences of astronomy
-and horoscopy were cultivated. As from a fountain, rich streams of knowledge flowed
-from the capital of Shinra, both over the peninsula and to the court of Japan. Even
-after the decay of Shinra’s power in the political unity of the whole peninsula, the
-nation looked upon Kion-chiu as a sacred city. Her noble temples, halls, and towers
-stood in honor and repair, enshrining the treasures of India, Persia, <span class="pageNum" id="pb49">[<a href="#pb49">49</a>]</span>and China, until the ruthless Japanese torch laid them in ashes in 1596.
-</p>
-<p>The generation of Corean people during the seventh century, when the Chinese hordes
-desolated large portions of the peninsula and crushed out Hiaksai and Korai, saw the
-borders of Shinra extending from the Everlasting White Mountains to the Island of
-Tsushima, and occupying the entire eastern half of the peninsula. From the beginning
-of the eighth until the tenth century, Shinra is the supreme state, and the political
-power of the Eastern Kingdom is represented by her alone. Her ambition tempted, or
-her Chinese master commanded, her into an invasion of the kingdom of Pu-hai beyond
-her northern border, 733 <span class="asc">A.D.</span> Her armies crossed the Tumen, but met with such spirited resistance that only half
-of them returned. Shinra’s desire of conquest in that direction was appeased, and
-for two centuries the land had rest from blood.
-</p>
-<p>Until Shinra fell, in 934 <span class="asc">A.D.</span>, and united Corea rose on the ruins of the three kingdoms, the history of this state,
-as found in the Chinese annals, is simply a list of her kings, who, of course, received
-investiture from China. On the east, the Japanese, having ceased to be her pupils
-in civilization during times of peace, as in time of war they were her conquerors,
-turned their attention to Nanking, receiving directly therefrom the arts and sciences,
-instead of at second-hand through the Corean peninsula. They found enough to do at
-home in conquering all the tribes in the north and east and centralizing their system
-of government after the model of the Tangs in China. For these reasons the sources
-of information concerning the eighth and ninth centuries fail, or rather it is more
-exact to say that the history of Shinra is that of peace instead of war. In 869 we
-read of pirates from her shores descending upon the Japanese coast to plunder the
-tribute ships from Buzen province, and again, in 893, that a fleet of fifty junks,
-manned by these Corean rovers, was driven off from Tsushima by the Japanese troops,
-with the loss of three hundred slain. Another descent of “foreign pirates,” most probably
-Coreans, upon Iki Island, in 1019, is recorded, the strangers being beaten off by
-reinforcements from the mainland. The very existence of these marauders is, perhaps,
-a good indication that the power of the Shinra government was falling into decay,
-and that lawlessness within the kingdom was preparing the way for some mighty hand
-to not only seize the existing state, but to unite all Corea <span class="pageNum" id="pb50">[<a href="#pb50">50</a>]</span>into political, as well as geographical, unity. In the far north another of those
-great intermittent movements of population was in process, which, though destroying
-the kingdom of Puhai beyond the Tumen, was to repeople the desolate land of Korai,
-and again call a dead state to aggressive life. From the origin to the fall of Shinra
-there were three royal families of fifty-five kings, ruling nine hundred and ninety-three
-years, or seven years less than a millennium.
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">Despite the modern official name of the kingdom, Chō-sen, the people of Corea still
-call their country Gaoli, or Korai, clinging to the ancient name. In this popular
-usage, unless we are mistaken, there is a flavor of genuine patriotism. Chō-sen does
-indeed mean Morning Calm, but the impression made on Western ears, and more vividly
-upon the eye by means of the Chinese characters, is apt to mislead. The term is less
-a reflection of geographical position than of the inward emotions of those who first
-of all were more Chinese than Corean in spirit, and of a desire for China’s favor.
-The term Chō-sen savors less of dew and dawn than of policy and prosy fact. It is
-probable, despite the Corean’s undoubted love of nature and beautiful scenery, that
-Americans and Europeans have been led astray as to the real significance of the phrase
-“morning calm.” At the bottom, it means rather peace with China than the serenity
-of dewy morning. Audience of the Chinese emperor to his vassals is always given at
-daybreak, and to be graciously received after the long and tedious prostrations is
-an auspicious beginning as of a day of heaven upon earth. To the founder of Corea,
-Ki Tsze, the gracious favor of the Chow emperor was as “morning calm;” and so to Ni
-Taijo, in 1392 <span class="asc">A.D.</span>, was the sunshine of the Ming emperor’s favor. In both instances the name Chō-sen
-given to their realm had, in reality, immediate reference to the dayspring of China’s
-favor, and “the calm of dawn” to the smile of the emperor.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb51">[<a href="#pb51">51</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch8" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e896">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">JAPAN AND COREA.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">It is as nearly impossible to write the history of Corea and exclude Japan, as to
-tell the story of mediæval England and leave out France. Not alone does the finger
-of sober history point directly westward as the immediate source of much of what has
-been hitherto deemed of pure Japanese origin, but the fountain-head of Japanese mythology
-is found in the Sungari valley, or under the shadows of the Ever-White Mountains.
-The first settler of Japan, like him of Fuyu, crosses the water upright upon the back
-of a fish, and brings the rudiments of literature and civilization with him. The remarkable
-crocodiles and sea-monsters, from which the gods and goddesses are born and into which
-they change, the dragons and tide-jewels and the various mystic symbols which they
-employ to work their spells, the methods of divination and system of prognostics,
-the human sacrifices and the manner of their rescue, seem to be common to the nations
-on both sides of the Sea of Japan, and point to a common heritage from the same ancestors.
-Language comes at last with her revelations to furnish proofs of identity.
-</p>
-<p>The mischievous Susanoō, so famous in the pre-historic legends, told in the Kojiki,
-half scamp, half benefactor, who planted all Japan with trees, brought the seeds from
-which they grew from Corea. His rescue of the maiden doomed to be devoured by the
-eight-headed dragon (emblem of water, and symbolical of the sea and rivers) reads
-like a gallant fellow saving one of the human beings who for centuries, until the
-now ruling dynasty abolished the custom, were sacrificed to the sea on the Corean
-coast fronting Japan. In Kiōto, on Gi-on Street, there is a temple which tradition
-declares was “founded in 656 <span class="asc">A.D.</span> by a Corean envoy in honor of Susanoō, to whom the name of Go-dzu Tenno (Heavenly
-King of Go-dzu) was given, because he was originally worshipped in Go-dzu Mountain
-in Corea.”
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb52">[<a href="#pb52">52</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Dogs are not held in any honor in Japan, as they were anciently in Kokorai. Except
-the silk-haired, pug-nosed, and large-eyed <i>chin</i>, which the average native does not conceive as canine, the dogs run at large, ownerless,
-as in the Levant; and share the work of street scavenging with the venerated crows.
-Yet there are two places of honor in which the golden and stone effigies of this animal—highly
-idealized indeed, but still <i>inu</i>—are enthroned.
-</p>
-<p>The <i>ama-inu</i>, or heavenly dogs, in fanciful sculpture of stone or gilt wood, represent guardian
-dogs. They are found in pairs guarding the entrances to miya or temples. As all miya
-(the name also of the mikado’s residence) were originally intended to serve as a model
-or copy of the palace of the mikado and a reminder of the divinity of his person and
-throne, it is possible that the <i>ama-inu</i> imitated the golden Corean dogs which support and guard the throne of Japan. Access
-to the shrine was had only by passing these two heavenly dogs. These creatures are
-quite distinct from the “dogs of Fo,” or the “lions” that flank the gateways of the
-magistrate’s office in China. Those who have had audience of the mikado in the imperial
-throne-room, as the writer had in January, 1873, have noticed at the foot of the throne,
-serving as legs or supports to the golden chair, on which His Majesty sits, two dogs
-sitting on their haunches, and upright on their forelegs. These fearful-looking creatures,
-with wide-open mouths, hair curled in tufts, especially around the front neck, and
-with tails bifurcated at their upright ends, are called “Corean dogs.” For what reason
-placed there we know not. It may be in witness of the conquest of Shinra by the empress
-Jingu, who called the king of Shinra “the dog of Japan,” or it may point to some forgotten
-symbolism in the past, or typify the vassalage of Corea—so long a fundamental dogma
-in Japanese politics. It is certainly strange to see this creature, so highly honored
-in Fuyu and dishonored among the vulgar in Japan, placed beneath the mikado’s throne.
-</p>
-<p>The Japanese laid claim to Corea from the second century until the 27th of February,
-1876. On that day the mikado’s minister plenipotentiary signed the treaty, recognizing
-Chō-sen as an independent nation. Through all the seventeen centuries which, according
-to their annals, elapsed since their armies first compelled the vassalage of their
-neighbor, the Japanese regarded the states of Corea as tributary. Time and again they
-enforced their <span class="pageNum" id="pb53">[<a href="#pb53">53</a>]</span>claim with bloody invasion, and when through a more enlightened policy the rulers
-voluntarily acknowledged their former enemy as an equal, the decision cost Japan almost
-immediately afterward seven months of civil war, 20,000 lives, and fifty millions
-of dollars in treasure. The mainspring of the “Satsuma rebellion” of 1877 was the
-official act of friendship by treaty, and the refusal of the Tōkiō Government to make
-war on Corea.
-</p>
-<p>From about the beginning of the Christian era until the fifteenth century the relations
-between the two nations were very close and active. Alternate peace and war, mutual
-assistance given, and embassies sent to and fro are recorded with lively frequency
-in the early Japanese annals, especially the Nihongi and Kojiki. A more or less continual
-stream of commerce and emigration seems to have set in from the peninsula. Some writers
-of high authority, who are also comparative students of the languages of the two countries,
-see in these events the origin of the modern Japanese. They interpret them to mean
-nothing less than the peopling of the archipelago by continental tribes passing through
-the peninsula, and landing in Japan at various points along the coast from Kiushiu
-to Kaga. Some of them think that Japan was settled wholly and only by Tungusic races
-of Northeastern Asia coming from or through Corea. They base their belief not only
-on the general stream and tendency of Japanese tradition, but also and more on the
-proofs of language.
-</p>
-<p>The first mention of Corea in the Japanese annals occurs in the fifth volume of the
-Nihongi, and is the perhaps half-fabulous narrative of ancient tradition. In the 65th
-year of the reign of the tenth mikado, Sujin (97–30 <span class="asc">B.C.</span>), a boat filled with people from the west appeared off the southern point of Chō-shiu,
-near the modern town of Shimonoséki. They would not land there, but steered their
-course from cape to cape along the coast until they reached the Bay of Keji no Wara
-in Echizen, near the modern city of Tsuruga. Here they disembarked and announced themselves
-from Amana Sankan (Amana of the Three Han or Kingdoms) in Southern Corea. They unpacked
-their treasures of finely wrought goods, and their leader made offerings to the mikado
-Sujin. These immigrants remained five years in Echizen, not far from the city of Fukui,
-till 28 <span class="asc">B.C.</span> Before leaving Japan, they presented themselves in the capital for a farewell audience.
-The mikado Mimaki, having died three years before, the visitors were requested on
-their return to call their country Mimana, <span class="pageNum" id="pb54">[<a href="#pb54">54</a>]</span>after their patron, as a memorial of their stay in Japan. To this they assented, and
-on their return named their district Mimana.
-</p>
-<p>Some traditions state that the first Corean envoy had a horn growing out of his forehead,
-and that since his time, and on account of it, the bay near which he dwelt was named
-Tsunaga (Horn Bay) now corrupted into Tsuruga.
-</p>
-<p>It may be added that nearly all mythical characters or heroes in Japanese and Chinese
-history are represented as having one or more very short horns growing out of their
-heads, and are so delineated in native art.
-</p>
-<p>Six years later an envoy from Shinra arrived, also bringing presents to the mikado.
-These consisted of mirrors, jade stone, swords, and other precious articles, then
-common in Corea but doubtless new in Japan.
-</p>
-<p>According to the tradition of the Kojiki (Book of Ancient Legends) the fourteenth
-mikado, Chiu-ai (<span class="asc">A.D.</span> 192–200) was holding his court at Tsuruga in Echizen, in <span class="asc">A.D.</span> 194, when a rebellion broke out in Kiushiu. He marched at once into Kiushiu, against
-the rebels, and there fell by disease or arrow. His consort, Jingu Kōgō, had a presentiment
-that he ought not to go into Kiushiu, as he would surely fail if he did, but that
-he should strike at the root of the trouble and sail at once to the west.
-</p>
-<p>After his death she headed the Japanese army and, leading the troops in person, quelled
-the revolt. She then ordered all the available forces of her realm to assemble for
-an invasion of Shinra. Japanese modern writers have laid great stress upon the fact
-that Shinra began the aggressions which brought on war, and in this fact justify Jingu’s
-action and Japan’s right to hold Corea as an honestly acquired possession.
-</p>
-<p>All being ready, the doughty queen regent set sail from the coast of Hizen, in Japan,
-in the tenth month <span class="asc">A.D.</span> 202, and beached the fleet safely on the coast of Shinra. The King of Shinra, accustomed
-to meet only with men from the rude tribes of Kiushiu, was surprised to see so well-appointed
-an army and so large a fleet from a land to the eastward. Struck with terror he resolved
-at once to submit. Tying his hands in token of submission and in presence of the queen
-Jingu, he declared himself the slave of Japan. Jingu caused her bow to be suspended
-over the gate of the palace of the king in sign of his submission. It is even said
-that she wrote on the gate “The King of Shinra is the dog of Japan.” Perhaps <span class="pageNum" id="pb55">[<a href="#pb55">55</a>]</span>these are historic words, which find their meaning to-day in the two golden dogs forming
-part of the mikado’s throne, like the Scotch “stone of Scone,” under the coronation
-chair in Westminster Abbey.
-</p>
-<p>The followers of Jingu evidently expected a rich booty, but after so peaceful a conquest
-the empress ordered that no looting should be allowed, and no spoil taken except the
-treasures constituting tribute. She restored the king to the throne as her vassal,
-and the tribute was then collected and laden on eighty boats with hostages for future
-annual tribute. The offerings comprised pictures, works of elegance and art, mirrors,
-jade, gold, silver, and silk fabrics.
-</p>
-<p>Preparations were now made to conquer Hiaksai also, when Jingu was surprised to receive
-the voluntary submission and offers of tribute of this country.
-</p>
-<p>The Japanese army remained in Corea only two months, but this brief expedition led
-to great and lasting results. It gave the Japanese a keener thirst for martial glory,
-it opened their eyes to a higher state of arts and civilization. From this time forth
-there flowed into the islands a constant stream of Corean emigrants, who gave a great
-impulse to the spirit of improvement in Japan. The Japanese accept the story of Jingu
-and her conquest as sound history, and adorn their greenback paper money with pictures
-of her foreign exploits. Critics reject many elements in the tradition, such as her
-controlling the waves and drowning the Shinra army by the jewels of the ebbing and
-the flowing tide,<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e2141src" href="#xd31e2141">1</a> and the delay of her accouchement by a magic stone carried in her girdle. The Japanese
-ascribe the glory of victory to her then unborn babe, afterward deified as Ojin, god
-of war, and worshipped by Buddhists as Hachiman or the Eight-bannered Buddha. Yet
-many temples are dedicated to Jingu, one especially famous is near Hiōgo, and Koraiji
-(Corean village) near Oiso, a few miles from Yokohama, has another which was at first
-built in her honor. Evidently the core of the narrative of conquest is fact.
-</p>
-<p>At the time when the faint, dim light of trustworthy tradition dawns, we find the
-people inhabiting the Japanese archipelago to be roughly divided, as to their political
-status, into four classes.
-</p>
-<p>In the central province around Kiōto ruled a kingly house—<span class="pageNum" id="pb56">[<a href="#pb56">56</a>]</span>the mikado and his family—with tributary nobles or feudal chiefs holding their lands
-on military tenure. This is the ancient classic land and realm of Yamato. Four other
-provinces adjoining it have always formed the core of the empire, and are called the
-Go-Kinai, or five home provinces, suggesting the five clans of Kokorai.
-</p>
-<p>To the north and east stretched the little known and less civilized region, peopled
-by tribes of kindred blood and speech, who spoke nearly the same language as the Yamato
-tribes, and who had probably come at some past time from the same ancestral seats
-in Manchuria, and called the Kuan-tō, or region east (<i>tō</i>) of the barrier (<i>kuan</i>) at Ozaka; or poetically Adzuma.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p056width" id="p056"><img src="images/p056.png" alt="Map of Ancient Japan and Corea." width="665" height="653"><p class="figureHead">Map of Ancient Japan and Corea.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>Still further north, on the main island and in Yezo, lived the Ainos or Ebisŭ, probably
-the aborigines of the soil—the straight-eyed men whose descendants still live in Yezo
-and the Kuriles. <span class="pageNum" id="pb57">[<a href="#pb57">57</a>]</span>The northern and eastern tribes were first conquered and thoroughly subdued by the
-Yamato tribes, after which all the far north was overrun and the Ainos subjugated.
-</p>
-<p>In the extreme south of the main island of Japan and in Kiushiu, then called Kumaso
-by the Yamato people, lived a number of tribes of perhaps the same ethnic stock as
-the Yamato Japanese, but further removed. Their progenitors had probably descended
-from Manchuria through Corea to Japan. Their blood and speech, however, were more
-mixed by infusions from Malay and southern elements. Into Kiushiu—it being nearest
-to the continent—the peninsulars were constantly coming and mingling with the islanders.
-</p>
-<p>The allegiance of the Kiushiu tribes to the royal house of Yamato was of a very loose
-kind. The history of these early centuries, as shown in the annals of Nihon, is but
-a series of revolts against the distant warrior mikado, whose life was chiefly one
-of war. He had often to leave his seat in the central island to march at the head
-of his followers to put down rebellions or to conquer new tribes. Over these, when
-subdued, a prince chosen by the conqueror was set to rule, who became a feudatory
-of the mikado.
-</p>
-<p>The attempts of the Yamato sovereign to wholly reduce the Kiushiu tribes to submission,
-were greatly frustrated by their stout resistance, fomented by emissaries from Shinra,
-who instigated them to “revolt,” while adventurers from the Corean mainland came over
-in large numbers and joined the “rebels,” who were, in one sense, their own compatriots.
-</p>
-<p>From the time of Jingu, if the early dates in Japanese history are to be trusted,
-may be said to date that belief, so firmly fixed in the Japanese mind, that Corea
-is, and always was since Jingu’s time, a tributary and dependency of Japan. This idea,
-akin to that of the claim of the English kings on France, led to frequent expeditions
-from the third to the sixteenth century, and which, even as late as 1874, 1875, and
-1877, lay at the root of three civil wars.
-</p>
-<p>All these expeditions, sometimes national, sometimes filibustering, served to drain
-the resources of Japan, though many impulses to development and higher civilization
-were thus gained, especially in the earlier centuries. It seemed, until 1877, almost
-impossible to eradicate from the military mind of Japan the conviction that to surrender
-Corea was cowardice and a stain on the national honor. But time will show, as it showed
-centuries ago <span class="pageNum" id="pb58">[<a href="#pb58">58</a>]</span>in England, that the glory and prosperity of the conqueror were increased, not diminished,
-when Japan relinquished all claim on her continental neighbor and treated her as an
-equal.
-</p>
-<p>The Coreans taught the Japanese the arts of peace, while the Coreans profited from
-their neighbors to improve in the business of war. We read that, in 316 <span class="asc">A.D.</span>, a Corean ambassador, bringing the usual tribute, presented to the mikado a shield
-of iron which he believed to be invulnerable to Japanese arrows. The mikado called
-on one of his favorite marksmen to practice in the presence of the envoy. The shield
-was suspended, and the archer, drawing bow, sent a shaft through the iron skin of
-the buckler to the astonishment of the visitor. In all their battles the Coreans were
-rarely able to stand in open field before the archers from over the sea, who sent
-true cloth-yard shafts from their oak and bamboo bows.
-</p>
-<p>The paying of tribute to a foreign country is never a pleasant duty to perform, though
-in times of prosperity and good harvests it is not difficult. In periods of scarcity
-from bad crops it is well nigh impossible. To insist upon its payment is to provoke
-rebellion. Instances are indeed given in Japanese history where the conquerors not
-only remitted the tribute but even sent ship loads of rice and barley to the starving
-Coreans. When, however, for reasons not deemed sufficient, or out of sheer defiance,
-their vassals refused to discharge their dues, they again felt the iron hand of Japan
-in war. During the reign of Yuriaki, the twenty-second mikado (<span class="asc">A.D.</span> 457–477), the three states failed to pay tribute. A Japanese army landed in Corea,
-and conquering Hiaksai, compelled her to return to her duty. The campaign was less
-successful in Shinra and Korai, for after the Japanese had left the Corean shores
-the “tribute” was sent only at intervals, and the temper of the half-conquered people
-was such that other expeditions had to be despatched to inflict chastisement and compel
-payment.
-</p>
-<p>The gallant but vain succor given by the Japanese to Hiaksai during the war with the
-Chinese, in the sixth century, which resulted in the destruction of the little kingdom,
-has already been detailed. Among the names, forever famous in Japanese art and tradition,
-of those who took part in this expedition are Saté-hiko and Kasi-wadé. The former
-sailed away from Hizen in the year 536, as one of the mikado’s body-guard to assist
-their allies the men of Hiaksai. A poetical legend recounts that his wife, Sayohimé,
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb59">[<a href="#pb59">59</a>]</span>climbed the hills of Matsura to catch the last glimpse of his receding sails. Thus
-intently gazing, with straining eyes, she turned to stone. The peasants of the neighborhood
-still discern in the <span class="corr" id="xd31e2188" title="Source: weathern-worn">weather-worn</span> rocks, high up on the cliffs, the figure of a lady in long trailing court dress with
-face and figure eagerly bent over the western waves. Not only is the name Matsura
-Sayohimé the symbol of devoted love, but from this incident the famous author Bakin
-constructed his romance of “The Great Stone Spirit of Matsura.”
-</p>
-<p>Kasiwadé, who crossed over to do “frontier service” in the peninsula a few years later,
-was driven ashore by a snow squall at an unknown part of the coast. While in this
-defenceless condition his camp was invaded by a tiger, which carried off and devoured
-his son, a lad of tender age. Kasiwadé at once gave chase and followed the beast to
-the mountains and into a cave. The tiger leaping out upon him, the wary warrior bearded
-him with his left hand, and buried his dirk in his throat. Then finishing him with
-his sabre, he skinned the brute and sent home the trophy. From olden times Chō-sen
-is known to Japanese children only as a land of tigers, while to the soldier the “marshal’s
-baton carried in his knapsack” is a tiger-skin scabbard, the emblem and possession
-of rank.
-</p>
-<p>As the imperial court of Japan looked upon Shinra and Hiaksai as outlying vassal states,
-the frequent military movements across the sea were reckoned under “frontier service,”
-like that beyond the latitude of Sado in the north of the main island, or in Kiushiu
-in the south. “The three countries” of Corea were far nearer and more familiar to
-the Japanese soldiers than were Yezo or the Riu Kiu Islands, which were not part of
-the empire till several centuries afterward. Kara Kuni, the country of Kara (a corruption
-of Korai?), as they now call China, was then applied to Corea. Not a little of classic
-poetry and legend in the Yamato language refers to this western frontier beyond the
-sea. The elegy on Ihémaro, the soldier-prince, who died at Iki Island on the voyage
-over, and that on the death of the Corean nun Riguwan, have been put into English
-verse by Mr. Chamberlain (named after the English explorer and writer on Corea, Basil
-Hall), in his “Classical Poetry of the Japanese.” This Corean lady left her home in
-714, and for twenty-one years found a home with the mikado’s Prime Minister, Otomo,
-and his wife, at Nara. She died in 735, while her hosts were away at the mineral <span class="pageNum" id="pb60">[<a href="#pb60">60</a>]</span>springs of Arima, near Kobé; and the elegy was written by their daughter. One stanza
-describes her life in the new country.
-</p>
-<div class="lgouter">
-<p class="line">“And here with aliens thou didst choose to dwell,
-</p>
-<p class="line xd31e2199">Year in, year out, in deepest sympathy;</p>
-<p class="line">And here thou builtest thee a holy cell,
-</p>
-<p class="line xd31e2199">And so the peaceful years went gliding by.”</p>
-</div>
-<p class="first">An interesting field of research is still open to the scholar who will point out all
-the monuments of Corean origin or influence in the mikado’s empire, in the arts and
-sciences, household customs, diet and dress, or architecture; in short, what by nature
-or the hand of man has been brought to the land of Sunrise from that of Morning Calm.
-One of the Corean princes, who settled in Japan early in the seventh century, founded
-a family which afterward ruled the famous province of Nagatō or Chōshiu. One of his
-descendants welcomed Francis Xavier, and aided his work by gifts of ground and the
-privilege of preaching. Many of the temples in Kiōto still contain images, paintings,
-and altar furniture brought from Corea. The “Pheasant Bridge” still keeps its name
-from bygone centuries; in a garden near by pheasants were kept for the supply of the
-tables of the Corean embassies. The Arab and Persian treasures of art and fine workmanship,
-in the imperial archives and museums of Nara, which have excited the wonder of foreign
-visitors, are most probably among the gifts or purchases from Shinra, where these
-imports were less rare. A Buddhist monk named Shiuho has gathered up the traditions
-and learning of the subject, so far as it illustrated his faith, and in “Precious
-Jewels from a Neighboring Country,” published in 1586, has written a narrative of
-the introduction of Buddhism from Corea and its literary and missionary influences
-upon Japan.
-</p>
-<p>Under the chapters on Art and Religion we shall resume this topic. As earnestly as
-the Japanese are now availing themselves of the science and progress of Christendom
-in this nineteenth century, so earnestly did they borrow the culture of the west,
-that is of Corea and China, a thousand years ago.
-</p>
-<p>The many thousands of Coreans, who, during the first ten centuries of the Christian
-era, but especially in the seventh, eighth, and ninth, settled in Japan, lived peaceably
-with the people of their adopted country, and loyally obeyed the mikado’s rule. An
-exception to this course occurred in 820, when seven hundred men who some time before
-had come from Shinra to Tōtōmi and Suruga revolted, <span class="pageNum" id="pb61">[<a href="#pb61">61</a>]</span>killed many of the Japanese, seized the rice in the store-houses, and put to sea to
-escape. The people of Musashi and Sagami pursued and attacked them, putting many of
-them to death.
-</p>
-<p>The general history of the Coreans in Japan divides itself into two parts. Those who
-came as voluntary immigrants in time of peace were in most cases skilled workmen or
-farmers, who settled in lands or in villages granted them, and were put on political
-and social equality with the mikado’s subjects. They founded industries, intermarried
-with the natives, and their identity has been lost in the general body of the Japanese
-people.
-</p>
-<p>With the prisoners taken in war, and with the laborers impressed into their service
-and carried off by force, the case was far different. These latter were set apart
-in villages by themselves—an outcast race on no social equality with the people. At
-first they were employed to feed the imperial falcons, or do such menial work, but
-under the ban of Buddhism, which forbids the destruction of life and the handling
-of flesh, they became an accursed race, the “Etas” or pariahs of the nation. They
-were the butchers, skinners, leather-makers, and those whose business it was to handle
-corpses of criminals and all other defiling things. They exist to-day, not greatly
-changed in blood, though in costume, language, and general appearance, it is not possible
-to distinguish them from Japanese of purest blood. By the humane edict of the mikado,
-in 1868, granting them all the rights of citizenship, their social condition has greatly
-improved.
-</p>
-<p>From the ninth century onward to the sixteenth, the relations of the two countries
-seem to be unimportant. Japan was engaged in conquering northward the barbarians of
-her main island and Yezo. Her intercourse, both political and religious, grew to be
-so direct with the court of China, that Corea, in the Japanese annals, sinks out of
-sight except at rare intervals. Nihon increased in wealth and civilization while Chō-sen
-remained stationary or retrograded. In the nineteenth century the awakened Sunrise
-Kingdom has seen her former self in the hermit nation, and has stretched forth willing
-hands to do for her neighbor now, what Corea did for Japan in centuries long gone
-by.
-</p>
-<p>Still, it must never be forgotten that Corea was not only the bridge on which civilization
-crossed from China to the archipelago, but was most probably the pathway of migration
-by which the rulers of the race now inhabiting Nihon reached it from their ancestral
-seats around the Sungari and the Ever-White Mountains. <span class="pageNum" id="pb62">[<a href="#pb62">62</a>]</span>True, it is not absolutely certain whether the homeland of the mikado’s ancestors
-lay southward in the sea, or westward among the mountains, but that the mass of the
-Corean and Japanese people are more closely allied in blood than either are with the
-Chinese, Manchius, or Malays, seems to be proved, not only by language and physical
-traits, but by the whole course of the history of both nations, and by the testimony
-of the Chinese records. Both Coreans and Japanese have inherited the peculiar institutions
-of their Fuyu ancestors—that race which alone of all the peoples sprung from Manchuria
-migrated toward the rising, instead of toward the setting, sun.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb63">[<a href="#pb63">63</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e2141">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e2141src">1</a></span> The story, told in full in the <i>Heiké Monogatari</i>, is given in English in “Japanese Fairy World.”&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e2141src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch9" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e905">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER IX.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">KORAI, OR UNITED COREA.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The fertile and well-watered region drained by the Amur River and its tributaries,
-stretching from the Pacific Ocean to Lake Baikal, covers the ancestral seats of many
-nations, and is perhaps the home of nations yet to arise. It may be likened to a great
-intermittent geyser-spring which, at intervals, overflows with terrific force and
-volume. The movements of population southward seem, on a review of Chinese and Corean
-history, almost as regular as a law of nature. As the conquerors from the central
-Asian plateaus have over and over again descended into India, as the barbarians overran
-the Roman empire, so out of the region drained by the Amur and its tributaries have
-burst forth, time and again, floods of conquest to overwhelm the rich plains of China.
-Or, if we regard the flowery and grassy lands of Manchuria and beyond as a great hive,
-full of busy life which, from the pressure of increasing numbers, must swarm off to
-relieve the old home, we shall have a true illustration. Time and again have clouds
-of human bees, with the sting of their swords and the honey of their new energy, issued
-from this ancient hive. The swarms receive different names in history: Hun, Turk,
-Tartar, Mongol, Manchiu, but they all emerge from the same source, giving or receiving
-dynastic names, but being in reality Tungusic people of the same basic stock.
-</p>
-<p>A tribe inhabiting one of the ravines or rich river flats of the Sungari region increases
-in wealth and numbers. A powerful chief leads them to war and victory. Tribes and
-lands are annexed. Martial valor, wealth, and strength increase. Ambition and the
-pressure of numbers tempt to farther conquest. Over and beyond the Great Wall is the
-ever-glittering prize—teeming China. The march begins southward. After many a battle,
-and only, it may be, after a generation of war against the imperial legions beyond
-the frontiers, the goal is reached. The Middle Kingdom is conquered and a new dynasty
-sits on the Dragon <span class="pageNum" id="pb64">[<a href="#pb64">64</a>]</span>Throne, until long peace enervates and luxury weakens. Then out of the old northern
-seats of population rolls a new flood of conquest, and a new swarm of conquerors is
-hived off.
-</p>
-<p>Thus we see the original land embracing the Amur and Sungari valleys has had its periods
-of power and decay, of historical and unhistorical life. Unity and movement make history,
-disintegration and apathy cause the page of history to be blank. But the land is still
-there with the people and the possibilities of the future.
-</p>
-<p>In spite of the associations of hoary antiquity that cluster around Asiatic countries,
-the reader of history does not expect to hear of single empires enduring through many
-centuries. With the exception of Japan, no nation of Asia can show a dynastic line
-extending through a millennium. The empires founded by Asiatic conquerors are short-lived.
-The countries and the people remain, but the rulers constantly change, and the building
-up, flourishing, decay, and dissolution suggest the seasons rather than the centuries.
-No enduring political fabrics, like those of Rome or Britain, are known in Asia. Though
-China and India abide like the oak, their rulers change like the leaves. Socially,
-these countries are the symbols of petrifaction, politically they are as the kaleidoscope.
-From this law of continuous political mutation, Corea has not been free.
-</p>
-<p>In one of these epochs of historical movement, at the opening of the eighth century,
-there arose the kingdom of Puhai, the capital of which was the present city of Kirin.
-Its northern boundaries first touched the Sungari, and later the Amur, shifting to
-the Sungari again. Its southern border was at first the Tumen River, and later the
-modern province of Ham-kiung was included in it. Lines drawn southwardly through Lake
-Hanka on the east, and Mukden on the west, would enclose its longitude. Its life lasted
-from about 700 to 925 <span class="asc">A.D.</span> This kingdom was continually on bad terms with China, and the Tang emperors for nearly
-a century attempted to crush it into vassalage. Puhai made brave resistance, being
-aided not only by the large numbers of Koraians, who had fled when beaten by the Chinese
-across the Tumen River, but also by the Japanese, whose supremacy they acknowledged
-by payment of tribute. With the latter their relations were always of a peaceful and
-pleasant nature, and the correspondence and other documents of the visiting embassies
-to the mikado’s court are still preserved in Japan.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb65">[<a href="#pb65">65</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Yet though Puhai was able to resist China and hold part of the old territory of Korai,
-it fell before the persistent attacks of the Kitan tribes, whose empire, lasting from
-907 to 1125 <span class="asc">A.D.</span>, stretched from west of Lake Baikal to the Pacific Ocean. In the early part of the
-tenth century this Puhai kingdom, whose age was scarcely two centuries, melted away
-again into tribes and villages, each with its chief. The country being without political
-unity returned to unhistorical obscurity, as part of the Kitan empire. Without crossing
-the Tumen, to enter China by way of Corea, the Kitans marched at once around the Ever-White
-Mountains and down the Liao Tung valley into China.
-</p>
-<p>The breaking up of Puhai was not without its influence on the Corean peninsula. As
-early as the ninth century thousands of refugees, driven before the Kitans or dissatisfied
-with nomad life on the plains, recrossed the Tumen and a great movement of emigration
-set into Northern Corea, which again became populous, cultivated, and rich. With increasing
-prosperity better government was desired. The worthlessness of the rulers and the
-prospect of a successful revolution tempted the ambition of a Buddhist monk named
-Kung-wo who, in 912 <span class="asc">A.D.</span>, left his monastery and raised the flag of rebellion. He set forth to establish another
-political fabric of mushroom duration, which was destined to make way for a more permanent
-kingdom, and, in the end, united Corea.
-</p>
-<p>With his followers, Kung-wo attacked the city of Kaichow (in the modern Kang-wen province),
-and was so far successful as to enter it and proclaim himself king. His personal success
-was of short duration. His lieutenant, Wang-ken, that is Wang the founder, was a descendant
-of the old kingly house of Korai. During all the time of Chinese occupancy, or Shinra
-supremacy, his family had kept alive their spirit, traditions, and claims. Thinking
-he could rule better than a priest, Wang put the ex-monk to death and proclaimed himself
-the true sovereign of Korai. All this went on without the interference of China, which
-at this time was torn by internal disorder and the ravages of the same Kitan tribes
-that had destroyed Puhai. Wang made Ping-an and Kaichow the capitals of his kingdom,
-and resolved to take full advantage of his opportunity to conquer the entire peninsula
-and unite all its parts under his sceptre.
-</p>
-<p>Circumstances made this an easy task. With China passive, Shinra weak, through long
-absorption in luxury and the arts of <span class="pageNum" id="pb66">[<a href="#pb66">66</a>]</span>peace, and with most part of the population of the peninsula of <span class="corr" id="xd31e2251" title="Source: Korain">Koraian</span> blood and descent, the work was easy. The whole country, from the Ever-White Mountains
-to Quelpart Island, was overrun and welded into unity. The name of Shinra was blotted
-out after a line of fifty-six kings and a life of nine hundred and ninety-three years.
-For the first time the peninsula became a political unit, and the name Korai, springing
-to life again like the Arabian phœnix out of its ashes, became the symbol alike of
-united Corea and of the race which peopled it. Even yet the name Korai (Gauli or Gori
-in the vernacular) is generally used by the people.
-</p>
-<p>The probabilities are that the people of the old Fuyu race, descendants of the tribes
-of Kokorai, as the more vigorous stock, had already so far supplanted the old aboriginal
-people inhabiting Southern Corea as to make conquest by Wang, who was one of their
-own blood, easy. This is shown in a series of maps representing the three kingdoms
-of Corea from 201 to 655 <span class="asc">A.D.</span>, by the Japanese scholar Otsuki Tōyō. At the former date the Kokorai people beyond
-that part of their domain conquered by China have occupied the land as far south as
-the Han River, or to the 37th parallel. Later, Shinra, in 593, and again in 655, backed
-by Chinese armies, had regained her territory a degree or two northward, and in the
-eighth and ninth centuries, acting as the ally of China, ruled all the country to
-the Tumen River. Yet, though Shinra held the land, the inhabitants were the same,
-namely, the stock of Korai, ready to rise against their rulers and to annihilate Shinra
-in a name and monarchy that had in it nationality and the prestige of their ancient
-freedom and greatness.
-</p>
-<p>Thoroughly intent on unifying his realm, Wang chose a central location for the national
-capital. Kion-chiu, the metropolis of Shinra, was too far south, Ping-an, the royal
-seat of old Korai, was too far north; but one hundred miles nearer “the river” Han,
-was Sunto. This city, now called Kai-seng, is twenty-five miles from Seoul and equally
-near the sea. Wang made Sunto what it has been for over nine centuries, a fortified
-city of the first rank, the chief commercial centre of the country, and a seat of
-learning. It remained the capital until 1392 <span class="asc">A.D.</span> Wang-ken or Wang, the founder of the new dynasty under which the people were to be
-governed for over four hundred years, was an ardent Buddhist. Spite of his having
-put the monk to death to further personal ends, he became the defender of the India
-faith and made it the official religion. Monasteries were founded and temples built
-in <span class="pageNum" id="pb67">[<a href="#pb67">67</a>]</span>great numbers. To furnish revenues for the support of these, tracts of land were set
-apart as permanent endowment. The four centuries of the house of Korai are the palmy
-days of Corean Buddhism.
-</p>
-<p>From China, which at this time was enjoying that era of literary splendor, for which
-the Sung dynasty was noted, there came an impulse both to scholastic activity and
-to something approaching popular education.
-</p>
-<p>The Nido, or native syllabary, which had been invented by Chul-chong, the statesman
-of Shinra, now came into general use. While Chinese literature and the sacred books
-of Buddhism were studied in the original Sanscrit, popular works were composed in
-Corean and written out in the Nido, or vernacular syllables. The printing press, invented
-by the Sung scholars, was introduced and books were printed from cut blocks. The Japanese
-are known to have adopted printing from Corea as early as the twelfth century, when
-a work of the Buddhist canon was printed from wooden blocks. “A Corean book is known
-which dates authentically from the period 1317–1324, over a century before the earliest
-printed book known in Europe.” The use of metal type, made by moulding and casting,
-is not distinctly mentioned in Corea until the year 1420, and the invention and use
-of the Unmun, a true native alphabet, seems to belong to the same period. The eleven
-vowels and fourteen consonants serve both as an alphabet and a syllabary, the latter
-being the most ancient system, and the former an improvement on it.
-</p>
-<p>The unifier of Corea died in 945 and was succeeded by his son Wu. Fifteen years later
-the last of the five weak dynasties that had rapidly succeeded each other in China,
-fell. The Chinese emperor proposing, and the Corean king being willing, the latter
-hastened to send tribute, and formed an alliance of friendship with the imperial Sung,
-who swayed the destinies of China for the next 166 years (960–1101).
-</p>
-<p>Korai soon came into collision with the Kitans in the following manner. The royal
-line of united Corea traced their descent directly from the ancient kings of Kokorai,
-and therefore claimed relationship with the princes of Puhai. On the strength of this
-claim, the Koraian king asserted his right to the whole of Liao Tung, which had been
-formerly held by Puhai. The Kitans, having matters of greater importance to attend
-to at the time, allowed its temporary occupation by Korai troops. Nevertheless the
-king <span class="pageNum" id="pb68">[<a href="#pb68">68</a>]</span>thought it best to send homage to the Kitan emperor, in order to get a clear title
-to the territory. In 1012 he despatched an embassy acknowledging the Kitan supremacy.
-This verbal message did not satisfy the strong conqueror, who demanded that the Koraian
-king should come in person and make obeisance. The latter refused. A feud at once
-broke out between them, which led to a war, in which Korai was worsted and stripped
-of all her territory west of the Yalu River.
-</p>
-<p>Palladius has pointed out the interesting fact that a little village about twenty
-miles north of Tie-ling, and seventy miles north of Mukden, called Gauli-chan (Korai
-village) still witnesses by its name to its former history, and to the possession
-by Corea of territory west of the Yalu.
-</p>
-<p>The Kitans, not satisfied with recovering Liao Tung, crossed the river and invaded
-Korai, in 1015. By this time a new nation, under the name of Nüjun or Ninchi, had
-formed around Lake Hanka, in part of the territory of extinct Puhai. With their new
-frontagers the Koraians made an alliance “as solid as iron and stone,” and with their
-aid drove back the Kitan invaders.
-</p>
-<p>Henceforth the boundaries of Corea remained stationary, and have never extended beyond
-the limits with which the western world is familiar.
-</p>
-<p>An era of peace and prosperity set in, and a thriving trade sprang up between the
-Nüjun and Korai. The two nations, cemented in friendship through a common fear of
-the Kitans, grew apace in numbers and prosperity.
-</p>
-<p>The Kitans were known to Chinese authors as early as the fifth century, seven nomad
-tribes being at that time confederate under their banners. At the beginning of the
-tenth century, these wanderers had been transformed into hordes of disciplined cavalry.
-Their wealth and intelligence having increased by conquest, they formed a great empire
-in 925, which extended from the Altai Mountains to the Pacific Ocean, and from within
-the Great Wall to the Yablonoi Mountains, having Peking for one of its capitals. It
-flourished until the twelfth century (<span class="asc">A.D.</span> 1125), when it gave way to the Kin empire, which held Mongolia and still more territory
-than the Kitans possessed within what is now China proper.
-</p>
-<p>This Kin empire was founded by the expansion of the Nüjun, who, from their seats north
-of the Tumen and east of the Sungari, had gradually widened, and by conquest absorbed
-the Kitans. Aguta, the founder of the new empire, gave it the name of the <span class="pageNum" id="pb69">[<a href="#pb69">69</a>]</span>Golden Dominion. During its existence Corea was not troubled by her great neighbor,
-and for two hundred years enjoyed peace within her borders. Her commerce now flourished
-at all points of the compass, both on land, with her northern and western neighbors,
-with the Japanese on the east, and the Chinese south and west. Much direct intercourse
-in ships, guided by the magnetic needle, “the chariot of the south,” took place between
-Ningpo and Sunto. Mr. Edkins states that the oldest recorded instance of the use of
-the mariner’s compass is that in the Chinese historian’s account of the voyage of
-the imperial ambassador to Corea, from Nanking by way of Ningpo, in a fleet of eight
-vessels, in the year 1122.
-</p>
-<p>The Arabs, who about this time were also trading with the Coreans, and had lived in
-their country, soon afterward introduced this silent friend of the mariner into their
-own country in the west, whence it found its way into Europe and to the hands of Columbus.
-To the eye of the Corean its mysterious finger pointed to the south. To the western
-man it pointed to the lode-star.
-</p>
-<p>The huge wide-open eyes which the sailors of Chinese Asia paint at the prow of their
-ship, to discover a path in the sea, became more than ever an empty fancy before this
-unerring pathfinder. As useless as the ever-open orbs on a mummy lid, these lidless
-eyes were relegated to the domain of poetry, while the swinging needle opened new
-paths of science and discovery.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p069width" id="p069"><img src="images/p069.png" alt="Coin of Korai. “Ko-ka” (Name of Year-Period). “Current Money.”" width="190" height="185"><p class="figureHead">Coin of Korai. “Ko-ka” (Name of Year-Period). “Current Money.”</p>
-</div><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb70">[<a href="#pb70">70</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch10" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e914">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER X.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">CATHAY, ZIPANGU, AND THE MONGOLS.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">After a long breathing-spell—as one, in reading history, might call it—the old hive
-in the north was again ready to swarm. It was to be seen once more how useless was
-the Great Wall of China in keeping back the many-named invaders, known in history
-by the collective term Tâtars. A new people began descending from their homeland,
-which lay near the northern and eastern shores of Lake Baikal. This inland sea—scarcely
-known in the school geographies, or printed in the average atlas in such proportionate
-dimensions as to suggest a pond—is one of the largest lakes in the world, being 370
-miles long and covering 13,300 square miles of surface. Its shores are now inhabited
-by Russian colonists and its waters are navigated by whole fleets of ships and steamers.
-It lies 1,280 feet above the sea.
-</p>
-<p>Beginning their migrations from this point, in numbers and bulk that suggest only
-the snowball, the Mongol horsemen moved with resistless increase and momentum, consolidating
-into their mass tribe after tribe, until their horde seemed an avalanche of humanity
-that threatened to crush all civilization and engulph the whole earth. These mounted
-highlanders from the north were creatures who seemed to be horse and man in one being,
-and to actualize the old fable of the Centaurs. With a tiger-skin for a saddle, a
-thong loop with only the rider’s great toe thrust in it for a stirrup, a string in
-the horse’s lower jaw for a bridle, armed with spear and cimeter, these conquerors
-who despised walls went forth to level cities and slaughter all who resisted. In their
-raids they found food ever ready in the beasts they rode, for a reeking haunch of
-horse-meat, cut from the steed whose saddle had been emptied by arrow or accident,
-was usually found slung to their pommels. A slice of this, raw or warmed, served to
-sustain life for these hard riders, who lived all day in the saddle and at night slept
-with it wrapped around them.
-</p>
-<p>For a century the power of these nomads was steadily growing, <span class="pageNum" id="pb71">[<a href="#pb71">71</a>]</span>before they emerged clearly into history and loomed up before the frontiers of the
-empire. The master mind and hand that moulded them into unity was Genghis Khan (1160–1227
-<span class="asc">A.D.</span>).
-</p>
-<p>Who was Genghis Khan? A Japanese writer, who is also a traveller in Corea and China,
-has written in English a thesis which shows, with strong probability, at least, that
-this unifier of Asia was Gen-Ghiké, or Yoshitsuné. This Japanese hero, born in 1159,
-was the field-marshal of the army of the Minamoto who annihilated the Taira family.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e2310src" href="#xd31e2310">1</a> In 1189, having fled from his jealous brother, Yoritomo, he reached Yezo and thence
-crossed, it is believed, to Manchuria. His was probably the greatest military mind
-which Japan ever produced.
-</p>
-<p>That Yoshitsuné and Genghis Khan were one person is argued by Mr. Suyematz,<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e2315src" href="#xd31e2315">2</a> who brings a surprising array of coincidences to prove his thesis. These are in names,
-titles, ages, dates, personal characteristics, flags and banners, myths and traditions,
-nomenclature of families, localities and individuals, and Japanese relics, coins,
-arms, and fortresses in Manchuria. Without reaching the point of demonstration, it
-seems highly probable that this wonderful personality, this marvellous intellect,
-was of Japanese origin.
-</p>
-<p>Whoever this restless spirit was, it is certain that he gathered tribes once living
-in freedom like the wild waves into the unity of the restless sea. Out from the grassy
-plains of Manchuria rolled a tidal-wave of conquest that swept over Asia, and flung
-its last drops of spray alike over Japan, India, and Russia. Among the nations completely
-overrun and overwhelmed by the Mongol hordes was Corea.
-</p>
-<p>In 1206, Yezokai—the word in Japanese means Yezo Sea—the leader of the Mongols, at
-the request of his chieftains, took the name of Genghis Khan and proclaimed himself
-the ruler of an empire. He now set before himself the task of subduing the Kitans
-and absorbing their land and people, preparatory to the conquest of China. This was
-accomplished in less than six years. Liao Tung was invaded and, in 1213, his armies
-were inside the Great Wall. Three mighty hosts were now organized, one to overrun
-all China to Nepal and Anam, one to conquer Corea and Japan, and one to bear the white
-banners of the Mongols across Asia into Europe. This work, though not done in a day,
-was nearly completed before <span class="pageNum" id="pb72">[<a href="#pb72">72</a>]</span>a generation passed.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e2323src" href="#xd31e2323">3</a> Genghis Khan led the host that moved to the west. In 1218 the Corean king declared
-himself a vassal of Genghis. In 1231 the murder of a Mongol envoy in Corea was the
-cause of the first act of war. The Mongols invaded the country, captured forty of
-the principal towns, received the humiliation of the king, who had fled to Kang-wa
-Island, and began the abolition of Corean independence by appointing seventy-two Mongol
-prefects to administer the details of local government. The people, exasperated by
-the new and strange methods of their foreign conquerors, rose against them and murdered
-them all. This was the signal for a second and more terrible invasion. A great Mongol
-army overran the country in 1241, fought a number of pitched battles, defeated the
-king, and again imposed heavy tribute on their humbled vassal. In 1256 the Corean
-king went in person to do homage at the court of the conqueror of continents.
-</p>
-<p>In the details of the Mongol rule kindness and cruelty were blended. The most relentless
-military measures were taken to secure obedience after the conciliatory policy failed.
-By using both methods the great Khan kept his hold on the little peninsula, although
-the Coreans manifested a constant disposition to revolt.
-</p>
-<p>About this time began a brilliant half century of intercourse between Europe and Cathay,
-which has been studied and illustrated in the writings of Colonel H. Yule. The two
-Franciscan monks Carpinini and Rubruquis visited China, and the camps of the great
-Khan, between the years 1245 and 1253. By their graphic narratives, in which the wars
-of Genghis were described, they made the name of Cathay (from Kitai, or Kitan) familiar
-in Europe. Matteo, Nicolo, and Marco Polo, who came later, as representatives of the
-commerce which afterward flourished between Venice and Genoa, and Ningpo and Amoy,
-were but a few among many merchants and travellers. Embassies from the Popes and the
-Khan exchanged courtesies at Avignon and Cambaluc (Peking). Christian churches were
-established in Peking and other cities by the Franciscan monks. The various Europeans
-who have saved their own names and a few others from oblivion, and have left us a
-romantic, but in the main a truthful, picture of mediæval China and the Mongols, were
-probably only the scribes among a host who traded or travelled, but never told their
-story. Among the marvels of the empire of the Mongols, in which one might walk safely
-from Corea to Russia, was religious toleration. When, however, the Mongols <span class="pageNum" id="pb73">[<a href="#pb73">73</a>]</span>of central Asia embraced the creed of Islam, bigotry closed the highway into Europe,
-and communications ceased. Cathay, Zipangu, and Corea again sunk from the eyes of
-Europe into the night of historic darkness.
-</p>
-<p>Khublai Khan having succeeded his grandfather, Genghis, and being now ruler of all
-the Asiatic mainland, resolved, in 1266, to conquer Japan. He wrote a letter to the
-mikado, but the envoys were so frightened by the Corean’s exaggerated account of the
-difficulties of reaching the empire in the sea, that they never sailed. Other embassies
-were despatched in 1271 and 1273, and Khublai began to prepare a mighty flotilla and
-army of invasion. One hundred of the ships were built on Quelpart Island. His armada,
-consisting of 300 vessels and 15,000 men, Chinese, Mongols, and Coreans, sailed to
-Japan and was met by the Japanese off the island of Iki. Owing to their valor, but
-more to the tempest that arose, the expedition was a total loss, only a few of the
-original number reaching Corea alive.
-</p>
-<p>Evidently desirous of conquering Japan by diplomacy, the great Khan despatched an
-embassy which reached, not the mikado’s, but only the shō-gun’s court in 1275. His
-ambassadors were accompanied by a large retinue from his Corean vassals. The Japanese
-allowed only three of the imposing number to go to Kamakura, twelve miles from the
-modern Tōkiō, and paid no attention to the Khan’s threatening letters. So irritated
-were the brave islanders that when another ambassador from the Khan arrived, in the
-following year, he disembarked as a prisoner and was escorted, bound, to Kamakura,
-where he was thrown into prison, kept during four years, and taken out only to be
-beheaded.
-</p>
-<p>Upon hearing this, Khublai began the preparation of the mightiest of his invading
-hosts. To be braved by a little island nation, when his sceptre ruled from the Dnieper
-to the Yellow Sea, was not to be thought of. Various fleets and contingents sailed
-from different ports in China and made rendezvous on the Corean coast. The fleet was
-composed of 3,500 war junks, of large size, having on board 180,000 Chinese, Mongols,
-and Coreans. Among their engines of war were the catapults which the Polos had taught
-them to make. They set sail in the autumn of 1281.
-</p>
-<p>From the very first the enterprise miscarried. The general-in-chief fell sick and
-the command devolved on a subordinate, who had no plan of operation. The various divisions
-of the force became separated. It is probable that the majority of them never <span class="pageNum" id="pb74">[<a href="#pb74">74</a>]</span>reached the mainland of Japan. The Mongol and Corean contingent reached the province
-of Chikuzen, but were not allowed to make a successful landing, for the Japanese drove
-them back with sword and fire. The Chinese division, arriving later, was met by a
-terrible tempest that nearly annihilated them and destroyed the ships already engaged.
-The broken remnant of the fleet and armies, taking refuge on the island of Iki, were
-attacked by the Japanese and nearly all slain, imprisoned, or beheaded in cold blood.
-Only a few reached Corea to tell the tale.
-</p>
-<p>The “Mongol civilization,” so-called, seems to have had little influence on Corea.
-The mighty empire of Genghis soon broke into many fragments. The vast fabric of his
-government melted <span class="corr" id="xd31e2341" title="Source: ike">like</span> a sand house before an incoming wave, and that wave receding left scarcely a sediment
-recognizable on the polity or social life of Corea. Marco Polo in his book hardly
-mentions the country, though describing Zipangu or Japan quite fully. One evil effect
-of their forced assistance given to the Mongols, was that the hatred of the Japanese
-and Coreans for each other was mutually intensified. After the Mongolian invasion
-begins that series of piratical raids on their coast and robbery of their vessels
-at sea, by Japanese adventurers, that made navigation beyond sight of land and ship-building
-among the Coreans almost a lost art.
-</p>
-<p>The centuries following the Mongol invasion were periods of anarchy and civil war
-in Japan, and the central government authority being weak the pirates could not be
-controlled. Building or stealing ships, bands of Japanese sailors or ex-soldiers put
-to sea, capturing Corean boats, junks, and surf-rafts. Landing, they harried the shores
-and robbed and murdered the defenceless people. Growing bolder, the marauders sailed
-into the Yellow Sea and landed even in China and in Liao Tung. They kept whole towns
-and cities in terror, and a chain of coast forts had to be built in Shan-tung to defend
-that province.
-</p>
-<p>The fire-signals which, in the old days of “the Three Kingdoms,” had flashed upon
-the headlands to warn of danger seaward, were now made a national service. The system
-was perfected so as to converge at the capital, Sunto, and give notice of danger from
-any point on the coast. By this means better protection against the sea-rovers was
-secured.
-</p>
-<p>All this evil experience with the piratical Japanese of the middle ages has left its
-impress on the language of the Coreans. From this period, perhaps even long before
-it, date those words <span class="pageNum" id="pb75">[<a href="#pb75">75</a>]</span>of sinister omen of which we give but one or two examples which have the prefix <i>wai</i> (Japan) in them. A <i>wai-kol</i>, a huge, fierce man, of gigantic aspect, with a bad head, though perhaps with good
-heart, a kind of ogre, is a Japanese <i>kol</i> or creature. A destructive wind or typhoon is a Japanese wind. As western Christendom
-for centuries uttered their fears of the Norse pirates, “From the fury of the Northmen,
-Good Lord, deliver us,” so the Korai people, along the coast, for many generations
-offered up constant petition to their gods for protection against these Northmen of
-the Pacific.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p075width" id="p075"><img src="images/p075.jpg" alt="Two-Masted Corean Vessel (from a Photograph taken in 1871)." width="700" height="607"><p class="figureHead">Two-Masted Corean Vessel (from a Photograph taken in 1871).</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>This chronic danger from Japanese pirates, which Korai and Chō-sen endured for a period
-nearly as extended as that of England from the Northmen, is one of the causes that
-have contributed to make the natives dread the sea as a path for enemies, and in Corea
-we see the strange anomaly of a people more than semi-civilized whose wretched boats
-scarcely go beyond tide-water.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb76">[<a href="#pb76">76</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e2310">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e2310src">1</a></span> The Mikado’s Empire, Chapters XIII. and XIV.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e2310src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e2315">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e2315src">2</a></span> The Identity of the Great Conqueror, Genghis Khan, with the Japanese Hero Yoshitsuné,
-by K. Suyematz of Japan. London, 1879.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e2315src" title="Return to note 2 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e2323">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e2323src">3</a></span> See Howorth’s History of the Mongols, London, 1876.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e2323src" title="Return to note 3 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch11" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e922">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XI.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">NEW CHŌ-SEN.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">It will be remembered that the first Chinese settler and civilizer of Corea, Ki Tsze,
-gave it the name of Chō-sen. Coming from violence and war, to a land of peace which
-lay eastward of his old home, Ki Tsze selected for his new dwelling-place a name at
-once expressive of its outward position and his own inward emotions—Chō-sen, or Morning
-Calm.
-</p>
-<p>For eleven centuries a part of Manchuria, including, as the Coreans believe, the northern
-half of the peninsula, bore this name. From the Christian era until the tenth century,
-the names of the three kingdoms, Shinra, Hiaksai, and Kokorai, or Korai, express the
-divided political condition of the country. On the fall of these petty states, the
-united peninsula was called Korai. Korai existed from <span class="asc">A.D.</span> 934 until <span class="asc">A.D.</span> 1392, when the ancient name of Chō-sen was restored. Though the Coreans often speak
-of their country as Korai (Gauli, or Gori), it is as the English speak of Britain—with
-a patriotic feeling rather than for accuracy. Chō-sen is still the official and popular
-designation of the country. This name is at once the oldest and the newest.
-</p>
-<p>The first bestowal of this name on the peninsula was in poetic mood, and was the symbol
-of a peaceful triumph. The second gift of the name was the index of a political revolution
-not unaccompanied with bloodshed. The latter days of the dynasty founded by Wang were
-marked by licentiousness and effeminacy in the palace, and misrule in the country.
-The people hated the cruelties of their monarch, the thirty-second of his line, and
-longed for a deliverer. Such a one was Ni Taijo (Japanese, Ri Seiki), who was born
-in the region of Broughton’s Bay, in the Ham-kiung province. It is said of him that
-from his youth he surpassed all others in virtue, intelligence, and skill in manly
-exercises. He was especially fond of hunting with the falcon.
-</p>
-<p>One day, while in the woods, his favorite bird, in pursuing its <span class="pageNum" id="pb77">[<a href="#pb77">77</a>]</span>quarry, flew so far ahead that it was lost to the sight of its master. Hastening after
-it the young man espied a shrine at the roadside into which he saw his hawk fly. Entering,
-he found within a hermit priest. Awed and abashed at the weird presence of the white-bearded
-sage, the lad for a moment was speechless; but the old man, addressing him, said:
-“What benefit is it for a youth of your abilities to be seeking a stray falcon? A
-throne is a richer prize. Betake yourself at once to the capital.”
-</p>
-<p>Acting upon the hint thus given him, and leaving the falcon behind, Taijo wended his
-way westward to Sunto, and entered the military service of the king. He soon made
-his mark and rapidly rose to high command, until he became lieutenant-general of the
-whole army. He married and reared children, and through the espousal of his daughter
-by the king, became father-in-law to his sovereign.
-</p>
-<p>The influence of Taijo was now immense. While with his soldierly abilities he won
-the enthusiastic regard of the army, his popularity with the people rested solely
-on his virtues. Possessed of such influence with the court, the soldiers, and the
-country at large, he endeavored to reform the abuse of power and to curb the cruelties
-of the king. Even to give advice to a despot is an act of bravery, but Taijo dared
-to do it again and again. The king, however, refused to follow the counsel of his
-father-in-law or to reform abuses. He thus daily increased the odium in which he was
-held by his subjects.
-</p>
-<p>Such was the state of affairs toward the end of the fourteenth century, when everything
-was ripe for revolution.
-</p>
-<p>In China, great events, destined to influence “the little kingdom,” were taking place.
-The Mongol dynasty, even after the breaking up of the empire founded by Genghis Khan,
-still held the dragon throne; but during the later years of their reign, when harassed
-by enemies at home, Corea was neglected and her tribute remained unpaid. A spasmodic
-attempt to resubdue the lapsed vassal, and make Corea a Mongol castle of refuge from
-impending doom, was ruined by the energy and valor of Ni Taijo. The would-be invaders
-were driven back. The last Mongol emperor fell in 1341, and the native Ming, or “Bright,”
-dynasty came into power, and in 1368 was firmly established.
-</p>
-<p>Their envoys being sent to Corea demanded pledges of vassalage. The king neglected,
-finally refused, and ordered fresh levies to be made to resist the impending invasion
-of the Chinese. In <span class="pageNum" id="pb78">[<a href="#pb78">78</a>]</span>this time of gloom and bitterness against their own monarch, the army contained but
-a pitifully small number of men who could be depended on to fight the overwhelming
-host of the Ming veterans. Taijo, in an address to his followers, thus spoke to them:
-</p>
-<p>“Although the order from the king must be obeyed, yet the attack upon the Ming soldiers,
-with so small an army as ours, is like casting an egg against a rock, and no one of
-the army will return alive. I do not tell you this from any fear of death, but our
-king is too haughty. He does not heed our advice. He has ordered out the army suddenly
-without cause, paying no attention to the suffering which wives and children of the
-soldiers must undergo. This is a thing I cannot bear. Let us go back to the capital
-and the responsibility shall fall on my shoulders alone.”
-</p>
-<p>Thereupon the captains and soldiers being impressed with the purity of their leader’s
-motives, and admiring his courage, resolved to obey his orders and not the king’s.
-Arriving at Sunto, he promptly took measures to depose the king, who was sent to Kang-wa,
-the island so famous in modern as in ancient and mediæval history.
-</p>
-<p>The king’s wrath was very great, and he intrigued to avenge himself. His plot was
-made known, by one of his retainers, to Taijo, who, by a counter-movement, put forth
-the last radical measure which, in Chinese Asia means, for a private person, disinheritance;
-for a king, deposition; and for a royal line, extinction. This act was the removal
-of the tablets of the king’s ancestors from their shrine, and the issue of an order
-forbidding further continuance of sacrifice to them. This Corean and Chinese method
-of clapping the extinguisher upon a whole dynasty was no sooner ordered than duly
-executed.
-</p>
-<p>Ni Taijo was now made king, to the great delight of the people. He sent an embassy
-to Nanking to notify the Ming emperor of affairs in the “outpost state,” to tender
-his loyal vassalage, to seek the imperial approval of his acts, and to beg his investiture
-as sovereign. This was graciously granted. The ancient name of Chō-sen was revived,
-and at the petitioner’s request conferred upon the country by the emperor, who profited
-by this occasion to enforce upon the Coreans his calendar and chronology—the reception
-of these being in itself alone tantamount to a sufficient declaration of fealty. Friendship
-being now fully established with the Mings, the king of Chō-sen sent a number of youths,
-sons of his nobles, to Nanking to study in the imperial Chinese college.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb79">[<a href="#pb79">79</a>]</span>
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p079width" id="p079"><img src="images/p079.jpg" alt="The Walls of Seoul (from a Photograph, 1876)." width="702" height="610"><p class="figureHead">The Walls of Seoul (from a Photograph, 1876).</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>The dynasty thus established is still the reigning family in Corea, though the direct
-line came to an end in 1864. The Coreans in their treaty with Japan, in 1876, dated
-the document according to the 484th year of Chō-sen, reckoning from the accession
-of Ni Taijo to the throne. One of the first acts of the new dynasty was to make a
-change in the location of the national capital. The new dynasty made choice of the
-city of Han Yang, situated on the Han River, about fifty miles from its mouth. The
-king enlarged the fortifications, enclosed the city with a wall of masonry of great
-extent, extending over the adjacent hills and valleys. On this wall was a rampart
-pierced with port-holes for archers and over the streams were built arches of stone.
-He organized the administrative system which, with slight modification, is still in
-force at the present time. The city being well situated, soon grew in extent, and
-hence became the <i>seoul</i> or capital (pronounced <span class="pageNum" id="pb80">[<a href="#pb80">80</a>]</span>by the Chinese <i>king</i>, as in Nanking and Peking, and the Japanese <i>kio</i>, as in Kiōto and Tōkiō). He also re-divided the kingdom into eight <i>dō</i> or provinces. This division still maintains. The names, formed each of two Chinese
-characters joined to that of <i>dō</i> (circuit or province), and approximate meanings are given below.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e2416src" href="#xd31e2416">1</a> With such names of bright omen, “the eight provinces” entered upon an era of peace
-and flourishing prosperity. The people found out that something more than a change
-of masters was meant by the removal of the capital to a more central situation. Vigorous
-reforms were carried out, and changes were made, not only in political administration,
-but in social life, and even in religion. In all these the influence of the China
-of the Ming emperors is most manifest.
-</p>
-<p>Buddhism, which had penetrated into every part of the country, and had become, in
-a measure, at least, the religion of the state, was now set aside and disestablished.
-The Confucian ethics and the doctrines of the Chinese sages were not only more diligently
-studied and propagated under royal patronage, but were incorporated into the religion
-of the state. From the early part of the fifteenth century, Confucianism flourished
-until it reached the point of bigotry and intolerance; so that when Christianity was
-discovered by the magistrates to be existing among the people, it was put under the
-band of extirpation, and its followers thought worthy of death.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb81">[<a href="#pb81">81</a>]</span>
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p081width" id="p081"><img src="images/p081.jpg" alt="Magistrate and Servant." width="487" height="720"><p class="figureHead">Magistrate and Servant.</p>
-</div><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb82">[<a href="#pb82">82</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Whatever may have been the motive for supplanting Buddhism, whether from sincere conviction
-of the paramount truth of the ancient ethics, or a desire to closely imitate the Middle
-Kingdom in everything, even in religion, or to obtain easy and great wealth by confiscating
-the monastery and temple lands, it is certain that the change was sweeping, radical,
-and thorough. All observers testify that the cult of Shaka in Corea is almost a shadow.
-On the other hand, in many cities throughout the land, are buildings and halls erected
-and maintained by the government, in which sit in honor the statues of Confucius and
-his greatest disciples.
-</p>
-<p>One great measure that tended to strengthen and make popular the new religious establishment,
-to weaken the old faith, to give strength and unity to the new government, to foster
-education and make the Corean literary classes what they are to-day—critical scholars
-in Chinese—was what Americans would call “civil service reform.” Appointment to office
-on the basis of merit, as shown in the literary examinations, was made the rule. Modelled
-closely upon the Chinese system, three grades of examinations were appointed, and
-three degrees settled. All candidates for military or civil rank and office must possess
-diplomas, granted by the royal or provincial examiners, before appointment could be
-made or salary begun. The system, which is still in vogue, is more fully described
-in the chapter on education.
-</p>
-<p>Among the changes in the fashion of social life, introduced under the Ni dynasty,
-was the adoption of the Ming costume. To the Chinese of to-day the Corean dress and
-coiffure, as seen in Peking, are subjects for curiosity and merriment. The lack of
-a long queue, and the very different cut, form, and general appearance of these eastern
-strangers, strike the eye of mandarin and street laborer alike, very much as a gentleman
-in knee-breeches, cocked hat, and peruke, or the peasant costumes at Castle Garden,
-appear to a New Yorker, stepping from the elevated railway, on Broadway.
-</p>
-<p>Yet from the fourteenth to the seventeenth century, the Chinese gentleman dressed
-like the Corean of to-day, and the mandarin of Canton or Nanking was as innocent of
-the Tartar hair-tail as is the citizen of Seoul. The Coreans simply adhere to the
-fashions prevalent during the Ming era. The Chinese, in the matter of garb, however
-loath foreigners may be to credit it, are more progressive than their Corean neighbors.
-</p>
-<p>To the house of Ni belongs also the greater honor of abolishing <span class="pageNum" id="pb83">[<a href="#pb83">83</a>]</span>at least two cruel customs which had their roots in superstition. Heretofore the same
-rites which were so long in vogue in Japan, traces of which were noticed even down
-to the seventeenth century, held unchallenged sway in Corea. <i>Ko-rai-chang</i>, though not fully known in its details, was the habit of burying old men alive. <i>In-chei</i> was the offering up of human sacrifices, presumably to the gods of the mountains
-and the sea. Both of these classes of rites, at once superstitious and horrible, were
-anciently very frequent; nor was Buddhism able to utterly abolish them. In the latter
-case, they choked the victims to death, and then threw them into the sea. The island
-of Chansan was especially noted as the place of propitiation to the gods of the sea.
-</p>
-<p>The first successors of the founder of the house of Ni held great power, which they
-used for the good of the people, and hence enjoyed great popularity. The first after
-Taijo reigned two years, from 1398 to 1400. Hetai-jong, who came after him, ruled
-eighteen years, and among other benefits conferred, established the <i>Sin-mun-ko</i>, or box for the reception of petitions addressed directly to the king. Into this
-coffer, complaints and prayers from the people could lawfully and easily be dropped.
-Though still kept before the gate of the royal palace in Seoul, it is stated that
-access to it is now difficult. It seems to exist more in name than in fact. Among
-the first diplomatic acts of King Hetai-jong was to unite with the Chinese emperor,
-in a complaint to the mikado of Japan, against the buccaneers, whom the authorities
-of the latter country were unable to control. Hence the remonstrance was only partially
-successful, and the evil, which was aggravated by Corean renegades acting as pilots,
-grew beyond all bounds. These rascals made a lucrative living by betraying their own
-countrymen.
-</p>
-<p>Siei-jong, who succeeded to the throne on the death of his father, Hetai-jong, enjoyed
-a long reign of thirty-two years, during which the fortifications of the capital were
-added to and strengthened. The Manchius beyond the Ever-white Mountains were then
-beginning to rise in power, and Liao Tung was disturbed by the raids of tribes from
-Mongolia, which the Ming generals were unable to suppress. When the fighting took
-place within fifty miles of her own boundary river, Chō-sen became alarmed, and looked
-to the defence of her own frontier and capital. In 1450, on the death of the king,
-who “in time of peace prepared for war,” Mun-jong, his son, succeeded to royal power.
-As usual <span class="pageNum" id="pb84">[<a href="#pb84">84</a>]</span>on the accession of a new sovereign, a Chinese ambassador was despatched from Peking,
-which had been the Ming capital since 1614, to Seoul, to confer the imperial patent
-of investiture. This dignitary, on his return, wrote a book recounting his travels,
-under the title of “Memorandum concerning the Affairs of Chō-sen.” According to this
-writer, the military frontier of Corea at that time was at the Eastern Mountain Barrier,
-a few miles northwest of the present Border Gate. Palladius, the Russian writer, also
-states that, during the Ming dynasty, three grades of fortresses were erected on the
-territory between the Great Wall and the Yalu River, “to guard against the attacks
-of the Coreans.”
-</p>
-<p>It is more in accordance with the facts to suppose that the Chinese erected these
-fortifications to guard against invasion from the Manchius and other northern tribes
-that were ravaging Liao Tung, rather than against the Coreans. These defences did
-not avail to keep back the invasion which came a generation or two later, and “the
-Corean frontier,” which the Chinese traveller, in 1450, found much further west than
-even the present “wall of stakes,” shows that the neutral territory was then already
-established, and larger than it now is. Of this strip of rich forest and ginseng land,
-with many well-watered and arable valleys, once cultivated and populous, but since
-the fifteenth century desolate, we shall hear again. In Chinese atlases the space
-is blank, with not one village marked where, until the removal by the Chinese government
-of the inhabitants westward, there was a population of 300,000 souls. The depopulation
-of this large area of fertile soil was simply a Chinese measure of military necessity,
-which compelled her friendly ally Chō-sen, for her own safety, to post sentinels as
-far west of her boundary river as the Eastern Mountain Barrier, described by the imperial
-envoy in 1450.
-</p>
-<p>The century which saw America discovered in the west, was that of Japan’s greatest
-activity on the sea. On every coast within their reach, from Tartary to Tonquin, and
-from Luzon to Siam, these bold marauders were known and feared. The Chinese learned
-to bitterly regret the day when the magnetic needle, invented by themselves, got into
-the hands of these daring islanders. The wounded eagle that felt the shaft, which
-had been feathered from his own plumes, was not more to be pitied than the Chinese
-people that saw the Japanese craft steering across the Yellow Sea to ravage and ruin
-their cities, guided by the compass bought in China. They not only harried the coasts,
-but went far <span class="pageNum" id="pb85">[<a href="#pb85">85</a>]</span>up the rivers. In 1523, they landed even at Ningpo, and in the fight the chief mandarin
-of the city was killed.
-</p>
-<p>Yet, with the exception of incursions of these pirates, Chō-sen enjoyed the sweets
-of peace, and two centuries slipped away in Morning Calm. The foreign vessels from
-Europe which first, in 1530, touched at the province of Bungo, in Southern Japan,
-may possibly have visited some part of the Corean shores. Between 1540 and 1546 four
-arrivals of “black ships” from Portugal, are known to have called at points in Japan.
-It was from these the Japanese learned how to make the gunpowder and firearms which,
-before the close of the century, were to be used with such deadly effect in Corea.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p085width" id="p085"><img src="images/p085.png" alt="The Neutral Territory (from a Chinese Atlas)." width="677" height="674"><p class="figureHead">The Neutral Territory (from a Chinese Atlas).</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>Now came back to Europe accounts of China and Japan—which were found to be the old
-Kathay, and Zipangu of Polo and the Franciscans<span class="pageNum" id="pb86">[<a href="#pb86">86</a>]</span>—and of “Coria,” which Polo had barely mentioned. It was from the Portuguese, that
-Europe first learned of this middle land between the mighty domain of the Mings, and
-the empire in the sea. Stirred by the spirit of adventure and enterprise, and unwilling
-that the Iberian peninsulars should gain all the glory, an English “Society for the
-Discovery of Unknown Lands” was formed in 1555. A voyage was made as far as Novaia
-Zemlia and Weigatz, but neither Corea nor Cathay was reached. Other attempts to find
-a northeast passage to India failed, and Asia remained uncircumnavigated until our
-own and <span class="corr" id="xd31e2554" title="Source: Nordensköld’s">Nordenskjöld’s</span> day. The other attempts to discover a northwest passage to China around the imaginary
-cape, in which North America was supposed to terminate, and through the equally fictitious
-straits of Anian, resulted in the discoveries of the Cabots, and of Hudson and Frobisher—of
-the American continent from the Hudson River to Greenland, but the way to China lay
-still around Africa.
-</p>
-<p>From Japan, the only possibility of danger during these two centuries was likely to
-come. In the north, west, and south, on the main land, hung the banners of the Ming
-emperors of China, and, as the tribute enforced was very light, the protection of
-her great neighbor was worth to Chō-sen far more than the presents she gave. From
-China there was nothing to fear.
-</p>
-<p>At first the new dynasty sent ships, embassies, and presents regularly to Japan, which
-were duly received, yet not at the mikado’s palace in Kiōto, but at the shō-gun’s
-court at Kamakura, twelve miles from the site of the modern Japanese capital, Tōkiō.
-But as the Ashikaga family became effeminate in life, their power waned, and rival
-chiefs started up all over the country. Clan fights and chronic intestine war became
-the rule in Japan. Only small areas of territory were governed from Kamakura, while
-the mikado became the tool and prey of rival daimiōs. One of these petty rulers held
-Tsushima, and traded at a settlement on the Corean coast called Fusan, by means of
-which some intercourse was kept up between the two countries. The Japanese government
-had always made use of Tsushima in its communications with the Coreans, and the agency
-at Fusan was composed almost exclusively of retainers of the feudal lord of this island.
-The journey by land and sea from Seoul to Kamakura, often consumed two or three months,
-and with civil wars inland and piracy on the water, intercourse between the two countries
-became less and less. The last embassy from Seoul was sent in 1460, but after that,
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb87">[<a href="#pb87">87</a>]</span>owing to continued intestine war, the absence of the Coreans was not noticed by the
-Ashikagas, and as the Tsushima men purposely kept their customers ignorant of the
-weakness of their rulers at Kamakura and Kiōto, lest the ancient vassals should cease
-to fear their old master, the Coreans remained in profound ignorance of the real state
-of affairs in Japan. As they were never summoned, so they never came. Giving themselves
-no further anxiety concerning the matter, they rejoiced that such disagreeable duties
-were no longer incumbent upon them. It is even said in Corean histories that their
-government took the offensive, and under the reign of the king Chung-jong (1506–1544)
-captured Tsushima and several other Japanese islands, formerly tributary to Corea.
-Whatever fraction of truth there may be in this assertion, it is certain that Japan
-afterward took ample revenge on the score both of neglect and of reprisal.
-</p>
-<p>So, under the idea that peace was to last forever, and the morning calm never to know
-an evening storm, the nation relaxed all vigilance. Expecting no danger from the east,
-the military resources were neglected, the army was disorganized, and the castles
-were allowed to dilapidate into ruin. The moats filled and became shallow ditches,
-choked with vegetation, the walls and ramparts crumbled piecemeal, and the barracks
-stood roofless. As peace wore sweeter charms, and as war seemed less and less probable,
-so did all soldierly duties become more and more irksome. The militia system was changed
-for the worse. The enrolled men, instead of being called out for muster at assigned
-camps, and trained to field duty and the actual evolutions of war, were allowed to
-assemble at local meetings to perform only holiday movements. The muster rolls were
-full of thousands of names, but off paper the army of Corea was a phantom. The people,
-dismissing all thought of possibility of war, gave themselves no concern, leaving
-the matter to the army officials, who drew pay as though in actual war. They, in turn,
-devoted themselves to dissipation, carousing, and sensual indulgence. It was while
-the country was in such a condition that the summons of Japan’s greatest conqueror
-came to them and the Coreans learned, for the first time, of the fall of Ashikaga,
-and the temper of their new master.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb88">[<a href="#pb88">88</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e2416">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e2416src">1</a></span> Beginning at the most northern and eastern, and following the sea line south around
-up to the northeast, they are:
-</p>
-<div class="table">
-<table>
-<thead>
-<tr class="label">
-<td class="cellHeadLeft cellHeadTop cellHeadBottom"> </td>
-<td class="cellHeadTop cellHeadBottom"><span class="sc">Corean.</span> </td>
-<td class="cellHeadTop cellHeadBottom"><span class="sc">Japanese.</span> </td>
-<td class="cellHeadRight cellHeadTop cellHeadBottom"><span class="sc">English.</span>
-</td>
-</tr>
-</thead>
-<tbody>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">1. </td>
-<td>Ham-kiung, or </td>
-<td>Kan-kiō dō. </td>
-<td class="cellRight">Perfect Mirror, or Complete View Province.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">2. </td>
-<td>Kang-wen, or </td>
-<td>Ko-gen dō. </td>
-<td class="cellRight">Bay Meadow Province.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">3. </td>
-<td>Kiung-sang, or </td>
-<td>Kei-shō dō. </td>
-<td class="cellRight">Respectful Congratulation Province.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">4. </td>
-<td>Julla, or </td>
-<td>Zen-ra dō. </td>
-<td class="cellRight">Completed Network Province.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">5. </td>
-<td>Chung-chong, or </td>
-<td>Chiu-sei dō. </td>
-<td class="cellRight">Serene Loyalty Province.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">6. </td>
-<td>Kiung-kei, or </td>
-<td>Kei-ki dō. </td>
-<td class="cellRight">The Capital Circuit, or Home Province.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">7. </td>
-<td>Whang-hai, or </td>
-<td>Ko-kai dō. </td>
-<td class="cellRight">Yellow Sea Province.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft cellBottom">8. </td>
-<td class="cellBottom">Ping-an, or </td>
-<td class="cellBottom">Hei-an dō </td>
-<td class="cellRight cellBottom">Peace and Quiet Province.</td>
-</tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p class="footnote cont">In this table we have given the names in English which approximate the sounds of the
-Chinese characters, with which names of the provinces are written, and as they are
-heard to-day in Chō-sen. The modern Coreans use the modern Chinese sounds of the characters,
-while the Japanese cling to the ancient Chinese pronunciation of the same characters
-as they received them through Hiaksai and Shinra, eleven or twelve centuries ago.
-The old pure Corean sounds were Teru-ra tai for Zen-ra dō, Tsiku-shaku tai for Chiu-sei
-dō, Keku-shaku tai for Kei-ki dō, etc.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e2416src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch12" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e930">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XII.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">EVENTS LEADING TO THE JAPANESE INVASION.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">China and Japan are to each other as England and the United States. The staid Chinaman
-looks at the lively Japanese with feelings similar to those of John Bull to his American
-“cousin.” Though as radically different in blood, language, and temperament as are
-the Germans and French, they are enough alike to find food for mutual jealousy. They
-discover ground for irritation in causes, which, between nations more distant from
-each other, would stir up no feeling whatever. China considers Japan a young, vain,
-and boasting stripling, whose attitude ought ever to be that of the pupil to the teacher,
-or the child to the father. Japan, on the contrary, considering China as an old fogy,
-far behind the age, decayed in constitution and fortune alike, and more than ready
-for the grave, resents all dictation or assumption of superiority. Even before their
-adoption of the forces of occidental civilization in this nineteenth century, something
-of this haughty contempt for China influenced the Japanese mind. Japan ever refused
-to become vassal or tributary to China, and the memory of one of her military usurpers,
-who accepted the honorary title of Nihon-O, or King of Japan, from the Chinese Emperor,
-is to this day loaded with increasing execration. It has ever been the practice of
-the Japanese court and people cheerfully to heap upon their mikado all the honors,
-titles, poetical and divine appellations which belong also to the Chinese emperor.
-</p>
-<p>To conquer or humble their mighty neighbor, to cross their slender swords of divine
-temper with the clumsy blades of the continental braves, has been the ambition of
-more than one Japanese captain. But Hidéyoshi alone is the one hero in Japanese annals
-who actually made the attempt.
-</p>
-<p>As the Mongol conquerors issuing from China had used Corea as their point of departure
-to invade Japan, so Hidéyoshi resolved to make the peninsula the road for his armies
-into China. After <span class="pageNum" id="pb89">[<a href="#pb89">89</a>]</span>two centuries of anarchy in Japan, he followed up the work which Nobunaga had begun
-until the proudest daimiō had felt the weight of his arm, and the empire was at peace.
-</p>
-<p>Yet, although receiving homage and congratulations from his feudal vassals, once proud
-princes, Hidéyoshi was irritated that Chō-sen, which he, with all Japanese, held to
-be a tributary province, failed to send like greetings. Since, to the Ashikagas, she
-had despatched tribute and embassies, he was incensed that similar honors were not
-awarded to him, though, for over a century, all official relations between the two
-countries had ceased.
-</p>
-<p>On the 31st day of July, 1585, Hidéyoshi was made Kuambaku, or Regent, and to celebrate
-his elevation to this, the highest office to which a subject of the mikado’s could
-aspire, he shortly afterward gave a great feast in Kiōto, and proclaimed holiday throughout
-the empire. This feast was graced by the presence of his highest feudatories, lords,
-and captains, court nobles and palace ladies in their richest robes. Among others
-was one Yasuhiro, a retainer of the lord of Tsushima. Hidéyoshi’s memory had been
-refreshed by his having had read to him, from the ancient chronicles, the account
-of Jingu Kōgō’s conquests in the second century. He announced to his captains that,
-though Chō-sen was from ancient times tributary to Japan, yet of late years her envoys
-had failed to make visits or to send tribute. He then appointed Yasuhiro to proceed
-to Seoul, and remind the king and court of their duty.
-</p>
-<p>The Japanese envoy was a bluff old campaigner, very tall, and of commanding mien.
-His hair and beard had long since turned white under years and the hardships of war.
-His conduct was that of a man accustomed to command and to instant obedience, and
-to expect victory more by brute courage than by address. On his journey to Seoul he
-demanded the best rooms in the hotels, and annoyed even the people of rank and importance
-with haughty and strange questions. He even laughed at and made sarcastic remarks
-about the soldiers and their weapons. This conduct, so different from that of previous
-envoys, greatly surprised the Corean officials. Heretofore, when a Japanese officer
-came to Fusan, native troops escorted him from Fusan to Seoul, overawing him by their
-fierceness and insolence. Yasuhiro, accustomed to constant war under Hidéyoshi’s gourd-banner,
-rode calmly on his horse, and, amid the lines of lances drawn up as a guard of honor,
-spoke to his followers in a loud voice, telling them <span class="pageNum" id="pb90">[<a href="#pb90">90</a>]</span>to watch the escort and note any incivility. In a certain village he joked with a
-Corean soldier about his spear, saying, with a pun, that it was too short and unfit
-for use. At this, all the Japanese laughed out loud. The Coreans could not understand
-the language, but hearing the laugh were angry and surprised at such boldness. At
-another town he insulted an aged official who was entertaining him, by remarking to
-his own men that his hair and that of the Japanese grew gray by years, or by war and
-manly hardships; “but what,” cried he, “has turned this man’s hair gray who has lived
-all his life amid music and dancing?” This sarcastic fling, at premature and sensual
-old age, stung the official so that he became speechless with rage. At the capital,
-credentials were presented and a feast given, at which female musicians sang and wine
-flowed. During the banquet, when all were well drunk, the old hero pulled out a gourd
-full of pepper seeds and began to hand them around. The singing-girls and servants
-grabbed them, and a disgraceful scuffle began. This was what Yasuhiro wanted. Highly
-disgusted at their greedy behavior, he returned to his quarters and poured out a tirade
-of abuse about the manners of the people, which his Corean interpreter duly retailed
-to his superiors. Yasuhiro made up his mind that the country was in no way prepared
-for invasion; the martial spirit of the people was very low, and the habits of dissipation
-and profligacy among them had sapped the vigor of the men.
-</p>
-<p>To the offensive conduct of the envoy was added the irritation produced by the language
-of Hidéyoshi’s summons; for in his letter he had used the imperial form of address,
-“we,” the plural of majesty. Yasuhiro asked for a reply to these letters, that he
-might return speedily to Japan. There was none given him, and the Coreans, pleading
-the flimsy excuse of the difficulty of the voyage, refused to send an embassy to Japan.
-</p>
-<p>Hidéyoshi was very angry at the utter failure of Yasuhiro’s mission. He argued that
-for an envoy to be content with such an answer was sure proof that he favored the
-Coreans. Some of Yasuhiro’s ancestors, being daimiōs of Tsushima, had served as envoys
-to Chō-sen, and had enjoyed a monopoly of the lucrative commerce, and even held office
-under the Corean government. Reflecting on these things, Hidéyoshi commanded Yasuhiro
-and all his family to be put to death.
-</p>
-<p>He then despatched a second envoy, named Yoshitoshi, himself the daimiō of Tsu Island,
-who took with him a favorite retainer, <span class="pageNum" id="pb91">[<a href="#pb91">91</a>]</span>and a priest, named Genshō, as his secretary. They reached Seoul in safety, and, after
-the formal banquet, demanded the despatch of an envoy to Japan. The Corean dignitaries
-did not reply at once, but unofficially sent word, through the landlord of the hotel,
-that they would be glad to agree to the demand if the Japanese would send back the
-renegades who piloted the Japanese pirates in their raids upon the Corean coasts.
-Thereupon, Yoshitoshi despatched one of his suite to Japan. With amazing promptness
-he collected the outlaws, fourteen in number, and produced them in Seoul. These traitors,
-after confessing their crime, were led out by the executioners and their heads knocked
-off. Meanwhile, having tranquillized “all under Heaven” (Japan), even to Yezo and
-the Ainos, and finding nothing “within the four seas” worth capturing, Hidéyoshi cast
-his eyes southward to the little kingdom well named Riu Kiu, or the Sleepy Dragon
-without horns. The people of these islands, called Loo Choo, on old maps, are true
-Japanese in origin, language, and dynasty. They speak a dialect kindred to that of
-Satsuma, and their first historical ruler was Sunten, a descendant of Tamétomo, who
-fled from Japan in the twelfth century. Of the population of 120,000 people, one-tenth
-were of the official class, who lived from the public granaries. Saving all expense
-in war equipment, and warding off danger from the two great powers between which they
-lay, they had kept the good will of either by making their country act the part of
-the ass which crouches down between two burdens. They made presents to both, acknowledging
-Japan as their father, and China as their mother. From early times they had sent tribute-laden
-junks to Ningpo, and had introduced the Chinese classics, and social and political
-customs. When the Ming dynasty came into power, the Chinese monarch bestowed on the
-Prince of Riu Kiu a silver seal, and a name for his country, which meant “hanging
-balls,” a reference to the fact that their island chain hung like a string of tassels
-on the skirt of China. Another of their ancient native names was Okinawa, or “long
-rope,” which stretches as a cable between Japan and Formosa. Sugar and rice are the
-chief products. Hidéyoshi, wishing to possess this group of isles as an ally against
-China, and acting on the principle of baiting with a sprat in order to catch a mackerel,
-sent word to Riu Kiu to pay tribute hereafter only to him.
-</p>
-<p>The young king, fearing the wrath of the mighty lord of Nippon, sent a priest as his
-envoy, and a vessel laden with tribute <span class="pageNum" id="pb92">[<a href="#pb92">92</a>]</span>offerings. Arriving in the presence of the august parvenu, the priest found himself
-most graciously received. Hidéyoshi entered into a personal conversation with the
-bonze, and set forth the benefits of Riu Kiu’s adherence to Japan alone, and her ceasing
-to send tribute to China. At the same time he gave the priest clearly to understand
-that, willing or unwilling, the little kingdom was to be annexed to the mikado’s empire.
-When the priest returned to Riu Kiu and gave the information to the king, the latter
-immediately despatched a vessel to China to inform the government of the designs of
-Japan.
-</p>
-<p>Meanwhile, the court at Seoul, highly gratified with the action of the Japanese government
-in the matter of the renegade pilots, gave a banquet to the embassy. Yoshitoshi had
-audience of the king, who presented him with a horse from his own stables. An embassy
-was chosen which left Seoul, in company with Yoshitoshi and his party, and their musicians
-and servants, in April, 1590, and, after a journey and voyage of three months, arrived
-at Kiōto during the summer of 1590. At this time Hidéyoshi was absent in Eastern Japan,
-not far from the modern city of Tōkiō, besieging Odawara Castle and reducing “the
-second Hōjō” family to submission. Arriving at Kiōto in the autumn, he postponed audience
-with the Coreans in order to gain time for war preparations, for his heart was set
-on conquests beyond sea.
-</p>
-<p>Finally, after five months had passed, they were accorded an interview. They were
-allowed to ride in palanquins under the gateway of the palace without dismounting—a
-mark of deference to their high rank—all except nobles of highest grade being compelled
-to get out and walk. As usual, their band of musicians accompanied them.
-</p>
-<p>They report Hidéyoshi as a man of low appearance, but with eyes that shot fire through
-their souls. All bowed before him, but his conduct in general was of a very undignified
-character. This did not raise him in the estimation of his guests, who had already
-discovered his true position, which was that of a subject of the mikado, whose use
-of the imperial “we” in his letters was, in their eyes, a preposterous assumption
-of authority. They delivered the king’s letter, which was addressed to Hidéyoshi on
-terms of an equal as a Koku O (king of a nation, in distinction from the title of
-Whang Ti, by which title the Heavenly Ruler, or Emperor—the Mikado of Japan, or the
-Emperor of China—is addressed). The letter contained the usual commonplaces of <span class="pageNum" id="pb93">[<a href="#pb93">93</a>]</span>friendly greeting, the names of the envoys, and a reference to the list of accompanying
-presents.
-</p>
-<p>The presents—spoken of in the usual terms of Oriental mock modesty—consisted of two
-ponies and fifteen falcons, with harness for bird and beast, rolls of silk, precious
-drugs, ink, paper, pens, and twenty magnificent tiger-skins. The interview over, Hidéyoshi
-wished the envoys to go home at once. This they declined to do, but, leaving Kiōto,
-waited at the port of Sakai. A letter to the king finally reached them, but couched
-in so insolent a tone that the ambassadors sent it back several times to be purged.
-Even in its improved form it was the blustering threat of a Japanese bully. All this
-consumed time, which was just what Hidéyoshi wished.
-</p>
-<p>Some years before this, some Portuguese trading ships had landed at the island of
-Tané, off the south of Japan. The Japanese, for the first time, saw Europeans and
-heard their unintelligible language. At first all attempts to understand them were
-in vain. A Chinese ship happened to arrive about the same time, on which were some
-sailors who knew a little Portuguese, and thus communications were held. The foreigners,
-being handsomely treated, gave their hosts some firearms, probably pistols, taught
-their use, and how to make powder. These “queer things, able to vomit thunder and
-lightning, and emitting an awful smell,” were presented to Shimadzŭ, the daimiō of
-Satsuma, who gave them to Hidéyoshi. Among the presents, made in return to Chō-sen,
-were several of these new weapons made by Japanese. They were most probably sent as
-a hint, like that of the Pequot’s offering of the arrows wrapped in snake-skin. With
-them were pheasants, stands of swords and spears, books, rolls of paper, and four
-hundred gold <i>koban</i> (a coin worth about $5.00).
-</p>
-<p>With the returning embassy, Hidéyoshi sent the priest and a former colleague of Yoshitoshi
-to Seoul. They were instructed to ask the king to assist Hidéyoshi to renew peaceful
-relations between Japan and China. These, owing to the long continued piratical invasions
-from Japan, during the anarchy of the Ashikaga, had been suspended for some years
-past.
-</p>
-<p>The peaceful influences of Christianity’s teachings now came between these two pagan
-nations, in the mind and person of Yoshitoshi, who had professed the faith of Jesus
-as taught by the Roman Catholic missionaries from Portugal, then in Japan. Be this
-as it may, Yoshitoshi, who had been in Seoul, and lived in Tsushima, being well acquainted
-with the military resources of the three <span class="pageNum" id="pb94">[<a href="#pb94">94</a>]</span>countries, knew that war would result in ruin to Chō-sen, while, in measuring their
-swords with China, the Japanese were at fearful odds. Animated by a desire to prevent
-bloodshed, he resolved to mediate with the olive branch. He started on an independent
-mission, at his own cost, to persuade the Coreans to use their good offices at mediation
-between Japan and China, and thus prevent war. Arriving at Fusan, in 1591, he forwarded
-his petition to Seoul, and waited in port ten days in hopes of the answer he desired.
-But all was in vain. He received only a letter containing a defiant reply to his master’s
-bullying letter. In sadness he returned to Kiōto, and reported his ill-success. Surprised
-and enraged at the indifference of the Coreans, Hidéyoshi pushed on his war preparations
-with new vigor. He resolved to test to its utmost the military strength of Japan,
-in order to humble China as well as her vassal. Accustomed to victory under the gourd-banner
-in almost every battle during the long series of intestine wars now ended, an army
-of seasoned veterans heard joyfully the order to prepare for a campaign beyond sea.
-</p>
-<p>Hidéyoshi, during this year, nominally resigned the office of Kuambaku, in favor of
-his son, and, according to usage, took the title of Taikō, by which name (Taikō Sama)
-he is popularly known, and by which we shall refer to him. Among the Coreans, even
-of to-day, he is remembered by the title which still inspires their admiration and
-terror—Kuambaku. Chinese writers give a grotesque account of Hidéyoshi, one of whose
-many names they read as Ping-syew-kye. They call him “the man under a tree,” in reference
-to his early nickname of Kinomoto. He is also dubbed “King of Taikō.” The Jesuit missionaries
-speak of him in their letters as Quabacundono (His Lordship the Kuambaku), or by one
-of his personal names, Faxiba (Hashiba).
-</p>
-<p>The Coreans were now in a strait. Though under the protectorate of China, they had
-been negotiating with a foreign power. How would China like this? Should they keep
-the entire matter secret, or should they inform their suzerain of the intended invasion
-of China? They finally resolved upon the latter course, and despatched a courier to
-Peking. About the same time the messenger from Riu Kiu had landed, and was on his
-way with the same tidings. The Riukiuan reached Peking first, and the Corean arrived
-only to confirm the news. Yet, in spite of such overwhelming evidence of the designs
-of Japan, the colossal “tortoise” could, at first, scarce believe “the bee” would
-attempt to sting.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb95">[<a href="#pb95">95</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch13" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e938">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE INVASION—ON TO SEOUL.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">For the pictures of camps, fleets, the details of armory and commissariat, and all
-the pomp and circumstance that make up the bright side of Japanese war preparations
-in 1591 and 1592, we are indebted, not only to the Japanese writers, but to those
-eye witnesses and excellent “war correspondents,” the Portuguese missionaries then
-in Kiushiu, and especially to Friar Louis Frois. He tells us of the amplitude, vigor,
-and brilliancy of Taikō’s measures for invasion, and adds that the expenses therefor
-greatly burdened the “<span lang="fr">ethniques</span>” or daimiōs who had to pay the cost. Those feudatories, whose domain bordered the
-sea, had to furnish a mighty fleet of junks, while to man them, the quota of every
-hundred houses of the fishing population was ten sailors.
-</p>
-<p>The land and naval forces assembled at Nagoya, in Hizen, now called Karatsu, and famous
-for being the chief place for the manufacture of Hizen porcelain. Here a superb castle
-was built, while huge inns or resting-places were erected all along the road from
-Kiōto. The armies gathered here during the war numbered 500,000 men; of whom 150,000
-formed the army of invasion, 60,000 the first reserve, while 100,000 were set apart
-as Taikō’s body-guard; the remainder were sailors, servants, camp followers, etc.
-</p>
-<p>Beside the old veterans were new levies of young soldiers, and a corps of matchlock
-men, who afterward did good execution among the Coreans. The possession of this new
-and terrible weapon gave the invaders a mighty advantage over their enemies. Though
-firearms had been known and manufactured in Japan for a half century, this was the
-first time they were used against foreign enemies, or on a large scale. Taikō also
-endeavored to hire or buy from the Portuguese two ships of war, so as to use their
-artillery; but in this he failed, and the troops were despatched in native-built vessels.
-These made a gallant display as they crowded together by hundreds. At the signal,
-given by the firing of cannon, <span class="pageNum" id="pb96">[<a href="#pb96">96</a>]</span>the immense fleet hoisted sail and, under a fresh breeze, bore away to the west.
-</p>
-<p>Their swelling sails, made of long sections of canvass laced together, vertically,
-at their edges, from stem to boom (thus differing from the Chinese, which are laced
-horizontally), were inscribed with immense crests and the heraldic devices of feudalism,
-many feet in diameter. Near the top were cross-wise bands or stripes of black. The
-junks of Satsuma could be distinguished by the white cross in a circle; those of Higo
-by the broad-banded ring. On one were two crossed arrow-feathers, on others the chess-board,
-the “cash” coin and palm-leaves, the butterfly, the cloisonné symbol, the sun, the
-fan, etc. Innumerable banners, gay with armorial designs or inscribed with Buddhist
-texts, hung on their staves or fluttered gaily as flags and streamers from the mastheads.
-Stuck into the back of many of the distinguished veterans, or officers, were the <i>sashi-mono</i>, or bannerets. Kato Kiyomasa, being a strict Buddhist, had for the distinctive blazon
-of his back-pennant, and on the banners of his division, the prayer and legend of
-his sect, the Nichirenites, “<span class="sc">Namu miyo ho rengé kiō</span>” (Glory to the Holy Lotus, or Glory to the salvation-bringing book of the Holy Law
-of Buddha). On the forward deck were ranged heavy shields of timber for the protection
-of the archers. These, at close quarters, were to be let down and used as boarding
-planks, when the sword, pike, and grappling-hook came into play. Huge tassels, dangling
-from the prows like the manes of horses, tossed up and down as the ships rode over
-the waves. Each junk had a huge eye painted at the prow, to look out and find the
-path in the sea. With the squadron followed hundreds of junks, laden with salt meat,
-rice-wine, dried fish, and rice and beans, which formed the staple of the <span class="corr" id="xd31e2634" title="Source: invaders">invaders’</span> commissariat for man and horse. Transport junks, with cargoes of flints, arrows,
-ball, powder, wax candles, ship and camp stores, “not forgetting a single thing,”
-sailed soon after, as well as the craft containing horses for the cavalry.
-</p>
-<p>Taikō did not go to Corea himself, being dissuaded by his aged mother. The court also
-wished no weaker hand than his to hold the reins of government while the army was
-on foreign shores. The men to whom he entrusted the leadership of the expedition,
-were Konishi Yukinaga and Kato Kiyomasa. To the former, he presented a fine war horse,
-telling him to “gallop over the bearded savages” with it, while to the latter he gave
-a battle-flag. Konishi was an impetuous young man, only twenty-three years <span class="pageNum" id="pb97">[<a href="#pb97">97</a>]</span>of age. He was a favorite of Taikō, and sprung like the latter from the common people,
-being the son of a medicine dealer. His crest or banner was a huge, stuffed, white
-paper bag, such as druggists in Japan use as a shop sign. In this he followed the
-example of his august chief, who, despising the brocade banners of the imperial generals,
-stuck a gourd on a pole for his colors. For every victory he added another gourd,
-until his immense cluster contained as many proofs of victory as there are bamboo
-sticks in an umbrella. The “gourd-banner” became the emblem of infallible victory.
-Konishi also imitated his master in his tactics—impetuous attack and close following
-up of victory.
-</p>
-<p>Konishi was a Christian, an ardent convert to the faith of the Jesuit fathers, by
-whom he had been baptized in 1584. In their writings, they call him “Don Austin”—a
-contraction of Augustine. Other Christian lords or daimiōs, who personally led their
-troops in the field with Konishi, were Arima, Omura, Amakusa, Bungo, and Tsushima.
-The personal name of the latter, a former envoy to Corea, of whom we have read before,
-was Yoshitoshi. He was the son-in-law of Konishi. Kuroda, as Mr. Ernest Satow has
-shown, is the “Kondera” of the Jesuit writers.
-</p>
-<p>Kato Kiyomasa was a noble, whose castle seat was at Kumamoto in Higo. From his youth
-he had been trained to war, and had a reputation for fierce bravery. It is said that
-Kato suggested to Taikō the plan of invading Corea. His crest was a broad-banded circle,
-and his favorite weapon was a long lance with but one cross-blade instead of two.
-Kato is the “Toronosqui” of the Jesuit fathers, who never weary of loading his memory
-with obloquy. This “<i lang="la">vir ter execrandus</i>” was a fierce Buddhist and a bitter foe to Christianity. A large number of fresh
-autographic writings had been made by the bonzes in the monasteries expressly for
-Kato’s division. The silk pennon, said to have been inscribed by Nichiren himself
-and worn by Kato during the invasion, is now in Tōkiō, owned by Katsu Awa, and is
-six centuries old.
-</p>
-<p>With such elements at work between the two commanders, bitterness of religious rivalry,
-personal emulation, the desire to earn glory each for himself alone, the contempt
-of an old veteran for a young aspirant, harmony and unity of plan were not to be looked
-for. Nevertheless, the personal qualities of each general were such as to inspire
-his own troops with the highest enthusiasm, and the army sailed away fully confident
-of victory.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb98">[<a href="#pb98">98</a>]</span></p>
-<p>What were the objects of Taikō in making this war? Evidently his original thought
-was to invade and humble China. Then followed the determination to conquer Chō-sen.
-Ambition may have led him to rival Ojin Tennō, who, in his mother’s womb, made the
-conquest of Shinra, and, as the deified Hachiman, became the Japanese god of war.
-Lastly, the Jesuit fathers saw in this expedition a plot to kill off the Christian
-leaders in a foreign land, and thus extirpate Christianity in Japan. To ship the Christians
-off to a foreign soil to die of wounds or disease, was easier than to massacre them.
-They make Taikō a David, and his best generals Uriahs—though Coligny, slain twenty
-years before, might have served for a more modern illustration.
-</p>
-<p>Certain it is that it was during the absence of the Christian leaders that the severest
-persecutions at home took place. It is probable, also, that his jealousy of the success
-and consequent popularity of the Christian generals created irresolution in Taikō’s
-mind, leading him to neglect the proper support of the expedition and thus to bring
-about a gigantic failure.
-</p>
-<p>Finally, we must mention the theory of a Japanese friend, Mr. Egi Takato, who held
-that Taikō, having whole armies of unemployed warriors, all jealous of each other,
-was compelled, in order to ensure peace in Japan, to find employment for their swords.
-His idea was to send them on this distant “frontier service,” and give them such a
-taste of home-sickness that peaceful life in Japan would be a desideratum ever afterward.
-</p>
-<p>The Coreans, by their own acknowledgment, were poorly prepared for a war with the
-finest soldiers in Asia, as the Japanese of the sixteenth century certainly were.
-Nor had they any leader of ability to direct their efforts. Their king, Sien-jo, the
-fifteenth of the house of Ni, who had already reigned twenty-six years, was a man
-of no personal importance, addicted entirely to his own pleasures, a drunkard, and
-a debauchee. Though the royal proclamation was speedily issued, calling on the people
-to fortify their cities, to rebuild the dilapidated castles, and to dig out the moats,
-long since choked by mud and vegetation, the people responded so slowly, that few
-of the fortresses were found in order when their enemies laid siege to them. Weapons
-were plentiful, but there were no firearms, save those presented as curiosities by
-the Taikō to the king. There was little or no military organization, except on paper,
-while the naval defences were in a sad plight. However, they began to enroll and drill,
-to lay up stores <span class="pageNum" id="pb100">[<a href="#pb100">100</a>]</span>of fish and grain for the army, to build ships, to repair their walls, and even to
-manufacture rude firearms.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p099width" id="p099"><img src="images/p099.png" alt="Map of the Japanese Military Operations of 1592." width="512" height="720"><p class="figureHead">Map of the Japanese Military Operations of 1592.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>Yet even the most despondent of the Coreans never dreamed that the Japanese, on their
-first arrival, would sweep everything before them like a whirlwind, and enter the
-capital within eighteen days after their landing at Fusan. One of the first castles
-garrisoned and provisioned was that of Tong-nai, near Fusan. On the morning of May
-25, 1592, the sentinels on the coast descried the Japanese fleet of eight hundred
-ships, containing the division of Konishi. Before night the invaders had disembarked,
-captured Fusan, and laid siege to Tong-nai Castle, which at once surrendered. So sudden
-was the attack that the governor of the district, then in the city, was unable to
-escape. Konishi, writing a letter to the king, gave it into the hands of the governor,
-and made him swear to deliver it safely, promising him unconditional liberty if he
-did so. The governor agreed, and at once set out for Seoul; but on reaching it he
-simply said he had escaped, and made no mention of the letter. His perjury was not
-to remain undetected, as later events proved. Without an hour’s delay Konishi’s division,
-leaving Tong-nai, marched up the Nak-tong valley to Shang-chiu.
-</p>
-<p>Kato’s division, delayed by a storm, arrived next day. Landing immediately, he saw
-with chagrin the pennons of his rival flying from the ramparts of Tong-nai. Angry
-at being left behind by “the boy,” he took the more northerly of the two routes to
-the capital. The two rival armies were now straining every nerve on a race to Seoul,
-each eager to destroy all enemies on the march, and reach the royal palace first.
-Kuroda and other generals led expeditions into the southern provinces of Chulla and
-Chung-chong. These provinces being subdued, and the castles garrisoned, they were
-to make their way to the capital.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p101width" id="p101"><img src="images/p101.png" alt="Corean Knight of the Sixteenth Century." width="521" height="720"><p class="figureHead">Corean Knight of the Sixteenth Century.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>The Coreans proved themselves especially good bowmen, but inexpert at other weapons,
-their swords being of iron only, short, clumsy, and easily bent. Their spears, or
-rather pikes, were shorter than the Japanese, with heavy blades, from the base of
-which hung tassels. The iron heads were hollow at the base, forming a socket, in which
-the staff fitted. The Japanese spearheads, on the contrary, were riveted down and
-into the wood, which was iron-banded for further security, making a weapon less likely
-to get out of order, while the blades were steel-edged. The Corean cavalry had heavy,
-three-pronged spears, which were extremely <span class="pageNum" id="pb101">[<a href="#pb101">101</a>]</span>formidable to look at, but being so heavy as to be unwieldly at close quarters, they
-did little execution. Many of their suits of armor were handsomely inlaid, made of
-iron and leather<span class="corr" id="xd31e2672" title="Source: .">,</span> but less flexible and more vulnerable than those of the Japanese, which were of interlaced
-silk and steel on a background of tough buckskin, with sleeves of chain mail. The
-foot soldiers on either side were incased in a combination of iron chain and plate
-armor, <span class="pageNum" id="pb102">[<a href="#pb102">102</a>]</span>but the Coreans had no glaves, or cross-blades on their pikes, and thus were nearly
-helpless against their enemy’s cavalry. The Japanese were smooth-shaven, and wore
-stout helmets, with ear-guards and visors, but the Coreans, with open helmets, without
-visors, and whiskered faces, were dubbed “hairy barbarians.” They were beginning to
-learn the use of powder, which, however, was so badly mixed as to be exasperatingly
-slow in burning. Their very few firearms were of the rudest and most cumbrous sort.
-They used on their ramparts a kind of wooden cannon, made of bamboo-hooped timber,
-from which they shot heavy wooden darts, three feet long, pointed with sharp-bladed,
-Y-shaped iron heads. The range of these clumsy missiles was very short. The Japanese,
-on the contrary, had at several sieges pieces of light brass ordnance, with which
-they quickly cleared the walls of the castles, and then scaled them with long and
-light ladders, made of bamboo, and easily borne by men on a run. The Japanese were
-not only better equipped, but their tactics were superior. Their firearms frightened
-the Corean horses, and the long spears and halberds of their cavalry were used with
-fearful effect while pursuing the fugitives, who were pierced or pulled off their
-steeds, or sabred in droves. Few bodies of native troops faced the invaders in the
-field, while fire-arrows, gunpowder, and ladders quickly reduced the castles. Not
-a few of the Corean officers were killed inside their fortresses by the long range
-fire of the sharp-shooters in the matchlock corps.
-</p>
-<p>The greater share of glory fell to Konishi, the younger man. Taking the southern route,
-he reached the castle of Shang-chiu, in the northwestern part of Kiung-sang, and captured
-it. Leaving a garrison, he pushed on to Chiun-chiu. This fortress of Chiun-chiu is
-situated in the northeastern part of Chung-chong province, and on the most northerly
-of the two roads, over which Kato was then marching. It was at that time considered
-to be the strongest castle in the peninsula. On it rested the fate of the capital.
-It lay near one of the branches of the Han River, which flows past Seoul. At this
-point the two high roads to the capital, on which the two rivals were moving, converged
-so as to nearly touch. Chiun-chiu castle lay properly on Kato’s route, but Konishi,
-being in the advance, invested it with his forces and, after a few days’ siege, captured
-the great stronghold. The loss of the Coreans thus far in the three fortresses seized
-by Konishi, as reported by Friar Frois, was 5,000 men, 3,000 of whom fell at Chiun-chiu;
-while the <span class="pageNum" id="pb103">[<a href="#pb103">103</a>]</span>Japanese had lost but 100 killed and 400 wounded. After such a victory, “Konishi determined
-to conquer all Corea by himself.”
-</p>
-<p>Kato and his army, arriving a few days after the victory, again saw themselves outstripped.
-Konishi’s pennons floated from every tower, and the booty was already disposed of.
-The goal of both armies was now “the Miaco of the kingly city of Coray.” Straining
-every nerve, Kato pressed forward so rapidly that the two divisions of the Japanese
-army entered Seoul by different gates on the same day. No resistance was offered,
-as the king, court, and army had evacuated the city three days before. The brilliant
-pageant of the Japanese army, in magnificent array of gay silk and glittering armor,
-was lost on the empty streets of deserted Seoul.
-</p>
-<p>When Taikō heard of the success of his lieutenants in Corea, especially of Konishi’s
-exploits, he was filled with joy, and cried out, “Now my own son seems risen from
-the dead.”
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb104">[<a href="#pb104">104</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch14" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e946">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE CAMPAIGN IN THE NORTH.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The court at Seoul had been too much paralyzed by the sudden invasion to think of
-or carry out any effective means of resistance. Konishi had sent letters from Fusan
-and Shang-chiu, but these, through official faithlessness and the accidents of war,
-had failed in their purpose. Konishi was too fast for them. When the news reached
-Seoul, of the fall of Chiun-chiu castle, the whole populace, from palace to hut, was
-seized with a panic which, in a few hours, emptied the city. The soldiers deserted
-their post, and the courtiers their king, while the people fled to the mountains.
-His Majesty resolved to go with his court into Liao Tung, but to send the royal princes
-into the northern provinces, that the people might realize the true state of affairs.
-So hurried were the preparations for flight, which began June 9th, that no food was
-provided for the journey. The only horses to be obtained were farm and pack animals,
-as the royal stables had been emptied by the runaway soldiers. The rain fell heavily,
-in perpendicular streams, soon turning the roads to mire, and drenching the women
-and children. The Corean dress, in wet weather, is cold and uncomfortable, and when
-soaked through, becomes extremely heavy, making a foot journey a severe tax on the
-strength. To add to the distress of the king, as the cortege passed, the people along
-the road clamored, with bitter tears, that they were being abandoned to the enemy.
-Tortured with hunger and fatigue, the wretched party floundered on.
-</p>
-<p>Their first day’s journey was to Sunto, or Kai Seng, thirty miles distant. Darkness
-fell upon them long before they reached the Rin-yin River, a tributary of the Han,
-which joins it a few miles above Kang-wa Island. The city lay beyond it, and the crossing
-of the stream was done in the light of the conflagration kindled behind them. The
-king had ordered the torch to be applied to the barracks and fortifications which
-guarded the southern bank <span class="pageNum" id="pb105">[<a href="#pb105">105</a>]</span>of the river. Another motive for this incendiary act was to deprive their pursuers
-of ready materials to ferry themselves across the river. It was not until near midnight
-that the miserable fugitives, tortured with hunger and almost dead with fatigue, entered
-the city. Though feeling safe for the moment, since the Japanese pursuers could not
-cross the river without boats or rafts, most of the king’s household were doomed still
-to suffer the pangs of hunger. The soldiers had stolen the food provided for the party,
-and the king had a scant supper, while his household remained hungry until the next
-day, when some of the military gave them a little rice. The march was resumed on the
-following morning and kept up until Ping-an was reached. Here they halted to await
-the progress of events.
-</p>
-<p>The king ordered his scattered forces to rally at the Rin-yin River, and, on its northern
-bank, to make a determined stand.
-</p>
-<p>Kato and Konishi, remaining but a short time in the capital, united their divisions
-and pressed forward to the north. Reaching the Rin-yin River, they found the Corean
-junks drawn up on the opposite side in battle array. The Japanese, being without boats,
-could not cross, and waited vainly during several days for something to turn up. Finally
-they began a feigned retreat. This induced a portion of the Corean army to cross the
-river, when the Japanese turned upon them and cut them down with terrible slaughter.
-With the few rafts and boats used by the enemy, the Japanese matchlock men rapidly
-crossed the stream, shot down the sailors and the remaining soldiers in the junks,
-and thus secured the fleet by which the whole army crossed and began the march on
-Ping-an.
-</p>
-<p>The rival Japanese commanders, Kato and Konishi, who had hitherto refrained from open
-quarrel, now found it impossible to remain longer together, and drew lots to decide
-their future fields of action in the two northern provinces. Ham-kiung fell to Kato,
-who immediately marched eastward with his division, taking the high road leading to
-Gensan. Konishi, to whom the province of Ping-an fell, pushed on to Ping-an City,
-arriving on the south bank of the river toward the end of July, or about three weeks
-after leaving Seoul. Here he went into camp, to await the reinforcements under Kuroda
-and Yoshitoshi. These soon afterward arrived, having traversed the four provinces
-bordering on the Yellow Sea.
-</p>
-<p>The great need of the Japanese was floating material; next to this, their object was
-to discover the fords of the river. On <span class="pageNum" id="pb106">[<a href="#pb106">106</a>]</span>July 20th they made a demonstration against the fleet of junks along the front of
-the city, by sending out a few detachments of matchlock men on rafts. Though unsuccessful,
-the Corean king was so frightened that he fled with his suite to Ai-chiu. The garrison
-still remained alert and defiant.
-</p>
-<p>Delay made the Japanese less vigilant. The Corean commanders, noticing this, planned
-to surprise their enemy by a night attack. Owing to bad management and delay, the
-various detachments did not assemble on the opposite side of the river until near
-daylight. Then forming, they charged furiously upon Konishi’s camp, and, taking his
-men by surprise, carried off hundreds of prisoners and horses, the cavalry suffering
-worse than the infantry. Kuroda’s division came gallantly to their support, and drove
-the Coreans back to the river. By this time it was broad daylight, and the cowardly
-boat-keepers, frightened at the rout of their countrymen, had pushed off into mid-stream.
-Hundreds of the Coreans were drowned, and the main body, left in the lurch, were obliged
-to cross by the fords. This move gave the Japanese the possession of the coveted secret.
-Flushed with victory, the entire army crossed over later on the same day and entered
-the city. Dispirited by their defeat, the garrison fled, after flinging their weapons
-into the castle moats and ditches of the city; but all the magazines of grain, dried
-fish, etc., were now in the hands of the invaders. Frois reports, from hearsay, that
-80,000 Coreans made the attack on Konishi’s camp, 8,000 of whom were slain.
-</p>
-<p>The news of the fall of Ping-an City utterly demoralized the Coreans, so that, horses
-being still numerous, the courtiers deserted the king, and the villagers everywhere
-looted the stores of food provided for the army. Many of the fugitives did not cease
-their flight until they had crossed the Yalu River, and found themselves on Chinese
-territory. These bore to the Governor of Liao Tung province, who had been an anxious
-observer of events, the news of the fall of Ping-an, and the irresistible character
-of the invasion. The main body of the Corean army went into camp at Sun-an, between
-An-ton and Sun-chon. In Japan, there was great rejoicing at the news received from
-the frontier, because, as Frois wrote, Konishi, “in twenty days, hath subdued so mighty
-a kingdom to the crown of Japan.” Taikō sent the brilliant young commander a two-edged
-sword and a horse—“pledges of the most peerless honor that can possibly be done to
-a man.”
-</p>
-<p>The Japanese soldiers felt so elated over their victory that they <span class="pageNum" id="pb107">[<a href="#pb107">107</a>]</span>expected immediate orders to march into China. With this purpose in view, Konishi
-sent word to the fleet at Fusan to sail round the western coast, into Ta-tong River,
-in order to co-operate with the victorious forces at Ping-an. Had this junction taken
-place, it is probable China would have been invaded by Japanese armies, and a general
-war between these rival nations might have turned the current of Asiatic history.
-This, however, was not to be. Corean valor, with the aid of gunpowder and improved
-naval construction, prevented this, and kept three hundred miles of distance, in a
-mountainous country, between the Japanese and their base of supplies.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p107width" id="p107"><img src="images/p107.png" alt="Map illustrating the Campaign in the North, 1592–93." width="703" height="681"><p class="figureHead">Map illustrating the Campaign in the North, 1592–93.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>Oriental rhetoric might describe the situation in this wise: the eastern dragon of
-invasion flew across the sea in winged ships, and <span class="pageNum" id="pb108">[<a href="#pb108">108</a>]</span>speedily won the crystal of victory. But on land the dragon must go upon its belly.
-The Corean navy snatched the jewel from the very claws of the dragon, and left it
-writhing and hungry.
-</p>
-<p>In cool western phrase, sinister, but significant, Konishi was soon afterward obliged
-to “make a change of base.” The brilliant success of the army seems to have impressed
-the Japanese naval men with the idea that there was nothing for them to do. On the
-contrary, the Chō-sen people set to work to improve the architecture of their vessels
-by having them double-decked. They also provided for the safety of their fighting
-men, by making heavy bulwarks, and rearing, along the upper deck, a line of strong
-planks, set edgewise, and bolted together. Behind these, archers discharged their
-missiles without danger, while from port-holes below they fired their rude, but effective,
-cannon. Appearing off the inlet, in which the Japanese fleet lay at anchor, they at
-first feigned retreat, and thus enticed their enemies into pursuit. When well out
-on the open sea, they turned upon their pursuers, and then their superior preparation
-and equipment were evident at once.
-</p>
-<p>Lively fighting began, but this time the Coreans seemed invulnerable. They not only
-gained the advantage by the greater length of their lances and grappling-hooks, with
-which, using them like long forks, they pulled their enemies into the sea, but they
-sunk a number of the Japanese junks, either by their artillery or by ramming them
-with their prows. The remnant of the beaten fleet crept back to Fusan, and all hope
-of helping the army was given up. The moral effect of the victory upon the Corean
-people was to inspire them to sacrifice and resistance, and in many skirmishes they
-gained the advantage. They now awaited hopefully the approach of Chinese reinforcements.
-</p>
-<p>To the Chinese it seemed incredible that the capture of the strongest castles, the
-capital, and the chief northern city, could be accomplished without the treasonable
-connivance of the Coreans. In order to satisfy his own mind, the Chinese mandarin
-sent a special agent into Corea to examine and report. The government at Peking were
-even more suspicious, but after some hesitation, they despatched, not without misgiving,
-a small body of Chinese soldiers to act as a body-guard to the Corean king. These
-braves crossed the frontier; but while on their way to Ping-an, heard of the fall
-of the city, and, facing about, marched back into Liao Tung. The king and the fragments
-of his court now sent courier <span class="pageNum" id="pb109">[<a href="#pb109">109</a>]</span>after courier with piteous appeals to Peking for aid, even offering to become the
-subjects of China in return for succor rendered. A force of 5,000 men was hastily
-recruited in Liao Tung, who marched rapidly into Corea. Early in August the Japanese
-pickets first descried the yellow silk banners of the Chinese host. These were inscribed
-with the two characters Tai-Ming (Great Brightness), the distinctive blazon of the
-Ming dynasty. For the first time, in eight centuries, the armies of the rival nations
-were to meet in pitched battle.
-</p>
-<p>The Chinese seemed confident of success, and moved to the attack on Ping-an with neither
-wariness nor fear. Having invested the city, they began the assault on August 27th.
-The Japanese allowed them to enter the city and become entangled in its narrow lanes.
-They then attacked them from advantageous positions, which they had occupied previously,
-assailing them with showers of arrows, and charging them with their long lances. One
-body of the Ming soldiers attempted to scale the wall of a part of the fortifications,
-which seemed to have been neglected by the Japanese, when near the top, the whole
-face of the castle being covered with climbing men, the garrison, rushing from their
-hiding-places, tumbled over or speared their enemies, who fell down and into the mass
-of their comrades below. Those not killed by thrusts or the fall, were shot by the
-gunners on the ramparts, and the Chinese now received into their bosoms a shower of
-lead, against which their armor of hide and iron was of slight avail. In this fight
-the Ming commander was slain. The rout of the Chinese army was so complete, that the
-fugitives never ceased their retreat until safely over the border, and into China.
-</p>
-<p>The government at Peking now began to understand the power of the enemy with whom
-they had to deal. An army of 40,000 men was raised to meet the invaders, and, in order
-to gain time, a man, named Chin Ikei, was sent, independently of the Coreans, to treat
-with Konishi and propose peace. Some years before the Japanese pirates had carried
-off a Chinaman to Japan, where he was kept captive for many years. Returning to China,
-he made the acquaintance of Chin Ikei, and gave him much information concerning the
-country and people of his captivity. Chin Ikei was evidently a mercenary adventurer,
-who could talk Japanese, and hoped for honors and promotion by acting as a go-between.
-He had no commission or any real authority. The Chinese seem to have used him only
-as a cat’s-paw.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb110">[<a href="#pb110">110</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Arriving at the Corean camp, at Sun-an, early in October, and fully trusting the honor
-of the Japanese commander, Chin Ikei ventured, in spite of the warnings of the frightened
-Coreans, and to their intense admiration, within the Japanese lines, and had a conference
-with Konishi, Yoshitoshi, and Genshō. The Chinese agent agreed to proceed to Peking,
-and, returning to Ping-an after fifty days, to report the approval or disapproval
-of his government. To this Konishi agreed, and there was a truce. The conditions of
-peace, insisted on by Konishi, were that the Japanese ancient territory in the peninsula,
-namely, those portions covered by the old states of Shinra and Hiaksai, should be
-delivered over to Japan, to be held as vassal provinces. This demand virtually claimed
-all Corea south of the Ta-tong River, in right of ancient possession and recent conquest
-and occupation.
-</p>
-<p>Arriving in Peking, Chin Ikei found the Chinese army nearly ready to march, and, as
-their government disowned his right to treat with the Japanese, nothing, except the
-time gained for the Chinese, resulted from the negotiations. Meanwhile Kato Kiyomasa,
-with his troops, had overran the whole extent of Ham-kiung, the longest and largest
-province of Corea, occupying also parts of Kang-wen. No great pitched battle in force
-was fought, but much hard fighting took place, and many castles were taken after bloody
-sieges. In one of these, the two royal princes, sent north by their father on his
-flight from Seoul, and many men of rank were captured. Among his prisoners, was “a
-young girl reputed to be the most beautiful in the whole kingdom.” In the pursuit
-of the fugitives the Japanese were often led into wild and lonely regions and into
-the depths of trackless mountains and forests, in which they met, not only human foes,
-but faced the tiger disturbed from his lair. They were often obliged to camp in places
-where these courageous beasts attacked the sentries or the sleeping soldiers. Kato
-himself slew a tiger with his lance, after a desperate struggle. After a hard campaign,
-the main body of the troops fixed their camp at Am-pen, near Gensan, but closer to
-the southern border of the province. Nabéshima’s camp was in Kang-wen, three days’
-journey distant. From a point on the sea-coast near by, in fair weather, the island
-cone of Dagelet is visible. To the question of Kato, some Corean prisoners falsely
-answered that this was Fujiyama—the worshipped mountain of the home-land, and “the
-thing of beauty and a joy forever” to the Japanese people. Immediately the Japanese
-reverently uncovered their heads <span class="pageNum" id="pb111">[<a href="#pb111">111</a>]</span>and, kneeling on the strand, gazed long and lovingly with homesick hearts—a scene
-often portrayed in Japanese decorative art.
-</p>
-<p>Thus the year 1592 drew near its close; the Japanese, necessarily inactive, and the
-spirit of patriotism among the Coreans rising. Collecting local volunteer troops and
-forming guerilla bands, they kept the Japanese camps, along the road from Fusan to
-Ping-an, constantly vigilant They ferreted out the spies who had kept the Japanese
-informed of what was going on, and promptly cut off their heads. Isolated from all
-communication, Konishi remained in ignorance of the immense Chinese army that was
-marching against him. The discovery, by the Japanese, of the existence of the regular
-Chinese troops in Corea, was wholly a matter of accident. According to Chinese report,
-the commander of the Ming army, Li-yu-son (Japanese, Ri Jo Shō), was a valiant hero
-fresh from mighty victories over the rising Manchiu tribes in the north. The march
-of his host of 60,000 men through Liao Tung in winter, especially over the mountain
-passes, was a severe one, and the horses are said to have sweated blood. Evidently
-the expectation of the leader was to drive out the invaders and annex the country
-to China. When the Corean mountains appeared, as they reached the Yalu River, the
-leader cried out, “There is the place which it depends on our valor to recover as
-our hereditary possessions.” On the sixth day, after crossing the frontier, he arrived
-at Sun-an. It was then near the last of January, 1592, and the New Year was close
-at hand. Word was sent to Konishi that Chin Ikei had arrived and was ready to reopen
-negotiations, with a favorable reply. Konishi promptly despatched a captain, with
-a guard of twenty men, to meet Chin Ikei and escort him within the lines. It being
-New Year’s Day, February 2, 1593, the guard sallied out amid the rejoicings of their
-comrades who, tired of desolate Chō-sen, longed for peace and home. The treacherous
-Chinamen received the Japanese with apparent cordiality, and feasted them until they
-were well drunk. Then the unsuspicious Japanese were set upon while their swords were
-undrawn in their scabbards. All were killed except two or three. According to another
-account, they fell into an ambuscade, and fought so bravely that only three were taken
-alive. From the survivors Konishi first learned of the presence of the Ming army.
-The pretext, afterward given by the lying Chinaman, was that the interpreters misunderstood
-each other, and began a quarrel. The gravity of the situation was now apparent. A
-Chinese army, of <span class="pageNum" id="pb112">[<a href="#pb112">112</a>]</span>whose numbers the Japanese were ignorant, menaced them in front, while all around
-them the natives were gathering in numbers and in courage to renew the struggle for
-their homes and country. The new army from China was evidently well equipped, disciplined,
-and supplied, while the Japanese forces were far in an enemy’s country, distant from
-their base of supplies, and with a desolate territory in the rear. Under this gloomy
-aspect of affairs, the faces of the soldiers wore a dispirited air.
-</p>
-<p>Konishi’s alternative lay between the risk of a battle and retreat to Kai-seng. He
-was not long in resolving on the former course, for, in six days afterward, the Ming
-host, gay with gleaming arms, bright trappings, and dragon-bordered silk banners,
-appeared within sight of the city’s towers. Konishi anxiously watched their approach,
-having posted his little force to the best advantage. The city was defended on the
-west by a steep mountainous ridge, on the north by a hill, and on the south by a river.
-The Japanese occupying the rising ground to the north, which they had fortified by
-earthworks and palisades.
-</p>
-<p>At break of day, on February 10th, the allies began a furious assault along the whole
-line. The Japanese at first drove back their besiegers with their musketry fire, but
-the Chinese, with their scaling ladders, reached the inside of the works, where their
-numbers told. When night fell on the second day of the siege, all the outworks were
-in their possession, and nearly two thousand of the Japanese lay dead. The citadel
-seemed now an easy prize to the Corean generals; but the Chinese commander, seeing
-that the Japanese were preparing to defend it to the last, and that his own men were
-exhausted, gave the order to return to camp, expecting to renew the attack next morning.
-</p>
-<p>Konishi had despatched a courier to Otomo, the Japanese officer in command at Hozan,
-a small fortress in Whang-hai, to come to his aid. So far from obeying, the latter,
-frightened at the exaggerated reports of the numbers of the Chinese, evacuated his
-post and marched back to Seoul. Unable to obtain succor from the other garrisons,
-and having lost many men by battle and disease, while many more were disabled by wounds
-and sickness, Konishi gave orders to retreat. One of his bravest captains was put
-in command of the rear-guard, and the castle was silently deserted at midnight. In
-this masterly retreat, little was left behind but corpses. Crossing, upon the ice,
-the river, which was then frozen many feet in thickness, their foes were soon left
-behind. <span class="pageNum" id="pb113">[<a href="#pb113">113</a>]</span>Next day the allied army, surprised at seeing no enemy to meet them, entered the castle,
-finding neither man nor spoil of any kind. The Coreans wished to pursue their enemy,
-but the Chinese commander, not only forbade it, but glad of a pretext by which he
-could shift the blame on some other person, cashiered the Corean general for allowing
-the Japanese to escape so easily. Konishi, without stopping at Kai-seng, was thus
-enabled to reach Seoul, now the headquarters of all the invading forces. Fully expecting
-the early advance of the Chinese, the men were now set to work in fortifying the city.
-</p>
-<p>In the flush of success, Li-yu-sung, the Ming commander, sent an envoy with a haughty
-summons of surrender to Kato and Nabéshima. To this Kato answered in a tone of defiance,
-guarded his noble prisoners more vigilantly, and with his own hand, in sight of the
-envoy, put the beautiful Corean girl to death, by transfixing her, with a spear, from
-waist to shoulder, while bound to a tree. He immediately sent reinforcements to the
-castle of Kié-chiu, then threatened by the enemy.
-</p>
-<p>The Corean patriots, who organized small detachments of troops, began to attack or
-repel the invaders in several places, and even to lay siege to castles occupied by
-Japanese wherever they suspected the garrison was weak. The possession of a few firearms
-and even rude artillery made them very daring. They compelled the evacuation of one
-fortress held by Kato’s men by the following means. A Corean, named Richosun, says
-a Japanese author, invented bombs, or <i>shin-ten-rai</i> (literally, heaven-shaking thunder), containing poison. Going secretly to the foot
-of the castle, he discharged the bombs out of a cannon into the castle. As soon as
-they fell or touched anything they burst and emitted poisonous gas, and every one
-within reach fell dead. The first of these balls fell into the garden of the castle,
-and the Japanese soldiers did not know what it was. They gathered around to examine
-it, and while doing so, the powder in the ball exploded. The report shook heaven and
-earth. The ball was rent into a thousand pieces, which scattered like stars. Every
-man that was hit instantly fell, and thus more than thirty men were killed. Even those
-who were not struck fell down stunned, and the soldiers lost their courage. Many balls
-were afterward thrown in, which finally compelled the evacuation of the castle.
-</p>
-<p>From the above account it seems that the Coreans actually invented bombs similar to
-the modern iron shells. They may have been fired from a heavy wooden cannon, a sort
-of howitzer, made <span class="pageNum" id="pb114">[<a href="#pb114">114</a>]</span>by boring out a section of tree trunk and hooping it along its whole length with stout
-bamboo. Such cannon are often used in Japan. They will shoot a ten or twenty pound
-rocket or case of fireworks many hundred feet in the air. The Corean most probably
-selected a spot so distant from the castle that a sortie for its capture could not
-be successfully made. Corean gunpowder is proverbially slow in burning, which accounts
-for the fact that the Japanese had time to gather round it. The bomb was most probably
-a thin shell of iron, loaded only with gunpowder, which, like the Chinese mixture,
-contains an excess of sulphur. The military customs of the Japanese required every
-man disabled by a wound to commit hara-kiri, so that the number of actual deaths must
-have been swelled by the suicides that followed wounds inflicted by the iron fragments.
-The Japanese were so completely demoralized that they evacuated the castle.
-</p>
-<p>Two other castles at Kinzan and Kishiu, being beleagured by the patriots, Kato started
-to succor the slender garrisons. The Coreans, hearing this, redoubled their efforts
-to capture them before Kato should arrive. They had so far succeeded that the Japanese
-officer in the citadel, having lost nearly all his men, went into the keep, or fireproof
-storehouse, in the centre of the castle, and opened his bowels, preferring to die
-by his own hands rather than allow a Corean the satisfaction of killing him. Just
-at that moment the black rings of Kato’s banners appeared in sight. The Coreans, setting
-the castle on fire, and giving loud yells of defiance and victory, disappeared.
-</p>
-<p>Kato and Nabéshima had received an urgent message from Seoul to come with their troops,
-and thus unite all the Japanese forces in a stand against the Chinese. Kato disliked
-exceedingly to obey this order because he knew it came from Konishi, but he finally
-set out to march across the country. Thorough discipline was maintained on the march,
-and the rivers were safely crossed. Cutting down trees, the soldiers, in companies
-of five or ten, holding on abreast of logs, forded or floated over the most impetuous
-torrents, while the cavalry kept the Coreans at bay. Though annoyed by attacks of
-guerilla parties on their flanks, the Japanese succeeded in reaching Seoul without
-serious loss.
-</p>
-<p>By the retreat of the Japanese armies, and their concentration in Seoul, the four
-northern provinces, comprising half the kingdom, were virtually lost to them. At the
-fall of Ping-an the war found its pivot, for the Japanese never again retrieved their
-fortunes in Chō-sen.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb115">[<a href="#pb115">115</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch15" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e954">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XV.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE RETREAT FROM SEOUL.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The allies, after looking well to their commissariat, began their march on Seoul,
-about the middle of February, with forces which the Japanese believed to number two
-hundred thousand men. The light cavalry formed the advance guard. The main body, after
-floundering through the muddy roads, arrived, on February 26th, about forty miles
-northwest of Seoul.
-</p>
-<p>In the first skirmish, which took place near the town shortly afterward, the allies
-drove back the Japanese advance detachment with heavy loss. Li-yo-sun, the commander-in-chief,
-now ordered the army to move against the capital.
-</p>
-<p>In the council of war, held by the Japanese generals, Ishida, who, like Konishi, was
-a Christian in faith, advised the evacuation of Seoul. This, of course, provoked Kato,
-who rose and angrily said: “It is a shame for us to give up the capital before we
-have seen even a single banner of the Ming army. The Coreans and our people at home
-will call us cowards, and say we were afraid of the Chinamen.” Hot words then passed
-between the rival generals, but Otani and others made peace between them. All concluded
-that, in order to guard against treason, the Coreans in the capital must be removed.
-Thereupon, large portions of the city were set on fire, and houses, gates, bridges,
-public and private buildings, were soon a level waste of ashes. The people, old and
-young, of both sexes, sick and well, were driven out at the point of the lance. To
-the stern necessities of war were added the needless carnage of massacre, and hundreds
-of harmless natives were cruelly murdered. Only a few lusty men, to be used as laborers
-and burden-bearers, were spared.
-</p>
-<p>Years after, the memory of this frightful and inhuman slaughter, burdening the conscience
-of many a Japanese soldier, drove him a penitent suppliant into the monasteries. There,
-exiled from the world, with shaven head and priestly robe, he spent his days <span class="pageNum" id="pb116">[<a href="#pb116">116</a>]</span>in fasting, vigils, and prayers for pardon, seeking to obtain Nirvana with the Eternal
-Buddha.
-</p>
-<p>Meanwhile the work of fortification went on. The advance guard of the Chinese host
-were now within a few miles of the city, and daily skirmishes took place. The younger
-Japanese officers clamored to lead the van against the Chinese, but Kobayékawa, an
-elderly general, was allowed to arrange the order of battle, and the Japanese army
-marched out from the capital to the attack in three divisions, Kobayékawa leading
-the third, or main body of ten thousand men, the others having only three thousand
-each. In the battle that ensued the Japanese were at first unable to hold their ground
-against the overwhelming forces of their enemies. The Chinese and Coreans drove back
-their first and second divisions with heavy loss. Then, thinking victory certain,
-they began a pursuit with both foot soldiers and cavalry, which led them into disorder
-and exhausted their strength. When well wearied, Kobayékawa, having waited till they
-were too far distant from their camp to receive reinforcements, led his division in
-a charge against the allies. The battle then became a hand-to-hand fight on a gigantic
-scale. The Chinese were armed mainly with swords, which were short, heavy, and double-edged.
-The allies had a large number of cavalry engaged, but the ground being miry from the
-heavy rains, they were unable to form or to charge with effect. Their advantage in
-other respects was more than counterbalanced by the length of the Japanese swords,
-the strength of their armor, and their veteran valor and coolness. Even the foot soldiers
-wielded swords having blades usually two, but sometimes three and four, feet long.
-</p>
-<p>The Japanese have ever prided themselves upon the length, slenderness, temper, and
-keen edge of their blades, and look with unmeasured contempt upon the short and clumsy
-weapons of the continental Asiatics. They proudly call their native land “The country
-ruled by a slender sword.” Marvellous in wonder and voluminousness are their legends,
-literature, and exact history concerning <i>ken</i> (two-edged, short falchion), and <i>katana</i> (two-handed and single-edged sabre). In this battle it was the sword alone that decided
-the issue, though firearms lent their deadly aid. The long, cross-bladed spears of
-their foot soldiers were also highly effective, first, in warding off the sabre strokes
-of the Chinese cavalry, and then unhorsing them, either by thrust or grapple. One
-general of high rank was pulled off his steed and killed.
-</p>
-<p>The Japanese leaders were in their best spirits, as well as in <span class="pageNum" id="pb117">[<a href="#pb117">117</a>]</span>their finest equipments. One was especially noticeable by his gilded helmet that flashed
-and towered conspicuously. It was probably that of Kato, whose head-gear was usually
-of incredible height and dazzling splendor.
-</p>
-<p>After a long struggle and frightful slaughter, the allies were beaten back in confusion.
-Ten thousand Chinese and Coreans, according to Japanese accounts, were slaughtered
-on this bloodiest day and severest pitched battle of the first invasion.
-</p>
-<p>The Chinese suffered heavily in officers, and their first taste of war in the field
-with such veterans as the soldiers of Taikō was discouraging in the extreme. Li-yo-sun
-drew off his forces and soon after retired to Sunto. Not knowing that Kato had got
-into Seoul, and fearing an attack from the rear, on Ping-an, he drew off his main
-body to that city, leaving a garrison at Sunto. Tired, disgusted, and scared, the
-redoubtable Chinaman, like “the beaten soldier that fears the top of the tall grass,”
-sent a lying report to Peking, exaggerating the numbers of the Japanese, and asking
-for release from command, on the usual Oriental plea of poor health. As for the Japanese,
-they had lost so heavily in killed, that they were unable to follow up the victory,
-if victory it may be called. A small force, however, pressed forward and occupied
-Kai-jo, while the main body prepared to pass a miserable winter in the desolate capital.
-</p>
-<p>The Corean stronghold of An-am was also assaulted. This castle was built on a precipitous
-steep, having but one gate and flank capable of access, and that being a narrow, almost
-perpendicular, cutting through the rocks. The attacking force entered the gloomy valley
-shut in from light by the luxuriant forest, which darkened the path even in the daytime.
-At the tops, and on the ledges of the rocks beetling over the entrance-way, the Corean
-archers took up advantageous positions, while others of the garrison, with huge masses
-of rock and timber piled near the ledge, stood ready to hurl these upon the invaders.
-</p>
-<p>Awaiting in silence the approach of their enemies, they soon saw the Japanese fan-standards
-and paper-strip banners approach, when these were directly beneath them, every bow
-twanged, and a shower of arrows rained upon the invaders, while volleys of stones
-fell into their ranks, crushing heads and helmets together. The besiegers were compelled
-to draw off and arrange a new attack; but in the night the garrison withdrew. Next
-day the Japanese entered, garrisoned the castle, and decorated it with their streamers.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb118">[<a href="#pb118">118</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The long-continued abandonment of the soil, owing to the war and the presence of three
-large armies, bore their natural fruits, and turned fertile Corea into a land of starvation.
-Famine began its ravages of death on friend and foe alike. The peasants petitioned
-their government for food, but none was to be had. Thousands of the poor people died
-of starvation. The fathers suffered in camp, while the dead mothers lay unburied in
-the houses, and the children, tortured with hunger, cried for food. One day a captain
-in the Chinese army found, by the roadside, an emaciated infant vainly seeking for
-nourishment from the cold and rigid breast of its dead mother. Touched with compassion,
-the warrior took the child and reared him to manhood under his own care.
-</p>
-<p>Some rice was distributed to the wretched people from the government store-houses
-in certain places, but still the groans and cries of the starving filled the air.
-Pestilence entered the Japanese camp, and thousands of the home-sick soldiers died
-ingloriously. The long winter rains made the living despondent and gloomy enough to
-commit hara-kiri, while the state of the roads and the dashing courage of the guerillas,
-who pushed their raids to the very gates of the camps, made foraging an unpopular
-duty among the men. In such discomfort, winter wore away, and tardy spring approached.
-In this state of affairs the Japanese were willing to listen, and the allies ready
-to offer, terms of peace. A Corean soldier, named Rijunchin, by permission of his
-superior officer, had penetrated into Seoul to visit the two captive princes. On his
-return to the camp, he stated that the Japanese generals were very homesick and heartily
-tired of the war. At the same time, a letter was received from Konishi, stating his
-readiness to receive terms of peace. Chin Ikei was again chosen to negotiate. Reaching
-the Japanese lines at Kai-jo, he held an interview with Konishi, and the following
-points of agreement were made:
-</p>
-<p>1. Peace between the three countries.
-</p>
-<p>2. Japan to remain in possession of the three southern provinces of Chō-sen.
-</p>
-<p>3. Corea to send tribute to Japan as heretofore.
-</p>
-<p>4. Hidéyoshi to be recognized as King of Corea. The three other articles drawn up
-were not made public, but the acknowledgment of Taikō as the equal of the Emperor
-of China was evidently one of them. The Japanese, on their part, were to return the
-two captive princes, withdraw all their armies to Fusan, and evacuate the country
-when the stipulations were carried out.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb119">[<a href="#pb119">119</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Both parties were weary of the war. The Ming commander had requested to be relieved
-of his command and to return to China, while the three old gentlemen, who were military
-advisers in the Japanese camp, yearning for the pleasures of Kiōto, wrote to Taikō,
-asking leave to come home, telling him the object of his ambition was on the eve of
-attainment, and that he was to receive investiture from the Chinese emperor, and recognition
-as an equal.
-</p>
-<p>Scholarship and literature were not at a very high premium at that time among the
-Japanese military men. The martial virtues and accomplishments occupied the time and
-thoughts of the warriors to the exclusion of book learning and skill at words. The
-sword for the soldier, and the pen for the priest, was the rule. The bluff warrior
-in armor looked with contempt, not unmingled with awe, upon the shaven-pated man of
-ink and brush. One of the bonzes from the monastery was usually of necessity attached
-to the service of each commander. It was by reason of the ignorance, as well as the
-vanity, of the illiterate Japanese generals that such a mistake, in supposing that
-Taikō was to be recognized as equal to the Emperor of China, was rendered possible.
-The wily Chin Ikei, who drove a lucrative trade as negotiator, hoodwinked Konishi,
-who would not have been thus outwitted if he had had a bonze present to inspect the
-writing. Being a Christian, however, he was on bad terms with the bonzes.
-</p>
-<p>In both camps there were those who bitterly opposed any peace short of that which
-the sword decided. The Corean generals chafed at the time wasted in parley, and wished
-to march on the Japanese at once, whose ranks they knew were decimated with sickness,
-and their spirit and discipline relaxed under the idea of speedy return home. An epidemic
-had also broken out among their horses, probably owing to scant provender. Thus crippled
-and demoralized, victory would certainly follow a well-planned attack in force. Within
-the camp of the invaders Achilles and Agamemnon were as far as ever from harmony.
-Kato sullenly refused to entertain the idea of peace, partly because Konishi proposed
-it, but mainly because, if the two princes were given up, his achievements would be
-brought to naught, and all the glory of the war would redound to his rival. Only after
-the earnest representation by his friends of the empty granaries, and the danger of
-impending starvation, the great sickness among the troops, and the fearful loss of
-horses, was he induced <span class="pageNum" id="pb120">[<a href="#pb120">120</a>]</span>to agree with the other commanders that Seoul should be evacuated.
-</p>
-<p>Meanwhile, the allies were advancing toward the capital.
-</p>
-<p>On May 22, 1593, the Japanese, with due precautions, evacuated the city, and the vanguard
-of the Chinese army entered on the same day. The retreat of the Japanese was effected
-in good order, and, to guard against treachery, they bivouacked in the open air, avoiding
-sleeping in the houses or villages, and rigidly kept up the vigilance of their sentinels
-and the discipline of the divisions. In this way the various detachments of the army
-safely reached Fusan, Tong-nai, Kinka, and other places near the coast. Here, after
-fortifying their camps, they rested for a space from the alarms of war, almost within
-sight of their native land. The allies later on marched southward and went into camp
-a few leagues to the northward. Since crossing the Yalu River, the Chinese had lost
-by the sword and disease twenty thousand men.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb121">[<a href="#pb121">121</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch16" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e963">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">CESPEDES, THE CHRISTIAN CHAPLAIN.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The aspect of affairs had now changed from that of a triumphal march through Corea
-into China and to Peking, to long and tedious camp life, with uncertain fortunes in
-the field, which promised a long stay in the peninsula. Konishi had now breathing
-time and space for reflection. Being an ardent Christian—after the faith and practice
-of the Portuguese Jesuits—he wished for himself and his fellow-believers the presence
-and ministrations of one of the European friars to act as chaplain. He therefore sent,
-probably when at or near Fusan, a message to the superior of the Mission in Japan,
-asking for a priest.
-</p>
-<p>Toward the end of 1593, the Vice-Provençal of the Company of the Jesuits despatched
-Father Gregorio de Cespedes and a Japanese convert named “Foucan Eion” to the army
-in Chō-sen. They left Japan and spent the winter in Tsushima, the domain of Yoshitoshi,
-one of the Christian lords then in the field. Early in the spring of 1594 they reached
-Corea, arriving at Camp Comangai (most probably a name given by the Japanese after
-the famous hero Kumagayé), at which Konishi made his headquarters. The two holy men
-immediately began their labors among the Japanese armies. They went from castle to
-castle, and from camp to camp, preaching to the pagan soldiers, and administering
-the rite of baptism to all who professed the faith, or signed themselves with the
-cross. They administered the sacraments to the Christian Japanese, comforted and prayed
-with the sick, reformed abuses, assisted the wounded, and shrived the dying. New converts
-were made and old ones strengthened. Dying in a foreign land, of fever or of wounds,
-the soul of the Japanese man-at-arms was comforted with words of hope from the lips
-of the foreign priest. Held before his glazing eyes gleamed the crucifix, on which
-appeared the image of the world’s Redeemer. The home-sick warrior, pining for wife
-and babe, was told of the “House not made with hands.”
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb122">[<a href="#pb122">122</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The two brethren seem to have been very popular among the Japanese soldiers. Perhaps
-they already dreamed of planting the faith in Corea, when, suddenly, their work was
-arrested at its height by Kato, whose jealousy of Konishi was only equalled by his
-fanatical zeal for the Buddhist faith. Being in Japan he denounced the foreign priest
-to Taikō, declaring that these zealous endeavors to propagate the Christian faith
-only concealed a vast conspiracy against himself and the power of the mikado. At this
-time Taikō was dealing with the Jesuits in Japan, and endeavoring to rid the country
-of their presence by shipping them off to China. He fully believed that they were
-political as well as religious emissaries, and that their aim was at temporal power.
-These suspicions, as every student of Japan knows, were more than well founded.
-</p>
-<p>Besides accusing Cespedes, Kato insinuated that Konishi himself was leading the conspiracy.
-The cry of chō-téki (rebel, or enemy of the mikado) in Japan is enough to blacken
-the character of the bravest man and greatest favorite. Treason against the mikado
-being the supreme crime, Konishi found it necessary to return to Kiōto, present himself
-before Taikō, and cleanse his reputation even from suspicion. This the lull in the
-active operations, occasioned by the negotiations of Chin Ikei, enabled him to do.
-</p>
-<p>Immediately sending back the priest, he shortly afterward crossed the straits, and,
-meeting Taikō, succeeded in fully ingratiating himself and allaying all suspicion.
-</p>
-<p>The wife of Konishi had also embraced the Christian faith, her baptized name being
-Marie. To her, while in camp, he had sent two Corean lads, both of whom were of rank
-and gentle blood, the elder being called in the letters of the Jesuits “secretary
-to the Corean king.” He was the son of a brave captain in the army, and was thirteen
-years old. The lady, Marie, touched by their misfortune, kept the younger to be educated
-in the faith under her own direction, and sent the elder to the Jesuit seminary in
-Kiōto. Of this young man’s career we catch some glimpses from the letters of the missionaries.
-At the college he was a favorite, by reason of his good character, gentle manners,
-and fine mind. Professing the faith, he was baptized in 1603, taking the name of Vincent.
-He began his religious work by instructing and catechising Japanese and his numerous
-fellow Coreans at Nagasaki. When about thirty-three years old, the Jesuits, wishing
-to establish a mission in Corea, proposed to send him to his native land as missionary;
-but not being able, on account of the persecution <span class="pageNum" id="pb123">[<a href="#pb123">123</a>]</span>then raging in Japan, he was chosen by the Father Provençal to go to Peking, communicate
-with the Jesuits there, and enter Corea from China. At Peking he remained four years,
-being unable to enter his own country by reason of the Manchius, who then held control
-of the northern provinces of Manchuria and were advancing on Peking, to set on the
-throne that family which is still the ruling dynasty of the Middle Kingdom. Vincent
-was recalled to Japan in 1620, where, in the persecutions under Iyémitsŭ, the third
-Tokugawa shō-gun, he fell a victim to his fidelity, and was martyrized in 1625, at
-the age of about forty-four.
-</p>
-<p>Warned of the dangers of patronizing the now proscribed religion, there was no farther
-return of zeal on Konishi’s part, or that of the other Christian princes, and no farther
-opportunity was given to plant the seeds of the faith in the desolated land.
-</p>
-<p>Of the large numbers of Corean prisoners sent over to Japan, from time to time, many
-of those living in the places occupied by the missionaries became Christians. Many
-more were sold as slaves to the Portuguese. In Nagasaki, of the three hundred or more
-living there, most of them were converted and baptized. They easily learned the Japanese
-language so as to need no interpreter at the confessional—a fact which goes to prove
-the close affinity of the two languages.
-</p>
-<p>Others, of gentle blood and scholarly attainments, rose to positions of honor and
-eminence under the government, or in the households of the daimiōs. Many Corean lads
-were adopted by the returned soldiers or kept as servants. When the bloody persecutions
-broke out, by which many thousand Japanese found death in the hundred forms of torture
-which hate and malice invented, the Corean converts remained steadfast to their new-found
-faith, and suffered martyrdom with fortitude equal to that of their Japanese brethren.
-But, by the army in Corea, or by Cespedes, no seed of Christianity was planted or
-trace of it left, and its introduction was postponed by Providence until two centuries
-later.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb124">[<a href="#pb124">124</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch17" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e971">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XVII</h2>
-<h2 class="main">DIPLOMACY AT KIŌTO AND PEKING.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The Chinese ambassadors, with whom was Chin Ikei, set sail from Fusan, and reached
-Nagoya, in Hizen, on June 22d. Taikō received them in person, and entertained them
-in magnificent style. His lords imitated the august example set them, and both presents
-and attentions were showered upon the guests. Among other entertainments in their
-honor was a naval review, in which hundreds of ships, decorated with the heraldry
-of feudalism, were ranged in line. The boats moved in procession; the men, standing
-up as they worked the sculls, sang in measured chorus. The sheaves of glittering weapons,
-spears, and halberds arranged at their bows, were inlaid with gold and pearl The cabins
-were arranged with looped brocades and striped canvas, with huge crests and imperial
-chrysanthemums of colossal size. The ambassadors were delighted, both with the lovely
-scenery and the attentions paid them, and so remained until August.
-</p>
-<p>Little, however, came of this mission. Taikō sent orders to Kato to release the Corean
-princes and nobles; and Chin Ikei, who usually went off like a clumsy blunderbuss,
-at half-cock, hied back to Chō-sen to tell the news and get the credit of having secured
-this concession. The Coreans were made to bear the blame of the war, and the envoys
-of China, in good humor, returned to Peking in company with a Japanese ambassador.
-</p>
-<p>Yet Taikō, though willing to be at peace with China, did not intend to spare unhappy
-Chō-sen. To soothe the spirit of Kato, the order was given to capture the castle of
-Chin-chiu, forty miles west of Fusan, which had not yet been taken by the Japanese,
-though once before invested.
-</p>
-<p>Alarmed at the movements of the invaders, the Coreans tried to revictual and garrison
-the devoted fortress, and even to attack the enemy on the way. Unable, however, to
-make a stand against their foes, they were routed with frightful carnage. Kato led
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb125">[<a href="#pb125">125</a>]</span>the besieging force, eager to make speedy capture so as to irritate the Coreans and
-prevent the peace he feared.
-</p>
-<p>He invested the castle which the Coreans had not been able to reinforce, but the vigorous
-resistance of the garrison, who threw stones and timber upon the heads of his assaulting
-parties, drove him to the invention of Kamé-no-kosha, or tortoise-shell wagons, which
-imitated the defensive armor of that animal. Collecting together several hundred green
-hides, and dry-hardening them in the fire, he covered four heavily built and slant-roofed
-wagons with them. These vehicles, proof against fire, missiles, or a crushing weight,
-and filled with soldiers, were pushed forward to the foot of the walls. While the
-matchlock men in the lines engaged those fighting on the ramparts, the soldiers, under
-the projecting sheds of the tortoise wagons, that jutted against the walls, began
-to dig under the foundations. These being undermined, the stones were pried out, and
-soon fell in sufficient number to cause a breach. Into this fresh soldiers rushed
-and quickly stormed the castle. The slaughter inside was fearful.
-</p>
-<p>The news of the fall of this most important fortress fell like a clap of thunder in
-Peking, and upon the Corean king, who was preparing to go back to Seoul. The Chinese
-government appointed fresh commissioners of war, and ordered the formation of a new
-and larger army.
-</p>
-<p>The immediate advance of the invaders on the capital was expected, but Kato, having
-obeyed Taikō’s orders, left a garrison in the castle and fell back on Fusan.
-</p>
-<p>The Chinese general, upbraiding Chin Ikei for his insincerity, sent him to Konishi
-again. Their interview was taken up mainly with mutual charges of bad faith. Chin
-Ikei, returning, tried to persuade the Chinese commander to evacuate Corea, or, at
-least, retire to the frontier. Though he refused, being still under orders to fight,
-the Chinese army moved back from Seoul toward Manchuria, while Konishi, on his own
-responsibility, despatched a letter to the Chinese emperor. Large detachments of the
-Japanese army actually embarked at Fusan, and returned to Japan. In the lull of hostilities,
-negotiations were carried on at Peking and Kiōto, as well as between the hostile camps.
-The pen took the place of the matchlock, and the ink-stone furnished the ammunition.
-</p>
-<p>A son was born to Taikō, and named Hidéyori. A great pageant, in honor of the infant,
-was given at the newly built and <span class="pageNum" id="pb126">[<a href="#pb126">126</a>]</span>splendid castle of Fushimi, near Kiōto, which was graced by a large number of the
-commanders and veterans of Corea, who had returned home on furlough, while negotiations
-were pending. The result of the Japanese mission to Peking was the despatch of an
-ambassador extraordinary, named Rishosei, with one of lesser rank, to Japan, by way
-of Fusan.
-</p>
-<p>On his arrival, he requested to see Konishi, who, however, evaded him, excusing himself
-on the plea of expecting to hear from Taikō, after which he promised to hold an interview.
-Konishi then departed for Japan, taking Chin Ikei with him. On his return he still
-avoided the Chinese envoy, for he had no definite orders, and the other generals refused
-to act without direct word from their master in Kiōto. Meanwhile Chin Ikei, consumed
-with jealousy, and angry at the Peking mandarins for ignoring him and withholding
-official recognition and honors, planned revenge against Rishosei; for Chin Ikei believed
-himself to have done great things for Chō-sen and China, and yet he had received neither
-thanks, pay, nor promotion for his toils, while Rishosei, though a young man, with
-no experience, was honored with high office solely on account of being of rank and
-in official favor at Peking. Evidently with the intent of injuring Rishosei, Chin
-Ikei gave out that Taikō did not wish to be made King of Chō-sen, but had sent an
-envoy to China merely to have a high ambassador of China come to Japan, that he might
-insult or rather return the insult of the sovereign of China, in the person of his
-envoy, by making him a prisoner or putting him to death. Konishi and Chin Ikei again
-crossed to Japan to arrange for the reception of the Chinese envoys.
-</p>
-<p>The reports started by Chin Ikei, coming to the ears of Rishosei, so frightened him
-that he fled in disguise from Fusan, and absconded to China. His colleague denounced
-him as a coward, and declaring that the Chinese government desired only “peace with
-honor,” sailed with his retinue and two Corean officers to Japan. “And Satan [Chin
-Ikei], came also among them.” All landed safely at Sakai, near Ozaka, October 8, 1596.
-</p>
-<p>Audience was duly given with pomp and grandeur in the gorgeous castle at Fushimi,
-on October 24th. The ambassador brought the imperial letter, the patent of rank, a
-golden seal, a crown, and silk-embroidered robes of state. At a banquet, given next
-day, these robes were worn by Taikō and his officers.
-</p>
-<p>Formalities over, the Ming emperor’s letter was delivered to <span class="pageNum" id="pb127">[<a href="#pb127">127</a>]</span>Taikō, who at once placed it in the hands of three of the most learned priests, experts
-in the Chinese language, and ordered them to translate its contents literally.
-</p>
-<p>To Konishi, then at Kiōto, came misgivings of his abilities as a diplomatist Visiting
-the bonzes, he earnestly begged them to soften into polite phrase anything in the
-letter that might irritate Taikō. But the priests were inflexibly honest, and rendered
-the text of the letter into the exact Japanese equivalent. In it the patent of nobility
-first granted to the Ashikaga shō-gun (1403–1425) was referred to; and the gist of
-this last imperial letter was: “We, the Emperor of China, appoint you, Taikō, to be
-the King of Japan” (Nippon O). In other words, the mighty Kuambaku of Japan was insulted
-by being treated no better than one of the Ashikaga generals!
-</p>
-<p>This was the mouse that was born from so great a mountain of diplomacy. The rage of
-Taikō was so great that, with his own hands, he would have slain Konishi, had not
-the bonzes plead for his life, claiming that the responsibility of the negotiations
-rested upon three other prominent persons. As usual, the “false-hearted Coreans” were
-made to bear the odium of the misunderstanding.
-</p>
-<p>The Chinese embassy, dismissed in disgrace, returned in January, 1596, and made known
-their humiliation at Peking; while the King of Corea, who had been living in Seoul
-during the negotiations, appealed at once for speedy aid against the impending invasion.
-Hidéyoshi again applied himself with renewed vigor to raising and drilling a new army,
-and obtaining ships and supplies. A grand review of the forces of invasion, consisting
-of one hundred and sixty-three thousand horse and foot soldiers, was held under his
-inspection. Kuroda, Nagamasa, and other generals, with their divisions, sailed away
-for Fusan, January 7, 1597, and joined the army under Konishi and Kato.
-</p>
-<p>The new levies from China, which had been waiting under arms, crossed the Yalu and
-entered from the west at about the same time. Marching down through Ping-an and Seoul,
-a division of ten thousand garrisoned the castle of Nan-on, in Chulla. The Coreans,
-meanwhile, fitted out a fleet, under the command of Genkai, expecting a second victory
-on the water.
-</p>
-<p>An extinguisher was put on Chin Ikei, who was suspected of being in the pay of Konishi.
-Genkai, a Chinese captain, had long believed him to be a dangerous busybody, without
-any real powers from the Peking government, but only used by them as a decoy <span class="pageNum" id="pb128">[<a href="#pb128">128</a>]</span>duck, while, in reality, he was in the pay of the Japanese, and the chief hinderance
-to the success of the allied arms. On the other hand, this volunteer politician, weary
-and disappointed at not receiving from China the high post and honors which his ambition
-coveted, was in a strait. Taikō urged him to secure from China the claim of Japan
-to the southern half of Corea. China, on the contrary, ordered him to induce the Japanese
-generals to leave the country. Thus situated, Chin Ikei knew not what to do. He sent
-a message, through a priest, to Kato, urging him to make peace or else meet an army
-of one hundred thousand Chinamen. The laconic reply of the Japanese was: “I am ready
-to fight. Let them come.”
-</p>
-<p>Bluffed in his last move, and aware of the plots of Genkai, his enemy, Chin Ikei,
-at his wits’ end, resolved to escape to Konishi’s camp. The spies of Genkai immediately
-reported the fact to their master, who lay in wait for him. Suddenly confronting his
-victim, they demanded his errand. “I am going to treat with Kato, the Japanese general;
-I shall be back in one month,” answered Chin Ikei. He was seized and, on being led
-back, was thrown into prison. A searching party was then despatched at once to his
-house. There they found gold, treasure, and jewels “mountain high,” and his wife living
-in luxury. Believing all these to have been purchased by Japanese gold, and the fruits
-of bribery, the Chinese confiscated the spoil and imprisoned the traitor’s family.
-</p>
-<p>This ended all further negotiations until the end of the war. Henceforth, on land
-and water, by the veterans of both armies, with fresh levies, both of allies and invaders,
-the issue was tried by sword and siege.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb129">[<a href="#pb129">129</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch18" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e979">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE SECOND INVASION.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The plan of the second invasion was to land all the Japanese forces at Fusan, and
-then to divide them into three columns, which were to advance by the south to Nan-on
-castle in Chulla, and by two roads, northward and westward, to the capital. As before,
-Konishi and Kato Kiyomasa were the two field commanders, while Hidéaki, a noble lad,
-sixteen years old, was the nominal commander-in-chief.
-</p>
-<p>The Coreans had made preparations to fight the Japanese at sea as well as on land.
-Their fleet consisted of about two hundred vessels of heavy build, for butting and
-ramming, as well as for accommodating a maximum of fighting men. They were two hundred
-and fifty or three hundred feet in length, with huge sterns, having enormous rudders,
-the tillers of which were worked by eight men. Their high, flat prows were hideously
-carved and painted to represent the face and open jaws of a dragon, or demon, ready
-to devour. Stout spars or knotted logs, set upright along the gunwale, protected the
-men who worked the catapults, and heavily built roofed cabins sheltered the soldiers
-and gave the archers a vantage ground. The rowers sat amidships, between the cabins
-and the gunwales, or rather over on these latter, in casements made of stout timber.
-The catapults were on deck, between the bows. They were twenty-four feet long, made
-of tree-trunks a yard in circumference. Immense bows, drawn to their notches by windlasses,
-shot iron-headed darts and bolts six feet long and four inches thick. On some of the
-ships towers were erected, in which cannon, missile-engines, and musketeers were stationed,
-to shoot out fire-arrows, stones, and balls. At close quarters the space at the bows—about
-one-third of the deck—was free for the movements of the men wielding spear and sword,
-and for those who plied the grappling hooks or boarding planks. The decks crowded
-with men in armor, the glitter of steel and flash of oars, the blare <span class="pageNum" id="pb130">[<a href="#pb130">130</a>]</span>of the long Corean trumpets, and the gay fluttering of thousands of silken flags and
-streamers made brilliant defiance.
-</p>
-<p>The Japanese accepted the challenge, and, sailing out, closed with the enemy. Wherever
-they could, they ran alongside and gave battle at the bows. Though their ships were
-smaller, they were more manageable. In some cases, they ran under the high sterns
-and climbed on board the enemy’s ships. Once at hand to hand fight, their superior
-swordsmanship quickly decided the day. Their most formidable means of offence which,
-next to their cannon, won them the victory, were their rockets and fire-arrows, which
-they were able to shoot into the sterns, where the dry wood soon caught fire, driving
-the crews into the sea, where they drowned. Two hours fighting sufficed, by which
-time one hundred and seventy-four Corean ships had been burned or taken. News of this
-brilliant victory was at once sent by a swift vessel to Japan.
-</p>
-<p>Endeavors were made to strengthen the garrison at Nan-on, but the Japanese general,
-Kato Yoshiakira, meeting the reinforcements on their way, prevented their design.
-Kato Kiyomasa, changing his plans, also marched to Nan-on, resolving to again, if
-possible, snatch an honor from his rival As usual, the younger man was too swift for
-him. Konishi now moved his entire command in the fleet up the Sem River, in Chulla
-province, and landing, camped at a place called Uren, eighteen ri from Nan-on castle.
-He rested here five days in the open meadow land to allow the horses to relax their
-limbs after the long and close confinement in the ships. From a priest, whom they
-found at this place, they learned that the garrison of Nan-on numbered over 20,000
-Chinese and Coreans, the reinforcements in the province, and on their way, numbered
-20,000 more, while in the north was another Chinese corps of 20,000.
-</p>
-<p>At the council of war held, it was resolved to advance at once to take the castle
-before succor came. In spite of many lame horses, and the imperfect state of the commissariat,
-the order to march was given. Men and beasts were in high spirits, but many of the
-horses were ridden to death, or rendered useless by the forced march of the cavalry.
-Early on the morning of September 21st, the advance guard camped in the morning fog
-at a distance of a mile from the citadel. The main body, coming up, surrounded it
-on all sides, pitched their camp, threw out their pickets, set up their standards,
-and proceeded promptly to fortify their lines.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb131">[<a href="#pb131">131</a>]</span>
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p131width" id="p131"><img src="images/p131.png" alt="Map of the Operations of the Second Invasion." width="550" height="720"><p class="figureHead">Map of the Operations of the Second Invasion.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>Nan-on castle was of rectangular form, enclosing a space nearly two miles square,
-as each side was nine thousand feet long. Its walls, which were twelve feet high,
-were built of great stones, laid together without cement. Though no mortar had been
-used on wall or tower, shell-lime had been laid over the outside, in which <span class="pageNum" id="pb132">[<a href="#pb132">132</a>]</span>glistened innumerable fragments of nacre and the enamel of shells, giving the structure
-the appearance of glittering porcelain. At the angles, and at intervals along the
-flanks, were towers, two or three stories high. The four ponderous gates were of stone,
-fourteen feet high.
-</p>
-<p>The preparations for defence were all that Chinese science could suggest. In the dry
-ditch, three hundred feet wide, was an abatis of tree-trunks, with their branches
-outward, behind which were iron-plated wagons, to be filled with archers and spearmen.
-From the towers, fire-missiles and shot from firearms were in readiness.
-</p>
-<p>The weak points, at which no enemy was expected, and for which preparations for defence
-were few, were on the east and west
-</p>
-<p>No effect being produced during the first two days, either by bullets or fire-arrows,
-Konishi, on the third, sent large detachments of men into the rice-fields, then covered
-with a promising harvest of growing rice, which the farmers, in the hope of peace,
-had sown. Reaping the green, juicy stalks, the hundreds of soldiers gathered an enormous
-quantity of sheaves and waited, with these and their stacks of bamboo poles and ladders,
-until night. In the thick darkness, and in perfect silence, they moved to a part of
-the wall which, being over twenty feet high, was but slightly guarded, and began to
-build a platform of the sheaves. Four Japanese, reaching the top by climbing, raised
-the war-cry, and one of the towers being set on fire by their arrows, the work was
-discovered. Yet the matchlock men kept the walls swept by their bullets, while the
-work of piling fresh sheaves and bundles of bamboo went on. The greenness of the rice-stalks
-made the mass both firm and fire-proof. At last the mound was so high that it overtopped
-the wall. The men now climbed over the ramparts by the hundreds, and the swordsmen,
-leaping into the castle, began the fight at hand to hand. Most of the Chinese fought
-with the courage of despair, while others, in their panic, opened the gates to escape,
-by which more of the besiegers entered. The garrison, smitten in front and rear, were
-driven to the final wall by Konishi’s troops. On the other side a body of picked men,
-from Kato’s army, joined in the slaughter. They had entered the castle at the rear,
-by scaling a rugged mountain path known only to the Corean prisoners, whose treachery
-they had purchased by the promise of their lives. Between the two attacking forces
-the <span class="pageNum" id="pb133">[<a href="#pb133">133</a>]</span>Coreans and Chinese, who could not escape, were slain by thousands.
-</p>
-<p>Among many curious incidents narrated by Ogawuchi, who tells the story of this siege
-and attack, was this. As he entered the castle, amid the smoke and confusion, in which
-he saw some of the panic-stricken garrison destroying themselves, he cut off the heads
-of two enemies, and then, suddenly recollecting that this fifteenth day of the eighth
-month was the day sacred to Hachiman, the god of war and Buddha of the Eight Banners,
-he flung down his bloody sword, put his red palms together, and bowing his head, prayed
-devoutly toward his adored Japan. His devotions ended, he sliced off the noses from
-the heads of the two enemies he had slain, wrapped them in paper, twisted the package
-to his girdle, and sprang forward to meet, with but three men, the charge of fifty
-horsemen. The first sweep of the Japanese sabre severed the leg of the nearest rider,
-who fell to the earth on the other side of his horse, and Ogawuchi’s companions killing
-each his man, the enemy fled. The fires of the burning towers now lighted up the whole
-area of the castle, while the autumn moon rose red and clear. Ogawuchi slew, with
-his own hand, Kéku-shiu, one of the Chinese commanders. His body, in rich armor, lined
-with gold brocade, was stripped, and the trappings secured as trophies to be sent
-home, while his head was presented for Konishi’s inspection next morning.
-</p>
-<p>According to the barbarous custom of the victors, they severed the heads of the bodies
-not already decapitated in fight, until the castle space resembled a great slaughter-yard.
-Collecting them into a great heap, they began the official count. The number of these
-ghastly trophies, or “glory-signs,” was three thousand seven hundred and twenty-six.
-The ears and noses of the slain were then sheared off, and with the commander’s head,
-were packed with salt and quick lime in casks, and sent to Japan to form the great
-ear-tomb now in Kiōto, the horrible monument of a most unrighteous war.
-</p>
-<p>A map of the castle and town, with the list of the most meritorious among the victors,
-was duly sent back to Taikō. Then the walls and towers, granaries, and barracks were
-destroyed. This work occupied two days.
-</p>
-<p>Promptly on September 30th the army moved on to Teru-shiu, the cavalry riding day
-and night, and reaching the castle only to find it deserted, the garrison having fled
-toward Seoul. The Japanese <span class="pageNum" id="pb134">[<a href="#pb134">134</a>]</span>remained here ten days, levelling the fortress with fire and hammer.
-</p>
-<p>As the cold weather was approaching, the Japanese commanders, after council, resolved
-at once to march to the capital. Katsuyoshi and Kiyomasa had joined them, and the
-advance northward was at once began. By October 19th they were within seventeen miles
-of Seoul.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e2902src" href="#xd31e2902">1</a>
-</p>
-<p>The successes on land, brilliant though they were, were balanced by the defeat of
-the Japanese navy off the southern coast. The Chinese admiral Rishinshin, in conjunction
-with the Coreans, won an important victory over Kuroda’s naval forces a few days after
-the fall of Nan-on. In this instance, the Chinese ships were not only heavy enough
-to be formidable as rams, but were made more manageable by numerous rowers sitting
-in well-defended timber casements, apparently covered with metal. The warriors, too,
-seem to have been armed with larger lances. The Chinese commanders, having improved
-their tactics, so managed their vessels that the Japanese fleet was destroyed or driven
-away.
-</p>
-<p>This event may be said to have decided the fate of the campaign. Bereft of their fleet,
-which would, by going round the west coast, have afforded them a base of supplies,
-they were now obliged to advance into a country nearly empty of forage, and with no
-store of provisions. As in the opening of the war, so again, the loss of the fleet
-at a critical period made retreat necessary even at the moment of victory.
-</p>
-<p>Meanwhile, the Chinese general Keikai, thoroughly disliking the rigors of a camp in
-a Corean winter, and feeling deeply for his soldiers suffering from exposure in a
-desolate land, determined on closing the war as soon as possible. Erecting an altar,
-in presence of the army, he offered sacrifices to propitiate the spirits of Heaven
-and Earth, and prayed for victory against the invaders. Then, after seeing well to
-commissariat and equipment, he gave orders for a general movement of all the allied
-forces, with the design of ending the war by a brief and decisive campaign. The Japanese
-generals at Koran, by means of their spies and advance parties, kept themselves well
-informed of the movements of the enemy. At a <span class="pageNum" id="pb135">[<a href="#pb135">135</a>]</span>skirmish at Chin-zen the Chinese advance guard was defeated with heavy loss, but the
-Japanese at once began their retreat. Shishida and Ota, who were further east, learning
-of the overwhelming odds against them, fell back into Uru-san, which was already manned
-by a detachment of Kato’s corps.
-</p>
-<p>While Kato and Katsuyoshi were at Chin-zen, a grand tiger hunt was proposed and carried
-out, in which a soldier was bitten in two places and died. The army agreed that tiger-hunting
-required much nerve and valor. Besides the tiger steaks, which they ate, much fresh
-meat was furnished by the numerous crane, pheasants, and “the ten thousand things
-different from those in Japan,” which they made use of to eke out their scanty rations.
-</p>
-<p>To remain in camp until the Han River was frozen over, and could be crossed easily,
-or to press on at once, was the question now considered by the Japanese. While thus
-debating, word came that the Chinese armies had made junction at Seoul, and numbered
-one hundred thousand men. The Japanese “felt cold in their breasts” when they heard
-this. Far from their base of supplies, their fleet destroyed, and they at the threshold
-of winter in a famine-stricken land, they were forced, reluctantly, again to retreat
-into Kiung-sang.
-</p>
-<p>This turning their backs on Seoul was, in reality, the beginning of their march homeward.
-The invaders, therefore, enriched themselves with the spoil of houses and temples
-as they moved toward the coast—gold and silver brocades, rolls of silk, paintings,
-works of art, precious manuscripts, books written with gold letters on azure paper,
-inlaid weapons and armor, rich mantles, and whatever, in this long-settled and wealthy
-province, pleased their fancy. On the boundaries of roads and provinces they noticed
-large dressed stone columns of an octagonal form, with inscriptions upon them. Their
-route lay from Chin-zen, which they left in ashes, on October 25th, to Chin-nan; to
-Ho-won; to Ho-kin; to Karon; reaching Kion-chiu, the old capital of Shinra, after
-some fighting along the way.
-</p>
-<p>The Japanese were impressed with the size and grandeur of the buildings in this old
-seat of the civilization and learning of Shinra and Korai. Here, in ancient days,
-was the focus of the arts, letters, religion, and science which, from the west, the
-far off mysterious land of India, and the nearer, yet august, empire of China, had
-been brought to Corea. Here, too, their own ancient mikados had sent embassies, and
-from this historic city had radiated <span class="pageNum" id="pb136">[<a href="#pb136">136</a>]</span>the influences of civilization into Japan. As Buddhism had been the dominant faith
-of Shinra and Korai, this was the old sacred city of the peninsula, and among the
-historic edifices still standing and most admired were the halls and pagodas of the
-Eternal Buddha. Kion-chiu was to the Japanese very much what London is to an American,
-Geneva to a Protestant, or Dordrecht to a Hollander. Yet, in spite of all classic
-associations, the city was wantonly destroyed. On the morning of November 2d, beginning
-at the magnificent temples, the whole city was given to the torch. Three hundred thousand
-dwellings were burned, and the flames lighted up the long night with the glare of
-day.
-</p>
-<p>The next morning, turning their backs on the gray waste of ashes, they resumed their
-march. Kokiō, Kunoi, Sin-né were passed through. Skirmishing and the destruction of
-castles, and the burning of granaries, were the pastimes enjoyed between camps. On
-November 18th the army reached a river, where the Coreans made an unsuccessful night
-attack, repeating the same in the morning, while the Japanese were crossing the stream,
-with the same negative results.
-</p>
-<p>Thence through Yei-tan, they came to Kéku-shiu, another famous old seat of Shinra’s
-ancient grandeur. The beautiful situation and rich appearance of the city charmed
-the invaders, who lingered long in the deserted streets before applying the torch.
-The “three hundred thousand houses of the people” were clustered around the great
-Buddhist temple in the centre. The clock-tower, eighteen stories high, was especially
-admired. The massive swinging beam by which the tongueless bells, or gongs, of the
-Far East are made to boom out the hours, struck against a huge bronze lotus eight
-or nine feet in diameter. This sacred flower of the Buddhist emblem of peace and calm
-in Nirvana had in Corean art taken the place of the suspended bell, being most probably
-a cup-shaped mass of metal set with mouth upright, or like a bell turned upside down—such
-being the form often seen in the temples of Chinese Asia. Again did antiquity, religion,
-or the promptings of mercy fail to restrain the invaders. Securing what spoils they
-cared for, everything else was burned up.
-</p>
-<p>After camping at Kiran, they reached the sea-coast, at Uru-san, November 18th.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb137">[<a href="#pb137">137</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e2902">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e2902src">1</a></span> Their line of march, as shown in the Japanese histories, was to Sen-ken, October 11th;
-to Kumu-san, where they experienced the first frost; to Kumui, October 12th; to Chin-zon;
-to Funki; to Shaku-shiu; to Koran; to Chin-zen. These are names of places in Chulla
-and Chung-chong, expressed in the Japanese and old Corean pronunciation.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e2902src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch19" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e987">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE SIEGE OF URU-SAN CASTLE.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The Japanese now took up the spade as their immediate weapon of defence against the
-infuriated Coreans and the avenging Chinese. A force of twenty-three thousand men
-was at once set to work, “without regard to wind or rain,” along the lines marked
-out by the Japanese engineers. To furnish the wood for towers, gates, huts, and engines,
-a party of two thousand axemen and laborers, guarded by twenty-eight mounted pickets
-and three hundred matchlock men, with seven flags, went daily into the forest.
-</p>
-<p>The winter huts were hastily erected, walls thrown up, ditches dug, towers built,
-and sentinels and watch stations set. The work went on from earliest daybreak till
-latest twilight, the carpenters so suffering from the cold that “their finger nails
-dropped off.” By the first part of January the castle was almost completed. From the
-eleventh day the garrison took rest.
-</p>
-<p>The fortress was three-sided, the south face lying on the sea. The total line of works
-was about three and a half miles, pierced by three gates. The inner defences were
-in three parts, or <i>maru</i>. The third <i>maru</i>, or enclosure, had stone walls, one tower and one gate; the second had two towers,
-two gates; and the first or chief citadel had stone walls, forty-eight feet high,
-with two towers and two gates.
-</p>
-<p>The war operations, which had hitherto covered large spaces of the country, now found
-the pivot at this place situated in Kiung-sang, on the sea-coast, thirty-five miles
-north of Fusan. Another commander, Asano, marched to assist the garrison and entered
-the castle before the Ming army arrived. His advance guard, while reconnoitring, was
-defeated by the Coreans, yet he succeeded, by an impetuous charge, in entering the
-castle.
-</p>
-<p>The Chinese, smarting under their losses at Chin-sen, and stung by the gibes of the
-Coreans, now hastened to Uru-san, to swallow up the Japanese. The Corean army, which
-had been collecting <span class="pageNum" id="pb138">[<a href="#pb138">138</a>]</span>around the Japanese camps, were soon joined by the advance guard of the Ming army.
-The arrival of the Chinese forces was made known in the following manner.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p138width" id="p138"><img src="images/p138.png" alt="Plan of Uru-san Castle.—Explanation: Hon, First Enclosure; Ni, Second; San, Third; G, Gates; Line of blocks. Bodies of Troops." width="635" height="720"><p class="figureHead">Plan of Uru-san Castle.—Explanation: Hon, First Enclosure; Ni, Second; San, Third;
-G, Gates; <span class="figure blockswidth"><img src="images/blocks.png" alt="Line of blocks." width="22" height="10"></span> Bodies of Troops.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>A Japanese captain commanded one of the advance pickets, which had their quarters
-in the cloisters of Ankokuji (Temple of the Peaceful Country). One night a board,
-inscribed with Chinese characters, was set up before the gate of the camp. The soldiers,
-seeing it in the morning, but unable to read Chinese, carried <span class="pageNum" id="pb139">[<a href="#pb139">139</a>]</span>it to their captain, who handed it to his priest-secretary. The board contained a
-warning that the Chinese were near and would soon attack Uru-san. Betraying no emotion
-and saying nothing, the captain soon after declared himself on the sick-list, and
-secretly absconded to Fusan. The truth was, that an overwhelming Ming army was now
-in front of them and their purpose to invest the castle was thus published. The entire
-Japanese forces were now gathered close under the walls, or inside the castle, and
-the sentinels were doubled.
-</p>
-<p>On the morning of January 30th the Ming army suddenly assaulted the castle. A small
-detachment, evidently a decoy and forlorn hope, attempting to scale the walls, was
-driven back by the matchlock men and began to retreat. Seeing this, the Japanese recklessly
-opened the barbican gate and began pursuit of their enemies, thinking they were only
-Coreans. Lured on to a distance, they suddenly found themselves encircled by a mighty
-host<span class="corr" id="xd31e2955" title="Not in source">.</span> By their black and yellow standards, and their excellent tactics, the Japanese officers
-saw that they were Ming soldiers. The dust raised by the horses of the oncoming enemy
-seemed to the garrison as high as Atago Mountain in Japan. They now knew that eighty
-thousand Chinese were before their gates. Only after hard fighting, was the remnant
-of the Japanese sortie enabled to get back within the castle, while the allies, surrounding
-the walls, fought as fiercely as if they intended to take it by immediate assault.
-Some of the bravest leaders of the garrison fell outside, but no sooner were the gates
-locked than Katsuyoshi, without extracting the two arrows from his wounds, or stanching
-the blood, posted the defenders on the walls in position. Ogawuchi had performed the
-hazardous feat of sallying out and firing most of the outside camps. He re-entered
-the castle with arrows in his clothes, but received no wounds. The battle raged until
-night, when the Chinese drew off.
-</p>
-<p>The Japanese had suffered fearfully by the first combat beyond and on the walls. “There
-was none but had been shot at by five or ten or fifteen arrows.” One of their captains
-reckoned their loss at eighteen thousand three hundred and sixty men, which left them
-but a garrison of five thousand fighting men. A large number of non-combatants, including
-many of the friendly people of the neighborhood, had crowded into the fortifications,
-and had to be fed.
-</p>
-<p>Food growing scarcer, and danger increasing, Asano sent word <span class="pageNum" id="pb140">[<a href="#pb140">140</a>]</span>to Kato for help. On a fleet horse the messenger arrived, after a ride of two days.
-Kato had, in Japan, taken oath to Asano’s father to help him in every strait. Immediately,
-with seventy picked companions, he put out to sea in seven boats, and, after hard
-rowing, succeeded in entering the castle.
-</p>
-<p>On January 31, 1598, the war-conch sounded in the Ming camp, as the signal of attack,
-and the ears of the besieged were soon deafened by the yells of the “eighty thousand”
-besiegers. The Japanese were at first terrified at the clouds of dust, through which
-the awful sight of ranks of men, twenty deep, were on all sides visible. The enemy,
-armed with shields shaped like a fowl’s wings, upon which they received the missiles
-of the garrison, charged on the outer works, but when into and on the slope of the
-ditch, flung their shields away, and plied axe, knife, sword, and lance. Though seven
-attacks were repulsed, the wall was breached, the outer works were gained by overwhelming
-numbers, and the garrison was driven into the inner enclosure.
-</p>
-<p>Night fell upon the work of blood, but at early morn, the enemy waked the garrison
-with showers of arrows, and with ladders and hurdles of bamboo, tried to scale the
-walls. In four hours, seven attacks in force had been repulsed, yet the fighting went
-on. In spite of the intense cold, the soldiers perspired so that the sweat froze on
-their armor. Over their own heaps of corpses the Chinese attempted to force one of
-the gates, while, from the walls of the inner citadel, and from the higher gate above
-them, the Japanese smote them. The next day the carnage ceased from the third to the
-ninth hour. On February 3d, the Chinese, with their ladders, were again repulsed.
-At night their sentinels “gathered hoar-frost on their helmets,” while guarding the
-night long against the sortie, which they feared. Another attack from the clouds of
-enemies kept up the work of killing. Some of the Japanese warriors now noticed that
-their stockings and greave-bands kept slipping down, though adjusted repeatedly. The
-fact was their flesh had shrunk until their bones were nearly visible, and “their
-legs were as lean as bamboo sticks.” Another warrior, taking off his helmet and vizor,
-was seen to have a face so thin and wizen that he reminded his comrades of one of
-those hungry demons of the nether world, which they had seen so often depicted in
-temple pictures at home.
-</p>
-<p>On February 5th, the Ming generals, who had looked upon the reduction of Uru-san as
-a small affair to be settled by the way, and <span class="pageNum" id="pb141">[<a href="#pb141">141</a>]</span>vexed at not having been able to take it by one assault, tried negotiation. In fact,
-they were suffering from lack of provisions. The Japanese sent back a defiant answer,
-and some of them profited by the lull in the fighting to make fires of broken arrows
-and lances, to strip the armor from the dead and frozen carcasses of their steeds,
-and enjoy a dinner of hot horse-meat. The vast number of shafts that had fallen within
-the walls, were gathered into stacks, and those damaged were reserved for fuel. Outside
-the citadel, they lay under the wall in heaps many feet high.
-</p>
-<p>The next day, February 6th, was one of quiet, but it was intensely cold, and many
-of the worn out soldiers of the garrison died. Sitting under the sunny side of the
-towers for warmth, they were found in this position frozen to death. Yet amid all
-the suffering, the Japanese jested with each other, poured out mutual compliments,
-and kept light hearts and defiant spirits.
-</p>
-<p>A council of war had been held February 2d, at Fusan, and a messenger sent to encourage
-the garrison. By some means he was able to communicate with his beleaguered brethren.
-With helmets off, the leaders listened to the words of cheer and praise, and promised
-to hold out yet longer.
-</p>
-<p>While the lull or truce was in force, the Chinese were, according to Ogawuchi, plotting
-to entrap the Japanese leaders. This they learned from one Okomoto, a native of Japan,
-who had lived long in China, and was a division commander of eight thousand men in
-the Chinese army. He it was who first brought the offers of accommodation from the
-Ming side. The Chinese proposed to get the Japanese leaders to come out of their citadel,
-leave their horses and weapons at a certain place, and go to the altar to swear before
-Heaven to keep the peace. Then the Chinese were to surround and make prisoners of
-the Japanese. Okomoto’s soul recoiled at the perfidy. Going by night to the side of
-the castle near the hills, he was admitted in the citadel, and exposing the plot,
-gave warning of the danger. A profound impression was produced on the grateful leaders,
-who immediately made a plan to show their gratitude to Okomoto. They swore by all
-the gods to reward also his sons and daughters who were still living in Japan. When
-this fact was made known to him, he burst into tears and said he had never forgotten
-his wife or children; though he saw them often in his dreams, yet “the winds brought
-him no news.”
-</p>
-<p>On the following morning a Chinese officer, coming to the foot of the wall, made signs
-with his standard, and offered the same <span class="pageNum" id="pb142">[<a href="#pb142">142</a>]</span>terms in detail which Okomoto had exposed. The Japanese leaders excused themselves
-on the plea of sickness, and the parley came to nothing.
-</p>
-<p>Yet the sufferings of the Japanese were growing hourly severer. To half rations and
-hunger had succeeded famine, and with famine came actual death from starvation. Unfortunately
-there was no well in the castle, so the Japanese had at first sallied out, under cover
-of the night, and carried water from the mountain brooks. The Chinese, discovering
-this, posted archers in front of every accessible stream, and thus cut off all approach
-by night or day. To hunger was added the torture of thirst. The soldiers who fought
-by day stole out at night and licked the wounds of their slain enemies and even secretly
-chewed the raw flesh sliced from the corpses of the Chinese. Within the castle, ingenuity
-was taxed to the utmost to provide sustenance from the most unpromising substances.
-The famished soldiers chewed paper, trapped mice and ate them, killed horses and devoured
-every part of them. Braving the arrows of the Chinese pickets, they wandered at night
-wherever their dead enemies lay, and searched their clothes for stray grains of parched
-rice. On one occasion the Chinese, lying in wait, succeeded in capturing one hundred
-of the garrison, that were prowling like ghouls around the corpses of the slain. After
-this the commanders forbade any soldier, on pain of death, to leave the castle. Yet
-famine held revel within, and scores of starved and frozen multiplied into hundreds,
-until room for the corpses was needed.
-</p>
-<p>Tidings of the straits of the dwindling garrison at Uru-san having reached the other
-Japanese commanders, Nabéshima and Kuroda, they marched to the relief of their compatriots.
-One of the Chinese generals, Rijobai, leaving camp, set out to attack them.
-</p>
-<p>The foiled Chinese commander-in-chief, angry at the refusal of the Japanese to come
-to his camp, ordered a fresh attack on the castle. This time fresh detachments took
-the places of others when wearied. The day seemed shut out by the dust of horses,
-the smoke of guns, the clouds of arrows, and the masses of flags. Again the scaling
-ladders were brought, but made useless by the vigilant defenders in armor iced with
-frozen sweat, and chafing to the bone. Their constant labor made “three hours seem
-like three years.” The attack was kept up unceasingly until February 12th, when the
-exhausted garrison noticed the Chinese retreating. The van of the reinforcements from
-Fusan had attacked the allies in the <span class="pageNum" id="pb143">[<a href="#pb143">143</a>]</span>rear, and a bloody combat was raging. At about the same time the fleet, laden with
-provisions, was on its way and near the starving garrison.
-</p>
-<p>Next morning the keen eyes of their commander noticed flocks of wild birds descending
-on the Chinese camp. The careful scrutiny of the actions of wild fowl formed a part
-of the military education of all Japanese, and they inferred at once that the camp
-was empty and the birds, attracted by the refuse food, were feeding without fear.
-Orders were immediately given to a detachment to leave the castle and march in pursuit.
-Passing through the deserted Ming camp, they came up with the forces of Kuroda and
-Nabéshima, who had gained a great victory over the allies. In this battle of the river
-plain of Gisen, February 9, 1598, the Japanese had eighteen thousand men engaged.
-Their victory was complete, thirteen thousand two hundred and thirty-eight heads of
-Coreans and Chinese being collected after the retreat of the allies. The noses and
-ears were, as usual, cut off and packed for shipment to Kiōto.
-</p>
-<p>The sufferings of the valiant defenders were now over. Help had come at the eleventh
-hour. For fourteen days they had tasted neither rice nor water, except that melted
-from snow or ice. The abundant food from the relief ships was cautiously dealt out
-to the famished, lest sudden plenty should cause sudden death. The fleet men not only
-congratulated the garrison on their brave defence, but decorated the battered walls
-with innumerable flags and streamers, while they revictualed the magazines. On the
-ninth, the garrison went on the ships to go to Sezukai, another part of the coast,
-to recruit their shattered energies. With a feeling as if raised from the dead, the
-warriors took off their armor. The reaction of the fearful strain coming at once upon
-them, they found themselves lame and unable to stand or sit. Even in their dreams,
-they grappled with the Ming, and, laying their hand on their sword, fought again their
-battles in the land of dreams. For three years afterward they did not cease these
-night visions of war.
-</p>
-<p>According to orders given, the number of the dead lying on the frozen ground, within
-two or three furlongs of the castle, was counted, and found to be fifteen thousand
-seven hundred and fifty-four. Of the Japanese, who had starved or frozen to death,
-eight hundred and ninety-seven were reported.
-</p>
-<p>In the camp of the allies, crimination and recrimination were going on, the Coreans
-angry at being foiled before Uru-san, and the <span class="pageNum" id="pb144">[<a href="#pb144">144</a>]</span>Chinese mortified that one fortress, with its garrison, could not have been taken.
-They made their plans to go back and try the siege anew, when the explosion of their
-powder magazine, which killed many of their men, changed their plans. For his failure
-the Chinese commander-in-chief was cashiered in disgrace.
-</p>
-<p>On May 10th the soldiers of the garrison, now relieved, left for their homes in Japan.
-</p>
-<p>Thus ended the siege of Uru-san, after lasting an entire year.
-</p>
-<p>After this nothing of much importance happened during the war. The invaders had suffered
-severely from the cold and the climate, and from hunger in the desolated land. Numerous
-skirmishes were fought, and a continual guerilla war kept up, but, with the exception
-of another naval battle between the Japanese and Chinese, in which artillery was freely
-used, there was nothing to influence the fortunes of either side. In this state of
-inaction, Hidéyoshi fell sick and died, September 9, 1598, at the age of sixty-three.
-Almost his last words were, “Recall all my troops from Chō-sen.” The governors appointed
-by him to carry out his policy at once issued orders for the return of the army. The
-orders to embark for home were everywhere gladly heard in the Japanese camps by the
-soldiers whose sufferings were now to end. Before leaving, however, many of the Japanese
-improved every opportunity to have a farewell brush with their enemies.
-</p>
-<p>It is said, by a trustworthy writer, that 214,752 human bodies were decapitated to
-furnish the ghastly material for the “ear-tomb” mound in Kiōto. Ogawuchi reckons the
-number of Corean heads gathered for mutilation at 185,738, and of Chinese at 29,014;
-all of which were despoiled of ears or noses. It is probable that 50,000 Japanese,
-victims of wounds or disease, left their bones in Corea.
-</p>
-<p>Thus ended one of the most needless, unprovoked, cruel, and desolating wars that ever
-cursed Corea, and from which it has taken her over two centuries to recover.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb145">[<a href="#pb145">145</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch20" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e995">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XX.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">CHANGES AFTER THE INVASION.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The war over, and peace again in the land, the fugitives returned to their homes and
-the farmers to their fields. The whole country was desolate, the scars of war were
-everywhere visible, and the curse of poverty was universal. From the king and court,
-in the royal city, of which fire had left little but ashes, and of which war and famine
-had spared few inhabitants, to the peasant, who lived on berries and roots until his
-scanty seed rose above the ground and slowly ripened, all now suffered the woful want
-which the war had bred. Kind nature, however, ceased not her bountiful stores, and
-from the ever-ready and ever-full treasuries of the ocean, fed the stricken land.
-</p>
-<p>The war was a fruitful cause of national changes in Corean customs and institutions.
-The first was the more thorough organization of the military, the rebuilding and strengthening
-of old castles, and the erection of new ones; though, like most measures of the government,
-the proposed reforms were never properly carried out. The coasts were guarded with
-fresh vigilance. Upon one of the Corean commanders, who had been many times successful
-against the Japanese, a new title and office was created, and the coast defence of
-the three southern provinces was committed to him. This title was subsequently conferred
-upon three officials whose headquarters were at points in Kiung-sang. Among the literary
-fruits of the leisure now afforded was the narrative, in Chinese, of the events leading
-to the war with the Japanese, written by a high dignitary of the court, and covering
-the period from about 1586 to 1598. This is, perhaps, the only book reprinted in Japan,
-which gives the Corean side of the war. In his preface the excessively modest author
-states that he writes the book “because men ought to look at the present in the mirror
-of the past.” The Chinese style of this writer is difficult for an ordinary Japanese
-to read. The book (Chōhitsuroku) contains a curious map of the eight provinces.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb146">[<a href="#pb146">146</a>]</span></p>
-<p>In Japan the energies of the returned warriors were fully employed at home after their
-withdrawal from Corea. The adherents of Taikō and those of Iyéyasŭ, the rising man,
-came to blows, and at the great battle of Sékigahara, in October, 1600, Iyéyasŭ crushed
-his foes. Many of the heroes of the peninsular campaign fell on the field; or, as
-beaten men, disembowelled themselves, according to the Japanese code of honor.
-</p>
-<p>Konishi, being a Christian, and unable, from conscientious scruples, to commit suicide
-by <i>hara kiri</i>, was decapitated. The humbled spirit and turbulent wrath of Satsuma were appeased,
-and given a valve of escape in the permission accorded them to make definite conquest
-of Riu Kiu. This was done by a well-planned and vigorously executed expedition in
-1609, by which the little archipelago was made an integral part of the Japanese empire.
-When retiring from Chō-sen, in 1597, the daimiō and general Nabéshima requited himself
-for the possible loss of further military glory, by bringing over and settling in
-Satsuma a colony of Corean potters. He builded better than he knew, for in founding
-these industries in his own domain, he became the prime author of that delight of
-the æsthetic world, “old Satsuma faïence.” Other daimiōs, in whose domains were potteries,
-likewise transported skilled workers in clay, who afterward brought fame and money
-to their masters. On the other hand, Iyéyasŭ sent back the Corean prisoners in Japan
-to their own homes.
-</p>
-<p>The spoil brought back from the peninsular campaign—weapons, flags, brocades, porcelains,
-carvings, pictures, and manuscripts was duly deposited, with certifying documents,
-in temples and storehouses, or garnished the home of the veterans for the benefit
-of posterity. Some, with a literary turn, employed their leisure in writing out their
-notes and journals, several of which have survived the wreck of time. Some, under
-an artistic impulse, had made valuable sketches of cities, scenery, battle-fields,
-and castles, which they now finished. A few of the victors shore off their queues
-and hair, and became monks. Others, with perhaps equal piety, hung up the arrow-pierced
-helmet, or corslet slashed by Chinese sabre, as ex-voto at the local shrines. The
-writer can bear personal witness to the interest which many of these authentic relics
-inspired in him while engaged in their study. In 1878 a large collection of various
-relics of the Corean war of 1592–1597 came into the possession of the mikado’s government
-in Tōkiō, from the heirs or descendants of the veterans of Taikō. In <span class="pageNum" id="pb147">[<a href="#pb147">147</a>]</span>Kiōto, besides the Ear-monument, the Hall of the Founder, in one of the great Buddhist
-temples, rebuilt by the widow of Taikō, was ceiled with the choice wood of the war
-junk built for the hero.
-</p>
-<p>Though the peninsula was not open to trade or Christianity, it was not for lack of
-thought or attention on the part of merchant or missionary.
-</p>
-<p>In England, a project was formed to establish a trading-station in Japan, and, if
-there was a possibility, in Corea also, or, at least, to see what could be done in
-“the island”—as Corea then, and for a long time afterward, was believed to be. Through
-the Dutch, the Jesuits, and their countryman, Will Adams, in Japan, they had heard
-of the Japanese war, and of Corea. Captain Saris arrived off Hirado Island about the
-middle of June, 1613, with a cargo of pepper, broadcloth, gunpowder, and English goods.
-In a galley, carrying twenty-five oars and manned by sixty men furnished by the daimiō,
-Saris and his company of seventeen Englishmen set out to visit the Iyéyasŭ at Yedo,
-by way of Suruga (now Shidzuoka). After two days’ rowing along the coast, they stopped
-for dinner in the large and handsome city of Hakata (or Fukuoka), the city being,
-in reality, double. As the Englishmen walked about to see the sights, the boys, children,
-and worse sort of idle people would gather about them, crying out, “Coré, Coré, Cocoré
-Waré” (Oh you Coreans, Coreans, you Kokorai men), taunting them by these words as
-Coreans with false hearts, whooping, holloaing, and making such a noise that the English
-could hardly hear each other speak. In some places, the people threw stones at these
-“Corean” Englishmen. Hakata was one of the towns at which the embassy from Seoul stopped
-while on its way to Yedo, and the incident shows clearly that the Japanese urchins
-and common people had not forgotten the reputed perfidy of the Coreans, while they
-also supposed that any foreigner, not a Portuguese, with whom they were familiar,
-must be a Corean. In the same manner, at Nankin, for a long while all foreigners,
-even Americans, were called “Japanese.”
-</p>
-<p>Nothing was done by Saris, so far as is known, to explore or open Corea to Western
-commerce, although the last one of the eight clauses of the articles of license to
-trade, given him by Iyéyasŭ, was, “And that further, without passport, they may and
-shall set out upon the discovery of Yeadzo (Yezo), or any other part in and about
-our empire.” By the last clause any Japanese would understand <span class="pageNum" id="pb148">[<a href="#pb148">148</a>]</span>Corea and Riu Kiu as being land belonging to, but outside of “civilized” Nippon.
-</p>
-<p>After leaving Nagasaki, and calling at Bantam, Saris took in a load of pepper, and
-sailed for England, reaching Plymouth September 27, 1614.
-</p>
-<p>An attempt was also made by the Dominican order of friars to establish a mission in
-Corea. Vincent (Caun), the ward of Konishi, who had been educated and sent over by
-the Jesuits to plant Christianity among his countrymen, reached Peking and there waited
-four years to accomplish his purposes, but could not, owing to the presence of the
-hostile Manchius in Liao Tung. But just as he was returning to Japan, in 1618, another
-attempt was made by the Dominican friars to penetrate the sealed land. Juan de Saint
-Dominique, a Castilian Spaniard, who had labored as a missionary in the Philippine
-Islands since 1601, was the chosen man. Having secured rapid mastery of the languages
-of the Malay archipelago, he was selected as one well fitted to acquire Corean. With
-two others of the same fraternity he embarked for the shores of Morning Calm. For
-some reason, not known, they could not land in Corea, and so passed over to Japan,
-where the next year, March 19th, having met persecution, Dominique died in prison.
-The ashes of his body, taken from the cremation furnace, were cast in the sea; but
-his followers, having been able to save from the fire a hand and a foot, kept the
-ghastly remnants as holy relics.
-</p>
-<p>The exact relations of “the conquering and the vassal state,” as the Japanese would
-say, that is, of Nihon and Chō-sen, were not definitely fixed, nor the menace of war
-withdrawn, until the last of the line of Taikō died, and the family became extinct
-by the death of Hidéyori, the son of Taikō, in 1612.
-</p>
-<p>There is not a particle of evidence that the conquerors ever exacted an annual tribute
-of “thirty human hides,” as stated by a recent French writer. While Iyéyasŭ had his
-hands full in Japan, he paid little attention to the country which Taikō had used
-as a cockpit for the Christians. Iyéyasŭ dealt with the Jesuit, the Christian, and
-the foreigner, in a manner different from, and for obvious reasons with success greater
-than, that of Taikō. He unified Japan, re-established the dual system of mikado and
-shō-gun, with two capitals and two centres of authority, Kiōto and Yedo. He cleared
-the ground for his grandson Iyémitsŭ, who at once summoned the Coreans to renew tributary
-relations and pay homage <span class="pageNum" id="pb149">[<a href="#pb149">149</a>]</span>to him at Yedo. Magnifying his authority, he sent, in 1623, a letter to the King of
-Corea, in which he styles himself Tai-kun (“Tycoon”), or Great Prince. This is the
-equivalent in Chinese pronunciation of the pure Japanese O-gimi, an ancient title
-applied only to the mikado. No assumption or presumption of pomp and power was, however,
-scrupled at by the successors of Iyéyasŭ.
-</p>
-<p>The title “Tycoon,” too, was intended to overawe the Coreans, as being even higher
-than the title <i>Koku O</i> (king of a [tributary] country), which their sovereign and the Ashikaga line of rulers
-held by patents from the Emperor of China, and which Taikō had scornfully refused.
-</p>
-<p>The court at Seoul responded to the call, and, in 1624, sent an embassy with congratulations
-and costly presents. The envoys landed in Hizen, and made their journey overland,
-taking the same route so often traversed by the Hollanders at Déshima, and described
-by Kaempfer, Thunberg, and others. A sketch by a Yedo artist has depicted the gorgeous
-scene in the castle of the “Tycoon.” Seated on silken cushions, on a raised dais,
-behind the bamboo curtains, with sword-bearer in his rear, in presence of his lords,
-all in imitation of the imperial throne room in Kiōto, the haughty ruler received
-from the Corean envoy the symbol of vassalage—a gohei or wand on which strips of white
-paper are hung. Then followed the official banquet.
-</p>
-<p>Since the invasion, Fusan, as before, had been held and garrisoned by the retainers
-of the daimiō of Tsushima. At this port all the commerce between the two nations took
-place. The interchange of commodities was established on an amicable basis. Japanese
-swords, military equipments, works of art, and raw products were exchanged for Corean
-merchandise. Having felt the power of the eastern sword-blades, and unable to perfect
-their own clumsy iron hangers, either in temper, edge, or material, they gladly bought
-of the Japanese, keeping their sword-makers busy. Kaempfer, who was at Nagasaki from
-September 24, 1690, to November, 1692, tells us that the Japanese imported from Fusan
-scarce medicinal plants, especially ginseng, walnuts, and fruits; the best pickled
-fish, and some few manufactures; among which was “a certain sort of earthen pots made
-in Japij and Ninke, two Tartarian provinces.” These ceramic oddities were “much esteemed
-by the Japanese, and bought very dear.”
-</p>
-<p>From an American or British point of view, there was little trade done between the
-two countries, but on the strength, of even <span class="pageNum" id="pb150">[<a href="#pb150">150</a>]</span>this small amount, Earl Russell, in 1862, tried to get Great Britain included as a
-co-trader between Japan and Corea. He was not successful. Provision was also made
-for those who might be cast, by the perils of the sea, upon the shore of either country.
-At the expense of the Yedo government a <i>Chō-sen Yashiki</i> (Corean House), was built at Nagasaki. From whatever part of the Japanese shores
-the waifs were picked up, they were sent to Nagasaki, fed and sheltered until a junk
-could be despatched to Fusan. These unfortunates were mostly fishermen, who, in some
-cases, had their wives and children with them. It was from such that Siebold obtained
-the materials for his notes, vocabulary, and sketches in the Corean department of
-his great <span lang="de">Archiv</span>.
-</p>
-<p>The possession of Fusan by the Japanese was, until 1876, a perpetual witness of the
-humiliating defeat of the Coreans in the war of 1592–1597, and a constant irritation
-to their national pride. Their popular historians, passing over the facts of the case,
-substitute pleasing fiction to gratify the popular taste. The subjoined note of explanation,
-given by Dallet, attached to a map of Corea of home manufacture, thus accounts for
-the presence of the foreigners. The substance of the note is as follows: During the
-sixteenth century many of the barbarous inhabitants of Tsushima left that island,
-and, coming over to Corea, established themselves on the coast of Corea, in three
-little ports, called Fusan, Yum, and Chisi, and rapidly increased in numbers. About
-five years after Chung-chong ascended the throne, the barbarians of Fusan and Yum
-made trouble. They destroyed the walls of the city of Fusan, and killed also the city
-governor, named Ni Utsa. Being subdued by the royal troops, they could no longer live
-in these ports, but were driven into the interior. A short time afterward, having
-asked pardon for their crimes, they obtained it and came and established themselves
-again at the ports. This was only for a short time, for a few years afterward, a little
-before the year 1592, they all returned to their country, Tsushima. In the year 1599
-the king, Syen-cho, held communication with the Tsushima barbarians. It happened that
-he invited them to the places which they had quitted on the coast of Corea, built
-houses for them, treated them with great kindness, established for their benefit a
-market during five days in each month, beginning on the third day of the month, and
-when they had a great quantity of merchandise on hand to dispose of he even permitted
-them to hold it still oftener.
-</p>
-<p>This is a good specimen of Corean varnish-work carried into <span class="pageNum" id="pb151">[<a href="#pb151">151</a>]</span>history. The rough facts are smoothed over by that well-applied native lacquer, which
-is said to resemble gold to the eye. The official gloss has been smeared over more
-modern events with equal success, and even defeat is turned into golden victory.
-</p>
-<p>Yet, with all the miseries inflicted upon her, the humble nation learned rich lessons
-and gained many an advantage even from her enemy. The embassies, which were yearly
-despatched to yield homage to their late invaders, were at the expense of the latter.
-The Japanese pride purchased, at a dear rate, the empty bubble of homage, by paying
-all the bills. We may even suspect that a grim joke was practised upon the victors
-by the vanquished. Year by year they swelled the pomp and numbers of their train until,
-finally, it reached the absurd number of four hundred persons. With imperturbable
-effrontery they devastated the treasury of their “Tycoon.” To receive an appointment
-on the embassy to Yedo was reckoned a rich sinecure. It enabled the possessor to enjoy
-an expensive picnic of three months, two of which were at the cost of the entertainers.
-Landing in Chikuzen, or Hizen, they slowly journeyed overland to Yedo, and, after
-their merrymaking in the capital, leisurely made their jaunt back again. For nearly
-a century the Yedo government appeared to relish the sensation of having a crowd of
-people from across the sea come to pay homage and bear witness to the greatness of
-the Tokugawa family. In 1710 a special gateway was erected in the castle at Yedo to
-impress the embassy from Seoul, who were to arrive next year, with the serene glory
-of the shō-gun Iyénobu. From a pavilion near by the embassy’s quarters, the Tycoon
-himself was a spectator of the feats of archery, on horseback, in which the Coreans
-excelled. The intolerable expense at last compelled the Yedo rulers to dispense with
-such costly vassalage, and to spoil what was, to their guests, a pleasant game. Ordering
-them to come only as far as Tsushima, they were entertained by the So family of daimiōs,
-who were allowed by the “Tycoon” a stipend in gold kobans for this purpose.
-</p>
-<p>A great social custom, that has become a national habit, was introduced by the Japanese
-when they brought over the tobacco plant and taught its properties, culture, and use.
-The copious testimony of all visitors, and the rich vocabulary of terms relating to
-the culture, curing, and preparation of tobacco show that the crop that is yearly
-raised from the soil merely for purposes of waste in smoke is very large. In the personal
-equipment of every <span class="pageNum" id="pb152">[<a href="#pb152">152</a>]</span>male Corean, and often in that of women and children, a tobacco pouch and materials
-for firing forms an indispensable part. The smoker does not feel “dressed” without
-his well-filled bag. Into the forms of hospitality, the requisites of threshold gossip
-and social enjoyment, and for all other purposes, real or imaginary, which nicotine
-can aid or abet, tobacco has entered not merely as a luxury or ornament, but as a
-necessity.
-</p>
-<p>Another great change for the better, in the improvement of the national garb, dates
-from the sixteenth century, and very probably from the Japanese invasion. This was
-the introduction of the cotton plant. Hitherto, silk for the very rich, and hemp and
-sea grass for the middle and poorer classes, had been the rule. In the north, furs
-were worn to a large extent, while plaited straw for various parts of the limbs served
-for clothing, as well as protection against storm and rain. The vegetable fibres were
-bleached to give whiteness. Cotton now began to be generally cultivated and woven.
-</p>
-<p>It is true that authorities do not agree as to the date of the first use of this plant.
-Dallet reports that cotton was formerly unknown in Corea, but was grown in China,
-and that the Chinese, in order to preserve a market for their textile fabrics within
-the peninsula, rigorously guarded, with all possible precautions, against the exportation
-of a single one of the precious seeds.
-</p>
-<p>One of the members of the annual embassy to Peking, with great tact, succeeded in
-procuring a few grains of cotton seed, which he concealed in the quill of his hat
-feather. Thus, in a manner similar to the traditional account of the bringing of silk-worms’
-eggs inside a staff to Constantinople from China, the precious shrub reached Corea
-about five hundred years ago. It is now cultivated successfully in the peninsula in
-latitude far above that of the cotton belt in America, and even in Manchuria, the
-most northern limit of its growth.
-</p>
-<p>It is evident that a country which contains cotton, crocodiles, and tigers, cannot
-have a very bleak climate. It seems more probable that though the first seeds may
-have been brought from China, the cultivation of this vegetable wool was not pursued
-upon a large scale until after the Japanese invasion. Our reasons for questioning
-the accuracy of the date given in the common tradition is, that it is certain that
-cotton was not known in Northern China five hundred years ago. It was introduced into
-Central China from Turkestan in the fourteenth century, though known in the extreme
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb153">[<a href="#pb153">153</a>]</span>south before that time. The Chinese pay divine honors to one Hwang Tao Po, the reputed
-instructress in the art of spinning and weaving the “tree-wool.” She is said to have
-come from Hainan Island.
-</p>
-<p>Though cotton was first brought to Japan by a Hindoo, in the year 799, yet the art
-of its culture seems to have been lost during the long civil wars of the middle ages.
-The fact that it had become extinct is shown in a verse of poetry composed by a court
-noble in 1248. “The cotton-seed, that was planted by the foreigner and not by the
-natives, has died away.” In another Japanese book, written about 1570, it is stated
-that cotton had again been introduced and planted in the southern provinces.
-</p>
-<p>The Portuguese, trading at Nagasaki, made cotton wool a familiar object to the Japanese
-soldiers. While the army was in Corea a European ship, driven far out of her course
-and much damaged by the storm, anchored off Yokohama. Being kindly treated while refitting,
-the captain, among other gifts to the daimiō of the province, gave him a bag of cotton
-seeds, which were distributed. The yarn selling at a high price, the culture of the
-shrub spread rapidly through the provinces of Eastern and Northern Japan, being already
-common in the south provinces. Even if the culture of cotton was not introduced into
-Corea by the Japanese army, it is certain that it has been largely exported from Japan
-during the last two centuries. The increase of general comfort by this one article
-of wear and use can hardly be estimated. Not only as wool and fibre, but in the oil
-from its seeds, the nation added largely to the sum of its blessings.
-</p>
-<p>Paper, from silk and hemp, rice stalk fibres, mulberry bark, and other such raw material,
-had long been made by the Chinese, but it is probable that the Coreans, first of the
-nations of Chinese Asia, made paper from cotton wool. For this manufacture they to-day
-are famed. Their paper is highly prized in Peking and Japan for its extreme thickness
-and toughness. It forms part of the annual tribute which the embassies carry to Peking.
-It is often thick enough to be split into several layers, and is much used by the
-tailors of the Chinese metropolis as a lining for the coats of mandarins and gentlemen.
-It also serves for the covering of window-frames, and a sewed wad of from ten to fifteen
-thicknesses of it make a kind of armor which the troops wear. It will resist a musket-ball,
-but not a rifle-bullet.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb154">[<a href="#pb154">154</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch21" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1004">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE ISSACHAR OF EASTERN ASIA.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The Shan-yan Alin, or Ever-White Mountains, stand like a wall along the northern boundary
-of the Corean peninsula. Irregular mountain masses and outjutting ranges of hills
-form its buttresses, while, at intervals, lofty peaks rise as towers. These are all
-overtopped by the central spire Paik-tu, or Whitehead, which may be over ten thousand
-feet high. From its bases flow out the Yalu, Tumen, and Hurka Rivers.
-</p>
-<p>From primeval times the dwellers at the foot of this mountain, who saw its ever hoary
-head lost in the clouds, or glistening with fresh-fallen snow, conceived of a spirit
-dwelling on its heights in the form of a virgin in white. Her servants were animals
-in white fur and birds in white plumage.
-</p>
-<p>When Buddhism entered the peninsula, as in China and Japan, so, in Corea, it absorbed
-the local deities, and hailed them under new names, as previous incarnations of Buddha
-before his avatar in India, or the true advent of the precious faith through his missionaries.
-They were thenceforth adopted into the Buddhist pantheon, and numbered among the worshipped
-Buddhas. The spirit of the Ever-White Mountains, the virgin in ever-white robes, named
-Manchusri, whose home lay among the unmelting snows, was one of these. Perhaps it
-was from this deity that the Manchius, the ancestors of the ruling dynasty of China,
-the wearers of the world-famous hair tails, took their name.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p155width" id="p155"><img src="images/p155.png" alt="Home of the Manchius, and Their Migrations." width="470" height="720"><p class="figureHead">Home of the Manchius, and Their Migrations.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>According to Manchiu legend, as given by Professor Douglas, it is said that “in remote
-ages, three heaven-born virgins dwelt beneath the shadow of the Great White Mountains,
-and that, while they were bathing in a lake which reflected in its bosom the snowy
-clad peaks which towered above it, a magpie dropped a blood red fruit on the clothes
-of the youngest. This the maiden instinctively devoured, and forthwith conceived and
-bore a son, whose name they called Ai-sin Ghioro, which being interpreted is <span class="pageNum" id="pb156">[<a href="#pb156">156</a>]</span>the ‘Golden Family Stem,’ and which is the family name of the emperors of China. When
-his mother had entered the icy cave of the dead, her son embarked on a little boat,
-and floated down the river Hurka, until he reached a district occupied by three families
-who were at war with each other. The personal appearance of the supernatural youth
-so impressed these warlike chiefs that they forgot their enmities, and hailed him
-as their ruler. The town of O-to-le [Odoli] was chosen as his capital, and from that
-day his people waxed fat and kicked against their oppressors, the Chinese.”
-</p>
-<p>The home of the Manchius was, as this legend shows, on the north side of the Ever-White
-Mountains, in the valley of the Hurka. From beyond these mountains was to roll upon
-China and Corea another avalanche of invasion. Beginning to be restless in the fourteenth
-century, they had, in the sixteenth, consolidated so many tribes, and were so strong
-in men and horses, that they openly defied the Chinese. The formidable expeditions
-of Li-yu-sun, previous to the Japanese invasion of Corea, kept them at bay for a time,
-but the immense expenditure of life and treasure required to fight the Japanese, drained
-the resources of the Ming emperors, while their attention being drawn away from the
-north, the Manchiu hordes massed their forces and grew daily in wealth, numbers, discipline,
-and courage. The invasion of Chō-sen by the Japanese veterans was one of the causes
-of the weakness and fall of the Ming dynasty.
-</p>
-<p>To repress the rising power in the north, and to smother the life of the young nation,
-the Peking government resorted to barbarous cruelties and stern coercion, in which
-bloodshed was continual. Unable to protect the eastern border of Liao Tung, the entire
-population of three hundred thousand souls, dwelling in four cities and many villages,
-were removed westward and resettled on new lands. Fortresses were planned, but not
-finished, in the deserted land, to keep back the restless cavalry raiders from the
-north. Thus the foundation of the neutral strip of fifty miles was unconsciously laid,
-and ten thousand square miles of fair and fertile land, west of the Yalu, was abandoned
-to the wolf and tiger. What it soon became, it has remained until yesterday—a howling
-wilderness. (See map on page 155.)
-</p>
-<p>Unable to meet these cotton-armored raiders in the field, the Ming emperor ordered,
-and in 1615 consummated, the assassination of their king. This exasperated all the
-Manchiu tribes to vengeance, and hostilities on a large scale at once began by a southwest
-movement into Liao Tung.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb157">[<a href="#pb157">157</a>]</span></p>
-<p>China had now again to face an invasion greater than the Japanese, for this time a
-whole nation was behind it. Calling on her vassal, the Eastern Kingdom, to send an
-army of twenty thousand men, she ordered them to join the imperial army at Hing-king.
-This city, now called Yen-den, lies about seventy miles west of the Yalu River, near
-the 42d parallel, just beyond what was “the neutral strip,” and inside the palisades
-erected later. In the battle, which ensued, the Coreans first faced the Manchius.
-The imperial legions were beaten, and the Coreans, seeing which way the victory would
-finally turn, deserted from the Chinese side to that of their enemy. This was in 1619.
-</p>
-<p>The Manchiu general sent back some of the runaway Coreans to their king, intimating
-that, though the Coreans were acting gratefully in assisting the Chinese, who had
-formerly helped the Coreans against the Japanese, yet it might hereafter be better
-to remain neutral. So far from taking any notice of this letter, the government at
-Seoul allowed the king’s subjects to cross the Yalu and assist the people of Liao
-Tung against the Manchius, who were making Hing-king their capital. At the same time
-the Chinese commander was permitted to enter Corea, and thence to make expeditions
-against the Manchius, by which they inflicted great damage upon the enemy. This continued
-until the winter of 1827, when the Manchius, having lost all patience with Corea,
-prepared to invade the peninsula. Compelling two refugees to act as their guides,
-they crossed the frozen Yalu in four divisions, in February, and at once attacked
-the Chinese army, which was defeated, and retreated into Liao Tung. They then began
-the march to Seoul. Ai-chiu was the first town taken, and then, after crossing the
-Ching-chong River, followed in succession the cities lining the high road to Ping-an.
-Thence, over the Tatong River, they pressed on to Seoul, the Coreans everywhere flying
-before them. Thousands of dwellings and magazines of provisions were given to the
-flames, and their trail was one of blood and ashes. Among the slain were two Hollanders,
-who were captives in the country.
-</p>
-<p>Heretofore a line of strong palisades had separated Corea from Manchuria, on the north,
-but large portions of it were destroyed at this time in the constant forays along
-the border. Those parts which stood yet intact were often seen by travellers along
-the Manchurian side as late as toward the end of the last century. Since then this
-wooden wall, a pigmy imitation of China’s colossal embargo in masonry, has gradually
-fallen into decay.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb158">[<a href="#pb158">158</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The Manchius invested Seoul and began its siege in earnest. The queen and ladies of
-the court had already been sent to Kang-wa Island. The king, to avoid further shedding
-of blood, sent tribute offerings to the invaders, and concluded a treaty of peace
-by which Chō-sen again exchanged masters, the king not only acknowledging from the
-Manchiu sovereign the right of investiture, but also direct authority over his person,
-that is, the relation of master and subject.
-</p>
-<p>The Coreans now waited to see whether events were likely to modify their new relations,
-so reluctantly entered into, for the Chinese were far from beaten as yet. When free
-from the presence of the invading army the courage of the ministers rose, and by their
-advice the king, by gradual encroachments and neglect, annulled the treaty.
-</p>
-<p>No sooner were the Manchius able to spare their forces for the purpose, than, turning
-from China, they marched into Corea, one hundred thousand strong, well supplied with
-provisions and baggage-wagons. Entering the peninsula, both at Ai-chiu and by the
-northern pass, they reached Seoul, and, after severe fighting, entered it. Being now
-provided with cannon and boats, they took Kang-wa, into which all the royal, and many
-of the noble, ladies had fled for safety.
-</p>
-<p>The king now came to terms, and made a treaty in February, 1637, in which he utterly
-renounced his allegiance to the Ming emperor, agreed to give his two sons as hostages,
-promised to send an annual embassy, with tribute, to the Manchiu court, and to establish
-a market at the Border Gate, in Liao Tung. These covenants were ratified by the solemn
-ceremonial of the king, his sons and his ministers confessing their crimes and making
-“kow-tow” (bowing nine times to the earth). Tartar and Corean worshipped together
-before Heaven, and the altar erected to Heaven’s honor. A memorial stone, erected
-near this sacred place, commemorates the clemency of the Manchiu conqueror.
-</p>
-<p>In obedience to the orders of their new masters, the Coreans despatched ships, loaded
-with grain, to feed the armies operating against Peking, and sent a small force beyond
-the Tumen to chastise a tribe that had rebelled against their conquerors. A picked
-body of their matchlock men was also admitted into the Manchiu service.
-</p>
-<p>After the evacuation of Corea, the victors marched into China, where bloody, civil
-war was already raging. The imperial army <span class="pageNum" id="pb159">[<a href="#pb159">159</a>]</span>was badly beaten by the rebels headed by the usurper Li-tse-ching. The Manchius joined
-their forces with the Imperialists, and defeated the rebels, and then demanded the
-price of their victory. Entering Peking, they proclaimed the downfall of the house
-of Ming. The Tâtar (vassal) was now a “Tartar.” The son of their late king was set
-upon the dragon-throne and proclaimed the Whang Ti, the Son of Heaven, and the Lord
-of the Middle Kingdom and all her vassals. The following tribute was fixed for Chō-sen
-to pay annually:
-</p>
-<p>100 ounces of gold, 1,000 ounces of silver, 10,000 bags of rice, 2,000 pieces of silk,
-300 pieces of linen, 10,000 pieces of cotton cloth, 400 pieces of hemp cloth, 100
-pieces of fine hemp cloth, 10,000 rolls (fifty sheets each) of large paper, 1,000
-rolls small sized paper, 2,000 knives (good quality), 1,000 ox-horns, 40 decorated
-mats, 200 pounds of dye-wood, 10 boxes of pepper, 100 tiger skins, 100 deer skins,
-400 beaver skins, 200 skins of blue (musk?) rats.
-</p>
-<p>When, as it happened the very next year, the shō-gun of Japan demanded an increase
-of tribute to be paid in Yedo, the court of Seoul plead in excuse their wasted resources
-consequent upon the war with the Manchius, and their heavy burdens newly laid upon
-them. Their excuse was accepted.
-</p>
-<p>Twice, within a single generation, had the little peninsula been devastated by two
-mighty invasions that ate up the land. Between the mountaineers of the north, and
-“the brigands” from over the sea, Corea was left the Issachar among nations. The once
-strong ass couched down between two burdens. “And he saw that the rest was good, and
-the land that it was pleasant, and bowed his shoulder to bear, and became a servant
-unto tribute.”
-</p>
-<p>The Manchius, being of different stock and blood from the Chinese, yet imposed their
-dress and method of wearing the hair upon the millions of Chinese people, but here
-their tyranny seemed to stop. Hitherto, the Chinese and Corean method of rolling the
-hair in a knot or ball, on the top of the head, had been the fashion for ages. As
-a sign of loyalty to the new rulers, all people in the Middle Kingdom were compelled
-to shave the forefront of the head and allow their hair to grow in a queue, or pig-tail,
-behind on their back. At first they resisted, and much blood was shed before all submitted;
-but, at length, the once odious mark of savagery and foreign conquest became the national
-fashion, and the Chinaman’s pride at home and abroad. Even in <span class="pageNum" id="pb160">[<a href="#pb160">160</a>]</span>foreign lands, they cling to this mark of their loyalty as to life and country. The
-object of the recent queue-cutting plots, fomented by the political, secret societies
-of China, is to insult the imperial family at Peking by robbing the Chinese of their
-loyal appendage, and the special sign of the Tartar dominion.
-</p>
-<p>As a special favor to the Coreans who first submitted to the new masters of Kathay,
-they were spared the infliction of the queue, and allowed to dress their hair in the
-ancient style.
-</p>
-<p>The Corean king hastened to send congratulations to the emperor, Shun Chi, which ingratiated
-him still more in favor at Peking. In 1650 a captive Corean maid, taken prisoner in
-their first invasion, became sixth lady in rank in the imperial household. Through
-her influence her father, the ambassador, obtained a considerable diminution of the
-annual tribute, fixed upon in the terms of capitulation in 1637. In 1643, one-third
-of this tribute had been remitted, so that, by this last reduction, in 1650, the tax
-upon Corean loyalty was indeed very slight. Indeed it has long been considered by
-the Peking government that the Coreans get about as much as they give, and the embassy
-is one of ceremony rather than of tribute-bringing. Their offering is rather a percentage
-paid for license to trade, than a symbol of vassalage. Nevertheless, the Coreans of
-the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries found out, to their cost, that any lack of
-due deference was an expensive item of freedom. Every jot and tittle, or tithe of
-the mint or anise of etiquette, was exacted by the proud Manchius. In 1695, the king
-of Chō-sen was fined ten thousand ounces of silver for the omission of some punctilio
-of vassalage. At the investiture of each sovereign in Seoul, two grandees were sent
-from Peking to confer the patent of royalty. The little bill for this costly favor
-was about ten thousand taels, or dollars, in silver. The Coreans also erected, near
-one of the gates of Seoul, a temple, which still stands, in honor of the Manchius
-general commanding the invasion, and to whom, to this day, they pay semi-divine honors.
-Yet to encourage patriotism it was permitted, by royal decree, to the descendants
-of the minister who refused, at the Yalu River, to allow the Manchius to cross, and
-who thereby lost his life, to erect to his memory a monumental gate, a mark of high
-honor only rarely granted.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p161width" id="p161"><img src="images/p161.png" alt="Styles of Hair-dressing in Corea." width="720" height="439"><p class="figureHead">Styles of Hair-dressing in Corea.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>The Jesuits at Peking succeeded in ingratiating themselves with the conquerors, and
-Shun-chi, the emperor, was a pupil of Adam Schall, a German Jesuit, who became President
-of the Board <span class="pageNum" id="pb162">[<a href="#pb162">162</a>]</span>of Mathematicians. Nevertheless, in the troubles preceding the peace, many upright
-men lost their lives, and hundreds of scholars who hated the Tâtar conquerors of their
-beloved China—as the Christians of Constantinople hated the Turks—fled to Corea and
-Japan, conferring great literary influence and benefit. In both countries their presence
-greatly stimulated the critical study of Chinese literature. With the Mito and Yedo
-scholars in Japan, they assisted to promote the revival of learning, so long neglected
-during the civil wars. At Nagasaki, a Chinese colony of merchants, and trade between
-the two countries, were established, after the last hope of restoring the Mings had
-been extinguished in Kokusenya (Coxinga), who also drove the Dutch from Formosa. This
-exodus of scholars was somewhat like the dispersion of the Greek scholars through
-Europe after the fall of the Byzantine empire.
-</p>
-<p>To the Jesuits in Peking, who were mostly Frenchmen, belongs the credit of beginning
-that whole system of modern culture, by which modern science and Christianity are
-yet to transform the Chinese mind, and recast the ideas of this mighty people concerning
-nature and Deity. They now began to make known in Europe much valuable information
-about China and her outlying tributary states. They sent home a map of Corea—the first
-seen in Europe. Imperfect, though it was, it made the hermit land more than a mere
-name. In “<span lang="la">China Illustrata</span>,” written by the Jesuit Martini, and published in 1649, in Amsterdam—the city of
-printing presses and the Leipsic of that day—there is a map of Corea. The same industrious
-scholar wrote, in Latin, a book, entitled “<span lang="la">De Bello inter Tartaros et Seniensis</span>” (On the War between the Manchius and the Chinese), which was issued at Antwerp in
-1654, and in Amsterdam in 1661. It was also translated into English, French, and Spanish,
-the editions being issued at London, Donay, and Madrid. The English title is “Bellum
-Tartaricum; or, the Conquest of the Great and Most Renowned Empire of China by the
-Invasion of the [Manchiu] Tartars,” London, 1654, octavo.
-</p>
-<p>The Dutch had long tried to get a hand in the trade of China, and, in 1604, 1622,
-and 1653, had sent fleets of trading vessels to Chinese ports, but were in every instance
-refused. The Russians, however, were first allowed to trade on the northern frontier
-of China before the same privileges were granted to other Europeans. The Cossacks,
-when they first crossed the Ural Mountains, in 1579, with their faces set toward the
-Pacific, never ceased their advance <span class="pageNum" id="pb163">[<a href="#pb163">163</a>]</span>till they had added to the Czar’s domain a portion of the earth’s surface as large
-as the United States, and half of Europe. Once on the steppes, there began that long
-duel between Cossack and Tartar, which never ended until the boundaries of Russia
-touched those of Corea, Japan, and British America. Cossacks discovered, explored,
-conquered, and settled this triple-zoned region of frozen moss, forest land and fertile
-soil, bringing over six million square miles of territory under the wings of the double-headed
-eagle. They brought reports of Corea to Russia, and it was from Russian sources that
-Sir John Campbell obtained the substance of his “Commercial History of Chorea and
-Japan” in his voyages and travels, printed in London, 1771.
-</p>
-<p>In 1645, a party of Japanese traversed Chō-sen from Ai-chiu to Fusan, the Dan and
-Beersheba of the peninsula. Returning from their travels, one of them wrote a book
-called the “Romance of Corea” (Chō-sen Monogatari). Takéuchi Tosaémon and his son,
-Tozo, and shipmaster Kunida Hisosaémon, on April 26, 1645, left the port of Mikuni
-in the province of Echizen—the same place to which the first native of Corea is said
-to have reached Japan in the legendary period. With three large junks, whose crews
-numbered fifty-eight men, they set sail for the north on a trading voyage. Off the
-island of Sado a fearful storm broke upon them, which, after fifteen days, drove them
-on the mountain coast of Tartary, where they landed, May 12th, to refit and get fresh
-water. At first the people treated them peacefully, trading off their ginseng for
-the saké, or rice-beer, of the Japanese. Later on, the Japanese were attacked by the
-natives, and twenty-five of their number slain. The remainder were taken to Peking,
-where they remained until the winter of 1646. Honorably acquitted of all blame, they
-were sent homeward, into the Eastern Kingdom, under safe conduct of the Chinese emperor
-Shun-chi. They began the journey December 18th, and, crossing the snow-covered mountains
-and frozen rivers of Liao Tung, reached Seoul, after twenty-eight days travel, February
-3, 1647.
-</p>
-<p>The Japanese were entertained in magnificent style in one of the royal houses with
-banquets, numerous servants, presents, and the attendance of an officer, named Kan-shun,
-who took them around the city and showed them the sights. The paintings on the palace
-walls, the tiger-skin rugs, the libraries of handsomely bound books, the festivities
-of New Year’s day, the evergreen trees and fine scenery, were all novel and pleasing
-to the Japanese, but still they longed <span class="pageNum" id="pb164">[<a href="#pb164">164</a>]</span>to reach home. Leaving Seoul, February 12th, they passed through a large city, where,
-at sunset and sunrise, they heard the trumpeters call the laborers to begin and cease
-work. They noticed that the official class inscribed on their walls the names and
-dates of reign and death of the royal line from the founder of the dynasty to the
-father of the ruling sovereign. This served as an object lesson in history for the
-young. The merchants kept in their houses a picture of the famous Tao-jō-kung, who,
-by skill in trade, accumulated fortunes only to spend them among his friends. On February
-21st, they passed through Shang-shen (or Shang-chiu?), where the Japanese gained a
-great victory.
-</p>
-<p>In passing along the Nak-tong River, they witnessed the annual trial of archery for
-the military examinations. The targets were straw mannikins, set up on boats, in the
-middle of the river. On March 6th they reached Fusan. The Japanese settlement, called
-<i>Nippon-machi</i>, or Japan Street, was outside the gates of the town, a guard-house being kept up
-to keep the Japanese away. Only twice a year, on August 15th and 16th, were they allowed
-to leave their quarters to visit a temple in the town. The Coreans, however, were
-free to enter the Japanese concession to visit or trade. The waifs were taken into
-the house of the daimiō of Tsushima, and glad, indeed, were they to talk with a fellow
-countryman. Sailing to Tsushima, they were able there to get Japanese clothes, and,
-on July 19th, they reached Ozaka, and finally their homes in Echizen. One of their
-number wrote out an account of his adventures.
-</p>
-<p>Among other interesting facts, he states that he saw, hanging in the palace at Peking,
-a portrait of Yoshitsuné, the Japanese hero, who, as some of his countrymen believe,
-fled the country and, landing in Manchuria, became the mighty warrior Genghis Khan.
-Whether mistaken or not, the note of the Japanese is interesting.
-</p>
-<p>Mr. Leon Pages, in his “<span lang="fr">Histoire de la Religion <span class="corr" id="xd31e3147" title="Source: Chretienne">Chrétienne</span> au Japon</span>,” says that these men referred to above found established in the capital a Japanese
-commercial factory, but with the very severe restrictions similar to those imposed
-upon the Hollanders at Deshima. This is evidently a mistake. There was no trading
-mart in the capital, but there was, and had been, one at Fusan, which still exists
-in most flourishing condition.
-</p>
-<p>The Manchius, from the first, showed themselves “the most improvable race in Asia.”
-In 1707, under the patronage of the <span class="pageNum" id="pb165">[<a href="#pb165">165</a>]</span>renowned emperor Kang Hi, the Jesuits in Peking began their great geographical enterprise—the
-survey of the Chinese Empire, including the outlying vassal kingdoms. From the king’s
-palace, at Seoul, Kang Hi’s envoy obtained a map of Corea, which was reduced, drawn,
-and sent to Europe to be engraved and printed. From this original, most of the maps
-and supposed Corean names in books, published since that time, have been copied. Having
-no Corean interpreter at hand, the Jesuit cartographers gave the Chinese sounds of
-the characters which represent the local names. Hence the discrepancies between this
-map and the reports of the Dutch, Japanese, French, and American travellers, who give
-the vernacular pronunciation. To French genius and labor, from first to last, we owe
-most of what is known in Europe concerning the secluded nation. The Jesuits’ map is
-accurate as regards the latitude and longitude of many places, but lacking in true
-coast lines.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p165width" id="p165"><img src="images/p165.png" alt="Map illustrating the Jesuit Survey of 1709." width="471" height="445"><p class="figureHead">Map illustrating the Jesuit Survey of 1709.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>While making their surveys, the party of missionaries, whose assignment of the work
-was to Eastern Manchuria, caught something like a Pisgah glimpse of the country which,
-before a century elapsed, was to become a land of promise to French Christianity.
-In 1709, as they looked across the Tumen River, they wrote: “It was a new sight to
-us after we had crossed so many forests, and coasted so many frightful mountains to
-find ourselves on the banks of the <span class="pageNum" id="pb166">[<a href="#pb166">166</a>]</span>river Tumen-ula, with nothing but woods and wild beasts on one side, while the other
-presented to our view all that art and labor could produce in the best cultivated
-kingdoms. We there saw walled cities, and placing our instruments on the neighboring
-heights, geometrically determined the location of four of them, which bounded Korea
-on the north.” The four towns seen by the Jesuit surveyors were Kion-wen, On-son,
-and possibly Kion-fun and Chon-shon.
-</p>
-<p>The Coreans could not understand the Tartar or Chinese companions of the Frenchmen,
-but, at Hun-chun, they found interpreters, who told them the names of the Corean towns.
-The French priests were exceedingly eager and anxious to cross the river, and enter
-the land that seemed like the enchanted castle of Thornrose, but, being forbidden
-by the emperor’s orders, they reluctantly turned their backs upon the smiling cities.
-</p>
-<p>This was the picture of the northern border in 1707, before it was desolated, as it
-afterward was, so that the Russians might not be tempted to cross over. At Hun-chun,
-on the Manchiu, and Kion-wen, on the Corean side of the river, once a year, alternately,
-that is, once in two years, at each place, a fair was held up to 1860, where the Coreans
-and Chinese merchants exchanged goods. The lively traffic lasted only half a day,
-when the nationals of either country were ordered over the border, and laggards were
-hastened at the spear’s point. Any foreigner, Manchiu, Chinese, or even Corean suspected
-of being an alien, was, if found on the south side of the Tumen, at once put to death
-without shrift or pity. Thus the only gate of parley with the outside world on Corea’s
-northern frontier resembled an embrasure or a muzzle. When at last the Cossack lance
-flashed, and the Russian school-house rose, and the church spire glittered with steady
-radiance beyond the Tumen, this gateway became the terminus of that “underground railroad,”
-through which the Corean slave reached his Canada beyond, or the Corean Christian
-sought freedom from torture and dungeons and death.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb167">[<a href="#pb167">167</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch22" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1012">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XXII.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE DUTCHMEN IN EXILE.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The old saw which tells us that “truth is stranger than fiction” receives many a new
-and unexpected confirmation whenever a traveller into strange countries comes back
-to tell his tale. Marco Polo was denominated “Signor Milliano” (Lord Millions) by
-his incredulous hearers, because, in speaking of China, he very properly used this
-lofty numeral so frequently in his narratives. Mendez Pinto, though speaking truthfully
-of Japan’s wonders, was dubbed by a pun on his Christian name, the “Mendacious,” because
-he told what were thought to be very unchristian stories. In our own day, when Paul
-Du Chaillu came back from the African wilds and told of the gorilla which walked upright
-like a man, and could dent a gun-barrel with his teeth, most people believed, as a
-college professor of <span lang="fr">belles lettres</span>, dropping elegant words for the nonce, once stated, that “he lied like the mischief.”
-When lo! the once mythic gorillas have come as live guests at Berlin and Philadelphia,
-while their skeletons are commonplaces in our museums. Even Stanley’s African discoveries
-were, at first, discredited.
-</p>
-<p>The first European travellers in Corea, who lived to tell their tale at home, met
-the same fate as Polo, Pinto, Du Chaillu, and Stanley. The narratives were long doubted,
-and by some set down as pure fiction. Like the Indian braves that listen to Red Cloud
-and Spotted Tail, who, in the lodges of the plains, recount the wonders of Washington
-and civilization, the hearers are sure that they have taken “bad medicine.” Later
-reports or personal experience, however, corroborate the first accounts, and by the
-very commonplaceness of simple truth the first reports are robbed alike of novelty
-and suspicion.
-</p>
-<p>The first known entrance of any number of Europeans into Corea was that of Hollanders,
-belonging to the crew of the Dutch ship <span class="corr" id="xd31e3179" title="Source: Hollandra">Hollandia</span>, which was driven ashore in 1627. In those days <span class="pageNum" id="pb168">[<a href="#pb168">168</a>]</span>the Dutch were pushing their adventurous progress in the eastern seas as well as on
-the American waters. They had forts, trading settlements, or prosperous cities in
-Java, Sumatra, the Spice Islands, Formosa, and the ports of Southern Japan. The shores
-of these archipelagoes and continents being then little known, and slightly surveyed,
-shipwrecks were very frequent. The profits of a prosperous voyage usually repaid all
-losses of ships, though it is estimated that three out of five were lost. The passage
-between China and Japan and up the seas south of Corea, has, from ancient times, been
-difficult, even to a Chinese proverb.
-</p>
-<p>A big, blue-eyed, red-bearded, robust Dutchman, named John <span class="corr" id="xd31e3186" title="Source: Wetterree">Weltevree</span>, whose native town was <span class="corr" id="xd31e3189" title="Source: Rip">De Rijp</span>, in North Holland, volunteered on board the Dutch ship <span class="corr" id="xd31e3192" title="Source: Hollandra">Hollandia</span> in 1626, in order to get to Japan. In that wonderful country, during the previous
-seventeen years, his fellow-countrymen had been trading and making rich fortunes,
-occasionally fighting on the seas with the Portuguese and other buccaneers of the
-period.
-</p>
-<p>The good ship, after a long voyage around the Cape of Good Hope, and through the Indian
-and Chinese Seas, was almost in sight of Japan. Coasting along the Corean shores,
-Mr. John <span class="corr" id="xd31e3197" title="Source: Wetterree">Weltevree</span> and some companions went ashore to get water, and there were captured by the natives.
-The Coreans were evidently quite willing to have such a man at hand, for use rather
-than ornament. After the Japanese invasions a spasm of enterprise in the way of fortification,
-architecture, and development of their military resources possessed them, and to have
-a big-nosed and red-bearded foreigner, a genuine “Nam-ban,” or barbarian of the south,
-was a prize. To both Coreans and Japanese, the Europeans, as coming in ships from
-the southward, were called “Southerners,” or “Southern savages.” Later on, after learning
-new lessons in geography, they called them “Westerners,” or “Barbarians from the West.”
-</p>
-<p>Like the black potentates of Africa, who like to possess a white man, believing him
-to be a “spirit,” or a New Zealand chief, who values the presence of a “paheka Maori”
-(Englishman), the Coreans of that day considered their western “devil” a piece of
-property worth many tiger skins. It may be remembered—and the Coreans may have borrowed
-the idea thence—that the Japanese, then beginning their hermit policy, had also a
-white foreigner in durance for their benefit. This was the Englishman Will Adams,
-who had been a pilot on a Dutch ship that sailed from the same <span class="pageNum" id="pb169">[<a href="#pb169">169</a>]</span>Texel River. Perhaps the boy <span class="corr" id="xd31e3204" title="Source: Wetterree">Weltevree</span> had seen and talked with the doughty Briton on the wharves of the Dutch port. Adams
-served the Japanese as interpreter, state adviser, ship architect, mathematician,
-and in various useful ways, but was never allowed to leave Japan. It is highly probable
-that the ambassadors from Seoul, while in Yedo, saw Will Adams, since he spent much
-of his time in public among the officials and people, living there until May, 1620.
-</p>
-<p>The magnates of Seoul probably desired to have a like factotum, and this explains
-why <span class="corr" id="xd31e3209" title="Source: Wetterree">Weltevree</span> was treated with kindness and comparative honor, though kept as a prisoner. When
-the Manchius invaded Corea, in 1635, his two companions were killed in the wars, and
-<span class="corr" id="xd31e3212" title="Source: Wetterree">Weltevree</span> was left alone. Having no one with whom he could converse, he had almost forgotten
-his native speech, when after twenty-seven years of exile, in the fifty-ninth year
-of his age, he met some of his fellow-Hollanders and acted as interpreter to the Coreans,
-under the following circumstances:
-</p>
-<p>In January, 1653, the Dutch ship <span class="corr" id="xd31e3217" title="Source: Sparwehr">Sperwer</span> (Sparrowhawk) left Texel Island, bound for Nagasaki. Among the crew was Hendrik Hamel,
-the supercargo, who afterward became the historian of their adventures. After nearly
-five months’ voyage, they reached Batavia, June 1st, and Formosa July 16th. From this
-island they steered for Japan, fortunately meeting no “wild Chinese” or pirates on
-their course. Off Quelpart Island, a dreadful storm arose, and, being close on a lee
-shore with death staring all in the face, the captain ordered them “to cut down the
-mast and go to their prayers.” The ship went to pieces, but thirty-six out of the
-sixty-four men composing the crew reached the shore alive. The local magistrate, an
-elder of some seventy years of age, who knew a little Dutch, met them with his retainers,
-and learned their plight, who they were, and whence they came. The Hollanders were
-first refreshed with rice-water. The Coreans then collected the pieces of the broken
-ship, and all they could get from the hulk, and burned them for the sake of the metal.
-One of the iron articles happened to be a loaded cannon, which went off during the
-firing. The liquor casks were speedily emptied into the gullets of the wreckers, and
-the result was a very noisy set of heathen.
-</p>
-<p>The old leader, however, evidently determined to draw the line between virtue and
-vice somewhere. He had several of the thieves seized and spanked on the spot, while
-others were bambooed on the soles of their feet, one so severely that his toes dropped
-off.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb170">[<a href="#pb170">170</a>]</span></p>
-<p>On October 29th the survivors were brought by the officials to be examined by the
-interpreter <span class="corr" id="xd31e3226" title="Source: Wetterree">Weltevree</span>. The huge noses, the red beards and white faces were at once recognized by the lone
-exile as belonging to his own countrymen. <span class="corr" id="xd31e3229" title="Source: Wetterree">Weltevree</span> was very “rusty” in his native language, after twenty-seven years’ nearly complete
-disuse, but in company with the new arrivals he regained it all in a month.
-</p>
-<p>Of course, the first and last idea of the captives was how to escape. The native fishing-smacks
-were frequently driven off to Japan, which they knew must be almost in sight. One
-night they made an attempt to reach the sea-shore. They at first thought they were
-secure, when the dogs betrayed them by barking and alarming the guards.
-</p>
-<p>It is evident that the European body has an odor entirely distinct from a Mongolian.
-The Abbé Huc states that even when travelling through Thibet and China, in disguise,
-the dogs continually barked at him and almost betrayed him, even at night. In travelling,
-and especially when living in the Japanese city of Fukui, the writer had the same
-experience. In walking through the city streets at night, even when many hundred yards
-off, the Japanese dogs would start up barking and run toward him. This occurred repeatedly,
-when scores of native pedestrians were not noticed by the beasts. The French missionaries
-in Corea, even in disguise, report the same facts.
-</p>
-<p>The baffled Hollanders were caught and officially punished after the fashion of the
-nursery, but so severely that some had to keep their beds for a month, in order to
-heal their battered flanks. Finally they were ordered to proceed to the capital, which
-the Dutchmen call Sior (Seoul).
-</p>
-<p>Hamel gives a few names of the places through which he passed. These are in the pronunciation
-of the local dialect, and written down in Dutch spelling. Most of them are recognizable
-on the map, though the real sound is nearly lost in a quagmire of Dutch letters, in
-which Hamel has attempted to note the quavers and semi-demi-quavers of Corean enunciation.
-He writes <i>Coeree</i> for Corea, and <i>Tyocen-koeck</i> for Chō-sen kokŭ, and is probably the first European to mention Quelpart Island,
-on which the ship was wrecked.
-</p>
-<p>The first city on the mainland to which they came was Heynam (Hai-nam), in the extreme
-southwest of Chulla. This was about the last of May. Thence they marched to Jeham,
-spending the night <span class="pageNum" id="pb171">[<a href="#pb171">171</a>]</span>at Na-diou (Nai-chiu). The gunner of the ship died at Je-ham, or Je-ban. They passed
-through San-siang (Chan-shon), and came to Tong-ap (Chon-wup?), after crossing a high
-mountain, on the top of which was the spacious fortress of Il-pam San-siang. The term
-“San-siang,” used twice here, means a fortified stronghold in the mountains, to which,
-in time of war, the neighboring villagers may fly for refuge. Teyn (Tai-in), was the
-next place arrived at, after which, “having baited at the little town of Kuniga” (Kumku),
-they reached Khin-tyo (Chon-chiu), where the governor of Chillado (Chulla dō) resided.
-This city, though a hundred miles from the sea, was very famous, and was a seat of
-great traffic. After this, they came to the last town of the province, Jesan, and,
-passing through Gunun and Jensan, reached Konsio (Kong-chiu), the capital of Chung-chong
-province. They reached the border of Kiung-kei by a rapid march, and, after crossing
-a wide river (the Han), they traversed a league, and entered Sior (Seoul). They computed
-the length of the journey at seventy-five leagues. This, by a rough reckoning, is
-about the distance from Hainam to Seoul, as may be seen from the map.
-</p>
-<p>In the capital, as they had been along the road, the Dutchmen were like wild beasts
-on show. Crowds flocked to see the white-faced and red-bearded foreigners. They must
-have appeared to the natives as Punch looks to English children. The women were even
-more anxious than the men to get a good look. Every one was especially curious to
-see the Dutchmen drink, for it was generally believed that they tucked their noses
-up over their ears when they drank. The size and prominence of the nasal organ of
-a Caucasian first strikes a Turanian with awe and fear. Thousands of people no doubt
-learned, for the first time, that the western “devils” were men after all, and ate
-decent food and not earthworms and toads. Some of the women, so Hamel flattered himself,
-even went so far as to admire the fair complexions and ruddy cheeks of the Dutchmen.
-At the palace, the king (Yo-chong, who reigned from 1648 to 1658) improved the opportunity
-for a little fun. It was too good a show not to see how the animals could perform.
-The Dutchmen laughed, sang, danced, leaped, and went through miscellaneous performances
-for His Majesty’s benefit. For this they were rewarded with choice drink and refreshments.
-They were then assigned to the body-guard of the king as petty officers, and an allowance
-of rice was set apart for their maintenance. Chinese and Dutchmen drilled and commanded
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb172">[<a href="#pb172">172</a>]</span>the palace troops, who were evidently the flower of the army. During their residence
-at the capital the Hollanders learned many things about the country and people, and
-began to be able to talk in the “Coresian” language.
-</p>
-<p>The ignorance and narrowness of the Coreans were almost incredible. They could not
-believe what the captives told them of the size of the earth. “How could it be possible,”
-said they, in sneering incredulity, “that the sun can shine on all the many countries
-you tell us of at once?” Thinking the foreigners told exaggerated lies, they fancied
-that the “countries” were only counties and the “cities” villages. To them Corea was
-very near the centre of the earth, which was China.
-</p>
-<p>The cold was very severe. In November the river was frozen over, and three hundred
-loaded horses passed over it on the ice.
-</p>
-<p>After they had been in Seoul three years, the “Tartar” (Manchiu) ambassador visited
-Seoul, but before his arrival the captives were sent away to a fort, distant six or
-seven leagues, to be kept until the ambassador left, which he did in March. This fort
-stood on a mountain, called Numma, which required three hours to ascend. In time of
-war the king sought shelter within it, and it was kept provisioned for three years.
-Hamel does not state why he and his companions were sent away, but it was probably
-to conceal the fact that foreigners were drilling the royal troops. The suspicions
-of the new rulers at Peking were easily roused.
-</p>
-<p>When the Manchiu envoy was about to leave Seoul, some of the prisoners determined
-to put in execution a plan of escape. They put on Dutch clothes, under their Corean
-dress, and awaited their opportunity. As the envoy was on the road about to depart,
-some of them seized the bridle of his horse, and displaying their Dutch clothing,
-begged him to take them to Peking. The plan ended in failure. The Dutchmen were seized
-and thrown into prison. Nothing more was ever heard of them, and it was believed by
-their companions that they had been put to death. This was in March.
-</p>
-<p>In June there was another shipwreck off Quelpart Island, and <span class="corr" id="xd31e3256" title="Source: Wetterree">Weltevree</span> being now too old to make the journey, three of the Hollanders were sent to act as
-interpreters. Hamel does not give us the result of their mission.
-</p>
-<p>The Manchiu ambassador came again to Seoul in August. The nobles urged the king to
-put the Hollanders to death, and have no more trouble with them. His Majesty refused,
-but sent <span class="pageNum" id="pb173">[<a href="#pb173">173</a>]</span>them back into Chulla, allowing them each fifty pounds of rice a month for their support.
-</p>
-<p>They set out from Seoul in March, 1657, on horseback, passing through the same towns
-as on their former journey. Reaching the castle-city of “Diu-siong,” they were joined
-by their three comrades sent to investigate the wreck at Quelpart, which made their
-number thirty-three. Their chief occupation was that of keeping the castle and official
-residence in order—an easy and congenial duty for the neat and order-loving Dutchmen.
-</p>
-<p>Hamel learned many of the ideas of the natives. They represented their country as
-in the form of a long square, “in shape like a playing-card”—perhaps the Dutchmen
-had a pack with them to beguile the tedium of their exile. Certain it is that they
-still kept the arms and flag of Orange, to be used again.
-</p>
-<p>The exiles were not treated harshly, though in one case, after a change of masters,
-the new magistrate “afflicted them with fresh crosses.” This “rotation in office”
-was evidently on account of the change on the throne. Yo-chong ceased to reign in
-1658, and “a new king arose who knew not Joseph.” Yen-chong succeeded his father,
-reigning from 1658 to 1676.
-</p>
-<p>Two large comets appearing in the sky with their tails toward each other, frightened
-the Coreans, and created intense alarm. The army was ordered out, the guards were
-doubled, and no fires were allowed to be kindled along the coast, lest they might
-attract or guide invaders or a hostile force. In the last few decades, comets had
-appeared, said the Coreans, and in each case they had presaged war. In the first,
-the Japanese invasions from the east, and, in the second, the Manchius from the west.
-They anxiously asked the Dutchmen how comets were regarded in Holland, and probably
-received some new ideas in astronomy. No war, however, followed, and the innocent
-comets gradually shrivelled up out of sight, without shaking out of their fiery hair
-either pestilence or war.
-</p>
-<p>The Dutchmen saw many whales blowing off the coast, and in December shoals of herring
-rushed by, keeping up an increasing stream of life until January, when it slackened,
-and in March ceased. The whales made sad havoc in these shoals, gorging themselves
-on the small fry. These are the herring which arrive off the coast of Whang-hai, and
-feed on the banks and shoals during the season. The catching of them affords lucrative
-employment to hundreds of junks from North China.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb174">[<a href="#pb174">174</a>]</span></p>
-<p>From their observations, the Dutchmen argued—one hundred and twenty years before La
-Perouse demonstrated the fact—that there must be a strait north of Corea, connecting
-with the Arctic Ocean, like that of Waigats (now called the Strait of Kara), between
-Nova Zemla and the island lying off the northwestern end of Russia. They thus conjectured
-the existence of the Straits of Tartary, west of Saghalin, before they appeared on
-any European map. Waigats was discovered by the Englishman, Stephen Burroughs, who
-had been sent out by the Muscovy company to find a northwest passage to China. Their
-mention of it shows that they were familiar with the progress of polar research, since
-it was discovered in 1556, only seven years before they left Holland. It had even
-at that time, however, become a famous hunting-place for whalers and herring fishers.
-</p>
-<p>These marine studies of the captives, coupled with the fact that they had before attempted
-to escape, may have aroused the suspicions of the government. In February, 1663, by
-orders from Seoul, they were separated and put in three different towns. Twelve went
-to “Saysiano,” five to Siun-schien, and five to Namman, their numbers being now reduced
-to twenty-two. Two of these places are easily found on the Japanese map. During all
-the years of their captivity, they seem not to have known anything of the Japanese
-at Fusan, nor the latter of them.
-</p>
-<p>Though thus scattered, the men were occasionally allowed to visit each other, which
-they did, enjoying each other’s society, sweetened with pipes and tobacco, and Hamel
-devoutly adds that “it was a great mercy of God that they enjoyed good health.” A
-new governor having been appointed over them, evidently was possessed with the idea
-of testing the skill of the bearded foreigners, with a view of improving the art productions
-of the country. He set the Dutchmen to work at moulding clay—perhaps to have some
-pottery and tiles after Dutch patterns, and the Delft system of illustrating the Bible
-at the fireplace. This was so manifestly against the national policy of making no
-improvements on anything, that the poor governor lost his place and suffered punishment.
-The spies informed on him to the king. An explosion of power took place, the ex-governor
-received ninety strokes on his shin-bones, and was disgraced from rank and office.
-The quondam improvers of the ceramic art of Corea were again set to work at pulling
-up grass and other menial duties about the official residence.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb175">[<a href="#pb175">175</a>]</span></p>
-<p>As the years passed on, the poor exiles were in pitiful straits. Their clothing had
-been worn to tatters, and they were reduced even to beggary. They were accustomed
-to go off in companies to seek alms of the people, for two or three weeks at a time.
-Those left at home, during these trips, worked at various odd jobs to earn a pittance,
-especially at making arrows. The next year, 1664, was somewhat easier for them, their
-overseer being kind and gentle; but, in 1665, the homesick fellows tried hard to escape.
-In 1666, they lost their benefactor, the good governor. Now came the time for flight.
-</p>
-<p>All possible preparations were made, in the way of hoarding provisions, getting fresh
-water ready, and studying well the place of exit. They waited for the sickness or
-absence of their overseer, to slacken the vigilance of their guards.
-</p>
-<p>In the latter part of August, or early in September, 1667, as the fourteenth year
-of their captivity was drawing to a close, the governor fell sick. The Dutchmen, taking
-time by the forelock, immediately, as soon as dark, on the night of September 4th,
-climbed the city wall, and reaching the seaside succeeded, after some parleying, in
-getting a boat. “A Corean, blinded by the offer of double the value of it,” sold them
-his fishing craft. They returned again to the city. At night they crept along the
-city wall, and this time the dogs were asleep, absent, or to windward, though the
-Dutchmen’s hearts were in their mouths all the time. They carried pots of rice and
-water, and that darling of a Dutchman—the frying-pan. Noiselessly they slipped the
-wood and stone anchor, and glided out past the junks and boats in the harbor, none
-of the crews waking from their mats.
-</p>
-<p>They steered directly southeast, and on the 6th found themselves in a current off
-the Goto Islands. They succeeded in landing, and cooked some food. Not long after,
-some armed natives (probably from the lingering influence of the comet) approached
-them cautiously, as the Japanese feared they were Coreans, and forerunners of an invading
-band.
-</p>
-<p>Hamel at once pulled out their flag, having the arms and colors of the Prince of Orange.
-Surrendering themselves, they stated their history, and condition, and their desire
-of getting home. The Japanese were kind, “but made no return for the gifts” of the
-Dutchmen. They finally got to Nagasaki in Japanese junks, and met their countrymen
-at Déshima. The annual ship from Batavia was then just about to return, and in the
-nick of time the waifs <span class="pageNum" id="pb176">[<a href="#pb176">176</a>]</span>got on board, reached Batavia November 20th, sailed for Holland December 28th, and
-on July 20, 1668, stepped ashore at home.
-</p>
-<hr class="tb"><p>
-</p>
-<p>Hamel, the supercargo of the ship, wrote a book on his return, recounting his adventures
-in a simple and straightforward style. It was written in Dutch and shortly after translated
-into French, German, and English. Four editions in Dutch are known. The English version
-may be found in full in the Astley, and in the Pinkerton, Collections of Voyages and
-Travels.
-</p>
-<p>The French translator indulges in skepticism concerning Hamel’s narrative, questioning
-especially his geographical statements. Before a map of Corea, with the native sounds
-even but approximated, it will be seen that Hamel’s story is a piece of downright
-unembroidered truth. It is indeed to be regretted that this actual observer of Corean
-life, people, and customs gave us so little information concerning them.
-</p>
-<p>The fate of the other survivors of the Sparrowhawk crew was never known. Perhaps it
-never will be learned, as it is not likely that the Coreans would take any pains to
-mark the site of their graves. Yet as the tomb of Will Adams was found in Japan, by
-a reader of Hildreth’s book, so perhaps some inquiring foreigner in Corea may discover
-the site of the graves of these exiles, and mark their resting-places.
-</p>
-<p>There is no improbability in supposing that other missing vessels, previous to the
-second half of the nineteenth century, shared the fate of the Sparrowhawk. The wrecks,
-burned for the sake of the iron, would leave no trace; while perhaps many shipwrecked
-men have pined in captivity, and dying lonely in a strange land have been put in unmarked
-graves.
-</p>
-<hr class="tb"><p>
-</p>
-<p>At this point, we bring to an end our sketch of the ancient and mediæval history of
-Corea. Until the introduction of Christianity into the peninsula, the hermit nation
-was uninfluenced by any ideas which the best modern life claims as its own. As with
-the whole world, so with its tiny fraction Corea, the door of ancient history shut,
-and the gate of modern history opened, when the religion of Jesus moved the hearts
-and minds of men. We now glance at the geography, politics, social life, and religion
-of the Coreans; after which we shall narrate the story of their national life from
-the implanting of Christianity until their rivulet of history flowed into the stream
-of the world’s history.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb177">[<a href="#pb177">177</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="pt2" class="div0 part">
-<h2 class="label">II.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">POLITICAL AND SOCIAL COREA.</h2>
-<p><span class="pageNum" id="pb179">[<a href="#pb179">179</a>]</span></p>
-<div id="ch23" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1028">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="super">POLITICAL AND SOCIAL COREA.</h2>
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XXIII.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE EIGHT PROVINCES.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<div class="div2 section"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main">PING-AN, OR THE PACIFIC.</h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">This province bears the not altogether appropriate name of Peaceful Quiet. It is the
-border land of the kingdom, containing what was for centuries the only acknowledged
-gate of entrance and outlet to the one neighbor which Corea willingly acknowledged
-as her superior. It contains, probably, the largest area of any province, unless it
-be Ham-kiung. Its northern, and a great part of its western, frontier is made by the
-Yalu River, called also the Ap-nok, the former name referring to its sinuous course,
-meaning “dragon’s windings,” and the latter after its deep green color.
-</p>
-<p>The Yalu is the longest river in Corea. Its source is found near the 40th parallel.
-Flowing northwardly, for about eighty miles, the stream forms the boundary between
-Ping-an and Ham-kiung. Then, turning to the westward, it receives on the Manchurian
-side twelve tributaries, which run down the gorges of the Ever-White Mountains. Each
-of these streams is named, beginning westwardly, after the numerals of arithmetic.
-The waters of so many valleys on the west, as well as on the north and east, emptying
-into the Yalu, make it, in spring and fall, a turbulent stream, which sinuates like
-the writhing of a dragon; whence its name. In the summer, its waters are beautifully
-clear, and blue or green—the Coreans having no word to distinguish between these two
-colors. It empties by three mouths into the Yellow Sea, its deltas, or islands, being
-completely submerged during the melting of the snows. It is easily navigable for junks
-to the town of Chan-son, a noted trading place, sixty miles from the sea. The <span class="pageNum" id="pb180">[<a href="#pb180">180</a>]</span>valley of the Yalu is extremely fertile, and well wooded, and the scenery is superb.
-Its navigation was long interdicted to the Chinese, but steamers and gunboats have
-entered it, and access to the fertile valley and the trade of the region will be gained
-by other nations. The Tong-kia River drains the neutral strip.
-</p>
-<p>The town nearest the frontier, and the gateway of the kingdom, is Ai-chiu. It is situated
-on a hill overlooking the river, and surrounded by a wall of light-colored stone.
-The annual embassy always departed for its overland journey to China through its gates.
-Here also are the custom-house and vigilant guards, whose chief business it was to
-scrutinize all persons entering or leaving Corea by the high road, which traverses
-the town. A line of patrols and guard-houses picketed the river along a length of
-over a hundred miles.
-</p>
-<p>Nevertheless, most of the French missionaries have entered the mysterious peninsula
-through this loophole, disguising themselves as wood-cutters, crossing the Yalu River
-on the ice, creeping through the water-drains in the granite wall, and passing through
-this town. Or they have been met by friends at appointed places along the border,
-and thence have travelled to the capital.
-</p>
-<p>Through this exit also, Corea sent to Peking or Mukden the waifs and sailors cast
-on her shores. A number of shipwrecked Americans, after kind treatment at the hands
-of the Coreans, have thus reached their homes by way of Mukden. This prosperous city,
-having a population of over two hundred thousand souls, and noted for its manufactures,
-especially in metal, is the capital of the Chinese province of Shing-king, formerly
-Liao Tong. It is surrounded by a long wall pierced with eight gates, one of which—that
-to the northeast—is called “the Corean Gate.” Niu-chwang has also a “Corean Gate.”
-</p>
-<p>Fifty miles beyond the Corean frontier is the “Border Gate” (Pien-mun), at which there
-was a fair held three or four times a year, the chief markets being at the exit and
-return of the Corean embassy to China. The value of the products here sold annually
-averaged over five hundred thousand dollars. In the central apartment of a building
-inhabited at either end by Chinese and Corean mandarins respectively, the customs-officers
-sat to collect taxes on the things bartered. The Corean merchants were obliged to
-pay “bonus” or tribute of about four hundred dollars to the mandarin of Fung-wang
-Chang, the nearest Chinese town, who came in person to open the gates of the building
-for the spring fair. For <span class="pageNum" id="pb181">[<a href="#pb181">181</a>]</span>the privilege of the two autumn fairs, the Coreans were mulcted but half the sum,
-as the gates were then opened by an underling Manchiu official. The winter fair was
-but of slight importance. For the various Chinese goods, and European cottons, the
-Coreans <span class="pageNum" id="pb182">[<a href="#pb182">182</a>]</span>bartered their furs, hides, gold dust, ginseng, and the mulberry paper used by Chinese
-tailors for linings, and for windows.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p181width" id="p181"><img src="images/p181.png" alt="Map of Ping-an Province." width="529" height="720"><p class="figureHead">Map of Ping-an Province.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>Ping-an has the reputation of being very rich in mineral and metallic wealth. Gold
-and silver by report abound, but the natives are prohibited by the government from
-working the mines. The neutrality of the strip of territory, sixty miles wide and
-about three hundred miles long, and drained by the Tong-kia River, between Chō-sen
-and Chin, was respected by the Chinese government until 1875, when Li Hung Chung,
-on complaint of the king of Corea, made a descent on the Manchiu outlaws and squatters
-settled on the strip. Having despatched a force of troops, with gunboats up the Yalu,
-to co-operate with them, he found the region overspread with cultivators. The eyes
-of the viceroy being opened to the fertility of this land, and the navigability of
-the river, he proposed, in a memorial to Peking, that the land be incorporated in
-the Chinese domain, but that a wall and ditch be built to isolate Corea, and that
-all Chinese trespassers on Corean ground be handed over to the mandarins to be sent
-prisoners to Mukden, and to be there beheaded, while Chinese resisting capture should
-be lawfully slain by Coreans. To this the Seoul government agreed. By this clever
-diplomacy the Chinese gained back a huge slice of valuable land, probably without
-the labor of digging ditches or building palisades. The old wall of stakes still remains,
-in an extremely dilapidated condition. Off the coast are a few islands, and a number
-of shallow banks, around which shell- and scale-fish abound. Chinese junks come in
-fleets every year in the fishing season, but their presence is permitted only on condition
-of their never setting foot on shore. In reality much contraband trade is done by
-the smugglers along the coast. A group of islands near the mouth was long the nest
-of Chinese pirates, but these have been broken up by Li Hung Chang’s gunboats. Next
-to the Yalu, the most important river of the province is the Ta-tong or Ping-an, which
-discharges a great volume of fresh water annually into the sea. A number of large
-towns and cities are situated on or near its banks, and the high road follows the
-course of the river. It is the Rubicon of Chō-sen history, and at various epochs in
-ancient times was the boundary river of China, or of the rival states within the peninsula.
-About fifty miles from its mouth is the city of Ping-an, the metropolis of the province,
-and the royal seat of authority, from before the Christian era, to the tenth century.
-Its situation renders it a natural stronghold. It <span class="pageNum" id="pb183">[<a href="#pb183">183</a>]</span>has been many times besieged by Chinese and Japanese armies, and near it many battles
-have been fought. “The General Sherman affair,” in 1866, in which the crew of the
-American schooner were murdered—which occasioned the sending of the United States
-naval expedition in 1871—took place in front of the city of Ping-an, Commander J.&nbsp;C.
-Febiger, in the U.&nbsp;S.&nbsp;S. Shenandoah, visited the mouths of the river in 1869, and
-while vainly waiting for the arrest of the murderers, surveyed the inlet, to which
-he gave the name of “Shenandoah.”
-</p>
-<p>By official enumeration, Ping-an contains 293,400 houses, and the muster-rolls give
-174,538 as the number of men capable of military duty. The governor resides at Ping-an.
-</p>
-<p>There is considerable diversity of character between the inhabitants of the eight
-provinces. Those of the two most northern, particularly of Ping-an, are more violent
-in temper than the other provincials. Very few nobles or official dignitaries live
-among them, hence very few of the refinements of the capital are to be found there.
-They are not <span class="corr" id="xd31e3334" title="Source: over loyal">overloyal</span> to the reigning dynasty, and are believed to cherish enmity against it. The government
-keeps vigilant watch over them, repressing the first show of insubordination, lest
-an insurrection difficult to quell should once gain headway. It is from these provinces
-that most of the refugees into Russian territory come. It was among these men that
-the “General Sherman affair” took place, and it is highly probable that even if the
-regent were really desirous of examining into the outrage, he was afraid to do so,
-when the strong public sentiment was wholly on the side of the murderers of the Sherman’s
-crew.
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div2 section"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main">THE YELLOW-SEA PROVINCE.</h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">All the eight circuits into which Chō-sen is divided are maritime provinces, but this
-is the only one which takes its name from the body of water on which its borders lie,
-jutting out into the Whang-hai, or Yellow Sea, its extreme point lies nearest to Shantung
-promontory in China. Its coast line exceeds its land frontiers. In the period anterior
-to the Christian era, Whang-hai, was occupied by the tribes called the Mahan, and
-from the second to the sixth century, by the kingdom of Hiaksai. It has been the camping-ground
-of the armies of many nations. Here, besides the border forays which engaged the troops
-of the rival kingdoms, the Japanese, Chinese, Mongols, and Manchius, have contended
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb184">[<a href="#pb184">184</a>]</span>for victory again and again. The ravages of war, added to a somewhat sterile soil,
-are the causes of Whang-hai being the least populated province of the eight in the
-peninsula. From very ancient times the Corean peninsula has been renowned for its
-pearls. These are of superior lustre and great size. Even before the Christian era,
-when the people lived in caves and mud huts, and before they had horses or cattle,
-the barbaric inhabitants of this region wore necklaces of pearls, and sewed them on
-their clothing, row upon row. They amazed the invading hordes of the Han dynasty,
-with such incongruous mixture of wealth and savagery; as the Indians, careless of
-the yellow dust, surprised by their indifference to it the gold-greedy warriors of
-Balboa. Later on, the size and brilliancy of Corean pearls became famous all over
-China. They were largely exported. The Chinese merchant braved the perils of the sea,
-and of life among the rude Coreans, to win lustrous gems of great price, which he
-bartered when at home for sums which made him quickly rich. In the twelfth century
-the fame of these “Eastern pearls,” as they were then called, and which outrivalled
-even those from the Tonquin fisheries, became the cause of an attempted conquest of
-the peninsula, the visions of wealth acting as a lure to the would-be invaders. It
-may even be that the Corean pearl fisheries were known by fame to the story-tellers
-of the “Arabian Nights Entertainments.” Much of the mystic philosophy of China concerning
-pearls is held also by the Coreans. The Corean Elysium is a lake of pearls. In burying
-the dead, those who can afford it, fill the mouth of the corpse with three pearls,
-which, if large, will, it is believed, preserve the dead body from decay. This emblem
-of three flashing pearls, is much in vogue in native art The gems are found on the
-banks lying off the coast of this province, as well as in the archipelago to the south,
-and at Quelpart. The industry is, at present, utterly neglected. The pearls are kept,
-but no use seems to be made of the brilliant nacre of the mussel-shells, which are
-exported to Japan, to be used in inlaying.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p185width" id="p185"><img src="images/p185.png" alt="Map of the Yellow-sea Province." width="715" height="433"><p class="figureHead">Map of the Yellow-sea Province.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>More valuable to the modern people than the now almost abandoned pearl mussel-beds,
-are the herring fisheries, which, during the season, attract fleets of junks and thousands
-of fishermen from the northern coast provinces of China. Opposite, at a distance of
-about eighty miles as the crow flies, measuring from land’s end to land’s end, is
-the populous province of Shantung, or “Country east of the mountains.” On the edge
-of this promontory are the <span class="pageNum" id="pb185">[<a href="#pb185">185</a>]</span>cities of Chifu and Teng Chow, while further to the east is Tientsin, the seaport
-of Peking. From the most ancient times, Chinese armadas have sailed, and invading
-armies have embarked for Corea from these ports. Over and over again has the river
-Tatong been crowded with fleets of junks, fluttering the dragon-banners at their peaks.
-From the Shantung headlands, also, Chinese pirates have sailed over to the tempting
-coasts and green islands of Corea, to ravage, burn, and kill. To guard against these
-invaders, and to notify the arrival of foreigners, signal fires are lighted on the
-hill-tops, which form a cordon of flame and speed the alarm from coast to capital
-in a few hours. These pyrographs or fire signals are called “Pong-wa.” At Mok-mie′
-san, a mountain south of the capital, the fire-messages of the three southern provinces
-are received. By day, instead of the pillars of fire, are clouds of smoke, made by
-heaping wet chopped straw or rice-husks on the blaze. Instantly a dense white column
-rises in the air, which, to the sentinels from peak to peak, is eloquent of danger.
-In more peaceful times, Corean timber has been largely exported to Chifu, and tribute-bearing
-ships have sailed over to Tientsin. The Chinese fishermen usually appear off the coast
-of this province in the third month, or April, remaining until June, when their white
-sails, bent homeward, sink from the gaze of the vigilant sentinels <span class="pageNum" id="pb186">[<a href="#pb186">186</a>]</span>on the hills, who watch continually lest the Chinese set foot on shore. This they
-are forbidden to do on pain of death. In spite of the vigilance of the soldiers, however,
-a great deal of smuggling is done at night, between the Coreans and Chinese boatmen,
-at this time, and the French missionaries have repeatedly passed the barriers of this
-forbidden land by disembarking from Chifu junks off this coast. The island of Merin
-(Merin-to) has, on several occasions, been trodden by the feet of priests who afterward
-became martyrs. At one time, in June, 1865, four Frenchmen entered “the lion’s den”
-from this rendezvous. There is a great bank of sand and many islands off the coast,
-the most important of the latter being the Sir James Hall group, which was visited,
-in 1816, by Captains Maxwell and Hall, in the ships Lyra and Alceste. These forest-clad
-and well-cultivated islands were named after the president of the Edinburgh Geographical
-Society, the father of the gallant sailor and lively author who drove the first British
-keel through the unknown waters of the Yellow Sea. Eastward from this island cluster
-is a large bay and inlet near the head of which is the fortified city of Chan-yon.
-</p>
-<p>In January, 1867, Commander R.&nbsp;W. Shufeldt, in the U.&nbsp;S.&nbsp;S. Wachusett, visited this
-inlet to obtain redress for the murder of the crew of the American schooner General
-Sherman, and while vainly waiting, surveyed portions of it, giving the name of Wachusett
-Bay to the place of anchorage. Judging from native maps, the scale of the chart made
-from this survey was on too large a scale, though the recent map-makers of Tōkiō have
-followed it. The southern coast also is dotted with groups of islands, and made dangerous
-by large shoals. One of the approaches to the national capital and the commercial
-city of Sunto, or Kai-seng, is navigable for junks, through a tortuous channel which
-threads the vast sand-banks formed by the Han River. Hai-chiu, the capital, is near
-the southern central coast, and Whang-chiu, an old baronial walled city, is in the
-north, on the Ta-tong River, now, as of old, a famous boundary line.
-</p>
-<p>Though Whang-hai is not reckoned rich, being only the sixth in order of the eight
-circuits, yet there are several products of importance. Rock, or fossil salt, is plentiful.
-Flints for fire-arms and household use were obtained here chiefly, though the best
-gun-flints came from China. Lucifer matches and percussion rifles have destroyed,
-or will soon destroy, this ancient industry. One district produces excellent ginseng,
-which finds a ready sale, <span class="pageNum" id="pb187">[<a href="#pb187">187</a>]</span>and even from ancient times Whang-hai’s pears have been celebrated. Splendid yellow
-varnish, almost equal to gilding, is also made here. The native varnishers are expert
-and tasteful in its use, though far behind the inimitable Japanese. Fine brushes for
-pens, made of the hair of wolves’ tails, are also in repute among students and merchants.
-</p>
-<p>The high road from the capital, after passing through Sunto, winds through the eastern
-central part, and crosses a range of mountains, the scenery from which is exceedingly
-fine. Smaller roads thread the border of the province and the larger towns, but a
-great portion of Whang-hai along its central length, from east to west, seems to be
-mountainous, and by no means densely populated. There are, in all, twenty-eight cities
-with magistrates.
-</p>
-<p>Whang-hai was never reckoned by the missionaries as among their most promising fields,
-yet on their map we count fifteen or more signs of the cross, betokening the presence
-of their converts, and its soil, like that of the other provinces, has more than once
-been reddened by the blood of men who preferred to die for their convictions, rather
-than live the worthless life of the pagan renegade. Most of the victims suffered at
-Hai-chiu, the capital, though Whang-chiu, in the north, shares the same sinister fame
-in a lesser degree. The people of Whang-hai are said, by the Seoul folks, to be narrow,
-stupid, and dull. They bear an ill name for avarice, bad faith, and a love of lying
-quite unusual even among Coreans. The official enumeration of houses and men fit for
-military duty, is 103,200 of the former and 87,170 of the latter.
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div2 section"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main">KIUNG-KEI, OR THE CAPITAL PROVINCE.</h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Kiung-kei, the smallest of the eight circuits, is politically the royal or court province,
-and physically the basin of the largest river inside the peninsula. The tremendous
-force of its current, and the volume of its waters bring down immense masses of silt
-annually. Beginning at a point near the capital, wide sand-banks are formed, which
-are bare at low water, but are flooded in time of rain, or at the melting of the spring
-snows. The tides rise to the height of twenty or thirty feet, creating violent eddies
-and currents, in which the management of ships is a matter of great difficulty. The
-Han is navigable for foreign vessels, certainly as far as the capital, as two French
-men-of-war proved in 1866, and it may be ascended still farther in light steamers.
-The causes <span class="pageNum" id="pb188">[<a href="#pb188">188</a>]</span>of the violence, coldness, and rapidity of the currents of Han River (called Salt
-or Salée on our charts), which have baffled French and American steamers, will be
-recognized by a study of its sources. The head waters of this stream are found in
-the distant province of Kang-wen, nearly the whole breadth of the peninsula from the
-mouth. Almost the entire area of this province of the river-sources, including the
-western watershed of the mountain range that walls the eastern coast, is drained by
-the tributaries which form the river, which also receives affluents from two other
-provinces. Pouring their united volume past the capital, shifting channels and ever
-new and unexpected bars and flats are formed, rendering navigation, and especially
-warlike naval operations, very difficult. Its channel is very hard to find from the
-sea. The French, in 1845, attempting its exploration, were foiled. Like most rivers
-in Chō-sen, the Han has many local names.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p188width" id="p188"><img src="images/p188.png" alt="Map of the Capital Province." width="637" height="397"><p class="figureHead">Map of the Capital Province.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>The city of Han-Yang, or Seoul, is situated on the north side of the river, about
-thirty-five miles from its mouth, measuring by a straight line, or fifty miles if
-reckoned by the channel of the river. It lies in 37° 30′ north latitude, and 127°
-4′ longitude, east from Greenwich. The name Han-yang, means “the fortress on the Han
-River.” The common term applied to the royal city is Seoul, which means “the capital,”
-just as the Japanese called the capital of their country Miako, or Kiō, instead of
-saying Kiōto. Seoul is <span class="pageNum" id="pb189">[<a href="#pb189">189</a>]</span>properly a common noun, but by popular use has become a proper name, which, in English,
-may be correctly written with a capital initial. According to the locality whence
-they come, the natives pronounce the name <i>Say´-ool</i>, <i>Shay´-ool</i>, or <i>Say´-oor</i>. The city is often spoken of as “the king’s residence,” and on foreign maps is marked
-“King-ki Taö,” which is the name of the province. The city proper lies distant nearly
-a league from the river bank, but has suburbs, extending down to the sand-flats. A
-pamphlet lately published in the city gives it 30,723 houses, which, allowing five
-in a house, would give a population of over 150,000 souls. The natural advantages
-of Seoul are excellent. On the north a high range of the Ho Mountain rises like a
-wall, to the east towers the Ridge of Barriers, the mighty flood of the Han rolls
-to the south, a bight of which washes the western suburb.
-</p>
-<p>The scenery from the capital is magnificent, and those walking along the city walls,
-as they rise over the hill-crests and bend into the valleys, can feast their eyes
-on the luxuriant verdure and glorious mountain views for which this country is noted.
-The walls of the city are of crenellated masonry of varying height, averaging about
-twenty feet, with arched stone bridges spanning the watercourses, as seen in the reproduced
-photograph on page 79. The streets are narrow and tortuous. The king’s castle is in
-the northern part. The high roads to the eight points of the compass start from the
-palace, through the city gates. Within sight from the river are the O-pong san, and
-the Sam-kak san or three-peaked mountain, which the French have named Cock’s Comb.
-North of the city is Chō-kei, or tide-valley, in which is a waterfall forty feet high.
-This spot is a great resort for tourists and picnic parties in the spring and summer.
-From almost any one of the hills near the city charming views of the island-dotted
-river may be obtained, and the sight of the spring floods, or of the winter ice breaking
-up and shooting the enormous blocks of ice with terrific force down the current, that
-piles them up into fantastic shapes or strews the shores, is much enjoyed by the people.
-Inundations are frequent and terrible in this province, but usually the water subsides
-quickly. Not much harm is done, and the floods enrich the soil, except where they
-deposit sand only. There are few large bridges over the rivers, but in the cities
-and towns, stone bridges, constructed with an arch and of good masonry, are built.
-The islands in the river near the capital are inhabited by fishermen, who pay their
-taxes in fish. Another large stream which <span class="pageNum" id="pb190">[<a href="#pb190">190</a>]</span>joins its waters with the Han, within a few miles from its mouth near Kang-wa Island,
-is the Rin-chin River, whose head waters are among the mountains at the north of Kang-wen,
-within thirty miles of the newly-opened port of Gen-san on the eastern coast. Several
-important towns are situated on or near its banks, and it is often mentioned in the
-histories which detail the movements of the armies, which from China, Japan, and the
-teeming North, have often crossed and recrossed it.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p190width" id="p190"><img src="images/p190.png" alt="Military Geography of Seoul." width="521" height="437"><p class="figureHead">Military Geography of Seoul.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>Naturally, we expect to find the military geography of this province well studied
-by the authorities, and its strategic points strongly defended. An inspection of the
-map shows us that we are not mistaken. Four great fortresses guard the approaches
-to the royal city. These are Suwen to the south, Kwang-chiu to the southeast, Sunto
-or Kai-seng to the north, and Kang-wa to the west. All these fortresses have been
-the scene of siege and battle in time past. On the walls of the first three, the rival
-banners of the hosts of Ming from China and of Taikō from Japan were set in alternate
-succession by the victors who held them during the Japanese occupation of the country,
-between the years 1592 and 1597. The Manchiu standards in 1637, and the French eagles
-in 1866, were planted on the ramparts of Kang-wa. Besides these castled cities, there
-are forts and redoubts along the <span class="pageNum" id="pb191">[<a href="#pb191">191</a>]</span>river banks, crowning most of the commanding headlands, or points of vantage. Over
-these the stars and stripes floated for three days, in 1871, when the American forces
-captured these strongholds. In most cases the walls of cities and forts are not over
-ten feet high, though, in those of the first order, a height of twenty-five feet is
-obtained. None of them would offer serious difficulty to an attacking force possessing
-modern artillery.
-</p>
-<p>Kai-seng, or Sunto, is one of the most important, if not the chief, commercial city
-in the kingdom, and from 960 to 1392, it was the national capital. The chief staple
-of manufacture and sale is the coarse cotton cloth, white and colored, which forms
-the national dress. Kang-wa, on the island of the same name at the mouth of the Han
-River, is the favorite fortress, to which the royal family are sent for safety in
-time of war, or are banished in case of deposition. Kang-wa means “the river-flower.”
-During the Manchiu invasion, the king fled here, and, for a while, made it his capital.
-Kwang-chiu was anciently the capital of the old kingdom of Hiaksai, which included
-this province, and flourished from the beginning of the Christian era until the Tang
-dynasty of China destroyed it in the seventh century. Kwang-chiu has suffered many
-sieges. Other important towns near the capital are Tong-chin, opposite Kang-wa, Kum-po,
-and Pupion, all situated on the high road. In-chiŭn, situated on Imperatrice Gulf,
-is the port newly opened to foreign trade and residence. The Japanese pronounce the
-characters with which the name is written, Nin-sen, and the Chinese Jen-chuan. At
-this place the American and Chinese treaties were signed in June, 1882; Commodore
-Shufeldt, in the steam corvette Swatara, being the plenipotentiary of the United States.
-Situated on the main road from the southern provinces, and between the capital and
-the sea, the location is a good one for trade, while the dangerous channel of the
-Han River is avoided.
-</p>
-<p>Most of the islands lying off the coast are well wooded; many are inhabited, and on
-a number of them shrines are erected, and hermits live, who are regarded as sacred.
-Their defenceless position <span class="corr" id="xd31e3395" title="Source: offer">offers</span> tempting inducements to the Chinese pirates, who have often ravaged them. Kiung-kei
-has been the scene of battles and contending armies and nations and the roadway for
-migrations from the pre-historic time to the present decade. The great highways of
-the kingdom converge upon its chief city. In it also Christianity has witnessed its
-grandest triumphs and bloodiest <span class="pageNum" id="pb192">[<a href="#pb192">192</a>]</span>defeats. Over and over again the seed of the church has been planted in the blood
-of its martyrs. Ka-pion, east of Seoul, is the cradle of the faith, the home of its
-first convert.
-</p>
-<p>For political purposes, this “home province” is divided into the left and right divisions,
-of which the former has twenty-two, and the latter fourteen districts. The <i>kam-sa</i>, or governor, lives at the capital, but outside of the walls, as he has little or
-no authority in the city proper. His residence is near the west gate. The enumeration
-of houses and people gives, exclusive of the capital, 136,000 of the former, and 680,000
-of the latter, of whom 106,573 are enrolled as soldiers. The inhabitants of the capital
-province enjoy the reputation, among the other provincials, of being light-headed,
-fickle, and much given to luxury and pleasure. “It is the officials of this province,”
-they say, “who give the cue to those throughout the eight provinces, of rapacity,
-prodigality, and love of display.” Official grandees, nobles, literary men, and professionals
-generally are most numerous in Kiung-kei, and so, it may be added, are singing and
-dancing girls and people who live to amuse others. When fighting is to be done, in
-time of war, the government usually calls on the northern provinces to furnish soldiers.
-From a bird’s-eye view of the history of this part of Corea, we see that the inhabitants
-most anciently known to occupy it were the independent clans called the Ma-han, which
-about the beginning of the Christian era were united into the kingdom of Hiaksai,
-which existed until its destruction by the Tang dynasty of China, in the seventh century.
-From that time until 930 <span class="asc">A.D.</span> it formed a part of the kingdom of Shinra, which in turn made way for united Korai,
-which first gave political unity to the peninsula, and lasted until 1392, when the
-present dynasty with Chō-sen, or Corea, as we now know it, was established. The capital
-cities in succession from Hiaksai to Chō-sen were, Kwang-chiu, Sunto, and Han-yang.
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div2 section"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main">CHUNG-CHONG, OR SERENE LOYALTY.</h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The province of Serene Loyalty lies mostly between the thirty-sixth and thirty-seventh
-parallel. Its principal rivers are the Keum, flowing into Basil’s Bay, and another,
-which empties into Prince Jerome Gulf. Its northeast corner, is made by the Han River
-bending in a loop around the White Cloud (Paik Un) Mountain. Fertile flats and valleys
-abound. The peninsula of Nai-po <span class="pageNum" id="pb193">[<a href="#pb193">193</a>]</span><span class="corr" id="xd31e3412" title="Not in source">(</span>within the waters), in the northwestern corner, is often called the “Granary of the
-Kingdom.” Most of the rice of the Nai-po, and the province generally, is raised for
-export to the capital and the north. In the other circuits the rice lands are irrigated
-by leading the water from the streams through each field, which is divided from the
-other by little walls or barriers of earth, while in this region, and in Chulla, the
-farmers more frequently make great reservoirs or ponds, in which water is stored for
-use in dry weather. The mountains are the great reservoirs of moisture, for in all
-the peninsula there is not a lake of noticeable size. The coast line is well indented
-with bays and harbors, and the run to Shantung across the Yellow Sea is easily made
-by junks, and even in open boats. On this account the native Christians and French
-missionaries have often chosen this province as their gate of entry into the “land
-of martyrs.”
-</p>
-<p>In the history of Corean Christianity this province will ever be remembered as the
-nursery of the faith. Its soil has been most richly soaked with the blood of the native
-believers. With unimportant exceptions, every town along its northern border, and
-especially in the Nai-po, has been sown with the seeds of the faith. The first converts
-and confessors, the most devoted adherents of their French teachers, the most gifted
-and intelligent martyrs, were from Nai-po, and it is nearly certain that the fires
-of Roman Christianity still smoulder here, and will again burst into flame at the
-first fanning of favorable events. The three great highways from Fusan to the capital
-cross this province in the northeastern portion. Over these roads the rival Japanese
-armies of invasion, led by Konishi and Kato, passed in jealous race in 1592, reaching
-the capital, after fighting and reducing castles on the way, in eighteen days after
-disembarkation. Chion-Chiu, the fortress on whose fate the capital depended, lies
-in the northeast, where two of the roads converge. The western, or sea road, that
-comes up from the south, hugs the shore through the entire length of the province.
-Others, along which the Japanese armies marched in 1592, and again in 1597, traverse
-the central part. Along one of these roads, the captive Hollanders, almost the first
-Europeans in Corea, rode in 1663, and one of the cities of which Hamel speaks, Kon-sio
-(Kong-Chiu), is the capital and residence of the provincial governor.
-</p>
-<p>The bays and islands, which have been visited by foreign navigators, retain their
-names on European or Japanese charts. Some <span class="pageNum" id="pb194">[<a href="#pb194">194</a>]</span>of these are not very complimentary, as Deception Bay, Insult Island, and False River.
-At Basil’s Bay, named after Captain Basil Hall, Gutzlaff also landed in 1832, planted
-potatoes, and left seeds and books. The archipelago to the northwest was, in 1866,
-named after the Prince Imperial, who met his death in Zululand in 1878. Prince Jerome’s
-Gulf is well known as the scene of the visits of the Rover and the Emperor, with the
-author of “A Forbidden Land” on board. Haimi, a town several times mentioned by him,
-is at the head of Shoal Gulf, which runs up into the Nai-po. Two other bays, named
-Caroline and Deception, indent the Nai-po peninsula.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p194width" id="p194"><img src="images/p194.png" alt="Map of Chung-chong Province." width="689" height="406"><p class="figureHead">Map of Chung-chong Province.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>The large shoal off the coast is called Chasseriau. Other wide and dangerous shoals
-line parts of the coast, making navigation exceedingly difficult. Fogs are frequent
-and very dense, shrouding all landmarks for hours. The tides and currents are very
-strong, rising in some places even as high as sixty feet. The international body-snatching
-expedition, undertaken by a French priest, a German merchant, and an American interpreter,
-in 1867, to obtain the bones or ancestral relics of the Regent, was planned to take
-advantage of a certain “nick of time.” The river emptying into the Prince Jerome Gulf,
-runs some thirty miles inland, and can be ascended by a barge, or very light-draught
-steamer, only within the period of thirty hours during spring tides, when the <span class="pageNum" id="pb195">[<a href="#pb195">195</a>]</span>water rises to a height of three feet at the utmost, while during the rest of the
-month it dries up completely. On account of delays, through grounding, miscalculated
-distances, and the burglar-proof masonry of Corean tombs, the scheme failed. The narrative
-of this remarkable expedition is given in a certain book on Corea, and in the proceedings
-of the United States Consular Court at Shanghae, China, for the year 1867.
-</p>
-<p>The flora is a brilliant feature of the summer landscape. Tiger-lilies and showy compositæ,
-asters, cactus plants, cruciferæ, labiatæ, and many other European species abound
-side by side with tropical varieties. The air is full of insects, and the number and
-variety of the birds exceed those of Japan. Pigeons, butcher-birds, fly-catchers,
-woodpeckers, thrushes, larks, blackbirds, kingfishers, wrens, spoonbills, quail, curlew,
-titmouse, have been noticed. The ever-present black crows contrast with the snowy
-heron, which often stand in rows along the watercourses, while on the reefs the cormorant,
-sea-gulls, and many kinds of ducks and diving birds, many of them being of species
-differing from those in Europe, show the abundance of winged life. The archipelago
-and the peninsula alike, are almost virgin soil to the student of natural history
-and the man of science will yet, in this secluded nook of creation, solve many an
-interesting problem concerning the procession of life on the globe. So far as known,
-the Coreans seem far behind the Japanese in the study and classification of animate
-nature.
-</p>
-<p>The Coreans are not a seafaring people. They do not sail out from land, except upon
-rare occasions. A steamer is yet, to most Coreans, a wonderful thing. The common folks
-point to one, and call it “a divine ship.” The reason of this is, that they think
-the country of steamships so utterly at the ends of the earth, that to pass over ten
-million leagues, and endure the winds and waves, could not be done by human aid, and
-therefore such a ship must have, in some way, the aid of the gods. The prow and stern
-of fishing-boats are much alike, and are neatly nailed together with wooden nails.
-They use round stems of trees in their natural state, for masts. The sails are made
-of straw, plaited together with cross-bars of bamboo. The sail is at the stern of
-the boat. They sail well within three points of the wind, and the fishermen are very
-skilful in managing them. In their working-boats, they do not use oars, but sculls,
-worked on a pivot in the gunwale or an outrigger. The sculls have a very long sweep,
-and are worked <span class="pageNum" id="pb196">[<a href="#pb196">196</a>]</span>by two, three, and even ten men. For narrow rivers this method is very convenient,
-and many boats can easily pass each other, or move side by side, taking up very little
-room. For fishing among the rocks, or for landing in the surf, rafts are extensively
-used all along the coasts. These rafts have a platform, capable of holding eight or
-ten persons. The boats or barges, which are used for pleasure excursions and picnic
-parties, have high bows and ornamental sterns, carved or otherwise decorated. Over
-the centre a canopy stretched on four poles, tufted with horsehair, shelters the pleasure-seekers
-from the sun as they enjoy the river scenery. In the cut we see three officials, or
-men of rank, enjoying themselves at a table, on which may be tea, ginseng infusion,
-or rice spirit, with fruits in dishes. They sit on silken cushions, and seem to be
-pledging each other in a friendly cup. Perhaps they will compose and exchange a pedantic
-poem or two on the way. In the long, high bow there is room for the two men to walk
-the deck, while with their poles they propel the craft gently along the stream, while
-the steersman handles the somewhat unwieldy rudder<span class="corr" id="xd31e3432" title="Not in source">.</span> The common people use a boat made of plain unpainted wood, neatly joined together,
-without nails or metal, the fastenings being of wood, the cushions of straw matting
-and the cordage of sea grass.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p196width" id="p196"><img src="images/p196.png" alt="A Pleasure-party on the River." width="703" height="331"><p class="figureHead">A Pleasure-party on the River.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>By official reckoning Chung-chong contains 244,080 houses, with 139,201 men enrolled
-for military service, in fifty-four districts. It contains ten walled cities, and
-like every other one of the eight provinces is divided into two departments, Right
-and Left.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb197">[<a href="#pb197">197</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div2 section"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main">CHULLA, OR COMPLETE NETWORK.</h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">This province, the most southern of the eight, is also the warmest and most fertile.
-It is nearest to Shang-hae, and to the track of foreign commerce. Its island-fringed
-shores have been the scene of many shipwrecks, among which were the French frigates,
-whose names Glory and Victory, were better than their inglorious end, on a reef near
-Kokun Island.
-</p>
-<p>Until the voyage of Captains Maxwell and Basil Hall, in the Alceste and Lyra, in 1816,
-“the Corean archipelago” was absolutely unknown in Europe, and was not even marked
-on Chinese charts. In the map of the empire, prepared by the Jesuits at Peking in
-the seventeenth century, the main land was made to extend out over a space now known
-to be covered by hundreds of islands, and a huge elephant—the conventional sign of
-ignorance of the map-makers of that day—occupied the space. In these virgin waters,
-Captain Hall sailed over imaginary forests and cities, and straight through the body
-of the elephant, and for the first time explored an archipelago which he found to
-be one of the most beautiful on earth. A later visitor, and a naturalist, states that
-from a single island peak, one may count one hundred and thirty-five islets. Stretching
-far away to the north and to the south, were groups of dark blue islets, rising mistily
-from the surface of the water. The sea was covered with large picturesque boats, which,
-crowded with natives in their white fluttering robes, were putting off from the adjacent
-villages, and sculling across the pellucid waters to visit the stranger ship.
-</p>
-<p>On these islands, as Arthur Adams tells us, the seals sport, the spoonbill, quail,
-curlew, titmouse, wagtail, teal, crane and innumerable birds thrive. The woody peaks
-are rich in game, and the shores are happy hunting-grounds for the naturalist. Sponges
-are very plentiful, and in some places may be gathered in any quantity. There are
-a number of well-marked species. Some are flat and split into numerous ribbon-like
-branches, others are round and finger-shaped, some cylindrical, and others like hollow
-tubes. Though some have dense white foliations, hard or horny, others are loose and
-flexible, and await only the hand of the diver. The Corean toilet requisites perhaps
-do not include these useful articles, which lie waste in the sea. The coral-beds are
-also very splendid in their living tints of green, blue, violet, and yellow, <span class="pageNum" id="pb198">[<a href="#pb198">198</a>]</span>and appear, as you look down upon them through the clear transparent water, to form
-beautiful flower-gardens of marine plants. In these submarine parterres, amid the
-protean forms of the branched corals, huge madrepores, brain-shaped, flat, or headed
-like gigantic mushrooms, are interspersed with sponges of the deepest red and huge
-star-fishes of the richest blue. Seals sport and play unharmed on many of the islands,
-and the sea-beach is at times blue with the bodies of lively crabs. An unfailing storehouse
-of marine food is found in this archipelago.
-</p>
-<p>The eight provinces take their names from their two chief cities, as Mr. Carles has
-shown. Whang Hai Dō, for instance, is formed by uniting the initial syllables of the
-largest cities, Whang-chiu and Hai-chiu. In the case of Chulla-Dō, the Chon and Nai
-in Chon-chiu and Nai-chiu (or Chung-jiu and Na-jiu) become, by euphony, Chulla or
-Cholla. Hamel tells of the great cayman or “alligator,” as inhabiting this region,
-asserting that it was “eighteen or twenty ells long,” with “sixty joints in the back,”
-and able to swallow a man.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e3451src" href="#xd31e3451">1</a>
-</p>
-<p>The soil of Chulla is rich and well cultivated, and large quantities of rice and grain
-are shipped to the capital. The wide valleys afford juicy pasture for the herds of
-cattle that furnish the beef diet which the Coreans crave more than the Japanese.
-The visiting or shipwrecked foreign visitors on the coast speak in terms of highest
-praise of fat bullocks, and juicy steaks which they have eaten. Considerable quantities
-of hides, bones, horns, leather, and tallow now form a class of standard exports to
-Japan, whose people now wear buttons and leather shoes. As a beef market, Corea exceeds
-either China or Japan—a point of importance to the large number of foreigners living
-at the ports, who require a flesh diet. Troops of horses graze on the pasture lands.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p199width" id="p199"><img src="images/p199.png" alt="Map of Chulla-dō." width="535" height="720"><p class="figureHead">Map of Chulla-dō.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>Chulla is well furnished with ports and harbors for the junks that ply northward.
-The town of Mopo, in latitude 34° 40′, has been looked upon by the Japanese as a favorable
-place for trade and residence, and may yet be opened under the provisions of the treaty
-of 1876. This region does not lack sites of great historic interest. The castle of
-Nanon, in the eastern part, was <span class="pageNum" id="pb199">[<a href="#pb199">199</a>]</span>the scene of a famous siege and battle between the allied Coreans and Chinese and
-the Japanese besiegers, during the second invasion, in 1597. The investment lasted
-many weeks, and over five thousand men were slaughtered. It was in this province also
-that the crew of the Dutch ship Sparrowhawk were kept prisoners, <span class="pageNum" id="pb200">[<a href="#pb200">200</a>]</span>some for thirteen years, some for life, of whom Hendrik Hamel wrote so graphic a narrative.
-For two centuries his little work afforded the only European knowledge of Corea accessible
-to inquirers. Among other employments, the Dutch captives were set to making pottery,
-and this province has many villages devoted to the fictile art. The work turned out
-consists, in the main, of those huge <span class="corr" id="xd31e3467" title="Source: earthern">earthen</span> jars for holding water and grains, common to Corean households, and large enough
-to hold one of the forty thieves of Arabian Nights story.
-</p>
-<p>Through the labors of the French missionaries, Christianity has penetrated into Chulla-dō,
-and a large number of towns, especially in the north, still contain believers who
-are the descendants or relatives of men and women who have exchanged their lives for
-a good confession. The tragedy and romance of the Christian martyrs, of this and other
-provinces, have been told by Dallet. Most of the executions have taken place at the
-capital city of Chon-chiu. Many have been banished to Quelpart, or some of the many
-islands along the coast, where it is probable many yet live and pine.
-</p>
-<p>Three large, and several small rivers drain the valleys. Two of these flow into the
-Yellow Sea and one into the sea of Japan. The main highway of this province traverses
-the western portion near the sea, the other roads being of inferior importance. Fortified
-cities or castle towns are numerous in this part of Corea, for this province was completely
-overrun by the Japanese armies in 1592–1597, and its soil was the scene of many battles.
-By official enumeration there are 290,550 houses, and 206,140 males enrolled for service
-in war. The districts number fifty-six. The capital is Chon-chiu, which was once considered
-the second largest city in the kingdom.
-</p>
-<p>If Corea is “the Italy of the East,” then Quelpart is its Sicily. It lies about sixty
-miles south of the main land. It may be said to be an oval, rock-bound island, covered
-with innumerable conical mountains, topped in many instances by extinct volcanic craters,
-and “all bowing down before one vast and towering giant, whose foot is planted in
-the centre of the island, and whose head is lost in the clouds.” This peak, called
-Mount Auckland, or Han-ra san, by the people, is about 6,500 feet high. On its top
-are three extinct craters, within each of which is a lake of pure water. Corean children
-are taught to believe that the three first-created men of the world still dwell on
-these lofty heights.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb201">[<a href="#pb201">201</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The whole surface of the island, including plains, valleys, and mountain flanks, is
-carefully and beautifully cultivated. The fields are neatly divided by walls of stone.
-It contains a number of towns and three walled cities, but there are no good harbors.
-As Quelpart has long been used as a place for the banishment of convicts, the islanders
-are rude and unpolished. They raise excellent crops of grain and fruit for the home
-provinces. The finely-plaited straw hats, which form the staple manufacture, are the
-best in this land of big hats, in which the amplitude of the head-coverings is the
-wonder of strangers. Immense droves of horses and cattle are reared, and one of the
-outlying islands is called Bullock Island. This island has been known from ancient
-times, when it formed an independent kingdom, known as Tam-na. About 100 <span class="asc">A.D.</span>, it is recorded that the inhabitants sent tribute to one of the states on the main
-land. The origin of the high central peak, named Mount Auckland, is thus given by
-the islanders. “Clouds and fogs covered the sea, and the earth trembled with a noise
-of thunder for seven days and seven nights. Finally the waves opened, and there emerged
-a mountain more than one thousand feet high, and forty <i>ri</i> in circumference. It had neither plants nor trees upon it, and clouds of smoke, widely
-spread out, covered its summit, which appeared to be composed chiefly of sulphur.”
-A learned Corean was sent to examine it in detail. He did so, and on his return to
-the main land published an account of his voyage, with a sketch of the mountain thus
-born out of the sea. It is noticeable that this account coincides with the ideas of
-navigators, who have studied the mountain, and speculated on its origin.
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div2 section"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main">KIUNG-SANG, OR RESPECTFUL CONGRATULATION.</h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Kiung-sang dō, or the Province of Respectful Congratulation, is nearest to Japan,
-and consists chiefly of the valleys drained by the Nak-tong River and its tributaries.
-It admirably illustrates the principle of the division of the country on the lines
-furnished by the river basins. One of the warmest and richest of the eight provinces,
-it is also the most populous, and the seat of many historical associations with Japan,
-in ancient, mediæval, and modern times. Between the court of Kion-chiu, the capital
-of Shinra, and that of Kiōto, from the third to the tenth century, the relations of
-war and peace, letters, and religion were continuous and fruitful. When the national
-capital was fixed at Sunto, and later at <span class="pageNum" id="pb202">[<a href="#pb202">202</a>]</span>Seoul, this province was still the gateway of entrance and exit to the Japanese. Many
-a time have they landed near the mouth of the Nak-tong River, which opens as a natural
-pass in the mountains which wall in the coast. Rapidly seizing the strategic points,
-they have made themselves masters of the country. The influence of their frequent
-visitations is shown in the language, manners, and local customs of southern Chō-sen.
-The dialect of Kiung-sang differs to a marked degree from that of Ping-an, and much
-more closely resembles that of modern Japanese. Kiung-sang seems to show upon its
-surface that it is one of the most ancient seats of civilization in the peninsula.
-This is certainly so if roads and facilities for travelling be considered. The highways
-and foot-paths and the relays and horses kept for government service, and for travellers,
-are more numerous than in any other province. It also contains the greatest number
-of cities having organized municipal governments, and is the most densely populated
-of the eight provinces. It is also probable that in its natural resources it leads
-all the others. The province is divided into seventy-one districts, each having a
-magistrate, in which are 421,500 houses, and 310,440 men capable of military duty.
-Two officials of high rank assist the governor in his functions, and the admirals
-of the “Sam-nam,” or three southern provinces, have their headquarters in Kiung-sang.
-This title and office, one of the most honorable in the military service, was created
-after the Japanese war of 1592–1597, in honor of a Corean commander, who had successfully
-resisted the invaders in many battles. There are five cities of importance, which
-are under the charge of governors. Petty officials are also appointed for every island,
-who must report the arrival or visit of all foreigners at once to their superiors.
-They were always in most favor at court who succeeded in prevailing upon all foreign
-callers to leave as soon as possible. Fusan has been held by the Japanese from very
-ancient times. Until 1868 it was a part of the fief of the daimiō of Tsushima. It
-lies in latitude 35° 6′ north, and longitude 129° 1′ east from Greenwich, and is distant
-from the nearest point on the Japan coast, by a straight line, about one hundred and
-fifty miles. It was opened to the Japanese by the treaty of 1876, and is now a bustling
-mart of trade. The name means, not “Gold Hill,” but Pot or Skillet Mountain.
-</p>
-<p>The approach to the port up the bay is through very fine scenery, the background of
-the main land being mountainous and the <span class="pageNum" id="pb203">[<a href="#pb203">203</a>]</span>bay studded with green islands. The large island in front of the settlement, to the
-southward, called Tetsuyé, or the Isle of Enchanting View, has hills eight hundred
-feet high. Hundreds of horses were formerly reared here, hence it is often called
-Maki, or island of green pastures. The fortifications of Fusan, on the northern side,
-are on a hill, and front the sea. The soil around Fusan is of a dark ruddy color,
-and fine fir trees are numerous. The fort is distant about a league from the settlement,
-and Tong-nai city and castle, in which the Corean governor resides, are about two
-leagues farther. Tai-ku, the capital, lies in the centre of the province. Shang-chiu,
-in the northwestern part, is one of the fortified cities guarding the approach to
-the capital from the southeast. It was captured by Konishi during his brilliant march,
-in eighteen days, to the capital in 1592. In recent years, much Christian blood has
-been shed in Shang-chiu, though the city which justly claims the bad eminence in slaughtering
-Christians is Tai-ku, the capital of the province. Uru-san, a few miles south, is
-a site rich in classic memories to all Japanese, for here, in 1597, the Chinese and
-Corean hosts besieged the intrepid Kato and the brave, but not over-modest, Ogawuchi
-for a whole year, during which the garrison were reduced, by straits of famine, to
-eat human flesh. When the Chinese retreated, and a battle was fought near by, between
-them and the relieving forces, ten thousand men were slain.
-</p>
-<p>Foreign navigators have sprinkled their names along the shore. Cape Clonard and Unkoffsky
-Bay are near the thirty-sixth parallel. Chō-san harbor was named by Captain Broughton,
-who on asking the name of the place in 1797, received the reply “Chō-san,” which is
-the name of the kingdom instead of the harbor. Other names of limited recognition
-are found on charts made in Europe. Many inhabited islands lie off the coast, some
-of which are used as places of exile to Christians and other offenders against the
-law. Christianity in this province seems to have flourished chiefly in the towns along
-the southern sea border. Nearly the whole of the coast consists of the slopes of the
-two mountain ranges which front the sea, and is less densely inhabited than the interior,
-having few or no rivers or important harbors. The one exception is at the mouth of
-the Nak-tong River, opposite Tsushima. This is the gateway into the province, and
-the point most vulnerable from Japan. The river after draining the whole of Kiung-sang,
-widens into a bay, around which are populous cities and towns, the port of Fusan and
-the two great roads to Seoul. Tsushima (the Twin <span class="pageNum" id="pb204">[<a href="#pb204">204</a>]</span>Islands) lies like a stepping-stone between Corea and Japan, and was formerly claimed
-by the Coreans, who call it Tu-ma. Its port of Wani-ura is thirty miles distant from
-Fusan, and often shelters <span class="pageNum" id="pb205">[<a href="#pb205">205</a>]</span>the becalmed or storm-stayed junks which, with fair wind and weather, can make the
-run between the two countries in a single day.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p204width" id="p204"><img src="images/p204.png" alt="Map of the Province nearest Japan." width="504" height="720"><p class="figureHead">Map of the Province nearest Japan.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>From a strategic military point of view, the Twin Islands are invaluable to the mikado’s
-empire, guarding, as they do, the sea of Japan like a sentinel. The Russians who now
-own the long island at the upper end of the sea, attempted, in 1859, to obtain a footing
-on Tsushima. They built barracks and planted seed, with every indication of making
-a permanent occupation. The timely appearance on the scene of a fleet of British ships,
-under Sir James Hope, put an end to Russian designs on Tsushima.
-</p>
-<p>A Japanese writer reports that the Kiung-sang people are rather more simple in their
-habits, less corrupted in their manners, and their ancient customs are more faithfully
-preserved than in some of the other provinces. There is little of luxury and less
-of expensive folly, so that the small estates or property are faithfully transmitted
-from father to son, for many generations, in the same families. Studious habits prevail,
-and literature flourishes. Often the young men, after toiling during the day, give
-the evening to reading and conversation, for which admirable practice the native language
-has a special word. Here ladies of rank are not so closely shut up in-doors as in
-other provinces, but often walk abroad, accompanied by their servants, without fear
-of insult. In this province also Buddhism has the largest number of adherents. Kion-chiu,
-the old capital of Shinra, was the centre of the scholastic and missionary influences
-of the Buddha doctrine in Corea, and, though burned by the Japanese in 1597, its influence
-still survives.
-</p>
-<p>The people are strongly attached to their superstitions, and difficult to change,
-but to whatever faith they are once converted they are steadfast and loyal. The numerous
-nobles who dwell in this province, belong chiefly to the Nam In party.
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div2 section"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main">KANG-WEN, THE RIVER-MEADOW PROVINCE.</h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Kang-wen fronts Japan from the middle of the eastern coast, and lies between Ham-kiung
-and Kiung-sang. Its name means River Meadow. Within its area are found the sources
-of “the river” of the realm. Though perhaps the most mountainous of all the provinces,
-it contains several fertile plains, which are watered by streams flowing mainly to
-the west, forming the Han River, <span class="pageNum" id="pb206">[<a href="#pb206">206</a>]</span>which crosses the entire peninsula, and empties into the Yellow Sea. The main mountain
-chain of the country, called here the Makira, runs near the coast, leaving the greater
-area of the province to the westward. The larger part of the population, the most
-important high roads, and the capital city Wen-chiu, are in the western division,
-which contains twenty-six districts, the eastern division having seventeen. The official
-census gives the number of houses at 93,000, and of men capable of bearing arms, 44,000.
-</p>
-<p>Some of the names of mountains in this province give one a general idea of the geographical
-nomenclature of the kingdom, reflecting, as it does, the ideas and beliefs of the
-people. One peak is named Yellow Dragon, another the Flying Phœnix, and another the
-Hidden Dragon (not yet risen up from the earth on his passage to the clouds or to
-heaven). Hard Metal, Oxhead, Mountain facing the Sun, Cool Valley, Wild Swamp, White
-Cloud, and Peacock, are other less heathenish, and perhaps less poetical names. One
-range is said to have twelve hundred peaks, and from another, rivers fall down like
-snow for several hundred feet. These “snowy rivers” are cataracts. Deer are very plentiful,
-and the best hartshorn for the pharmacy of China comes from these parts. Out in the
-sea, about a degree and a half from the coast, lies an island, called by the Japanese
-Matsu-shima, or Pine Island, by the Coreans U-lon-to, and by Europeans, Dagelet<span class="corr" id="xd31e3514" title="Not in source">.</span> This island was first discovered by the French navigator, La Perouse, in June, 1787.
-In honor of an astronomer, it was named Dagelet Island. “It is very steep, but covered
-with fine trees from the sea-shore to the summit. A rampart of bare rock, nearly as
-perpendicular as a wall, completely surrounds it, except seven sandy little coves
-at which it is possible to land.” The grand central peak towers four thousand feet
-into the clouds. Firs, sycamores, and juniper trees abound. Sea-bears and seals live
-in the water, and the few poor Coreans who inhabit the island dry the flesh of the
-seals and large quantities of petrels and haliotis, or sea-ears, for the markets or
-the main land. The island is occasionally visited by Japanese junks and foreign whaling
-ships, as whales are plentiful in the surrounding waters. The Japanese obtained the
-timber for the public and other buildings at their new settlement at Gensan from this
-island.
-</p>
-<p>The Land of Morning Calm is, by all accounts of travellers, a land of beauty, and
-the customs and literature of the people <span class="pageNum" id="pb207">[<a href="#pb207">207</a>]</span>prove that the superb and inspiring scenery of their peninsula is fully appreciated
-by themselves. Not only are picnics and pleasure gatherings, within the groves, common
-to the humbler classes, but the wealthy travel great distances simply to enjoy the
-beauty of marine or mountain views. Scholars assemble at chosen seats, having fair
-landscapes before them, poets seek inspiration under waterfalls, and the bonzes, understanding
-the awe-compelling influence of the contemplation of nature’s grandeur, plant their
-monasteries and build their temples on lofty mountain heights. These favorite haunts
-of the lovers of natural beauty are as well known to the Coreans as Niagara and Yo
-Semite are to Americans, or Chamouni to all Europe. The places in which the glory
-of the Creator’s works may be best beheld are the theme of ardent discussion and competing
-praise with the people of each province. The local guide-books, itineraries, and gazetteers,
-descant upon the merits of the scenery, for which each of the eight divisions is renowned.
-In the River-meadow province, the eight most lovely “sceneries” are all located along
-the coast. Beginning at the south, and taking them in order toward the north, they
-are the following:
-</p>
-<p>1. The house on Uru-chin, a town below the thirty-seventh parallel of latitude. The
-inn is called “The House of the Emerging Sun,” because here the sun seems to rise
-right out of the waters of the ocean. In front of the coast lies an island, set like
-a gem in the sea. The view of the rising sun, the tints of sky, river, waves, land,
-and mountains form a vision of gorgeous magnificence.
-</p>
-<p>2. Hion-hai (Tranquil Sea). Out in the sea, in front of this village, are many small
-islands. When the moon rises, they seem to be floating in a sea of molten silver.
-The finest effect is enjoyed just before the orb is fully above the horizon. In many
-of the dwellings of the men of rank and wealth, there is a special room set apart
-for the enjoyment of the scenery, upon which the apartment looks. Especially is this
-the case, with the houses of public entertainment. At Hion-hai, one of the inns from
-which the best view may be obtained is called the “House Fronting the Moon.” In it
-are several “looking-rooms.”
-</p>
-<p>3. One of the finest effects in nature is the combination of fresh fallen snow on
-evergreens. The pure white on the deep green is peculiarly pleasing to the eye of
-the Japanese, who use it as a popular element in their decorative art, in silver and
-bronze, <span class="pageNum" id="pb208">[<a href="#pb208">208</a>]</span>in embroidery, painting, and lacquer. The Coreans are equally happy in gazing upon
-the snow, as it rests on the deep shadows of the pine, or the delicate hue of the
-giant grass called bamboo. Near the large town of San-cho is a tower or house, built
-within view of a stream of water, which flows in winding course over the rocks, sparkling
-beneath the foliage. It has a scene-viewing room to which people resort to enjoy the
-“chikusetsu,” or snow and bamboo effect.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p208width" id="p208"><img src="images/p208.png" alt="Map of Kang-wen Province." width="720" height="555"><p class="figureHead">Map of Kang-wen Province.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>4. From an elevation near the town of Kan-nun, or Bay Hill, one may obtain a pretty
-view of the groves and shrubbery growing upon the rocks. During the spring showers,
-when the rain falls in a fine mist, and the fresh vegetation appears in a new rich
-robe of green, the sight is very charming.
-</p>
-<p>5. Beneath the mound at An-an the river flows tranquilly, tinted by the setting sun.
-The sunsets at this place are of exquisite beauty.
-</p>
-<p>6. At the old castle town of Kan-nun, there is a room named <span class="pageNum" id="pb209">[<a href="#pb209">209</a>]</span>“The Chamber between the Strong Fortress and the Tender Verdure.” Here the valley
-is steep, and in the bosom of the stream of water lie “floating islands”—so called
-because they seem to swim on the surface of the water.
-</p>
-<p>7. Near Ko-sion, or High Fortress, is “Three Days Bay,” to which lovers of the picturesque
-resort on summer mornings, to see the sun rise, and on autumnal evenings, to watch
-the moonlight effects. The fishers’ boats gliding to and fro over the gleaming waters
-delight the eye.
-</p>
-<p>8. At Tsu-sen is the “Rock-loving Chamber.” Here, among some steep rocks, grow trees
-of fantastic form. The combination of rock-scenery and foliage make the charm of this
-place, to which scholars, artists, and travellers resort. In spring and autumn, literary
-parties visit the chamber dedicated to those who love the rocks. There, abandoning
-themselves to literary revels, they compose poems, hold scholarly reunions, or ramble
-about in search of health or pleasure.
-</p>
-<p>The people of Kang-wen are industrious and intelligent, with less energy of body than
-the southern provincials, but like their northern countrymen, they have the reputation
-of being bold, obstinate, and quarrelsome. In time of bad harvests or lax government,
-“tramps” form bands of thirty or fifty, and roam the country, stealing food or valuables
-from the villages. Local thieves are sufficiently abundant. During the heavy snows
-of winter, people travel the mountain paths on snow-shoes, and in exceptional places,
-cut tunnels under the snow for communication from house to house. Soldiers test their
-strength by pulling strong bows, and laborers by carrying heavy burdens on their shoulders.
-Strong men shoulder six hundred pounds of copper, or two bales of white rice (260
-pounds each<span class="corr" id="xd31e3541" title="Source: .)">).</span> The women of this province are said to be the most beautiful in Corea. Even from
-ancient times, lovely damsels from this part of the peninsula, sent to the harem of
-the Chinese emperor, were greatly admired. Christianity has made little progress in
-Kang-wen, only a few towns in the southern part being marked with a cross on the French
-missionary map. In the most ancient times the Chinhan tribes occupied this portion
-of Corea. From the Christian era, until the tenth century, it was alternately held
-by Kokorai, or Korai, and by Shinra.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb210">[<a href="#pb210">210</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="div2 section"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#toc">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h3 class="main">HAM-KIUNG, OR COMPLETE VIEW.</h3>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first"></p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p210width" id="p210"><img src="images/p210.png" alt="Corean frontier facing Manchuria and Russia." width="473" height="446"><p class="figureHead">Corean frontier facing Manchuria and Russia.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>Ham-kiung is that part of Corean territory which touches the boundary of Russia. Only
-a few years ago all the neighbors along the land frontiers of Chō-sen were Chinese
-subjects. Now she has the European within rifle-shot of her shores. Only the Tumen
-River separates the Muscovites from the once hermits of the peninsula. The southern
-boundary of Russia in Asia, which had been thrown farther south after every European
-war with China, touched Corea in 1858. What was before an elastic line, has in each
-instance become the Czar’s “scientific frontier.” By the supplementary treaty of Aigun,
-March 28, 1858, Count Mouravieff “rectified” the far eastern line of the Czar’s domain,
-by demanding and obtaining that vast and fertile territory lying south of the Amur
-River, and between the Gulf of Tartary and the river Usuri, having a breadth of one
-hundred and fifty miles. This remote, but very desirable, slice of Asia, is rich in
-gold and silk, coal and cotton, rice and tobacco. With energy and enterprise, the
-Russian government at once encouraged emigration, placed steamers built in New York
-on the Usuri River and Lake Hanka, laid out <span class="pageNum" id="pb212">[<a href="#pb212">212</a>]</span>the ports of Vladivostok, and Possiet, constructed a telegraph from the Baltic Sea
-to the Pacific Ocean, and enforced order among the semi-civilized and savage tribes.
-The name of the new Russian territory between the Amur River and the Sea of Okhotsk,
-is Primorskaïa, with Vladivostok for the capital, which is finely situated on Peter
-the Great or Victoria Bay. Immense fortifications have been planned, and the place
-is to be made the Sebastopol of the Czar’s Pacific possessions. This gigantic work
-was begun under the charge of the late Admiral Popoff, whose name has been given to
-the iron-turreted war vessels of which he was the inventor, and to a mountain in Central
-Corea. Possiet is within twenty-five miles of the Corean frontier. It is connected
-with Nagasaki by electric cable. In the event of a war between China and Russia, or
-even of Anglo-Russian hostilities, the Czar would most probably make Corea the basis
-of operations against China; for Corea is to China as Canada is to the United States,
-or, as the people say, “the lips of China’s teeth.”
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p211width" id="p211"><img src="images/p211.jpg" alt="Corean Village in Russian Territory." width="720" height="483"><p class="figureHead">Corean Village in Russian Territory.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>Russia needs a coast line in the Pacific with seaports that are not frozen up in winter,
-and her ambition is to be a naval power. While England checks her designs in the Mediterranean,
-and in Europe, her desire is great and her need is greater to have this defenceless
-peninsula on her eastern borders. The Coreans know too well that the possession of
-their country by “Russia the ravenous” is considered a necessity of the absorption
-policy of Peter the Great’s successors. The Tumen River, which rises at the foot of
-the Ever-White Mountains and separates Corea from Russia, is about two hundred miles
-in length. It drains a mountainous and rainy country. Ordinarily it is shallow and
-quiet; but in spring, or after heavy rains, and swollen by a great number of tributaries,
-its current becomes very turbulent and powerful. In winter it is frozen over during
-several months, and hence is easily crossed. Thousands of Coreans fleeing from famine,
-or from the oppression of government officials, Christians persecuted for their faith,
-criminals seeking to escape the clutches of the law, emigrants desirous of bettering
-their condition, have crossed this river and settled in Primorskaïa, until they now
-number, in all, about eight thousand. The majority of them are peasants from Ham-kiung,
-and know little of the southern parts of their country. There is, however, an “underground
-railroad” by which persecuted Christians can fly for refuge to Russian protection.
-Their houses are built of stout timbers, wattled with <span class="pageNum" id="pb213">[<a href="#pb213">213</a>]</span>cane, plastered with mud, and surrounded with a neat fencing of interlaced boughs.
-They cover their houses with strips of bamboo, well fastened down by thatching. The
-chimney is detached from the house, and consists of a hollow tree. Under the warmed
-floor is the usual system of flues, by which the house is kept comfortable in winter,
-and every atom of fuel utilized. Their food is millet, corn, venison, and beef. They
-pare and dry melon-like fruits, cutting them up in strips for winter use. They dress
-in the national color, white, using quilted cotton clothes. They make good use of
-bullock-carts, and smoke tobacco habitually. The national product—thick strong paper—is
-put to a great variety of uses, and a few sheets dressed with oil, serve as windows.
-</p>
-<p>Some of the Russian merchants have married Corean women, who seem to make good wives.
-Their offspring are carefully brought up in the Christian faith. Some of these Corean
-children have been sent to the American Home at Yokohama, where the ladies of the
-Woman’s Union Missionary Society of America have given them an education in English.
-Through the Russian possessions, the Corean liberal, Kin Rinshio, made his escape.
-From this man the Japanese officials learned so much of the present state of the peninsula,
-and by his aid those in the War Department at Tōkiō were enabled to construct and
-publish so valuable a map of Corea, the accuracy of which astonishes his fellow-countrymen.
-The Russians have taken the pains to educate the people in schools, and, judging from
-the faces and neat costumes, as seen in photographs taken on the spot, they enjoy
-being taught. The object of instruction is not only to civilize them as loyal subjects
-of the Czar, but also to convert them to the Russian form of Christianity. In this
-work the priests and schoolmasters have had considerable success. There are but few
-Coreans north of the Tumen who cannot read and write, and the young men employed as
-clerks are good linguists. A number of them are fishermen, living near the coast.
-Most of the converts to the Greek church are gathered at Vladivostok.
-</p>
-<p>So great has been the fear and jealousy felt by Corea toward Russia, that during the
-last two generations the land along the boundary river has been laid desolate. The
-banks were picketed with sentinels, and death was the penalty of crossing from shore
-to shore. Many interesting relics of the ancient greatness of Corea still abound in
-Manchuria and on Russian soil. Travellers have visited these ruins, now overgrown
-with large forest trees, <span class="pageNum" id="pb214">[<a href="#pb214">214</a>]</span>and have given descriptions and measurements of them. One fortification was found
-to cover six acres, with walls over thirty feet in height, protected by a moat and
-two outer ditches, with gateways guarded by curtains. In the ruins were elaborately
-carved fragments of columns, stone idols or statues, with bits of armor and weapons.
-Some of these now silent ruins have sustained famous sieges, and once blazed with
-watch-fires and echoed to battle-shouts. They are situated on spurs or ends of mountain
-chains, commanding plains and valleys, testifying to the knowledge of strategic skill
-possessed by their ancient builders.
-</p>
-<p>The Shan-yan Alin, range on range, visible from the Corean side of the river, are
-between eight thousand and twelve thousand feet high, and are snow-covered during
-most of the year. The name means Long-white, or Ever-White Mountains, the Chinese
-Shang-bai, meaning the same thing. Two of the peaks are named after Chinese emperors.
-Paik-tu, or White Head, is a sacred mountain famous throughout the country, and is
-the theme of enthusiastic description by Chinese, Japanese, and Corean writers, the
-former comparing it to a vase of white porcelain, with a scolloped rim. Its flora
-is mostly white, and its fauna are reputed to be white-haired, never injuring or injured
-by man. It is the holy abode of a white-robed goddess, who presides over the mountain.
-She is represented as a woman holding a child in her arms, after a legendary character,
-known in Corean lore and Chinese historical novels. Formerly a temple dedicated to
-her spirit was built, and for a long time was presided over by a priestess. The Corean
-Buddhists assign to this mountain, the home of Manchusri, one of their local deities,
-or incarnations of Buddha. Lying in the main group of the range, over eight thousand
-feet above the sea, is a vast lake surrounded by naked rocks, probably an extinct
-crater. Large portions of the mountain consist of white limestone, which, with its
-snow, from which it is free only during two months of the year, gives it its name.
-</p>
-<p>Another imposing range of mountains follows the contour of the coast, and thus presents
-that lofty and magnificent front of forest-clad highland which strikes the admiration
-of navigators. Other conspicuous peaks are named by the natives, Continuous Virtue,
-The Peak of the Thousand Buddhas, Cloud-toucher, Sword Mountain, Lasting Peace, Heaven-reaching.
-</p>
-<p>Twenty-four rivers water and drain this mountainous province. The coast of Ham-kiung
-down to the fortieth parallel is devoid <span class="pageNum" id="pb215">[<a href="#pb215">215</a>]</span>of any important harbors. A glance at a foreign chart shows that numerous French,
-Russian, and English navigators have visited it, and gained precarious renown by sprinkling
-foreign names upon its capes and headlands. At the south, Yung-hing, or Broughton’s
-Bay, so named by the gallant British captain in 1797, is well known for its fine harbors
-and its high tides. It contains a small archipelago, while the country around it is
-the most populous and fertile portion of the province. Port Lazareff, east of Yon-fun,
-near the mouth of the Dungan River, and west of Virginie Bay, is well known. A large
-Japanese army under Kato occupied this territory during the year 1592.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p215width" id="p215"><img src="images/p215.png" alt="Southern part of Ham-kiung." width="495" height="584"><p class="figureHead">Southern part of Ham-kiung.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>By the recent treaty with Japan, the port of Gensan, fronting on the south of Broughton’s
-Bay, was opened for trade and commerce, from May 1, 1880. Gensan lies near the thirty-ninth
-parallel of latitude. Near the shore is the island of Chotoku, and within the twenty-five
-mile circuit allowed to Japanese merchants <span class="pageNum" id="pb216">[<a href="#pb216">216</a>]</span>for general travel, or free movement, is the old castle-town of Tokugen. The tomb
-of the founder of the reigning dynasty of Chō-sen is situated near the bay and is
-a highly venerated spot. As the dragon is in native ideas the type of all that is
-strong, mighty, and renowned, the place is named the “Rise of the Dragon.” One of
-the high roads of the kingdom traverses the strip of land skirting the sea from north
-to south throughout the province, touching the water at certain places. The greater
-part of the people dwelling in the province live along this road. The interior, being
-a mass of mountains, is thinly inhabited, and the primeval forests are populated chiefly
-by tigers and other beasts of prey.
-</p>
-<p>In the current scouring the coast of Ham-kiung swim unnumbered shoals of herring,
-ribbon fish, and other species inhabiting the open seas. After these follow in close
-pursuit schools of whales, which fatten on them as prey. Thousands of natives from
-the interior and the shore villages come down in the season and fish. They often stand
-knee-deep in the water, looking like long rows of the snowy heron of a rice-swamp,
-in their white clothes. They use a kind of catamaran or raft for fishing and for surf
-navigation, which is very serviceable. They sometimes hunt the whales at sea, or capture
-them in shoal water, driving them in shore till stranded. Sticking in the bodies of
-these huge creatures have been found darts and harpoons of European whalers. This
-chase of the herring by the whales was noticed, even in the extreme south of Corea,
-by Hamel, and by <span class="corr" id="xd31e3586" title="Source: shipwrekced">shipwrecked</span> Dutchmen. Since the present year, Japanese whale-hunters have been engaged by Coreans
-to improve their methods of catching this huge sea-mammal.
-</p>
-<p>The capital city of this largest of the provinces, and the residence of the governor,
-is Ham-hung, situated near the fortieth parallel of north latitude. According to a
-native geography this province contains 103,200 houses, which gives a population varying
-from 309,600 to 516,000 souls. There are enrolled and capable of military service
-(on paper) 87,170 men. For administrative purposes the province is divided into divisions,
-the northern and the southern. There are fifteen walled cities.
-</p>
-<p>Formerly, and until the Russians occupied the Primorskaia territory, an annual or
-bi-annual fair was held at the Corean city of Kion-wen, which lies close to the border.
-The Manchiu and Chinese merchants bartered tea, rice, pipes, gold, and furs for the
-Corean ginseng, hides, and household implements. Furs of a <span class="pageNum" id="pb217">[<a href="#pb217">217</a>]</span>thousand sorts, cotton stuff, silks, artificial flowers, and choice woods, changed
-hands rapidly, the traffic lasting but two or three days, and sometimes only one day,
-from noon until sunset. Such was the bustle and confusion that these fairs often terminated
-in a free fight, which reminds one of the famous Donnybrook. One of the articles most
-profitable to the Coreans was their cast-off hair. Immense quantities cut from the
-heads of young persons, and especially by those about to be married, were and are
-still sold by the Chinese to lengthen out their “pig-tails”—that mark of subjection
-to their Manchiu conquerors. During the time of trade no Chinese or Manchiu was allowed
-to enter a Corean house, all the streets and doorways being guarded by soldiers, who
-at the end of the fair drove out any lingering Chinese, who, if not soon across the
-border, were forced to go at the point of the spear. Any foreigner found inside the
-border at other seasons might be, and often was, ruthlessly murdered.
-</p>
-<p>The nearest town beyond the frontier, at which the Chinese merchants were wont to
-assemble, is Hun-chun.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e3596src" href="#xd31e3596">2</a> This loophole of entrance into Corea, corresponded to Ai-chiu at the Yalu River in
-the west. As at the latter place, foreigners and Christian natives have attempted
-to penetrate the forbidden country at Kion-wen, but have been unsuccessful.
-</p>
-<p>An outline of the political history of the part of the peninsula now called Ham-kiung
-shows that many masters have in turn been its possessors. When the old kingdom of
-Chō-sen, which comprehended Liao Tung and that part of the peninsula between the Ta-tong
-and the Tumen Rivers, was broken up toward the end of the first century, the northern
-half of what is now Ham-kiung was called Oju or Woju, the southern portion forming
-part of the little state of Wei, or Whi. These were both conquered by Kokorai, which
-held dominion until the seventh century, when it was crushed by the Chinese emperors
-of the Han dynasty, and the land fell under the sway of Shinra, whose borders extended
-in the ninth and tenth centuries, from Eastern Sea to the Tumen River. After Shinra,
-arose Korai and Chō-sen, the founders of both states being sprung from this region
-and of the hardy race inhabiting it. From very ancient times, the boundaries of this
-province, being almost entirely natural and consisting of mountain, river, and sea,
-have remained unchanged.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb218">[<a href="#pb218">218</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e3451">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e3451src">1</a></span> Mr. Pierre L. Jouy, of the Smithsonian Institute, who in 1884 spent six months in
-Corea in zoological collecting and research, says: “No monkeys or alligators are found
-in Corea. I am at a loss to understand how the alligator story originated.” Was the
-alleged animal the giant salamander, or the <i>aké</i>? Japanese art and legend refer often to alligators.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e3451src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e3596">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e3596src">2</a></span> Hun-chun is in Chinese Manchuria. The Russian possessions south of Victoria Bay extend
-but a few miles from the mouth of the Tumen.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e3596src" title="Return to note 2 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch24" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1036">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XXIV.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE KING AND ROYAL PALACE.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The title of majesty in Chō-sen is Hap-mun. In full robes of state the sovereign wears
-a silken garment, the gift of his suzerain, the Emperor of China. It is embroidered
-with dragons, the emblems of regal power. His throne has <i>riong</i> or dragons sculptured around it. The steps leading to it are called “the staircase
-of jade.” The cord which is used to tie criminals has a dragon’s head at the ends,
-to signify that the officers act in obedience to the royal command. Chief of the regalia
-of Corean sovereignty is the Great Seal, the possession of which makes the holder
-the actual sovereign of Chō-sen. This seal, of which we shall hear again, seems to
-have been captured by the French in 1866. In time of war or public danger, the royal
-library, archives and regalia are sent to Kang-wa Island for safety. Ridel wrote in
-1866:
-</p>
-<p>“In another case, they found a marble tortoise, sculptured in perfect art, upon the
-pedestal of which was the great seal of state. This royal cartouche was to the simple
-Corean folk neither visible nor approachable, the possession of which has sufficed
-many times to transfer the royal authority and to terminate revolutions. It was the
-regalia of Corean sovereignty. The one which he saw was new and appeared never to
-have been used.”
-</p>
-<p>The sovereign, in speaking of himself, uses the term “Hap-mun,” which is the equivalent
-of the imperial “We” of Asiatic state documents. The word is somewhat similar to that
-employed by, or for, other rulers—Pharaoh, Sublime Porte, Mikado, all of which mean
-the Grand, Chief, or First, Gate of all the gates in the country. The first character
-in Hap-mun is, however, different from that in Mikado, or Honorable Gate, but the
-hap is honorific. No other person in the land, official or private, is allowed to
-use this compound word in speech or writing as applying to anyone except the king.
-Even in transcribing the term hap, a stroke must be omitted out of respect to the
-august personage to whom <span class="pageNum" id="pb219">[<a href="#pb219">219</a>]</span>alone it is applied. At his death, three cups of rice are set out in the households
-<i>in memoriam</i>. This ceremony must not be imitated for any other person. So also, if the character
-with which the name of the ruling emperor of China is written be found in that of
-a public person, a gateway, a palace or edifice in Seoul, the graphic sign must be
-temporarily changed, though the pronunciation remains the same. This same system of
-graduated honors, of which, in Corea, the king is the culmination, slopes down to
-the common people, and is duly protected by law.
-</p>
-<p>The sovereign’s person is hedged round with a divinity that has an antipathy to iron.
-This metal must never touch his august body, and rather than have an abscess lanced,
-the king Cheng-jong, in 1800, died from the effects of the disease. No ordinary mortal
-must touch him, and if by accident this is done, the individual must ever afterward
-wear a red silk cord. Notwithstanding such regulated veneration for the Hap-mun’s
-person, the royal harem numbers several hundred inmates, duly presided over by eunuchs.
-None but the king can drink out of a cup made of gold, and a heavy penalty is visited
-upon all who presume to do so. When outside the palace, the three signs of the sovereign’s
-power of life and death over his subjects, are the axe, sabre, and trident. The huge
-violet fan and red umbrella are likewise borne before him. The Chinese envoy is always
-escorted by soldiers bearing the three emblems, and by a band of musicians. When the
-Hap-mun, or king, is in his minority, the queen, who is regent, sits behind a curtain
-in the council of ministers, and takes part in the discussions. When she is pregnant,
-the slaughter of beeves is prohibited during the space of three months. This is done
-in order “to honor heaven by abstinence,” and may also be ordered to procure rain.
-Once every year, the queen entertains at her palace some worthy woman in humble life,
-who has reached the advanced age of eighty years. The king likewise shows favor to
-old men in the lower walks of life. Whenever an auspicious event happens, or good
-fortune befalls the kingdom, all the officials over seventy, and the common people
-over eighty years of age, are feasted at the expense of the government. When the first
-male child is born to the king, criminals are pardoned, and general festivity is observed.
-The birthdays of the royal pair are celebrated every year. The royal princes are supposed
-to have nothing whatever to do with politics, and any activity in matters of government
-on their part is jealously resented by the nobles, who form the political parties.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb220">[<a href="#pb220">220</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The Royal Castle contains over three acres (15,202 square yards), surrounded by a
-wall twenty feet high, and formerly by a moat, now filled up, measuring fifty feet
-wide or less. It is crossed by stone bridges in several places. This castled palace
-is called the “Place of Government,” and is divided into two parts called the “East
-and West” palace. The East, or Lower Palace, is the residence of the king and is so
-called because situated on level land. The Western palace is used for the reception
-of the Chinese ambassadors. The gates of the outer city proper, and inner city, or
-palace, are named in high-sounding phrase, such as “Beneficent Reception,” “Exalted
-Politeness,” “Perfect Change,” “Entrance of Virtue,” and the throne-room is styled
-“The Hall of the Throne of the Humane Government.” The Chinese ambassador of 1866
-spent the night in that part of the royal residence called “The Palace Reserved for
-the South,”—“the south” here evidently referring to the imperial favor, or the good
-graces, of the emperor.
-</p>
-<p>A marked difference concerning “the freedom of the city” is noticed in the relative
-treatment of the two embassies. While the entire body of Coreans, dignitaries, servants,
-merchants, and cart-men enter Peking, and all circulate freely in the streets among
-the people, the Chinese envoy to Seoul, must leave his suite at the frontier, and
-proceed to the capital with but a few servants, and while there dwell in seclusion.
-After the long and rough journey through Shin-king and Corea, the Chinese envoy in
-1866 stayed less than three days in Seoul, and most of the time in-doors. The Japanese
-who, in 1646, were feasted in some part of the Eastern palace, describe it as being
-handsomely furnished, with the walls gilded and painted with landscapes, beasts, birds,
-and flowers, with artistic effects in gold-dust and leaf. The royal family live each
-in separate buildings, those above the ninth degree of relationship reside inside
-the enclosure, all others live beyond the wall in the city. When the wife of the king
-has a child, she dwells apart in a separate building. The queen is selected from among
-the old and most loyal families of the nobility. The palace pages, who attend the
-king day and night, number thirty. There are also three hundred court ladies, and
-eunuchs are among the regularly-appointed officers of the court. The royal archives
-and library form an interesting portion of the royal residence. Part of this library,
-when removed to Kang-wa in 1866, was captured by the French. Bishop Ridel wrote of
-it, “The library is very rich, consisting of two or three thousand books printed in
-Chinese <span class="pageNum" id="pb221">[<a href="#pb221">221</a>]</span>with numerous illustrations upon beautiful paper, all well labeled, for the most part
-in many volumes hooped together with copper bands, the covers being of green or crimson
-silk. I notice among other things the ancient history of Corea in sixty volumes. What
-was most curious of all was a book formed of tablets of marble, with characters in
-gold encrusted in the marble, folding upon one another like the leaves of a screen,
-upon hinges of gilded copper, and each tablet protected by a cushion of scarlet silk,
-the whole placed in a handsome casket made of copper, which was in its turn enclosed
-in a box of wood painted red, with chased ornaments in gilt copper. These square tablets
-formed a volume of a dozen pages. They contain, as some say, the moral laws of the
-country, but according to others, whose opinion is more probable, the honors accorded
-the kings of Corea by the Emperor of China. The Coreans set great store by it.”
-</p>
-<p>A custom, similar to the old “curfew” of England prevails in the capital. The great
-city bell is struck at sunset, after which male citizens are not allowed to go out
-of their houses even to visit their neighbors. If such nocturnal prowlers are caught,
-they run the risk of receiving the bastinado on their legs. At eight o’clock another
-three strokes are given on the bell. At the hours of midnight, and at two and four
-<span class="asc">A.M.</span> the drum is struck, and the brass cymbals sounded. At these signals the watchmen
-or guards of the palace are relieved. The night-watch consists of ten reliefs of eighteen
-each. Twenty stand guard at midnight, thirty at two <span class="asc">A.M.</span>, twenty at four <span class="asc">A.M.</span>, and ten at six <span class="asc">A.M.</span> There are also extra reliefs with their officers ready. The sentinels change after
-giving the pass-word. The military garrison of the city is divided into five portions,
-or four in addition to the household or palace troops. This is the modern form of
-the old division of Kokorai, into five tribes or clans.
-</p>
-<p>There are several noted holidays, on which the curfew law is suspended, and the people
-are allowed to be out freely at night. These are the first and the last day of the
-year, the fourteenth and fifteenth day of the first month, and the fifteenth of August.
-</p>
-<p>Even under a despotism there are means by which the people win and enjoy a certain
-measure of liberty. The monarch hears the complaints of his subjects. Close communication
-between the palace and populace is kept up by means of the pages employed at the court,
-or through officers, who are sent out as the king’s spies all over the country. An
-<i>E-sa</i>, or commissioner, who is to <span class="pageNum" id="pb222">[<a href="#pb222">222</a>]</span>be sent to a distant province to ascertain the popular feeling, or to report the conduct
-of certain officers, is also called “The Messenger on the Dark Path.” He receives
-sealed orders from the king, which he must not open till beyond the city walls. Then,
-without even going to his own house, he must set out for his destination, the government
-providing his expenses. He bears the seal of his commission, a silver plate having
-the figure of a horse engraved on it. In some cases he has the power of life and death
-in his hands. Yet, even the Messenger of the Dark Path is not free from espionage,
-for after him forthwith follows his “double”—the <i>yashi</i> or Night Messenger, who reports on the conduct of the royal inspector and also on
-the affairs of each province through which he passes. The whereabouts of these emissaries
-are rarely discoverable by the people, as they travel in strict disguise, and unknown.
-This system corresponds almost exactly to that of the ométsuké (eye-appliers), for
-many centuries in use in Japan, but abolished by the mikado’s government at the revolution
-of 1868. It was by means of these <i>E-sa</i> or spies that many of the Corean Christians of rank were marked for destruction.
-The system, though abominable in free countries, is yet an excellent medium between
-the throne and the subject, and serves as a wholesome check on official rapine and
-cruelty.
-</p>
-<p>The king rarely leaves the palace to go abroad in the city or country. When he does,
-it is a great occasion which is previously announced to the public. The roads are
-swept clean and guarded to prevent traffic or passage while the royal cortége is moving.
-All doors must be shut and the owner of each house is obliged to kneel before his
-threshold with a broom and dust-pan in his hand as emblems of obeisance. All windows,
-especially the upper ones, must be sealed with slips of paper, lest some one should
-look down upon his majesty. Those who think they have received unjust punishment enjoy
-the right of appeal to the sovereign. They stand by the roadside tapping a small flat
-drum of hide stretched on a hoop like a battledore. The king as he passes hears the
-prayer or receives the written petition held in a split bamboo. Often he investigates
-the grievance. If the complaint is groundless the petitioner is apt to lose his head.
-The procession for pleasure or a journey, as it leaves the palace, is one of the grandest
-spectacles the natives ever witness. His body-guard and train amount to many thousand
-persons. There are two sedan chairs made exactly alike, and in which of them the king
-is riding <span class="pageNum" id="pb223">[<a href="#pb223">223</a>]</span>no one knows except the highest ministers. They must never be turned round, but have
-a door to open at both ends. The music used on such occasions is—to a Corean ear—of
-a quiet kind, and orders are given along the line by signals made with pennons. In
-case of sudden emergencies, when it is <span class="corr" id="xd31e3655" title="Source: neccessary">necessary</span> to convey an order from the rear to the front or far forward of the line, the message
-is sent by means of an arrow, which, with the writing attached, is shot from one end
-of the line to the other.
-</p>
-<p>Five caparisoned horses with embroidered saddles precede the royal sedan. The great
-dragon-flag, which is about fourteen feet square, mounted in a socket and strapped
-on the back of a strong fresh horse—with four guy ropes held by footmen, like banner-string
-boys in a parade—forms the most conspicuous object in the procession. Succession to
-the throne is at the pleasure of the sovereign, who may nominate his legitimate son,
-or any one of his natural male offspring, or his cousin, or uncle, as he pleases.
-A son of the queen takes precedence over other sons, but the male child of a concubine
-becomes king when the queen is childless, which, in Corean eyes, is virtually the
-case when she has daughters only. Since the founding of the present dynasty in 1392,
-there have been twenty-nine successors to the founder, among whom we find nephews,
-cousins, or younger sons, in several instances. Four were <i>kun</i>, princes, or king’s son only, and not successors in the royal line. They are not
-styled <i>wang</i>, or kings, but only <i>kun</i>, or princes, in the official light. One of these four <i>kun</i>, degraded from the throne, was banished after eleven years, and another was served
-in like manner after fourteen <span class="corr" id="xd31e3668" title="Source: years,">years’</span> reign. The heir to the throne holds the rank of <i>wang</i> (Japanese Ō), king, while the younger sons are <i>kun</i>, princes. From 1392 to 1882, the average reign of the twenty sovereigns of Corea
-who received investiture is very nearly sixteen and a half years.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb224">[<a href="#pb224">224</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch25" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1044">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XXV.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">POLITICAL PARTIES.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">During the past three centuries the nobles have been steadily gaining political power,
-or rather we might say have been regaining their ancient prestige at court. They have
-compelled the royal princes to take the position of absolute political neutrality,
-and the policy of the central government is dictated exclusively by them. Those who
-hold no office are often the most powerful in influence with their own party.
-</p>
-<p>The origin of the political parties, which have played such an influential part in
-the history of modern Corea, is referred to about the time of the discovery of America.
-During the reign of Sien-chong (1469–1494), the eleventh sovereign of the house of
-Ni, a dispute broke out between two of the most powerful of the nobles. The court
-had bestowed upon one of them a high dignity, to which his rival laid equal claim.
-As usual in feudalism everywhere, the families, relatives, retainers, and even servants,
-of either leader took part in the quarrel. The king prudently kept himself neutral
-between the contending factions, which soon formed themselves into organized parties
-under the names of “Eastern” and “Western.” Later on, from a cause equally trivial
-to an alien eye, two other parties formed themselves under the names “Southern” and
-“Northern.” Soon the Easterners joined themselves to the Southerners, and the Northerners,
-who were very numerous, split into two divisions, called the Great North and the Little
-North. In one of those unsuccessful palace intrigues, called conspiracies, the Great
-North party was mixed up with the plot, and most of its members were condemned to
-death. The survivors hastened to range themselves under the banner of the Little North.
-The next reaction which arranged the parties on new lines, occurred during the reign
-of Suk-chong (1676–1720), and well illustrates that fanaticism of pedantry to which
-the literary classes in time of peace formerly devoted their energies. The father
-of a young <span class="pageNum" id="pb225">[<a href="#pb225">225</a>]</span>noble named Yun, who belonged to the Western party, having died, the young man composed
-an epitaph. His tutor, an influential man of letters, not liking the production of
-his pupil, proposed another. Unable to agree upon the proper text, a lively controversy
-arose, and out of a literary acorn sprang up a mighty oak of politics. The Western
-party split into the Sho-ron, and No-ron, in which were found the adherents of the
-pupil and master. A free translation of the correlative terms <i>sho</i> and <i>no</i>, would be “Old Corea” and “Young Corea,” or Conservative and Progressive, or radical.
-There were now four political parties.
-</p>
-<p>The <i>Shi-seik</i>, or “the four parties,” are still in existence, and receive illustration better from
-French than from British politics. Every noble in the realm is attached to one or
-the other of the four parties, though “trimmers” are not unknown. These <i>Tuhil-poki</i>, or “right and left men,” are ever on the alert for the main chance, and on the turn
-of the political vane promptly desert to the winning side.
-</p>
-<p>However trivial the causes which led to their formation, as Western eyes see, the
-objects kept in view by the partisans are much the same as those of parties in European
-countries and in the United States. Nominally the prime purpose of each faction is
-to advance the interests of the country. Actual and very powerful motives have reference
-to the spoils of office. Each party endeavors to gain for its adherents as many of
-the high appointments and dignities as possible. Their rallying-point is around the
-heirs apparent, or possible, to the throne. When a strong and healthy king holds the
-reins of power, political activity may be cool. When the sovereign dies and the succession
-is uncertain, when a queen or royal concubine is to be chosen, when high ministers
-of state die or resign, the Corean political furnace is at full blast. When king Suk-chong
-was reigning in 1720, having no son to succeed him, the four parties coalesced into
-two, the Opposition and the Court or royal party. The former supported in this case
-one who proved the successful candidate, a brother of the king; the latter party urged
-the claims of an expected heir to the reigning king, which, however, was not born,
-as the king died childless. To secure the throne to their nominee, the brother of
-the childless king, the opposition secretly despatched a courier to Peking to obtain
-the imperial investiture. The other party sent assassins to waylay or overtake the
-courier, who was murdered before he had crossed the frontier.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb226">[<a href="#pb226">226</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Yeng-chong, the nominee of the Opposition, mounted the throne after the death of his
-brother, and reigned from 1724 to 1776. He was an able ruler, and signalized his reign
-by abolishing many of the legal tortures until then practised, especially the branding
-of criminals. Yet personally he was cruel and unscrupulous. Public rumor credited
-him with having found a road to power by means of a double crime. By the use of various
-drugs he made it impossible for his brother to have an heir, after which he poisoned
-him.
-</p>
-<p>Stung by these reports, he began, as soon as he was made sovereign, to send to the
-block numbers of the opposite party whom he knew to be his enemies. Some years after,
-his eldest son having died, he nominated his second son, Sato, to be his heir, and
-associated him with himself in the government of the kingdom. This young and accomplished
-prince endeavored to make his father forget his bitter hatred against the <i>Si-pai</i> party, to proclaim general amnesty, and to follow out a frank policy of reconciliation.
-The king, irritated by his son’s reproaches, and hounded on by his partisans, resolved
-to put the prince out of the way. By the royal command a huge chest of wood was made,
-into which the young prince was ordered to sleep while living. The ponderous lid was
-put on during one of his slumbers and sealed with the royal seal. They then covered
-this sarcophagus with leaves and boughs, so that in a short time the young prince
-was smothered. This horrible crime served only to exasperate the party of the prince,
-and they demanded that his name should be enrolled in the list of sovereigns. Their
-opponents refused, and this question is still a burning one. The king’s defenders,
-to this day decline to rehabilitate the character of the smothered prince. The others
-demand that historic justice be done. Though other questions have since arisen, of
-more immediate moment, this particular moot point makes its distinct hue in the opposing
-colors of Corean politics. This, however, does not take on the features of an hereditary
-feud, for oftentimes in the same family, father and son, or brothers may hold varying
-views on this historical dispute, nor does it affect marriage between holders of diverse
-views. The Corean Romeo and Juliet may woo and wed without let or danger. In general,
-it may be said that the <i>Piek-pai</i> are radical and fiery, the <i>Si-pai</i> are conservative and conciliatory.
-</p>
-<p>Cheng-chong, who ruled from 1776 to 1800, a wise, moderate, and prudent prince, and
-a friend of learning, favored the men of <span class="pageNum" id="pb227">[<a href="#pb227">227</a>]</span>merit among the Southern <i>Si-pai</i>, and is also noted for having revised the code of laws.
-</p>
-<p>Among the more radical of the partisans, the object in view is not only to gain for
-their adherents the public offices, but also to smite their rivals hip and thigh,
-and prevent their getting appointments. Hence the continual quarrels and the plots,
-which often result in the death of one or other of the leaders. Assassination and
-murderous attacks are among the means employed, while to supplant their enemies the
-king is besought to order them to death or exile. Concessions are made by the dominant
-party to the other only to avoid violent outbreaks, and to keep the peace. With such
-a rich soil for feuds, it is not wonderful that Corea is cursed with elements of permanent
-disturbance like those in mediæval Scotland or Italy. As each of the noble families
-have many retainers, and as the feuds are hereditary, the passions of human nature
-have full sway. All manner of envy and malice, with all uncharitableness flourish,
-as in a thicket of interlacing thorns. The Southern and No-ron parties have always
-been the most numerous, powerful, and obstinate. Between them marriages do not take
-place, and the noble who in an intrigue with one of his enemies loses caste, his honors,
-or his life, hands down to his son or his nearest relative his demand for vengeance.
-Often this sacred duty is associated with an exterior and visible pledge. He may give
-to his son, for instance, a coat which he is never to take off until revenge is had.
-The kinsman, thus clad with vengeance as with a garment, must wear it, it may be until
-he dies, and then put it upon his child with the same vow. It is not rare to see noblemen
-clad in rags and tatters during two or three generations. Night and day these clothes
-call aloud to the wearer, reminding him of the debt of blood which he must pay to
-appease the spirits of his ancestors.
-</p>
-<p>In Corea, not to avenge one’s father is to be disowned, to prove that one is illegitimate
-and has no right to bear the family name, it is to violate, in its fundamental point,
-the national religion, which is the worship of ancestors. If the father has been put
-to death under the forms of law, it behooves that his enemy or his enemy’s son should
-die the same death. If the father has been exiled, his enemy’s exile must be secured.
-If the parent has been assassinated, in like manner must his enemy fall. In these
-cases, public sentiment applauds the avenger, as fulfilling the holy dictates of piety
-and religion.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb228">[<a href="#pb228">228</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The pretext of accusation most often employed by the rival factions is that of conspiracy
-against the life of the king. Petitions and false evidence are multiplied and bribery
-of the court ministers is attempted. If, as is often the case, the first petitioners
-are thrown in jail, beaten, or condemned to mulct or exile, the partisans assess the
-fine among themselves and pay it, or manage by new methods, by the favor or venality
-of the court ministers, or the weakness of the king, at last to compass their ends,
-when those of the vanquished party are ousted from office, while the victors use and
-abuse their positions to enrich themselves and ruin their enemies, until they in their
-turn are supplanted.
-</p>
-<p>It is no wonder that a Corean liberal visiting in Tōkiō, in 1882, declared to a Japanese
-officer his conviction that Corea’s <span class="corr" id="xd31e3722" title="Source: dfficulties">difficulties</span> in the way of national progress were greater than those of which Japan had rid herself,
-mighty as these had been. By the revolutions of 1868, and later, the ripened fruits
-of a century of agitation and the presence of foreigners, Japan had purged from her
-body politic feudalism and caste, emancipating herself at once from the thrall of
-the priest and the soldier; but Corea, with her feudalism, her court intrigues, her
-Confucian bigotry, and the effete products of ages of seclusion and superstition has
-even a more hopeless task to attempt. The bearing of these phases of home politics
-will be further displayed when the new disturbing force of Christianity enters to
-furnish a lever to ambition and revenge, as well as to affection and philanthropy.
-</p>
-<p>A native caricature, which was published about a generation ago, gives even a foreigner
-a fair idea of the relative position of each party at that epoch. At a table gorgeously
-furnished, a No-ron is seated at his ease, disposing of the bountiful fare. A Sho-ron
-seated beside him, yet in the rear, graciously performs the office of servant, receiving
-part of the food as reward for his attendance. The Little North, seeing that the viands
-are not for him, is also seated, but with a more sedate and serious visage. Last of
-all the Southern, covered with rags, keeps far in the rear, behind the No-ron, who
-does not notice him, while he, in vexation, grinds his teeth and shakes his fist like
-a man who means to take burning vengeance. Such was the political situation before
-1850, as some native wit pictured it for the amusement of the Seoulians.
-</p>
-<p>It requires a ruler of real ability to be equal to the pressure brought upon him by
-the diverse and hostile political parties. Nominally sovereign of the country, he
-is held in check by powerful <span class="pageNum" id="pb229">[<a href="#pb229">229</a>]</span>nobles intrenched in privileges hoary with age, and backed by all the reactionary
-influences of feudalism. The nobles are the powerful middle term in the problem of
-Corean politics, who control both king and commons. The nobles have the preponderance
-of the government patronage, and fill the official positions with their liegemen to
-an extent far beyond what the theory of the law, as illustrated in the literary examinations,
-allows them. A native caricature thus depicts the situation. Chō-sen is represented
-as a human being, of whom the king is the head, the nobles the body, and the people
-the legs and feet. The breast and belly are full, while both head and lower limbs
-are gaunt and shrunken. The nobles not only drain the life-blood of the people by
-their rapacity, but they curtail the royal prerogative. The nation is suffering from
-a congestion, verging upon a dropsical condition of over-officialism.
-</p>
-<p>The disease of Corea’s near neighbor, old Japan, was likewise a surplus of government
-and an excess of official patronage, but the body politic was purged by revolution.
-The obstructions between the throne and the people were cleared away by the removal
-of the shō-gunate and the feudal system. Before the advent of foreigners, national
-unity was not the absolute necessity which it became the instant that aliens fixed
-their dwelling on the soil. Now, the empire of the mikado rejoices in true political
-unity, and has subjects in a strong and not over-meddlesome government. The people
-are being educated in the rudiments of mutual obligations—their rights as well as
-their duties. The mikado himself took the oath of 1868, and his own hand shaped the
-august decree of 1881, which will keep his throne unshaken, not because it was won
-by the bows and arrows of his divine ancestors, but because it will rest broad-based
-upon the peoples’ will. So in Chō-sen the work of the future for intelligent patriots
-is the closer union of king and people, the curtailment of the power of the nobles,
-and the excision of feudalism. Already, to accomplish this end, there are Coreans
-who are ready to die. During the last decade, the pressure from Japan, the jealousy
-of China, the danger from Russia, the necessity, at first shrunk from and then yielded
-to, of making treaties with foreign nations, has altered the motives and objects of
-Corean politics. Old questions have fallen out of sight, and two great parties, Progressionists
-and Obstructionists, or Radical and Conservative, have formed for the solution of
-the problems thrust upon them by the nineteenth century.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb230">[<a href="#pb230">230</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch26" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1053">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XXVI.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">ORGANIZATION AND METHODS OF GOVERNMENT.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Next in authority to the king are the three <i>chong</i> or high ministers. The chief of these (Chen-kun) is the greatest dignitary in the
-kingdom, and in time of the minority, inability, or imbecility of the king, wields
-royal authority in fact if not in name. Another term applied to him when the king
-is unable to govern, is “Foundation-stone Minister,” upon whom the king leans and
-the state rests as a house upon its foundation-stone. The title of Tai-wen-kun, which
-suggests that of the “Tycoon” of Japan, seems to have been a special one intended
-for the emergency. It was given to the Regent who is the father of the present King,
-and who ruled with nearly absolute power from 1863 to 1874, when the king reached
-his majority. In the troubles in Seoul in July, 1882, his title, written in Japanese
-as Tai-in kun, became familiar to western newspapers.
-</p>
-<p>After the king, and the three prime ministers, come the six ministries or boards of
-government, the heads of which rank next to the three <i>chong</i> or ministers forming the Supreme Council. In the six departments, the heads are called
-<i>pan-cho</i>, and these are assisted by two other associates, the <i>cham-pan</i>, or substitutes, and the <i>cham-é</i>, or counsellor. These four grades and twenty-one dignitaries constitute the royal
-council of <i>dai-jin</i> (great ministers), though the actual authority is in the supreme council of the three
-<i>chong</i>. The six boards, or departments of the government, are: 1, Office and Public Employ;
-2, Finance; 3, Ceremonies; 4, War; 5, Justice; 6, Public Works. The heads of these
-tribunals make a daily report of all affairs within their province, but refer all
-matters of importance to the Supreme Council. There are also three chamberlains, each
-having his assistants, who record every day the acts and words of the king. A daily
-government gazette, called the Chō-po, is issued for information on official matters.
-The general cast and method of procedure in the court and government is copied after
-the great model in Peking.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb231">[<a href="#pb231">231</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Each of the eight provinces is under the direction of a <i>kam-sa</i>, or governor. The cities are divided into six classes (<i>yin</i>, <i>mu</i>, <i>fu</i>, <i>ki</i>, <i>ling</i>, and <i>hilu</i>), and are governed by officers of corresponding rank. The towns are given in charge
-of the petty magistrates, there being twelve ranks or dignities in the official class.
-In theory any male Corean able to pass the government examinations is eligible to
-office, but the greater number of the best positions are secured by nobles and their
-friends.
-</p>
-<p>From the sovereign to the beggar, the gate, both figuratively and actually, is very
-prominent in the public economy and in family relationships. A great deal of etiquette
-is visible in the gates. At the entrance to the royal palace are, or were formerly,
-two huge effigies, in wood, of horses, painted red. Only high officials can pass these
-mute guardians. All persons riding past the palace must dismount and walk. To the
-houses of men of rank there are usually two, sometimes three, gates. The magistrate
-himself enters by the largest, his parents and nearer friends by the eastern, and
-servants by the west or smallest. When a visitor of equal grade calls upon an officer
-or noble, the host must come all the way to the great or outer gate to receive him,
-and do likewise on dismissing him. If he be of one degree lower rank, the host comes
-only to the outside of the middle gate. If of third or fourth rank, the caller is
-accompanied only to the space inside the middle gate. The man of fifth and sixth rank
-finds that etiquette has so tapered off that the lord of the mansion walks only to
-the piazza. In front of a magistrate’s office, at the gateway, are ranged the symbols
-of authority, such as spears and tridents. The gates are daily opened amid the loud
-cries of the underlings, and their opening and closing with a vocal or instrumental
-blast is a national custom, illustrated as well at the city as at the office. The
-porters who close them at sunset and open them at dawn execute a salvo on their trumpets,
-often lasting a quarter of an hour. This acoustic devastation, so distressing to foreign
-ears, is considered good music to the native tympanum.
-</p>
-<p>In sitting, the same iron tongue upon the buckle of custom holds each man to his right
-hole in the social strap. People of equal rank sit so that the guest faces to the
-east and the host to the west. In ordinary easy style, the visitor’s nose is to the
-south, as he sits eastward of his host. A commoner faces north. In social entertainments,
-after the <i>yup</i>, or bows with the head and hands bent together, have been made, wine is sipped or
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb232">[<a href="#pb232">232</a>]</span>drunk three or five times, and then follows what the Coreans call music.
-</p>
-<p>The sumptuary laws of the kingdom are peculiar, at many points amusing to occidentals.
-To commit <i>pem-ram</i> is to violate these curious regulations. What may be worn, or sat upon, is solemnly
-dictated by law. Nobles sit on the <i>kan-kio</i>, or better kind of chairs. Below the third rank, officers rest upon a bench made
-of ropes. Chairs, however, are not common articles of use, nor intended to be such.
-At entertainments for the aged, in time of rich harvests, local feasts, archery tournaments,
-and on public occasions, these luxuries are oftener used. In short, the chair seems
-to be an article of ceremony, rather than a constant means of use or comfort.
-</p>
-<p>Only men above the third rank are allowed to put on silk. Petty officials must wear
-cotton. Merchants and farmers may not imitate official robes, but don tighter or more
-economical coats and trowsers. A common term for officials is “blue clouds,” in reference
-to their blue-tinted garments. To their assistants, the people apply the nickname,
-not sarcastic, but honorable, of “crooked backs,” because they always bend low in
-talking to their employers.
-</p>
-<p>The magistrates lay great stress on the trifles of etiquette, and keep up an immense
-amount of fuss and pomp to sustain their dignity, in order to awe the common folks.
-Whenever they move abroad, their servants cry out “chii-wa,” “chii-wa,” “get down
-off your horse,” “get down off your horse,” to riders in sight. The Il-san, or large
-banner or standard in the form of an umbrella, is borne at the head of the line. To
-attempt to cross one of their processions is to be seized and punished, and anyone
-refusing to dismount, or who is slow about slipping off his horse, is at once arrested,
-to be beaten or mulcted. When permission is given to kill an ox, the head, hide, and
-feet usually become the perquisites of the magistrate or his minions. The exuberant
-vocabulary in Corean, for the various taxes, fines, mulcts, and squeezes of the understrappers
-of the magistrate, in gross and in detail, chief and supplementary, testify to the
-rigors and expenses of being governed in Chō-sen.
-</p>
-<p>Overreaching magistrates, through whose injustice the people are goaded into rebellion,
-are sometimes punished. It seems that one of the penalties in ancient times was that
-the culpable official should be boiled in oil. Now, however, the condemned man is
-exiled, and only rarely put to death, while a commutation of justice<span class="pageNum" id="pb233">[<a href="#pb233">233</a>]</span>—equivalent to being burned in effigy—is made by a pretended boiling in oil. Good
-and upright magistrates are often remembered by <i>mok-pi</i>, or inscribed columns of wood, erected on the public road by the grateful people.
-In many instances, this testimonial takes the form of sculptured stone. A number of
-the public highways are thus adorned. These, with the <i>tol-pi</i>, or monumental bourne, which marks distances or points out the paths to places of
-resort, are interesting features of travel in the <span class="corr" id="xd31e3797" title="Source: peninusla">peninsula</span>, and more pleasant to the horseman than the posts near temples and offices on which
-one may read “Dismount.” At the funeral of great dignitaries of the realm, a life-sized
-figure of a horse, made of bamboo, dragged before the coffin, is burned along with
-the clothes of the deceased, and the ashes laid beside his remains.
-</p>
-<p>As the magistrates are literary men, their official residences often receive poetic
-or suggestive names, which, in most cases, reflect the natural scenery surrounding
-them. “Little Flowery House,” “Rising Cloud,” “Sun-greeting,” “Sheet of Resplendent
-Water,” “Water-that-slides-as-straight-as-a-sword Dwelling,” “Gate of Lapis-lazuli,”
-“Mansion near the Whirlpool,” are some of these names, while, into the composition
-of others, the Morning-star, the Heaven-touching, the Cave-spirit, and the Changing-cloud
-Mountain, or the Falling-snow Cataract may enter. Passionately fond of nature, the
-Corean gentleman will erect a tablet in praise of the scenery that charms his eye.
-One such reads, “The beauty of its rivers, and of its mountains, make this district
-the first in the country.”
-</p>
-<p>If, as the French say, “Paris is France,” then Seoul is Corea. An apparently disproportionate
-interest centres in the capital, if one may judge from the vast and varied vocabulary
-relating to Seoul, its people and things, which differentiate all else outside its
-wall. Three thousand official dignitaries are said to reside in the capital, and only
-eight hundred in all the other cities and provinces. Seoul is “the city,” and all
-the rest of the peninsula is “the country.” A provincial having cultivated manners
-is called “a man of the capital.” “Capital and province” means the realm.
-</p>
-<p>The rule of the local authorities is very minute in all its ramifications. The system
-of making every five houses a social unit is universal. When a crime is committed,
-it is easy to locate the group in which the offender dwells, and responsibility is
-fixed at once. Every subject of the sovereign except nobles of rank, must possess
-a passport or ticket testifying to his personality, and all <span class="pageNum" id="pb234">[<a href="#pb234">234</a>]</span>must “show their tickets” on demand. For the people, this certificate of identity
-is a piece of branded or inscribed wood, for the soldiers of horn, for the literary
-class and government officials of bone. Often, the tablet is in halves, the individual
-having one-half, and the government keeping its tally. The people who cannot read
-or write have their labels carefully tied to their clothing. When called upon to sign
-important documents, or bear witness on trial, they make a blood-signature, by rudely
-tracing the signs set before them in their own blood. The name, residence of the holder,
-and the number of the group of houses in which he lives, are branded or inscribed
-on the <i>ho-pai</i>, or passport.
-</p>
-<p>The actual workings of Corean justice will be better understood when treating of Christianity—an
-element of social life which gave the pagan tribunals plenty of work. Civil matters
-are decided by the ordinary civil magistrate, who is judge and jury at once; criminal
-cases are tried by the military commandant. Very important cases are referred to the
-governor of the province. The highest court of appeal is in the capital. Cases of
-treason and rebellion, and charges against high dignitaries, are tried in the capital
-before a special tribunal instituted by the king.
-</p>
-<p>The two classes of assistants to the magistrate, who are called respectively <i>hai-seik</i> and <i>a-chen</i>, act as constables or sheriffs, police messengers, and jailers. French writers term
-them “pretorians” and “satellites.” These men have practically the administration
-of justice, and the details and spirit of local authority are in their power. The
-<i>hai-seik</i>, or constables, form a distinct class in the community, rarely intermarrying with
-the people, and handing down their offices, implements, and arts from father to son.
-The <i>a-chen</i>, who are the inferior police, jailers, and torturers, are from the very lowest classes,
-and usually of brutal life and temper.
-</p>
-<p>The vocabulary of torture is sufficiently copious to stamp Chō-sen as still a semi-civilized
-nation. The inventory of the court and prison comprises iron chains, bamboos for beating
-the back, a paddle-shaped implement for inflicting blows upon the buttocks, switches
-for whipping the calves till the flesh is ravelled, ropes for sawing the flesh and
-bodily organs, manacles, stocks, and boards to strike against the knees and shin-bones.
-Other punishments are suspension by the arms, tying the hands in front of the knees,
-between which and the elbows is inserted a stick, while the human ball is rolled about.
-An ancient but now obsolete mode <span class="pageNum" id="pb235">[<a href="#pb235">235</a>]</span>of torture was to tie the four limbs of a man to the horns of as many oxen, and then
-to madden the beasts by fire, so that they tore the victim to fragments. The punishment
-of beating with paddles often leaves scars for life, and causes ulcers not easily
-healed. One hundred strokes cause death in most cases, and many die under forty or
-fifty blows. For some crimes the knees and shin-bones are battered. A woman is allowed
-to have on one garment, which is wetted to make it cling to the skin and increase
-the pain. The chief of the lictors, or public spanker, is called <i>siu-kiō</i>. With the long, flexible handle swung over his head, he plies the resounding blows,
-planting them on the bare skin just above the knee-joint, the victim being held down
-by four gaolers. The method of correction is quite characteristic of paternal government,
-and is often inflicted upon the people openly and in public, at the whim of the magistrate.
-The bastinado was formerly, like hundreds of other customs common to both countries,
-in vogue in Japan. As in many other instances, this has survived in the less civilized
-nation.
-</p>
-<p>When an offender in the military or literary class is sentenced to death, decapitation
-is the rather honorable method employed. The executioner uses either a sort of native
-iron hatchet-sword or cleaver, or one of the imported Japanese steel-edged blades,
-which have an excellent reputation in the peninsula.
-</p>
-<p>Undoubtedly the severity of the Corean code has been mitigated since Hamel’s time.
-According to his observations, husbands usually killed their wives who had committed
-adultery. A wife murdering her husband was buried to the shoulders in the earth at
-the road side, and all might strike or mutilate her with axe or sword. A serf who
-murdered his master was tortured, and a thief might be trampled to death. The acme
-of cruelty was produced, as in old Japan, by pouring vinegar down the criminal’s throat,
-and then beating him till he burst. The criminal code now in force is, in the main,
-that revised and published by the king in 1785, which greatly mitigated the one formerly
-used. One disgraceful, but not very severe, mode of correction is to tie a drum to
-the back of the offender and publicly proclaim his transgression, while the drum is
-beaten as he walks through the streets. Amid many improvements on the old barbarous
-system of aggravating the misery of the condemned, there still survives a disgraceful
-form of capital punishment, in which the cruelty takes on the air of savage refinement.
-The <i>cho-reni-to-ta</i> appears only in <span class="pageNum" id="pb236">[<a href="#pb236">236</a>]</span>extreme cases. The criminal’s face is smeared with chalk, his hands are tied behind
-him, a gong is tied on his back, and an arrow is thrust through either ear. The executioner
-makes the victim march round before the spectators, while he strikes the gong, crying
-out, “This fellow has committed [adultery, murder, treason, etc.]. Avoid his crime.”
-The French missionaries executed near Seoul were all put to death in this barbarous
-manner.
-</p>
-<p>Officials often receive furloughs to return home and visit their parents, for filial
-piety is the supreme virtue in Chinese Asia. The richest rewards on earth and brightest
-heaven hereafter await the filial child. Curses and disgrace in this life and the
-hottest hell in the world hereafter are the penalties of the disobedient or neglectful
-child. The man who strikes his father is beheaded. The parricide is burned to death.
-Not to mourn long and faithfully, by retiring from office for months, is an incredible
-iniquity.
-</p>
-<p>Coreans, like Japanese, argue that, if the law punishes crime, it ought also to reward
-virtue. Hence the system which prevails in the mikado’s empire and in Chō-sen of publicly
-awarding prizes to signal exemplars of filial piety. These in Japan may be in the
-form of money, silver cups, rolls of silk, or gewgaws. In Corea, they are shown in
-monumental columns, or dedicatory temples, or by public honors and promotion to office.
-Less often are the rewarded instances of devotion to the mother than to the father.
-</p>
-<p>Official life has its sunshine and shadows in this land as elsewhere, but perhaps
-one of the hardest tasks before the Corean ruling classes of this and the next generation
-is the duty of diligently eating their words. Accustomed for centuries to decry and
-belittle the foreigner from Christendom, they must now, as the people discern the
-superiority of westerners, “rise to explain” in a manner highly embarrassing. In intellect,
-government, science, social customs, manual skill, refinement, and possession of the
-arts and comforts of life, the foreigner will soon be discovered to be superior. At
-the same time the intelligent native will behold with how little wisdom, and how much
-needless cruelty, Chō-sen is governed. The Japanese official world has passed through
-such an experience. If we may argue from a common ancestry and hereditary race traits,
-we may forecast the probability that to Corea, as to Japan, may come the same marvellous
-revolution in ideas and customs.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb237">[<a href="#pb237">237</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch27" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1061">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XXVII.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">FEUDALISM, SERFDOM, AND SOCIETY.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">It is remarked by Palladius that the Fuyu race, the ancestors of the modern Coreans,
-was the first to emerge from the desert under feudal forms of organization. The various
-migrations of new nations rising out of northern and eastern Asia were westward, and
-were held together under monarchical systems of government. The Fuyu tribes who, by
-turning their face to the rising, instead of the setting sun, were anomalous in the
-direction of their migration, were unique also in their political genius. Those emigrants
-who, descending from the same ancestral seats in Manchuria, and through the peninsula,
-crossed toward Nippon, or Sunrise, and settled Japan, maintained their feudalism until,
-through ambitious desire to rival great China, they borrowed the centralized system
-of court and monarchy from the Tang dynasty, in the seventh century. The mikado, by
-means of boards or ministries like the Chinese, ruled his subjects until the twelfth
-century. Then, through the pride and ambition of the military clans, which had subdued
-all the tribes to his sway, feudalism, which had spread its roots, lifted its head.
-By rapid growths, under succeeding military regents, it grew to be the tree overspreading
-the empire. It was finally uprooted and destroyed only by the revolution of 1868,
-and the later victories of united Japan’s imperial armies, at an awful sacrifice of
-life and treasure.
-</p>
-<p>That branch of the Fuyu migration which remained in the Corean peninsula likewise
-preserved the institution of feudalism which had been inherited from their ancestors.
-In their early history, lands were held on the tenure of military service, and in
-war time, or on the accession of a new dynasty, rewards were made by parcelling out
-the soil to the followers of the victor. Provision for a constant state of servitude
-among one class of the political body was made by the custom of making serfs of criminals
-or their kindred. A nucleus of slavery being once formed<span class="corr" id="xd31e3845" title="Source: .">,</span> <span class="pageNum" id="pb238">[<a href="#pb238">238</a>]</span>debt, famine, capture in war, voluntary surrender, would serve to increase those whose
-persons and labor were wholly or partly owned by another. To social prosperity, religion,
-and the increase of general intelligence, we may look as elements for the amelioration
-of serfdom and the elevation of certain classes of bondsmen into free people. The
-forms of Corean society, to this day, are derived from feudal ranks and divisions,
-and the powers, status, divisions, and practical politics of the nobles have their
-roots in the ancient feudalism which existed even “before the conquest.” Its fruit
-and legacy are seen in the serfdom or slavery which is Corea’s “domestic” or “peculiar”
-institution.
-</p>
-<p>Speaking in general terms, the ladder of society has four rungs, the king, nobles,
-and the three classes of society, in the last of which are “the seven low callings.”
-In detail, the grades may be counted by the tens and scores. In the lowest grade of
-the fourth class are “the seven vile callings,” viz.: the merchant, boatman, jailor,
-postal or mail slave, monk, butcher, and sorcerer.
-</p>
-<p>The “four classes of society” include the literary men or officials, the farmers,
-the artisans, and the traders. Among the nobility are various ranks, indicated by
-titles, high offices at court, or nearness of relationship to the king. He is “neither
-ox nor horse” is the native slang for one who is neither noble nor commoner. The nobles
-are usually the serf-proprietors or slave-holders, many of them having in their households
-large numbers whom they have inherited along with their ancestral chattels. The master
-has a right to sell or otherwise dispose of the children of his slaves if he so choose.
-The male slave is called <i>chong-nom</i>. A free man may marry a female slave, in which case he is termed a <i>pi-pu</i>. The male children by this marriage are free, but the female offspring belong to
-the master of the mother, and may be sold. A liberated slave is called <i>pal-sin</i>, and he speaks of his former master as <i>ku-siang</i>. The native vocabulary for the slave in his various relations is sufficiently copious.
-“Fugitive” slaves, “slave-hunters,” and “slave-drivers,” are as common to the Corean
-ear, as to the American in the long-ago days of “before the war.” A <i>pan-no</i> is a bondsman trying to escape, and to attempt <i>chiu-ro</i> is to hunt the fugitive and bring him back. The <i>in-chang</i> is the public slave of the village. Yet such a thing as the bondsman’s servile love
-of place, rising into swollen and oppressive pride that looks down on the poor freeman,
-is a common thing, and cruel and overbearing treatment of the peasantry by the minions
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb239">[<a href="#pb239">239</a>]</span>of a noble is too frequently witnessed in Corea. “<i>Tek-pun-ai</i>” (“By your favor,” equivalent to “Let me live, I pray you”) is a cry, more than once
-heard by French missionaries, from a man beaten by the swaggering serfs of some nobleman.
-It is not exactly the feeling of the sleek and well-bred black slave of old-time Virginia
-for “the poor white trash,” since in Corea slavery has no color-line; yet, in essentials
-of circumstance, it is the same. Such a phase of character is more likely to be developed
-among the serfs of the old barons or landed proprietors who have longest occupied
-their hereditary possessions, and who keep up a petty court within their castles or
-semi-fortified mansions.
-</p>
-<p>Slavery or serfdom in Corea is in a continuous state of decline, and the number of
-slaves constantly diminishing. In the remote provinces it is practically at an end.
-The greater number of serfs are to be found attached to the estates of the great noble
-families of the central provinces. The slaves are those who are born in a state of
-servitude, those who sell themselves as slaves, or those who are sold to be such by
-their parents in time of famine or for debt. Infants exposed or abandoned that are
-picked up and educated become slaves, but their offspring are born free. The serfdom
-is really very mild. Only the active young men are held to field labor, the young
-women being kept as domestics. When old enough to marry, the males are let free by
-an annual payment of a sum of money for a term of years. Often the slaves marry, are
-assigned a house apart, and bound only to a fixed amount of labor. Although the master
-has the power of life and death over his slaves, the right is rarely exercised unjustly,
-and the missionaries report that there were few cases of excessive cruelty practised.
-An unjust master could be cited before the tribunals, and the case inquired into.
-Often the actual condition of the serfs is superior to that of the poor villagers,
-and instances are common in which the poor, to escape the rapacity and cruelty of
-the nobles, have placed themselves under the protection of a master known to be a
-kind man, and thus have purchased ease and comfort at the sacrifice of liberty.
-</p>
-<p>Outside of private ownership of slaves, there is a species of government slavery,
-which illustrates the persistency of one feature of ancient Kokorai perpetuated through
-twenty centuries. It is the law that in case of the condemnation of a great criminal,
-the ban of <i>Ui-ro-ui-pi</i> shall fall upon his wife and children, who at once become the slaves of the judge.
-These unfortunates do not have <span class="pageNum" id="pb240">[<a href="#pb240">240</a>]</span>the privilege of honorably serving the magistrate, but usually pass their existence
-in waiting on the menials in the various departments and magistracies. Only a few
-of the government slaves are such by birth, most of them having become so through
-judicial condemnation in criminal cases; but this latter class fare far worse than
-the ordinary slaves. They are chiefly females, and are treated very little better
-than beasts. They are at the mercy not only of the officers but even of their satellites,
-servants, and grooms, or to whomever they are sold for an hour. Nothing can equal
-the contempt in which they are held, and for an honest or an innocent woman, such
-a fate is worse than many deaths. In the earliest written account of the Kokorai people,
-the ancestors of the modern Coreans, we find this same feature of ancient feudalism
-by which a class of serfs may be continually provided. To Christian eyes it is a horrible
-relic of barbarism.
-</p>
-<p>The penal settlements on the sea-coast, and notably Quelpart Island, are worked by
-colonies of these male government slaves or convicts. The females are not usually
-sent away from the place of their parents or their own crime.
-</p>
-<p>In ancient times of Kokorai and Korai there were only two classes of people, the nobles
-and their free retainers, and the serfs or slaves. The nobles were lords of cities
-and castles, like the daimiōs of Japan, and were very numerous. The whole country
-was owned by them, or at least held in the king’s name under tenure of military service—a
-lien which length of time only strengthened. In the long centuries of peace, many
-of these old families—weakly descendants of vigorous founders—have died out, and the
-land reverting to the sovereign, or possessed by the people, is now owned by a more
-numerous and complex class, while nearly all the cities and towns are governed by
-officers sent out by the central authority at Seoul. The ancient class of serfs has,
-by industry and intelligence and accumulation of rights vested in their special occupations,
-developed into the various middle classes. The nobles are now in a minority, though
-at present their power is on the increase, and their ancestral landholds comprise
-but a small portion of the soil.
-</p>
-<p>As in mediæval Europe, so in Corea, where feudalism, which rests on personal loyalty
-to a reigning sovereign, or a particular royal line, prevails, a more or less complete
-revolution of titles and possessions takes place upon a change of dynasty. On the
-accession of the present royal house in 1392, the old Korai nobility <span class="pageNum" id="pb241">[<a href="#pb241">241</a>]</span>were impoverished and the partisans of the founder of the Ni, and all who had aided
-him to the throne, became at once the nobility of the kingdom, and were rewarded by
-gifts of land. To the victors belonged the spoils. The honors, riches, and the exclusive
-right to fill many of the most desirable public offices were awarded in perpetuity
-to the aristocracy. The mass of the people were placed or voluntarily put themselves
-under the authority of the nobles. The agricultural class attached to the soil simply
-changed masters and landlords, while the cities and towns people and sea-coast dwellers
-became, only in a nominal sense, the tenantry of the nobles. Gradually, however, those
-who had ability and address obtained their full liberty, so that they were in no way
-bound to pay tithe or tax to the nobles, but only to the central government. Under
-peace, with wealth, intelligence, combination, trade-unions, and guilds, and especially
-by means of the literary examinations, the various classes of the people emerged into
-independent existence, leaving but a few of the lowest of the population in the condition
-of serfs or slaves. Between the accounts of Hamel in 1653, and of the French missionaries
-in the last decade, there are many indications of progress. Laborers, artisans, merchants,
-soldiers, etc., now have a right to their own labor and earnings, and the general
-division of the commonwealth is into three classes—nobles, common people, and serfs
-or slaves.
-</p>
-<p>Speaking generally, the peculiar institution of Chō-sen is serfdom rather than slavery,
-and is the <span class="corr" id="xd31e3888" title="Source: inheritence">inheritance</span> of feudalism; yet, as Russia has had her Alexander, America her Lincoln, and Japan
-her Mutsŭhito, we may hope to see some great liberator yet arise in the “Land of Morning
-Calm.”
-</p>
-<p>Under absolute despotisms, as most Asiatic governments are, it is a wonder to republicans
-how the people enjoy any liberty at all. If they have any, it is interesting to study
-how they have attained it, and how they hold it. Politically, they have absolutely
-no freedom. They know nothing of government, except to pay taxes and obey. Their political
-influence is nothing. In Chō-sen, according to law, any person of the common people
-may compete at the public examinations for civil or military employment, but, in point
-of fact, his degree is often worthless, for he is not likely to receive office by
-it. In a country where might and wealth make right, and human beings are politically
-naught, being but beasts of burden or ciphers without a unit, how do the people <span class="pageNum" id="pb242">[<a href="#pb242">242</a>]</span>protect themselves and gain any liberty? How does it come to pass that serfs may win
-their way to social freedom?
-</p>
-<p>It is by union and organization. The spirit of association, so natural and necessary,
-is spread among the Coreans of all classes, from the highest families to the meanest
-slaves. All those who have any kind of work or interest in common form guilds, corporations,
-or societies, which have a common fund, contributed to by all for aid in time of need.
-Very powerful trade-unions exist among the mechanics and laborers, such as porters,
-ostlers, and pack-horse leaders, hat-weavers, coffin-makers, carpenters, and masons.
-These societies enable each class to possess a monopoly of their trade, which even
-a noble vainly tries to break. Sometimes, they hold this right by writ purchased or
-obtained from government, though usually it is by prescription. Most of the guilds
-are taxed by the government for their monopoly enjoyed. They have their chief or head
-man, who possesses almost despotic power, and even, in some guilds, of life and death.
-New members or apprentices may be admitted by paying their rate and submitting to
-the rules of the guild. In the higher grades of society we see the same spirit of
-association. The temple attendants, the servants of the nobles, the gardeners, messengers,
-and domestics of the palace, the supernumeraries and government employes, all have
-their “rings,” which an outsider may not break. Even among the noble families the
-same idea exists in due form. The villages form each a little republic, and possess
-among themselves a common fund to which every family contributes. Out of this money,
-hid in the earth or lent out on interest, are paid the public taxes, expenses of marriage
-and burial, and whatever else, by custom and local opinion, is held to be a public
-matter. Foreigners, accustomed to the free competition of English-speaking countries,
-will find in Chō-sen, as they found in Japan, and even more so, the existence of this
-spirit of protective association and monopoly illustrated in a hundred forms which
-are in turn amusing, vexatious, or atrocious. A man who in injustice, or for mere
-caprice, or in a fit of temper, discharges his ostler, house-servant, or carpenter,
-will find that he cannot obtain another good one very easily, even at higher wages,
-or, if so, that his new one is soon frightened off the premises. To get along comfortably
-in Chinese Asia, one must, willy-nilly, pay respect to the visible or invisible spirit
-of trade-unionism that pervades all society in those old countries.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb243">[<a href="#pb243">243</a>]</span></p>
-<p>One of the most powerful and best organized guilds is that of the porters. The interior
-commerce of the country being almost entirely on the backs of men and pack-horses,
-these people have the monopoly of it. They number about ten thousand, and are divided
-by provinces and districts under the orders of chiefs, sub-chiefs, censors, inspectors,
-etc. A large number of these porters are women, often poor widows, or those unable
-to marry. Many of them are of muscular frame, and their life in the open air tends
-to develop robust forms, with the strength of men. They speak a conventional language,
-easily understood among themselves, and are very profuse in their salutations to each
-other. They have very severe rules for the government of their guild, and crimes among
-them are punished with death, at the order of their chief. They are so powerful that
-they pretend that even the government dare not interfere with them. They are outside
-the power of the local magistrate, just as a German University student is responsible
-to the Faculty, but not to the police. They are honest and faithful in their business,
-delivering packages with certainty to the most remote places in the kingdom. They
-are rather independent of the people, and even bully the officers. When they have
-received an insult or injustice, or too low wages, they “strike” in a body and retire
-from the district. This puts a stop to all travel and business, until these grievances
-are settled or submission to their own terms is made.
-</p>
-<p>Owing to the fact that the country at large is so lacking in the shops and stores
-so common in other countries, and that, instead, fairs on set days are so numerous
-in the towns and villages, the guild of <span class="corr" id="xd31e3901" title="Source: pedlers">peddlers</span> and hucksters is very large and influential. The class includes probably 200,000
-able-bodied adult persons, who in the various provinces move freely among the people,
-and are thus useful to the government as spies, detectives, messengers, and, in time
-of need, soldiers. It was from this class that the Corean battalions which figured
-prominently in the affair of December 4–6, 1887, were recruited.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb244">[<a href="#pb244">244</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch28" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1069">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XXVIII.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">SOCIAL LIFE.—WOMAN AND THE FAMILY.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">According to the opinions of the French missionaries, who were familiar with the social
-life of the people, a Corean woman has no moral existence. She is an instrument of
-pleasure or of labor; but never man’s companion or equal. She has no name. In childhood
-she receives indeed a surname by which she is known in the family, and by near friends,
-but at the age of puberty, none but her father and mother employ this appellative.
-To all others she is “the sister” of such a one, or “the daughter” of so-and-so. After
-her marriage her name is buried. She is absolutely nameless. Her own parents allude
-to her by employing the name of the district or ward in which she has married. Her
-parents-in-law speak of her by the name of the place in which she lived before marriage,
-as women rarely marry in the same village with their husbands. When she bears children,
-she is “the mother” of so-and-so. When a woman appears for trial before a magistrate,
-in order to save time and trouble, she receives a special name for the time being.
-The women below the middle class work very hard. Farm labor is done chiefly by them.
-Manure is applied by the women, rarely by the men. The women carry lunch to the laborers
-in the field, eating what is left for their share. In going to market, the women carry
-the heavier load. In their toilet, the women use rouge, white powders, and hair oil.
-They shave the eyebrows to a narrow line—that is, to a perfectly clean arch, with
-nothing straggling. They have luxuriant hair, and, in addition, use immense switches
-to fill out large coiffures.
-</p>
-<p>In the higher classes of society, etiquette demands that the children of the two sexes
-be separated after the age of eight or ten years. After that time the boys dwell entirely
-in the men’s apartments, to study and even to eat and drink. The girls remain secluded
-in the women’s quarters. The boys are taught that it is a shameful thing even to set
-foot in the female part of the house. <span class="pageNum" id="pb245">[<a href="#pb245">245</a>]</span>The girls are told that it is disgraceful even to be seen by males, so that gradually
-they seek to hide themselves whenever any of the male sex appear. These customs, continued
-from childhood to old age, result in destroying the family life. A Corean of good
-taste only occasionally holds conversation with his wife, whom he regards as being
-far beneath him. He rarely consults her on anything serious, and though living under
-the same roof, one may say that husband and wife are widely separated. The female
-apartments among the higher classes resemble, in most respects, the zenanas of India.
-The men chat, smoke, and enjoy themselves in the outer rooms, and the women receive
-their parents and friends in the interior apartments. The same custom, based upon
-the same prejudice, hinders the common people in their moments of leisure from remaining
-in their own houses. The men seek the society of their male neighbors, and the women,
-on their part, unite together for local gossip. In the higher classes, when a young
-woman has arrived at marriageable age, none even of her own relatives, except those
-nearest of kin, is allowed to see or speak to her. Those who are excepted from this
-rule must address her with the most ceremonious reserve. After their marriage, the
-women are inaccessible. They are nearly always confined to their apartments, nor can
-they even look out in the streets without permission of their lords. So strict is
-this rule that fathers have on occasions killed their daughters, husbands their wives,
-and wives have committed suicide when strangers have touched them even with their
-fingers. The common romances or novels of the country expatiate on the merits of many
-a Corean Lucretia. In some cases, however, this exaggerated modesty produces the very
-results it is intended to avoid. If a bold villain or too eager paramour should succeed
-in penetrating secretly the apartments of a noble lady, she dare not utter a cry,
-nor oppose the least resistance which might attract attention; for then, whether guilty
-or not, she would be dishonored forever by the simple fact that a man had entered
-her chamber. Every Corean husband is a Cæsar in this respect. If, however, the affair
-remains a secret, her reputation is saved.
-</p>
-<p>There is, however, another side. Though counting for nothing in society, and nearly
-so in their family, they are surrounded by a certain sort of exterior respect. They
-are always addressed in the formulas of honorific language. The men always step aside
-in the street to allow a woman to pass, even though she be of the <span class="pageNum" id="pb246">[<a href="#pb246">246</a>]</span>poorer classes. The apartments of females are inviolable even to the minions of the
-law. A noble who takes refuge in his wife’s room may not be seized. Only in cases
-of rebellion is he dragged forth, for in that case his family are reckoned as accomplices
-in his guilt. In other crimes the accused must in some way be enticed outside, where
-he may be legally arrested. When a <span class="corr" id="xd31e3918" title="Source: pedler">peddler</span> visits the house to show his wares, he waits until the doors of the women’s apartments
-are shut. This done, his goods are examined in the outer apartments, which are open
-to all. When a man wishes to mend, or go up on his roof, he first notifies his neighbors,
-in order that they may shut their doors and windows, lest he risk the horrible suspicion
-of peeping at the women. As the Coreans do not see a “man in the moon,” but only a
-rabbit pounding drugs, or a lady banished there for a certain fault, according as
-they are most familiar with Sanskrit or the Chinese story, the females are not afraid
-of this luminary, nor are the men jealous of her, the moon being female in their ideas
-of gender.
-</p>
-<p>Marriage in Chō-sen is a thing with which a woman has little or nothing to do. The
-father of the young man communicates, either by call or letter, with the father of
-the girl whom he wishes his son to marry. This is often done without consulting the
-tastes or character of either, and usually through a middle-man or go-between. The
-fathers settle the time of the wedding after due discussion of the contract. A favorable
-day is appointed by the astrologers, and the arrangements are perfected. Under this
-aspect marriage seems an affair of small importance, but in reality it is marriage
-only that gives one any civil rank or influence in society. Every unmarried person
-is treated as a child. He may commit all sorts of foolishness without being held to
-account. His capers are not noticed, for he is not supposed to think or act seriously.
-Even the unmarried young men of twenty-five or thirty years of age can take no part
-in social reunions, or speak on affairs of importance, but must hold their tongues,
-be seen but not heard. Marriage is emancipation. Even if mated at twelve or thirteen
-years of age, the married are adults. The bride takes her place among the matrons,
-and the young man has a right to speak among the men and to wear a hat. The badge
-of single or of married life is the hair. Before marriage, the youth, who goes bareheaded,
-wears a simple tress, hanging down his back. The nuptial tie is, in reality, a knot
-of hair, for in wedlock the hair is bound up on the top of the head and is cultivated
-on all parts of <span class="pageNum" id="pb247">[<a href="#pb247">247</a>]</span>the scalp. According to old traditions, men ought never to clip a single hair; but
-in the capital the young gallants, in order to add to their personal attractions—with
-a dash of fashionable defiance—trim their locks so that their coiffure will not increase
-in size more than a hen’s egg. The women, on the contrary, not only preserve all their
-own hair, but procure false switches and braids to swell their coiffures to fashionable
-bulk. They make up two large tresses, which are rolled to the back and top of the
-head, and secured by a long pin of silver or copper. The common people roll their
-plaits around their heads, like a turban, and shave the front of the scalp. Young
-persons who insist on remaining single, or bachelors arrived at a certain or uncertain
-age, and who have not yet found a wife, secretly cut off their hair, or get it done
-by fraud, in order to pass for married folks and avoid being treated as children.
-Such a custom, however, is a gross violation of morals and etiquette. (See illustration,
-page 161.)
-</p>
-<p>On the evening before the wedding, the young lady who is to be married invites one
-of her friends to change her virginal coiffure to that of a married woman.
-</p>
-<p>The bridegroom-to-be also invites one of his acquaintance to “do up” his hair in manly
-style. The persons appointed to perform this service are chosen with great care, and
-as changing the hair marks the turning-point in life, the hair-dresser of this occasion
-is called the “hand of honor,” and answers to the bridesmaid and groomsman of other
-countries.
-</p>
-<p>On the marriage-day, in the house of the groom, a platform is set up and richly adorned
-with decorative woven stuffs. Parents, friends, and acquaintances assemble in a crowd.
-The couple to be married—who may never have seen or spoken to each other—are brought
-in and take their places on the platform, face to face. There they remain for a few
-minutes. They salute each other with profound obeisance, but utter not a word. This
-constitutes the ceremony of marriage. Each then retires, on either side; the bride
-to the female, the groom to the male apartments, where feasting and amusement, after
-fashions in vogue in Chō-sen, take place. The expense of a wedding is considerable,
-and the bridegroom must be unstinting in his hospitality. Any failure in this particular
-may subject him to unpleasant practical jokes.
-</p>
-<p>On her wedding-day, the young bride must preserve absolute silence, both on the marriage
-platform and in the nuptial chamber. Etiquette requires this at least among the nobility.
-Though <span class="pageNum" id="pb248">[<a href="#pb248">248</a>]</span>overwhelmed with questions and compliments, silence is her duty. She must rest mute
-and impassive as a statue. She seats herself in a corner clothed in all the robes
-she can bear upon her person. Her husband may disrobe her if he wishes, but she must
-take no part or hinder him. If she utters a word or makes a gesture, she is made the
-butt of the jokes and gossip of her husband’s house or neighborhood. The female servants
-of the house place themselves in a peeping position to listen or look through the
-windows, and are sure to publish what they see and hear amiss. Or this may be done
-to discover whether the husband is pleased with his wife, or how he behaves to her,
-as is the case in Japan. A bit of gossip—evidently a stock story—is the following
-from Dallet:
-</p>
-<p>A newly married Corean groom spent a whole day among his male friends, in order to
-catch some words from his wife at their first interview, after their hours of separation.
-His spouse was informed of this, and perhaps resolved to be obstinate. Her husband,
-having vainly tried to make her speak, at last told her that on consulting the astrologers
-they had said that his wife was mute from birth. He now saw that such was the case,
-and was resolved not to keep for his wife a dumb woman. Now in a Corean wedding, it
-is quite possible that such an event may take place. One of the contracting parties
-may be deaf, mute, blind, or impotent. It matters not. The marriage exists. But the
-wife, stung by her husband’s words, broke out in an angry voice, “Alas, the horoscope
-drawn for my partner is still more true. The diviner announced that I should marry
-the son of a rat.” This, to a Corean, is a great insult, as it attaints father and
-son, and hence the husband and his father. The shouts of laughter from the eavesdropping
-female servants added to the discomfiture of the young husband, who had gained his
-point of making his bride use her tongue at a heavy expense, for long did his friends
-jeer at him for his bravado, and chaff him at catching a Tartar.
-</p>
-<p>From the language, and from Japanese sources, we obtain some side-lights on the nuptial
-ceremony and married life. In Corean phrase <i>hon-sang</i> (the wedding and the funeral) are the two great events of life. Many are the terms
-relating to marriage, and the synonyms for conjugal union. “To take the hat,” “to
-clip the hair,” “to don the tuft,” “to sit on the mat,” are all in use among the gentlemen
-of the peninsula to denote the act or state of marriage. The hat and the hair play
-an important part in the transition from single to double blessedness. All who <span class="pageNum" id="pb249">[<a href="#pb249">249</a>]</span>wear their locks <i>ta-rai</i>, or in a tress behind, are youths and maidens. Those with the tuft or top-knot are
-married. At his wedding and during the first year, the bridegroom wears a cap, made
-of a yellow herb, which is supposed to grow only near Sunto. Other honeymoon caps
-are melon-shaped, and made of sable skin. <span class="corr" id="xd31e3942" title="Source: Ater">After</span> the <i>chung-mai</i>, or middle-man, has arranged the match, and the day is appointed for the <i>han-sa</i>, or wedding, the bride chooses two or three maiden friends as “bridesmaids.” If rich,
-the bride goes to her future husband’s house in a palanquin; if poor, she rides on
-horseback. Even the humblest maid uses a sort of cap or veil, with ornaments on the
-breast, back, and at the girdle. When she cannot buy, she borrows. The prominent symbolic
-figure at the wedding is a goose; which, in Corean eyes, is the emblem of conjugal
-fidelity. Sometimes this <i>mok-an</i> is of gilded wood, sometimes it is made out of a fish for eating, again it is a live
-bird brought in a cloth with the head visible. If in the house, as is usual, the couple
-ascend the piled mats or dais and the reciprocal prostrations, or acts of mutual consent,
-form the sacramental part of the ceremony, and constitute marriage. The bride bows
-four times to her father-in-law and twice to the groom. The groom then bows four times
-to the bride. Other symbolic emblems are the fantastic shapes of straw (<i>otsuka</i>) presented to bride and groom alike. Dried pheasant is also brought in and cut. A
-gourd-bottle of rice-wine, decorated or tied with red and blue thread, is handed by
-the bride to the groom. The bridesmaids standing beside the couple pour the liquid
-and pass for exchange the one little “cup of the wine of mutual joy,” several times
-filled and emptied.
-</p>
-<p>Then begins the wedding-feast, when the guests drink and make merry. The important
-document certifying the fact of wedlock is called the <i>hon-se-chi</i>, and is signed by both parties. When the woman is unable to write, she makes “her
-mark” (<i>siu-pon</i>) by spreading out her hand and tracing with a pencil the exact profile of palm, wrist,
-and fingers. Sometimes the groom, in addition to his four prostrations, which are
-significant of fidelity to the bride, gives to his father-in-law a written oath of
-constancy to his daughter. Faithfulness is, however, a typical feminine, rather than
-masculine, virtue in the hermit nation. The <i>pong-kang</i>, a kind of wild canary bird, is held up to the wife as her model of conjugal fidelity.
-Another large bird, somewhat exceeding a duck in size, and called the <i>ching-kiong</i>, is said never to remate after <span class="pageNum" id="pb250">[<a href="#pb250">250</a>]</span>the death of its consort. Corean widows are expected to imitate this virtuous fowl.
-In some places may be seen the vermilion arch or monumental gateway erected to some
-widow of faithful memory who wedded but once. Married women wear two rings on the
-ring finger. Sixty years, or a cycle, completes the ideal length of marital life,
-and “a golden wedding” is then celebrated.
-</p>
-<p>Among the most peculiar of women’s rights in Chō-sen is the curious custom forbidding
-any males in Seoul from being out after eight o’clock in the evening. When this Corean
-curfew sounds, all men must hie in-doors, while women are free to ramble abroad until
-one <span class="asc">A.M.</span> To transgress this law of <i>pem-ya</i> brings severe penalty upon the offender. In-doors, the violation of the privacy of
-the woman’s quarters is punishable by exile or severe flagellation.
-</p>
-<p>The following story, from Dallet, further illustrates some phases of their marriage
-customs, and shows that, while polygamy is not allowed, concubinage is a recognized
-institution:
-</p>
-<p>A noble wished to marry his own daughter and that of his deceased brother to eligible
-young men. Both maidens were of the same age. He wished to wed both well, but especially
-his own child. With this idea in view he had already refused some good offers. Finally
-he made a proposal to a family noted alike for pedigree and riches. After hesitating
-some time which of the maidens he should dispose of first, he finally decided upon
-his own child. Without having seen his future son-in-law, he pledged his word and
-agreed upon the night. Three days before the ceremony he learned from the diviners
-that the young man chosen was silly, exceedingly ugly, and very ignorant. What should
-he do? He could not retreat. He had given his word, and in such a case the law is
-inflexible. In his despair he resolved upon a plan to render abortive what he could
-not avert. On the day of the marriage, he appeared in the women’s apartments, and
-gave orders in the most imperative manner that his niece, and not his daughter, should
-don the marriage coiffure and the wedding-dress, and mount the nuptial platform. His
-stupefied daughter could not but acquiesce. The two cousins being of about the same
-height, the substitution was easy, and the ceremony proceeded according to the usual
-forms. The new bridegroom passed the afternoon in the men’s apartments, where he met
-his supposed father-in-law. What was the amazement of the old noble to find that far
-from being stupid and ugly, as depicted by the diviners, the young man <span class="pageNum" id="pb251">[<a href="#pb251">251</a>]</span>was good-looking, well-formed, intelligent, highly educated, and amiable in manners.
-Bitterly regretting the loss of so accomplished a son-in-law, he determined to repair
-the evil. He secretly ordered that, instead of his niece, his daughter should be introduced
-as the bride. He knew well that the young man would suspect nothing, for during the
-salutations the brides are always so muffled up with dresses and loaded with ornaments
-that it is impossible to distinguish their countenances.
-</p>
-<p>All happened as the old man desired. During the two or three days which he passed
-with the new family, he congratulated himself upon obtaining so excellent a son-in-law.
-The latter, on his part, showed himself more and more charming, and so gained the
-heart of his supposed father-in-law that, in a burst of confidence, the latter revealed
-to him all that had happened. He told of the diviners’ reports concerning him, and
-the successive substitutions of niece for daughter and daughter for niece.
-</p>
-<p>The young man was at first speechless, then, recovering his composure, said: “All
-right, and that is a very smart trick on your part. But it is clear that both the
-two young persons belong to me, and I claim them. Your niece is my lawful wife, since
-she has made to me the legal salute, and your daughter—introduced by yourself into
-my marriage-chamber—has become of right and law my concubine.” The crafty old man,
-caught in his own net, had nothing to answer. The two young women were conducted to
-the house of the new husband and master, and the old noble was jeered at both for
-his lack of address and his bad faith.
-</p>
-<p>It is the reciprocal salutation before witnesses on the wedding-dais that constitutes
-legitimate marriage. From that moment a husband may claim the woman as his wife. If
-he repudiates or divorces her, he may not marry another woman while his former wife
-is living, but he is free to take as many concubines as he can support. It is sufficient
-that a man is able to prove that he has had intimate relations with a maiden or a
-widow; she then becomes his legal property. No person, not even her parents, can claim
-her if the man persists in keeping her. If she escape, he may use force to bring her
-back to his house. Conjugal fidelity—obligatory on the woman—is not required of the
-husband, and a wife is little more than a slave of superior rank. Among the nobles,
-the young bridegroom spends three or four days with his bride, and then absents himself
-from her for a considerable time, to prove that he does not esteem her too highly.
-Etiquette dooms <span class="pageNum" id="pb252">[<a href="#pb252">252</a>]</span>her to a species of widowhood, while he spends his hours of relaxation in the society
-of his concubines. To act otherwise would be considered in very bad taste, and highly
-unfashionable. Instances are known of nobles who, having dropped a few tears at the
-death of their wives, have had to absent themselves from the saloons of their companions
-to avoid the torrent of ribaldry and jeers at such weakness. Such eccentricity of
-conduct makes a man the butt of long-continued <span class="corr" id="xd31e3984" title="Source: railery">raillery</span>.
-</p>
-<p>Habituated from infancy to such a yoke, and regarding themselves as of an inferior
-race, most women submit to their lot with exemplary resignation. Having no idea of
-progress, or of an infraction of established usage, they bear all things. They become
-devoted and obedient wives, jealous of the reputation and well-being of their husbands.
-They even submit calmly to the tyranny and unreason of their mothers-in-law. Often,
-however, there is genuine rebellion in the household. Adding to her other faults of
-character, violence and insubordination, a Corean wife quarrels with her mother-in-law,
-makes life to her husband a burden, and incessantly provokes scenes of choler and
-scandal. Among the lower classes, in such cases, a few strokes of a stick or blows
-of the fist bring the wife to terms. In the higher classes it is not proper to strike
-a woman, and the husband has no other course than that of divorce. If it is not easy
-for him to marry again, he submits. If his wife, not content with tormenting him,
-is unfaithful to him, or, deserting his bed, goes back to her own house, he can lead
-her before the magistrate, who after administering a beating with the paddles, gives
-her as a concubine to one of his underlings.
-</p>
-<p>Women of tact and energy make themselves respected and conquer their legitimate position,
-as the following example shows. It is taken by Dallet from a Corean treatise on morals
-for the youth of both sexes:
-</p>
-<p>Toward the end of the last century a noble of the capital, of high rank, lost his
-wife, by whom he had had several children. His advanced age rendered a second marriage
-difficult. Nevertheless, the middle-men (or marriage-brokers employed in such cases)
-decided that a match could be made with the daughter of a poor noble in the province
-of Kiung-sang. On the appointed day he appeared at the mansion of his future father-in-law,
-and the couple mounted the stage to make the salute according to custom. Our grandee,
-casting his eyes upon his new wife, stopped for the moment thunderstruck. She was
-very fat, ugly, hump-backed, <span class="pageNum" id="pb253">[<a href="#pb253">253</a>]</span>and appeared to be as slightly favored with gifts of mind as of body.
-</p>
-<p>But he could not withdraw, and he played his part firmly. He resolved neither to take
-her to his house nor to have anything to do with her. The two or three days which
-it was proper to pass in his father-in-law’s house being spent, he departed for the
-capital and paid no further attention to his new relatives.
-</p>
-<p>The deserted wife, who was a person of a great deal of intelligence, resigned herself
-to her isolation and remained in her father’s house, keeping herself informed, from
-time to time, of what happened to her husband. She learned, after two or three years,
-that he had become minister of the second rank, and that he had succeeded in marrying
-his two sons very honorably. Some years later, she heard that he proposed to celebrate,
-with all proper pomp, the festivities of his sixtieth birthday. Immediately, without
-hesitation and in spite of the remonstrances and opposition of her parents, she took
-the road to the capital. There hiring a palanquin, she was taken to the house of the
-minister and announced herself as his wife. She alighted, entered the vestibule, and
-presented herself with an air of assurance and a glance of tranquillity at the women
-of the united families. Seating herself at the place of honor, she ordered some fire
-brought, and with the greatest calmness lighted her pipe before the amazed domestics.
-The news was carried to the outer apartments of the gentlemen, but, according to etiquette,
-no one appeared surprised.
-</p>
-<p>Finally the lady called together the household slaves and said to them, in a severe
-tone, “What house is this? I am your mistress, and yet no one comes to receive me.
-Where have you been brought up? I ought to punish you severely, but I shall pardon
-you this time.” They hastened to conduct her into the midst of all the female guests.
-“Where are my sons-in-law?” she demanded. “How is it that they do not come to salute
-me? They forget that I am without any doubt, by my marriage, the mother of their wives,
-and that I have a right, on their part, to all the honors due to their own mothers.”
-</p>
-<p>Forthwith the two daughters-in-law presented themselves with a shamed air, and made
-their excuses as well as they were able. She rebuked them gently, and exhorted them
-to show themselves more scrupulous in the accomplishment of their duties. She then
-gave different orders in her quality as mistress of the house.
-</p>
-<p>Some hours after, seeing that neither of the men appeared, she <span class="pageNum" id="pb254">[<a href="#pb254">254</a>]</span>called a slave to her, and said to him: “My two sons are surely not absent on such
-a day as this. See if they are in the men’s apartments, and bid them come here.” The
-sons presented themselves before her, much embarrassed, and blundered out some excuses.
-“How?” said she, “you have heard of my arrival for several hours and have not come
-to salute me? With such bad bringing up, and an equal ignorance of principles of action,
-how will you make your way in the world? I have pardoned my slaves and my daughters-in-law
-for their want of politeness, but for you who are men I cannot let this fault pass
-unpunished.” With this she called a slave and bade him give them some strokes on the
-legs with a rod. Then she added, “For your father, the minister, I am his servant,
-and I have not had orders to yield to him; but, as for you, henceforth do you act
-so as not to forget proprieties.” Finally the minister himself, thoroughly astonished
-at all that had passed, was obliged to come to terms and to salute his wife. Three
-days after, the festivities being ended, he returned to the palace. The king asked
-familiarly if all had passed off happily. The minister narrated in detail the history
-of his marriage, the unexpected arrival of his wife, and how she had conducted herself.
-The king, who was a man of sense, replied: “You have acted unjustly toward your wife.
-She appears to me to be a woman of spirit and extraordinary tact. Her behavior is
-admirable, and I don’t know how to praise her enough. I hope you will repair the wrongs
-you have done her.” The minister promised, and some days later solemnly conferred
-upon his wife one of the highest dignities of the court.
-</p>
-<p>The woman who is legally espoused, whether widow or slave, enters into and shares
-the entire social estate of her husband. Even if she be not noble by birth she becomes
-so by marrying a noble, and her children are so likewise. If two brothers, for example,
-espouse an aunt and a niece, and the niece falls to the lot of the elder, she becomes
-thereby the elder sister, and the aunt will be treated as a younger sister. This relation
-of elder and younger sisters makes an immense difference in life, position, and treatment,
-in all Chinese Asia.
-</p>
-<p>It is not proper for a widow to remarry. In the higher classes a widow is expected
-to weep for her deceased husband, and to wear mourning all her life. It would be infamy
-for her, however young, to marry a second time. The king who reigned 1469–1494 excluded
-children of remarried widows from competition at the public examinations, <span class="pageNum" id="pb255">[<a href="#pb255">255</a>]</span>and from admittance to any official employment. Even to the present day such children
-are looked upon as illegitimate.
-</p>
-<p>Among a people so passionate as Coreans, grave social disorders result from such a
-custom. The young noble widows who cannot remarry become, in most cases, secretly
-or openly the concubines of those who wish to support them. The others who strive
-to live chastely are rudely exposed to the inroads of passion. Sometimes they are
-made intoxicated by narcotics which are put in their drink, and they wake to find
-themselves dishonored. Sometimes they are abducted by force, during the night, by
-the aid of hired bandits. When they become victims of violence, there is no remedy
-possible. It often happens that young widows commit suicide, after the death of their
-husbands, in order to prove their fidelity and to secure their honor and reputation
-beyond the taint of suspicion. Such women are esteemed models of chastity, and there
-is no end to their praises among the nobles. Through their influence, the king often
-decrees a memorial gateway, column, or temple, intended to be a monument of their
-heroism and virtue. Thus it has often happened that Christian widows begged of the
-missionary fathers permission to commit suicide, if attempts were made to violate
-their houses or their persons; and it was with difficulty that they could be made
-to comprehend the Christian doctrine concerning suicide.
-</p>
-<p>The usual method of self-destruction is <i>ja-mun</i>, or cutting the throat, or opening the abdomen with a sword. In this the Coreans
-are like the Japanese, neck-cutting or piercing being the feminine, and <i>hara-kiri</i> (belly-cutting) the masculine, method of ending life at one’s own hands.
-</p>
-<p>Among the common people, second marriages are forbidden neither by law nor custom,
-but wealthy families endeavor to imitate the nobles in this custom as in others. Among
-the poor, necessity knows no law. The men must have their food prepared for them,
-and women cannot, and do not willingly die of famine when a husband offers himself.
-Hence second marriages among the lowly are quite frequent.
-</p>
-<hr class="tb"><p>
-</p>
-<p>Most of the facts stated in this chapter are drawn from Dallet’s “History of the [Roman
-Catholic] Church in Corea.” Making due allowance for the statements of celibate priests,
-who are aliens in religion, nationality, and civilization, the picture of the social
-life of Chō-sen is that of abominable heathenism.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb256">[<a href="#pb256">256</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch29" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1077">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XXIX.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">CHILD LIFE.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Judging from a collection of the toys of Corean children, and from their many terms
-of affection and words relating to games and sports, festivals and recreation, nursery
-stories, etc., the life of the little Kim or Ni must be a pleasant one. For the blessings
-of offspring the parents offer rice to the god of the household (<i>sam-sin-hang</i>), whose tiny shrine holds a place of honor in some ornamental niche in the best room.
-When the baby begins to grow, cradles being unknown, the mother puts the infant to
-sleep by <i>to-tak, to-tak</i>—patting it lightly on the stomach. When it is able to take its first step across
-the floor—the tiger-skin rug being ready to ease its possible fall—this important
-household event, spoken of with joy as the <i>ja-pak, ja-pak</i>, is described to the neighbors. As the child grows up and is able to walk and run
-about, the hair is mostly shaved off, so that only a “button of jade” is left on the
-top of the head. This infantile tuft takes its name from the badge or togle worn on
-the top of the men’s caps in winter. A child, “three feet high,” very beautiful and
-well formed, docile and strong, if a son, is spoken of “as a thousand-mile horse”—one
-who promises to make an alert and enduring man. A child noted for filial piety will
-even cheerfully commit <i>tan-ji</i>—cutting his finger to furnish his blood as a remedy for the sickness of father or
-mother. Should the child die, a stone effigy or statue of itself is set up before
-his grave.
-</p>
-<p>In the capital and among the higher classes, the children’s toys are very handsome,
-ranking as real works of art, while in every class the playthings of the tiny Corean
-humanity form but a miniature copy of the life of their elders. Among the living pets,
-the monkey is the favorite. These monkeys are fitted with jackets, and when plump
-and not too mischievous make capital pets for the boys. Puppies share the affections
-of the nursery with the tiger on wheels. Made of paper pulp and painted, this harmless
-effigy of the king of beasts is pulled about with a string. A <span class="pageNum" id="pb257">[<a href="#pb257">257</a>]</span>jumping-jack is but a copy of the little boy who pulls it. A jerk of the string draws
-in the pasteboard tongue, and sends the trumpet to his mouth. Official life is mirrored
-in the tasselled umbrella, the fringed hats, and the toy-chariot with fancy wheels.
-Other toys, such as rattles, flags, and drums, exactly imitate the larger models with
-which the grown-up men and women amuse themselves. All these are named, fashioned,
-and decorated in a style peculiarly Corean. Among the most common of the children’s
-plays are the following: A ring is hidden in a heap of sand, and the urchins poke
-sticks into and through the pile to find it. Whoever transfixes the circlet wins the
-game, suggesting our girls’ game of grace-hoop, though often taking a longer time.
-Rosettes or pinwheels of paper are made and fastened on the end of sticks. Running
-before the breeze, the miniature windmills afford hilarious delight.
-</p>
-<p>The children’s way of bringing rain is to move the lips up and down, distending the
-cheeks and pressing the breath through the lips. Playing “dinner” with tiny cups and
-dishes, and imitating the ponderous etiquette of their elders, is a favorite amusement.
-See-saw is rougher and more exhilarating. Games of response are often played with
-hands, head, or feet, in which one watches the motions of his rival, opens or shuts
-his hands, and pays a forfeit or loses the game when a false move is made. For the
-coast-dwellers, the sea-shore, with the rocks which are the refuge of the shell-fish,
-is the inexhaustible playground of the children. Looking down in the clear deep water
-of the archipelago they see the coral reefs, the bright flower-gardens of marine plants,
-and shoals of striped, banded, crimson-tailed, and green-finned fish, which, in the
-eastern seas, glitter with tints of gold and silver. The children, half naked, catch
-the crabs and lobsters, learning how to hold their prizes after many a nab and pinch,
-which bring infantile tears and squalls. One of the common playthings of Corean children,
-the “baby’s rattle,” is the dried leathery egg of the skate, which with a few pebbles
-inside makes the infant, if not its parents, happy with the din.
-</p>
-<p>Besides a game of patting and dabbling in the water—<i>chal-pak, chal-pak</i>—boys amuse themselves by fishing with hook and line or net. One method is to catch
-fish by means of the <i>yek-kui</i>. This is a plant of peppery taste, which poisons or stupefies the fish that bite
-the tempting tip, making them easy prey. More serious indoor games played by women
-and children are <i>pa-tok</i>, or backgammon; <span class="pageNum" id="pb258">[<a href="#pb258">258</a>]</span><i>sang-pi-yen</i>, dominoes; <i>siu-tu-chen</i>, game of eighty cards; and <i>chang-keui</i>, or chess. All these pastimes are quite different from ours of the same name, yet
-enough like them to be recognized as belonging to the species named. The festivals
-most intensely enjoyed by the children are those of “Treading the Bridges,” “The Meeting
-of the Star Lovers,” and the “Mouse Fire.” There is one evening in the year in which
-men and children, as well as women, are allowed to be out in the streets of the capital.
-The people spend the greater part of the night in passing and repassing upon the little
-bridges of stone. It is a general “night out” for all the people. Comedians, singers,
-harlequins, and merry-makers of all kinds are abroad, and it being moonlight, all
-have a good time in “treading the bridges.” On the seventh day of the seventh month,
-the festival honored in China, Corea, and Japan takes place, for which children wait,
-in expectation, many days in advance. Sweetmeats are prepared, and bamboos strung
-with strips of colored paper are the symbols of rejoicing. On this night the two stars
-Capricornus and Alpha Lyra (or the Herd-boy and Spinning Maiden) are in conjunction
-in the milky way<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e4056src" href="#xd31e4056">1</a> (or the River of Heaven), and wishes made at this time are supposed to come true.
-</p>
-<p><i>Chu-pul</i>, or the Mouse Fire, occurs in the twelfth month, on the day of the Mouse (or rat).
-Children light brands or torches of dry reeds or straw, and set fire to the dry herbage,
-stubble, and shrubbery on the borders of the roads, in order to singe the hair of
-the various field or ground-burrowing animals, or burn them out, so as to obtain a
-plentiful crop of cotton.
-</p>
-<p>At school, the pupils study according to the method all over Asia, that is, out loud,
-and noisily. This <i>kang-siong</i>, or deafening buzz, is supposed to be necessary to sound knowledge. Besides learning
-the Chinese characters and the vernacular alphabet, with tongue, ear, eye, and pen,
-the children master the <i>ku-ku</i> (“nine times nine”), or the multiplication table, and learn to work the four simple
-rules of arithmetic, and even fractions, involution, and evolution on the chon-pan,
-or sliding numeral frame. A “red mark” is a vermilion token of a good lesson, made
-by the examiner; and for a good examination passed rewards are given in the form of
-a first-rate dinner, or one or all of “the four friends of the study table”—pens,
-ink, paper, and inkstand, or brushes, sticks of “India” ink, rolls of unsized paper,
-and an inkstone <span class="pageNum" id="pb259">[<a href="#pb259">259</a>]</span>or water-dropper. Writing a good autograph signature—“one’s own pen”—is highly commended.
-Sometimes money is given for encouragement, which the promising lad saves up in an
-earthen savings-bank. Not a few of the youth of the humbler classes, who work in the
-fields by day and study the characters by night, rise to be able officers who fill
-high stations.
-</p>
-<p>The French missionaries assure us that the normal Corean is fond of children, especially
-of sons, who in his eyes are worth ten times as much as daughters. Such a thing as
-exposure of children is almost unknown. In times of severe famine this may happen
-after failure to give away or sell for a season, that they may be bought back. Parents
-rarely find their family too numerous.
-</p>
-<p>The first thing inculcated in a child’s mind is respect for his father. All insubordination
-is immediately and sternly repressed. Far different is it with the mother. She yields
-to her boy’s caprices and laughs at his faults and vices without rebuke. The child
-soon learns that a mother’s authority is next to nothing. In speaking of his father
-a lad often adds the words “severe,” “terrible,” implying the awe and profound respect
-in which he holds his father. (Something of the same feeling prevails as in Japan,
-where the four dreadful things which a lad most fears, and which are expressed in
-a rhyming proverb, are: “Earthquake, wind, fire, and father,” or “daddy.”) On the
-contrary, in speaking of his mother, he adds the words “good,” “indulgent,” “I’m not
-afraid of her,” etc. A son must not play nor smoke in his father’s presence, nor assume
-free or easy posture before him. For lounging, there is a special room, like a nursery.
-The son waits on his father at meals and gets his bed ready. If he is old or sickly,
-the son sleeps near him and does not quit his side night or day. If he is in prison
-the son takes up his abode in the vicinity, to communicate with his parent and furnish
-him with luxuries. In case of imprisonment for treason, the son at the portal, on
-bended knees day and night, awaits the sentence that will reduce himself to slavery.
-If the accused is condemned to exile, the son must at least accompany his father to
-the end of the journey, and, in some cases, share banishment with him. Meeting his
-father in the street, the son must make profound salute on his knees, in the dust,
-or in the ditch. In writing to him, he must make free use of the most exaggerated
-honorifics which the Corean knows.
-</p>
-<p>The practice of adoption is common, as it is abnormally so in all countries where
-ancestral worship is prevalent and underlies <span class="pageNum" id="pb260">[<a href="#pb260">260</a>]</span>all religions. The preservation of the family line is the supreme end and aim of life.
-In effect all those persons are descendants of particular ancestors who will keep
-up the ancestral sacrifices, guard the tablets and observe the numerous funeral and
-mourning ceremonies which make life such a burden in Eastern Asia. Daughters are not
-adopted, because they cannot accomplish the prescribed rites. When parents have only
-a daughter, they marry her to an adopted son, who becomes head of the family so adopted
-into. Even the consent of the adopted, or of his parents, is not always requisite,
-for as it is a social, as well as a religious necessity, the government may be appealed
-to, and, in case of need, forces acceptance of the duty. In this manner, as in the
-patriarchal age of biblical history, a man may be coerced into “raising up seed” to
-defunct ancestors.
-</p>
-<p>Properly, an adoption, to be legal, ought to be registered at the office of the Board
-of Rites, but this practice has fallen into disuse, and it is sufficient to give public
-notice of the fact among the two families concerned. An adoption once made cannot
-be void except by a decree from the Tribunal of Rites, which is difficult to obtain.
-In practice, the system of adoption results in many scandals, quarrels, jealousies,
-and all the train of evils which one familiar with men and women, as they are, might
-argue <i>a priori</i> without the facts at hand. The iron fetters of Asiatic institutions cannot suppress
-human nature.
-</p>
-<p>Primogeniture is the rigid rule. Younger sons, at the time of their marriage, or at
-other important periods of life, receive paternal gifts, now more, now less, according
-to usage, rank, the family fortune, etc., but the bulk of the property belongs to
-the oldest son, on whom the younger sons look as their father. He is the head of the
-family, and regards his father’s children as his own. In all Eastern Asia the bonds
-of family are much closer than among Caucasian people of the present time. All the
-kindred, even to the fifteenth or twentieth degree, whatever their social position,
-rich or poor, educated or illiterate, officials or beggars—form a clan, a tribe, or
-more exactly one single family, all of whose members have mutual interests to sustain.
-The house of one is the house of the other, and each will assist to his utmost another
-of the clan to get money, office, or advantage. The law recognizes this system by
-levying on the clan the imposts and debts which individuals of it cannot pay, holding
-the sodality responsible for the <span class="corr" id="xd31e4083" title="Source: indivdual">individual</span>. To this they submit without complaint or protest.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb261">[<a href="#pb261">261</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Instead of the family being a unit, as in the west, it is only the fragment of a clan,
-a segment in the great circle of kindred. The number of terms expressing relationship
-is vastly greater and much more complex than in English. One is amazed at the exuberance
-of the national vocabulary in this respect. The Coreans are fully as clannish as the
-Chinese, and much more so than the Irish; and in this, as in the Middle Kingdom, lies
-one great obstacle to Christianity or to any kind of individual reform. Marriage cannot
-take place between two persons having the same family cognomen. There are in the kingdom
-only one hundred and forty or fifty family, or rather clan names. Yet many of these
-names are widespread through the realm. All are formed of a single Chinese letter,
-except six or seven, which are composed of two characters. To distinguish the different
-families who bear the same patronymic, they add the name which they call the <i>pu</i>, or Gentile name, to indicate the place whence the family originally came. In the
-case of two persons wishing to marry, if this <i>pu</i> is the same, they are in the eyes of the law relatives, and marriage is forbidden.
-If the <i>pu</i> of each is different, they may wed. The most common names, such as Kim and Ni—answering
-to our Smith and Jones—have more than a score of <i>pu</i>, which arise from more than twenty families, the place of whose origin is in each
-case different. The family name is never used alone. It is always followed by a surname;
-or only the word <i>so-pang</i>, junior, <i>sang-wen</i>, senior, lord, sir, etc.
-</p>
-<p>Male adults usually have three personal names, that given in childhood, the common
-proper name, and the common legal name, while to this last is often added the title.
-Besides these, various aliases, nicknames, fanciful and punning appellatives, play
-their part, to the pleasure or vexation of their object. This custom is the source
-of endless confusion in documents and common life. It was formerly in vogue in Japan,
-but was abolished by the mikado’s government in 1872, and now spares as much trouble
-to tongue, <span class="corr" id="xd31e4104" title="Source: tpyes">types</span>, and pens, as a reform in our alphabet and spelling would save the English-speaking
-world. As in Nippon, a Corean female has but one name from the cradle to the grave.
-The titles “Madame,” or “Madame widow,” are added in mature life. As in old Japan,
-the common people do not, as a rule, have distinguishing individual names, and among
-them nicknames are very common. Corean etiquette forbids that the name of father,
-mother, or uncle be used in conversation, or even pronounced aloud.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb262">[<a href="#pb262">262</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e4056">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e4056src">1</a></span> See “The Meeting of the Star Lovers,” in Japanese Fairy World.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e4056src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch30" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1085">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XXX.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">HOUSEKEEPING, DIET, AND COSTUME.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Corean architecture is in a very primitive condition. The castles, fortifications,
-temples, monasteries and public buildings cannot approach in magnificence those of
-Japan or China. The country, though boasting hoary antiquity, has few ruins in stone.
-The dwellings are tiled or thatched houses, almost invariably one story high. In the
-smaller towns these are not arranged in regular streets, but scattered here and there.
-Even in the cities and capital the streets are narrow and tortuous.
-</p>
-<p>In the rural parts, the houses of the wealthy are embosomed in beautiful groves, with
-gardens surrounded by charming hedges or fences of rushes or split-bamboo. The cities
-show a greater display of red-tiled roofs, as only the officials and nobles are allowed
-this sumptuary honor. Shingles are not much used. The thatching is of rice or barley
-straw, cut close, with ample eaves, and often finished with great <span class="corr" id="xd31e4115" title="Source: neatnesss">neatness</span>.
-</p>
-<p>A low wall of uncemented stone, five or six feet high, surrounds the dwelling, and
-when kept in repair gives an air of neatness and imposing solidity to the estate.
-Often a pretty rampart of flat bamboo or rushes, plaited in the herring-bone pattern,
-surmounts the wall, which may be of pebbles or stratified rock and mortared. Sometimes
-the rampart is of wattle, covered with smooth white plaster, which, with the gateway,
-is also surmounted by an arched roofing of tiles. Instead of regular slanting lines
-of gables, one meets with the curved and pagoda-like roofs seen in China, with a heavy
-central ridge and projecting ornaments of fire-hardened clay, like the “stirrup” or
-“devil” tiles of Japan. These curves greatly add to the beauty of a Corean house,
-because they break the monotony of the lines of Corean architecture.
-</p>
-<p>Doors, windows, and lintels are usually rectangular, and are set in regularly, instead
-of being made odd to relieve the eye, as in Japan. Bamboo is a common material for
-window-frames.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb263">[<a href="#pb263">263</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The foundations are laid on stone set in the earth, and the floor of the humble is
-part of the naked planet. People one grade above the poorest cover the hard ground
-with sheets of oiled paper, which serve as rugs or a carpet. For the better class
-a floor of wood is raised a foot or so above the earth, but in the sleeping- and sitting-room
-of the average family, the “kang” forms a vaulted floor, bed, and stove.
-</p>
-<p>The kang is characteristic of the human dwelling in northeastern Asia. It is a kind
-of tubular oven, in which human beings, instead of potatoes, are baked. It is as though
-we should make a bedstead of bricks, and put foot-stoves under it. The floor is bricked
-over, or built of stone over flues, which run from the fireplace, at one end of the
-house, to the chimney at the other. The fire which boils the pot or roasts the meat
-is thus utilized to warm those sitting or sleeping in the room beyond. The difficulty
-is to keep up a regular heat without being alternately chilled or smothered. With
-wood fuel this is almost impossible, but by dint of tact and regulated draught may
-be accomplished. As in the Swedish porcelain stove, a pail of live coals keeps up
-a good warmth all night. The kangs survive in the <i>kotatsù</i> of Japan.
-</p>
-<p>The “fire” in sentiment and fact is the centre of the Corean home, and the native
-phrase, “he has put out his fire,” is the dire synonym denoting that a man is not
-only cold and fasting, but in want of the necessities of life.
-</p>
-<p>Bed-clothes are of silk, wadded cotton, thick paper, and tiger, wolf, or dog skins,
-the latter often sewn in large sheets like a carpet. Comfort, cleanliness, and luxury
-make the bed of the noble on the warm brick in winter, or cool matting in summer;
-but with the poor, the cold of winter, and insects of summer, with the dirt and rags,
-make sleeping in a Corean hut a hardship. Cushions or bags of rice-chaff form the
-pillows of the rich. The poor man uses a smooth log of wood or slightly raised portion
-of the floor to rest his head upon. “Weariness can snore upon the flint when resty
-sloth finds the down pillow hard.”
-</p>
-<p>Three rooms are the rule in an average house. These are for cooking, eating, and sleeping.
-In the kitchen the most noticeable articles are the <i>ang-pak</i>, or large earthen jars, for holding rice, barley, or water. Each of them is big enough
-to hold a man easily. The second room, containing the kang, is the sleeping apartment,
-and the next is the best room or parlor. Little furniture is the rule. Coreans, like
-the Japanese, sit, not cross-legged, <span class="pageNum" id="pb264">[<a href="#pb264">264</a>]</span>but on their heels. Among the well-to-do, dog-skins, or <i>kat-tei</i>, cover the floor for a carpet, or splendid tiger-skins serve as rugs. Matting is
-common, the best being in the south.
-</p>
-<p>As in Japan, the meals are served on the floor on low <i>sang</i>, or little tables, one for each guest, sometimes one for a couple. The best table
-service is of porcelain, and the ordinary sort of earthenware with white metal or
-copper utensils. The table-cloths are of fine glazed paper and resemble oiled silk.
-No knives or forks are used; instead, chopsticks, laid in paper cases, and, what is
-more common than in China or Japan, spoons are used at every meal. The climax of æsthetic
-taste occurs when a set of historic porcelain and faience of old Corean manufacture
-and decoration, with the tall and long-spouted teapot, are placed on the pearl-inlaid
-table and filled with native delicacies.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p264width" id="p264"><img src="images/p264.png" alt="Table Spread for Festal Occasions." width="685" height="491"><p class="figureHead">Table Spread for Festal Occasions.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>The walls range in quality of decoration from plain mud to colored plaster and paper.
-The Corean wall-paper is of all grades, sometimes as soft as silk, or as thick as
-canvas. <i>Sa-peik</i> is a favorite reddish earth or mortar which serves to rough-cast in rich color tones
-the walls of a room.
-</p>
-<p>Pictures are not common; the artistic sense being satisfied <span class="pageNum" id="pb265">[<a href="#pb265">265</a>]</span>with scrolls of handsome Chinese characters containing moral and literary gems from
-the classics, or the caligraphic triumph of some king, dignitary, or literary friend.
-To possess a sign-manual or autograph scrap of Yung, Hong, or O, the three most renowned
-men of Chō-sen, is reckoned more than a golden manuscript on azure paper.
-</p>
-<p>The windows are square and latticed without or within, and covered with tough paper,
-either oiled or unsized, and moving in grooves—the originals of the Japanese sliding-doors
-and windows. In every part of a Corean house, paper plays an important and useful
-part.
-</p>
-<p>Very fine Venetian blinds are made of threads split from the ever-useful bamboo, which
-secures considerable variety in window decoration. The doors are of wood, paper, or
-plaited bamboo. Glass was, till recently, a nearly unknown luxury in Corea among the
-common people. Even with the nobles, it is rather a curiosity. The windows being made
-of oiled or thin paper, glass is not a necessity. This fact will explain the eagerness
-of the people to possess specimens of this transparent novelty. Even old porter and
-ale bottles, which sailors have thrown away, are eagerly picked up, begged, bought,
-or stolen. An old medicine-vial, among the Coreans, used to fetch the price of a crystal
-goblet among us. The possessor of such a prize as a Bass’ ale bottle will exhibit
-it to his neighbor as a rare curio from the Western barbarians, just as an American
-virtuoso shows off his last new Satsuma vase or box of Soochow lacquer. When English
-ship captains, visiting the coast, gave the Coreans a bottle of wine, the bottle,
-after being emptied, was always carefully returned with extreme politeness as an article
-of great value. The first Corean visitor to the American expedition of 1871, went
-into ecstacies, and his face budded into smiles hitherto thought impossible to the
-grim Corean visage, because the cook gave him an arm-load of empty ale-bottles. The
-height of domestic felicity is reached when a Corean householder can get a morsel
-of glass to fasten into his window or sliding-door, and thus gaze on the outer world
-through this “loophole of retreat.” This not only saves him from the disagreeable
-necessity of punching a finger-hole through the paper to satisfy his curiosity, but
-gives him the advantage of not being seen, and of keeping out the draft. When a whole
-pane has been secured, it is hard to state whether happiness or pride reigns uppermost
-in the owner’s bosom.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb266">[<a href="#pb266">266</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Candlesticks are either tall and upright, resting on the floor in the Japanese style,
-or dish-lamps of common oil are used.
-</p>
-<p>Flint and steel are used to ignite matches made of chips of wood dipped in sulphur,
-by which a “fire-flower” is made to blossom, or in more prosaic English, a flame is
-kindled. Phosphorus matches, imported from Japan, are called by a word signifying
-“fire-sprite,” “will-of-the-wisp,” or <i>ignis-fatuus</i>.
-</p>
-<p>Usually in a <span class="corr" id="xd31e4165" title="Source: gentlemen’s">gentleman’s</span> house there is an ante-room or vestibule, in which neighbors and visitors sit and
-talk, smoke or drink. In this place much freedom is allowed and formalities are laid
-aside. Here are the facilities and the atmosphere which in Western lands are found
-in clubs, coffee- and ale-houses, or obtained from newspapers. One such, of which
-the picture is before us, has in it seats, and looks out on a garden or courtyard.
-On a ledge or window-seat are vases of blossoms and cut flowers; a smaller vase holds
-fans, and another is presumably full of tobacco or some other luxury. Short eave-curtains
-and longer drapery at the side, give an air of inviting comfort to these free and
-easy quarters, where news and gossip are exchanged. These <i>oi-tiang</i>, or outer apartments, are for strangers and men only, and women are never expected
-or allowed to be present.
-</p>
-<p>The Ching-ja is a small house or room on the bank of a river, or overlooking some
-bit of natural scenery, to which picnic parties resort, the Coreans most heartily
-enjoying out-door festivity, in places which sky, water, and foliage make beautiful
-to the eye.
-</p>
-<p>There are often inscribed on the portals, in large Chinese characters, moral mottoes
-or poetical sentiments, such as “Enter happiness, like breezes bring the spring, and
-depart evil spirit as snow melts in water.” Before a new house is finished, a sheet
-of pure white paper, in which are enclosed some <i>nip</i>, or “cash,” with grains of rice which have been steeped in wine, is nailed or fastened
-on the wall, over the door, and becomes the good spirit or genius of the house, sacrifices
-being duly offered to it. In more senses than one, the spirit that presides over too
-many Corean households is the alcohol spirit.
-</p>
-<p>The Corean liquor, by preference, is brewed or distilled from rice, millet, or barley.
-These alcoholic drinks are of various strength, color, and smell, ranging from beer
-to brandy. In general their beverages are sufficiently smoky, oily, and alcoholic
-to Western tastes, as the fusel-oil usually remains even in the best products of their
-stills. No trait of the Coreans has more impressed <span class="pageNum" id="pb267">[<a href="#pb267">267</a>]</span>their numerous visitors, from Hamel to the Americans, than their love of all kinds
-of strong drink, from ale to whiskey. The common verdict is, “They are greatly addicted
-to the worship of Bacchus.” The Corean vocabulary bears ample witness to the thorough
-acquaintance of the people with the liquor made from grain by their rude processes.
-The inhabitants of the peninsula were hard drinkers even in the days of Fuyu and Kokorai.
-No sooner were the ports of modern Chō-sen open to commerce than the Chinese established
-liquor-stores, while European wines, brandies, whiskeys, and gins have entered to
-vary the Corean’s liquid diet and increase the national drunkenness.
-</p>
-<p>Strange as it may seem, the peasant, though living between the two great tea-producing
-countries of the world—Japan and China—and in the latitude of tea-plantations, scarcely
-knows the taste of tea, and the fragrant herb is as little used as is coffee in Japan.
-The most common drink, after what the clouds directly furnish, is the water in which
-rice has been boiled. Infusions of dried ginseng, orange-peel, or ginger serve for
-festal purposes, and honey when these fail; but the word “tea,” or <i>cha</i>, serves the Corean, as it does the typical Irishman, for a variety of infusions and
-decoctions. With elastic charity the word covers a multitude of sins, chiefly of omission;
-all that custom or euphony requires is to prefix the name of the substance used to
-“cha” and the drink is tea—of some kind.
-</p>
-<p>The staple diet has in it much more of meat and fat than that of the Japanese. The
-latter acknowledge that the average Corean can eat twice as much as himself. Beef,
-pork, fowls, venison, fish, and game are consumed without much waste in rejected material.
-Nearly everything edible about an animal is a tidbit, and a curious piece of cookery,
-symbolical of a generous feast, is often found at the board of a liberal host. This
-<i>tang-talk</i> (which often becomes the “town-talk”) is a chicken baked and served with its feathers,
-head, claws, and inwards intact. “To treat to an entire fowl” is said of a liberal
-host, and is equivalent to “killing the fatted calf.”
-</p>
-<p>Fish are often eaten raw from tail to head, especially if small, with only a little
-seasoning. <i>Ho-hoi</i>, or fish-bone salad, is a delicacy. Dog-flesh is on sale among the common butchers’
-meats, and the Coreans enjoy it as our Indians do. In the first month of the year,
-however, owing to religious scruples, no dog-meat is eaten, or dishes of canine origin
-permitted.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb268">[<a href="#pb268">268</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The state dinner, given to the Japanese after the treaty, consisted of this bill of
-fare: two-inch squares of pastry, made of flour, sugar, and oil; heaps of boiled eggs;
-pudding made of flour, sesame, and honey; dried persimmons; “pine-seeds,” honey-like
-food covered with roasted rice colored red and white; <span class="corr" id="xd31e4195" title="Source: maccaroni">macaroni</span> soup with fowl; boiled legs of pork, and wine, rice or millet spirit with everything.
-It is customary to decorate the tables on grand occasions with artificial flowers,
-and often the first course is intended more for show than for actual eating. For instance,
-when the Japanese party, feasted at Seoul in 1646, first sat down to the table, one
-of them began to help himself to fish, of which he was very fond. The dish seemed
-to contain a genuine cooked carp basted with sauce, but, to the embarrassment of the
-hungry guest, the fish would not move. He was relieved by the servant, who told him
-that it was put on the table only for show. The courses brought on later contained
-more substantial nourishment, such as fish, flesh, fowl, vegetables, soups, cakes,
-puddings and tea. Judging from certain words in the language, these show-dishes form
-a regular feature at the opening of banquets. The women cook rice beautifully, making
-it thoroughly soft by steaming, while yet retaining the perfect shape of each grain
-by itself. Other well-known dishes are barley, millet, beans, <i>taro</i> (potato cooked in a variety of ways), lily-bulbs, sea-weeds, acorns, <i>dai-kon</i> (radishes), turnips, and potatoes. <span class="corr" id="xd31e4202" title="Source: Maccaroni">Macaroni</span> and vermicelli are used for soups and refreshing lunches. Apples, pears, plums, grapes,
-persimmons, and various kinds of berries help to furnish the table, though the flavor
-of these is inferior to the same fruits grown in our gardens.
-</p>
-<p>All kinds of condiments, mustard, vinegar, pepper, and a variety of home-made sauces,
-are much relished. Itinerant food-sellers are not so common as in China, but butcher-shops
-and vermicelli stands are numerous. Two solid meals, with a light breakfast, is the
-rule. <i>Opan</i>, or midday rice, is the dinner. <i>Tai-sik</i> is a regular meal. The appearance of the evening star is the signal for a hearty
-supper, and the planet a synonym for the last meal of the day. At wakes or funeral
-feasts, and on festal days, the amount of victuals consumed is enormous, while a very
-palatable way of remembering the dead is by the <i>yum-pok</i>, or drinking of sacrificial wine. The Coreans understand the preservative virtues
-of ice, and in winter large quantities of this substance are cut and stored away for
-use in the summer, in keeping fresh meat and fish. Their ice-houses are made by excavating
-the ground <span class="pageNum" id="pb269">[<a href="#pb269">269</a>]</span>and covering over the store with earth and sod, from which in hot weather they use
-as may be necessary. These ice stores are often under the direction of the government,
-especially when large quantities of fish are being preserved for rations of the army
-in time of war. Those who oversee the work are called “Officers of the Refrigerator.”
-</p>
-<p>One striking fault of the Coreans at the table is their voracity, and to this trait
-of their character Japanese, French, Dutch, and Chinese bear witness. It might be
-supposed that a Frenchman, who eats lightly, might make a criticism where an Englishman
-would be silent; but not so. All reports concerning them seem to agree. In this respect
-there is not the least difference between the rich and poor, noble or plebeian. To
-eat much is an honor, and the merit of a feast consists not in the quality but in
-the quantity of the food served. Little talking is done while eating, for each sentence
-might lose a mouthful. Hence, since a capacious stomach is a high accomplishment,
-it is the aim from infancy to develop a belly having all possible elasticity. Often
-the mothers take their babies upon their knees, and after stuffing them with rice,
-like a wad in a gun, will tap them from time to time with the paddle of a ladle on
-the stomach, to see that it is fully spread out or rammed home, and only cease gorging
-when it is physically impossible for the child to swell up more. A Corean is always
-ready to eat; he attacks whatever he meets with, and rarely says, “Enough.” Even between
-meals, he will help himself to any edible that is offered. The ordinary portion of
-a laborer is about a quart of rice, which when cooked makes a good bulk. This, however,
-is no serious hindrance to his devouring double or treble the quantity when he can
-get it. Eating matches are common. When an ox is slaughtered, and the beef is served
-up, a heaping bowl of the steaming mess does not alarm any guest. Dog-meat is a common
-article of food, and the canine sirloins served up in great trenchers are laid before
-the guests, each one having his own small table to himself. When fruits, such as peaches
-or small melons, are served, they are devoured without peeling. Twenty or thirty peaches
-is considered an ordinary allowance, which rapidly disappears. Such a prodigality
-in victuals is, however, not common, and for one feast there are many fastings. Beef
-is not an article of daily food with the peasantry. Its use is regulated by law, the
-butcher being a sort of government official; and only under extraordinary circumstances,
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb270">[<a href="#pb270">270</a>]</span>as when a grand festival is to be held, does the king allow an ox to be killed in
-each village. The Coreans are neither fastidious in their eating nor painstaking in
-their cooking. Nothing goes to waste. All is grist that comes to the mill in their
-mouths.
-</p>
-<p>They equal Japanese in devouring raw fish, and uncooked food of all kinds is swallowed
-without a wry face. Even the intestines pass among them for delicate viands. Among
-the poorer classes, a cooked fish is rarely seen on the table; for no sooner is it
-caught than it is immediately opened and devoured. The raw viands are usually eaten
-with a strong seasoning of pepper or mustard, but they are often swallowed without
-condiment of any sort. Often in passing along the banks of a river, one may see men
-fishing with rod and line. Of these some are nobles who are not able, or who never
-wish to work for a living, yet they will fish for food and sport. Instead of a bag
-or basket to contain the game, or a needle to string it upon, each fisher has at his
-side a jar of diluted pepper, or a kind of soy. No sooner is a fish hooked, than he
-is drawn out, seized between the two fingers, dipped into the sauce, and eaten without
-ceremony. Bones do not scare them. These they eat, as they do the small bones of fowls.
-</p>
-<p>Nationally, and individually, the Coreans are very deficient in conveniences for the
-toilet. Bath-tubs are rare, and except in the warmer days of summer, when the river
-and sea serve for immersion, the natives are not usually found under water. The Japanese
-in the treaty expedition in 1876 had to send bath-tubs on shore from their ships.
-Morning ablutions are made in a copper basin. The sponges which grow on the west coast
-seem to find no market at home. This neglect of more intimate acquaintance with water
-often makes the lowest classes “look like mulattos,” as Hamel said. Gutzlaff, Adams,
-and others, especially the Japanese, have noted this personal defect, and have suggested
-the need of soap and hot water. It may be that the contrast between costume and cuticle
-tempts to exaggeration. People who dress in white clothing have special need of personal
-cleanliness. Perhaps soap factories will come in the future.
-</p>
-<p>The men are very proud of their beards, and the elders very particular in keeping
-them white and clean. The lords of creation honor their beard as the distinctive glory
-and mark of their sex. A man is in misery if he has only just enough beard to distinguish
-him from a woman. A full crop of hair on cheek and chin insures to its possessor unlimited
-admiration, while in Corean <span class="pageNum" id="pb271">[<a href="#pb271">271</a>]</span>billingsgate there are numerous terms of opprobrium for a short beard. Europeans are
-contemptuously termed “short-hairs”—with no suspicion of the use of the word in New
-York local politics. Old gentlemen keep a little bag in which they assiduously collect
-the combings of their hair, the strokings of their beard and parings of their nails,
-in order that all that belongs to them may be duly placed in their coffin at death.
-</p>
-<p>The human hair crop is an important item in trade with China, to which country it
-is imported and sold to piece out the hair-tails which the Chinese, in obedience to
-their Manchiu conquerors, persist in wearing. Some of this hair comes from poor women,
-but the staple product is from the heads of boys who wear their hair parted in the
-middle, and plaited in a long braid, which hangs down their backs. At marriage, they
-cut this off, and bind what remains in a tight, round knot on the top of the scalp,
-using pins or not as they please.
-</p>
-<p>The court pages and pretty boys who attend the magnates, usually rosy-cheeked, well
-fed, and effeminate looking youths, do not give any certain indication of their sex,
-and foreigners are often puzzled to know whether they are male or female. Their beardless
-faces and long hair are set down as belonging to women. Most navigators have made
-this mistake in gender, and when the first embassy from Seoul landed in Yokohama,
-the controversy, and perhaps the betting, as to the sex of these nondescripts was
-very lively. Captain Broughton declared that the whole duty of these pages seemed
-to be to smooth out the silk dresses of the grandees. Officials and nobles cover their
-top-knots with neat black nets of horse-hair or glazed thread. Often country and town
-people wear a fillet or white band of bark or leaves across the forehead to keep the
-loose hair in order, as the ancient Japanese used to do. Women coil their glossy black
-tresses into massive knots, and fasten them with pins or golden, silver, and brass
-rings. The heads of the pins are generally shaped like a dragon. They oil their hair,
-using a sort of vegetable pomatum. Among the court ladies and female musicians the
-styles of coiffure are various; some being very pretty, with loops, bands, waves,
-and “bangs,” as the illustration on page 161 shows.
-</p>
-<p>Corea is decidedly the land of big hats. From their amplitude these head-coverings
-might well be called “roofs,” or, at least, “umbrellas.” Their diameter is so great
-that the human head encased in one of them seems but as a hub in a cart-wheel. They
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb272">[<a href="#pb272">272</a>]</span>would probably serve admirably as parachutes in leaping from a high place. Under his
-wide-spreading official hat a magistrate can shelter his wife and family. It serves
-as a numeral, since a company is counted by hats, instead of heads or noses. How the
-Corean dignitary can weather a gale remains a mystery, and, perhaps, the feat is impossible
-and rarely attempted. A slim man is evidently at a disadvantage in a “Japanese wind”
-or typhoon. The personal avoirdupois, which is so much admired in the peninsula, becomes
-very useful as ballast to the head-sail. Corean magnates, cast away at sea, would
-not lack material for ship’s canvas. In shape, the gentleman’s hat resembles a flower-pot
-set on a round table, or a tumbler on a Chinese gong. Two feet is a common diameter,
-thus making a periphery of six feet. The top or cone, which rises nine inches higher,
-is only three inches wide. This chimney-like superstructure serves as ornament and
-ventilator. Its purpose is not to encase the head, for underneath the brim is a tight-fitting
-skull-cap, which rests on the head and is held on by padded ties under the ears. The
-average rim for ordinary people, however, is about six inches in radius. The huge
-umbrella-hat of bleached bamboo is worn by gentlemen in mourning. After death it is
-solemnly placed on the bier, and forms a conspicuous object at the funeral. The native
-name for hat is <i>kat</i> or <i>kat-si</i>.
-</p>
-<p>The usual material is bamboo, split to the fineness of a thread, and woven so as to
-resemble horse-hair. The fabric is then varnished or lacquered, and becomes perfectly
-weather-proof, resisting sun and rain, but not wind. The prevalence of cotton clothing,
-easily soaked and rendered uncomfortable, requires the ample protection for the back
-and shoulders, which these umbrella-like hats furnish. In heavy rain, the <i>kat-no</i> is worn, that is, a cone of oiled paper, fixed on the hat in the shape of a funnel.
-Indeed, the umbrella in Corea is rather for a symbol of state and dignity than for
-vulgar use, and is often adorned with knobs and strips. Quelpart Island is the home
-of the hatters, whose fashionable wares supply the dandies and dignitaries of the
-capital and of the peninsula. The highest officers of the government have the cone
-truncated or rounded at the vertex, and surmounted by a little figure of a crane in
-polished silver, very handsome and durable. This long-legged bird is a symbol of civil
-office. “To confer the hat,” means as much to an officer high in favor at the court
-of Seoul as to a cardinal in the Vatican, only the color is black, not <span class="pageNum" id="pb273">[<a href="#pb273">273</a>]</span>red. It is Corean etiquette to keep the hat on, and in this respect, as well as in
-their broad brims, the hermits resemble the Quakers. Marriage and mourning are denoted
-also by the hat.
-</p>
-<p>A variety of materials is employed by other classes. Soldiers wear large black or
-brown felt hats, resembling Mexican sombreros, which are adorned with red horse-hair
-or a peacock’s feather, swung on a swivel button.
-</p>
-<p>Suspended from the sides, over the ears and around the neck, are strings of round
-balls of blue porcelain, cornelian, amber, or what resembles kauri gum. Sometimes
-these ornaments are tubular, reminding one of the millinery of a cardinal’s hat.
-</p>
-<p>For the common people, plaited straw or rushes of varied shapes serve for summer,
-while in winter shaggy caps of lynx, wolf, bear, or deer-skin are common, made into
-Havelock, Astrachan, Japanese, and other shapes, some resembling wash-bowls, some
-being fluted or fan-like, winged, sock-shaped, or made like a nightcap. Variety seems
-to be the fashion.
-</p>
-<p>The head-dress of the court nobles differs from that of the vulgar as much as the
-Pope’s tiara differs from a cardinal’s <i>rubrum</i>. It is a crown or helmet, which, eschewing brim, rises in altitude to the proportions
-of a mitre. Without earstrings or necklaces of beads, it is yet highly ornamental.
-One of these consists of a cap, with a sort of gable at the top. Another has six lofty
-curving folds or volutes set in it. On another are designs from the <i>pa-kwa</i>, or sixty-four mystic diagrams, which are supposed to be sacred symbols of the Confucian
-philosophy, and of which fortune-tellers make great use.
-</p>
-<p>The wardrobe of the gentry consists of the ceremonial and the house dress. The former,
-as a rule, is of fine silk, and the latter of coarser silk or cotton. These “gorgeous
-Corean dresses” are of pink, blue, and other rich colors. The official robe is a long
-garment like a wrapper, with loose, baggy sleeves. This is embroidered with the stork
-or phœnix for civil, and with the kirin, lion, or tiger for military officers. Buttons
-are unknown and form no part of a Corean’s attire, male or female, thus greatly reducing
-the labor of the wives and mothers who ply the needle, which in Corea has an “ear”
-instead of an “eye.” Strings and girdles, and the shifting of the main weight of the
-clothing to the shoulders, take the place of these convenient, but fugitive, adjuncts
-to the Western costume. There are few tailors’ shops, the women of each household
-making the family outfit.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb274">[<a href="#pb274">274</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Soldiers in full dress wear a sleeveless, open surcoat for display. The under dress
-of both sexes is a short jacket with tight sleeves, which for men reaches to the thighs,
-and for women only to the waist, and a pair of drawers reaching from waist to ankle,
-a little loose all the way down for the men, and tied at the ankles, but for the women
-made tight and not tied. The females wear a petticoat over this garment, so that the
-Coreans say they dress like Western women, and foreign-made hosiery and under-garments
-are in demand. Although they have a variety of articles of apparel easily distinguishable
-to the native eye, yet their general style of costume is that of the wrapper, stiff,
-wide, and inflated with abundant starch in summer, but clinging and baggy in winter.
-The rule is tightness and economy for the working, amplitude and richness of material
-for the affluent<span id="xd31e4256"></span> classes. The women having no pockets in their dresses, wear a little bag suspended
-from their girdle. This is worn on the right side, attached by cords. These contain
-their bits of jewelry, scissors, knife, a tiger’s claw for luck, perfume-bottle or
-sachet, a tiny chess-board in gold or silver, etc. Besides the rings on their fingers
-the ladies wear hair-pins of gold ornamented with bulbs or figures of birds. Many
-of them dust <i>pun</i>, or white powder, on their faces, and employ various other cosmetics, which are kept
-in their <i>kiong-tai</i>, or mirror toilet-stands; in which also may be their <i>so-hak</i>, or book containing rules of politeness.
-</p>
-<p>The general type of costume is that of China under the Ming dynasty. To a Chinaman
-a Corean looks antiquated, a curiosity in old clothes; a Japanese at a little distance,
-in the twilight, is reminded of ghosts, or the snowy heron of the rice-fields, while
-to the American the Corean swell seems compounded chiefly of bed-clothes, and in his
-most elaborate costume to be still in his under-garments.
-</p>
-<p>Plenty of starch in summer, and no stint of cotton in winter, are the needs of the
-Corean. His white dress makes his complexion look darker than it really is. The monotonous
-dazzle of bleached garments is relieved by the violet robes of the magistrate, the
-dark blue for the soldiers, and lighter shades of that color in the garb of the middle
-class; the blue strip which edges the coat of the literary graduates, and the pink
-and azure clothes of the children. Less agreeable is the nearness which dispels illusion.
-The costume, which seemed snowy at a distance, is seen to be dingy and dirty, owing
-to an entire ignorance of soap.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb275">[<a href="#pb275">275</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The Corean dress, though simpler than the Chinese, is not entirely devoid of ornament.
-The sashes are often of handsome blue silk or brocaded stuff. The official girdles,
-or flat belts a few inches wide, have clasps of gold, silver, or rhinoceros horn,
-and are decorated with polished ornaments of gold or silver. For magistrates of the
-three higher ranks these belts are set with blue stones; for those of the fourth and
-fifth grade with white stones, and for those below the fifth with a substance resembling
-horn. Common girdles are of cotton, hemp cloth, or rope.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p275width" id="p275"><img src="images/p275.png" alt="Gentlemen’s Garments and Dress Patterns." width="693" height="519"><p class="figureHead">Gentlemen’s Garments and Dress Patterns.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>Fans are also a mark of rank, being made of various materials, especially silk or
-cloth, stretched on a frame. The fan is an instrument of etiquette. To hide the face
-with one is an act of politeness. The man in mourning must have no other kind than
-that in which the pin or rivet is of cow’s horn. Oiled paper fans serve a variety
-of purposes. In another kind, the ribs of the frame are bent back double. The finer
-sort for the nobility are gorgeously inlaid with pearl or nacre.
-</p>
-<p>A kind of flat wand or tablet, seen in the hands of nobles, ostensibly to set down
-orders of the sovereign, is made of ivory for officers above, and of wood for those
-below the fourth grade.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb276">[<a href="#pb276">276</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Another badge of office is the little wand, half way between a toy whip and a Mercury’s
-caduceus, of black lacquered wood, with cords of green silk. This is carried by civil
-officers, and may be the original of the Japanese baton of command, made of lacquered
-wood with pendant strips of paper.
-</p>
-<p>Canes are carried by men of the literary or official class when in mourning. These
-tall staves, which, from the decks of European vessels sailing along the coast, have
-often looked like spears, are the <i>sang-chang</i>, or smooth bamboo staves, expressive of ceremonial grief, and nothing more.
-</p>
-<p>As the Coreans have no pockets, they make bags, girdles, and their sleeves serve instead.
-The women wear a sort of reticule hung at the belt, and the men a smoking outfit,
-consisting of an oval bag to hold his flint and steel, some fine-cut tobacco, and
-a long, narrow case for his pipe.
-</p>
-<p>Foot-gear is either of native or of Chinese make. The laborer contents himself with
-sandals woven from rice-straw, which usually last but a few days. A better sort is
-of hempen twine or rope, with many strands woven over the top of the foot. A man in
-mourning can wear but four cords on the upper part. Socks are too expensive for the
-poor, except in the winter. Shoes made of cotton are often seen in the cities, having
-hempen or twine soles. The low shoes of cloth, or velvet, and cowhide, upturned at
-the toe, worn by officials, are imported from China. Small feet do not seem to be
-considered a beauty, and the foot-binding of the Chinese is unknown in Chō-sen, as
-in Japan.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb277">[<a href="#pb277">277</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch31" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1094">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XXXI.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">MOURNING AND BURIAL.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The fashion of mourning, the proper place and time to shed tears and express grief
-according to regulations, are rigidly prescribed in an official treatise or “Guide
-to Mourners,” published by the government. The corpse must be placed in a coffin of
-very thick wood, and preserved during many months in a special room prepared and ornamented
-for this purpose. It is proper to weep only in this death-chamber, but this must be
-done three or four times daily. Before entering it, the mourner must don a special
-weed, which consists of a gray cotton frock coat, torn, patched, and as much soiled
-as possible. The girdle must be of twisted straw and silk, made into a rope of the
-thickness of the wrist. Another cord, the thickness of the thumb, is wound round the
-head, which is covered with dirty linen, each of the rope’s ends falling upon the
-cheek. A special kind of sandals is worn, and a big knotty stick completes the costume
-of woe. In the prescribed weeds the mourner enters the death-chamber in the morning
-on rising, and before each meal. He carries a little table filled with food, which
-he places upon a tray at the side of the coffin. The person who is master of the mourners
-presides at the ceremonies. Prostrate, and struck by the stick, he utters dolorous
-groans, sounding “<i>ai-kō</i>” if for a parent. For other relatives he groans out “<i>oi, oi</i>.” According to the noise and length of the groans and weeping, so will the good opinion
-of the public be. The lamentations over, the mourner retires, doffs the mourning robes,
-and eats his food. At the new and the full moon, all the relatives are invited and
-expected to assist at the ceremonies. These practices continue more or less even after
-burial, and at intervals during several years. Often a noble will go out to weep and
-kneel at the tomb, passing a day, and even a night, in this position. In some instances,
-mourners have built a little house <span class="pageNum" id="pb278">[<a href="#pb278">278</a>]</span>before the grave, and watched there for years, thus winning a high reputation for
-filial piety.
-</p>
-<p>Among the poor, who have not the means to provide a death-chamber and expensive mourning,
-the coffin is kept outside their houses covered with mats until the time of sepulture.
-</p>
-<p>Though cremation, or “burying in the fire,” is known in Chō-sen, the most usual form
-of disposing of the dead is by inhumation. Children are wrapped up in the clothes
-and bedding in which they die, and are thus buried. As unmarried persons are reckoned
-as children, their shroud and burial are the same. With the married and adult, the
-process is more costly, and the ceremonial more detailed and prolonged. This, which
-is described very fully in Ross’ “Corea,” and with which Hamel’s curt notes agree,
-consists of minute ceremonial and mourning among the living and the washing, combing,
-nail-paring, robing, and laying out in state of the dead, with calling of the spirits,
-and with screens, lights, and offerings, according to Confucian ritual. In many interesting
-features, the most ancient rites of China have survived in the peninsula after they
-have become obsolete in the former country. The very old tombs opened, and the painted
-coffins, coated with many layers of silicious paint, dug up near Shanghai recently,
-are much like those of the Coreans.
-</p>
-<p>The coffin, which fits the body, is made air-tight with wax, resin, or varnish, and
-is borne on a bier to the grave by men who make this their regular business. Often
-there are two coffins, one inside the other. Sons follow the body of their father
-on foot, relatives ride in palanquins or on horseback. Prominent at the head of the
-procession is the red standard containing the titles and honors of the deceased. This
-banner, or <i>sa-jen</i>, has two points on it to frighten away the spirits, and at the funeral of a high
-officer, a man wears a hideous mask for the same purpose. When there are no titles,
-only the name of the deceased is inscribed upon the banner.
-</p>
-<p>The selection of a proper site for a tomb is a matter of profound solicitude, time,
-and money; for the geomancers must be consulted with a fee. The <i>pung-sui</i> superstition requires for the comfort of both living and dead that the right site
-should be chosen. Judging from the number of times the word “mountain” enters into
-terms relating to burial, most interments are on the hillsides. If these are not done
-properly, trouble will <span class="pageNum" id="pb279">[<a href="#pb279">279</a>]</span>arise, and the bones must then be dug up, collected, and reburied, often at heavy
-expense. Thousands of professional cheats and self-duped people live by working upon
-the feelings of the bereaved through this superstition.
-</p>
-<p>The tombs of the poor consist only of the grave and a low mound of earth. These mounds,
-subjected to the forces of nature, and often trampled upon by cattle, disappear after
-the lapse of a few years, and oblivion settles over the spot.
-</p>
-<p>With the richer class monuments are of stone, sometimes neat or even imposing, sometimes
-grotesque. Some, as the <i>pi-popi</i>, are shaped like a house or miniature temple; or, two stones, cut in the form of
-a ram and a horse respectively, are placed before the sepulchre. The <i>man-tu</i>, “gazing headstone,” consists of two monoliths or columns of masonry, flanking the
-tomb on either side, so that the soul of the dead, changed into a bird, may repose
-peacefully. In the graveyards are many tombs paved with granite slabs around the temple
-model, but for the most part a Corean cemetery is filled with little obelisks, or
-tall, square columns, either pointed at the top or surmounted with the effigy of a
-human head, or a rudely sculptured stone image, which strangely reminds a foreigner
-of “patience on a monument, smiling at grief.” This apparition of a human head rising
-above the tall grass of the burial-ground may be the original of Japanese pictures
-of the ghosts and spirits which seem to rise dark and windblown out of the wet grass.
-Often the carving in Corean grave-yards is so rude as to be almost indistinguishable.
-</p>
-<p>Mourning is of many degrees and lengths, and is betokened by dress, abstinence from
-food and business, visits to the tomb, offerings, tablets, and many visible indications,
-detailed even to absurdity. Pure, or nearly pure white is the mourning color, as a
-contrast to red, the color of rejoicing. Even the rivets of the fan, the strings on
-the shoes, and the carrying of a staff in addition to the mourning-hat, betoken the
-uniform of woe.
-</p>
-<p>When noblemen don the peaked hat, which covers the face as well as the head, they
-are as dead to the world—not to be spoken to, molested, or even arrested if charged
-with crime. This Corean mourning hat proved “the helmet of salvation” to Christians,
-and explains the safety of the French missionaries who lived so long in disguise,
-unharmed in the country where the police were as lynxes and hounds ever on their track.
-The Jesuits were not <span class="pageNum" id="pb280">[<a href="#pb280">280</a>]</span>slow to see the wonderful shelter promised for them, and availed themselves of it
-at once and always.
-</p>
-<p>The royal sepulchres within the peninsula have attracted more than one unlawful descent
-upon the shores of Chō-sen. The various dynasties of sovereigns during the epoch of
-the Three Kingdoms in the old capitals of these states, the royal lines of Kokorai
-at Ping-an, of Korai at Sunto, and of the ruling house at Seoul, have made Corea during
-her two thousand years of history rich in royal tombs. These are in various parts
-of the country, and those which are known are under the care of the government.
-</p>
-<p>Are these mausoleums filled with gold or jewels? Foreign grave-robbers have believed
-so, and shown their faith by their works, as we shall see. French priests in the country
-have said so. The ancient Chinese narratives descriptive of the customs of the Fuyu
-people, confirm the general impression. Without having the facts at hand to demonstrate
-what eager foreigners have believed, we know that vast treasures have been spent upon
-the decoration of the royal sepulchres, and the erection of memorial buildings over
-them, and that the fear of their violation by foreign or native outlaws has been for
-centuries ever before the Corean people. That these fears have too often been justified,
-we shall find when we read of that memorable year, <span class="asc">A.D.</span> 1866. The profuse vocabulary of terms relating to burial, mourning, and memorial
-tablets in Corea show their intense loyalty to the Confucian doctrines, the power
-of superstition, and the shocking waste of the resources of the living upon the dead.
-</p>
-<p>The voluble Corean envoys when in Tōkiō, visited the Naval College, and on learning
-that in certain emergencies the students from distant provinces were not allowed to
-go home to attend the funeral of their parents, nor to absent themselves from duty
-on account of mourning, were amazed beyond measure, and for a few moments literally
-speechless from surprise. It is hard for a Corean to understand the sayings of Jesus
-to the disciple who asked, “Lord, suffer me first to go and bury my father,” and “Let
-the dead bury their dead.”
-</p>
-<p>From the view-point of political economy, this lavish expense of time, energy, money,
-and intellect upon corpses and superstition is beneficial. Without knowing of Malthus
-or his theories, the Chō-senese have hit upon a capital method of limiting population,
-and keeping the country in a state of chronic poverty. <span class="pageNum" id="pb281">[<a href="#pb281">281</a>]</span>The question has been asked the writer, “How can a people, pent in a little mountainous
-peninsula like Corea, exist for centuries without overpopulating their territory?”
-</p>
-<p>Wars, famine, pestilence, ordinary poverty answer the question in part. The absurd
-and rigorous rules of mourning, requiring frightful expense, postponement of marriage
-to young people—who even when betrothed must mourn three years for parents and grandparents,
-actual and expected, the impoverishing of the people, and the frequent hindrances
-to marriage at the proper season, serve to keep down population. This fact is an often
-chosen subject for native anecdotes and romances. The vexations and delays often caused
-by the long periods of idle mourning required by etiquette, are well illustrated by
-the following story, from the “<span lang="fr">Grammaire <span class="corr" id="xd31e4340" title="Source: Coréene">Coréenne</span></span>,” which is intended to show the sympathy of the king Cheng-chong (1776 to 1800) with
-his subjects. It is entitled “A Trait of Royal Solicitude.”
-</p>
-<p>It was about New Year’s that Cheng-chong walked about here and there within the palace
-enclosure. Having come to the place reserved for the candidates at the literary examinations,
-he looked through a crack in the gate. The competitors had nearly all gone away to
-spend the New Year holidays at home, and there remained only two of them, who were
-talking together.
-</p>
-<p>“Well, all the others have gone off to spend New Year’s at home; isn’t it deplorable
-that we two, having no place to go to, must be nailed here?”
-</p>
-<p>“Yes, truly,” said the other; “you have no longer either wife, children, or house.
-How is this?”
-</p>
-<p>“Listen to my story,” said the first man. “My parents, thinking of my marriage, had
-arranged my betrothal, but some time before the preparations were concluded, my future
-grandfather died, and it became necessary to wait three years. Hardly had I put off
-mourning, when I was called on to lament the death of my poor father. I was now compelled
-to wait still three years. These three years finished, behold my mother-in-law who
-was to be died, and three years passed away. Finally, I had the misfortune to lose
-my poor mother, which required me to wait again three years. And so, three times four—a
-dozen years—have elapsed, during which we have waited the one for the other. By this
-time she, who was to be my wife, fell ill. As she was upon the point of death, I went
-to make her a visit. My intended brother-in-law came to see me, found me, and said,
-‘Although <span class="pageNum" id="pb282">[<a href="#pb282">282</a>]</span>the ceremonies of marriage have not been made, they may certainly consider you as
-married, therefore come and see her.’ Upon his invitation I entered her house, but
-we had hardly blown a puff of smoke, one before the other, than she died.
-</p>
-<p>“Seeing this, I have no more wished even to dream at night. I am not yet married.
-You may understand, then, why I have neither wife, children, nor home.”
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p282width" id="p282"><img src="images/p282.jpg" alt="Thatched House near Seoul. (From a photograph, 1876.)" width="659" height="720"><p class="figureHead">Thatched House near Seoul. (From a photograph, 1876.)</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>In his turn the other thus spoke: “My house was extremely poor. Our diet looked like
-fasting. We had no means of freeing ourselves from embarrassment. When the day of
-the examination came I presented myself. During my absence my wife contrived <span class="pageNum" id="pb283">[<a href="#pb283">283</a>]</span>in such a manner, that putting in the brazier a farthing’s worth of charcoal, she
-set a handful of rice to cook in a skillet, and settled herself to wait for me. She
-served this to me every time I came back. But I never obtained a degree. The day on
-which I was at last received as a bachelor of arts, on returning after examination,
-I found that she had as before lighted the charcoal, put to boil a dish of soup, and
-seating herself before the fire, she waited. In this position she was dead.
-</p>
-<p>“At sight of this my grief was without bounds. Having no desire to contract a new
-union, I have never re-married.”
-</p>
-<p>Hearing these narratives, Cheng-chong was touched with pity. Entering the palace,
-seating himself upon the throne, and having had the two scholars brought in, he said
-to them:
-</p>
-<p>“All the other scholars have gone to their homes to spend New Year’s. Why have not
-you two gone also?” They answered, “Your servants having no house to go to, remained
-here.”
-</p>
-<p>“What does that mean?” said Cheng-chong. “The fowls and the dogs, oxen and horses
-have shelter. The birds have also a hole to build their nests in. Can it be that men
-have no dwelling? There should be a reason for this. Speak plainly.” One of the scholars
-answered: “Your servant’s affairs are so-and-so. I have come even till now without
-re-marriage. It is because I have neither wife, child, nor family.”
-</p>
-<p>The story being exactly like that which he had heard before, the king cried out, “Too
-bad!”
-</p>
-<p>Then addressing the other, he put this question: “And you, how is it that you are
-reduced to this condition?” He answered<span class="corr" id="xd31e4367" title="Source: .">,</span> “My story is almost the same.”
-</p>
-<p>“What do you wish? Speak!” replied the king.
-</p>
-<p>“The circumstances being such and such, I am at this moment without wife and without
-food. That is my condition.”
-</p>
-<p>As there was in all this nothing different from the preceding, the king, struck with
-compassion, bestowed upon them immediately lucrative offices.
-</p>
-<p>If he had not examined for himself, how could he have been able to know such unfortunate
-men, and procure for them so happy a position in the world? In truth, the goodness
-of his Majesty Cheng-chong has become celebrated.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb284">[<a href="#pb284">284</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch32" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1102">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XXXII.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">OUT-DOOR LIFE.—CHARACTERS AND EMPLOYMENTS.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Six public roads of the first class traverse the peninsula and centre at the capital.
-They are from twenty to thirty feet in width, with ditches at the side for drainage.
-One of these begins near the ocean, in Chulla Dō, and in general follows the shores
-of the Yellow Sea through three provinces to Tong-chin opposite Kang-wa Island, and
-enters the capital by branch roads. Another highway passes through the interior of
-the three provinces bordering the Yellow Sea, and enters Seoul by the southern gate.
-Hamel and his fellow-captives journeyed by this road. The road by which the annual
-embassy reaches Peking, after leaving the capital, passes through Sunto and Ping-an
-and Ai-chiu, crosses the Neutral Strip, and enters Manchuria for Peking by way of
-Mukden. This was the beaten track of the French missionaries, and the shipwrecked
-men from the United States and Japan, and is the military road from China. It is well
-described, with a good map, in Koei-Ling’s “Journal of a Mission into Corea,” which
-Mr. F. Scherzer has translated for us.
-</p>
-<p>From Fusan and Tong-nai, in the southeast, Seoul is reached by no less than three
-roads. One strikes westward through Chung-chong, and joins the main road coming up
-from the south. Another following the Nak-tong River basin, crosses the mountains
-to Chulla, and enters Seoul by the south gate. Eight river crossings must be made
-by this road, over which Konishi marched in 1593. The third route takes a more northerly
-trend, follows the sea-coast to Urusan, and passing through Kion-chiu, enters the
-capital by the east gate.
-</p>
-<p>The fifth great road issuing from the north gate of the capital passes into Kang-wen,
-and thence upward to Gensan, and to the frontiers at the Tumen River.
-</p>
-<p>The roads of the second class are eight or nine feet wide, and without side ditches.
-They ramify through all the provinces, but <span class="pageNum" id="pb285">[<a href="#pb285">285</a>]</span>are especially numerous in the five southern. The three northern circuits, owing to
-their mountainous character, are but poorly furnished with highways, and these usually
-follow the rivers.
-</p>
-<p>The third class roads, which are nothing more than bridle-paths, or trails, connect
-the villages.
-</p>
-<p>The hilly nature of the country, together with the Asiatic apathy to bestowing much
-care on the public highways, makes travelling difficult. Inundations are frequent,
-though the water subsides quickly. Hence in summer the road-beds are dust, and in
-winter a slough of mud. Macadamized, or paved roads, are hardly known, except for
-short lengths. Few of the wide rivers are bridged, which necessitates frequent fordings
-and ferriages. Stone bridges, built with arches, are sometimes seen over streams not
-usually inundated, but few of the wooden bridges are over one hundred and eighty feet
-long.
-</p>
-<p>In one respect the roads are well attended to. The distances are well marked. At every
-<i>ri</i> is a small, and at every three <i>ri</i> a large mound, surmounted with an inscribed post or “mile-stone,” called <i>chang-sung</i>. They are two, six, and even ten feet in length.
-</p>
-<p>In ancient times, it is said, there was a man named Chang-sung, who killed his servant
-and wife. When punished, his head was placed on a small mound. Legend even declares
-that it was successively exposed on all the distance mounds in the kingdom. This is
-said to be the origin of the bournes or distance-mounds, which suggests, as Mr. Adams
-has shown, the <i>termini</i> of the Romans. When of stone, they are called <i>pio-sek</i>, but they are often of wood, rudely carved or hacked out of a whole tree by an axe
-into the exaggerated form of a man, and are of a ludicrous or absurd appearance. The
-face is meant to be that of the murderer Chang-sung. The author of “A Forbidden Land”
-mistook these for “village idols,” and was surprised to find the boys in some cases
-sacrilegiously kicking about some that had rotted down or fallen. The “gods of the
-roads” may, however, have their <span class="corr" id="xd31e4403" title="Source: effiges">effigies</span>, which are worshipped or profaned.
-</p>
-<p>All distances in every direction are measured from the front gate of the magistrates’
-offices, the standard of all being the palace at Seoul. Not the least interesting
-sights to the traveller are the memorial stones set up and inscribed with a view to
-commemorate local or national worthies, or the events of war, famine, or philanthropy.
-The Coreans are “idolaters of letters,” and the erection of memorial tablets or columns
-occasionally becomes a <span class="pageNum" id="pb286">[<a href="#pb286">286</a>]</span>passion. Sometimes the inscriptions are the means of stirring up patriotism, as the
-following inscription shows. It was graven on a stone in front of a castle erected
-after the French and American expeditions, and was copied by a Japanese correspondent.
-</p>
-<p>“It is nothing else than selling the kingdom into slavery, in order to avoid war,
-to make peace without fighting when any Western nation comes to attack it; such should
-never be done even by our descendants thousands of years hence.”
-</p>
-<p>In this country, in which sumptuary laws prevent the humbler classes from travelling
-on horseback, and where wagons and steam-roads are unknown, the roads are lively with
-numerous foot-passengers. Palanquins are used by the better classes and the wealthy.
-The rambling life of many of the people, the goodly numbers of that character not
-unknown in Christendom—the tramp—the necessities of trade, literary examinations,
-government service, and holy pilgrimages, prevent too many weeds from growing in the
-highways. In travelling over the high roads one meets a variety of characters that
-would satisfy a Corean Dickens, or the Japanese author who wrote the <i>Tokaidō Hizakurigé</i> (Leg-hair, <i>i.e.</i>, “Shanks’ mare,” on the East Sea Road). Bands of students on their way to the capital
-or provincial literary examinations, some roystering youths in the full flow of spirits,
-are hastening on, others, gray-headed and solemn, are wending their way to fail for
-the twentieth time. Pompous functionaries in umbrella-hats, on horseback, before whom
-ordinary folks dismount or kneel or bow, brush past with noisy attendants. Pilgrims
-in pious garb are on their way to some holy mountain or famous shrine, men to pray
-for success in business, women to beseech the gods for offspring. Here hobbles along
-the lame or rheumatic, or the pale-faced invalid is borne to the hot springs. Here
-is a party of pic-nickers, or poets intent on the joys of drink, verse, and scenery.
-Here a troop of strolling players or knot of masqueraders are in peripatetic quest
-of a livelihood, toiling fearfully hard in order to escape settled industry. Nobles
-in mourning pass with their faces invisible. Postal slaves, women doing the work of
-express agents in forwarding parcels, pass the merchant with his loaded pack-horses
-returning from Sunto, or going to Gensan. There a packman is doing horse’s work in
-transportation. Here an ox laden with brushwood is led by a woman. Beggars, corpses,
-kang-si, or men dead of hunger in times of famine, make the lights and shadows of
-life on the road.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb287">[<a href="#pb287">287</a>]</span></p>
-<p>There are other methods of travel besides those of horseback, on foot, and sedan chair,
-for oxen are often straddled by the men, and poor women travel on an ox, in a sort
-of improvised palanquin having four poles recurved to centre and covered with robe
-or cloak. In winter, among the mountains not only in the north, but even in Chulla,
-the people go on racquettes or snow-shoes. These are in shape like a battledore, and
-are several feet long. At regular distances are <i>yek</i>, or relays or offices, at which sit clerks or managers under government auspices,
-with hereditary slaves or serfs, porters, guides, mail-couriers, and pack-horses.
-These await the service of the traveller, especially of official couriers, the finer
-beasts being reserved for journeying dignitaries.
-</p>
-<p>All these throughout a certain district, of which there are several in each province,
-are under the direction of the <i>Tsal-peng</i>, or Director of Posts. Kiung-sang, the province having the greatest number of roads,
-has also the best equipment in the way of post-officers, relays, and horses. The following
-table from Dallet shows the equipment of the eight provinces:
-</p>
-<div class="table">
-<table>
-<thead>
-<tr class="label">
-<td class="cellHeadLeft cellHeadTop cellHeadBottom"> </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429 cellHeadTop cellHeadBottom">Post Superintendents. </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429 cellHeadTop cellHeadBottom">Relays. </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429 cellHeadRight cellHeadTop cellHeadBottom">Horses.
-</td>
-</tr>
-</thead>
-<tbody>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">Kiung-Kei </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429"> 6 </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429"> 47 </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429 cellRight"> 449</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">Chung-chong </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429"> 5 </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429"> 62 </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429 cellRight"> 761</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">Chulla </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429"> 6 </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429"> 53 </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429 cellRight"> 506</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">Kiung-sang </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429">11 </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429">115 </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429 cellRight">1,700</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">Kang-wen </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429"> 4 </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429"> 78 </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429 cellRight"> 447</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">Wang hei </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429"> 3 </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429"> 28 </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429 cellRight"> 396</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">Ham-kiung </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429"> 3 </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429"> 58 </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429 cellRight"> 792</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft">Ping-an </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429"> 2 </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429"> 30 </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429 cellRight"> 311
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="cellLeft cellBottom"> </td>
-<td class="xd31e4429 cellBottom"><span class="sum">40 </span></td>
-<td class="xd31e4429 cellBottom"><span class="sum">471 </span></td>
-<td class="xd31e4429 cellRight cellBottom"><span class="sum">5,362
-</span></td>
-</tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>Yet with this provision for locomotion, the country is very deficient in houses for
-public accommodation. Inns are to be found only along the great highways, and but
-rarely along the smaller or sequestered roads. This want arises, perhaps, not so much
-from the poverty of the people, as from the fact that their proverbial hospitality
-does away with the necessity of numerous inns. The Coreans have been so often represented,
-or rather misrepresented, <span class="pageNum" id="pb288">[<a href="#pb288">288</a>]</span>as inhospitable, fierce, and rude by foreigners, that to give an inside view of them
-as seen through information gathered from the French missionaries in Corea is a pleasant
-task. From them we may learn how much the white-coated peninsulars are like their
-cousins, the Japanese, and that human nature in good average quantity and quality
-dwells under the big hats of the Coreans. The traveller usually takes his provisions
-along with him, but he need not eat it out-doors. As he sits along the wayside, he
-will be invited into some house to warm his food. When obliged to go some distance
-among the mountains to cut wood or make charcoal, a man is sure to find a hut in which
-he can lodge. He has only to bring his rice. The villagers will cook it for him, after
-adding the necessary pickles or sauces. Even the oxen, except during the busy season,
-are easily obtained on loan.
-</p>
-<p>The great virtue of the Coreans is their innate respect for and daily practice of
-the laws of human brotherhood. Mutual assistance and generous hospitality among themselves
-are distinctive national traits. In all the important events of life, such as marriages
-and funerals, each one makes it his duty to aid the family most directly interested.
-One will charge himself with the duty of making purchases; others with arranging the
-ceremonies. The poor, who can give nothing, carry messages to friends and relatives
-in the near or remote villages, passing day and night on foot and giving their labors
-gratuitously. To them, the event is not a mere personal matter, but an affair of public
-interest.
-</p>
-<p>When fire, flood, or other accident destroys the house of one of their number, neighbors
-make it a duty to lend a hand to rebuild. One brings stone, another wood, another
-straw. Each, in addition to his gifts in material, devotes two or three days’ work
-gratuitously. A stranger, coming into a village, is always assisted to build a dwelling.
-</p>
-<p>Hospitality is considered as one of the most sacred duties. It would be a grave and
-shameful thing to refuse a portion of one’s meal with any person, known or unknown,
-who presents himself at eating-time. Even the poor laborers, who take their noon-meal
-at the side of the roads, are often seen sharing their frugal nourishment with the
-passer-by. Usually at a feast, the neighbors consider themselves invited by right
-and custom. The poor man whose duty calls him to make a journey to a distant place
-does not need to make elaborate <span class="corr" id="xd31e4532" title="Source: preparatons">preparations</span>. His stick, his pipe, some clothes in a packet hung from his shoulder, some cash
-in <span class="pageNum" id="pb289">[<a href="#pb289">289</a>]</span>his purse, if he has one, and his outfit is complete. At night, instead of going to
-a hotel with its attendant expense, he enters some house, whose exterior room is open
-to any comer. There he is sure to find food and lodging for the night. Rice will be
-shared with the stranger, and, at bed-time, a corner of the floor-mat will serve for
-a bed, while he may rest his head on a foot-length of the long log of wood against
-the wall, which serves as a pillow. Even should he delay his journey for a day or
-two, little or nothing to his discredit will be harbored by his hosts. In Corea, the
-old proverb concerning fish and company after three days does not seem to hold good.
-</p>
-<p>As may be imagined, such a system is prolific in breeding beggars, tramps, blackmailers,
-and lazy louts, who “sponge” upon the benevolently disposed. Rich families are often
-bored by these self-invited parasites, who eat with unblushing cheek at their tables
-for weeks at a time. They do not even disdain—nay, they often clamor for—clothing
-as well. To refuse would only result in bringing down calumny and injury. Peddlers,
-strolling players, astrologers, etc., likewise avail themselves of the opportunities,
-and act as plundering harpies. Often whole bands go round quartering themselves on
-the villages, and sometimes the government is called upon to interpose its authority
-and protect the people.
-</p>
-<p>Corea is full of Micawbers, men who are as prodigal as avaricious, who when they have
-plenty of money, scatter it quickly. When flush they care only to live in style, to
-treat their friends, to satisfy their caprices. When poverty comes, they take it without
-complaint, and wait till the wheel of fortune turns again to give them better days.
-When by any process they have made some gain by finding a root of ginseng, a bit of
-gold ore, a vein of crystal, what matters it? Let the future take care of itself.
-Hence it happens that the roads are full of men seeking some stroke of luck, hoping
-to discover at a distance what they could not find at home, to light upon some treasure
-not yet dug up or to invent some new means of making money. People forever waiting
-for something to turn up emigrate from one village to another, stop a year or two,
-and then tramp on, seeking better luck, but usually finding worse.
-</p>
-<p>Strolling companies of mountebanks, players and musicians, in numbers of five, six,
-or more, abound in Chō-sen. They wander up and down through the eight circuits, and,
-in spring and summer, <span class="pageNum" id="pb290">[<a href="#pb290">290</a>]</span>earn a precarious and vagabond livelihood. Their reputation among the villagers is
-none of the best, being about on a par with that of the gypsies, or certain gangs
-of railroad surveyors of our own country. They often levy a sort of blackmail upon
-the people. They are jugglers, acrobats, magicians, marionette players, and performers
-on musical instruments. Some of them display an astonishing amount of cleverness and
-sleight of hand in their feats. In the villages crowds of gaping urchins are their
-chief spectators, but in the large cities they are invited to private houses to give
-exhibitions and are paid for it. When about to begin a performance, they secure attention
-by whistling on the nail of their little finger. On the occasion of the anniversary
-of some happy event, a public fête day, a marriage or a social company, the lack of
-what we call society—that is, social relations between gentlemen and ladies—is made
-up, and amusement is furnished by these players, engaged for an evening or two. The
-guests fully appreciate the “hired music,” and “best talent” thus secured for a variety
-entertainment. The company of one class of these “men of society,” or <i>pang-tang</i>, a kind of “professional diner-out,” is so desirable that several are taken along
-by the ambassadors to China to amuse them on their long and tedious journey, especially
-at nights. The <i>chang-pu</i> are character-comedians, who serenade the baccalaureates that have passed successfully
-the government examinations. They play the flute and other instruments of music, forming
-the escort which accompanies the graduate on his visits to relatives and officials.
-A band of performers is always attached to the suite of ambassadors to China and Japan,
-or when visiting a foreign vessel.
-</p>
-<p>A character common to Corea and Japan is the singing-girl, who is also a great aid
-in making life endurable to the better class of Coreans, whose chief business it is
-to kill time. The singing-girl is the one poem and picture in the street life of the
-humbler classes, whose poverty can rarely, if ever, allow them to purchase her society
-or enjoy her charms and accomplishments. Socially, her rank is low, very low. She
-is herself the child of poverty and toil. Her parents are poor people, who gladly
-give up their daughter, if of pretty face and form, to a life of doubtful morals,
-in order that she may thereby earn her own support and assist her parents. She herself
-gladly leaves the drudgery of the kitchen, and the abject meanness of the hovel, to
-shine in the palace and the mansion. Her dress is of finest fabric, her luxuriant
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb291">[<a href="#pb291">291</a>]</span>black hair is bound with skill and grace, her skin is whitened by artificial cosmetics
-as far as possible, and with powder, paint, and pomatum, she spends much of her life
-before the looking-glass, studying in youth to increase, and in womanhood to retain,
-her charms. At home, she practises her music, occasionally enlivening a party of her
-humble neighbors. As she passes along the street, fresh, clean, bright, and pretty,
-she may dispense smiles for popularity’s sake, but her errand is to the houses of
-the wealthy, and especially to the official, who, for his own amusement as he dines
-alone, or for his friends in social gathering, may employ from two to twenty <i>geishas</i> (as the Japanese call them). Most Corean cities have these geishas, who form themselves
-into a sort of guild for fixed prices, etc. Often they organize complete bands or
-choirs, by which music may be had in mass and volume. At a feast they serve the wine,
-fill and pass the dishes, and preside generally at the table. When eating has fairly
-begun, they sing (chant), play the guitar, recite in <span class="corr" id="xd31e4554" title="Source: pantomine">pantomime</span> or vocally, and furnish general amusement. The dancing is usually not of an immoral
-character. Such a life, however, amid feast and revel, wine and flattery, makes sad
-wreck of many of them, morally and physically. A large proportion of the most beautiful
-girls become concubines to wealthy men or officials, or act as ladies of the chamber
-(brevet wives) to young men and widowers. Not a few join the business of prostitutes
-with that of musicians. Nevertheless, it is quite possible for a respectable family
-to enjoy a pleasant and harmless evening by the aid of the lively geishas. Of course,
-Seoul is the chief headquarters of the fairest and most accomplished geishas, who
-are, as a class, the best educated of their sex in Corea.
-</p>
-<p>The theatre, proper, does not seem to exist in Corea. The substitute and nearest approach
-to it is recitation in monologue of certain events or extracts from the standard or
-popular histories, a single individual representing the successive rôles. The histrionic
-artist pitches his tabernacle of four posts in some popular street or corner. He spreads
-mats for a roof or shade from the sun in front, and for a background in the rear.
-A platform, and a box to squat on, with a small reading-desk, and a cup of gingery
-water to refresh his palate, complete his outfit.
-</p>
-<p>A few rough benches or mats constitute all the accommodation for the audience. A gaping
-crowd soon collects around him, his auditors pull out their pipes, and refreshment
-venders improve the occasion for the chance sale of their viands. With his voice <span class="pageNum" id="pb292">[<a href="#pb292">292</a>]</span>trained to various tones and to polite and vulgar forms of speech, he will hold dialogues
-and conversations, and mimic the attitude and gestures of various characters. The
-trial of a criminal before a magistrate, the bastinado, a quarrel between husband
-and wife, scenes from high life and low life will be in turn rendered. He will imitate
-the grave tones and visage of the magistrate, the piteous appeals, the cries and groans
-and contortions of the victim under torture, the angry or grumbling voice of the husband,
-the shrill falsetto of the scolding shrew or the shower of tears and the piteous appeals
-of the wife. Smiles, frowns, surprise, sorrow, and all the emotions are simulated,
-and the accompaniment of voice is kept up with jokes, puns, bon-mots, irony, or well-expressed
-pathos. In short, the reciter is a theatrical stock company, and a band of minstrels,
-rolled into one person. For the use of beginners, and the mediocrity of the profession,
-there are a number of “jest-books,” collections of jokes and anecdotes, more or less
-threadbare, and of varying moral quality, from which speakers may prime for the occasion.
-With the advanced of the profession, however, most of the smart sayings are original
-and off-hand. The habitués of the booths have their “star” favorite, as theatre-goers
-with us go into raptures over their actors. Able men make a good living at the business,
-as they “pass round the hat” to take up a collection in the audience. This usually
-comes at the most telling point of the narrative, when the interest of the hearers
-is roused to the highest pitch (or when it is to be “continued in our next,” as the
-flash newspapers say). Sometimes the speaker will not go on till the collection is
-deemed by the tyrant a sufficient appreciation of his talents. In addition to their
-public street income, the best of them are often invited to perform in private houses,
-at family reunions, social parties, and as a rule, in visits to dignitaries by candidates
-who have won degrees.
-</p>
-<p>The Corean gamut, differing from the scale used in European countries, makes a fearful
-and wonderful difference in effect upon our ears. Some of their melodies upon the
-flute are plaintive and sweet, but most of their music is distressing to the ear and
-desolating to the air. One hearer describes their choicest pieces as “the most discordant
-sounds that ever were emitted under the name of music from brass tubes.” Some of the
-flute music, however, is very sweet. As most of the ancient music of Japan is of Corean
-origin, one can get a fair idea of the nature of the sounds that delight a Corean
-ear from the music of the imperial band of <span class="pageNum" id="pb293">[<a href="#pb293">293</a>]</span>Tōkiō, which plays the classical scores. Yet it is evident that the modern tunes of
-Seoul are not melodious to Japanese auditory nerves. One would think that, as the
-mikado’s subjects “hear themselves as others hear them” when Corean musicians play,
-they would be delighted. On the contrary, Corean music seems to horrify and afflict
-the Japanese ear. Evidently, in the course of centuries the musical scales of the
-two countries, originally identical, have altered in tone and interval. Wan-ka is
-the father of Corean music—though the mere fact that he belonged to antiquity would
-secure his renown. The various stringed musical instruments known are the <i>kemunko</i>, a kind of large guitar; the <i>kanyakko</i>, mandolin; the <i>ko-siul</i>, or guitar of twenty-five strings; and the five-stringed harp or violin. The wind
-instruments comprise a whole battery of flutes, long and short trumpets, while cymbals,
-drums, and other objects of percussion are numerous. Ambassadors and other high officers
-at home, and when on duty to foreign countries, are accompanied by a band of musicians.
-Laborers on government works are summoned to begin and end work by music, but the
-full effect of a musical salvo is attained at the opening and closing of the city
-gates. Then the sound is most distressing—or most captivating, according as the ears
-are to the manner born, or receive their first experience of what tortures the air
-may be made to vibrate.
-</p>
-<p>The chief out-door manly sport in Corea is, by excellence, that of archery. It is
-encouraged by the government for the national safety in war, and nobles stimulate
-their retainers to excellence by rewards. Most gentlemen have targets and arrow-walks
-for practice in their gardens. At regular times in the year contests of skill are
-held, at which archers of reputation compete, the expense and prizes being paid for
-out of the public purse. Hamel says the great men’s retainers have nothing to do but
-to learn to shoot. The grandees rival each other in keeping the most famous archers,
-as an Englishman might his fox-hounds or as the daimiōs of Japan formerly vied with
-each other in patronizing the fattest and most skilful wrestlers. Other manly sports
-are those of boxing and fist-fights. Young men practice the “manly art” in play with
-each other, and at times champions are chosen by rival villages and a set-to between
-the bruisers is the result, with more or less of broken heads and pulpy faces. In
-large cities the contestants may come from different wards of the same city. In Seoul,
-usually in the first month, there are some lively tussles <span class="pageNum" id="pb294">[<a href="#pb294">294</a>]</span>between picked champions, with betting and cheering of the backers of either party.
-Often these trials of skill degenerate into a free fight, in which clubs and stones
-are used freely; cracked skulls and loss of life are common. The magistrates do not
-usually interfere, but allow the frolic to spend itself.
-</p>
-<p>Another class of men worthy of notice, and identified with out-door life, are the
-sportsmen. The bird-hunters never shoot on the wing. They disguise themselves in skins,
-feathers, straw, etc., and lurk in some coigne of vantage to bring down the game that
-comes within their range. The skilled fowler understands perfectly how to imitate
-the cries of the various birds, particularly that of the pheasant calling his mate.
-By this means most of the female pheasants are captured. The call used is an iron
-whistle, shaped like the apricot-stone, and <span class="corr" id="xd31e4578" title="Source: simliar">similar</span> to that used by the Japanese hunters. The method of hunting the deer is as follows:
-During the months of June and July deer-horn commands a very high price, for it is
-at this season that the deer-horns are developing, and the “spike-bucks” are special
-prizes. A party of three or four hunters is formed. They beat up the mountain sides
-during several days, and, at night, when obliged to cease for awhile, they have a
-wonderful instinct for detecting the trail of the game, except when the earth is too
-dry. Usually they come up to their game on the third day, which they bring down with
-a gunshot. The horn is sold to the native physicians or is exported to China and Japan,
-where hartshorn and valuable medicines are concocted from it. A successful deer-hunt
-usually enables a hunter to live on his profits for a good part of the year, and in
-some cases individuals make small fortunes. Those who hunt bears wait for the occasion
-when the mother bear leads her cubs to the seashore to feast them on the crabs. Then
-the hunters bide their time till they see the mother lifting up the heavy rocks on
-edge, while the little cubs eat the crabs. The hunters usually rush forward and assault
-the bear, which, frightened, lets fall the rock, which crushes the cub. When on the
-open field or shore they do not fire at the she-bear, unless sure of killing her.
-For the various parts of the animal good prices await the hunter who sells. In addition
-to the proceeds from hide, flesh, fat, and sinews, the liver and gall of the brute,
-supposed to possess great potency in medicine, are sold for their weight in silver.
-In another chapter we have written of the tiger-hunters and their noble game.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb295">[<a href="#pb295">295</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Gambling and betting are fearfully common habits in Corea, and kite-flying gives abundant
-occasion for money to change hands. The two months of the winter, during which the
-north wind blows, is “kite time.” The large and strong kites are flown with skill,
-requiring stout cords and to be held by young men. A large crowd usually collects
-to witness the battle of the kites, when the kites are put through various evolutions
-in the air, by which one seeks to destroy, tear, or saw off the string of the other.
-</p>
-<p>Resources for in-door amusement are chiefly in the form of gossip, story-telling,
-smoking, lounging, and games of hazard, such as chess, checkers, and backgammon. The
-game of chess is the same as that played in Japan and China. Card-playing, though
-interdicted by law, is habitual among the common people. The nobles look upon it as
-vulgar amusement beneath their dignity. The people play secretly or at night, often
-gambling to a ruinous extent. It is said that the soldiers, especially those on guard,
-and at the frontiers, are freely allowed to play cards, as that is the surest way
-to keep them awake and alert in the presence of enemies, and as safeguards against
-night attacks. They shuffle and cut the cards as we do. Games with the hands and fingers,
-similar to those in Japan, are also well known.
-</p>
-<p>In pagan lands, where a Sabbath, or anything like it, is utterly <span class="corr" id="xd31e4586" title="Source: uknown">unknown</span> alike to the weary laborer, the wealthy, and the men of leisure, some compensation
-is afforded by the national and religious holidays. These in Corea consist chiefly
-of the festal occasions observed in China, the feasts appropriate to the seasons,
-planting, and harvest, the Buddhist saints’ anniversaries, the king’s birthday, and
-the new year.
-</p>
-<p>Among the poorer classes the families celebrate the birthday of the head of the family
-only, but among the noble and wealthy, each member of the family is honored with gifts
-and a festal gathering of friends. There are certain years of destiny noticed with
-extra joy and congratulations, but the chief of all is the sixty-first year. With
-us, the days of man are three score years and ten, but in the hermit kingdom the limit
-of life is three score years and one, and the reason is this: The Coreans divide time
-according to the Chinese cycle of sixty years, which is made up of two series of ten
-and twelve each respectively. Every year has a name after the zodiacal sign, or one
-of the five elements. The first birthday occurring after the entire revolution of
-the cycle is a very solemn event to a sexagenarian, and the festival commemorative
-of it is <span class="pageNum" id="pb296">[<a href="#pb296">296</a>]</span>called <i>Wan-kap</i>. All, rich and poor, noble and vulgar, observe this day, which definitely begins
-old age, when man, having passed the acknowledged limit of life, must remember and
-repose. When it happens—a rare event—that the sixty-first anniversary of a wedding
-finds both parties alive, there are extraordinary rejoicings, and the event is celebrated
-like our “diamond weddings.” For both these feasts children and friends must strain
-every nerve, and spend all their cash to be equal to the occasion and to spread the
-table for all comers; for at such a time, not only the neighbors, but often the whole
-country folk round are interested. A silk robe for the honored aged, new clothes for
-themselves, and no end of wine and good cheer for friends, acquaintances, hangers-on,
-country cousins, and strangers from afar, must be provided without stint. Poems are
-recited, games and sports enjoyed, minstrels sing and dance, and recitations are given.
-All come with compliments in their mouths—and a ravenous appetite. All must be fed
-and none turned away, and the children of the honored one must be willing to spend
-their last coin and economize, or even starve, for a year afterward. It is often as
-dreadful an undertaking as a funeral pageant in other lands. In the event of the queen,
-royal mother, or king, reaching the sixty-first birthday the profusion and prodigality
-of expense and show reaches a height of shameful extravagance. All the prisons are
-opened by general amnesty, and the jail-birds fly free. An extraordinary session of
-examiners is held to grant degrees. In the capital all the grandees present themselves
-before the king with gifts and homage. In all the rural districts, a large picture
-of the king is hung up in a noted place. The chief magistrate, preceded by music and
-followed by his satellites, and all the people proceed to the place and prostrate
-themselves before the effigy, offering their congratulations. In the capital the soldiers
-receive gifts from the court, and the day is a universal holiday for the entire nation.
-</p>
-<p>Almost as matter of course, the festivals are used as means of extortion and oppression
-of the people by the officials, who grind the masses mercilessly to provide the necessary
-resources for the waste and luxury of the capital and the court. New Year’s day is
-not only the greatest of all Corean feasts in universal observance, but is also the
-only real Sabbath time of the year, when for days together all regular employments
-cease and rejoicing reigns supreme. All debts must be paid and accounts squared up,
-absentees must return, and children away from home must rejoin the <span class="pageNum" id="pb297">[<a href="#pb297">297</a>]</span>family. The magistrates close the tribunals, no arrests are made, and prisoners held
-to answer for slight offences are given leave of absence for several days, after which
-they report again as prisoners. All work, except that of festal preparation, ought
-to cease during the last three days of the old year. It is etiquette to begin by visits
-on New Year’s Eve, though this is not universal.
-</p>
-<p>On New Year’s morning salutations or calls are made on friends, acquaintances, and
-superiors. To this rule there must be no exception, on pain of a rupture of friendly
-relations. The chief ceremony of the day is the sacrifice at the tablets of ancestors.
-Proceeding to the family tombs, if near the house, or to the special room or shelf
-in the dwelling itself, the entire family make prostrations. Costly ceremonies, with
-incense-sticks, etc., regulated according to the family purse, follow. This is the
-most important filial and religious act of the year. In cases where the tombs are
-distant, the visit must not be postponed later than during the first month. After
-the ancestral sacrifices, comes the distribution of presents, which are enclosed in
-New Year’s boxes. These consist of new dresses, shoes, confectionery, jewelry for
-the boys and girls, and various gifts, chiefly cooked delicacies, for neighbors, friends,
-and acquaintances. For five days the festivities are kept up by visits, social parties,
-and entertainments of all sorts. The ordinary labors of life are resumed on the sixth
-day of the new year, but with many, fun, rest, and frolic are prolonged during the
-month.
-</p>
-<p>The tenth day of the second month is the great house-cleaning day of the year, when
-mats are taken up and shaken, the pots, kettles, and jars scoured, and the clothing
-renovated.
-</p>
-<p>Tomb-cleaning day occurs in the third month. On this occasion they make offerings
-of food to their ancestors, and cleanse tombs and tablets. It is a busy time in the
-graveyards, to which women transfer their straw scrubbers, dippers, and buckets, when
-monuments and idols are well soused and scoured. It is more like a picnic, with fun
-and work in equal proportions.
-</p>
-<p>The third day of the third month comes in spring, and is the great May-day and merrymaking.
-The people go out on the river with food and drink, and spend the day in feasting
-and frolic. Others wander in the peach-orchards to view the blossoms. Others so inclined,
-enjoy themselves by composing stanzas of poetry.
-</p>
-<p>On the eighth day of the fourth month the large cities are illuminated with paper
-lanterns of many colors, and people go out on hills and rivers to view the gay sights
-and natural scenery.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb298">[<a href="#pb298">298</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The fifth day of the fifth month is a great festival day, on which the king presents
-fans to his courtiers.
-</p>
-<p>On the fifteenth day of the seventh month occurs the ceremony of distributing seed.
-The king gives to his officials one hundred kinds of seed for the crops of the next
-year.
-</p>
-<p>On the fifteenth day of the eighth month sacrifices are offered at the graves of ancestors
-and broken tombs are repaired.
-</p>
-<p>The chrysanthemum festival is one of much popular interest. Among the most brilliant
-flowers of the peninsula are the chrysanthemums, which are cultivated with great pride
-and care by gentlemen and nobles. The flower is brought to unusual perfection by allowing
-but a single flower to grow upon one stem. They are often cultivated apart, under
-oiled paper frames. On the ninth day of the ninth month the perfected blossoms are
-in their glory, and the owner of a crop of brilliant chrysanthemums invites his friends
-to his house to feast and enjoy the sight of the blooms. The florists exhibit their
-triumphs, and picnic parties enjoy the scenery from the bridges and on the mountains.
-</p>
-<p>The article chiefly used for pastry among oblique-eyed humanity is what the Japanese
-call <i>mochi</i>, a substance made by boiling rice and pounding it into a tough mass resembling pie-crust.
-Like oysters, it may be eaten “in every style,” raw, warmed, baked, toasted, boiled,
-or fried. It occupies an important place in ceremonial offerings to the dead, in the
-temple, and in household festal decoration. It is made in immense quantities, and
-eaten especially at New Year’s time, and on the two equinoctial days of the year.
-Another favorite mixed food for festive occasions is “red rice” and beans. The Corean
-housewife takes as much pains to color the rice properly as a German lavishes upon
-his meerschaum, and if the color fails, or is poor, it is a sign of bad luck.
-</p>
-<p>The fourteenth day of the first month a person who is entering upon a critical year
-of his life makes an effigy of straw, dresses it up with his own clothing at evening,
-and casts it out on the road, and then feasts merrily during the whole night. Whatever
-happens to the man of straw thus kicked out of the house, is supposed to happen to
-the man’s former self, now gone into the past; and Fate is believed to look upon the
-individual in new clothes as another man.
-</p>
-<p>The fifth, fifteenth, and twenty-fifth of each month are called “broken days,” on
-which they avoid beginning anything new. These are the “Fridays” of Chō-sen. In the
-beginning of each <span class="pageNum" id="pb299">[<a href="#pb299">299</a>]</span>of the four seasons of the year they post up on the doors of their houses slips of
-paper, on which are written mottoes, such as “Longevity is like the South Mountain,”
-“Wealth is like the Eastern Sea,” etc. Certain years in each person’s life are supposed
-to be critical, and special care as to health, food, clothing, new ventures, etc.,
-must be taken during these years, which are ended with a feast, or, what is more economical,
-a sigh of relief.
-</p>
-<p>The fifteenth day of the first month is called “Stepping on the Bridge.” A man and
-woman go out together over the bridge at the rising of the moon and view the moonlit
-scenery, indulging meanwhile in refreshments, both of the solid and liquid sort. It
-is believed that if one crosses over seven bridges on this night, he will be free
-from calamities during the year.
-</p>
-<p>Not the least interesting of the local or national festivals, are those held in memory
-of the soldiers slain in the service of their country on famous battle-fields. Besides
-holding annual memorial celebrations at these places, which fire the patriotism of
-the people, there are temples erected to soothe the spirits of the slain. Especially
-noteworthy are these monumental edifices, on sites made painful to the national memory
-by the great Japanese invasion of 1592–97, which keep fresh the scars of war. A revival
-of these patriotic festivals has been stimulated by the fanatical haters of Japan,
-since this neighbor country broke away from Asiatic traditions.
-</p>
-<hr class="tb"><p>
-</p>
-<p>Though much has been written concerning the population of Corea, we consider all conjectures
-of persons alike unfamiliar with the interior and the true sources of information
-as worthless. These random figures vary from 250,000 (!) to 6,000,000. Dallet presumes
-a population of 10,000,000. A rude enumeration made thirty years ago gives the number
-of houses at 1,700,000, and of the people at 7,000,000. Our own opinion, formed after
-a study of the map and official lists of towns and cities, is that there are at least
-12,000,000 souls in Chō-sen<span class="corr" id="xd31e4628" title="Not in source">.</span> A Japanese correspondent of the Tōkiō <i>Hochi <span class="corr" id="xd31e4632" title="Source: Shimlun">Shimbun</span></i>, writing from Seoul, states that a census made last year (1881) shows that there
-are 3,480,911 houses and 16,227,885 persons in the kingdom.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb300">[<a href="#pb300">300</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch33" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1110">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XXXIII.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">SHAMANISM AND MYTHICAL ZOÖLOGY.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Shamanism is the worship of a large number of primitive North Asiatic tribes, having
-no idols except a few fetishes and some rude ancestral images or representations of
-the spirits of the earth and air. It is a gross mixture of sorcery and sacrificial
-ceremonies for the propitiation of evil spirits. These malignant beings are supposed
-to populate the earth, the clouds, and the air, and to be the cause of most of the
-ills suffered by man. They take various forms, chiefly those of animals whose structure
-and anatomy are more or less imaginary, each imp or demon being a composite creature,
-compiled from the various powers of locomotion, destruction, and defence possessed
-by the real creatures that inhabit water, earth, and air. Some of them, however, are
-gentle and of lovely form and mien. Their apparition on earth is welcomed with delight
-as the harbinger of good things to come. Confucius, the teacher, hailed by the Chinese
-as their holiest sage, and to whom even divine honors are paid, believed firmly in
-these portents and appearances. Chief among these mythic creatures are the phœnix,
-the kirin, the dragon, besides a variety of demons of various sizes, colors, habits,
-and character. Much of the mythology of Chō-sen is that common to Chinese Asia. Instead
-of a gallery of beautiful human, or partially human, presences like that of Greece,
-the mythology of China deals largely with mythic animals, though legendary heroes,
-sages, and supernatural beings in human form are not lacking. The four chief ideal
-creatures are the dragon, phœnix, tortoise, and kirin.
-</p>
-<p>There is another animal which, though a living reality, the Coreans have idealized
-and gifted with powers supernatural and supra-animal, almost as many in number as
-those with which the Japanese have endowed the white fox. This is the tiger. They
-not only ascribe to him all the mighty forces and characteristics of which he is actually
-possessed, but popular superstition attributes <span class="pageNum" id="pb301">[<a href="#pb301">301</a>]</span>to him the powers of flying, of emitting fire and hurling lightning. He is the symbol
-of strength and ubiquity, the standard of comparison with all dangers and dreadful
-forces, and the paragon of human courage. On the war-flags this animal is painted
-or embroidered in every posture, asleep, leaping, erect, couchant, winged, and holding
-red fire in his fore-paw. On works of art, cabinets, boxes, and weapons the tiger
-is most frequently portrayed and is even associated as an equal with the four supernatural
-beings. In ancient time he was worshipped.
-</p>
-<p>The riong, or dragon, whose figure, as depicted in Corean art, is perhaps nothing
-more than a highly idealized form of an extinct geological species of saurian, is
-one of the four supernatural or spiritually endowed creatures. He is an embodiment
-of all the forces of motion, change, and power for offence and defence in animal life,
-fin, wing, tusk, horn, claws, with the mysterious attributes of the serpent. There
-are many varieties of the species dragon, which is the chief of scaly monsters. It
-possesses the gift of transformation and of rendering itself visible or invisible
-at will. In the spring it ascends to the skies and in the autumn buries itself in
-the watery depths.
-</p>
-<p>It is this terrific manifestation of movement and power which the Corean artist loves
-to depict—always in connection with water, clouds, or the sacred jewel of which it
-is the guardian, and for which it battles, causing commotion in heaven and earth.
-The dragon is synonymous in Chinese philosophy with the third of the four creative
-influences and indicative of the East and Springtime, the blue dragon being the guardian
-of the East.
-</p>
-<p>Another cycle of popular notions and artistic ideas is suggested by its change of
-bulk, for this omnipotent monster “becomes at will reduced to the size of a silkworm
-or swollen till it fills the space of heaven and earth. It desires to mount, and it
-rises until it affronts the clouds; to sink, and it descends until hidden below the
-fountains of the deep.” The dragon is the embodiment of the watery principle of the
-atmosphere, and its Protean shapes are but the varied ideal expression of the many
-forms and forces of water. Moisture in its fertilizing or destructive aspects—from
-the silent dew to the roaring tempest, from the trickling of a rill to the tidal wave
-that engulphs cities—blessed, terrible, gentle, irresistible, is symbolized by the
-dragon. The functions of the celestial dragon are to guard the mansions of the gods
-in heaven, so that they do not fall; of the spiritual, to cause <span class="pageNum" id="pb302">[<a href="#pb302">302</a>]</span>the wind to blow and produce rain for the benefit of mankind; of the terrestrial,
-to mark out the courses of rivers and streams, while another watches over the hidden
-treasures concealed from mortals. This last is the dragon that presides over mines
-and gems, and which mortals must propitiate or overcome in order to gain the precious
-metals and minerals out of the earth. Intense belief in the dragon is one of the chief
-reasons why the mines in Chō-sen are so little worked, and the metals disturbed. The
-dragon pursuing the invaders of their sanctuaries or fighting each other to gain possession
-of the jewel balls or sacred crystals is a favorite subject in all art of Chinese
-parentage. Rarely is the whole figure of the writhing creature exposed. Partly hidden
-in clouds or water, he seems ever in motion. There are also four dragon-kings, who
-have their palaces in the world under the sea, one ruling in the northern, one in
-the eastern, one in the southern, and one in the western sea. The ministers and messengers
-of these four monarchs are the terrible dragons whose battles in the air and in the
-deep are the causes of the commotion of the elements. There is also a dragon without
-horns, and another that never ascends to the skies. The yellow dragon is reckoned
-the most honorable of his tribe. In common belief the dragon carries on his forehead
-a pear-shaped pearl, supposed to possess wondrous virtues of healing and power. Whoever
-possesses these jewels will be invincible, and the power of his descendants endure.
-</p>
-<p>From its divine origin and character the dragon is symbolical of all that pertains
-to the emperor of Great China. Hence it is made use of not only by him, but by his
-vassal, the king of Chō-sen, and by his rival the mikado of Japan. Hence the significance
-of the trio of these sacred jewels on ornaments and instruments belonging to the royal
-family, whether embroidered on the robes of state worn by the king, surmounting the
-large drum of his musicians, or glistening in golden embroidery on the banners of
-his body-guard. The “dragon robe” and “dragon’s bed,” “dragon standard,” refer to
-the mantle, throne, and flag of the king. In the popular speech, whatever is most
-excellent is compared to a dragon. A “dragon-child” is a paragon, a “dragon horse”
-is one of extraordinary speed. When “the fish has been metamorphosed into the dragon,”
-some happy change or promotion has taken place—the student-competitor has received
-his degree of doctorate, or the office-holder has been told by royal <span class="corr" id="xd31e4653" title="Source: appointemnt">appointment</span> to “come up higher.”
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb303">[<a href="#pb303">303</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The kirin (kilin or lin) is another of the four supernatural creatures of Chinese
-philosophy and mythology, believed in by the Coreans, and depicted in Corean art especially
-as a symbol of peace and joy, and on articles used on auspicious and happy occasions.
-This beast, which to the Corean is a “living creature,” has the body of a deer and
-the tail of an ox, usually highly curled and twisted in a manner to suggest the work
-of a hair-dresser. On its forehead is a single soft horn. It is said never to tread
-on or injure any living being. It is the emblem of perfect rectitude, and the incarnate
-essence of the five primordial elements of all things, viz.: water, fire, wood, metal,
-earth. It is considered the noblest form of the animal creation. Its appearance on
-the earth is ever regarded as a happy omen, as the harbinger of good government and
-the birth of good rulers. Hence the wealth of association to the Oriental mind in
-the kirin. The male beast is called ki and the female rin or lin. The two words combined
-form the general term kirin.
-</p>
-<p>The tortoise is the centre of a great circle of pleasing superstitions, and hence
-is one of the set of symbols oftenest employed in Corean art. The practice of divination
-is mostly associated with tortoise-shell, the figuring of a tortoise’s back having
-a mystic signification. In Chinese legend a divine tortoise emerged from the Yellow
-River, on the shell of which a sage discovered the system of numerals, and thus obtained
-the foundation of mathematics and the rudiments of philosophy. This tortoise was said
-to be the embodiment of the star in Ursa Major, and the progenitor of all the tortoise
-tribe. It can transform itself into other forms of life and lives to the age of ten
-thousand years. Hence it is the symbol of long life. It is said to conceive by thought
-alone. There are said to be ten kinds of tortoises, one of them being half dragon,
-half tortoise, and with a tail like a fringe of silver. This is the attendant of the
-god of waters, and hence is often used as the top of a well. The tortoise is also
-the symbol of immortality and strength, hence is often used over walls and places
-of entrance. Many Corean gateways are surmounted with huge tortoises sculptured in
-stone. The same idea is expressed in making the representations of this creature,
-cut from a single rock, the base for monumental tablets set into its back. The great
-seal of state, the regalia of sovereignty in Chō-sen, has the form of a tortoise.
-The phœnix is also represented as standing upon a tortoise. Closely connected with
-the Hindoo idea of the world resting on an elephant which stands on <span class="pageNum" id="pb304">[<a href="#pb304">304</a>]</span>a tortoise, is the Chinese idea of “supporting the earth with the feet of a tortoise.”
-A common idea in Chō-sen, as in China, is the huge tortoise which supports mountains
-on its back, and having a shell which is one thousand leagues in circumference.
-</p>
-<p>The phœnix (fung-wang or hōwō), like the kirin, appears on the earth at or near the
-birth of a good ruler, and hence is the emblem of peace and good government. The male
-is called <i>fung</i>, or <i>ho</i>, and the female <i>wang</i>, or <i>wō</i>, hence the generic name fung-wang or hōwō. In its marvellous plumage the sheen of
-the five colors may be descried, each of which is typical of the five cardinal virtues.
-In figure it seems to be an ideal combination of the peacock and the golden pheasant,
-but with feathers wondrously curled and made into ringlets. It is not only a symbol
-of auspicious government, but of inseparable fellowship, and many stanzas of poetry
-refer to it as typical of courtship and conjugal love. In its voice are many intonations,
-to each of which a name is given. For this reason it is a favorite element in the
-decoration of musical instruments.
-</p>
-<p>Another symbol often used is the Chinese lion, with marvellously curled hair and mane.
-Every tuft is a mass of fanciful ringlets, and the beast is so pictured as to make
-a masterpiece of ugliness and terror. The dog of the breed called <i>ngao</i>, so named after the earth-supporting tortoise, is also liberally furnished with tooth,
-nail, and hair. It usually cuts the figure of guardian on the edge or lid of vessels
-in which are kept treasures which, because they tempt the palate, tempt also the fingers
-that lift to the mouth. The marvellous creature called the Dog of Fo, or Buddha, usually
-associated with Chinese-Buddhist art, is believed to be of Corean origin. Jacquemart
-calls it the “Dog of Corea.”
-</p>
-<p>Other mythical creatures that have their existence in the Corean imagination are in
-the form of fishes and serpents. The in-é (fish-man or merman) is a sort of siren
-that is supposed to inhabit the Sea of Japan and the Eastern Sea, but whether partly
-fabulous or entirely real, we are unable to say. It is six or seven feet long, and
-in its head and body resembles a human being, as its nose, mouth, ears, and arms,
-or flippers, are covered with white skin without scales. It has a long and slender
-tail, like that of a horse. It suckles its young, and sheds tears when its offspring
-are captured. It is probable that this creature, though called a fish-man by the Coreans,
-is the animal of which we read, in several instances, being presented to the Manchiu
-emperors in Peking. <span class="pageNum" id="pb305">[<a href="#pb305">305</a>]</span>One of them inquired whether such a creature was known in Europe, and the Jesuit friar,
-producing a book, showed an engraving of one similar. Perhaps this “fish-man” is the
-same as a reported “dog-fish or shark,” living in the seas around Quelpart, whose
-tears produce pearls.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p305width" id="p305"><img src="images/p305.png" alt="Battle-flag Captured by the Americans in 1871." width="293" height="592"><p class="figureHead">Battle-flag Captured by the Americans in 1871.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>The i-sium, a colossal marine creature, is purely imaginary, like the “earthquake-fish”
-of the Japanese, which causes the continent to shake. The word is pure Corean, and
-may answer to our symbol of vastness and uncertainty—the sea-serpent. Mr. Fergusson
-would doubtless find a new chapter for his “Tree and Serpent Worship” in Chō-sen,
-for, in the peninsula, not only are trees reverenced as the abode of spirits, but
-the sa, or snakes, are rarely, if ever, harmed. The people feed, venerate, and even
-worship them as the guardian genii of their households. The epkuron-gi (a pure Corean
-word) is the name by which they call the serpent which presides over their family
-Edens. Instead of being looked upon as the embodiment of the principle of evil, as
-in Semitic lore, their presence is hailed as an omen of blessing. They are treated
-like pets. In their heads they are believed to carry a precious jewel after they have
-lived long. A serpent often lives to be one thousand years old, and then bears in
-his front a glistening gem, called ya-kang-chiu, which name the people also apply
-to any glittering stone, especially the diamond. The guardian serpent is represented
-as double-winged, with forked tongue, long and darting, flying among the clouds and
-protecting its worshippers by pursuing their enemies. The illustration here given
-is copied from one of the war-flags carried by the Corean mountaineers from their
-homes to the forts on the Han River, in 1871. The staff is tipped with pheasant-feathers
-and horse-hair.
-</p>
-<p>Their fear of the serpent is the basis of their worship, and the <span class="pageNum" id="pb306">[<a href="#pb306">306</a>]</span>average Corean does not fail to take due precaution to guard against its sting. In
-addition to the ordinary <i>osa</i> or black snake, there is the venomous viper, <i>salmo</i>, which “kills its mother at birth.” Its bite is considered exceedingly dangerous.
-The <i>tai-mang</i> is a great serpent. The flower called <i>kiuk-sa-wa</i> (snake-bane), or Eye of India, is believed by Coreans to keep away the reptiles,
-and hence is highly valued.
-</p>
-<p>Hamel and the French missionaries agree in picturing Corea as a land well supplied
-with reptiles, serpents, and vermin of all sorts, and testify to the veneration of
-them by the people. In the folk-lore of the country, the beasts play a conspicuous
-part.
-</p>
-<p>Another creature to whom wings rightfully belong is the <i>gin-sai</i>. This fabulous bird is capable of diffusing so venomous an influence that even its
-shadow poisons food.
-</p>
-<p>Even the brief list of creatures which we have enumerated does not exhaust the list
-of the beings which are real and active to the imagination of the people. Science
-and Christianity are the remedies for this delirium tremens of paganism.
-</p>
-<p>The ancient and still lingering belief in the powers of the air and all the creatures
-therein, visible and invisible, is reflected on their triangular and streamer-shaped
-war-banners. They believe that all these creatures and all the forces of nature are
-under the control of the spirits, who will give or withhold sunshine or rain, send
-blasting mildew and pestilence, or fertility, plenty and joy, according as they are
-pleased or displeased.
-</p>
-<p>It will be seen at once what a soil the demagogue has for sowing dragons’ teeth, and
-what frightful popular commotion may be stirred up by playing upon the fears of the
-populace. The most recent illustration of this is seen in the frightful massacre of
-the ministers and the Japanese, in July, 1882. The long drought having ruined the
-rice crop, the leaders of the anti-foreign faction persuaded the common people that
-the spirits were annoyed at the introduction of foreigners, and therefore withheld
-the rain. In this belief they were strengthened from the fact that it rained heavily
-for many hours after the Japanese had been driven out of Seoul.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb307">[<a href="#pb307">307</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch34" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1119">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XXXIV.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">LEGENDS AND FOLK-LORE.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">It is not difficult to appreciate or understand the history of people whose psychology
-is our own. We seem to look through white light in gazing at their past as told in
-the words of a language that grew in the same mental sunlight with our own. In eating
-fruit that grows on familiar intellectual soil, we may sometimes recognize a slightly
-strange flavor, but the pulp is good food which our mental stomach does not reject,
-but readily assimilates. Truth, like the moon, usually presents one side only, but
-the mass of mankind do not think of this, even if they know it. They go on blissfully
-imagining they have seen all sides, even the full orb.
-</p>
-<p>With the history of the Aryan nations we are familiar, and think it is clear to us.
-We insist that we know we can understand what they did and that their thoughts need
-no translation to us.
-</p>
-<p>A visitor at the American Centennial, or any exposition of the industry of all nations,
-sees before him for comparative study the art, symbols of religion, architecture,
-implements of domestic life, and all the outward expressions of inward ideas. They
-are the clothed or concrete soul of man under the varied civilizations of this planet.
-Standing before the exhibits of India—the home of the Aryan nations—the man of Western
-Christendom, as his mind’s eye surveys the vastness of difference between him and
-the Hindoo, is yet able to bridge the gulf. The researches into language, art, myths,
-folk-lore, show him that the infancy of the two races was the same, and that modern
-differences are impertinent accidents. At bottom the Aryan and the Hindoo are brothers.
-</p>
-<p>No such reconciliation of ideas is yet demonstrable between the Mongolian and the
-Aryan. Before the art, symbols, ideas, literature, language, and physical presence
-of the man of Cathay, no bridging of the gulf seems yet possible. He appears to be
-a man of another planet<span class="corr" id="xd31e4717" title="Not in source">.</span> Language gives as yet little clue to a common origin; art and symbol seem at the
-other pole, and in <span class="pageNum" id="pb308">[<a href="#pb308">308</a>]</span>psychology the difference at present seems total and irreconcilable.
-</p>
-<p>Hence, to attempt to write the history of a Turanian people by simply narrating bald
-facts in an occidental language, seems to be but putting another white skeleton in
-the museum of nations. Even the attempt, by a purely destructive method of criticism,
-to manufacture a body, or corpse, rather, of history, by hacking away all legend and
-tradition to get out what the critic is pleased to call “history,” seems at once unnatural
-and false. It is like attempting to correlate the genius of Shakspeare with ounces
-of beef and cheese, or to measure the market value of poetry by avoirdupois. A history
-of an Asiatic people ought to be as much a history of mind, of psychology, as of facts
-or dynasties. Hence, in writing of a new and almost unknown people like the Coreans,
-we think it as important to tell what <i>they</i> believe to have happened, as to attempt to state what we think actually did happen.
-To understand a people we must know their thoughts, as well as their physical environment.
-</p>
-<p>According to Corean tradition, the origin of their country and people is thus outlined:
-</p>
-<p>Of old the land had neither prince nor chiefs. A Divine Being descended from heaven
-and took up his abode at the foot of a sandal-wood tree on the Ever-White Mountains.
-The people of the land became his subjects, made him their sovereign and called him
-Dan Kun (the Sandal Prince), and his realm Chō-sen (Morning Calm). This took place
-in the time of Tang Ti Yao (2356 <span class="asc">B.C.</span>). His first residence was at Ping-an. Later he transferred it to Pe-yo, where his
-descendants remained till the eighth year of the emperor Wu Ting of the Chang dynasty
-(1317 <span class="asc">B.C.</span>), when they were established in Mount Asstak. His descendants reigned in Chō-sen
-more than one thousand years, but nothing more is known of them after the period covered
-by their reign. Then followed the occupation of the country by the Chinese noble Ki
-Tsze.
-</p>
-<p>The mythical origin and founding of Shinra is thus told in the local legends of the
-place. After the invasion of Chō-sen, by the Chinese emperor, many of the original
-inhabitants fled and scattered over the east coast. They made settlements on the mountains,
-in the valleys, and along the sea-shore, some of which in time grew to be cities and
-large towns. One day the attention of the head man of one of the villages was attracted
-by the neighing of horses toward a mountain. He went in the direction of the <span class="pageNum" id="pb309">[<a href="#pb309">309</a>]</span>sounds, but instead of a horse he found an egg of extraordinary size, shaped like
-a gourd. Carefully breaking it open, he discovered a beautiful rosy boy-baby inside.
-The old man’s heart was touched by the sight, and he took the child to his home and
-adopted it as his own. The boy grew up beloved of all who saw or knew him. When but
-thirteen years old, the elders of the six principal towns gathered together and chose
-him as their lord and master. They gave him a name signifying “Coming Out of the West,”
-and to the country a name meaning “Born of the Gourd-egg.” The new king took to wife
-a fair maiden who was reputed to be the offspring of a well-dragon. They reigned for
-sixty years, when their daughter succeeded to the throne.
-</p>
-<p>In the fifth year of her reign she married a youth who had come from afar, whose origin
-was as wonderful as that of her own parents. His mother the queen had been delivered
-of an egg. Her husband, not enjoying such a form of offspring, threw the egg away,
-but the queen recovering it, carefully wrapped it in a silk napkin, and with many
-other treasures put it in a box and set it adrift on the sea. After many days the
-box was washed ashore on a distant coast. The fishermen who picked it up in their
-nets thought nothing of it, and threw it into the sea again. It drifted into one of
-the harbors of Shinra. An old woman finding it, opened the lid and found a lovely
-boy with a smile on his face. Carefully nourishing him, he grew up to be a man of
-strength, nine feet high. He excelled all other youths in bodily vigor and accomplishments.
-When the old woman first picked up the waif, there were a number of crows standing
-around the shore, and the crone gave him a name referring to the presence of these
-birds—“Opened in Presence of the Crows.” Excelling in the knowledge of geomancy, he
-found a good place for a residence and built on it. Hearing of his renown, the queen
-of Shinra married him to her daughter.
-</p>
-<p>One evening the newly made king heard a cock crow in the woods toward the west. He
-sent his servants after it, who found a small golden casket suspended from a tree.
-Under it a white cock was crowing. The servant reported the matter to his master.
-Another servant was despatched to the place. He returned with the box, which, being
-opened, was found to contain a boy baby, who was given the name signifying “The Golden
-Boy from the Grove in which the Cock crowed.” The baby boy grew up and succeeded his
-father. In the reign of the twenty-second king of <span class="pageNum" id="pb310">[<a href="#pb310">310</a>]</span>the line, the people of the country, then called Shin-han, changed the name of their
-country to Shinra.
-</p>
-<hr class="tb"><p>
-</p>
-<p>In the “<span lang="fr">Grammaire <span class="corr" id="xd31e4750" title="Source: Coréene">Coréenne</span></span>” there are a number of specimens of folk-lore given in Corean and French, from which
-we extract a few of the most characteristic. The first one is an illustration of our
-universal human nature.
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">THE THREE WISHES.
-</p>
-<p>There were once two old married folks who had not a single child, boy or girl. Extremely
-poor, they lived a pitiable life. One evening, when it was very cold in winter, after
-having supped, they gazed into the fire in the brazier, and sitting in their room
-face to face they warmed themselves a moment in silence, when the good old man thus
-spoke:
-</p>
-<p>“For the rich the winter is an excellent season; their food is prepared in advance.
-Having no toil they have only to take their ease. But for the poor, it is a rough
-time when they have neither food for the mouth nor fuel. If they go out over the mountain
-through the rain or the snow to seek wood, they die of cold or frost.”
-</p>
-<p>The good dame replied: “They say that Heaven is just. Why then does he permit this?
-They say, besides, that when you pray to Heaven, it is easy to obtain that which you
-need. If we ask to become rich—” said she.
-</p>
-<p>“You are right, do so,” replied the husband.
-</p>
-<p>And both prostrating themselves, prayed fervently to the Deity, when suddenly an angel
-appeared.
-</p>
-<p>“In spite of your sin of murmuring, Heaven having pitied you, accords you three things,
-after which you can ask no more. Reflect well, choose, and ask.” Saying this he disappeared.
-</p>
-<p>The old man made this proposition: “If we ask riches, freedom from sickness, or long
-life—”
-</p>
-<p>“No,” said the old woman, “we should not enjoy these things properly if we do not
-have a child. What pleasure will it be?”
-</p>
-<p>“Hold! I have not asked. What shall I do? If he had only said <i>four</i> things at the good moment! Why did he say only <i>three</i>? Since we wish to have a child, must we forego freedom from sickness, must we renounce
-riches, must we give up long life? It is hard to decide. Think, then, seriously this
-night, and decide to-morrow.”
-</p>
-<p>Breaking off their conversation, both sat plunged in reverie. At the moment of lying
-down to sleep, the old woman, stirring up the fire with the tongs, launched out with
-this reflection, “If we could have three or four feet of pudding to set to toast on
-this brazier, that would be royally excellent.”
-</p>
-<p>She spoke, and there was three feet of food placed by her side.
-</p>
-<p>The husband, beside himself with rage, screamed out—
-</p>
-<p>“Oh! what a woman! By one stroke you have lost all our benefits. To punish you I wish
-the pudding would hang itself on the point of your nose.”
-</p>
-<p>Immediately the pudding made a leap and attached itself to the old dame’s nose.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb311">[<a href="#pb311">311</a>]</span></p>
-<p>At this the husband cried out, “Hello! Angry as I am, I have also by my fault lost
-a wish.” Seizing the sausage to detach it, they pulled, first one, then the other,
-almost dislocating the nose, but the sausage held on.
-</p>
-<p>“Alas!” said the woman in tears, “if this is always to remain hanging here, how can
-I live?”
-</p>
-<p>The husband, on the contrary, without being at all disturbed, said, “If even yet our
-wish of fortune is fulfilled, we could make a tube of gold to hide this sausage, and
-then drawing it out at length, it will be only more beautiful to see.”
-</p>
-<p>The wife, still more miserable, cried out, “Oh, wretched me, only to think that fortune
-should wish to put it there. Well! whether you be rich or live long, as for me, I
-should like to kill myself.”
-</p>
-<p>Saying this she took a cord and went to strangle herself at the end of a beam. The
-husband, struck with fear, and touched with compassion, hastened to set her free.
-</p>
-<p>“Stop,” said he, “there remains one wish to us. Have your own way about it.”
-</p>
-<p>“If that is so, I wish that what hangs to my nose comes loose. Quick, quick, that
-it may go swift away. That is my chief wish.”
-</p>
-<p>She had hardly finished speaking when the sausage fell plump to the ground, and out
-of the midst of the heaven an angry voice was heard:
-</p>
-<p>“You have obtained the three things which you wished for, and have you gained a great
-advantage? If you wish to enjoy true blessing in this world be content to live with
-what Heaven gives, and do not form vain desires.”
-</p>
-<p>The two old folks spitted the pudding, ate it, and from this night they abstained
-from foolish wishes.
-</p>
-<p>On the morrow, agreeably to their supreme ambition, which was to have a baby, they
-found a little fatherless and motherless orphan. Having adopted it as their child,
-they gave him a good education and lived happily to extreme old age.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>The following illustrates official shrewdness and rapacity:
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">THE HISTORY OF A NOSE.
-</p>
-<p>In the chief city of Chulla, there was a politician who was in debt to the government
-to the amount of ten thousand strings of cash. Unable to pay the same, he was condemned
-to death. Cast into prison, he awaited only the orders of the king to carry out the
-sentence. As he had thought hard without discovering any means to get out of the affair,
-he bethought himself of a stratagem. So, addressing the jailer, he said:
-</p>
-<p>“Helloa! you there, you’ll do well to let me go free a little while.”
-</p>
-<p>“Helloa!” answered the jailer, “what wretched talk! After I have set free a man who
-ought to be put to death to-morrow or day after to-morrow, what shall <i>I</i> do?”
-</p>
-<p>The prisoner replied, “Are we not friends both of us? If you do not let me go, who
-can save my life? Think over it a little and see. My wife, my children, my house,
-all I have, all my relations and friends being here, where <span class="pageNum" id="pb312">[<a href="#pb312">312</a>]</span>shall I fly? If you set me at liberty for some moments not only will I not abscond
-but there will be found means for preserving my life safely. Do so.”
-</p>
-<p>As he thus besought him eagerly, the jailer, struck with compassion, could not do
-otherwise than let him go.
-</p>
-<p>So at midnight he presented himself before the door of the room where the governor
-slept, and thus addressed him.
-</p>
-<p>“Are you asleep? Is your excellency sleeping?”
-</p>
-<p>Hearing the sound and astonished at recognizing the voice of the officer who had been
-cast into prison and was to be executed in a short time, the governor asked.
-</p>
-<p>“Who are you?”
-</p>
-<p>“Your servant,” answered the officer.
-</p>
-<p>“A scoundrel who is at the point of being executed, how is it you are here?”
-</p>
-<p>“If I may be allowed to enter to salute you,” said the officer, “I have something
-particular to say to you.”
-</p>
-<p>“Oh, well, come in and speak.”
-</p>
-<p>The officer entering, approached, sat down, and said:
-</p>
-<p>“I pray your excellency to reflect and consider my purpose. If you put your servant
-to death this will be simply one man of means less in the world, and the money I owe
-will be lost to the government. What advantage will you thus derive? If, on the contrary,
-you preserve my life there will be one man more in the world, and I shall repay the
-whole of my debt to the government. Let me then live.”
-</p>
-<p>“If it ought to be so I wish you well in the matter.”
-</p>
-<p>“Your servant will come again, then, to-morrow, during the night, to see you.”
-</p>
-<p>“Do as you will.”
-</p>
-<p>The morrow during the night the officer presented himself anew and asked to be introduced.
-Approaching he made the prostrations before the governor, drew from his sleeve a packet
-which he undid and took out a sketch representing a human nose. He immediately besought
-the governor to please put his seal upon the sketch.
-</p>
-<p>Agreeing to the proposal the governor imposed his seal.
-</p>
-<p>The officer now associated three companions who were in the plot, and they all assembled
-upon the coast of the Eastern Sea, where they found a populous village, in the midst
-of which rose a high and grand mansion. Taking their drink of spirits at a hotel in
-the suburbs of the next village beyond, they prepared to sup. Addressing their host
-they put this question:
-</p>
-<p>“What is the name of the village which is just behind us? Whose is the largest house?”
-</p>
-<p>The inn-keeper answered, “That is the house of a very rich noble. Last year he received
-the degree of the doctorate and is eligible to fill very soon a very high position
-under the government.”
-</p>
-<p>The officer taking with him one of his comrades repaired to the mansion, where, as
-he noticed, everything showed abundant means, and thus spoke to the son.
-</p>
-<p>“As we have a secret affair to treat of, let us go into another room,” said the officer.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb313">[<a href="#pb313">313</a>]</span></p>
-<p>They did so. “See here, the king is very sick, and they have called all the physicians
-from all the eight provinces for a consultation. They have declared that the only
-means to obtain healing is to find the nose of a man just like this, and to concoct
-a remedy from it. This is why we have been commanded by the Court, where they have
-said to us, putting in our hand this sketch of the nose<span class="corr" id="xd31e4831" title="Source: .">:</span> ‘Without distinction of place or person if you meet a nose similar to this, strike
-it off and produce it before us in this place.’ Obeying this severe order we have
-been out many times without being able to find a nose conforming to the sketch, and
-thus far have made useless journeys, but now, without peradventure, your honorable
-father’s nose exactly resembles this. We demand to see him, and wherever he may be
-we shall not depart till we have cut it off.”
-</p>
-<p>The son cried out: “<i>Perhaps</i> they do say such things!”
-</p>
-<p>“Who dare oppose the government business? Hurry, hurry, strike it off and we’ll go.”
-</p>
-<p>The son fell into a study and reflected.
-</p>
-<p>“It is an affair of state. This is a matter which we cannot prevent. Cut it off, they
-say, but to cut off the nose of my old father, that is altogether impossible. The
-entire family, men, women, young and old, every one will be plunged into woe. You
-can bear away the half of our fortune at least, if you will go away without taking
-my father’s nose.”
-</p>
-<p>The officer replied, “We had proposed to ourselves to depart only after having cut
-off the nose. However, as this is a matter of a son devoted to his father, and that
-they may not repress filial piety in others, we shall not cut off the nose. If you
-will give us a certain sum we will go elsewhere to procure a nose which we shall present
-to the king.”
-</p>
-<p>He accepted with thanks a sum equal to many times ten thousand strings of cash, for
-which he gave a receipt, told the sender of the money such a day, such a place, and
-on leaving offered this recommendation:
-</p>
-<p>“Upon the whole, say nothing of this affair. If it should leak out, and the government
-comes to know that having found a proper nose we have been bribed not to cut it off,
-we shall be arrested and put to death, they will certainly cut off your father’s nose
-and take your money also. Pray then be careful not to divulge this secret.” Upon this
-they took their leave.
-</p>
-<p>Overjoyed at not having his parent’s nose amputated, but believing that the king on
-being informed would send again on this business, the son dared let no one know until
-the day of his father’s death. Then breaking the silence he said, “I have bought my
-father’s nose for —— thousand strings of cash.”</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>The story here told explains itself. Cheng-chong was the Haroun al Raschid of Corea.
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">AN INSTANCE OF ROYAL SOLICITUDE.
-</p>
-<p>There was in Chō-sen a king called His Majesty Cheng-chong, who was celebrated in
-all the kingdom for his goodness. One night, disguised as a countryman, and accompanied
-only by a single companion, he started out from the midst of the capital to make a
-circuit in order to inform himself of the temper of his subjects, and to become himself
-acquainted with the details of their life.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb314">[<a href="#pb314">314</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Arrived at a certain point he looked in the window. There was a miserable house, of
-which the outer dilapidation, extremely pitiable as it was, led him to suspect in
-the interior a state of things difficult to imagine. Eagerly wishing to know what
-it was, he punched a peep-hole in the paper door and perceived an old man weeping,
-a man in mourning singing, and a nun or widow dancing. Unable to divine the cause
-of this spectacle, he ordered his companion to call the master of the house. The king’s
-servant doing so, said:
-</p>
-<p>“Is the proprietor of the house at home?”
-</p>
-<p>Hearing this voice the man in mourning made his appearance. His Majesty saluting him
-said:
-</p>
-<p>“We have never before met.”
-</p>
-<p>“True,” said the man in mourning, “but whence are you? How is it that you should come
-to find me at midnight? To what family do you belong?”
-</p>
-<p>Cheng-chong answered, “I am Mr. Ni, living at Tong-ku-an. As I was passing before
-your house, I was attracted by strange sounds. Then by a hole which I made in the
-door, I saw an old man weeping, a nun who danced, and a gentleman in mourning who
-sang. Why did the old man shed tears, the nun dance, and the man in mourning sing?
-Unable to fathom the motive I have made my friend call the householder with the purpose
-of informing myself.”
-</p>
-<p>The man in mourning rejoined, “Have you any business to know other people’s matters?
-What is your reason for acting thus when it concerns you so little? The night is well
-gone. Get back as quickly as possible.”
-</p>
-<p>“No, not at all. I acknowledge that it is not becoming to pry into the affairs of
-others, but this is such an extraordinary case I beg of you give me some light on
-the matter.”
-</p>
-<p>“Alas!” said the man in mourning, “why is the gentleman so eager to know other people’s
-matters?”
-</p>
-<p>Cheng-chong replied, “It is important that I should be somewhat informed.”
-</p>
-<p>“Since the gentleman wishes so much to know, I cannot do other than tell. This is
-why. My family has always been poor. In my hut one could never find sufficient grain
-for a meal and one flea would not have enough room upon my land to squat upon. I have
-no victuals for my old father. This is why, morning and evening, in default of all
-other resource, my wife has often cut off a tress of her hair and gone and sold it
-to buy a cup of bean-soup, which she graciously offers to my father. This evening
-she clipped and sold all of her hair that remained, and by this she has become bare-headed
-like a nun. My old father, seeing that for his sake his young daughter-in-law has
-become a nun, broke out into mourning in these terms:
-</p>
-<p>“ ‘Why have I lived to this day? Why am I not dead? Why have I thus degraded my daughter-in-law?’
-And in saying this he shed tears. To console him, my wife said to him, ‘Do not weep,’
-and she danced. I, also, although in mourning, joined in with my wife. One danced,
-the other sang. This made my old father smile, and perhaps gave him solace. There!
-that is why we behaved so. Do not think it strange, and go away.”
-</p>
-<p>Listening to this narrative the king was impressed with such a marked supreme devotion
-on the part of the son and daughter-in-law, even in the time of deepest misfortune,
-and he said, “This is the most extraordinary thing in the world. How will it do to
-present you at the examination to-morrow?”
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb315">[<a href="#pb315">315</a>]</span></p>
-<p>“What examination to-morrow?” asked the man.
-</p>
-<p>“Why, certainly,” said Cheng-chong, “to-morrow there will be an examination. By all
-means don’t fail to be there.”
-</p>
-<p>The man responded, “But I have not heard it said that there is to be an examination.”
-</p>
-<p>“Whether you have heard or not,” said the king, “prepare to compete, and present yourself.
-As I shall also present myself to-morrow I shall give you a stall in the enclosure.”
-</p>
-<p>Having thus spoken he took his leave, returned to the palace and awaited the stroke
-of the great clock-bell.
-</p>
-<p>No sooner did he hear the vibration of the mighty gong than he immediately gave the
-order to announce promptly the examination in the city, and beyond the walls, to the
-utter astonishment of the literary men, who said, “Even until yesterday no one had
-heard of an examination, and behold it was published during the night. What does this
-mean?”
-</p>
-<p>The poor householder on his part made this reflection, “Although I knew nothing about
-it, this man knows perfectly,” and he started out.
-</p>
-<p>On the way he noticed a crowd of candidates. Without hesitation he entered the enclosure.
-The subject of the examination was: “The song of a man in mourning, the dance of a
-nun, the tears of an old man.”
-</p>
-<p>Of all the students not one could derive the sense of such a subject.
-</p>
-<p>This man alone knew it perfectly well, because he had had experience of those very
-things in his own house. He treated the theme clearly and sent in his copy. The king
-having examined the essay and found it without a mistake, gave the degree of doctor
-and sent for him to come to him.
-</p>
-<p>When they were in each other’s presence the king said:
-</p>
-<p>“Do you know me? It is I who yesterday recommended you to present yourself at the
-examination. Lift up your head and look.”
-</p>
-<p>Fixing his gaze attentively, the man recognized who he was—in effect the same person—and
-manifested his feelings in appropriate actions of gratitude.
-</p>
-<p>“Go quickly,” said the king to him, “go find your old father and wife.”
-</p>
-<p>Forthwith, with high appointment to office joined to magnificent treatment, the king
-recompensed the filial piety of the son and daughter-in-law.
-</p>
-<p>The royal renown has been handed down from generation to generation. In truth, beyond
-the goodness of the king, the reward bestowed upon the filial devotion of these two
-married people is known to every one.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>Evidently the following is a story told by metropolitans to show up the bumpkins of
-the provinces:
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">THE PRODIGIOUS EFFECTS OF A LOOKING-GLASS.
-</p>
-<p>A young noble of Kiung-sang province was going on a journey to Seoul. Just as he was
-about to depart, his wife called him.
-</p>
-<p>“He! say now, listen to me a little. I have heard the mother of Mr. Kim speak of a
-very lovely thing which looks like glass and pretty metal. They say that if you look
-in it you will see a very curious thing. You must bring me one.”
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb316">[<a href="#pb316">316</a>]</span></p>
-<p>“Is it dear or cheap?” asked the husband.
-</p>
-<p>“It is not dear,” said she. “It will be necessary to spend some money, but if you
-heed the matter at all, it will be easy to pay for it.” This is what the husband heard
-as he set out for the capital.
-</p>
-<p>Having finished his business at Seoul he was on the point of returning, having almost
-lost sight of his wife’s order. At last he recalled it, asked the name of the object
-in question, and made the purchase of a mirror through one of his friends. In his
-eagerness to get home he put his wife’s commission in his wallet without even looking
-at it. When he arrived home, she hastened to take out the mirror. At once she perceived
-in it a woman. Immediately she began to weep and to berate her husband.
-</p>
-<p>“Oh the villain! not only to play himself the vagabond and debauchee but to bring
-along a concubine! Is it possible? This woman, what is she?”
-</p>
-<p>The amazed husband looked in the mirror, and at the side of his wife perceived a man.
-Unable to contain his wrath which made his face first dark and then blue, he uttered
-piercing cries.
-</p>
-<p>“Is this the conduct for the wife of a noble. You have brought a libertine here,”
-cried he.
-</p>
-<p>He was about to murder his wife, when his old mother hearing the squabble came in
-to know what it was. At sight of the old woman the quarrel ceased on either side.
-Pointing at the mirror, the rivals spoke both at once. The weeping daughter-in-law
-raved about a concubine, the son, even more angry, talked of a paramour. As the couple
-had never quarrelled before, there was no way of accounting for the mystery.
-</p>
-<p>“Do not be vexed,” said she, and looking in the mirror she saw a woman. At once she
-broke out into a laugh.
-</p>
-<p>“Is it because you see the old woman, your neighbor, that you dispute? The widow Pak
-has come to get some fire,” said she, and she went out to speak to her, but she was
-not there.
-</p>
-<p>Astonished, she called her husband and said to him
-</p>
-<p>“There is in the children’s room a very funny thing. You can see in it all kinds of
-extraordinary things and they are bickering over it. Come and see a little.”
-</p>
-<p>The venerable gentleman having entered the room perceived in the mirror an aged man.
-</p>
-<p>“Hello! the puppy of the teacher Tsoi has come to collect his fees and I have not
-a penny. That is not very nice.”
-</p>
-<p>The people of the village, one by one, two by two, all without exception looked at
-the mirror, but unable to comprehend anything, they made a tumult. Curious to know
-what should result, they carried it to the magistrate. At sight of the instrument,
-the man of authority more astonished than the others, called the policemen and gave
-them this order:
-</p>
-<p>“A new officer has arrived, why have I lost my place? Get ready men and horses for
-him.”
-</p>
-<p>Really believing that he had been cashiered he prepared to leave, when a young policeman
-after a careful examination of the mirror, pointed out the manner in which the visage
-of each individual was reflected.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb317">[<a href="#pb317">317</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch35" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1127">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XXXV.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">PROVERBS AND PITHY SAYINGS.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Shut off, as they are, from the rest of the world, like fish in a well, the Coreans
-nevertheless have coined a fair share of homely wisdom, which finds ready circulation
-in their daily speech. Their proverbs not only bear the mint-mark of their origin,
-but reflect truly the image and superscription of those who send them forth. Many,
-indeed, of their current proverbs and pithy expressions are of Japanese or Chinese
-origin, but those we have selected are mainly of peninsular birth, and have the flavor
-of the soil.
-</p>
-<p>Do the Coreans place the seat of wisdom as they do the point of vaccination, in the
-nose? They ask, “Who has a nose three feet long?” which means, “If one is embarrassed,
-how can he put others at ease?” Evidently they have a wholesome regard for that member.
-A “nose of iron” describes an opinionated man and suggests unlimited “cheek.” A common
-expression of the Christians, meaning to go to church and pray, is “to see the long
-nose of the father”—that feature of the French priest’s face being looked upon with
-awe as the seat of wisdom.
-</p>
-<p>Between the rivals, Japan and China, Corea probably sees herself in this proverb of
-the unhappy cur that wanders boneless between two kitchens—the cook in each supposing
-it has been fed by the other. “The dog which between two monasteries gets nothing.”
-</p>
-<p>Corea’s isolation is “like a fish in a well,” or “like a hermit in the market-place.”
-They say of a secluded villager, “He knows nothing beyond the place which he inhabits.”
-</p>
-<p>“One stick to ten blind men,” is something very precious.
-</p>
-<p>“The cock of the village in a splendid city mansion,” is the bumpkin in the capital.
-</p>
-<p>“To have a cake in each hand,” is to know not which to eat first—to be in a quandary.
-</p>
-<p>“A volcano under the snow,” is a man of amiable manners who conceals a violent temper.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb318">[<a href="#pb318">318</a>]</span></p>
-<p>“The treasure which always circulates without an obstacle,” is “cash,” or <i>sapeks</i>.
-</p>
-<p>“An apricot-blossom in the snow,” is said when something rare and marvellous happens.
-</p>
-<p>“To blow away the hair to see if there is a scar,” is to look for a mote in another
-man’s eye, and to hunt for defects.
-</p>
-<p>“As difficult as the roads of Thibet,” is evidently a reminiscence derived from the
-ancient Buddhist missionaries who came from that region.
-</p>
-<p>“To put on a silk dress to travel at night,” is to do a good action and not have it
-known.
-</p>
-<p>Some pithy sayings show the local gauge of sense. “He does not know silver from lead,”
-“He has round eyes,” “He can’t tell cheese from wheat,” He is an idiot. “Doesn’t know
-<i>lu</i> from <i>yu</i>.” This last refers to two Corean letters, jot and tittle.
-</p>
-<p>“As opposed as fire and water.”
-</p>
-<p>“A buckskin man,” is a man of no will or backbone.
-</p>
-<p>“To have a big hand,” means to be liberal.
-</p>
-<p>“A great blue sea,” refers to something very difficult, with no end to it and no way
-out of it.
-</p>
-<p>A man who is “not known in all the eight coasts,” is an utter stranger.
-</p>
-<p>A very sick person is “a man who holds disease in his arms.”
-</p>
-<p>“A bag of diseases,” is a chronic patient
-</p>
-<p>“Who can tell in seeing a crow flying whether it be male or female?” is a question
-referring to the impossible.
-</p>
-<p>The numeral 10,000 (<i>man</i>) plays a great part in proverbial sayings as “10,000 times certain.” Corea is a “land
-of 10,000 peaks.” Certain success is “10,000 chances against one.” “To die 10,000
-times and not be regretted,” is to be “worthy of 10,000 deaths.” Ten thousand sorrows
-means great grief. A mountain is “10,000 heights of a man high.” “Ten thousand strings
-of cash,” is a priceless amount. <i>Man-nin</i> are 10,000 people—all the people in the universe.
-</p>
-<p>“To lose one’s hands,” is to make a fiasco.
-</p>
-<p>A comet is an “arrow star.”
-</p>
-<p>“A hundred battles make a veteran.”
-</p>
-<p>Almost as poetical as the Greek “<i lang="grc-latn">anarithma gelasma</i>” (unnumbered laughings) is this Corean description of the sea—“Ten thousand flashings
-of blue waves.”
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb319">[<a href="#pb319">319</a>]</span></p>
-<p>“To lose both at a time,” is a proverb founded on a native love-story.
-</p>
-<p>“When a raven flies from a pear-tree, a pear falls”—appearances are deceitful, don’t
-hazard a guess.
-</p>
-<p>“If one lifts a stone, the face reddens.” The Coreans are fond of rival feats of lifting.
-Heavy stones are kept for that purpose. “Results are proportionate to effort put forth.”
-</p>
-<p>Mosquitoes are lively and jubilantly hungry in Chō-sen, yet it does not do to fight
-them with heavy weapons or “seize a sabre to kill a mosquito.”
-</p>
-<p>A very poor man is thus described: “He eats only nine times in a month,” or “He eats
-only three times in ten days.” To say he is in the depths of poverty is to mention
-the pathetic fact that “he has extinguished his fire;” for “he looks to the four winds
-and finds no friend.”
-</p>
-<p>“The right and left are different,” is said of a hypocrite who does not speak as he
-thinks.
-</p>
-<p>When a man is not very bright he “has mist before his eyes;” or he “carries his wits
-under his arms;” or has “hidden his soul under his arm-pits,” or he “goes to the east
-and goes to the west when he is bothered.”
-</p>
-<p>Like Beaconsfield’s dictum—“Critics are men who have failed in literature and art,”
-is this Corean echo, “Good critic, bad worker.”
-</p>
-<p>“On entering a village to know its usages,” is our “When in Rome do as the Romans
-do.”
-</p>
-<p>“To destroy jade and gravel together,” refers to indiscriminate destruction.
-</p>
-<p>“Without wind and without cloud,” describes a serene life.
-</p>
-<p>“Go to sea,” is a provincial malediction heavier than a tinker’s, and worse than “Go
-to grass.”
-</p>
-<p>“I am I, and another is another,” is a formula of selfish, and Corean for “<i lang="la">ego et non ego</i>,” “I and not I.”
-</p>
-<p>“A poor horse has always a thick tail”—talent and capacity are badly located.
-</p>
-<p>The large number of morals pointed and tales adorned by the tiger are referred to
-elsewhere.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb320">[<a href="#pb320">320</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch36" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1135">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XXXVI.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE COREAN TIGER.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The one royal quadruped associated with Corea, as the white elephant is with Siam,
-the bison with the United States, or the dromedary with Egypt, is the tiger. Unlike
-his relative in India that roams in the hot jungles and along the river bottoms, the
-Corean “king of the mountains” is seen oftenest in the snow and forests of the north,
-ranging as far as the fiftieth parallel.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p320width" id="p320"><img src="images/p320.png" alt="Battle-flag Captured in the Han Forts, 1871." width="389" height="493"><p class="figureHead">Battle-flag Captured in the Han Forts, 1871.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>Both actually and ideally the tiger is the symbol of power and fierceness. The flag
-of the tiger-hunters, from the northern provinces of Ping-an or Ham-kiung, who so
-bravely faced the rifles of the United States marines and sailors in “our little war
-with the heathen,” in 1871, was a winged tiger rampant, spitting fire, holding the
-lightnings in his lifted fore-claws, and thus embodying the powers of earth, air,
-and heaven. It reminds one of the winged leopard in the vision of Daniel, “After this,
-I beheld, and lo another like a leopard, which had upon the back of it four wings
-of a fowl.” It is the tutelary genius of the descendants of the aboriginal worshippers
-of the tiger, who even yet cling to the religion of the soil.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5001src" href="#xd31e5001">1</a>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb321">[<a href="#pb321">321</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The caps of the body-guard of the sovereign are decorated with the cheek and whiskers
-of the tiger, in order to inspire terror among beholders. The Corean beauty carries
-among the jewelry and “charms” in the reticule at her waist, a claw of the dreaded
-pem or tiger, nor can the hardy mountaineer put in the hand of his bride a more eloquent
-proof of his valor than one of these weapons of a man-eater. It means even more than
-the edelweiss of other mountain lands. On the floors of the better class of houses
-the tiger-skin rug not only adorns the best room, but makes the children’s play-ground,
-or the baby’s cushion in lieu of cradles, which are unknown. The soft hair of these
-natural rugs is often a finger long. Curious toys are made of the fur.
-</p>
-<p>The most prized articles among the tribute offerings (in these days, rather a “bonus”
-or bribe, than a tax or humiliation) presented at the court of Peking, as of old at
-Kiōto or Yedo, are these gorgeous pelts. One of them, which the writer saw recently,
-the property of a Japanese merchant, measured twelve feet long, exclusive of the tail.
-The symbol of military rank in old Japan, as indicative as our shoulder-straps, was
-a tiger-skin scabbard. Especially was it honorable to wear it if captured with one’s
-own hands on “frontier service.” The hair of these animals seems to have more of a
-woolly quality than those from India, while the orange tint is far less predominant,
-white taking its place. The black bars are, however, of equal magnificence with the
-tropical product, and the tail seems to be rather longer. Some idea of the great numbers
-and awful ravages of these huge <i lang="la">felidæ</i> in the two northern provinces of the Peninsular Kingdom, may be gained from the common
-saying of the Chinese that “the Coreans hunt the tiger during one half the year and
-the tigers hunt the Coreans during the other half.” The Coreans retort by the proverb
-born of the desolation that has so often followed the presence of a Chinese army on
-their soil, whether as invaders or allies: “After the Chinese, the tigers.<span id="xd31e5011"></span>” As a single man can create the gigantic spectre of the Brocken, so in the national
-literature this one animal seems to have cast a measureless shadow of evil influence
-upon this hermit nation. From the most ancient times it has been an object of religious
-reverence. “They also worshipped the tiger, which they looked on as a god,” was written
-of the people living on the sea of Japan before the Christian era. “They had also
-the many-spotted leopard.” A few of the national proverbs will illustrate the amount
-of attention which the subject receives <span class="pageNum" id="pb322">[<a href="#pb322">322</a>]</span>in daily life, in art, religion, and language, and how often it serves to point the
-morals and adorn the tales told around Corean hearths. “A wooden tiger,” is the ass
-in the lion’s skin.
-</p>
-<p>“A broken-backed tiger” describes impotent and raging malice.
-</p>
-<p>“To give wings to a tiger,” is to add shrewdness to force.
-</p>
-<p>“If you don’t enter the tiger’s lair, you can’t get her cubs,” is said to spur on
-the faint heart, “to beard the tiger in his cave.”
-</p>
-<p>“A tiger’s repast,” describes excess in eating, or the gorging which follows after
-fasting. “To nourish a tiger, and have him devour you,” probably states a common fact
-of history, as well as it depicts ingratitude. “If you tread on the tail of a tiger,
-you’ll know it,” explains itself. “It is hard to let go the tail of a tiger,” suggests
-our “fire” after the “frying-pan,” or the “other horn of the dilemma;” while over-cautious
-people “in avoiding a deer, meet a tiger.” Men of irascible temper or violent disposition
-are given the pet name of <i>maing-ho</i>, which means an unusually ferocious tiger or “man-eater.”
-</p>
-<p>Corean shrewdness utilizes the phenomena of local experience, and equals the craft
-of the sellers of Joseph. So common is the disappearance of a villager through visitations
-of the tiger, that the standard method of escaping creditors or processes of law is
-to leave bits of one’s torn clothes in the woods, and then to abscond. Obliging friends
-or relatives quickly report, “Devoured by a tiger,” and too often it is believed that
-“Joseph is without doubt rent in pieces.” This local substitute for our former G.&nbsp;T.
-T., or the usual trip to Europe, is especially fashionable in places where “tigers
-as big as a mountain” are plentiful. To drive away the dreaded <i>kal-pem</i>, the people invoke the aid of the tu-e′, a fabulous monster, which is the enemy of
-the tiger, and which the latter greatly fears. The cry of his name <i>tu-e′, tu-e′</i>, is believed to act as a charm, and is often raised by villagers at night.
-</p>
-<p>In art, though the native picture-maker may draw a lion in such preposterous shape
-and with such impossible attributes as to show at once that no living model was ever
-before his eyes, yet in those pictures of the tiger drawn by Corean artists which
-we have examined, accuracy and vigor of treatment predominate over artistic grace.
-</p>
-<p>The hunters who are familiar with every habit, trait of character, and physical detail
-of the species, carefully distinguish his parts and varieties. <i>Ho-rang-i</i> is the generic name for the <i lang="la">felis tigris</i>. <i>Kal-pem</i>, is a mature fellow in full claw, scratchy and <span class="pageNum" id="pb323">[<a href="#pb323">323</a>]</span>ferocious. <i>Maing-ho</i> is a large one of unusual size and in the full rampancy of his vigor. <i>Mil-pal</i> is an old brute that can no longer scratch, and is most probably mangy, and well
-gouged and scarred from numerous household quarrels and frequent tussles with rivals.
-<i>Pi-ho</i> is one agile in turning tail to escape, rather than in showing teeth to fight—the
-term being sometimes applied to the leopard. <i>San-tol</i> is a huge fellow that makes annual visits to one place, making his lightning strike
-more than once in the same spot. <i>Siyo-ho</i> is a little, and <i>hal-pem</i> is a female, tiger. A “stone” tigress is sterile. Special terms suggestive, and even
-poetical, for the murders, calamities, or ravages of the beast, for traps or ditches,
-for the skin, tail (used for banners and spear-sheaths), beard, moustaches, and the
-noises of purring, growling, nocturnal caterwauling, and even for lashing the tail,
-enrich and vivify the Chō-sen vocabulary.
-</p>
-<p>Tiger-shooting is not a favorite sport among the nobles or young bloods. Hunting in
-general is considered a servile occupation. Nobles, except those of a few poor families
-in the northern provinces, never practise it as sport. Yet it is free to all. There
-are no game laws, no proscription of arms, no game preserves, no seasons interdicted.
-</p>
-<p>The only animal which it is forbidden to kill is the falcon, whose life is protected
-by stringent laws. From the most ancient times this bird of the golden wing has been
-held in high honor. The hunting-grounds are almost entirely among the mountains, as
-the valleys are too densely occupied with rice and millet fields and cultivated soil,
-to allow game to exist or be hunted. The chief weapon used is the flint-lock, imported
-from Japan. With this a single hunter will attack the huge game, although the animal,
-when not <span class="corr" id="xd31e5057" title="Source: immedately">immediately</span> killed, leaps right upon his enemy and easily makes him his prey. When a tiger has
-caused great ravages in a district, the local magistrate calls together all the professional
-hunters and organizes a hunt in the mountains. In such cases, the chase is usually,
-and of intent, without results; for the skin is the property of the government, and
-the official always looks out for himself, coming in first for the spoils. Hence it
-is that a government hunt is usually a farce. Most of the tiger-hunters prefer to
-meet the royal game alone, for then the prized skin, which they sell secretly, is
-theirs. They eat the meat, and the bones stripped and boiled make various medicines.
-</p>
-<p>The number of human lives lost, and the value of property <span class="pageNum" id="pb324">[<a href="#pb324">324</a>]</span>destroyed by their ravages, is so great as at times to depopulate certain districts.
-A hungry tiger will often penetrate a village in which the houses are well secured,
-and will prowl around a hovel or ill-secured dwelling, during several entire nights.
-If hunger presses he will not raise the siege until he leaps upon the thatched roof.
-Through the hole thus made by tearing through, he bounds upon the terrified household.
-In this case a hand-to-claw fight ensues, in which the tiger is killed or comes off
-victorious after glutting himself upon one or more human victims. Rarely, however,
-need this king of Corean beasts resort to this expedient, for such is the carelessness
-of the villagers that in spite of the man-eater’s presence in their neighborhood,
-they habitually sleep during the summer with the doors of their houses wide open,
-and oftentimes even in the sheds in the open fields without dreaming of taking the
-precaution to light a fire.
-</p>
-<p>This sense of security is especially apt to follow after a grand hunt successfully
-pursued. Then the prey is supposed to have been all killed off in the vicinity or
-driven to the distant mountains. The Coreans are as careless of tigers as the Japanese
-are of fires. Sometimes the tiger is caught in a snare, without danger and by very
-simple means. A deep pit is covered over with branches, leaves, and earth. At the
-bottom a sharp stake is set up. This, however, is only rarely used. During the winter
-the snow is half frozen over and strong enough to bear the weight of a man, but is
-broken through by the paws of the tiger. The beast sinks to the belly, and not being
-able to move fast, or escape, is as helpless as a fly in molasses. It is then apparently
-quite easy to approach the creature at bay, though woe be to the hunter who is too
-sure of his prey. To be well-equipped for this method of mountain sport, the hunter
-must have a short sword, lance, and snow-shoes. These <i>sel-mai</i>, or racquettes, are of slightly curved elastic board, well fitted with loops and
-thongs. With dogs, trained to the work, the <i>san-chang</i> (lanceman) starts the game, and following up the trail usually finishes him with
-a thrust of his spear; or, in bravado, with a sword-stroke. This method of sport was
-the favorite one pursued by the Japanese invaders. Though occasionally a man-at-arms
-was chewed up, or clawed into ribbons, scores of glossy skins were carried back to
-Nippon as trophies by the veterans. Indeed, it may be said, to most Japanese children,
-the nearest country west of them has no other association in their minds than as a
-land of tigers. At Gensan, the <span class="pageNum" id="pb325">[<a href="#pb325">325</a>]</span>merchants from Tōkiō had their dreary homesickness, about the time of their first
-New Year’s season in the strange land, rather unpleasantly enlivened by the advent
-of several striped man-eaters. These promenaded the settlement at night, and seemed
-highly desirous of tasting a Japanese, after having already feasted on several natives.
-The prospect of playing Little Red Riding Hood to a whiskered man-eater was not a
-very pleasant experience, though a possible one at any time. A tiger ten feet long
-can easily stow away two five-feet Japanese without grievous symptoms of indigestion.
-For an untrained hand, even when armed with a Winchester breech-loader, to attempt
-hunting this Corean emblem of power is not attractive sport. The tiger is more apt
-to hunt the man, for elephants are not at hand to furnish the shelter of their backs.
-The Japanese do not seem to hanker after tiger-claws or skins while in the flesh,
-but prefer to buy for cash over their own counters at Gensan. The “crop” of these
-costly pelts averages five hundred a year at this one port.
-</p>
-<p>Few experiences tend more to develop all the manly virtues than facing a tiger on
-foot in his native wilds. The Coreans know this, and in their lack of drilled troops
-capable of meeting the soldiers of Europe—their “army” consisting almost entirely
-of archers, spearmen, and jingal-firers—they summoned the tiger-hunters from Ping-an
-to fight the Frenchmen of Admiral Roze’s expedition of 1866. Underrating their enemy,
-the Frenchmen, in attempting to storm a fortified monastery garrisoned by the hunters,
-were completely defeated. When the marines and sailors of the American naval expedition
-of 1871 assaulted “Fort McKee,” after it had been swept by the shells of the fleet,
-they were amazed at the stern courage of their dark-visaged enemies, who, with matchlock,
-spear, and sword, fought against the shells and breech-loaders to the last. The Americans
-speak admiringly of these brave fellows, so worthy of their lead and steel.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb326">[<a href="#pb326">326</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5001">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5001src">1</a></span> This flag was presented by its captors to Commodore Homer C. Blake, by whose courtesy
-the writer had the sketch made for the cut given above.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5001src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch37" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1144">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XXXVII.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">RELIGION.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">A careful study of the common names applied to the mountains, rivers, valleys, caves,
-and other natural features of the soil and landscape of any country will lay bare
-many of the primitive or hidden beliefs of a people. No words are more ancient than
-the aboriginal names given to the natural features of a country amid which the childhood
-of a nation has been spent. With changing customs, civilization, or religion, these
-names still hold their place, reflecting the ancient, and often modified, or even
-vanished, faith.
-</p>
-<p>Even a casual examination of the mountain, river, and other local names of places
-in Corea will give one a tolerably clear outline of the beliefs once fully held by
-the ancient dwellers of this peninsula. Against the tenets and influences of Buddhism
-these doctrines have held their sway over the minds of the people and are still the
-most deeply-seated of their beliefs. The statements of ancient Chinese, and later
-of Japanese writers, of foreign castaways, and of the French missionaries all concur
-in showing us that Shamanism is the basis of the Corean’s, and especially the northern
-Corean’s, faith. In the first historic accounts of Fuyu, Kokorai, and the Sam-han,
-we find the worship of the spirits of heaven and earth, and of the invisible powers
-of the air, of nature, the guardian genii of hills and rivers, of the soil and grain,
-of caves, and even of the tiger. They worshipped especially the morning-star, and
-offered sacrifice of oxen to heaven. From such scanty notices of early Corea, especially
-of the northern parts, we may form some idea of the cultus of the people before Buddhism
-was introduced. From the reports of recent witnesses, Dutch, Japanese, and French,
-and the evidence of language, we incline to the belief that the fibres of Corean superstition
-and the actual religion of the people of to-day have not radically changed during
-twenty centuries, in spite of Buddhism. The worship of the spirits of heaven and earth,
-of mountains and rivers and caves, of the <span class="pageNum" id="pb327">[<a href="#pb327">327</a>]</span>morning star, is still reflected in the names of these natural objects and still continues,
-in due form, as of old, along with the sacrifices of sheep and oxen.
-</p>
-<p>The god of the hills is, perhaps, the most popular deity. The people make it a point
-to go out and worship him at least once a year, making their pious trip a picnic,
-and, as of old, mixing their eating and drinking with their religion. Thus they combine
-piety and pleasure, very much as Americans unite sea-bathing and sanctification, croquet
-and camp-meeting holiness, by the ocean or in groves. On mountain tops, which pilgrims
-climb to make a visit for religious merit, may often be seen a pile of stones called
-siong-wang-tang, dedicated to the god of the mountain. The pilgrims carry a pebble
-from the foot of the mountain to the top. These pilgrims are among those held in reputation
-for piety.
-</p>
-<p>The other popular gods are very numerous. The <i>mok-sin</i>, the genii of the trees, the god of rain and of the harvest, are all propitiated,
-but the robust Corean, blessed with a good appetite, especially honors <i>Cho-an-nim</i>, the tutelary genius of the kitchen. To a Corean, the air is far from being empty.
-It is thickly inhabited with spirits and <span class="corr" id="xd31e5091" title="Source: invisbile">invisible</span> creatures. Some of these figments of imagination, and the additional powers for good
-and evil, which the Corean attributes to animals of flesh and blood, are treated of
-in a former chapter on Mythical Zoölogy. Even the breezes are the breath of spirits,
-and “a devil’s wind” is a tempest raised by a demon intent on mischief. When a person
-falls dead suddenly, heart-disease is not thought of; he has been struck by a devil’s
-arrow. There are not wanting sorcerers who seek to obtain supernatural force by magic,
-which they use against their enemies or for hire, direct the spirits to wreak malignity
-against the enemy of him who fees them. These sorcerers are social outcasts, and reckoned
-the lowest of humanity.
-</p>
-<p>The unlucky days are three in each month, the figure of ill-omen being five. They
-are the fifth, fifteenth, and twenty-fifth. On all extraordinary occasions there are
-sacrifices, ceremonies, and prayers, accompanied with tumultuous celebration by the
-populace. The chief sacrifices are to heaven, earth, and to the King or Emperor of
-Heaven<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5096src" href="#xd31e5096">1</a> (Shang Ti of the Chinese).
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb328">[<a href="#pb328">328</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The various superstitions concerning the direction of evil, the auspicious or the
-ill-omened lay of the land, the site for the building of a house, or the erection
-of a tomb, will be well understood by those who know the meaning of the Chinese term,
-Fung Shuy, or the Corean Pung-siu. This system of superstition has not only its millions
-of believers, but also its priests or professors, who live by their expertness and
-magnify their calling. The native vocabulary relating to these pretenders and all
-their works is very profuse. Among the common sights in Corea are little mounds raised
-on eligible, propitious places, in which a pole is planted, from which little bells
-or cymbals are hung. These jingled by the breeze are supposed to propitiate the good
-spirits and to ward off the noxious influences of the demons. The same idea is expressed
-in the festoons of wind-bells strung on their pagodas and temples. Pung-siu means
-literally “wind and water,” but in a broad sense is a rude cyclopædia of ideas relating
-to nature, and bears nearly the same relation to natural philosophy as astrology does
-to astronomy. Its ideas color every-day speech, besides having a rich terminology
-for the advanced student of its mysteries.
-</p>
-<p>Upon this system, and perhaps nearly coeval in origin with it, is the cult of ancestral
-worship which has existed in Chinese Asia from unrecorded time. Confucius found it
-in his day and made it the basis of his teachings, as it had already been of the religious
-and ancient documents of which he was the editor.
-</p>
-<p>The Corean cult of ancestor-worship seems to present no features which are radically
-distinct from the Chinese. Public celebrations are offered at stated times to ancestors,
-and in every well-to-do house will be found the gilt and black tablets inscribed with
-the names of the departed. Before these tablets the smoke of incense and sacrifice
-arises daily. In the temple also are rooms for the preservation of duplicates of the
-tablets in the private houses for greater safety. Like the iron atoms in his blood,
-the belief in ancestral piety and worship is wrought into the Corean’s soul. The Christian
-missionaries meet with no greater obstacle to their tenets and progress than this
-practice. It is the source, even among their most genuine converts, of more scandals,
-lapses, and renunciations, than are brought about by all other causes.
-</p>
-<p>Confucianism, or the Chinese system of ethics, is, briefly stated, <span class="pageNum" id="pb329">[<a href="#pb329">329</a>]</span>an expansion of the root idea of filial piety. It is duty based on relation. Given
-the five great relations, all the manifold duties of life follow. The five relations
-are that of king and subject (prince and minister), of parent and child, of husband
-and wife, of the elder brother and the younger brother, and between friends. The cardinal
-virtues inculcated, or “The Five Constituents of Worth,” or constant virtues displayed,
-according to the teachings of Confucius, by the perfect man are: 1, Benevolence; 2,
-Uprightness of Mind; 3, Propriety of Demeanor; 4, Knowledge or Enlightenment; 5, Good
-Faith; or, Affection, Justice, Deference, Wisdom, Confidence.
-</p>
-<p>With the ethics of the Chinese came their philosophy, which is based on the dual system
-of the universe, and of which in Corean, <i>yum-yang</i> (positive and negative, active and passive, or male and female) is the expression.
-All things in heaven, earth, and man are the result of the interaction of the <i>yum</i> (male or active principle) and the <i>yang</i> (female or passive principle). Even the metals and minerals in the earth are believed
-to be produced through the <i>yum-yang</i>, and to grow like plants or animals.
-</p>
-<p>The Confucian ethics, suiting well a state of feudalism, and being ever acceptable
-to the possessors of authority, found congenial soil in the <span class="corr" id="xd31e5122" title="Source: peninsla">peninsula</span>, as they had already taken root in Kokorai. They nourished the spirit of filial piety
-and personal loyalty, of feud and of blood-revenge, by forbidding a man to live under
-the same heaven with the murderer of his father or master. Notwithstanding the doctrines
-and loftier morals of Buddha, the Chinese ethics and ancestor-worship, especially
-in the northern part of the peninsula, underlaid the outward adherence of the people
-to the religion of the Enlightened One. As the average Christian, in spite of the
-spirit of Jesus and the Sermon on the Mount, is very apt to base his behavior and
-legal procedure on the code of Justinian, so the Corean, though he may believe in
-Fo (Buddha), practises after the rules of Kong-ja (Confucius).
-</p>
-<p>Official sacrifices are regulated by the government and are offered up publicly at
-the national festivals. Something of the regulated subordination in vogue among the
-Chinese prevails in Chō-sen when ancestors are honored. High officials may sacrifice
-to three ancestors, the gentry only to father and grandfather, and the common people
-to father only. In every province, capital, and city ranked as <i>Tai-mu-kan</i>, there are buildings containing statues <span class="pageNum" id="pb330">[<a href="#pb330">330</a>]</span>of Confucius and his thirty-two disciples, which are maintained at the public expense.
-</p>
-<p>Confucianism overspreads the whole peninsula, but during the prevalence of Buddhism,
-from the fourth to the fourteenth century, was probably fully studied and practised
-only by the learned classes. Under the present dynasty, or from the fifteenth century,
-the religion of China has been both the official and popular cult of <i>Chō-sen</i>, long ago reaching the point of bigotry, intolerance, and persecution. Taoism seems
-to be little studied.
-</p>
-<p>In Corean mouths Buddha becomes <i>Pul</i>, and his “way” or doctrine <i>Pul-to</i> or <i>Pul-chie</i>. Introduced into Hiaksai in the fourth, and into Shinra in the sixth century, the
-new faith from India made thorough conquest of the southern half of the peninsula,
-but has only partially leavened the northern portion, where the grosser heathenism
-prevails. The palmy days of Corean Buddhism were during the era of Korai (from 905–1392,
-<span class="asc">A.D.</span>). The missionary work had been accomplished, the reigning dynasty were professors
-and defenders of the faith, and for these four centuries it was the religion of the
-state. The few surviving monuments of this era of splendor are the grand pagodas,
-monasteries, and temples that are found, especially in the southern provinces. The
-profusion of legal and ecclesiastical terms in the language which relate to lands
-set apart to provide revenues for the temples, and to their boundaries and rents,
-and the privileges of monks and priests, are more probably the relics of a past time,
-being only verbal shells and husks of what were once fruit and kernel.
-</p>
-<p>Until the fifteenth or sixteenth century the Japanese Buddhists looked to the “Treasure-land
-of the West,” as they termed Chō-sen, for spiritual and even pecuniary aid in their
-ecclesiastical enterprises. The special features of many renowned Japanese temples,
-libraries, collections of books, images, altar furniture, etc., are of Corean origin.
-This is especially noticeable in the old seats of the faith in Kiōto. Images in gold,
-gilt wood, bronze, and some fire-resisting material—perhaps platinum—are known and
-duly certified by genuine documents in temples in other cities. In a building at Kamakura
-is a copy of the Buddhist canon in a revolving library, said to have been obtained
-by Sanétomo from Corea in the thirteenth century. Among the amusing passages in the
-letters from Ashikaga in Kamakura, two hundred years later, is the hint given to the
-king of Corea that a contribution in aid of the repair of certain Japanese temples
-would be acceptable.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb331">[<a href="#pb331">331</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The site and general surroundings of Corean Buddhist temples and monasteries greatly
-resemble those of China and Japan. They are often situated on hills, rising ground,
-and even high mountains, and walled round by lofty and venerable trees which seem
-to inspire awe and veneration in the worshipper, besides acting as extinguishers to
-sparks drifted from neighboring fires. An imposing gateway is usually built at some
-distance before the temple, with massive curved roof of tiles, and flanked by a wall
-of masonry which, in its upper part, consists of plaster tiled at the top. On the
-frieze of the portal, the name of the temple is inscribed in large Chinese characters.
-Sanskrit letters or monograms are occasionally seen. Under a roofed shed in front
-hangs the drum on which the bonze beats the hours for prayer, or of the clock. On
-the other side stands the coffer for the cash of the faithful, or a well for the manual
-ablutions of pious worshippers. Boards, on which are written the names of those who
-have contributed money to the temple, are suspended near by, and the thatched houses
-of the neophytes and bonzes are close at hand.
-</p>
-<p>The idols seen in a Corean temple are the same as those found throughout Buddhist
-Asia. The chief is that of Shaka Muni, or Buddha, the founder of the religion. In
-their sculpture and artistic treatment of this, the central figure of their pantheon,
-the image-carvers of the different countries do not greatly vary, adhering strictly
-to their traditions. The sage in Nirvana sits on his knees with the soles of his feet
-turned upward to the face. His hands touch, thumb to thumb, and finger to finger.
-The folds of the robes, the round bead-like caste mark of his forehead, the snails
-on his crown—which tradition says came out to shelter his head from the rays of the
-sun—and the lop or pierced ears, are substantially the same as those seen on idols
-from India, Siam, and Thibet. The eye is only slightly oblique, and the ear-lobes
-are made but slightly bulbous, to satisfy the tastes of worshippers in Chinese Asia.
-The throne, consisting of the fully opened calyx of a lotus flower—the symbol of eternity—with
-the petals around the base and seed-holes open, is the same.
-</p>
-<p>In the representation of local deities the artist asserts his patriotism and displays
-his own taste. In the various countries overrun by Buddhism, the indigenous heroes,
-sages, and gods have been renamed and accepted by the Buddhists as avatars or incarnations
-of Buddha to these countries before the advent of the teachers of “the true religion.”
-There are also saints and <span class="pageNum" id="pb332">[<a href="#pb332">332</a>]</span>subordinate magnates in the Buddhist gallery of worshipped worthies, with whose effigies
-the artist does not scruple to take certain liberties. One can easily recognize an
-idol of Chinese, Corean, Siamese, or Japanese manufacture, though all bear the same
-name. The god of war in Chō-sen holds the double-bladed sword, with its tasselled
-cord, and wears the Chino-Corean armor and helmet. In the aureole round the head are
-three fiery revolving thunder-clouds. On the battle-flags captured by the American
-forces in 1871 were painted or embroidered the protecting deities of those who fought
-under them. One of these, whether representing a Buddha, as seems most probable, or,
-as is possible, some local hero—perhaps Dan Kun or Ki Tsze—deified, rides on one of
-the curious little ponies, stunted and piebald, of Ham-kiung, with which, even in
-ancient times, one could ride under a fruit tree. Evidently it would have been safer
-for Absalom in Corea than in woody Palestine.
-</p>
-<p>The tutelary god on the stunted piebald horse is dressed in the peculiar winged head-dress
-and frilled collar which travellers on Ham-kiung soil noticed fifteen centuries ago.
-His armor is in scales, or wrought in the “wave-pattern” characteristic of Corean
-art. His shoes and saddle are of the Chinese type. He rides among the conventional
-clouds, which in the native technique, are different from those of either China or
-Japan. Evidently the Buddha and saints of Shaka Muni are portrayed by the native artist
-according to the strict canons of orthodoxy, while in dealing with indigenous deities,
-artistic licence and local color have free play. Most of the artists and sculptors
-of temple work are priests or monks. The principal idols are of brass, bronze, or
-gilded wood, the inferior sorts are of stone. The priests dress just like the Japanese
-bonzes. They attend the sick or dying, but have little to do with the burial of the
-dead, owing to the prevalence of the Pung-sui superstition, to which a Corean in life
-and in death is a bond-slave. This all-powerful disease of the intellect is the great
-corrupter of Corean Buddhism, many of its grossest ideas being grafted into, or flourishing
-as parasites on a once pure faith.
-</p>
-<p>In its development Corean Buddhism has frequently been a potent influence in national
-affairs, and the power of the bonzes has at times been so great as to practically
-control the court and nullify decrees of the king. With the Fuyu race—that is in Chō-sen
-and Nihon—the history of Buddhism has a decidedly military <span class="pageNum" id="pb333">[<a href="#pb333">333</a>]</span>cast. During the first centuries of its sway in the peninsula the ablest intellects
-were fed and the ablest men were developed by it, so that it was the most potent factor
-in Corea’s civilization. Over and over again have the <span class="corr" id="xd31e5160" title="Source: politcial">political</span> and social revolutions been led by Buddhist priests, who have proved agitators and
-warriors as well as recluses and students. Possessing themselves of learning, they
-have made their presence at court a necessity. Here they have acted as scribes, law-givers,
-counsellors, and secretaries. Often they have been the conservers of patriotism. The
-shaven-pated priest has ever been a standard character in the glimpses of Corean history
-which we are allowed to catch.
-</p>
-<p>Not always has this influence been exerted for good, for once possessed of influence
-at court, they have not scrupled to use it for the purpose of aggrandizing their sects.
-Tradition tells of high nobles won from the pleasures of the palace to the seclusion
-of the cloisters, and even of Corean queens renouncing the bed of their royal spouses
-to accept the vows of the nuns. As in Japan, the frequent wars have developed the
-formation of a clerical militia, not only able to garrison and defend their fortified
-monasteries but even to change the fortune of war by the valor of their exploits and
-the power of their <span class="corr" id="xd31e5166" title="Source: commisariat">commissariat</span>. There seems to be three distinct classes or grades of bonzes. The student monks
-devote themselves to learning, to study, and to the composition of books and the Buddhist
-ritual, the <i>tai-sa</i> being the abbot. The <i>jung</i> are mendicant and travelling bonzes, who solicit alms and contributions for the erection
-and maintenance of the temples and monastic establishments. The military bonzes (<i>siung kun</i>) act as garrisons, and make, keep in order, and are trained to use, weapons. Many
-of their monasteries are built on the summit or slopes of high mountains, to which
-access is to be gained only with the greatest difficulty up the most rocky and narrow
-passages. Into these fastnesses royal and noble professors of the faith have fled
-in time of persecution, or pious kings have retired after abdication. In time of war
-they serve to shelter refugees. It was in attacking one of these strongholds, on Kang-wa
-Island, in 1866, that the French marines were repulsed with such fearful loss.
-</p>
-<p>Many temples throughout the country have been erected by the old kings of Korai or
-by noblemen as memorials of events, or as proofs of their devotion. The building of
-one of these at great expense and the endowment of others from government <span class="pageNum" id="pb334">[<a href="#pb334">334</a>]</span>funds, sometimes happens, even during the present dynasty, as was the case in 1865,
-when the regent was influenced by the bonzes. He rebuilt the temple in an unparalleled
-style of magnificence, and made immense presents to other temples out of the public
-treasury. It has been by means of these royal bounties, and the unremitting collection
-of small sums from the people, that the bonzes have amassed the vast property now
-held by them in ecclesiastical edifices, lands, and revenues. Some of these mountain
-monasteries are large and stately, with a wealth of old books, manuscripts, liturgical
-furniture, and perhaps even yet of money and land. The great monastery of Tong-to-sa,
-between Kiung-sang and Chulla, is noted for its library, in which will be found the
-entire sacred canon. The probabilities of American or European scholars finding rare
-treasures in the form of Sanskrit MSS. in this unsearched field are good, since the
-country is now opened to men of learning from Christendom. As a rule, the company
-of monks does not number over ten, twenty, or thirty, respectively, in the three grades
-of temples. Hamel tells us that they live well and are jolly fellows, though his opinion
-was somewhat biased, since he remarks that “as for religion, the Coreans have scarcely
-any.… They know nothing of preaching or mysteries, and, therefore, have no disputes
-about religion.” There were swarms of monastics who were not held in much respect.
-He describes the festivals as noisy, and the people’s behavior at them as boisterous.
-Incense sticks, or “joss” perfumery, seemed very much in vogue. He bears witness to
-their enjoyment in natural scenery, and the delightful situation of the famous temples.
-</p>
-<p>Even at the present day, Buddhist priests are made high officers of the government,
-governors of provinces, and military advisers. Like as in Japan, Buddhism inculcates
-great kindness to animals—the logical result of the doctrine of the transmigration
-of souls, and all who kill are under its ban. Though beef, pork, and mutton are greedily
-eaten by the people, the trade of the butcher is considered the most degraded of all
-occupations, and the butchers and leather dressers form a caste below the level of
-humanity, like the Etas in Japan. They are beneath the slaves. They must live in villages
-apart from the rest of the people, and are debarred from receiving water, food, fire,
-or shelter at the hands of the people. The creation of this class of Corean pariahs
-and the exclusion of these people from the pale of recognized society <span class="pageNum" id="pb335">[<a href="#pb335">335</a>]</span>is the direct result of the teachings of the bonzes. Like the Chinese, and unlike
-the Japanese bonze, the devotees will often mutilate themselves in the frenzy of their
-orgies, in order to gain a character for holiness or in fulfilment of a vow. One of
-these bonzes, appointed by the magistrate to dispute publicly with a Christian, had
-lost four fingers for the sake of manufacturing a reputation. The ceremony of <i>pul-tatta</i>, or “receiving the fire,” is undergone upon taking the vows of the priesthood. A
-moxa or cone of burning tinder is laid upon the man’s arm, after the hair has been
-shaved off. The tiny mass is then lighted, and slowly burns into the flesh, leaving
-a painful sore, the scar of which remains as a mark of holiness. This serves as initiation,
-but if vows are broken, the torture is repeated on each occasion. In this manner,
-ecclesiastical discipline is maintained.
-</p>
-<p>In the nunneries are two kinds of female devotees, those who shave the head and those
-who keep their locks. The <i>po-sal</i> does not part with her hair, and her vows are less rigid. Hamel mentions two convents
-in Seoul, one of which was for maidens of gentle birth, and the other for women of
-a lower social grade.
-</p>
-<p>Excepting in its military phases, the type of Corean Buddhism approaches that of China
-rather than of Japan. In both these countries its history is that of decay, rather
-than of improvement, and it would be difficult indeed for Shaka Muni to recognize
-the faith which he founded, in the forms which it has assumed in Chō-sen and Nippon;
-nor did it ever succeed in making the thorough missionary conquest of the former,
-which it secured in the latter, country. The priority of the Confucian teachings and
-the thorough indoctrination of the people in them, the nearness of China, the close
-copying of Chinese manners, customs, and materialistic spirit, the frequency of Chinese
-conquests, and perhaps the presence of an indigenous religion even more strongly marked
-than that of Shintō in Japan, were probably the potent reasons why Buddhism never
-secured so strong a hold on the Corean intellect or affections as upon the Japanese.
-Nevertheless, since Buddhism has always been largely professed, and especially if
-Confucianism be considered simply an ethical system and not a religion proper, Corea
-may be classed among Buddhist countries. Among the surprises of history is the fact
-that, in 1876, the Shin, or Reformed sect of Japanese Buddhists, sent their missionaries
-to Corea to preach and convert. Among their conquests was a young native of ability,
-who came to Kiōto, in 1878, to study the <span class="pageNum" id="pb336">[<a href="#pb336">336</a>]</span>reformed Buddhism, and who later returned to preach among his own people. In 1880
-five more young Coreans entered the Shin theological school in Kiōto, and a new and
-splendid Shin temple, dedicated to Amida Buddha, has been built at Gensan. Evidently
-this vigorous sect is resolutely endeavoring, not only to recoup the losses which
-Christianity has made in its ranks in Japan, but is determined to forestall the exertions
-of Christian missionaries in the peninsula.
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">So thoroughly saturated is the Corean mind with Chinese philosophy (p. 329) that when
-of necessity a national emblem or flag must be made, the symbol expressive of the
-male and female, or active and passive principles dominating the universe, was selected.
-Though Corea excels in the variety of her bunting and the wealth of symbolism upon
-her flags and streamers, yet the national flag, as now floated from her ships, custom-houses,
-and Legations in the United States and Europe, has an oblong field, in the centre
-of which are the two comma-shaped symbols, red and black, of the two universal principles.
-In each of the four corners of the flag is one of the Pak-wa or eight diagrams, consisting
-of straight and broken lines, which Fu-hi, the reputed founder of Chinese civilization,
-read upon the scroll on the back of the dragon-horse which rose out of the Yellow
-River, and on the basis of which he invented the Chinese system of writing. In these
-diagrams the learned men in Chinese Asia behold the elements of all metaphysical knowledge,
-and the clue to all the secrets of nature, and upon them a voluminous literature,
-containing divers systems of divination and metaphysical exegesis, has been written.
-The eight diagrams may be expanded to sixty-four combinations; or, are reducible to
-four, and these again to their two primaries. The continuous straight line, symbol
-of the <i>yum</i> principle, corresponds to light, heaven, masculinity, etc. The broken line symbolizes
-the <i>yang</i> principle, corresponding to darkness, earth, femininity, etc. These two lines signify
-the dual principle at rest, but when curved or comma-shaped, betoken the ceaseless
-process of revolution in which the various elements or properties of nature indicated
-by the diagrams mutually extinguish or give birth to one another, thus producing the
-phenomena of existence.
-</p>
-<p>Professor Terrien de Lacouperie sees in the Pak-wa a link between Babylonia and China,
-a very ancient system of phonetics or syllabary explaining the pronunciation of the
-old Babylonian characters and their Chinese derivatives. It is not likely that Morse
-derived the idea of his magneto-electric telegraphic alphabet from the Chinese diagrams.
-Possibly the Corean literati who suggested the design for a national flag intended
-to show, in the brightly colored and actively revolving germs of life set prominently
-in the centre, and contrasted with the inert and immovable straight lines in the background
-of the corners, the progressive Corea of the present and future as contrasted with
-Corea of the past and her hermit-like existence. Significantly, and with unconscious
-irony of the Virginia advertisers, the new Corean flag was first published to the
-Western world at large on the covers of cigarette packages. For centuries the energies
-of Coreans have been wasted in tobacco smoke, and the era of national decay is almost
-synchronous with the introduction of tobacco.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb337">[<a href="#pb337">337</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5096">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5096src">1</a></span> This word, pronounced in a slightly different way in Corean, is the term which Dr.
-James Legge, in his “Religions of China,” and many missionaries of Reformed Christianity,
-translate God (Jehovah, Theos), but which the Roman Catholic missionaries are forbidden
-to use. Dr. Legge holds that Shang <span class="pageNum" id="pb328n">[<a href="#pb328n">328</a>]</span>Ti is the most ancient title of Deity in the language of the Chinese, and was used
-by their ancestors when they held to primitive monotheism. “In the ceremonies at the
-altars of heaven and earth, they served God” (Confucius).&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5096src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch38" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1152">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XXXVIII.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">EDUCATION AND CULTURE.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Corea received her culture from China, and gave it freely to Japan. If we may believe
-the doubtful story of Ki Tsze, then the Coreans have possessed letters and writing,
-or, what is the equivalent thereto, they have had “civilization,” during three thousand
-years. It is certain that since about the opening of the Christian era, the light
-of China’s philosophy has shone steadily among Corean scholars. Japanese early tradition—unworthy
-of credence in the matter of chronology—claims that literature was brought to Nippon
-as early as the period 157–30 <span class="asc">B.C.</span> The legend of Jingu bringing back books and manuscripts from Shinra is more probable;
-while the coming of Wani from Hiaksai, to teach the Chinese characters and expound
-the classics, is a historic fact, though the real date may be uncertain, or later
-than the accepted one, which is 285 <span class="asc">A.D.</span> While the Kokorai people may have brought letters with them, as they migrated southward,
-in Hiaksai the Confucian analects were not studied until the fourth century, when
-official recognition of education was made by the appointment of Hanken as master
-of Chinese literature. This is said to have been the first importation of learning
-into the peninsula. It was so in the sense of being formally introduced from China
-into the country south of the Ta-tong River.
-</p>
-<p>As in most of the Asiatic countries, into which Chinese culture penetrated, popular
-education was for centuries a thing unthought of. Learning was the privilege of a
-few courtiers, who jealously guarded it from the vulgar, as an accomplishment for
-those about the royal person, or in the noble families. The classics and ethical doctrines
-seem in every case to have penetrated the nations surrounding the Middle Kingdom,
-and formed the basis of courtly and aristocratic education.
-</p>
-<p>Buddhism furnished the popular or democratic element, which brought learning to the
-lower strata of society. Neophytes were <span class="pageNum" id="pb338">[<a href="#pb338">338</a>]</span>usually taken from the humbler classes, and thus culture was diffused. Even the idols,
-pictures, and scrolls, with the explanations and preaching in the vernacular, served
-to instruct the people and lift their thoughts out of the rut of every-day life—a
-result which is in itself true education. Wherever Buddhism penetrated, there was
-more or less literature published in the speech of the unlearned, and often the first
-books for the people were works on religion. China gave her language and ideographs;
-India sent Sanskrit and phonetic letters, from which syllabaries or alphabets were
-constructed, not only for vernacular writing and printing, but as aids to the easier
-apprehension and more popular understanding of the tenets of Confucius.
-</p>
-<p>The Corean syllabary seems to have been first invented by Chul-chong, one of the ministers
-at the court of the king of Shinra, in the seventh century. This was the <i>Nido</i>; like the kana of the Japanese, purely a collection of syllables and not a true alphabet.
-The Nido was made by giving to some of the commoner Chinese characters a phonetic
-value, though the idea of having a vernacular system of writing was most probably
-suggested by the Sanskrit letters,<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5224src" href="#xd31e5224">1</a> some of which accurately represented Corean sounds. The true alphabet of the Coreans,
-called <i>Unmun</i> (common language), was invented by a Buddhist priest named Syel-chong, or Sye′-chong,
-who is regarded as one of the ablest scholars in the literary annals of Corea. The
-“<span lang="fr">Grammaire <span class="corr" id="xd31e5231" title="Source: Coréene">Coréenne</span></span>” states that this took place under the dynasty of Wang, at Sunto, “toward the end
-of the eighth or ninth century of the Christian era.” This is a palpable mistake,
-as the dynasty of Wang was not established at Sunto until the tenth century. Mr. Aston,
-whose researches are based on the statements of Corean and Japanese writers, believes
-that the Unmun, or true Corean alphabet, “was invented not earlier than the first
-half of the fifteenth century.” Yet, in spite of their national system of writing,
-the influence of the finished philosophy and culture of China, both in form and spirit,
-has been so great that the hopelessness of producing a copy equal to the original
-became at once apparent to the Corean mind. Stimulating to the receptive <span class="pageNum" id="pb339">[<a href="#pb339">339</a>]</span>intellect, it has been paralyzing to all originality. The culture of their native
-tongue has been neglected by Corean scholars. The consequence is, that after so many
-centuries of national life, Chō-sen possesses no literature worthy of the name. Only
-in rare cases are native books translated into either Chinese or Japanese.
-</p>
-<p>At present, Corean literary men possess a highly critical knowledge of Chinese. Most
-intelligent scholars read the classics with ease and fluency. Penmanship is an art
-as much prized and as widely practised as in Japan, and reading and writing constitute
-education. From the fifth to the seventeenth century the Corean youth of gentle blood
-went to Nanking to receive or complete their education. Since Peking has been the
-Chinese capital (under the Mongols from 1279, and under the Ming emperors from 1410)
-few young men have gone abroad to study until within the last year, when numbers of
-Corean lads have entered the naval, military, and literary schools of the imperial
-government.
-</p>
-<p>The practical democratic element pervading China was long absent from the nations
-which were her pupils and vassals. Of all these borrowers, Corea has most closely
-imitated her teacher. She fosters education by making scholastic ability, as tested
-in the literary examination, the basis of appointment to office. This “Civil Service
-Reform” was established in Chō-sen by the now ruling dynasty early in the fifteenth
-century. Education in Corea is public, and encouraged by the government only in this
-sense, that it is made the road to government employ and official promotion. By instituting
-literary examinations for the civil and military service, and nominally opening them
-to all competitors, and filling all vacancies with the successful candidates, there
-is created and maintained a constant stimulus to culture.
-</p>
-<p>Corean culture resembles that in mediæval Europe. It is extra-vernacular. It is in
-Latin—the Latin of Eastern Asia—the classic tongue of the oldest of living empires.
-This literary instrument of the learned is not the speech of the modern Chinamen,
-but the condensed, vivid, artificial diction of the books, which the Chinese cannot
-and never did speak, and which to be fully understood must be read by the eye of the
-mind. The accomplished scholar of Seoul who writes a polished essay in classic style
-packs his sentences with quotable felicities, choice phrases, references to history,
-literary prismatics, and kaleidoscopic patches picked out here and there from the
-whole range of ancient Chinese literature, and imbeds them into a mosaic—smooth, brilliant,
-chaste, and a <span class="pageNum" id="pb340">[<a href="#pb340">340</a>]</span>perfect unity. This is the acme of style. So in the Corean mind, the wise saws and
-ancient instances, the gnomic wisdom, quotations and proverbs, political principles,
-precedents, historical examples, and dynasties, are all Chinese, and ancient Chinese.
-His heaven, his nature, his history, his philosophy, are those of Confucius, and like
-the Chinaman, he looks down with infinite contempt upon the barbarians of Christendom
-and their heterodox conceptions of the universe. Meanwhile his own language, literature,
-and history are neglected. The Corean child begins his education by learning by voice,
-eye, and pen, the simple and beautiful native alphabet of twenty-five letters, and
-the syllabary of one hundred and ninety or more combinations of letters. He learns
-to read, and practises writing in both the book or square style and the script form
-or running hand. The syllabary is not analyzed, but committed to memory from sight
-and sound. Spelling is nearly an unknown art, as the vowel changes and requirements
-of euphony—so numerous as to terrify the foreign student of Corean—are quickly acquired
-by ear and example in childhood. With this equipment in the rudiments, which is all
-that nearly all the girls, and most of the boys learn, the young reader can master
-the story-books, novels, primers of history, epistles, and the ordinary communications
-of business and friendship. If the lad is to follow agriculture, cattle-raising, trade,
-mining, or hunting, he usually learns no more, except the most familiar Chinese characters
-for numbers, points of the compass, figures on the clock-dial, weights, measures,
-coins, and the special technical terms necessary in his own business. Thus it often
-happens that a Corean workman, like a Chinese washerman, may be perfectly familiar
-with the characters even to the number of hundreds relating to his trade or occupation,
-and yet be utterly unable to read the simplest book, or construct one Chinese sentence.
-With the Chinese characters, one can write English as well as Corean or Japanese,
-but a thorough knowledge of the terms necessary to a sailor, a jeweller, a farmer,
-or a lumber merchant would not enable one to read Ivanhoe or Wordsworth.
-</p>
-<p>If the Corean lad aspires to government service, he begins early the study of the
-“true letters” or “great writing.” The first book put into his hands is, “The Thousand
-Character Classic.” This work is said to have been composed by a sage in one night—a
-labor which turned the hair and beard of the composer to whiteness. In it no character
-is repeated, and all the phrases are <span class="pageNum" id="pb341">[<a href="#pb341">341</a>]</span>in two couplets, making four to a clause. The copies for children are printed from
-wooden blocks in very large type. At the right side of each character is its pronunciation
-in Corean, and on the left the equivalent Corean word. The sounds are first learned,
-then the meaning, and finally the syntax and the sense of the passages. Meanwhile
-the brush-pen is kept busily employed until the whole text of the author is thoroughly
-mastered by eye, ear, hand, and memory. In this manner, the other classics are committed.
-Education at first consists entirely of reading, writing, and memorizing. Etiquette
-is also rigidly attended to, but arithmetic, mathematics, and science receive but
-slight attention.
-</p>
-<p>After this severe exercise of memory and with the pen, the critical study of the text
-is begun. Passages are expounded by the teacher, and the commentaries are consulted.
-Essays on literary themes are written, and a style of elegant composition in prose
-and verse is striven for. For the literary examinations in the capital and provinces,
-the government appoints examiners, who give certificates to those who pass. Those
-who succeed at the provincial tests, are eligible only to subordinate grades of employ
-in the local magistracies. The aspirants to higher honors, armed with their diplomas,
-set out to Seoul to attend at the proper time the national examination. The journey
-of these lads, full of the exultation and lively spirit born of success, moving in
-hilarious revelry over the high roads, form one of the picturesque features of out-door
-life in Corea. The young men living in the same district or town go together. They
-go afoot, taking their servants with them. Pluming themselves upon the fact that they
-are summoned to the capital at the royal behest, they often make a roystering, noisy,
-and insolent gang, and conduct themselves very much as they please. The rustics and
-villagers gladly speed their parting. At the capital they scatter, putting up wherever
-accommodations in inns or at the houses of relatives permit.
-</p>
-<p>Though young bachelors form the majority at these examinations, the married and middle-aged
-are by no means absent. Gray-headed men try and may be rejected for the twentieth
-time, and grandfather, father, and son occasionally apply together.
-</p>
-<p>On the appointed day, the several thousand or more competitors assemble at the appointed
-place, with the provisions which are to stay the inner man during the ordeal. The
-hour preparatory to the assignment of themes is a noisy and smoky one, devoted to
-study, review, declamation, or to eating, drinking, chatting, or <span class="pageNum" id="pb342">[<a href="#pb342">342</a>]</span>sleeping, according to the inclination or habit of each. The examination consists
-of essays, and oral and written answers to questions. During the silent part of his
-work, each candidate occupies a stall or cell. The copious, minute, and complex vocabulary
-of terms in the language relating to the work, success and failure, the contingencies,
-honest and dishonest shifts to secure success, and what may be called the student’s
-slang and folk-lore of the subject, make not only an interesting study to the foreigner,
-but show that these contests subtend a large angle of the Corean gentleman’s vision
-during much of his lifetime.
-</p>
-<p>Examination over, the disappointed ones wend their way home with what resignation
-or philosophy they may summon to their aid. The successful candidates, on horseback,
-with bands of musicians, visit their patrons, relatives, the examiners and high dignitaries,
-receiving congratulations and returning thanks. Then follows the inevitable initiation,
-which none can escape—corresponding to the French “baptism of the line,” the German
-“introduction to the fox,” the English “fagging,” and the American “hazing.”
-</p>
-<p>One of the parents or friends of the new graduate, an “alumnus,” or one who has taken
-a degree himself, one also of the same political party, acts as godfather, and presides
-at the ceremony. The graduate presents himself, makes his salute and takes his seat
-several feet behind the president of the party. With all gravity the latter proceeds,
-after rubbing up some ink on an ink-stone, to smear the face of the victim with the
-black mess, which while wet he powders thickly over with flour. Happy would the new
-graduate be could he escape with one layer of ink and flour, but the roughness of
-the joke lies in this, that every one present has his daub; and when the victim thinks
-the ordeal is over new persons drop in to ply the ink-brush and handful of flour.
-Meanwhile a carnival of fun is going on at the expense, moral and pecuniary, of the
-graduate. Eating, drinking, smoking, and jesting are the order of the day. It is impossible
-to avoid this trial of purse and patience, for unless the victim is generous and good-natured,
-other tricks and jokes as savage and cruel as those sometimes in vogue in American
-and British colleges follow. After this farce, but not until it has been undergone,
-is the title recognized by society.
-</p>
-<p>The three degrees, corresponding somewhat to our <abbr title="XX">B.A.</abbr>, <abbr title="XX">M.A.</abbr>, and <abbr title="XX">Ph.D.</abbr>, are <i>cho-si</i>, <i>chin-sa</i>, <i>kiup-chiei</i>. The diplomas are awarded in the king’s name, the second written on white paper,
-and the third on red adorned with garlands of flowers. The degrees are not <span class="pageNum" id="pb343">[<a href="#pb343">343</a>]</span>necessarily successive. The highest, or the second, may be applied for without the
-first. The holder of the second degree may obtain office in the provinces, and after
-some years may become a district magistrate or guardian of one of the royal sepulchres.
-The highest degree qualifies one to fill honorable posts at the palace and in the
-capital, in one of the ministries, or to be the governor of a province, or of a great
-city. Properly, the place of a “doctor” is in Seoul. The usual term of office is two
-years.
-</p>
-<p>The examinations for civil titles and offices attract students of the highest social
-grade. The military studies are chiefly those of archery or horsemanship, the literary
-part of their exercises being slight. But one degree, the lowest, is awarded, and
-if the holder is of gentle blood, and has political influence, he may rise to lucrative
-office and honors, but if from the common people, he usually gets no more than his
-title, or remains a private or petty officer.
-</p>
-<p>The system of literary examinations which, when first established, and during two
-or three centuries, was vigorously maintained with impartiality, is said to be at
-present in a state of decay, bribery and official favor being the causes of its decline.
-</p>
-<p>The special schools of languages, mathematics, medicine, art, etc., are under the
-patronage of the government. The teachers and students in these branches of knowledge
-form a special class midway between the nobles and people, having some of the privileges
-of the former. They may also attend the examinations, gain diplomas, and fill offices.
-Their professions are usually hereditary, and they marry only among themselves. In
-most respects, these bodies of learned men resemble the old guilds of scholars in
-Yedo, and the privileged classes, like physicians, astronomers, botanists, etc., in
-Japan.
-</p>
-<p>There are eight distinct departments of special knowledge. The Corps of Interpreters
-include students and masters of the Chinese, Manchiu, Mongol, and Japanese languages.
-These attend the embassy to Peking, have posts on the frontier, or live near Fusan.
-The treaties recently made with the United States and European powers will necessitate
-the establishment of schools of foreign languages, as in Tōkiō and Peking.
-</p>
-<p>The School of Astronomy, geoscopy, and the choice of fortunate days for state occasions
-is for the special service of the king. Corea, like China, has not yet separated astrology
-from astronomy, but still keeps up official consultation with the heavenly bodies
-for luck’s sake. The School of Medicine trains physicians for the royal, <span class="pageNum" id="pb344">[<a href="#pb344">344</a>]</span>and for the public, service. The School of Charts or documents has charge of the archives
-and the preparation of the official reports sent to Peking. In the School of Design,
-the maps, sketches, plans and graphic work required by the government are made, and
-the portraits of the king are painted. The School of Law is closely connected with
-the Ministry of Justice, and serves for the instruction of judges, and as a court
-of appeals. The School of Mathematics or Accounts assists the Treasury Department,
-audits accounts, appraises values, and its members are often charged with the task
-of overseeing public works. The School of Horology at Seoul keeps the standard time
-and looks after the water-clock. Beside these eight services, there is the band of
-palace musicians.
-</p>
-<p>It is evident from all the information gathered from sources within and without the
-hermit nation, that though there is culture of a certain sort among the upper classes,
-there is little popular education worthy of a name. The present condition of Chō-sen
-is that of Europe in the Middle Ages. The Confucian temples and halls of scholars,
-the memorial stones and walls inscribed with historical tablets and moral maxims,
-the lectures and discussions of literary coteries, and the poetry parties concentrate
-learning rather than diffuse it. The nobles and wealthy scholars, the few monasteries
-and the government offices possess libraries, but these are but dead Chinese to the
-common people. Nothing like the number of book stores, circulating libraries, private
-schools, or ordinary means of diffusing intelligence, common in China and Japan, exists
-in Corea. Science and the press, newspapers and hospitals, clocks and petroleum, and,
-more than all, churches and school-houses, have yet a mighty work to do in the Land
-of Morning Calm.
-</p>
-<hr class="tb"><p>
-</p>
-<p>Paganism and superstition, Confucianism and Buddhism, having taken root in Chō-sen,
-each with its educational influence, Christianity entered within the last century
-to plant an acorn within the narrow bottle of the Corean intellect. It is needless
-to say that the receptacle was shattered by the spreading of the oak. The Corean body-politic,
-confronted by this rooted and growing influence, must be transformed. How the seed
-was dropped, how the tiny stem grew, how the trunk received into its bosom the lightning
-bolts of persecution, how the boughs were riven, and how life yet remains, will now
-be narrated.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb345">[<a href="#pb345">345</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5224">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5224src">1</a></span> Dr. D. Bethune McCartee, a well-known American scholar, writing on Riu Kiu, says:
-“The art of spelling was invented neither by the Chinese nor by the Japanese. Its
-introduction into both these countries (and, as we are convinced, into Corea as well)
-was the result of the labors of … the early Buddhist missionaries. In all the three
-countries … the system of spelling is most undoubtedly of Sanskrit origin.”&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5224src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="pt3" class="div0 part">
-<h2 class="label">III.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">MODERN AND RECENT HISTORY.</h2>
-<p><span class="pageNum" id="pb347">[<a href="#pb347">347</a>]</span></p>
-<div id="ch39" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1167">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="super">MODERN AND RECENT HISTORY.</h2>
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XXXIX.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY—1784–1794.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Christianity entered Corea through the gates of Rome and Peking. Though some writers
-have supposed that Christianity was introduced into the Corean peninsula by the Japanese,
-in 1592, yet it is nearly certain that this religion was popularly unknown until near
-the end of the eighteenth century. Then it entered from the west, and not from the
-east. It was not brought by foreigners, but grew up from chance seed wafted from the
-little garden of the church in Peking.
-</p>
-<p>The soil upon which the exotic germ first lighted was in the mind of a student well-named
-by his father, “Stonewall,” on account of his character in choosing a literary career,
-instead of the hereditary profession which his family wished him to adopt. During
-the winter of 1777, Stonewall was invited to form one of a party of students who were
-to spend a season of literary dalliance in company with the famous Confucian professor,
-Kwem.
-</p>
-<p>The conference, held in a secluded temple, lasted ten days, during which time the
-critical study of the texts of Confucius and Mencius was indulged in with keen delight,
-and the profoundest problems that can interest man were earnestly discussed; but most
-fertilizing to their minds were some tracts on philosophy, mathematics, and religion
-just brought from Peking. These were translations of the writings, or original compositions
-in Chinese of the Jesuits in the imperial capital. Among these publications were some
-tracts on the Christian and Roman Catholic Religion, treating of the Existence of
-God, Divine Providence, the Immortality of the Soul, the Conduct of Life, the Seven
-Capital Sins, and the Seven <span class="pageNum" id="pb348">[<a href="#pb348">348</a>]</span>Contrary Virtues. Surprised and delighted, they resolved to attain, if possible, to
-a full understanding of the new doctrines.
-</p>
-<p>They began at once to practise what they knew, and morning and evening they read and
-prayed. They set apart the 7th, 14th, 21st and 28th days of the month as periods of
-rest, fasting, and meditation. How long they continued this course of life is not
-known.
-</p>
-<p>Stonewall, well knowing that his ideas of this new religion were imperfect and confused,
-turned his thoughts longingly toward Peking, hoping to get more books or information
-through a living teacher. For several years all his attempts were fruitless; though
-study, discussion, and practice of the new life were continued. In 1782, he moved
-to Seoul to live, and in 1783, to his joy, his friend Senghuni, son of the third ambassador
-to Peking, proceeded thither through Shing-king (Liao Tung), with a message to the
-bishop, Alexander de Gorla, a Portuguese Franciscan.
-</p>
-<p>Senghuni himself became a docile pupil, and was, with the consent of his father, baptized.
-With the hope that he would become the first stone of the church in Chō-sen, he was
-named Peter.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5309src" href="#xd31e5309">1</a> He pledged himself to suffer all torments rather than abandon his faith, to have
-but one wife, to renounce worldly vanities, and finally to send his foreign friends
-tidings every year.
-</p>
-<p>Safely passing the sentinels at Ai-chiu, he reached Seoul. Stonewall, eagerly receiving
-his share, gave himself for a time up to fresh reading and meditation, and then began
-to preach. Some of his friends in the capital, both nobles and commoners, embraced
-the new doctrines with cheering promptness and were baptized.
-</p>
-<p>It is interesting to note the choice of baptismal names. As Stonewall had been the
-forerunner, he was named John the Baptist. Another called himself Francis Xavier,
-intending to make this saint his protector and patron. Other names of these primitive
-confessors are Ambrose, Paul, Louis, Thomas, Augustine, and later, <span class="pageNum" id="pb349">[<a href="#pb349">349</a>]</span>among the women, Agatha, Marie, Madeleine, Barbe, etc. The adoption of these foreign
-names excited bitter feelings among the patriotic, and became a cause of intense hatred
-against the Christians, who were stigmatized as “foreigner-Coreans.”
-</p>
-<p>A counterblast soon followed. The first, and as they were destined to be the last
-and most bitter enemies were the literati, who saw at once that the new faith sapped
-at the base their national beliefs and their most cherished customs. In the contest
-of discussion which followed, Senghuni came off victor. The pagan champions retired
-from the conflict uttering memorable and prophetic words, with a final question, that
-became a by-word to Americans nearly a century later: “This [Christian] doctrine is
-magnificent, it is true, but it will bring sorrow to those who profess it. What are
-you going to do about it?”
-</p>
-<p>Among the converts were the lecturer Kwem and his brother, both of whom propagated
-the faith in their district of Yang-kun, thirty miles east of Seoul, now justly called
-“the cradle of the faith.” One of their converted students from the Nai-po returned
-home to labor in the new cause, and from first to last, in the history of Roman Christianity
-in Corea, Nai-po has ever been a nursery of fervent confessors and illustrious martyrs.
-A second convert of the Kwem brothers laid the foundations of the faith in Chulla.
-At the capital, a learned interpreter, on becoming a believer, multiplied with his
-own facile pen copies of the books brought from Peking; and it is believed translated
-from the Chinese the “Explanation of the Gospels of the Sabbaths and Feasts”—the first
-Christian book in the Corean language.
-</p>
-<p>Thus from small beginnings, but rapidly, were the Christian ideas spread, but soon
-the arm of the law and the power of the pen were invoked to crush out the exotic faith.
-The first victim, Thomas Kim, was tried on the charge of destroying his ancestral
-tablets, tortured, and sent into exile, in which he soon after died. The scholar now
-took up weapons, and in April, 1784, the king’s preceptor fulminated the first public
-document officially directed against Christianity. In it all parents and relatives
-were entreated to break off all relations with the Christians. The names of the leaders
-were published; and the example of Kim was cited. Forthwith began a violent pressure
-of entreaty and menace upon the believers to renounce their faith. Instead of peace,
-the sword was brought into the household. Then began an exhibition alike of glorious
-confession and shameful apostasy, but though even <span class="pageNum" id="pb350">[<a href="#pb350">350</a>]</span>Stonewall lapsed, the work went on in Nai-po, and in 1787,<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5324src" href="#xd31e5324">2</a> persecution slackened.
-</p>
-<p>Meanwhile, in order to cement more closely their bonds, the leaders formed a hierarchy
-after the model which Peter had seen in Peking, and to which their liturgical books
-so often referred. Francis Xavier was made bishop and others were chosen as priests.
-Separating to their various posts, they baptized, confessed, confirmed, and distributed
-the sacred elements in communion, all of which infused a new glow of faith among the
-converts. They robed themselves in rich Chinese silk, and erected platform confessionals.
-For ordinary faults confessed by the kneeling penitents alms were ordered, but for
-graver derelictions the priests administered one or two smart blows on the legs—a
-mild imitation of the national punishment, which so suggests Western methods of nursery
-discipline.
-</p>
-<p>In perfect good faith and harmony, this curious hierarchy, so strange and even comical
-to a believer in the so-called “apostolical succession”—continued for two years; but
-in 1789, certain passages in their books suggested doubts as to the validity of their
-ministry. After earnest thought, and even at the risk of public ridicule, and of troubling
-the consciences of the faithful, they resigned their offices and took their places
-among the laity. A letter of inquiry was written, and sent in 1790 by the convert
-Paul to Peking. Surprised and overjoyed at the news from Corea, the fathers baptized
-and confirmed Paul, explained to him the Roman dogma of validity of ordination, and
-gave him a letter written on silk, to be concealed in his clothes, directed to Peter
-and Francis Xavier. His godfather Pansi, being an artist, painted Paul’s portrait
-in oil, which was sent on to Paris.
-</p>
-<p>The Christians at Seoul graciously submitted to the Episcopal rebuke and explanation,
-giving them the right only to baptize, yet <span class="pageNum" id="pb351">[<a href="#pb351">351</a>]</span>they yearned to receive the sacraments. Inflamed by the accounts of Paul, who pictured
-before them the ritual splendors, in the Peking cathedral, of altars, lights, vestments,
-solemn masses, music, processions, and all that enchants the eye and fires the imagination
-in the Roman form of Christianity, they indited another letter to the bishop, beseeching
-that an ordained priest should be sent them. This letter, carried by Paul, who left
-with the special embassy sent to congratulate the renowned emperor Kien-lung, which
-left Seoul September 17, 1790, contained a whole catechism of vexed questions of discipline
-and faith which had begun to disturb the little church.
-</p>
-<p>While in Peking, Paul’s companion was baptized, receiving the name of John the Baptist.
-The fathers gave them a chalice, a missal, a consecrated stone, some altar ornaments,
-and everything necessary for the celebration of the eucharist, with a recipe for making
-wine out of grapes, in order that all might be ready on the arrival of a priest among
-them. Paul and John the Baptist, after the return journey of a thousand miles through
-Shing-king, arrived safely in Seoul. All were filled with joy at the idea of having
-a priest sent them, but the episcopal decision against the worship of ancestors proved
-to many a stone of stumbling and a cause of apostasy. Hitherto, in simple ignorance
-and good faith, they had honored their ancestral shades and burnt incense at their
-shrines. Henceforth, all participation in such rites was impossible. After the authoritative
-declaration from Peking, that the worship of God and the worship of ancestors were
-contrary and impossible, no Corean could be a Christian while he burned incense before
-the tablets.
-</p>
-<p>This tenet of the bishop was in the eyes of the Corean public a blow at the framework
-of society, the base of the family, and the foundation of the state. From this time
-forward, many of the feeble adherents began to fall away. In the conflict of filial
-and religious duty, many a soul was torn with remorse. In frequent instances the earnest
-believer who, for conscience sake, despoiled the family oratory and piling the ancestral
-tablets in his garden set them on fire, saw his aged parents sink with sorrow to the
-grave. For this crime Paul and Jacques Kim were put upon public trial, at which, for
-the first time, a clear and systematic presentation of Christian doctrine and the
-Roman cultus was elicited. The case, after condemnation of the prisoners, was submitted
-to the king, who was prevailed upon by the premier to approve the finding <span class="pageNum" id="pb352">[<a href="#pb352">352</a>]</span>of the local tribunal. On December 8, 1791, the two Christians, after publicly refusing
-to recant, and reading aloud the sentence inscribed upon the board to be nailed over
-their pillory, were decapitated, while invoking the names of Jesus and Mary. Their
-ages were thirty-three and forty-one.
-</p>
-<p>Thus was shed the first blood for Corean Christianity—the first drops of the shower
-to come, and the seed of a mighty church. The headless trunks, frozen to a stony rigidity
-which kept even the blood fresh and red, lay unburied on the ground for nine days,
-until devout men carried them to burial. A number of handkerchiefs dipped in their
-blood and preserved kept long alive the memory of these first martyrs of bloody persecution.
-The Nai-po now became a hunting-ground for the minions of the magistrates, who sought
-out all who professed themselves Christians and threw them in prison. There the tortures,
-peculiarly Corean, were set to work to cause apostasy. The victims were beaten with
-rods and paddles on the flesh and shin-bones, or whipped till the flesh hung in bloody
-rags. In many cases their bones were disjointed until the limbs dangled limp and useless.
-One man, Francis Xavier, after prolonged agonies was exiled to Quelpart, and on being
-removed to another place, died on the way. Peter, 61 years old, after wearying his
-torturers with his endurance, was tied round with a cord, laid on the icy ground at
-night, while pails of water were poured over him, which freezing as it fell, covered
-his body with a shroud of ice. In this Dantean tomb, the old martyr, calling on the
-name of Jesus, was left to welcome death, which came to him at the second cock-crow
-on the morning of January 29, 1793.
-</p>
-<p>In the ten years following the baptism of Peter at Peking, in spite of persecution
-and apostasy, it is estimated that there were four thousand Christians in Corea.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5341src" href="#xd31e5341">3</a>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb353">[<a href="#pb353">353</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5309">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5309src">1</a></span> The equipment of this first native missionary propagandist of Roman Christianity in
-Corea, deserves notice, as it brings out in sharp contrast the differing methods of
-Roman and Reformed Christianity. The convert brought back numerous tracts, didactic
-and polemic treatises, catechisms and commentaries, prayer-books, lives of the saints,
-etc., etc. These were for the learned, and those able to master them. For the simple,
-there was a goodly supply of crosses and crucifixes, images, pictures, and various
-other objects to strike the eye. It is not stated that the Bible, or any part of the
-Holy Scriptures, was sent for the feeding of hungry souls.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5309src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5324">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5324src">2</a></span> It was during the summer of this year, 1787, that La Perouse sailed along the eastern
-coast of Chō-sen, discovered the straits which bear his name, between Yezo and Saghalin,
-demonstrated that the Gulf of Tartary divided Saghalin from the Asian mainland, and
-that Corea was not sea-girt, and named Dagelet Island and its companion Boussole.
-He had a copy of Hamel’s book with him. He noticed the signal-fires along the coast,
-which from headland to headland, telegraphed to the capital the news of the stranger
-with his “black ships.” Not as yet, however, as afterward, did the government connect
-the appearance of European vessels with the activity of the Christians within the
-realm, although La Perouse sailed under the flag which ever afterward was indissolubly
-associated in Corean minds with Christianity.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5324src" title="Return to note 2 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5341">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5341src">3</a></span> This rapid spread of Christian ideas may be understood if we consider, as Dallet points
-out, the customs of the people. In every house there is the room open to the street,
-where everybody, friend or stranger, known or unknown, may come and talk or hear the
-news and discuss events. Nothing is kept secret, and being a nation of gossips and
-loungers, the news of any event, or the expression of a fresh idea, spreads like fire
-on the prairie. A doctrine so startlingly new, and preached as it was by men already
-famous for their learning, would at once excite the public curiosity, set all tongues
-running, and fire many hearts. Though in most cases the new flame would soon die out,
-leaving hardly enough ashes to mark a fire, yet the steady glow of altered lives would
-not pale even before torture and death.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5341src" title="Return to note 3 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch40" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1175">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XL.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">PERSECUTION AND MARTYRDOM—1801–1834.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The first attempt of a foreign missionary to enter the hermit kingdom from the west
-was made in February, 1791. Jean dos Remedios, a Portuguese priest from Macao, offered
-himself, was accepted, and left Peking for the Border Gate with some Chinese guides.
-After a twenty days’ journey in midwinter, he arrived on the frontier, and there awaited
-the precarious chances of recognition, according to certain signs agreed upon. For
-ten days he scanned the faces of the noisy crowd, hoping every moment to light upon
-friends, but in vain. The Christians, kept at home by the violence of the persecution,
-feared to venture to the border. The fair closed, the embassy crossed the Yalu River,
-while the foreigner and his Chinese guides returned to Peking. There the disappointed
-priest soon after died.
-</p>
-<p>About the same time, the Bishop of Peking addressed a letter to the Pope detailing
-the origin, development, and condition of the new-born church in Corea.
-</p>
-<p>Hearing no word from the Corean Christians during the next two years, it was determined
-to send succor. For this perilous mission, a young Chinese priest named Jacques Tsiu,
-twenty-four years old, of good bodily strength and pronounced piety, whose visage
-closely resembled a Corean’s, was selected. Fortified with extraordinary ecclesiastical
-powers, he left Peking in February, 1794, and in twenty days arrived on the neutral
-ground. There he met the Christians, who urged him to wait nearly a year, on account
-of the vigilance of the sentinels. This he did among his fellow Christians in Shing-king,
-and on the night of December 23, 1794, crossed the Yalu, reached Seoul in safety,
-and at once began his labors. All went on well till June, when, through a treacherous
-visitor, the official spies were put upon his track. In spite of his removal to another
-place, three Christians—two who had guided him to Seoul, and one an interpreter, who
-in sublime self-sacrifice <span class="pageNum" id="pb354">[<a href="#pb354">354</a>]</span>tried to pass himself off as the Chinaman—were seized and tortured. With arms and
-legs dislocated, and knees crushed, they refused to betray their brother in the faith,
-and were put to death in prison, June 18. The three headless and battered trunks were
-flung in the Han River, which for the first, but not for the last time was streaked
-with martyr blood.
-</p>
-<p>Meanwhile, the Chinese priest was at first hidden for many days under a wood-pile
-by a Christian lady, who, having gained over her mother-in-law, sheltered him in her
-house, where, protected by the law which forbids a noble’s dwelling to be invaded,
-he remained three years. In September, 1796, he wrote a letter in Latin to the Bishop
-of Peking, and the native Christians writing in Chinese, the copies on silk were sewed
-into the garments of two believers, who, having bought positions as servants in the
-embassy, arrived in Peking, January 28, 1797. Among other things Jacques proposed
-that the King of Portugal should send an embassy to the King of Chō-sen to obtain
-a treaty of friendship, and allow the residence of physicians, astronomers, and scientific
-men in Corea.
-</p>
-<p>Though no Portuguese envoy was sent out to treat with the court of Seoul,<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5358src" href="#xd31e5358">1</a> a foreign vessel appeared in the autumn of this same year, off the eastern coast,
-floating the British flag. It was the sloop of war Providence, carrying sixteen guns,
-commanded by Captain W.&nbsp;R. Broughton, who cast anchor in Yung-hing Bay, October 4th,
-and touched at Fusan.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5361src" href="#xd31e5361">2</a> One of the natives who visited the ship was suspected by the government and arrested;
-though the English visitors were ignorant of the existence of Christians in Corea,
-and the local magistrates were equally uninformed as to the difference in religion
-and nationality between Britons and Portuguese.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p355width" id="p355"><img src="images/p355.png" alt="House and Garden of a Noble." width="720" height="490"><p class="figureHead">House and Garden of a Noble.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>The four political parties into which the Corean nobility was at this time divided,
-as described in Chapter XXV., were ranged into <span class="pageNum" id="pb356">[<a href="#pb356">356</a>]</span>two general groups, the Si-pai and the Piek-pai, “the government” and “the opposition.”
-The Si-pai were devoted to the king, and ready to second his views, the Piek-pai were
-more attached to their special views. The king, Cheng-chong, who had ruled since 1776,
-was opposed to persecution of the Christians, and had done much to restrain the bitterness
-of partisans. The Si-pai included the Nam-in, or “Southern” wing, in which were the
-Christian nobles, while all their enemies belonged to the Piek-pai. So long as the
-king lived, the sword of persecution slept in its scabbard, but in 1800<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5372src" href="#xd31e5372">3</a> the king died, and was succeeded by his son, Sunchō, a boy still under the care of
-his grandmother. This lady at once assumed the conduct of national affairs,<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5375src" href="#xd31e5375">4</a> and no sooner were the five months of public mourning decently over, than the queen
-regent dismissed the ministers then in office, and installed three others of the No-ron
-group, all of whom were bitter enemies of the Christians. A decree of general persecution
-was issued a few days after, in the name of the king. Two converts of noble rank were
-at once arrested, and during 1801, the police were busy in haling to prison believers
-of every rank, age, and sex. Alexander Wang, who had written a book in his native
-language on “The Principal Articles of the Christian Religion,” and had begun another
-on systematic theology, was arrested. From the reading of these works, the magistrates
-imagined the essence of Christianity was in hatred of one’s parents and the king,
-and the destruction of the human race.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5378src" href="#xd31e5378">5</a> The Church Calendar was also seized.
-</p>
-<p>The Chinese priest was outlawed by the government, in a public proclamation. On reading
-this, the brave man left the house of the noble lady in which he had been sheltered,
-and refusing to endanger longer the lives of his friends, voluntarily surrendered
-himself, <span class="pageNum" id="pb357">[<a href="#pb357">357</a>]</span>and received the death-stroke, May 31, 1801, at the age of thirty-two. His hostess,
-Colombe, thrown in prison herself, while awaiting death wrote out his life and works
-on the silk skirt of her dress. At her execution the noble lady begged that she might
-not be stripped of her clothes, as were other malefactors, but die in her robes. Her
-request was granted, and with the grace of the English Lady Jane Grey, she laid her
-head on the block. Four other women, formerly attendants in the palace, and an artist,
-who for painting Christian subjects was condemned, were beheaded by the official butchers,
-who made the “Little Western Gate” of Seoul—where a Christian church may yet be built—a
-Golgotha. The policy of the government was shown in making away with the Christians
-of rank and education, who might be able to direct affairs in the absence of the foreign
-priests, and in letting the poor and humble go free.
-</p>
-<p>From a letter written on silk in sympathetic ink to the Bishop of Peking by Alexander
-Wang, and, with the aid of treachery, deciphered by the magistrates, they suspected
-a general conspiracy of the Christians; for in his letter this Corean proposed an
-appeal to the Christian nations of Europe to send sixty or seventy thousand soldiers
-to conquer Corea!<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5387src" href="#xd31e5387">6</a> The bearer of this letter was immediately beheaded, and his body cut into six pieces;
-while the visitor to Captain Broughton’s ship in 1799, for having said that “one such
-ship as that could easily destroy one hundred Corean vessels of war,” was put to the
-torture and condemned. Alexander Wang, who had witnessed a good confession, before
-the king, a year before, and bore on his wrist the cord of crimson silk showing that
-he had touched the royal person, was likewise decapitated.
-</p>
-<p>It now devolved upon the king of Chō-sen to explain to his suzerain the execution
-of a Chinese subject. In a letter full of Confucian orthodoxy, he declares that Chō-sen
-from the time of Ki Tsze, had admitted no other dogmas than those taught by the sages
-of China—“all other doctrine is strange to the Little Kingdom.” He describes the Christians
-as “the monstrous, barbarous, and infamous” “sect of brigands” “who live like brutes
-and birds of the vilest sort,” and who in their plot, “have interlaced themselves
-as a serpent and knotted themselves together like a cord.” The plan to conquer “the
-Little Kingdom <span class="pageNum" id="pb358">[<a href="#pb358">358</a>]</span>at the corner of the earth” by myriads of men and vessels from Europe is detailed,
-with an apology for the execution of Jacques, not as a Chinese subject, but as chief
-conspirator. Dallet suggests that, in answer to this letter, the Dragon Monarch read
-the king a tart lecture, and hinted that a rich stream of silver would soothe his
-ruffled scales. “China had not been China had she lost so fair an occasion to fleece
-her cowering vassal.”
-</p>
-<p>A fresh edict, made up of the usual fixed ammunition of Corean rhetoric, was fulminated
-against “the evil sect,” January 25, 1802. The result was to advertise the outlawed
-faith in every corner of the realm. Nevertheless, the condition of the Christians
-scattered in the mountains and northern forests, or suffering poverty, hunger, and
-cold at home, was deplorable, under the stress of political as well as religious hatred.
-</p>
-<p>The first exchange of Muscovite and Corean courtesies took place in 1808, when several
-of the commissioners from Seoul were in Peking.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5398src" href="#xd31e5398">7</a> Presents were mutually given, which in both cases were products of the then widely
-separated countries, which were destined within fifty years to be next-door neighbors.
-</p>
-<p>Out of the modern catacombs of Roman Christianity, the Corean converts addressed two
-letters, dated December 9 and 18, 1811, to the Pope—“the Very High, Very Great Father,
-Chief of the whole Church”—in which they invited help, not only of a spiritual nature,
-but aid in ships and envoys to treat with their king. They were willing even to leave
-their native land and colonize the islands in the sea, for the sake of worship and
-conscience. Signed with fictitious names, copied on silk, and sewn in the clothing
-of the messenger, they reached Peking and Rome, but the bishop of neither city could
-afford succor. His Holiness was then a prisoner at Fontainebleau, and the Roman propaganda
-was nearly at a standstill. With a goodly supply of medals and crosses, the messenger
-returned, and the church in Corea enjoyed peace, and new converts were made until
-1815, when a non-political persecution broke out for a while in Kang-wen and Kiung-sang.
-</p>
-<p>In 1817, the king and court were terrified by the appearance off <span class="pageNum" id="pb359">[<a href="#pb359">359</a>]</span>the west coast of the British<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5406src" href="#xd31e5406">8</a> vessels Alceste and Lyra. They suspected that the good captain and jolly surgeon,
-who have given us such fascinating narratives of their cruise, were in active connection
-with “the evil sect;” but beyond some surveys, purchases of beef, and interviews with
-local magistrates, the foreigners departed without further designs against the throne.
-</p>
-<p>In 1823 several of the Christians, encouraged by hopes held out by the Bishop of Peking,
-went to the Border Gate to meet a foreign priest, but to their dismay found none.
-In 1826,<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5411src" href="#xd31e5411">9</a> they were troubled by a report that the shō-gun of Japan had requested their king
-to return six Japanese adherents of the interdicted “Jesus sect,” who had fled the
-empire in a boat. Shortly after, in Chulla, through a quarrel instigated by a drunken
-potter, a convert, which led to information given in spite, a severe persecution broke
-out, lasting three months.
-</p>
-<p>The year 1832 was noted for its rainfall and inundations. To propitiate Heaven’s favor
-the king recalled many exiles, among whom were Christians. In this year also the British
-ship, Lord Amherst, was sent out by the East India Company on a voyage of commercial
-exploration, and to open, if possible, new markets for the fabrics of England and
-India. On board was a Prussian gentleman, the Rev. Charles Gutzlaff, under the patronage
-of the Netherlands Missionary Society, though travelling at his own cost. Reaching
-the coast of Chulla, July 17th, he remained one month. Being a good Chinese scholar,
-and well equipped with medical knowledge, he landed on several of the islands and
-on the mainland, he distributed presents of books, buttons, and medicines, planted
-potatoes and taught their cultivation. Through an officer he sent the king presents
-of cut glass, calicoes, and woollen goods, with a copy of the Bible and some Protestant
-Christian tracts. These, after some days of negotiation, were refused. A few of the
-more intelligent natives risked their heads, and accepted various gifts, among which
-were Chinese translations <span class="pageNum" id="pb360">[<a href="#pb360">360</a>]</span>of European works on geography and mathematics. Mr. Gutzlaff could discover no trace
-of Christianity<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5418src" href="#xd31e5418">10</a> or the converts, though he made diligent inquiry. The lying magistrates denied all
-knowledge of even the existence of the Christian faith. Deeply impressed with their
-poverty, dirt, love of drink, and degradation, the Protestant, after being nearly
-a month among the Coreans, left their shores, fully impressed with their need of soap
-and bibles.
-</p>
-<p>The year 1834 closed the first half century of Corean Christianity.
-</p>
-<hr class="tb"><p>
-</p>
-<p>In this chapter, the moral weakness of Roman Catholic methods of evangelization in
-Corea, and elsewhere in Asia, has been revealed. It must be remembered that the Corean
-converts were taught to believe not only in the ecclesiastical supremacy of the Pope,
-but also in the righteousness of his claim to temporal power as the Vicar of Heaven.
-Untaught in the Scriptures of the New Testament, and doubtless ignorant of the words
-of Jesus—“My kingdom is not of this world; if my kingdom were of this world, then
-would my servants fight”—the Coreans suspected no blasphemy in the papal claim. Seeing
-the Pope’s political power upheld by the powerful European nations then under Bourbon
-rule, the Corean Christians, following the ethics of their teachers, played the part
-of traitors to their country; they not only deceived the magistrates, and violated
-their country’s laws, but, as the letter of Alexander Wang shows, actually invited
-armed invasion. Hence from the first Christianity was associated in patriotic minds
-with treason and robbery. The French missionary as the forerunner of the French soldier
-and invader, the priest as the pilot of the gunboat, were not mere imaginings, but,
-as the subsequent narrative shows, strict logic and actual fact. It is the narrative
-of friends, not foes, that, later, shows us a bishop acting as spy and pilot on a
-French man-of-war, a priest as guide to a buccaneering raid; and, after the story
-of papal Christianity, the inevitable “French expedition.”
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb361">[<a href="#pb361">361</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5358">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5358src">1</a></span> “Some priests proposed to the late Queen of Portugal to send an embassy hither [to
-Corea] with some gentlemen versed in mathematics, that they might benefit the country
-both in a religious and scientific way.… This plan never succeeded.” Gutzlaff, 1834.
-Voyages to China, page 261.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5358src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5361">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5361src">2</a></span> Captain Broughton was impressed with “the gorgeous Corean dresses,” and the umbrella-hats,
-a yard in diameter. He asked for beef, but they gave him only wood, and he was tantalized
-with the sight of fat cattle grazing near by, which he was unable to get or purchase.
-He cruised in the Sea of Japan and the Gulf of Tartary, naming several places on the
-Corean coast. See p. 203.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5361src" title="Return to note 2 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5372">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5372src">3</a></span> See page 226.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5372src" title="Return to note 3 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5375">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5375src">4</a></span> Or, as the natives say, “she proceeded to pull down the blinds.” This phrase, which
-is highly suggestive of American street slang, refers to the curtain of bamboo which
-veils the sovereign of Chō-sen; as in Old Japan the mikado was thus screened from
-the vulgar, and even noble, gaze during state councils. Whoever, therefore, is “behind
-the curtain,” is on the throne.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5375src" title="Return to note 4 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5378">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5378src">5</a></span> This highly logical conclusion was reached by pondering upon the doctrine of Romanism
-that celibacy is a more perfect state than marriage; and that “the world,” which,
-with the flesh and the devil, was to be regarded as one of the true believers’ enemies,
-could mean only the king and country of Chō-sen. To this day, most of the pagans accept
-the magistrates’ decision as a complete epitome of the gospel of Christ.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5378src" title="Return to note 5 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5387">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5387src">6</a></span> Dallet, vol. i., p. 205.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5387src" title="Return to note 6 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5398">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5398src">7</a></span> Timkowski’s Travels of the Russian Mission through Mongolia to China, and Residence
-in Peking, London, 1827.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5398src" title="Return to note 7 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5406">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5406src">8</a></span> In 1793, the first British and the first European vessel entered the Yellow Sea. It
-was the ship of the line Lion, on board of which was Lord Macartney, the ambassador
-of King George III. to Peking, the first English envoy to China. The ship did not
-visit or approach Corean shores.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5406src" title="Return to note 8 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5411">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5411src">9</a></span> This date is that given by Dallet, who perhaps refers to the uprising in 1829 at Ozaka,
-of suspected believers in the “Jesus doctrine,” when six men and one old woman were
-crucified by the Japanese authorities. The leader of the so-called conspiracy fled
-to sea with his companions.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5411src" title="Return to note 9 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5418">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5418src">10</a></span> While off the island of Wen-san, according to Dallet, some of the native Christians,
-attracted by the legend in Chinese characters on the flag “The Religion of Jesus Christ,”
-came on board. “A Protestant minister saluted them with the words which are sacramental
-among the pagans, ‘May the spirits of the earth bless you!’ At these words the neophytes,
-seeing that they had been deceived, and that a snare had been laid for their good
-faith, retired in all haste without ever returning the salute, and made no further
-visits to the ships.”&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5418src" title="Return to note 10 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch41" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1184">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XLI.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE ENTRANCE OF THE FRENCH MISSIONARIES—1835–1845.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The French Revolution, and the wars of Napoleon following, which distracted all Europe
-for a period of over twenty years, completely disorganized the missionary operations
-of the Holy See and French Roman Catholic Church. On the restoration of the Bourbons,
-and the strengthening of the papal throne by foreign bayonets, the stream of religious
-activity flowed anew into its old channels, and with an added volume. Missionary zeal
-in the church was kindled afresh, and the prayers of the Christians in the far East
-were heard at the court of St. Peter. It was resolved to found a mission in Corea,
-directly attached to the Holy See, but to be under the care of the Society of Foreign
-Missions of Paris.
-</p>
-<p>Barthelemy Brugiere, then a missionary at Bangkok, Siam, offered as a volunteer, and
-in 1832 was nominated apostolic Vicar of Corea. He reached Shing-king, but was seized
-with sudden illness, and died October 20, 1835. Pierre Philibert Maubant, his host,
-stepped into the place of his fallen comrade, and with five Corean Christians left
-Fung-Wang Chang, crossed the neutral strip, and the Yalu River on the ice. Dodging
-the sentinels at Ai-chiu, he entered Corea as a thread enters the needle’s eye. They
-crawled through a water-drain in the wall, and despite the barking of a dog, got into
-the city. Resting several hours, they slid out again through another drain, reaching
-the country and friends beyond. Two days’ journey on horses brought them to Seoul,
-from which Maubant, the first Frenchman who had penetrated the hermit kingdom, or
-who, in Corean phrase, had committed <i>pem-kiong</i> (violation of the frontier), wrote to his friends in Paris.
-</p>
-<p>Maubant’s first duty was to order back a Chinese priest who refused to learn Corean,
-or to obey any but the Bishop of Peking. With the couriers who escorted the refractory
-Chinaman to the frontier, went three young men to study at the college in Macao. At
-the Border Gate they met Jacques Honore Chastan a young <span class="pageNum" id="pb362">[<a href="#pb362">362</a>]</span>French priest, who, on the dark night of January 17, 1837, passed the custom-house
-of Ai-chiu disguised as a Corean widower in mourning, and joined Maubant in Seoul.
-Nearly one year later, December 19, 1838, Laurent Marie-Joseph Imbert, a bishop, ran
-the gauntlet of wilderness, ice, and guards, and took up his residence under the shadow
-of the king’s palace.
-</p>
-<p>Visits, masses, and preaching now went on vigorously. The Christians at the end of
-1837 numbered 6,000, and in 1838, 9,000. Up to January 16, 1839, the old regent being
-averse from persecution, the work went on unharmed, but on that day, the court party
-in favor of extirpating Christianity, having gained the upper hand, hounded on the
-police in the king’s name. The visitation of every group of five houses in all the
-eight provinces was ordered. Hundreds of suspects were at once seized and brought
-to trial. In June, before the death of the old regent, the uncle of the young king
-(Hen-chong, 1834–1849) and the implacable enemy of the Christians obtained control
-of power, and at an extraordinary council of the ministers, held July 7, 1839, a new
-decree was issued in the regent’s name. The persecution now broke out with redoubled
-violence. In a few days, three native lay leaders were beheaded, and a score of women
-and children suffered death. To stay the further shedding of blood, Bishop Imbert,
-who had escaped to an island, came out of his hiding-place, and on August 10th delivered
-himself up and ordered Maubant and Chastan to do the same. The three willing martyrs
-met in chains before the same tribunal. During three days they were put to trial and
-torture, thence transferred to the Kum-pu, or prison for state criminals of rank.
-They were again tried, beaten with sixty-six strokes of the paddle, and condemned
-to die under the sword, September 21, 1839.
-</p>
-<p>On that day, the inspector and one hundred soldiers took their place on the execution
-ground, not near the city gate, but close to the river. A pole fixed in the earth
-bore a flag inscribed with the death-sentence. Pinioned and stripped of their upper
-clothing, a stick was passed between the elbows and backs of the prisoners, and an
-arrow, feather end up, run through the flesh of each ear. Their faces were first wet
-with water and then powdered with chalk. Three executioners then marched round, brandishing
-their staves, while the crowd raised a yell of insult and mockery. A dozen soldiers,
-sword in hand, now began prancing around the kneeling victims, engaging in mock combat,
-but delivering their blows at the victims. Only when weary of their sport, the human
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb363">[<a href="#pb363">363</a>]</span>butchers relieved the agony of their victims by the decapitating blow. The heads were
-presented to the inspector on a board, and the corpses, after public exposure during
-three days, were buried in the sand by the river banks.
-</p>
-<p>On the day after the burial, three Christians attempted to remove the bodies, but
-the government spies lying in wait caught them. As of old in Rome, when the primitive
-Christians crawled stealthily at night through the arches of the Coliseum, into the
-arena, and groping about in the sand for the bones of Ignatius left after the lion’s
-feast, bore them to honored sepulture, so these Corean Christians with equal faith
-and valor again approached the bloody sand by the Han River. Twenty days after the
-first attempt, a party of seven or eight men succeeded in bearing away the bodies
-of the martyrs to Noku, about eight miles north of Seoul.
-</p>
-<p>Thus died the first European missionaries who entered “the forbidden land.” As in
-the old fable of the lion’s den, the footprints all pointed one way.
-</p>
-<p>With the foreign leaders there perished no less than one hundred and thirty of their
-converts, seventy by decapitation, and the others by strangulation, torture, or the
-result of their wounds.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5450src" href="#xd31e5450">1</a> In November, 1839, a new edict in the vernacular was posted up all over the country.
-Six bitter years passed before the Christians again had a foreign pastor.
-</p>
-<p>Great events now began to ripen in China. The opium war of 1840–42 broke out. The
-“Western Barbarians” held the chief cities of the China coast from Hong-Kong to Shanghae,
-and the military weakness of the colossal empire was demonstrated. The French, though
-having nothing to do with this first quarrel of China with Europe, were on the alert
-for any advantage to be gained in the far East. In 1841, Louis Philippe sent out the
-war vessels Erigone and Favorite, to occupy if possible some island to the south of
-Japan, which would be valuable for strategic and commercial purposes, and to make
-treaties of trade and friendship with Japan, and especially with Corea.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb364">[<a href="#pb364">364</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The Erigone cast anchor at Macao, September 7, 1841, and Captain Cecile awaited events.
-Moving north in February, 1842, with Andrew Kim the Corean student, as interpreter,
-on the Erigone, and Thomas Tsoi, his companion, on the Favorite, the French captains,
-hearing of the sudden conclusion of the war, gave up the idea of opening Corea.
-</p>
-<p>The two Coreans, with two French priests, engaged a Chinese junk, and landed on the
-coast of Shing-king, October 25, 1842. On December 23d, Kim set out for the Border
-Gate, and within two leagues of it met the outward-bound embassy. Each of the three
-hundred persons had his passport at his girdle. Stopping to see them file past, he
-saluted one who was a Christian, and had in his belt letters from Maubant and Chastan,
-written before their execution, and from the natives. Unable to go back with Andrew
-to Ai-chiu, as every name on the embassy’s list was registered, the man went on to
-Peking. Andrew Kim, by mingling among the drovers and huge cattle returning from the
-fair, ran the blockade at Ai-chiu; but on the next day, having walked all night, he
-applied for lodgings at an inn for shelter, and was recognized as a stranger. Fearful
-of being arrested as a border-ruffian from the neutral strip, he took to his heels,
-recrossed the Yalu, and after resting at Fung-Wang Chang, rejoined his friends at
-Mukden.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p364width" id="p364"><img src="images/p364.png" alt="The Missionary’s Gateway into Corea." width="553" height="305"><p class="figureHead">The Missionary’s Gateway into Corea.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>On December 31, 1843, Jean Joseph Ferreol was consecrated Bishop of Corea, and resolved
-to cross the frontier, not at Ai-chiu, but at Hun-chun, on the Tumen. Andrew Kim exploring
-the way, after a month’s journey through ice and snow, mountains and forests, reached
-Hun-chun, February 25, 1845. The native Christians, having been duly instructed, had
-arrived at Kion-wen a <span class="pageNum" id="pb365">[<a href="#pb365">365</a>]</span>month before. For recognition, Andrew was to hold a blue kerchief in his hand and
-have a little red bag of tea at his girdle. At the fair which opened at Kion-wen on
-the 28th, the Christians met. The result of their conference was that Ai-chiu was
-declared safer even than Kion-wen.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p365width" id="p365"><img src="images/p365.png" alt="Border Towns of Northern Corea." width="469" height="289"><p class="figureHead">Border Towns of Northern Corea.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>Since 1839, the government had tripled its vigilance, and doubled the guards on the
-frontier. No one could pass the gate at Ai-chiu who had not a passport stamped with
-the chief inspector’s seal, bestowed only after the closest scrutiny and persistent
-cross-questioning. On it was written the name and place of birth and residence of
-the holder, and after return from China or the fair it must be given up. The result
-of these stringent regulations was to drive the missionaries to find a path seaward.
-In December, 1844, of seven converts from Seoul, attempting to get to the Border Gate,
-to meet Ferreol, only three were able to pass Ai-chiu. The other four, who had the
-wig, hair pins, and mourning costume of a widower for Ferreol, were unable to satisfy
-their questioners, and so returned. At the Border Gate, Ferreol, after seeing the
-caravan pass, ordered Andrew Kim to enter alone, while he returned and sailed soon
-after to Macao. Andrew, with the aid of his three friends, who met him at a lonely
-spot at some distance from Ai-chiu, reached Seoul, January 8, 1845.
-</p>
-<p>As soon as resources and opportunity would permit, Andrew collected a crew of eleven
-fellow-believers, only four of whom had ever seen the sea, and none of whom knew their
-destination, and equipped with but a single compass, put to sea in a rude fishing-boat,
-April 24, 1845. Despite the storms and baffling winds, this uncouth mass of firewood,
-which the Chinese sailors jeeringly dubbed “the Shoe,” reached Shanghae in June. Andrew
-Kim, never before <span class="pageNum" id="pb366">[<a href="#pb366">366</a>]</span>at sea except as a passenger, had brought this uncalked, deckless and unseaworthy
-scow across the entire breadth of the Yellow Sea.
-</p>
-<p>After the ordeal of the mandarin’s questions,<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5478src" href="#xd31e5478">2</a> and visits and kindly hospitality from the British naval officers and consul, he
-reached his French friends at the Roman Catholic mission.
-</p>
-<p>The beacon fires were now blazing on Quelpart, and from headland to headland on the
-mainland, telegraphing the news of “foreign ships” to Seoul. From June 25th until
-the end of July, Captain Edward Belcher,<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5483src" href="#xd31e5483">3</a> of the British ship Samarang, was engaged in surveying off Quelpart and the south
-coast. Even after the ship left for Nagasaki, the magistrates of the coast were ordered
-to maintain strict watch for all seafarers from strange countries. This made the return
-of Andrew Kim doubly dangerous.
-</p>
-<p>Bishop Ferreol came up from Macao to Shanghae, and on Sunday, August 17th, Andrew
-Kim was ordained to the priesthood. On September 1st, with Ferreol and Marie Antoine
-Nicholas Daveluy, another French priest, he set sail in “the Shoe,” now christened
-the “Raphael,” and turned toward the land of martyrdom. It was like Greatheart approaching
-Giant Despair’s Castle.
-</p>
-<p>The voyage was safely, though tediously, made past Quelpart, and through the labyrinth
-of islands off Chulla. On October 12th, the Frenchmen, donning the garb of native
-noblemen in mourning, and baffling the sentinels, landed at night in an obscure place
-on the coast. Soon after this Daveluy was learning the language among some Christian
-villagers, who cultivated tobacco in a wild part of the country. The bishop went to
-Seoul as the safest place to hide and work in, while the farmer-sailors, after seven
-months’ absence, returned to their hoes and their native fields.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb367">[<a href="#pb367">367</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5450">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5450src">1</a></span> By poetic justice, the chief instigators of this persecution came each to a bad end.
-Of the court ministers, one, having provoked the king’s jealousy, was obliged by royal
-order to poison himself at a banquet, in December, 1845, and the other, falling into
-disgrace, was sent to exile, in which he shortly died. The chief informer, who had
-hoped for reward in high office, obtained only a minor position, with little honor
-and less salary. He was afterward exiled, and in 1862, having headed a local uprising,
-was put to death, his body was minced up, and the fragments were exhibited through
-the provinces.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5450src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5478">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5478src">2</a></span> So fearless and generous a soul as Andrew Kim, who could yet follow the ethics and
-example of his teachers in repeatedly practising deception and violating his country’s
-laws at Ai-chiu, scrupled not to lie to the mandarin at Shanghae, and tell him that
-he and his crew had been accidentally driven out to sea. As in the later case of the
-robbery of the regent’s tomb, “the end justified the means.”&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5478src" title="Return to note 2 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5483">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5483src">3</a></span> The voyage of this officer, which added so much to science, resulted in making Quelpart
-and Beaufort Islands, Port Hamilton, and Mount Auckland as well known in geography
-as the names of Her Majesty’s servants were known in British politics. The visitors
-were treated with courtesy, and even their survey-marks, stakes, and whitewashed stones
-were carefully set up when washed away by the storm, or disturbed by cattle. The Coreans,
-however, drove their beeves well away from the Englishmen, who longed for fresh meat.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5483src" title="Return to note 3 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch42" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1192">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XLII.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE WALLS OF ISOLATION SAPPED.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">While the three priests were prosecuting their perilous labors, Thomas Tsoi, the Corean
-student from Macao with Maistre, a new missionary, were on their way through Manchuria
-to Hun-chun. Arriving after a seventeen days’ march, they were seized by Manchiu officers,
-reprimanded, and sent back to Mukden.
-</p>
-<p>Andrew Kim, by order of Bishop Ferreol, went to Whang-hai by water, to examine into
-the feasibility of making that province a gateway of entrance. The sea was full of
-Chinese junks, the herring fishery being at its height. Watch-towers dotted the hills,
-and the beach was patrolled by soldiers to prevent communication with shore. Andrew,
-coming ostensibly to buy a cargo of fish, was enabled to sail among the islands, to
-locate the rocks and sandspits, and to make a chart of the coast. Deeming the route
-practicable, he hailed a Chinese junk, and after conference, confided to the captain
-the mail-bag of the mission, which contained also the charts and two maps of Corea.
-Unfortunately these documents were seized by the spies, and Andrew Kim, delayed while
-the cargo of fish was drying, was arrested on the suspicion of being a Chinaman. He
-was sent to Seoul, and while in prison heard of the French ships which were at that
-moment vainly trying to find the mouth of the Han River and the channel to the capital.
-Meanwhile, from his hiding-place, Ferreol wrote to Captain Cecile, who commanded the
-fleet of three war-vessels.
-</p>
-<p>The object of this visit was to hold a conference with the king’s ministers, and demand
-satisfaction for the murder of Imbert Chastan and Maubant in 1839. After some coast
-surveys made, and the despatch of a threatening letter, the ships withdrew. Ferreol’s
-note arrived too late, and Andrew Kim’s fate was sealed.
-</p>
-<p>While in prison, Andrew was employed in coloring, copying, and translating two English
-maps of the world, one of which was for the king, and composing a summary of geography.
-In a letter <span class="pageNum" id="pb368">[<a href="#pb368">368</a>]</span>in Latin to Ferreol, dated August 26th, he narrated his capture and trial. On September
-16th, he was led out to trial. The sentence-flag bore the inscription: “Put to death
-for communicating with the western barbarians,” and the full programme of cruelty
-was carried out. Four women and four men were put to death in the persecution which
-followed.
-</p>
-<p>Maistre and Thomas Tsoi went to Macao and there found the French frigates La Gloire
-and La Victorieuse, ready to sail north for an answer to Captain Cecile’s letter.
-Gladly welcomed by Captain Pierre, they went aboard July 12th. On August 10th, while
-under sail in a group of islands off Chulla, in latitude 35° 45′ and longitude 124°
-8′, in water which the English charts marked at twelve fathoms deep, both vessels
-grounded simultaneously. The high tides for which this coast is noted falling rapidly,
-both vessels became total wrecks. The largest of the La Gloire’s boats was at once
-sent to Shanghae for assistance, and the six hundred men made their camp at Kokun
-Island. Kindly treated and furnished with provisions as they were, the Frenchmen during
-their stay were rigidly secluded, and at night cordons of boats with lanterns guarded
-against all communication with the mainland. Thomas Tsoi acted as dumb interpreter,
-with pencil, in Chinese, and though hearing every word of the Corean magistrates was
-not recognized. Though meeting fellow Christians, he was unable to get inland, and
-Ferreol’s messengers to the sea-shore arrived after an English ship from Shanghae
-had taken the crews away.
-</p>
-<p>The Corean government, fearing<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5504src" href="#xd31e5504">1</a> further visits of the outside barbarians, sent an answer to Admiral Cecile, directing
-it to Captain Pierre at Macao, by way of Peking.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5507src" href="#xd31e5507">2</a> They explained why they treated Frenchmen shipwrecked kindly; but sent Frenchmen
-disguised to execution.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5510src" href="#xd31e5510">3</a> When Admiral Cecile reached Paris in <span class="pageNum" id="pb369">[<a href="#pb369">369</a>]</span>1848, one of the periodical French revolutions had broken out in Paris, and a war
-at the ends of the earth was out of the question. The French government neglected
-to send a vessel to take away the effects saved from the wreck. The Coreans promptly
-put the cannon to use, and from them, as models, manufactured others for the forts
-built to resist “the Pepins” in 1866, and the Americans in 1871.
-</p>
-<p>Once more Maistre and Thomas Tsoi essayed to enter the guarded peninsula, by sailing
-early in 1848 in a Chinese junk from Macao to Merin Island off Whang-hai, but no Christians
-met them. By way of Shanghae, they then went into Shing-king, and in December to the
-Border Gate, meeting couriers from Bishop Ferreol. On a fiercely cold, windy, and
-dark night, which drove the soldiers indoors to the more congenial pleasure of the
-long pipe, cards, and cup on the oven-warmed floors, Thomas Tsoi got safely through
-Ai-chiu, and in a few days was in Seoul, and later in Chulla. The work of propagation
-now took a fresh start. A number of religious works composed or translated into the
-vulgar tongue were printed in pamphlet form from a native printing press, and widely
-circulated. In 1850, the Christians numbered eleven thousand, and five young men were
-studying for the priesthood. Regular mails, sewn into the thick cotton coats of men
-in the embassy, were sent to and brought from China. A French whaler having grounded
-off the coast, the French consul at Shanghae, with two Englishmen, came to reclaim
-the vessel’s effects, and meeting three young men sent by the ever-alert Thomas Tsoi,
-took them back to Shanghae, the third remaining to meet his comrades on their return
-with fresh missionaries to come. After still another failure to enter Corea, Maistre
-set foot in Chulla-dō, by way of Kokun Island, even while the fire-signals were blazing
-on the headlands on account of the presence of Russian ships.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5519src" href="#xd31e5519">4</a>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb370">[<a href="#pb370">370</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Ferreol, worn out with his labors, after lying paralytic for many months, died February
-3, 1853; but in March, 1854, Janson, making a second attempt, entered Corea, having
-crossed the Yellow Sea in a junk, which immediately took back three native students
-for Macao. Janson died in Seoul, of cerebral fever, June 18, 1854.
-</p>
-<p>In these years, 1853 and 1854, Commodore Perry and the American squadron were in the
-waters of the far East, driving the wedge of civilization into Japan, and sapping
-her walls of seclusion. The American flag, however, was not yet seen in Corean waters,
-though the court of Seoul were kept informed of Perry’s movements.
-</p>
-<p>A fresh reinforcement of missionaries to storm the citadel of paganism, Bishop Simeon,
-François Berneux, with two young priests, Michel Alexandre Petitnicholas and Charles
-Antoine Pourthie, set sail from Shanghae in a junk, and, after many adventures, arrived
-at Seoul via Whang-hai, while Feron (of later buccaneering fame) followed on a Corean
-smuggling vessel, standing unexpectedly before his bishop in the capital, March 31,
-1857. A synod of all the missionaries was now held, at which Berneux consecrated Daveluy
-as his fellow bishop. Maistre died December 20th. The faith was now spread to Quelpart
-by a native of that island, who, having been shipwrecked on the coast of China, was
-carried by an English ship to Hong-Kong, where he met a Corean student from Macao
-and was converted. The Roman Catholic population of Corea in 1857 was reckoned at
-16,500.
-</p>
-<p>Communication with the native Christians living near Nagasaki, and then under the
-harrow of persecution, took place. The cholera imported from Japan swept away over
-400,000 victims in Corea. Thus does half the world not know how the other half lives.
-How many Americans ever heard of this stroke of pestilence in the hermit nation?
-</p>
-<p>In 1860, war with China broke out, the French and English forces took the Peiho forts,
-entered Peking, sacked the summer palace of the Son of Heaven, a few thousand European
-troops destroying the military prestige of the Chinese colossus. The <span class="pageNum" id="pb371">[<a href="#pb371">371</a>]</span>Chinese emperor fled into Shing-king, toward Corea. The news produced a lively effect
-in Chō-sen, especially at court.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5539src" href="#xd31e5539">5</a>
-</p>
-<p>The utter loss of Chinese prestige struck terror into all hearts. For six centuries,
-China, the Tai-kuk (Great Empire), had been, in Corean eyes, the synonym and symbol
-of invincible power, and “the Son of Heaven, who commands ten thousand chariots,”
-the one able to move all the earth. Copies of the treaty made between China and the
-allies, granting freedom of trade and religion, were soon read in Corea, causing intense
-alarm.
-</p>
-<p>But the after-clap of news, that turned the first storm of excitement into a tempest
-of rage and fear, was the treaty with Russia. General Ignatieff, the brilliant and
-vigorous diplomatist then but twenty-eight years old and fresh on the soil of Cathay,
-obtained, in 1860, after the allied plenipotentiaries had gone home, the signature
-of Prince Kung to the cession of the whole Ussuri province. The tread of the Great
-Bear had been so steadily silent, that before either Great Britain or Chō-sen knew
-it, his foot had been planted ten degrees nearer the temperate zone. A rich and fertile
-region, well watered by the Amoor and Sungari Rivers, bordered by the Pacific, with
-a coast full of harbors, and comprising an area as large as France, was thus ceded
-to Russia. The Manchiu rulers of China had actually surrendered their ancestral homeland
-to the wily Muscovites. The boundaries of Siberia now touched the Tumen. The Russian
-bear jostled the Corean tiger.
-</p>
-<p>With France on the right, Russia on the left, China humbled, and Japan opened to the
-western world, what wonder that the rulers in Seoul trembled?
-</p>
-<p>The results to Corean Christianity were that, in less than a decade, <span class="pageNum" id="pb372">[<a href="#pb372">372</a>]</span>thousands of natives had fled their country and were settled in the Russian villages.
-</p>
-<p>At the capital all official business was suspended, and many families of rank fled
-to the mountains. The nobles or officials who could not quit their posts sent off
-their wives and children. All this turned to the temporary advantage of the missionaries.
-In many instances, people of rank humbly sought the good favor and protection of the
-Christians. Medals, crosses, and books of religion were bought in quantities. Some
-even publicly wore them on their dress, hoping for safety when the dreaded invasion
-should come. The government now proceeded to raise war-funds, levying chiefly on the
-rich merchants, who were threatened with torture and death in case of refusal. A conscription
-of able-bodied men was ordered, and bombs, called “French pieces,” and small-bore
-cannon were manufactured. In a foundry in the capital heavy guns were cast after the
-model of those left by the wreck of the La Gloire. The Kang-wa forts were built and
-garrisoned. In the midst of these war preparations, the missionary body was reinforced
-by the arrival of four of their countrymen, who, by way of Merin Island, set foot
-on the soil of their martyrdom October, 1861. Their names were Landre, Joanno, Ridel,
-and Calais. This year the number of Christians reached 18,000.
-</p>
-<p>Indirect attempts to insert the crowbars of diplomacy in the chinks of Corea’s wall
-of seclusion were made about this time by France and England, and by Russia at another
-point. Japan was in each case the fulcrum. On account of the petty trade between Tsushima
-and Fusan, Earl Russell wished to have Great Britain included as a co-trader with
-the peninsula. The Russians the same year occupied a station on Tsu Island, commanding
-the countries on either side; but under protest from Yedo, backed by British men-of-war,
-abandoned their purpose. In 1862, while the members of the Japanese embassy from the
-Tycoon were in Paris, the government of Napoleon III. requested their influence in
-the opening of Corea to French trade and residence. At this time, however, the Japanese
-had their hands full of their own troubles at home, nor had the court at Seoul sent
-either envoys or presents since 1832. They should have done so in 1852, at the accession
-of the new shō-gun, but not relishing the humiliation of coming only to Tsushima,
-and knowing the weakened state of their former conquerors, they were now ready to
-defy them.
-</p>
-<p>One new missionary and two returned native students entered <span class="pageNum" id="pb373">[<a href="#pb373">373</a>]</span>in March, 1863. The Ni dynasty, founded in 1392, came to an end on January 15, 1864,
-by the King Chul-chong, who had no child, dying before he had nominated an heir. This
-was the signal for fresh palace intrigues, and excitement among the nobles and political
-parties. The three widows of the kings who had reigned since 1831 were still living.
-The oldest of these, Queen Chō, at once seized the royal seal and emblems of authority,
-which high-handed move made her the mistress of the situation. Craftily putting aside
-her nephew Chō Sung, she nominated for the throne a lad then but twelve years old,
-and son of Ni Kung, one of the royal princes. This latter person was supposed to be
-indifferent to politics, but no sooner was his son made the sovereign, than his slumbering
-ambition woke to lion-like vigor. This man, to use a Corean phrase, had “a heart of
-stone, and bowels of iron.” He seemed to know no scruple, pity, or fear. Possessing
-himself of the seal and royal emblems, he was made Tai-wen Kun (Lord of the Great
-Court—a rare title given to a noble when his son is made king) and became actual regent.
-This Corean mayor of the palace held the reins of government during the next nine
-years, ruling with power like that of an absolute despot. He was a rabid hater of
-Christianity, foreigners, and progress.
-</p>
-<p>In spite of the new current of hostility that set steadily in, the Christians began
-to be bold even to defiance. In Kiung-sang a funeral procession carrying two hundred
-lanterns, bore aloft a huge cross, and chanted responsive prayers. In the capital,
-the converts paraded the signs of the Romish cult. A theological training school was
-established in the mountains, four new missionaries entered the kingdom through Nai-po,
-1976 baptisms were made during the year, and, with much literary work accomplished,
-the printing-press was kept busy.
-</p>
-<p>The year 1866 is phenomenal in Corean history. It seemed as if the governments and
-outlaws alike, of many nations, had conspired to pierce or breach the walls of isolation
-at many points. Russians, Frenchmen, Englishmen, Americans, Germans, authorized and
-unauthorized, landed to trade, rob, kill, or, what was equally obnoxious to the regent
-and his court, to make treaties.
-</p>
-<p>In January the Russians, in a war-vessel, again appeared in Broughton’s Bay, and demanded
-the right of trade. At the same time they stated that some Russian troops were to
-pass the frontier of Ham-kiung to enforce the demand. The usual stereotyped response
-was made, that Corea was a vassal of China, and could not <span class="pageNum" id="pb374">[<a href="#pb374">374</a>]</span>treat with any other nation without permission of that Power, and that a special ambassador
-charged with the matter would be immediately despatched to Peking, etc.
-</p>
-<p>The advent of the double-headed eagle was the signal for lively feeling and action
-among the Christians at Seoul. The long-cherished project of appealing to England
-and France to make an alliance to secure liberty of religion was revived. The impulsive
-converts now forwarded the scheme, under the plea of patriotic defense against the
-Russians, with all the innocent maladdress which characterizes men who are adults
-in age but children in politics. In their exhilaration they already dreamed of building
-a cathedral in Seoul of imposing proportions, and finished in a style worthy alike
-of their religion and their country. Three Christian nobles, headed by Thomas Kim,
-composed a letter embodying their ideas of an anti-Russian Franco English alliance,
-and had it presented to the regent, who blandly sent Thomas Kim to invite the bishops,
-then absent to a conference in the capital. On his return to Seoul, Kim was coldly
-received, and no further notice was taken of him. The anti-Christian party, now in
-full power at court, clamored for the enforcement of the old edict against the foreign
-religion, while a letter from one of the Corean embassy in Peking, arriving late in
-January, added fuel to the rising flame. It stated that the Chinese were putting to
-death all the Christians found in the empire. That lie, “as light as a feather” in
-its telling, was “as heavy as a mountain” in Corea. Such an illustrious example must
-be followed. Vainly the regent warned the court of the danger from Europe. The Russian
-ship, too, had disappeared, and the French seemed afraid to take vengeance for the
-massacre of 1839. The cry of “Death to all the Christians, death to the western barbarians”
-now began to be heard. Forced by the party in power, the regent signed the death-warrants
-of the bishops and priests, promulgated anew the old laws of the realm against the
-Christians, and proceeded “to make very free with the heads of his subjects.” The
-minions of the magistrates sallied forth like bloodhounds unleashed. Berneux was seized
-on February 23d, and brought to trial successively before three tribunals, the last
-being the highest of the realm.
-</p>
-<p>In his interview with the regent, who had formed a high idea of the Frenchman, Berneux
-failed to address his Highness in the punctilious form of words demanded by court
-etiquette. Forthwith the official made up his mind that the Frenchman was a man <span class="pageNum" id="pb375">[<a href="#pb375">375</a>]</span>of slight attainments, and of no personal importance—so sensitive is the Corean mind
-in the matter of etiquette. From the highest class prison, the bishop, after undergoing
-horrible tortures with club, paddle, and pointed sticks thrust into his flesh, was
-cast into a common dungeon, where, in a few days, he was joined by three of his fellow
-missionaries with several converts, faithful to their teachers even in the hour of
-death.
-</p>
-<p>All suffered the fierce and savage beatings, and on March 8th were led out to death.
-An immense crowd of jeering, laughing, curious people followed the prisoners, who
-were tied by their hair to the chair so as to force them to hold up their faces, that
-the crowd might see them. Four hundred soldiers marched out with the doomed men to
-the sandy plain near the river. The lengthened programme of brutal torture and insult
-was duly carried out, after which the four heads were presented for inspection.
-</p>
-<p>One day afterward, two other French missionaries and their twelve students for the
-priesthood were led captives into Seoul, marked with the red cord and yellow caps
-betokening prisoners soon to die. With like tortures, and the same shameful details
-of execution, they suffered death on March 11th. On this day, also, Daveluy and two
-other priests were seized, and on March 30th, Good Friday, decapitated, together with
-two faithful natives. In the case of Daveluy, the barbarity of the proceeding was
-increased by the sordid executioner, who, after delivering one blow, and while the
-blood was spouting out from the wound, left the victim to bargain with the official
-for the sum due him for his work of blood.
-</p>
-<p>In a little over a month all missionary operations had come to a standstill. Scores
-of natives had been put to death; hundreds more were in prison. Ridel, while hiding
-between two walls, wrote to Peking, describing the state of affairs. Feron and Ridel
-met on May 8th, travelling all night, and on June 15th they found that Calais was
-still alive. Hearing that a foreign steam-vessel was cruising off the Nai-po, Ridel
-sent a letter begging for help. This ship was the Rona, Captain Morrison, belonging
-to a British firm in China, on its way back from Niu-chwang, under the direction of
-Mr. Ernest Oppert. The native Christians were unable to get on board the Rona; but
-when the same Oppert visited Haimi in the Nai-po, some months later, in the steamer
-Emperor, this letter was put in his hands. Meanwhile Ridel had reached the sea-coast,
-and in spite of the vigilant patrols, put off in a boat constructed without an ounce
-of iron, and manned by a crew of eleven Christian <span class="pageNum" id="pb376">[<a href="#pb376">376</a>]</span>fishermen. He reached Chifu July 7th. Going at once to Tien-tsin, he informed the
-French Admiral Roze of the recent events in Corea, and then returning to Chifu, waited
-till mid-August. Feron and Calais, hearing of the presence of French ships in the
-Han River, reached the coast, after great straits, to find them gone. They put to
-sea, however, and got upon a Chinese smuggler, by which they reached Chifu, October
-26th—while the French expedition was in Corea. Not one foreign priest now remained
-in the peninsula, and no Christian dared openly confess his faith, while thousands
-were banished, imprisoned, or put to death.
-</p>
-<p>Thus after twenty years of nearly uninterrupted labors, the church was again stripped
-of her pastors, and at the end of the eighty-two years of Corean Christianity, the
-curtain fell in blood. Of four bishops and nineteen priests, all except four were
-from France, and of these only three remained alive. Fourteen were martyrs, and four
-fell victims to the toils and dangers of their noble calling.
-</p>
-<hr class="tb"><p>
-</p>
-<p>In the foregoing story of papal Christianity in Chō-sen, which we have drawn from
-Dallet—a Roman Catholic writer—we have the spectacle of a brave band of men, mostly
-secular priests educated in French seminaries of learning, doing what they believed
-it was right to do. Setting the laws of this pagan country at defiance, they, by means
-of dissimulation and falsehood, entered the country in disguise as nobles in mourning.
-Fully believing in the dogma of salvation by works, they were sublimely diligent in
-carrying on their labors of conversion, ever in readiness for that crown of martyrdom
-which each one coveted, and which so many obtained; but the nobleness of their calling
-was disfigured by the foul and abominable teaching that evil should be done in order
-that good might come—a tenet that insults at once the New Testament and the best casuistry
-of the Roman Catholic Church. According to the code of any nation, their converts
-were traitors in inviting invasion; but if worthy to be set down as Arnolds and Iscariots,
-then their teachers have the greater blame in leading them astray. It is to be hoped
-that the future Christian missionaries in Corea, whether of the Greek, Roman, or Reformed
-branch, will teach Christianity with more of the moral purity inculcated by its Founder.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb377">[<a href="#pb377">377</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5504">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5504src">1</a></span> These were the first official relations of France with Corea; or, as a native would
-say, between Tai-pep-kuk and Chō-sen; the expression for France being Tai-pep, and
-for a Frenchman—curiously enough—Pepin.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5504src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5507">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5507src">2</a></span> Inside the country, the frequent appearance of the foreign ships was the subject of
-everyday talk, and the news in this nation of gossips spread like a prairie fire,
-or a rolling avalanche. By the time the stories reached the northern provinces whole
-fleets of French ships lay off the coast. Their moral effect was something like that
-among the blacks in the Southern States during the civil war, when the “Lincoln gunboats”
-hove in sight. The people jestingly called the foreign vessels “The authorities down
-the River.”&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5507src" title="Return to note 2 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5510">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5510src">3</a></span> For changing their name and garments, sleeping by day, going abroad at night, associating
-with rebels, criminals and villains, and entering the kingdom <span class="pageNum" id="pb369n">[<a href="#pb369n">369</a>]</span>clandestinely, the missionaries were put to death; and no comparison could be drawn
-to mitigate their sentence between them and innocent shipwrecked men.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5510src" title="Return to note 3 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5519">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5519src">4</a></span> Other nations besides France now began to learn something of the twin hermits of the
-East, Chō-sen and Nippon. During 1852, the Russian frigate Pallas sailed along the
-east coast up to the Tumen River, making no landing, but keeping at a distance of
-from two to five miles from the shore in order to avoid shoals and rocks. The object
-of the Pallas was to trace and map the shore line. In 1855, the French war-vessel
-Virginie continued the work begun by the Pallas, and at the end of her voyage the
-whole coast from Fusan to the Tumen was known with some accuracy, and mapped out with
-European <span class="pageNum" id="pb370n">[<a href="#pb370n">370</a>]</span>names, at once numerous and prophetic. The coast line of Tartary or Manchuria—at that
-time a Chinese province—was also surveyed, mapped, and made ready for the Czar’s use
-and that of his ambassador in 1860.
-</p>
-<p class="footnote cont">Pallas and Virginie! The names are suggestive of the <i>maiden</i> diplomatic victory of General Ignatieff, of whom more anon.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5519src" title="Return to note 4 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5539">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5539src">5</a></span> A noble of high rank presented to the council of ministers a memorial, setting forth
-the dangers that then menaced Chō-sen, and urging that extraordinary means be put
-forth to meet the emergencies. He proposed that the national policy of armed neutrality
-should be preserved, that the conquered emperor of China should not enter Chō-sen,
-that the frontier should be strengthened against a possible invasion of the border-ruffians
-inhabiting the neutral strip. Taking advantage of the situation, these men, banding
-together with Chinese adventurers and Corean refugees, might make a descent in force
-into the kingdom. Finally, the supreme danger that filled all minds was the threatened
-invasion of the French. He recommended that the castle of Tong-nai, near Fusan, and
-the western strongholds of Nam-an, Pu-pion, and In-chiŭn (the port opened in 1882),
-should be strongly garrisoned and strengthened; and that a new citadel be built on
-the island of Kang-wa, to command the river and the entrance to the capital. (See
-map, page 190.)&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5539src" title="Return to note 5 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch43" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1200">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XLIII.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE FRENCH EXPEDITION.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The preliminaries of the French expedition to Corea in 1866 may be gathered from the
-letters which passed between the French chargé d’affairs at Peking and Prince Kung,
-the Chinese premier, as published in the United States Diplomatic Correspondence,
-1867–68.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5586src" href="#xd31e5586">1</a> The pyrotechnic bombast of the Frenchman may be best understood by remembering that
-he lived in the palmy days of Louis Napoleon and the third empire. His violent language
-and behavior may be contrasted with the calm demeanor and firm temper of the astute
-Chinaman, the greatest of the diplomats of the Middle Kingdom.
-</p>
-<p>“Unfortunately for the interests of his country, M.&nbsp;H. Bellonet had carried into diplomacy
-the rude customs and unmeasured language of the African Zouaves, in whose ranks he
-had served at one period of his career.”
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb378">[<a href="#pb378">378</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The best commentary upon this boast of an irate underling, dressed in the brief authority
-of his superior, will be found in the events of the expedition, notably in the reduction
-to ashes of the city of Kang-wa, which rendered 10,000 people homeless, and in the
-repulse of the reckless invaders even before Bellonet at Peking was settling the fate
-of the king.
-</p>
-<p>With Bishop Ridel as interpreter, and three of his converts as pilots, three vessels
-were sent to explore the Han River. Equipped with charts made by Captain James of
-the Emperor, who had examined the western entrance one month before, the despatch-boat
-Déroulède leaving her consorts in Prince Jerome Gulf, steamed up the river on September
-21st, as far as the narrows between Kang-wa and the mainland. The French officers
-were charmed with the beauty of the autumnal scenery. On the cultivated plain, checkered
-into a thousand squares of tiny rice-fields, all well irrigated, <span class="pageNum" id="pb379">[<a href="#pb379">379</a>]</span>the golden-tinted grain, now full ripe, awaited the sickle and the sheaf-binder. Numerous
-villages dotted the landscape, and to the northwest rose the green hills on which
-sat, like a queen, the city of Kang-wa. A number of forts, as yet unmounted with cannon,
-were already built. Others, in process of construction, were rising on well-chosen
-sites commanding the river. No garrison or a single soldier was as yet seen. The simple
-villagers, at first frightened at the sight of a mighty black ship, moving up the
-river against a strong current without sails or oars, collected in crowds along the
-banks to see this fire-pulsing monster from the western ocean.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p379width" id="p379"><img src="images/p379.png" alt="Map of French Naval and Military Operations, 1866." width="677" height="636"><p class="figureHead">Map of French Naval and Military Operations, 1866.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>On the 23d the Déroulède and Tardif, leaving the Primauguet at Boisée (Woody) Island,
-moved up the Han River to the capital, the Corean pilots at the bow, and Ridel with
-the men at the wheel. <span class="pageNum" id="pb380">[<a href="#pb380">380</a>]</span>One or two forts fired on the vessels as they steamed along, and in one place a fleet
-of junks gathered to dispute their passage. A well-aimed shot sunk two of the crazy
-craft, and a bombshell dropped among the artillerists in the redoubt silenced it at
-once. The rocks were safely avoided, and on the evening of the 25th, the two ships
-cast anchor, and the flag of France floated in front of the Corean capital. The hills
-environing the city and every point of view were white with gazing thousands, who
-for the first time saw a vessel moving under steam.
-</p>
-<p>The ships remained abreast of the city several days, the officers taking soundings
-and measurements, computing heights and making plans. M. Ridel went on shore in hopes
-of finding a Christian and hearing some news, but none dared to approach him.
-</p>
-<p>While the French remained in the river, not a bag of rice nor a fagot of wood entered
-Seoul. Eight days of such terror, and a famine would have raged in the city. Seven
-thousand houses were deserted by their occupants.
-</p>
-<p>Returning to Boisée Island, having surveyed the river, two converts came on board.
-They informed Ridel of the burning of a “European” ship [the General Sherman] at Ping-an,
-the renewal of the persecution, and the order that Christians should be put to death
-without waiting for instructions from Seoul. Ridel in vain urged Admiral Roze to remain
-with his fleet, in order to intimidate the government. Sailing away, the ships arrived
-at Chifu, October 3d.
-</p>
-<p>Tai-wen kun, now thoroughly alarmed, began to stir up the country to defense. The
-military forces in every province were called out. Every scrap of iron was collected,
-and the forges and blacksmith shops were busy day and night in making arms of every
-known kind; even the farmer’s tools were altered into pikes and sabres. Loaded junks
-were sunk in the channel of the Han to obstruct it Through the Japanese at Fusan,
-and the daimiō of Tsushima, word was sent to the Tycoon of Japan, informing him of
-his straits, and begging for assistance. The Yedo government, being at that time in
-great straits between the pressure of foreigners on one hand, and of the “mikado-reverencers”
-on the other, could not then, had it been right to do so, afford any military assistance
-against the French, with whom a treaty had been made. Instead of this, two commissioners
-were appointed to go to Seoul, and recommend that Chō-sen open her ports to foreign
-commerce, as Japan had done, and thus choose peace instead of war <span class="pageNum" id="pb381">[<a href="#pb381">381</a>]</span>with foreigners. Before the envoys could leave Japan, the Tycoon had died, and the
-next year Japan was in the throes of civil war, the shō-gunate was abolished, and
-Corea was for the time utterly forgotten.
-</p>
-<p>The object of the French expedition and the blockade of the Salée (Han) River were
-duly announced from the French legation in China to the Chinese and foreign representatives
-in Peking. Without waiting to hear from his government at home, Bellonet despatched
-the fleet and made war on his own responsibility. The squadron which sailed October
-11th, to distribute thrones and decapitate prime ministers, consisted of the frigate
-Guerrière, the corvettes Laplace and Primauguet, the despatch-vessels Déroulède and
-Kien-chan, and the gunboats Tardif and Lebrethon, with 600 soldiers, including a detachment
-of 400 marines from the camp at Yokohama.
-</p>
-<p>One would have thought 600 men rather too small a force to root up thrones with, seeing
-that the days of Cortez and Pizarro were past. The Coreans were not like the Mexicans,
-who thought a horse and his rider were one animal. They had smelt powder and fought
-tigers.
-</p>
-<p>On October 13th the admiral cast anchor off Boisée Island. The next day the gunboats
-steamed up the river, landing the marines in camp, a little over half a mile from
-the city. On the 15th, before any attempt was made to communicate with the government,
-a reconnoissance was made in force, toward Kang-hoa (Kang-wa), during which a small
-fort, mounting two guns, was captured.
-</p>
-<p>Kang-wa was, to a modern eye, probably one of the best fortified cities in the kingdom.
-It was surrounded by a crenelated wall, nearly fifteen feet high! Behind this defense
-the native soldiery stood ready with flails, arrows, matchlocks, and jingals.
-</p>
-<p>The royal residence, for pleasure in summer, and refuge in war-time, was beautifully
-situated on a wooded hill, from which a glorious view of the island, sea, and mainland
-was visible. The fertile island itself lay like a green emerald upon a greener sea.
-Crops of rice, barley, tobacco, sorghum, maize, various root foods, Chinese cabbage,
-chestnuts, persimmons, with here and there a great camellia tree just entering into
-bloom, greeted the view of the invaders. Kang-wa was well named “The Flower of the
-River.”
-</p>
-<p>At eight o’clock on the morning of October 16th an attack was made in force on the
-main gate. At the distance of one hundred yards, the infantry charged on a run, to
-the cry of “<span lang="fr">Vive l’Empereur</span>.” <span class="pageNum" id="pb382">[<a href="#pb382">382</a>]</span>The hot fire of the jingals checked them not a moment. Reaching the wall, they set
-up the scaling ladders, and in a few moments hundreds of Frenchmen were inside, shooting
-down the flying white-coats, or engaging in a hand to hand encounter, though only
-a few natives were killed. The gate was soon crushed in with axes, and the main body
-entered easily. Firing was soon over, and the deserted city was in the <span class="corr" id="xd31e5654" title="Source: victors">victors’</span> hands. About eighty bronze and iron cannon, mostly of very small calibre, over six
-thousand matchlocks, and the official archives of the city were found and made trophies
-of.
-</p>
-<p>Kang-wa was the military headquarters for western Corea and the chief place of gunpowder
-manufacture. Large magazines of food supplies had been collected in it. Eighteen boxes
-of silver, containing ingots to the value of nearly thirty eight thousand dollars,
-and a great many books and manuscripts were found, besides spoil of many kinds from
-the shops and houses. Immense stores of bows and arrows, iron sabres without scabbards,
-helmets, and breastplates, beautifully wrought, but very heavy and clumsy, were found.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p382width" id="p382"><img src="images/p382.png" alt="Breech-loading Cannon of Corean Manufacture." width="634" height="110"><p class="figureHead">Breech-loading Cannon of Corean Manufacture.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>The cannon had no carriages, but were fastened to logs or fixed platforms. They were
-breech-loaders, in that the powder, fixed in an iron cartridge, was introduced at
-the breech, while the ball seemed to be put in simultaneously at the muzzle. These
-double-ended cannon reminded one of a tortoise. A curious or rather comical thing
-about these cannon was that many of them had several touch-holes in a row, the cannonier
-firing them by applying his match rapidly along the line of vents—an “accelerating
-gun,” of a rude kind. The Corean gunpowder is said to burn so slowly that a charge
-has to be lighted at both ends—a type of the national policy.
-</p>
-<p>As the Coreans were fortifying Tong-chin with unusual care, the admiral sent out,
-October 26th, a reconnoitering party of one hundred and twenty men, who were landed
-on the mainland, opposite Kang-wa Island, whence the high road runs direct to the
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb383">[<a href="#pb383">383</a>]</span>capital. Here was a village, with fortifications clustered around a great gate, having
-a pointed stone arch surmounted by the figure of a tortoise and a pagoda. To force
-this gate was to win the way to the capital.
-</p>
-<p>As the marines were disembarking, the Coreans poured in a heavy fire, which killed
-two and wounded twenty-five Frenchmen. Nevertheless the place was stormed and seized,
-but as the Corean forces were gathering in the vicinity, the marines returned to the
-ships to await reinforcements.
-</p>
-<p>Toward evening a party of Coreans defiled at the foot of the plain in gallant array,
-evidently elated with supposed victory. Suddenly, as they came within range, the French
-ships opened on them with shell, which exploded among them.
-</p>
-<p>Terrified at such unknown war missiles, they broke and fled to the hill-tops, where,
-to their surprise, they were again enveloped in a shower of iron. Finally they had
-to take shelter in the distant ravines and the far plains, which at night were illumined
-by their bivouac fires.
-</p>
-<p>Weak men and nations, in fighting against stronger enemies, must, like the weaker
-ones in the brute creation, resort to cunning. They try to weary out what they cannot
-overcome. The Coreans, even before rifled cannon and steamers, began to play the same
-old tricks practised in the war with the Japanese in the sixteenth century. They made
-hundreds of literal “men of straw,” and stuck them within range of the enemy’s artillery,
-that the Frenchmen might vainly expend their powder and iron. The keen-eyed Frenchmen,
-aided by their glasses, detected the cheat, and wasted no shot on the mannikins.
-</p>
-<p>Meanwhile the invaded nation was roused to a white heat of wrath. The furnace of persecution
-and the forges of the armorers were alike heated to their utmost. Earnest hands plied
-with rivalling diligence the torture and the sledge. In the capital it was written
-on the gate-posts of the palace that whoever should propose peace with the French
-should be treated as a traitor and immediately executed.
-</p>
-<p>On October 19th, Ni, the Corean general commanding, had sent the French admiral a
-long letter stuffed with quotations from the Chinese classics, the gist of which was
-that whoever from outside broke through the frontiers of another kingdom was worthy
-of death—a sentiment well worthy of a state of savagery.
-</p>
-<p>The French admiral, with equal national bombast, but in direct <span class="pageNum" id="pb384">[<a href="#pb384">384</a>]</span>and clearest phrase, demanded the surrender of the three high ministers of the court,
-else he would hold the Corean government responsible for the miseries of the war.
-</p>
-<p>The Coreans in camp were ceaselessly busy in drilling raw troops and improving their
-marksmanship. Soldiers arrived from all quarters, and among them was a regiment of
-eight hundred tiger-hunters from the north, every man of whom was a dead shot either
-with bow or matchlock. These men, who had faced the tiger and many of whom had felt
-his claws, were not likely to fear even French “devils.” They garrisoned a fortified
-monastery on the island which was situated in a valley in the centre of a circle of
-hills which were crowned by a wall of uncemented masonry. It could be approached only
-by one small foot-path in a deep ravine. The entrance was a gateway of heavy hewn
-stone, arched in a full semicircle, the gate being in one piece. The walls were mounted
-with home-made artillery.
-</p>
-<p>On the same day on which this information reached the admiral, the natives attacked
-a French survey boat, whereupon he at once resolved to capture the monastery. For
-this purpose he detached 160 men, without artillery, who left at six o’clock in the
-morning of October 27th, with their luncheon packed on horses. The invaders, with
-their heads turned by too many easy victories, went in something like picnic order,
-frequently stopping to rest and enjoy the autumnal scenery. On several occasions they
-saw squads of men marching over the hills toward the same destination, but this did
-not hurry the Frenchmen, though a native informed them that the monastery, ordinarily
-inhabited only by a dozen priests, was now garrisoned and full of soldiers.
-</p>
-<p>At 11.30 they arrived near the fortress, when some one proposed lunch. Others jauntily
-declared it would be very easy to capture “the pagoda,” and then dine in the hall
-of Buddha himself; this advice was not, however, followed. Having arranged three parties,
-they advanced to within three hundred yards of the gate. All within was as silent
-as death. Suddenly a sheet of flame burst from the whole length of the wall, though
-not a black head nor a white coat was visible. In a minute the French columns were
-shattered and broken, and not a man was on his feet. The soldiers, retreating in a
-hail of lead, found refuge behind rocks, sheaves of rice, piles of straw, and in the
-huts near by. There the officers rallied their men lest the garrison should make a
-sally. The wounded were then borne to the rear. They numbered thirty-two. <span class="pageNum" id="pb385">[<a href="#pb385">385</a>]</span>Only eighty fighting men were left, and these soon became conscious of being weak
-and very hungry, for they had been cruelly tantalized by seeing the lunch-horse kick
-up his heels at the first fire, and trot over to the Coreans. They learned that one
-of the slips ’twixt the cup and the lip might be caused by a horse in Chō-sen. Perhaps
-some native poet improvised a poem contrasting the patriotic nag with the steed of
-Kanko, which led a hungry army home.
-</p>
-<p>It being madness or annihilation for eighty Frenchmen to attempt to storm a stone
-fortress, garrisoned by five or ten times their number of enemies, and guarded with
-artillery, retreat was resolved on. The wounded were hastily cared for and the mournful
-march began. The stronger men carried their severely injured comrades on their shoulders
-with brotherly kindness. The unwounded who were free formed the rear-guard. Three
-times the little band had to face about and fire with effect at the Coreans, who thrice
-charged their foes with heavy loss to themselves. They then mounted the hills, and
-with savage yells celebrated their victory over the western barbarians. It was not
-till night, hungry and tired, that reinforcements were met a half league from camp.
-They had been sent out by the admiral, to whom had come presentiment of failure.
-</p>
-<p>There was gloom in the camp that night and at headquarters. The near sky and the horizon,
-notched by the hills, seemed to glare with unusual luridness, betokening the joy and
-the deadly purpose of the invaded people.
-</p>
-<p>The next morning, to the surprise of all, and the anger of many, orders were given
-to embark. The work on the fortifications begun around the camp was left off. The
-troops in Kang-wa set fire to the city, which, in a few hours, was a level heap of
-ashes. The departure of the invaders was so precipitate that the patriots to this
-day gloat over it as a disgraceful retreat.
-</p>
-<p>A huge bronze bell, from one of the temples in Kang-wa, which had been transported
-half way to the camp, was abandoned. The Coreans recaptured this, regarding it as
-a special trophy of victory. The French embarked at night, and at six o’clock next
-morning dropped down to the anchorage at Boisée Island. On the way, every fort on
-the island seemed to be manned and popping away at the ships, but hurting only the
-paint and rigging. To their great disgust, the men repulsed two days before, discovered
-the walls of the monastery from deck, and that the distance was only a mile and <span class="pageNum" id="pb386">[<a href="#pb386">386</a>]</span>a half from the river side. There was considerable silent swearing among the officers,
-who believed it could be easily stormed and taken even then. Orders must be obeyed,
-however, and in rage and shame they silently gazed on the grim walls. The return of
-the expedition was a great surprise to the fleet at Boisée Island. On his return to
-China, the admiral found, to his mortification, that his government did not approve
-of the headlong venture of Bellonet.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5692src" href="#xd31e5692">2</a>
-</p>
-<p>In the palace at Seoul, the resolve was made to exterminate Christianity, root and
-branch. Women and even children were ordered to the death. Several Christian nobles
-were executed. One Christian, who was betrayed in the capital by his pagan brother,
-and another unknown fellow-believer were taken to the river side in front of the city,
-near the place where the two French vessels had anchored. At this historic spot, by
-an innovation unknown in the customs of Chō-sen, they were decapitated, and their
-headless trunks held neck downward to spout out the hot life-blood, that it might
-wash away the stain of foreign pollution. “It is for the sake of these Christians,”
-said the official proclamation, “that the barbarians have come just here. It is on
-account of these only that the waters of our river have been denied by western ships.
-It behooves that their blood should wash out the stain.” Upon the mind of the regent
-and court at Seoul, the effect was to swell their pride to the folly of extravagant
-conceit. Feeling themselves able almost to defy the world, they began soon after to
-hurl their defiance at Japan. The dwarf of yesterday had become a giant in a day.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb387">[<a href="#pb387">387</a>]</span></p>
-<p>In spite of foreign invaders and war’s alarms, one peaceful event during this same
-year, and shortly after the French fleet had gone away, sent a ripple of pleasure
-over the surface of Corean society. The young king, now but fourteen years old, who
-had been duly betrothed to Min,<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5700src" href="#xd31e5700">3</a> a daughter of one of the noble families, was duly married. Popular report credits
-the young queen with abilities not inferior to those of her royal husband.
-</p>
-<p>According to custom, the Chinese emperor sent an ambassador, one Koei-ling, a mandarin
-of high rank, to bear the imperial congratulations and investiture of the queen. This
-merry Chinaman, cultivated, lively, poetic in mood, and susceptible to nature’s beauties,
-wrote an account of his journey between the two capitals. His charming impressions
-of travel give us glimpses of peaceful life in the land of Morning Calm, and afford
-a delightful contrast to the grim visage of war, with which events in Corea during
-the last decade have unhappily made us too familiar.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb388">[<a href="#pb388">388</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5586">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5586src">1</a></span> July 13, 1866.
-</p>
-<p class="footnote cont address"><span class="sc">M. de Bellonet to Prince Kung.</span>
-</p>
-<p class="footnote cont"><span class="sc">Sir</span>: I grieve to bring officially to the knowledge of your Imperial Highness a horrible
-outrage committed in the small kingdom of Corea, which formerly assumed the bonds
-of vassalage to the Chinese empire, but which this act of savage barbarity has forever
-separated from it.
-</p>
-<p class="footnote cont">In the course of the month of March last, the two French bishops who were evangelizing
-Corea, and with them nine missionaries and seven Corean priests, and a great multitude
-of Christians of both sexes and of every age, were massacred by order of the sovereign
-of that country.
-</p>
-<p class="footnote cont">The government of His Majesty cannot permit so bloody an outrage to be unpunished.
-The same day on which the king of Corea laid his hands upon my unhappy countrymen
-was the last of his reign; he himself proclaimed its end, which I, in turn, solemnly
-declare to-day. In a few days our military forces are to march to the conquest of
-Corea, and the Emperor, my august Sovereign, alone has now the right and the power
-to dispose, according to his good pleasure, of the country and the vacant throne.
-</p>
-<p class="footnote cont">The Chinese government has declared to me many times that it has no authority over
-Corea, and it refused on this pretext to apply the treaties of <span class="pageNum" id="pb378n">[<a href="#pb378n">378</a>]</span>Tien-tsin to that country, and give to our missionaries the passports which we have
-asked from it. We have taken note of these declarations, and we declare now that we
-do not recognize any authority whatever of the Chinese government over the kingdom
-of Corea.
-</p>
-<p class="footnote cont signed">I have, etc.,<br>
-<span class="sc">H. de Bellonet</span>.
-</p>
-<p class="footnote cont">His Imperial Highness, <i>Prince Kung</i>.
-</p>
-<p class="footnote cont">Spurning with irritating, not to say insulting, language, the suggestion of Prince
-Kung that Bellonet might do well to inquire into the causes and merits of the execution
-of the missionaries, the representative of France, November 11th, again addressed
-the Chinese statesman. In this missive occurs the following: “As for the fate of the
-former king of Corea, it is now subject to the decision of the Emperor, my august
-Sovereign.”
-</p>
-<p class="footnote cont">Monsieur Bellonet’s method is one specimen of the manner in which the envoys of European
-nations are accustomed to bully the governments of Asiatic countries. In a long communication
-to Prince Kung, dated November 11, 1866, Mr. Bellonet charges upon the Chinese government:
-1st. Complicity with Corea. 2d. That the Corean embassy, during the previous winter,
-had stated the project of the massacre, and had received the tacit official authorization
-of the Chinese government. 3d. The direct approval of several high members of it.
-4th. That the recruiting and mobilization of Mauchiu troops, beyond the Great Wall,
-was for the purpose of assisting Corea against the French. He writes, in addition
-to the above, an amazing amount of nonsense, which shows of what magnifying powers
-the human eye is capable when enlarged by suspicion.
-</p>
-<p class="footnote cont">Among other tidbits of rodomontade, is this one—which is a truthful picture of the
-France of Napoleon III.—“War for us is a pleasure which the French passionately seek;”
-and this—“The people of Corea address us as deliverers, … we shall inaugurate the
-reign of order, justice, and prosperity.”&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5586src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5692">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5692src">2</a></span> The results of this expedition were disastrous all over the East. Happening at a time
-when relations between foreigners and Chinese were strained, the unexpected return
-of the fleet filled the minds of Europeans in China with alarm. It was the unanimous
-verdict of press and people that the return of the French in sufficient force to Corea
-in the spring was a measure of absolute safety to foreigners in the far East. If not,
-since both British and American citizens were among the crew of the General Sherman,
-murdered at Ping-an, the fleets of Great Britain and the United States should proceed
-to Seoul. This, however, was not done; the English let well enough alone, the French
-soon had their hands full in attending to the Germans at home, and the Americans went
-later only to follow Admiral Roze’s example. Meanwhile the smothered embers of hostility
-to foreign influence steadily gathered vigor, as the report spread like a gale through
-China that the hated Frenchmen had been driven away by the Coreans. The fires at length
-broke out in the Tien-tsin massacre, June 21, 1870. “It is believed by many thoughtful
-observers in China that this frightful event gained its first serious impetus from
-the unfortunate issue of Admiral Roze’s campaign in Corea.”&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5692src" title="Return to note 2 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5700">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5700src">3</a></span> The Min or Ming family is largely Chinese in blood and origin, and, besides being
-pre-eminent among all the Corean nobility in social, political, and intellectual power,
-has been most strenuous in adherence to Chinese ideas and traditions, with the purpose
-of keeping Corea unswerving in her vassalage and loyalty to China. Their retainers
-constitute a large portion of the population of Seoul. Besides the queen, the king
-on his mother’s side, the wife of the heir apparent, and several of the highest officers
-of the government belong to the house of Min. For centuries this family has practically
-governed the kingdom. Their social and personal influence in Peking has always been
-very great, while at home their relations to the treasury and the army have been very
-close. The plot of 1882 was in effect an ineffectual attempt to destroy their power.
-When China commanded, they approved of the treaty with the United States.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5700src" title="Return to note 3 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch44" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1208">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XLIV.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">AMERICAN RELATIONS WITH COREA.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">America became a commercial rival to Chō-sen as early as 1757, when the products of
-Connecticut and Massachusetts lay side by side with Corean imports in the markets
-of Peking and Canton. Ginseng, the most precious drug in the Chinese pharmacopœia,
-had been for ages brought from Manchuria and the neighboring peninsula, where, on
-the mountains, the oldest and richest roots are found.
-</p>
-<p>The Dutch traders, at once noticing the insatiable demand for the famed remedy, sought
-all over the world for a supply. The sweetish and mucilaginous root, though considered
-worthless by Europeans, was then occasionally bringing its weight in gold, and usually
-seven times its weight in silver, at Peking, and the merchants in the annual embassy
-from Seoul were reaping a rich harvest. Besides selling the younger and less valuable
-crop in its natural condition, they had factories in which the two-legged roots—which
-to the Asiatic imagination suggested the figure of the human body they were meant
-to refresh—were so manipulated as to take on the appearance of age, thus enhancing
-their price in the market.
-</p>
-<p>Suddenly the Corean market was broken. Stimulated by the Dutch merchants at Albany,
-the Indians of Massachusetts had found the fleshy root growing abundantly on the hills
-around Stockbridge in Massachusetts. Taking it to Albany, they exchanged it for hardware,
-trinkets, and rum. While the Dutch domines were scandalized at the drunken revels
-of the “Yankee” Indians, who equalled the Mohawks in their inebriation, good Jonathan
-Edwards at Stockbridge was grieving over the waywardness of his dusky flock, because
-they had gone wild over ginseng-hunting.
-</p>
-<p>The Hollanders, shipping the bundled roots on their galliots down the Hudson, and
-thence to Amsterdam and London, sold them to the British East India Company at a profit
-of five hundred per cent. Landed at Canton, and thence carried to Peking, American
-ginseng broke the market, forced the price to a shockingly low figure, and dealt a
-heavy blow to the Corean monopoly.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb389">[<a href="#pb389">389</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Henceforth a steady stream of ginseng—now found in limitless quantities in the Ohio
-and Mississippi valleys—poured into China. Though far inferior to the best article,
-it (<i lang="la">Aralia quinquefolia</i>) is sufficiently like it in taste and real or imaginary qualities to rival the root
-of Chō-sen, which is not of the very highest grade.
-</p>
-<p>Less than a generation had passed from the time that the western end of Massachusetts
-had any influence on Corea or China, before there was brought from the far East an
-herb that influenced the colony at her other end, far otherwise than commercially.
-Massachusetts had sent ginseng to Canton, China now sent tea to Massachusetts. The
-herb from Amoy was pitched into the sea by men dressed and painted like the Indians,
-and the Revolution followed.
-</p>
-<p>The war for independence over, Captain John Greene, in the ship Empress of China,
-sailed from New York, February 22, 1784. Major Samuel Shaw, the supercargo, without
-government aid or recognition, established American trade with China, living at Canton
-during part of the year 1786 and the whole of 1787 and 1788. Having been appointed
-consul by President Washington in 1789, while on a visit home, Major Shaw returned
-to China in an entirely new ship, the Massachusetts, built, navigated, and owned by
-American citizens. At Canton he held the office of consul certainly until the year
-1790, and presumably until his death in 1794. This first consul of the United States
-in China received his commission from Congress, on condition that he should “not be
-entitled to receive any salary, fees, or emoluments whatever.”
-</p>
-<p>Animated by the spirit of independence, and a laudable ambition, the resolute citizen
-of the New World declared that “the Americans must have tea, and they seek the most
-lucrative market for their precious root ginseng.”<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5725src" href="#xd31e5725">1</a>
-</p>
-<p>It was ginseng and tea—an exchange of the materials for drink, a barter of tonics—that
-brought the Americans and Chinese, and finally the Americans and Coreans together.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb390">[<a href="#pb390">390</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Cotton was the next American raw material exported to China, beginning in 1791. In
-1842 the loaded ships sailed direct from Alabama to Canton, on the expansion of trade
-after the Opium War.
-</p>
-<p>The idea now began to dawn upon some minds that it was high time that Japan and Corea
-should be opened to American commerce.
-</p>
-<p>The first public man who gave this idea official expression was the Honorable Zadoc
-Pratt, then member of the House of Representatives from the Eleventh (now the Fifteenth)
-Congressional District of New York. As chairman of the Committee on Naval Affairs,
-he introduced in Congress, February 12, 1845, a proposition for the extension of American
-commerce by the despatch of a mission to Japan and Corea as follows:
-</p>
-<p>“It is hereby recommended that immediate measures be taken for effecting commercial
-arrangements with the empire of Japan and the kingdom of Corea,” etc. (<i>Congressional Globe</i>, vol. xiv., p. 294).
-</p>
-<p>The Mexican war was then already looming as a near possibility, and under its shadow,
-the wisdom of sending even a part of our little navy was doubted, and Mr. Pratt’s
-bill failed to pass.
-</p>
-<p>None of the American commanders, Glyn, Biddle, John Rodgers, or even Perry, seem to
-have ventured into Corean waters, and Commodore Perry has scarcely mentioned the adjacent
-kingdom in the narrative of the treaty expedition which he wrote, and his pastor,
-the Rev. Francis L. Hawks, edited. In truth, the sealed country was at that time almost
-as little known as that of Corea or Coreæ, which Josephus mentions, or that province
-of India which bears the same name.
-</p>
-<p>The commerce which sprang up, not only between our country and China and Japan, but
-also that carried on in American vessels between Shanghae, Chifu, Tien-tsin, and Niu-chwang
-in North China, and the Japanese ports, made the navigation of Corean waters a necessity.
-Sooner or later shipwrecks must occur, and the question of the humane treatment of
-American citizens cast on Corean shores came up before our government for settlement,
-as it had long before in the case of Japan.
-</p>
-<p>When it did begin to rain it poured. Within one year the Corean government having
-three American cases to deal with, gave a startling illustration of its policy—with
-the distressed, kindness; with the robber, powder and iron; with the invader, death
-and annihilation.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb391">[<a href="#pb391">391</a>]</span></p>
-<p>On June 24, 1866, the American schooner Surprise was wrecked off the coast (of Whang-hai?).
-The approach of any foreign vessel was especially dangerous at this time, as the crews
-might be mistaken for Frenchmen and killed by the people from patriotic impulses.
-Nevertheless Captain McCaslin and his men with their Chinese cook, after being first
-well catechised by the local magistrate, and secondly by a commissioner sent from
-Seoul, were kindly treated and well fed, and provided with clothing, medicines, and
-tobacco. By orders of Tai-wen Kun, they were escorted on horseback to Ai-chiu, and,
-after being feasted there, were conducted safely to the Border Gate. Thence, after
-a hard journey via Mukden, they got to Niu-chwang and to the United States consul.
-A gold watch was voted by Congress to the Rev. Père Gillie for his kindness to these
-men while in Mukden.
-</p>
-<p>From a passage in one of the letters of the Corean Government, we gather that the
-crew of still another American ship were hospitably treated after shipwreck, but of
-the circumstances we are ignorant. Of the General Sherman affair more is known.
-</p>
-<p>The General Sherman was an American schooner, owned by a Mr. Preston, who was making
-a voyage for health. She was consigned to Messrs. Meadows &amp; Co., a British firm in
-Tien-tsin, and reached that port July, 1866. After delivery of her cargo, an arrangement
-was made by the firm and owner to load her with goods likely to be saleable in Corea,
-such as cotton cloth, glass, tin-plate, etc., and despatch her there on an experimental
-voyage in the hope of thus opening the country to commerce.
-</p>
-<p>Leaving Tien-tsin July 29th, the vessel touched at Chifu, and took on board Mr. Hogarth,
-a young Englishman, and a Chinese shroff,<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5753src" href="#xd31e5753">2</a> familiar with Corean money. The complement of the vessel was now five white foreigners,
-and nineteen Malay and Chinese sailors. The owner, Preston, the master, Page, and
-the mate, Wilson, were Americans. The Rev. Mr. Thomas, who had learned Corean from
-refugees at Chifu, and had made a trip to Whang-hai on a Chinese junk, went on board
-as a passenger to improve his knowledge of the language.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5756src" href="#xd31e5756">3</a>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb392">[<a href="#pb392">392</a>]</span></p>
-<p>From the first the character of the expedition was suspected, because the men were
-rather too heavily armed for a peaceful trading voyage. It was believed in China that
-the royal coffins in the tombs of Ping-an, wherein more than one dynasty of Chō-sen
-lay buried, were of solid gold; and it was broadly hinted that the expedition had
-something to do with these.
-</p>
-<p>The schooner, whether merchant or invader, leaving Chifu, took a west-northwest direction,
-and made for the mouth of the Ta Tong River. There they met the Chinese captain of
-a Chifu junk, who agreed to pilot them up the river. He continued on the General Sherman
-during four tides, or two days. Then leaving her, he returned to the river’s mouth,
-and sailed back to Chifu, where he was met and questioned by the firm of Meadows &amp;
-Co.
-</p>
-<p>No further direct intelligence was ever received from the unfortunate party.
-</p>
-<p>The time chosen for this “experimental trading voyage” was strangely inopportune.
-The whole country was excited over the expected invasion of the French, and to a Corean—especially
-in the north, where not one in ten thousand had ever seen a white foreigner—any man
-dressed in foreign clothes would be taken for a Frenchman, as were even the Japanese
-crew of the gunboat Unyo Kuan in 1875. An armed vessel would certainly be taken for
-a French ship, and made the object of patriotic vengeance.
-</p>
-<p>According to one report, the hatches of the schooner were fastened down, after the
-crew had been driven beneath, and set on fire. According to another, all were decapitated.
-The Coreans burned the wood work for its iron, and took the cannon for models.
-</p>
-<p>During this same month of August, 1866, the Jewish merchant Ernest Oppert, in the
-steamer Emperor, entered the Han River, and had secret interviews with some of the
-native Christians, who wrote to him in Latin. Communications were also held with the
-governor of Kang-wa, and valuable charts were made by Captain James. One month later,
-in September, the French war-vessels made their appearance.
-</p>
-<p>The U.&nbsp;S. steamship Wachusett, despatched by Admiral Rowan to inquire into the Sherman
-affair, reached Chifu January 14, <span class="pageNum" id="pb393">[<a href="#pb393">393</a>]</span>1867, and is said to have taken on board the Chinese pilot of the General Sherman,
-and the Rev. Mr. Corbett, an American missionary, to act as interpreter. Leaving Chifu
-January 21st, they cast anchor, January 23d, at the mouth of the large inlet opposite
-Sir James Hall group, which indents Whang-hai province. This estuary they erroneously
-supposed to be the Ta Tong River leading to Ping-an city, whereas they were half a
-degree too far south, as the chart made by themselves shows.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p393width" id="p393"><img src="images/p393.png" alt="Map Illustrating the “General Sherman” Affair." width="534" height="500"><p class="figureHead">Map Illustrating the “General Sherman” Affair.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>A letter was despatched, through the official of Cow Island, near the anchorage, to
-the prefect of the large city nearest the place of the Sherman affair, demanding that
-the murderers be produced on the deck of the Wachusett. The city of Ping-an was about
-seventy-five miles distant. The letter probably went to Hai-chiu, the capital of the
-province. Five days elapsed before the answer arrived, during which the surveying
-boats were busy. Many natives were met and spoken to, who all told one story, that
-the Sherman’s crew were murdered by the people, and not by official instigation.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5778src" href="#xd31e5778">4</a>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb394">[<a href="#pb394">394</a>]</span></p>
-<p>On the 29th, an officer from one of the villages of the district appeared, “whose
-presence inspired the greatest dread among the people.” An interview was held, during
-which Commander Shufeldt possessed his soul in patience.
-</p>
-<p>To the polished American’s eye, the Corean’s manner was haughty and imperious. He
-was utterly beyond the reach of reason and of argument. In his person he seemed “the
-perfect type of a cruel and vindictive savage.” The Corean’s impressions of the American,
-not being in print, are unknown.
-</p>
-<p>It is unnecessary to give the details of the fruitless interview. The American could
-get neither information nor satisfaction; the gist of the Corean reiteration was,
-“Go away as soon as possible.” Commander Shufeldt, bound by his orders, could do nothing
-more, and being compelled also by stress of weather, came away.
-</p>
-<p>In 1867, Dr. S. Wells Williams, Secretary of the Legation of the United States at
-Peking, succeeded in obtaining an interview with a member of the Corean embassy, who
-told him that after the General Sherman got aground, she careened over, as the tide
-receded, and her crew landed to guard or float her. The natives gathered around them,
-and before long an altercation took place between the two parties, which soon led
-to blows and bloodshed. A general attack began upon the foreigners, in which every
-man was killed by the mob. About twenty of the natives lost their lives. Dr. Williams’
-comment is, “The evidence goes to uphold the presumption that they invoked their sad
-fate by some rash or violent act toward the natives.” Dr. Williams also met a Chinese
-pilot, Yu Wautai, who reported that in 1867 he had seen the hull of a foreign vessel
-lying on the south bank of the river, about ten miles up from the sea. The hull was
-full of water. A Corean from Sparrow Island had told him that the murder of the Sherman’s
-crew was entirely the work of the people and farmers, and not of the magistrates or
-soldiery.
-</p>
-<p>Still determined to learn something of the fate of the Sherman’s crew, since reports
-were current that two or more of them were still alive and in prison, Admiral Rowan,
-in May, 1867, despatched another vessel, which this time got into the right river.
-Commander <span class="pageNum" id="pb395">[<a href="#pb395">395</a>]</span>Febiger, in the U.&nbsp;S. steamship Shenandoah, besides surveying the “Ping Yang Inlet,”
-learned this version of the affair:
-</p>
-<p>A foreign vessel arrived in the river two years before. The local officials went on
-board and addressed the two foreign officers of the ship in respectful language. The
-latter grossly insulted the native dignitaries, i.e., “they turned round and went
-to sleep.”
-</p>
-<p>A man on board, whom they spoke of as “Tony,<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5798src" href="#xd31e5798">5</a> a Frenchman,” used violent and very impolite language toward them. The Coreans treated
-their visitors kindly, but warned them of their danger, and the unlawfulness of penetrating
-into, or trading in the country. Nevertheless, the foreigners went up the river to
-Ping-an city, where they seized the “adjutant-general’s” ship, put him in chains,
-and proceeded to rob the junks and their crews. The people of the city aroused to
-wrath, attacked the foreign ship with fire-arms and cannon; they set adrift fire-rafts,
-and even made a hand-to-hand fight with pikes, knives, and swords. The foreigners
-fought desperately, but the Coreans overpowered them. Finally, the ship, having caught
-fire, blew up with a terrific report.
-</p>
-<p>This story was not of course believed by the American officers, but even the best
-wishers and friends of the Ping-an adventurers cannot stifle suspicion of either cruelty
-or insult to the natives. Knowing the character of certain members of the party, and
-remembering the kindness shown to the crew of the Surprise, few of the unprejudiced
-will believe that the General Sherman’s crew were murdered without cause.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb396">[<a href="#pb396">396</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5725">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5725src">1</a></span> The Honorable Gideon Nye, of China, from whose article in “The Far East” these facts
-are drawn concerning the first consul of the United States to China, has effectually
-disproved the oft-quoted statement of Sir John Davis in his “History of China,” that
-“It was in the year 1802 that the American flag was <i>first</i> hoisted at Canton.” Dr. William Speer in his excellent book—fair to the Chinese as
-well as to foreigners—has told the story of Jonathan Edwards and his troubles over
-ginseng and the drink which his Indian pupils bought with it.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5725src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5753">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5753src">2</a></span> These shroffs are experts in handling money. They can detect counterfeits by the touch,
-and, with incredible celerity, can reckon amounts to thousandths of a cent on the
-abacus. One or more of them are found in nearly every one of the banks and hongs in
-Eurasian ports.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5753src" title="Return to note 2 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5756">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5756src">3</a></span> Some weeks before, he had offered to penetrate the peninsula as missionary and agent
-of the Scottish National Bible Society. The Coreans who had <span class="pageNum" id="pb392n">[<a href="#pb392n">392</a>]</span>accompanied Bishop Ridel to Chifu, and who had met Dr. Williamson, volunteered to
-be his guides, and he had decided to go with them. When the opportunity of going by
-the American vessel offered itself, he changed his plan. Against the advice of his
-friends, who suspected the character of the expedition, he joined the party.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5756src" title="Return to note 3 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5778">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5778src">4</a></span> A broad streak of light was thrown upon at least one possible cause of the Sherman
-tragedy, by the statement of the natives that Chinese pirates frequently descend on
-the coast and kill and rob the Coreans. During the previous <span class="pageNum" id="pb394n">[<a href="#pb394n">394</a>]</span>year, several natives had been killed by Chinese pirates near the Wachusett’s anchorage.
-As ten of the crew of the Sherman were Canton Chinamen, it is probable that the very
-sight of them on an <i>armed</i> vessel would inflame the Coreans to take their long-waited for revenge.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5778src" title="Return to note 4 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5798">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5798src">5</a></span> In 1884, Lieutenant J.&nbsp;B. Bernadon, U.S.N., made a journey from Seoul to Ping-an,
-and, being able to speak Corean, learned the following from native Christians. The
-Sherman, arriving during the heavy midsummer rains, which make the river impassable
-to native boats, was seen from the city walls and caused great excitement. When the
-waters subsided the governor sent officers to inquire her mission. Unfortunately,
-to gratify their curiosity, the common people set out also in a large fleet of boats,
-which the Sherman’s crew mistook for a hostile demonstration, and fired guns in the
-air to warn them off. Then all the boats returned. When the river fell the Sherman
-grounded and careened over, which being seen from the city walls a fleet of boats
-set out with hostile intent and were fired upon. Officers and people, now enraged,
-started fire-rafts, and soon the vessel, though with white flag hoisted, was in flames.
-Of those who leaped in the river most were drowned. Of those picked up one Tchoi-nan-un
-(Rev. Mr. Thomas), who was able to talk Corean, explained the meaning of the white
-flag, and begged to be surrendered to China. His prayer was in vain. In a few days
-all the prisoners were led out and publicly executed.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5798src" title="Return to note 5 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch45" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1217">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XLV.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">A BODY-SNATCHING EXPEDITION.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Early in May, 1867, the foreign settlement at Shanghae was thrown into excitement
-by the report of the return of an unsuccessful piratical expedition from Corea. The
-<i>ennui</i> of Eurasian port life was turned into a lively glow of excitement. Conversation at
-the clubs and tea-tables, which had wilted down to local gossip, Wade’s policy, paper
-hunts, and the races, now turned upon the politics and geography, methods of royal
-sepulture, mortuary architecture, antiquities, customs, and costumes in the mysterious
-peninsula. The pleasures of wheelbarrow rides, and visits to the bubbling springs,
-now palled before the pending trial at the United States consular court.
-</p>
-<p>An American citizen was charged with making an “unlawful and scandalous expedition”
-to Corea, and of violently attempting to land in a country with which the United States
-had no treaty relations. It was further stated that he had gone to exhume the bones
-of a defunct king in order to hold them for sale or ransom. In plain English, it was
-said to be a piratical and body-snatching descent upon the grave-yards of Chō-sen,
-to dig up royal remains, not for the purpose of dissection, nor in the interests of
-science or of archæology, but for the sake of money, which money was to be extorted
-from the regent and court of Seoul.
-</p>
-<p>The idea, of course, awoke merriment as well as interest. One may well understand
-why Professor Marsh should make periodical descents upon the bone-yards of Red Cloud’s
-territory, and exhibit his triumphs—skeletons of toothed birds and of geological horses
-as small as Corean ponies—in a museum under glass cases, well mounted with shining
-brass springs and iron joints. Even a school-boy can without laughing think of Dr.
-Schliemann rooting among the tombs of Mycenæ, and Di Cesnola sifting the dust of Kurium
-for its golden treasures. Even the night picture of resurrectionists, <span class="pageNum" id="pb397">[<a href="#pb397">397</a>]</span>emptying graves in a Scotch kirk-yard for subjects to sell at a pound sterling apiece,
-has few elements of humor about it.
-</p>
-<p>But to conceive of civilized “Christians,” or Israelites, chartering a steamer to
-exhume and steal the carcase and mouldering bones of a heathen king, to hold them
-in pawn to raise money on them<span class="corr" id="xd31e5819" title="Not in source">,</span> created more laughter than frowns or tears. It was thought that the sign under which
-the ship sailed, instead of being the flag of the North German Confederation, should
-have been the three golden balls, such as hang above a pawnbroker’s windows.
-</p>
-<p>The person on trial was formerly an interpreter at the United States consulate, and,
-having learned Chinese from childhood, was able to speak the language fluently, and
-thus converse, by means of tongue or pencil, with the many Coreans who know the standard
-of communication in Eastern Asia either by sound or sight. It was he also who furnished
-the cash for the expedition, the commander-in-chief of which was one Oppert, a North
-German subject; the guide was a French Jesuit priest named Farout (evidently a fictitious
-name) who spoke Corean, having been in the country as a missionary. These three were
-the leaders of the expedition.
-</p>
-<p>Before going, the American had told Consul Seward that his object was to take a Corean
-embassy to Europe, to <span class="corr" id="xd31e5824" title="Source: negociate">negotiate</span> treaties, and to explain to the governments of France and the United States the murder
-of their subjects in Corea. Four Coreans, with the French missionary Bishop Ridel,
-had been in Shanghae a short time before, April 24, 1867; and the defendant declared
-that it was from these four persons, whom he styled “commissioners,” that he got his
-information as to the desire of the Corean government for treaties, etc. He also stated
-that this knowledge was held only by the four Coreans, himself, and a Jewish <span class="corr" id="xd31e5827" title="Source: pedler">peddler</span>, who had several times penetrated into Corea, and by whom the Corean “commissioners,”
-had been brought to Shanghae. These “commissioners,” he averred, had a new and correct
-version of the General Sherman affair. According to their report, some of the crew
-had become embroiled in a row growing out of the improper treatment of some native
-women, and were arrested. The crew went to rescue them. They succeeded, and took also
-two native officers on board for hostages. This so enraged the people that they attacked
-the crew, killed eight at once, and made prisoners of the others who were still alive.
-</p>
-<p>Readers of our narrative will smile at discovering the poor <span class="pageNum" id="pb398">[<a href="#pb398">398</a>]</span>fishermen who brought their bishop across the Yellow Sea in their boat thus transformed
-into “ambassadors.”
-</p>
-<p>One thing seemed to be on the surface—that this modern Jason and his argonauts had
-gone out to find a golden fleece, but came back shorn.
-</p>
-<p>On the return of the expedition, Mr. Seward questioned the American closely, sifted
-the matter, and finally, being satisfied that something was wrong, put him on trial,
-eliciting the facts which seem to be the following:
-</p>
-<p>Oppert, who had been at the Naipo, and up the Han River in the Emperor and Rona, secured
-a steamer named the China, of six hundred and eighty tons, with a steam tender, the
-Greta, of sixty tons, and run the North German flag up at the fore. The complement
-of the ship was eight Europeans, twenty Malays from <span class="corr" id="xd31e5839" title="Source: Manilla">Manila</span>, and about one hundred Chinamen, these last were a motley crew of sailors, laborers,
-and coolies—the riff-raff of humanity, such as swarm in every Chinese port. With muskets
-in their hands—it is doubtful whether a dozen of them had ever fired off a gun—they
-were to form the “forces” or military escort of the expedition, which was to negotiate
-“treaties,” embark an embassy to travel round the globe, and introduce the Hermit
-Nation to the world.
-</p>
-<p>The “fleet” left Shanghae April 30, 1867, and steamed to Nagasaki; in which Japanese
-port she remained two days, taking on board coal, water, and ten cases of muskets.
-The prow was then headed for Chung-chong province. They arrived in Prince Jerome Gulf
-at 10 <span class="asc">P.M.</span> on Friday, May 8th. The next day at 10 <span class="asc">A.M.</span> they moved farther in the river. In the afternoon they succeeded in getting two small
-boats, or sampans, partly by persuasion and pay, partly by force. The expedition was
-then organized, Oppert commanding. The mate, engineer, and regular Chinese manned
-the tender which was to tow the boats. The muskets were unpacked and distributed on
-deck, and the coolies were armed, equipped, taught the difference between the butt
-and muzzle of their weapons, and given their orders. Four men carried spades or coal
-shovels to exhume the bones and treasure.
-</p>
-<p>The French priest who had been in Corea acted as guide and interpreter. Shortly after
-midnight, and very early on Sunday morning, the steam tender began to move up the
-river, stopping at a point about forty miles from the sea. The armed crowd landed,
-and the march across the open country to the tomb was begun. As they proceeded, the
-neighborhood became alive with <span class="pageNum" id="pb399">[<a href="#pb399">399</a>]</span>curious people, and the hills were white with people gazing at the strange procession.
-A few natives being met on the way, the French priest stopped to speak with them.
-The party rested for a while at a temple, for the march was getting tiresome, having
-already occupied several hours.
-</p>
-<p>Reaching the burial-place [near Totta-san?], they found a raised mound with a slab
-of stone on each side at the base. Beneath this tomb was the supposed treasure. Was
-it bones or gold?
-</p>
-<p>The four men with spades now began their work, and soon levelled the mound. They had
-dug out a considerable quantity of earth, when their shovels struck on a rocky slab,
-which seemed to be the lid of the tomb proper, or the sarcophagus. This they could
-not move. All efforts to budge or pry it up were vain. Having no crowbars they were,
-after much useless labor, with perhaps not a little swearing, compelled to give up
-their task.
-</p>
-<p>On their return march, the exasperated Coreans, plucking up courage, attempted to
-molest them, but the marauders, firing their guns in the air, kept their assailants
-at a respectful distance. The party and tender dropped down the river and rejoined
-the steamer at noon, the weather being foggy.
-</p>
-<p>Further proceedings of the expedition are known only in outline. The steamer weighed
-anchor and left for Kang-wa Island. They put themselves in communication with the
-local magistrate during three days. On the third day a party landed from the ship,
-and while on shore were fired upon. Two men were killed and one wounded.
-</p>
-<p>The expedition remained in Corea ten days, returning to Shanghae after two weeks’
-absence.
-</p>
-<p>In the foregoing trial it is most evident that many details were concealed. The quantity
-of truth divulged was probably in proportion to the whole amount, as the puffs of
-steam from a safety-valve are to the volume in the boiler. The accused let out just
-enough to save them from conviction and to secure their acquittal.
-</p>
-<p>The defendant was discharged with the Scotch verdict “not proven.” Mr. George F. Seward,
-however, wrote to the State Department at Washington his opinion, that the expedition
-was “an attempt to take from their tombs the remains of one or more sovereigns of
-Corea, for the purpose, it would seem, of holding them to ransom.”
-</p>
-<p>Whether any great amount of treasure is ever buried with the sovereigns or grandees
-of Chō-sen is not known to us. Certain it <span class="pageNum" id="pb400">[<a href="#pb400">400</a>]</span>is that the national sentiment is that of horror against the disturbance or rifling
-of sepulchres. Now they had before their eyes a fresh confirmation of their suspicions
-that the chief purpose of foreign invaders was to rob the dead and violate the most
-holy instincts of humanity. The national mind now settled into the conviction that,
-beyond all doubt, foreigners were barbarians and many of them thieves and robbers.
-With such eyes were they ready to look upon the flag and ships of the United States
-when they came in 1871.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p400width" id="p400"><img src="images/p400.png" alt="Map Illustrating the “China” Affair." width="503" height="543"><p class="figureHead">Map Illustrating the “China” Affair.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p><span class="sc">Note.</span>—Nearly every word of the above was written in December, 1877, the information having
-been derived from the United States Diplomatic Correspondence. At that time we suspected
-that “Farout” was the fictitious name of Feron, the French Roman Catholic missionary,
-who had escaped the persecutions of 1866. It seems that three countries and three
-religions were represented in this body-snatching expedition, which was of a truly
-international character.
-</p>
-<p>In March, 1880, there was published in London and New York the English translation
-of “<span lang="de">Ein Verschlossenes Land</span>,” a work printed in Germany. As we read “A Forbidden Land: Voyages to the Corea,”
-it dawned upon us <span class="pageNum" id="pb401">[<a href="#pb401">401</a>]</span>that the author was none other than “the needy Hamburgh trader,” “the Jewish <span class="corr" id="xd31e5881" title="Source: pedler">peddler</span>,” of the Consular Court trial of 1867. It was even so. Coolly and without denial,
-the author tells us that the main object of his last voyage was to “remove” some buried
-relics held in great veneration by that “blood-thirsty tyrant,” the Tai-wen Kun, or
-regent. The project was first suggested to him by the French priest, who, as the author
-takes pains to tell us, was not a Jesuit, nor had ever belonged to that order (p.
-295), though he gives Feron’s proposition in his own words (p. 299), the italics being
-ours:
-</p>
-<p>“If the project I am going to lay before you (<i>i.e.</i>, to rob the grave) will at first sight appear to you strange and out of the common,
-remember that <i>a great aim can never be gained by small means</i>, and that we must look at this affair from another point of view than that which
-may be taken by narrow-minded people.”
-</p>
-<p>The details of the landing, march [to near Totta-san?], excavation, and retreat are
-duly narrated, the blame of failure being laid upon one unlucky wight who was “the
-only disreputable character we had with us!”
-</p>
-<p>After leaving Prince Jerome Gulf, the China proceeded up the Han River to Tricault
-Island (see map, page 379), “about twenty minutes’ steam below Kang-wha.” There the
-leader received a note from the Taiouen-goon (the Tai-wen Kun, or regent), the gist
-of which was, “Corea has no need of foreign intruders.” While holding a parley near
-the wall of a town on Tricault Island, “the only disreputable character” in the party
-again got them into trouble. This black sheep was a German sailor, who, hungering
-after fresh veal, had stolen a calf; an act which drew the fire of the native soldiery
-on the city wall. The thief received a ball in his arm, which compelled him to drop
-the calf and run, while one Manilaman was shot dead. It is not known how far the statistics
-of a Corean warfare diverge from those elsewhere, nor how many tons of lead are required
-to kill one man, but owing to the incredibly bad aim of the jingal shooters, the remainder
-of the party of twenty or more escaped their deserts and reached the tender. The next
-morning the expedition set out on the return to Shanghae.
-</p>
-<p>After a review of this book (in <i>The Nation</i> of April 7, 1880), which the author issued after his imprisonment, the following
-note appeared in the same paper of April 21st:
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first"><span class="sc">Oppert’s Corean Outrage.</span>
-</p>
-<p class="salute"><i>To the Editor of The Nation</i>:
-</p>
-<p><span class="sc">Sir</span>: The notice of Oppert’s book on Corea recalls some curious incidents to my mind.
-The raid on the King’s tomb was one of the most extraordinary affairs ever known.
-Its inception and failure might have been concealed but for the Coreans, when they
-attacked the ghouls, killing an unfortunate Manilaman. Hearing of this, the Spanish
-consul applied to Mr. Seward (United States Consul-General at Shanghae), who at once
-arrested Jenkins. I was one of the four “associates” summoned to sit with the consul-general
-in the trial, and well remember what a perfect burlesque it was. The Chinese, who
-had told a plain and coherent story on preliminary examination, were as dumb as oysters
-on the stand. When all had been called, the defendant’s counsel said that he would
-rest his case on their testimony. Conviction was <span class="pageNum" id="pb402">[<a href="#pb402">402</a>]</span>impossible, but in the minds of those informed on the subject, the wickedness of this
-buccaneering expedition was remembered as surpassing even the absurdity of an attempt
-to destroy a granite mausoleum with coal shovels. There is a monstrous impertinence
-in Oppert’s publishing an account of a piratical fiasco which is reported to have
-cost him a term of imprisonment at home.
-</p>
-<p class="signed"><span class="sc">A.&nbsp;A. Hayes</span>, Jr.
-</p>
-<p class="dateline"><span class="sc">New York</span>, April 15, 1880.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb403">[<a href="#pb403">403</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch46" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1225">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XLVI.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">“OUR LITTLE WAR WITH THE HEATHEN.”</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The representations made to the Department of State at Washington by Dr. S. Wells
-Williams, concerning the General Sherman, and by Consul-General George F. Seward,
-in the matter of the China, affair, directed the attention of the Government to the
-opening of Corea to American commerce. The memorial of Mr. Seward, dated October 14,
-1868, reviewed the advantages to be gained and the obstacles in the way. The need
-of protection to American seamen was pointed out, and as Japan had been opened to
-international relations by American diplomacy, why should not a smaller nation yield
-to persuasion? American merchants in China having seconded Mr. Seward’s proposal,
-the State Department took the matter into serious consideration, and, in 1870, resolved
-to undertake the difficult enterprise.
-</p>
-<p>The servants of the United States who were charged with this delicate mission were,
-Mr. Frederick F. Low, Minister of the United States to Peking, and Rear-Admiral John
-Rodgers, Commander-in-Chief of the Asiatic squadron. Mr. Low was directed by Secretary
-Fish to gain all possible knowledge from Peking, and then proceed on the admiral’s
-flag-ship to the Corean capital. He was to make a treaty of commerce if possible,
-but his chief aim was to secure provision for the protection of shipwrecked mariners.
-He was to avoid a conflict of force, unless it could not be avoided without dishonor.
-“The responsibility of war or peace” was to be left with him and not with the admiral.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5927src" href="#xd31e5927">1</a>
-</p>
-<p>There was at this time, all over the far East, a feeling of uncertainty <span class="pageNum" id="pb404">[<a href="#pb404">404</a>]</span>and alarm among foreigners, and many portentious signs seemed to indicate a general
-uprising, both in China and Japan, against foreigners. The example of Corea in expelling
-or beheading the French priests acted as powerful leaven in the minds of the fanatical
-foreigner-haters in the two countries adjoining. The “mikado-reverencers,” who in
-Japan had overthrown the “Tycoon” and abolished the dual system of government, made
-these objects only secondary to the expulsion of all aliens. The cry of “honor the
-mikado” was joined to the savage yell of the Jo-i (alien-haters), “expel the barbarians.”
-In China the smothered feelings of murderous animosity were almost ready to burst.
-The air was filled with alarms, even while the American fleet was preparing <a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5934src" href="#xd31e5934">2</a> for Corea.
-</p>
-<p>Rear-Admiral Rodgers,<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5939src" href="#xd31e5939">3</a> who had taken command, and relieved Admiral Rowan, August 20, 1869, began his preparations
-with vigor.
-</p>
-<p>In a consultation held at Peking during November, 1870, between the admiral, minister,
-and consul general, the time for the expedition was fixed for the month of May, 1871.
-Mr. Seward then left for a visit to India, and Mr. Low despatched, through the Tribunal
-of Rites at Peking, a letter to the King of Corea. After vast circumlocution, it emerged
-from the mazes of Chinese court etiquette, and by a special courier reached the regent
-at Seoul. In this, however, the Chinese were doing a great favor. No answer was received
-from Seoul before the expedition sailed.
-</p>
-<p>Meanwhile the German minister to Japan (now in Peking), <span class="pageNum" id="pb405">[<a href="#pb405">405</a>]</span>Herr M. Von Brandt, had landed from the Hertha at Fusan, and attempted to hold an
-interview with the governor of Tong-nai. He was accompanied by the Japanese representatives
-at Fusan, who politely forwarded his request. A tart lecture to the mikado’s subject
-for his officiousness, and a rebuff to the Kaiser’s envoy were the only results of
-his mission. After sauntering about a little, Herr Von Brandt, who arrived June 1,
-1878, left June 2d, and the era of commercial relations between the Central European
-Empire<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5947src" href="#xd31e5947">4</a> and Chō-sen was postponed.
-</p>
-<p>During the year 1870, Bishop Ridel, who had gone back to France, returned to China
-and prepared to rejoin his converts. Having communicated with them, they awaited his
-coming with anxiety, and we shall hear of them on board of the flag-ship Colorado.
-</p>
-<p>Mr. Low, having gathered all possible information, public and private, concerning
-“the semi-barbarous and hostile people” of “the unknown country” which he expected
-to fail of entering, sailed from Shanghae, May 8th, arriving at Nagasaki, May 12th.
-On the 13th he wrote to the Secretary of State, Mr. Hamilton Fish. He declared that
-“Corea is more of a sealed book than Japan was before Commodore Perry’s visit.” Evidently
-he looked upon the pathway of the duty laid upon him as unusually thorny. The rose
-if plucked at all would be held in smarting fingers. While granting a faithful servant
-of the nation the virtue of modesty, one cannot fail to read in his letter more of
-an expectation to redress wrongs than to conciliate hostility.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb406">[<a href="#pb406">406</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The whole spirit of the expedition was not that reflected in the despatches of the
-State Department, but rather that of the clubs and dinner-tables of Shanghae. The
-minister went to Corea with his mind made up, and everything he saw confirmed him
-in his fixed opinion. Of the admiral, it is not unjust to say that the warrior predominated
-over the peace-maker. He had an eye to the victories of war more than those, not less
-renowned, of peace. The sword was certainly more congenial to his nature than the
-pen.
-</p>
-<p>The fleet made rendezvous at Nagasaki, in Kiushiu—that division of Japan whence warlike
-expeditions to Chō-sen have sailed from the days of Jingu to those of Taikō, and from
-Taikō to Rodgers. This time, as in the seventh century, the landing was to be made
-not near the eastern, but on the remote western, coast. The cry was, “On to Seoul.”
-</p>
-<p>The squadron, consisting of the flag-ship Colorado, the corvettes Alaska and Benicia,
-and the gun-boats Monocacy and Palos, sailed gallantly out of the harbor on May 16th,
-and, making an easy run, anchored off Ferrières Islands on the 19th, and, after a
-delay of fogs, Isle Eugenie on the 23d.
-</p>
-<p>In spite of the formidable appearance of our navy, the vessels were of either an antiquated
-type or of too heavy a draught, their timbers too rotten or not strong enough for
-shotted broadsides, and their <span class="corr" id="xd31e5960" title="Source: armanent">armament</span> defective in breech-loading firearms, while the facilities for landing a force were
-inadequate. The Palos and Monocacy were the only ships fitted to go up the Han River.
-The others must remain at the mouth. They were little more than transports. All the
-naval world in Chinese waters wondered why so wide-awake and practical a people as
-the Americans should be content with such old-fashioned ships, unworthy of the gallant
-crews who manned them. However, the fleet and armament were better than the Corean
-war-junks, or mud-forts armed with jingals. In gallant sailorly recognition of his
-predecessor, yet with unconscious omen of like failure, the brave Rodgers named the
-place of anchorage Roze Roads. The French soundings were verified and the superb scenery
-richly enjoyed. All navigators of the approaches to Seoul are alike unanimous in showering
-unstinting praise upon their natural beauty. Here for the first time the natives beheld
-the “flowery” flag of the United States.
-</p>
-<p>Next morning the Palos and four steam-launches were put under the command of Captain
-Homer C. Blake, to examine the channel beyond Boisée Island. Four days were peaceably
-spent in this service, <span class="pageNum" id="pb407">[<a href="#pb407">407</a>]</span>a safe return being made on the evening of the 28th. Meanwhile boat parties had landed
-and been treated in a friendly manner by the people, and the usual curiosity as to
-brass buttons, blue cloth, and glass bottles displayed. The customary official paper
-without signature, of interrogations as to who, whence, and why of the comers was
-displayed, and the answers, “Americans,” “Friendly,” and “Interview” returned in faultless
-Chinese. It was announced that the fleet would remain for some time.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p407width" id="p407"><img src="images/p407.jpg" alt="“The Entering Wedge of Civilization.”" width="456" height="706"><p class="figureHead">“The Entering Wedge of Civilization.”</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>On the following day, May 30th, the fleet anchored between the Isles Boisée and <span class="corr" id="xd31e5973" title="Source: Guerriére">Guerrière</span>. A stiff breeze had blown away the fogs and revealed the verdure and the features
-of a landscape which struck all with admiration for its luxuriant beauty. Approaching
-the squadron in a junk, some natives made signs of friendship, and came on board without
-hesitation. They bore a missive acknowledging the receipt of the Americans’ letter,
-and announcing that three nobles had been appointed by the regent for conference.
-These junk-men were merely messengers, and made no pretence of being anything more.
-They were hospitably treated, shown round the ship, and dined and wined until their
-good nature broke out in broad grins and redolent visages. They stood for their photographs
-on deck, and some fine <span class="pageNum" id="pb408">[<a href="#pb408">408</a>]</span>pictures of them were obtained. One of them, after being loaded with an armful of
-spoil in the shape of a dozen or so of Bass’ pale ale bottles, minus their corks,
-and a copy of <i>Every Saturday</i>, a Boston illustrated newspaper, was told in the stereotyped photographer’s phrase
-to “assume a pleasant expression of countenance, and look right at this point.” He
-obeyed so well, and in the nick of time, that a wreath of smiles was the result. “Our
-first Corean visitor” stands before us on the page.
-</p>
-<p>Strange coincidence! Strange medley of the significant symbols of a Christian land!
-The first thing given to the Corean was alcohol, beer, and wine. In the picture, plainly
-appearing, are the empty pale ale bottles, with their trade-mark, the red triangle—“the
-entering wedge of civilization.” But held behind the hands clasping the bottles is
-a copy of <i>Every Saturday</i>, on the front page of which is a picture of Charles Sumner, the champion of humanity,
-and of the principle that “nations must act as individuals,” with like moral responsibility!
-</p>
-<p>Promptly on May 31st, a delegation of eight officers, of the third and fifth rank,
-came on board evidently with intent to see the minister and admiral, to learn all
-they could, and to gain time. They had little or no authority and no credentials,
-but they were sociable, friendly, and in good humor.
-</p>
-<p>“Mr. Low would not lower himself,” nor would Admiral Rodgers see them. They were received
-by the secretary, Mr. Drew. They were absolutely non-committal on all points and to
-all questions asked, and naturally so, since they had no authority whatever<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5987src" href="#xd31e5987">5</a> to say “yes” or “no” to any proposition of the Americans.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb409">[<a href="#pb409">409</a>]</span></p>
-<p>A golden opportunity was here lost. The Corean envoys were informed that soundings
-would be taken in the river, and the shores would be surveyed. It was hoped that no
-molestation would be offered, and, further, that twenty-four hours would elapse before
-the boats began work.
-</p>
-<p>“To all this they (the Coreans) made no reply which could indicate dissent.” [Certainly
-not! They had no power to nod their heads, or say either “yes” or “no.”] “So, believing
-that we might continue our surveys while further diplomatic negotiations were pending,
-an expedition was sent to examine and survey the Salée [Han] River.”<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e5999src" href="#xd31e5999">6</a>
-</p>
-<p>The survey fleet consisted of the Monocacy, Palos, the only ships fit for the purpose,
-and four steam-launches, each of the latter having a howitzer mounted in the bow.
-Captain H.&nbsp;C. Blake, the commander, was on board the Palos. The old hero understood
-the situation only too well. As he started to obey orders he remarked: “In ten minutes
-we shall have a row.”
-</p>
-<p>Exactly at noon of June 2d, the four steam-launches proceeded <span class="pageNum" id="pb410">[<a href="#pb410">410</a>]</span>in line abreast up the river, the Palos and Monocacy following. The tide was running
-up, and neither of the large vessels could be kept moving at a rate slow enough to
-allow the survey work to be done well, so that this part of their work is of little
-value.
-</p>
-<p>Yet everything seemed quiet and peaceful; the bluffs and high banks along the water
-were densely covered with green woods, with now meadows, now a thatched-roof village,
-anon a rice-field in the foreground. Occasionally people could be seen in their white
-dresses along the banks, but not a sign of hostility or war until, on reaching the
-lower end of Kang-wa Island, a line of forts and fluttering flags suddenly become
-visible. In a few minutes more long lines of white-garbed soldiery were seen, and
-through a glass an interpreter read on one of the yellow flags the Chinese characters
-meaning “General Commanding.” In the embrasures were a few pieces of artillery of
-32-pound calibre, and some smaller pieces lashed together by fives, or nailed to logs
-in a row. On the opposite point of the river was a line of smaller earthworks, freshly
-thrown up, armed only with jingals. Around the bend in the river was “a whirlpool
-as bad as Hell Gate,” full of eddies and ledges, with the channel only three hundred
-feet wide. The fort (Du Condè) was situated right on this elbow. Hundreds of mats
-and screens were ranged within and on the works, masking the loaded guns. As the boats
-passed nearer, glimpses into the fort became possible, by which it was seen that the
-cannon “lay nearly as thick together as gun to gun and gun behind gun on the floor
-of an arsenal.” (See map, page 415.)
-</p>
-<p>For a moment the silence was ominous—oppressive. The hearts of the men beat violently,
-their teeth were set, and calm defiance waited in the face of certain death. The rapid
-current bore them on right into the face of the frowning muzzles. It seemed impossible
-to escape. Were the Coreans going to fire? If so, why not now? Immediately? Now is
-their opportunity. The vessels are abreast the forts.
-</p>
-<p>The Corean commander was one moment too late. From the parapet under the great flag
-a signal gun was fired. In an instant mats and screens were alive with the red fire
-of eighty pieces of artillery. Then a hail of shot from all the cannon, guns, and
-jingals rained around the boats. Forts, batteries, and walls were hidden for a moment
-in smoke. The water was rasped and torn as though a hailstorm was passing over it.
-Many of the men in the boats were wet to the skin by the splashing of the water over
-them. <span class="pageNum" id="pb411">[<a href="#pb411">411</a>]</span>Old veterans of the civil war had never seen so much fire, lead, iron, and smoke of
-bad powder concentrated in such small space and time. “Old Blake,” who had had two
-ships shot under him by the Confederates, declared he could remember nothing so sharp
-as this.
-</p>
-<p>The fire was promptly returned by the steam-launch howitzers. The Palos and Monocacy,
-which had forged ahead, turned back, and “Old Blake came round the point a-flying,
-and let drive all the guns of the Palos at them. The consequence was that they kicked
-so hard as to tear the bolts out of the side of the ship and render the bulwarks useless
-during the remainder of the fight.” The Monocacy also anchored near the point, and
-sent her ten-inch shells into the fort. During her movements, she struck a rock and
-began to leak badly. After hammering at the forts until everything in them was silenced,
-the squadron returned down the river, sending their explosive compliments into the
-forts and redoubts as they passed. All were quiet and deserted, however, but the commander’s
-flag was still flying unharmed and neglected. Strange to say, out of the entire fleet
-only one of our men was wounded and none was killed; nor did any of the ships or boats
-receive any damage from the batteries. Two hundred guns had been fired on the Corean
-side. The signal coming too late, the immovability of their rude guns, the badness
-of the powder, and the poor aim of the unskilled gunners, were the causes of such
-an incredibly small damage. It was like the bombardment of Fort Sumter in 1861, or
-like those battles which statistics reveal to us, in which it requires a ton of lead
-to kill a man.
-</p>
-<p>However, it was determined by the chief representatives of the civil and naval powers
-to resent the insult offered to our “flag” in the “unprovoked” attack on our vessels,
-“should no apology or satisfactory explanation be offered for the hostile action of
-the Corean government.”
-</p>
-<p>Ten days were now allowed to pass before further action was taken. They were ten days
-of inaction, except preparation for further fight and some correspondence with the
-local magistrate. What a pity these ten days had not been spent before, and not after,
-June 2d! Some civilians, not to say Christians, might also be of the opinion that
-ample revenge had already been taken, enough blood spilled, the “honor” of the flag
-fully “vindicated,” a delicate diplomatic mission of “peace” spoiled beyond further
-damage, and that further vengeance was folly, and more blood spilled, murder. But
-not so thought the powers that be.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb412">[<a href="#pb412">412</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The chastising expedition consisted of the Monocacy, Palos, four steam-launches, and
-twenty boats, conveying a landing force of six hundred and fifty-one men, of whom
-one hundred and five were marines. The Benicia, Alaska, and Colorado remained at anchor.
-The total force detailed for the work of punishing the Coreans was seven hundred and
-fifty-nine men. These were arranged in ten companies of infantry, with seven pieces
-of artillery. The Monocacy had, in addition to her regular armament, two of the Colorado’s
-nine-inch guns. Captain Homer C. Blake, who was put in charge of the expedition, remained
-on the Palos.
-</p>
-<p>The squadron proceeded up the river at 10 o’clock, on the morning of the 10th of June,
-two steam-launches moving in advance of the Monocacy. The boats were in tow of the
-Palos, which moved at 10.30. The day was bright, clear, and warm. A short distance
-above the isle Primauguet a junk was seen approaching, the Coreans waving a white
-flag and holding a letter from one of the ministers of the court. One of the steam-launches
-met the junk, and the letter was received. It was translated by Mr. Drew, but as it
-contained nothing which, in the American eyes, seemed like an apology, the squadron
-moved on. At 1 o’clock the Monocacy arrived within range of the first fort and opened
-with her guns, which partly demolished the walls and emptied it in a few seconds.
-</p>
-<p>The landing party, after a two minutes’ pull at the oars, reached the shore, and disembarked
-about eight hundred yards below the fort. The landing-place was a mud-flat, in which
-the men sunk to their knees in the tough slime, losing gaiters, shoes, and even tearing
-off the legs of their trousers in their efforts to advance. The howitzers sank to
-their axles in the heavy ooze.
-</p>
-<p>Once on firm land, the infantry formed, the marines deploying as skirmishers. Unarmed
-refugees from the villages were not harmed, and the first fort was quietly entered.
-The work of demolition was begun by firing everything combustible and rolling the
-guns into the river. Day being far spent when this was finished, the whole force went
-into camp and bivouacked, taking every precaution against surprise. Four companies
-of infantry were first detailed to drag the howitzers out of the mud, a task which
-resembled the wrenching of an armature off a twenty-horse power magnet.
-</p>
-<p>Our men lay down to sleep under the stars. All was quiet that Saturday night, except
-the chatting round the camp-fires and <span class="pageNum" id="pb413">[<a href="#pb413">413</a>]</span>the croaking of the Corean frogs, as the men cleaned themselves and prepared for their
-Sunday work. Toward midnight a body of white-coats approached, set up a tremendous
-howling, and began a dropping fire on our main pickets. As they moved about in the
-darkness, they looked like ghosts. When the long roll was sounded, our men sprang
-to their arms and fell in like old veterans. A few shells were scattered among the
-ghostly howlers, and all was quiet again. The marines occupied a strong position half
-a mile from the main body, a rice-field dividing them, with only a narrow foot-path
-in the centre. They slept with their arms at their side, and, divided into three reliefs,
-kept watch.
-</p>
-<p>While at the anchorage off Boisée Island that evening, twelve native Christians, approaching
-noiselessly in the dark, made signs of a desire to communicate. They had come in a
-junk from some point on the coast to inquire after their pastor, Ridel, and two other
-French missionaries whom they expected. To their great distress, the Americans could
-give them no information. Fearing lest the government might know, from the build of
-their craft, from what part of the country they came, and punish them for communicating
-with the foreigners, they burned their boat and returned home.
-</p>
-<p>Next day was Sunday. The reveille was sounded in the camps, breakfast eaten, and blankets
-rolled up. Company C and the pioneers were sent into the fort to complete its destruction,
-by burning up the rice, dried fish, and huts still standing.
-</p>
-<p>The march began at 7 <span class="asc">A.M.</span> The sun rolled up in a cloudless sky and the weather was very warm. It was a rough
-road, if, indeed, it could be called such, being but a bridle-path over hills and
-valleys, and through rice fields. Whole companies were required to drag the howitzers
-up the hills and through the narrow defiles. The marines led the advance. The next
-line of fortifications, the “middle fort,” was soon entered. The guns were found loaded,
-as they had been deserted as soon as the fort was made a target by the Monocacy, every
-one of whose shots told. The work of dismantling was here thoroughly done. The sixty
-brass pieces of artillery, all of them insignificant breech-loaders of two-inch bore,
-were tumbled into the river, and the fort appropriately named “Fort Monocacy.”
-</p>
-<p>The difficult march was resumed under a blazing sun and in steaming heat. A succession
-of steep hills lay before them. Sappers and miners, with picks, shovels, and axes,
-went ahead levelling and widening the road, cutting bushes and filling hollows. The
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb414">[<a href="#pb414">414</a>]</span>guns had to be hauled up and lowered down the steep places by means of ropes. Large
-masses of white coats and black heads hovered on their flanks, evidently purposing
-to get in the rear. Their numbers were increasing. The danger was imminent. The fort
-must be taken soon or never.
-</p>
-<p>A detachment of five howitzers and three companies were detailed to guard the flanks
-and rear under Lieutenant-Commander Wheeler. The main body then moved forward to storm
-the fort (citadel). This move of our forces checkmated the enemy and made victory
-sure, redeeming a critical moment and turning danger into safety.
-</p>
-<p>Hardly were the guns in position, when the Coreans, massing their forces, charged
-the hill in the very teeth of the howitzers’ fire. Our men calmly took sure aim, and
-by steadily firing at long range, so shattered the ranks of the attacking force that
-they broke and fled, leaving a clear field. The fort was now doomed. The splendid
-practice of our howitzers effectually prevented any large body of the enemy from getting
-into action, and made certain the capture of the <span class="corr" id="xd31e6042" title="Source: cidadel">citadel</span>.
-</p>
-<p>Meanwhile the Monocacy, moving up the river and abreast of the land force, poured
-a steady fire of shell through the walls and into the fort, while the howitzers of
-the rear-guard on the hill behind, reversing their muzzles, fired upon the garrison
-over the heads of our men in the ravine. The infantry and marines having rested awhile
-after their forced march, during which several had been overcome by heat and sunstroke,
-now formed for a charge.
-</p>
-<p>The citadel to be assaulted was the key to the whole line of fortifications. It crowned
-the apex of a conical hill one hundred and fifty feet high, measuring from the bottom
-of the ravine. It mounted, with the redoubt below, one hundred and forty-three guns.
-The sides of the hill were very steep, the walls of the fort joining it almost without
-a break. Up this steep incline our men were to rush in the face of the garrison’s
-fire. Could the white-coats depress the jingals at a sufficiently low angle, they
-must annihilate the blue-jackets. Should our men reach the walls, they could easily
-enter through the breaches made by the Monocacy’s shells. As usual, slowness, and
-the national habit of being behind time, saved our men and lost the day for Corea.
-</p>
-<p>A terrible reception awaited the Americans. Every man inside was bound to die at his
-post, for this fort being the key to all the <span class="pageNum" id="pb415">[<a href="#pb415">415</a>]</span>others, was held by the tiger-hunters, who, if they flinched before the enemy, were
-to be put to death by their own people.
-</p>
-<p></p>
-<div class="figure p415width" id="p415"><img src="images/p415.png" alt="Map of the American Naval Operations in 1871." width="518" height="720"><p class="figureHead">Map of the American Naval Operations in 1871.</p>
-</div><p>
-</p>
-<p>All being ready, our men rose up with a yell and rushed for the redoubt, officers
-in front. A storm of jingal balls rained over <span class="pageNum" id="pb416">[<a href="#pb416">416</a>]</span>their heads, but their dash up the hill was so rapid that the garrison could not depress
-their pieces or load fast enough. Their powder burned too slowly to hurt the swift
-Yankees. Goaded to despair the tiger-hunters “chanted their war-dirge in a blood-chilling
-cadence which nothing can duplicate.” They mounted the parapet, fighting with furious
-courage. They cast stones at our men. They met them with spear and sword. With hands
-emptied of weapons, they picked up dust and threw in the invaders’ eyes to blind them.
-Expecting no quarter and no relief, they contested the ground inch by inch and fought
-only to die. Scores were shot and tumbled into the river. Most of the wounded were
-drowned, and some cut their own throats as they rushed into the water.
-</p>
-<p>Lieutenant McKee was the first to mount the parapet and leap inside the fort. For
-a moment, and only a moment, he stood alone fighting against overwhelming odds. A
-bullet struck him in the groin, a Corean brave rushed forward, and, with a terrible
-lunge, thrust him in the thigh, and then turned upon Lieutenant-Commander Schley,
-who had leaped over the parapet. The spear passed harmlessly between the arm and body
-of the American as a carbine bullet laid the Corean dead.
-</p>
-<p>The fort was now full of officers and men, and a hand to hand fight between the blue
-and white began to strew the ground with corpses. Corean sword crossed Yankee cutlass,
-and clubbed carbine brained the native whose spear it dashed aside. The garrison fought
-to the last man. Within the walls those shot and bayoneted numbered nearly one hundred.
-Not one unwounded prisoner was taken. The huge yellow cotton flag, which floated from
-a very short staff in the centre, was hauled down by Captain McLane Tilton and two
-marines. Meanwhile a desperate fight went on outside the fort. During the charge,
-some of the Coreans retreated from the fort, a movement which caught the eye of Master
-McLean. Hastily collecting a party of his men, he moved to the left on the double
-quick to cut off the fugitives. He was just in time. The fugitives, forty or fifty
-in all, after firing, attempted to rush past him. They were driven back in diminished
-numbers. Hemmed in between the captured fort and their enemy, McLean charged them
-with his handful of men. Hiding behind some rocks, they fought with desperation until
-they were all killed, only two or three being made prisoners. Another party attempting
-to escape were nearly annihilated by Cassel’s battery, which sent canister into their
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb417">[<a href="#pb417">417</a>]</span>flying backs, mowing them down in swaths. Moving at full speed, many were shot like
-rabbits, falling heels over head. At the same time Captain Tilton passed to the right
-of the fort and caught another party retreating along the crest of the hill joining
-the two forts, and, with a steady carbine fire, thinned their numbers. At 12.45 the
-stars and stripes floated over all the forts. A photographer came ashore and on his
-camera fixed the horrible picture of blood.
-</p>
-<p>The scene after the battle smoke cleared away, and our men sat down to rest, was of
-a kind to thoroughly satisfy those “who look on war as a pastime.” It was one from
-which humanity loves to avert her gaze. Two hundred and forty-three corpses in their
-white garments lay in and around the citadel. Many of them were clothed in thick cotton
-armor, wadded to nine thicknesses, which now smouldered away. A sickening stench of
-roasted flesh filled the air, which, during the day and night, became intolerable.
-Some of the wounded, fearing their captors worse than their torture, slowly burned
-to death; choosing rather to suffer living cremation than to save their lives as captives.
-Our men, as they dragged the smoking corpses into the burial trench, found one man
-who could endure the torture no longer. Making signs of life, he was soon stripped
-of his clothes, but died soon after of his wounds and burns. Only twenty prisoners,
-all wounded, were taken alive. At least a hundred corpses floated or sunk in the river,
-which ran here and there in crimson streaks. At this one place probably as many as
-three hundred and fifty Corean patriots gave up their lives for their country.
-</p>
-<p>On the American side, the gallant McKee, who fell as his father fell in Mexico, at
-the head of his men, the first inside the stormed works, was mortally wounded, and
-died soon after. One landsman of the Colorado and one marine of the Benicia were killed.
-Five men were severely, and five slightly, wounded.
-</p>
-<p>The other two forts below the citadel being open to the rear from the main work were
-easily entered, no regular resistance being offered. The results of the forty-eight
-hours on shore, eighteen of which were spent in the field, were the capture of five
-forts—probably the strongest in the kingdom—fifty flags, four hundred and eighty-one
-pieces of artillery, chiefly jingals, and a large number of matchlocks. Of the artillery
-eleven pieces were 32,– fourteen were 24,– two were 20,– and the remaining four hundred
-and fifty-four were 2- and 4-pounders. The work of destruction was carried on and
-made as thorough as fire, axe, and shovel could make <span class="pageNum" id="pb418">[<a href="#pb418">418</a>]</span>it. A victory was won, of which the American navy may feel proud. Zeal, patience,
-discipline, and bravery characterized men and officers in all the movements.
-</p>
-<p>The wounded were moved to the Monocacy. The forts were occupied all Sunday night,
-and early on Monday morning the whole force was re-embarked in perfect order, in spite
-of the furious tide, rising twenty feet. The fleet moved down the stream with the
-captured colors at the mast-heads and towing the boats laden with the trophies of
-victory. Reaching the anchorage at half past ten o’clock, they were greeted with such
-ringing cheers of their comrades left behind as made the woodlands echo again.
-</p>
-<p>Later in the day, Dennis Hendrin (or Hanrahan) and Seth Allen, the two men slain in
-the fight, were buried on Boisée Island, and the first American graves rose on Corean
-soil. At 5.45 <span class="asc">P.M.</span> McKee breathed his last.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e6077src" href="#xd31e6077">7</a>
-</p>
-<p>Yet the odds of battle were dreadful—three graves against heaps upon heaps of unburied
-slain. Well might the pagan ask: “What did Heaven mean by it?”
-</p>
-<p>The native wounded were kindly cared for, and their broken bones mended, by the fleet
-surgeon, Dr. Mayo. Admiral Rodgers, in a letter to the native authorities, offered
-to return his prisoners. The reply was in substance: “Do as you please with them.”
-The prisoners were therefore set ashore and allowed to dispose of themselves.
-</p>
-<p>Admiral Rodgers having obeyed to the farthest limit the orders given him, and all
-hope of making a treaty being over, two of the ships, withal needing to refit, the
-fleet sailed from the anchorage off Isle Boisée the day before the fourth of July,
-arriving in Chifu on the morning of July 5th, after thirty-five days’ stay in Corean
-waters. He arrived in time to hear of the Tientsin massacre, which had taken place
-June 20th. “Our little war with the heathen,” as the <i>New York Herald</i> styled it, attracted slight notice in the United States. A few columns of news and
-comment from the metropolitan press, a page or two of woodcuts in an illustrated newspaper,
-the ringing of a chime of jests on going up Salt River (Salée), and <span class="pageNum" id="pb419">[<a href="#pb419">419</a>]</span>the usual transmission of official documents, summed up the transient impression on
-the American public.
-</p>
-<p>In China the expedition was looked upon as a failure and a defeat. The popular Corean
-idea was, that the Americans had come to avenge the death of pirates and robbers,
-and, after several battles, had been so surely defeated that they dare not attempt
-the task of chastisement again. To the Tai-wen Kun the whole matter was cause for
-personal glorification. The tiger-hunters and the conservative party at court believed
-that they had successfully defied both France and America, and driven off their forces
-with loss. When a Scotch missionary in Shing-king reasoned with a Corean concerning
-the power of foreigners and their superiority in war, the listener’s reply, delivered
-with angry toss of the head and a snap of the fingers, was: “What care we for your
-foreign inventions? Even our boys laugh at all your weapons.”
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb420">[<a href="#pb420">420</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5927">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5927src">1</a></span> Mr. Low, who had served one term in Congress and as governor of California from 1864
-to 1868, had been chosen by President Grant to be minister to China the year before,
-1869, was new to his duties. He was in the prime of life, being fifty-two years of
-age. All his despatches show that Chō-sen was as unknown to him as Thibet or Anam,
-and from the first he had scarcely one ray of hope in the success of the mission.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5927src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5934">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5934src">2</a></span> Admiral Rodgers left New York, April 9, 1869, with the Colorado and Alaska. The Benicia
-had left Portsmouth March 2d, and the Palos set sail from Boston June 20th. These
-vessels, with the Monocacy and Ashuelot, were to form the Asiatic squadron of Admiral
-Rodgers. Of our vessels on the station during the previous year, two had returned
-home, two had been sold, the rotten Idaho was moored at Yokohama as a store-ship,
-and the Oneida, which had been sunk by the British mail-steamer Bombay, lay with her
-uncoffined dead untouched and neglected by the great Government of the United States.
-Admiral Rodgers was so delayed by repairs to the Ashuelot, that finally, in order
-to gain the benefit of the spring tides, had to sail without this vessel.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5934src" title="Return to note 2 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5939">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5939src">3</a></span> Rear-Admiral John Rodgers, who commanded the fleet, was a veteran in war, in naval
-science, and in polar research. He had served in the Seminole and Mexican campaigns,
-and through the civil war on the iron-clad monitors. He had visited the Pacific in
-1853, when in command of the John Hancock. He had cruised in the China seas and sailed
-through Behring’s Straits. He, too, was in the prime of life, being at this time fifty-eight
-years of age. His whole conduct of the expedition displayed consummate skill, and
-marked him in this, as in his many other enterprises, as “one of the foremost naval
-men of the age.” Yet princes in naval science are not always princes in diplomacy.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5939src" title="Return to note 3 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5947">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5947src">4</a></span> The first appearance of the flag of North Germany in Corean waters was at the mast-head
-of the China, when plunder and dead men’s bones were the objects sought. Its second
-appearance, on the Hertha man-of-war, was in peace and honorable quest of friendly
-relations. Its third appearance, in May, 1871—while, or shortly before, the American
-fleet were in the Han River—was on the schooner Chusan, which was wrecked on one of
-the islands of Sir James Hall group, the Chinese crew only, it appears, being saved.
-On June 6th, a party of three foreigners left Chifu in a junk to bring back salvage
-from the wreck. These men were not heard from until July 6th, when the Chinese crew
-returned without them. On the same day the British gunboat Ringdove, with the consul
-of Chifu, left for the Hall group. It was found that the foreigners had landed to
-bring away the crew of the Chusan, when the Chinamen, pretending or thinking that
-they had been taken prisoners, put off to sea without them. The consul found them
-in good health and spirits, and the Ringdove brought away for them whatever was worth
-saving from the Chusan. Again the Corean policy of kindness toward the shipwrecked
-was illustrated. The two foreigners—a Scotchman and a Maltese—had been well fed and
-kindly treated.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5947src" title="Return to note 4 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5987">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5987src">5</a></span> These men simply acted as the catspaws for the monkey in the capital to pull out as
-many hot chestnuts from the fire as possible. It is part of Asiatic policy to send
-official men of low rank and no authority to dally and prelude, and, if possible,
-hoodwink or worry out foreigners. Their chief weapons are words; their main strength,
-cunning. When these are foiled by kindness, and equal patience, firmness, and address,
-the Asiatics yield, and send their men of first rank to confer and treat. Perry knew
-this, so did Townsend Harris in Japan; so have successful diplomats known it in China.
-Was it done in the American expedition to Corea in 1871? Let us see.
-</p>
-<p class="footnote cont">These Coreans had no right to say either “yes” or “no” to any proposition of the Americans.
-Had they committed themselves to anything definite, degradation, crushed shin-bones,
-and perhaps death, might have been their fate. The only thing for the Americans to
-do—who came to ask a favor which the Coreans were obstinately bent on not giving—was
-to feast them, treat them with all kindness, get them in excellent good humor, send
-them back, and wait till accredited envoys of high rank should arrive. In the light
-of the <span class="pageNum" id="pb409n">[<a href="#pb409n">409</a>]</span>French failure, this was the only course to pursue. There were even men of influence
-in the American fleet who advised this policy of patience. As matter of fact, such
-a course was urged by Captain H.&nbsp;S. Blake.
-</p>
-<p class="footnote cont">In such an emergency, patience, kindness, tact, the absence of any burning idea of
-“wiping out insults to the flag,” and an antiseptic condition toward fight were most
-needed—the higher qualities, of resolution and self-conquest rather than valor. Even
-if it had been possible to inflict ten times the damage which was afterward actually
-inflicted, and win tenfold more “glory,” the rear-admiral must have known that nature
-and his “instructions” were on the side of the Coreans, and that the only end of the
-case must be a retreat from the country. And the only possible interpretation the
-people could put upon the visit of the great American fleet would be a savage thirst
-for needless vengeance, a sordid greed of gain, and the justification of robbers and
-invaders. In spite of all the slaughter of their countrymen, they would read in the
-withdrawal of their armies, defeat, and defeat only.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5987src" title="Return to note 5 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e5999">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e5999src">6</a></span> These are the rear-admiral’s own words. Here was the mistake! From what may be easily
-known of the Corean mind, it must have seemed to them that the advance of such an
-armed force up the river, leading to the capital—following exactly the precedent of
-the French—was nothing more than a treacherous beginning of war in the face of assurances
-of peace. To enter into their waters seemed to them an invasion of their country.
-To do it after fair words spoken in friendship seemed basest treachery. Had a Corean
-officer counselled peace in the face of the advancing fleet, he would undoubtedly
-have been beheaded at once as a traitor. There were men on the American side who saw
-this. Some spoke out loud of it to others, but it was not “theirs to make reply.”&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e5999src" title="Return to note 6 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e6077">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e6077src">7</a></span> In the chapel of the Naval Academy, at Annapolis, a tasteful mural tablet, “Erected
-by his brother officers of the Asiatic squadron,” with the naval emblems—sword, belt,
-anchor, and glory-wreath—in medallion, and inscription on a shield beneath, keeps
-green the memory of an unselfish patriot and a gallant officer.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e6077src" title="Return to note 7 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch47" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1234">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XLVII.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE PORTS OPENED TO JAPANESE COMMERCE.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The walls of Corean isolation, so long intact, had been sapped by the entrance of
-Christianity and the French missionaries, and now began to crumble. With the Russians
-on the north, and the sea no longer a barrier, the Japanese began to press upon the
-east, while China broke through and abolished the neutrality of the western border.
-The fires of civilization began to smoke out the hermit.
-</p>
-<p>The revolutions of 1868 in Japan, culminating after a century of interior preparation,
-abolished the dual system and feudalism, and restored the mikado to supreme power.
-The capital was removed to Tōkiō, and the office of Foreign Affairs—a sub-bureau—was
-raised to a department of the Imperial administration. One of the first things attended
-to was to invite the Corean government to resume ancient friendship and vassalage.
-</p>
-<p>This summons, coming from a source unrecognized for eight centuries, and to a regent
-swollen with pride at his victory over the French and his success in extirpating the
-Christian religion, and irritated at Japan for adopting western principles of progress
-and cutting free from Chinese influence and tradition, was spurned with defiance.
-An insolent and even scurrilous letter was returned to the mikado’s government, which
-stung to rage the military classes of Japan, who began to form a “war-party,” which
-was headed by Saigo of Satsuma. Waiting only for the return of the embassy from Europe,
-and for the word to take up the gage of battle, they nourished their wrath to keep
-it warm.
-</p>
-<p>It was not so to be. New factors had entered the Corean problem since Taiko’s time.
-European states were now concerned in Asiatic politics. Russia was too near, China
-too hostile, and Japan too poor; she was even then paying ten per cent. interest to
-London bankers on the Shimonoséki Indemnity loan. Financial ruin, and a collision
-with China might result, if war were declared. <span class="pageNum" id="pb421">[<a href="#pb421">421</a>]</span>In October, 1873, the cabinet vetoed the scheme, and Saigo, the leader of the war
-party, resigned and returned to Satsuma, to nourish schemes for the overthrow of the
-ministry and the humiliation of Corea. “The eagle, even though starving, refuses to
-eat grain;” nor would anything less than Corean blood satisfy the Japanese veterans.
-</p>
-<p>In 1873, the young king of Corea attained his majority. His father, Tai-wen Kun, by
-the act of the king backed by Queen <span class="corr" id="xd31e6106" title="Source: Cho">Chō</span>, was relieved of office, and his bloody and cruel lease of power came to an end.
-The young sovereign proved himself a man of mental vigor and independent judgment,
-not merely trusting to his ministers, but opening important documents in person. He
-has been ably seconded by his wife Min, through whose influence Tai-wen Kun was shorn
-of influence, nobles of progressive spirit were reinstated to office, and friendship
-with Japan encouraged. In this year, 1873, an heir to the throne was born of the queen;
-another royal child, the offspring of a concubine, having been born in 1869.
-</p>
-<p>The neutral belt of land long inhabited by deer and tiger, or traversed by occasional
-parties of ginseng-hunters, had within the last few decades been overspread with squatters,
-and infested by Manchiu brigands and Corean outlaws. The depredations of these border
-ruffians both across the Yalu, and on the Chinese settlements—like the raids of the
-wild Indians on our Texas frontier—had become intolerable to both countries. In 1875,
-Li Hung Chang, sending a force of picked Chinese troops, supported by a gunboat on
-the Yalu, broke up the nest of robbers, and imbibed a taste both for Corean politics
-and for rectifying the frontiers of Shing-king. He proceeded at once to make said
-frontier “scientific” by allowing the surveyor and plowman to enter the no longer
-debatable land. In 1877, the governor of Shing-king proposing, the Peking Government
-shifted the eastern frontier of the empire twenty leagues nearer the rising sun, on
-the plea that “the width of the tract left uncultivated was of less moment than the
-efficiency of border regulations.” By this act the borders of China and Corea touched,
-and were written in Yalu water. The last vestige of insulation was removed, and the
-shocks of change now became more frequent and alarming. By contact with the living
-world, comatose Corea was to be galvanized into new life.
-</p>
-<p>Nevertheless the hostile spirit of the official classes, who tyrannize the little
-country, was shown in the refusal to receive envoys of <span class="pageNum" id="pb422">[<a href="#pb422">422</a>]</span>the mikado because they were dressed in European clothes, in petty regulations highly
-irritating to the Japanese at Fusan, and by the overt act of violence which we shall
-now narrate.
-</p>
-<p>Since 1868 the Japanese navy, modelled after the British, and consisting of American
-and European iron-clads and war vessels, has been manned by crews uniformed in foreign
-style. On September 19, 1875, some sailors of the Unyo Kuan, which had been cruising
-off the mouth of the Han River, landing near Kang-wa for water, were fired on by Corean
-soldiers, under the idea that they were Americans or Frenchmen. On the 21st the Japanese,
-numbering thirty-six men, and armed with breech loaders, stormed the fort. Most of
-the garrison were shot or drowned, the fort dismantled, and the spoil carried to the
-ships. Occupying the works two days, the Japanese returned to Nagasaki on the 23d.
-</p>
-<p>The news of “the Kokwa [Kang-wa] affair” brought the wavering minds of both the peace
-and the war party of Japan to a decision. Arinori Mori was despatched to Peking to
-find out the exact relation of China to Corea, and secure her neutrality. Kuroda Kiyotaku
-was sent with a fleet to the Han River, to make, if possible, a treaty of friendship
-and open ports of trade. By the rival parties, the one was regarded as the bearer
-of the olive branch, the other of arrows and lightning. With Kuroda went Inouyé Bunda
-of the State Department, and Kin Rinshiō, the Corean liberal.
-</p>
-<p>General Kuroda sailed January 6, 1876, amid salvos of the artillery of newspaper criticism
-predicting failure, with two men-of-war, three transports, and three companies of
-marines, or less than eight hundred men in all, and touching at Fusan, anchored within
-sight of Seoul, February 6th. About the same time, a courier from Peking arrived in
-the capital, bearing the Imperial recommendation that a treaty be made with the Japanese.
-The temper of the young king had been manifested long before this by his rebuking
-the district magistrate of Kang-wa for allowing soldiers to fire on peaceably disposed
-people, and ordering the offender to degradation and exile. Arinori Mori, in Peking,
-had received the written disclaimer of China’s responsibility over “the outpost state,”
-by which stroke of policy the Middle Kingdom freed herself from all possible claims
-of indemnity from France, the United States, and Japan. The way for a treaty was now
-smoothed, and the new difficulties were merely questions of form. Nevertheless, while
-Kuroda was unheard from, the Japanese war preparations went vigorously on.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb423">[<a href="#pb423">423</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Kuroda, making Commodore Perry’s tactics his own, disposed his fleet in the most imposing
-array, made his transports look like men-of-war, by painting port-holes on them, kept
-up an incredible amount of fuss, movement, and bustle, and on the 10th landed a dazzling
-array of marines, sailors, and officers in full uniform, who paraded two miles to
-the treaty-house, on Kang-wa Island, where two high commissioners from Seoul, Ji Shinken
-and In Jiahō, aged respectively sixty-five and fifty, awaited him.
-</p>
-<p>One day was devoted to ceremony, and three to negotiation. A written apology for the
-Kang-wa affair was offered by the Coreans, and the details of the treaty settled,
-the chief difficulties being the titles to be used.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e6123src" href="#xd31e6123">1</a> Ten days for consultation at the capital were then asked for and granted, at the
-end of which time, the two commissioners returned, declaring the impossibility of
-obtaining the royal signature. The Japanese at once embarked on their ships in disgust.
-They returned only after satisfactory assurances; and on February 27th the treaty,
-in which Chō-sen was recognized as an independent nation, was signed and attested.
-The Japanese then made presents, mostly of western manufacture, and after being feasted,
-returned March 1st. Mr. Inouyé Bunda then proceeded to Europe, visiting, on his way,
-the Centennial Exposition at Philadelphia, at which also, it is said, were one or
-more Corean visitors.
-</p>
-<p>The first Corean Embassy, which since the twelfth century had been accredited to the
-mikado’s court, sailed in May, 1876, from Fusan in a Japanese steamer, landing at
-Yokohama May 29th, at 8 <span class="asc">A.M.</span> Two Neptune-like braves with the symbols of power—huge iron <span class="pageNum" id="pb424">[<a href="#pb424">424</a>]</span>tridents—led the procession, in which was a band of twenty performers on metal horns,
-conch-shells, flutes, whistles, cymbals, and drums. Effeminate-looking pages bore
-the treaty documents. The chief envoy rode on a platform covered with tiger-skins,
-and resting on the shoulders of eight men, while a servant bore the umbrella of state
-over his head, and four minor officers walked at his side. The remainder of the suite
-rode in <i>jin-riki-shas</i>, and the Japanese military and civil escort completed the display. They breakfasted
-at the town hall, and by railroad and steam-cars reached Tōkiō. At the station, the
-contrast between the old and the new was startling. The Japanese stood “with all the
-outward signs of the Civilization that is coming in.” “On the other side, were all
-the representatives of the Barbarism that is going out.” On the following day, the
-Coreans visited the Foreign Office, and on June 1st, the envoy, though of inferior
-rank, had audience of the mikado. For three weeks the Japanese amused, enlightened,
-and startled their guests by showing them their war ships, arsenals, artillery, torpedoes,
-schools, buildings, factories, and offices equipped with steam and electricity—the
-ripened fruit of the seed planted by Perry in 1854. All attempts of foreigners to
-hold any communication with them, were firmly rejected by the Coreans, who started
-homeward June 28th. The official diary, or report by the ambassador of this visit
-to Japan, was afterward published in Seoul. It is a colorless narrative carefully
-bleached of all views and opinions, evidently satisfying the scrutiny even of enemies
-at court.
-</p>
-<p>During the autumn of this year, 1876, and later on, in following years, the British
-war-vessels, Sylvia and Swinger, were engaged in surveying portions of the coast of
-Kiung-sang province. Captain H.&nbsp;C. Saint John, who commanded the Sylvia, and had touched
-near Fusan in 1855—long enough to see a native bastinadoed simply for selling a chicken
-to a foreigner—now found more hospitable treatment. His adventures are narrated in
-his chatty book, “The Wild Coasts of Nipon.” An English vessel, the Barbara Taylor,
-having been wrecked on Corean shores, an attaché of the British Legation in Tōkiō
-was sent to Fusan to thank the authorities for their kind treatment of the crew.
-</p>
-<p>The Japanese found it was not wise to hasten in taking advantage of their new liberties
-granted by treaty. Near Fusan, are thousands of graves of natives killed in the invasion
-of 1592–97, over which the Coreans hold an annual memorial celebration. Hitherto the
-Japanese had been rigorously kept within their <span class="pageNum" id="pb425">[<a href="#pb425">425</a>]</span>guarded enclosure. Going out to witness the celebration, they were met with a shower
-of stones, and found the road blockaded. After a small riot in which many words and
-missiles were exchanged, matters were righted, but the temper of the people showed
-that, as in old Japan, it would be long before ignorant hermits, and not over-gentle
-foreigners could live quietly together.
-</p>
-<p>Saigo, of Satsuma, dissatisfied with the peaceful results of Kuroda’s mission, and
-the “brain victory” over the Coreans, organized, during 1877, “The Satsuma Rebellion,”
-to crush which cost Japan twenty thousand lives, $50,000,000, and seven months of
-mighty effort, the story of which has been so well told in the lamented A.&nbsp;H. Mounsey’s
-perspicuous monograph. Yet out of this struggle, with which Corea manifested no sympathy,
-the nation emerged with old elements of disturbance eliminated, and with a broader
-outlook to the future. A more vigorous policy with Chō-sen was at once inaugurated.
-</p>
-<p>Under the new treaty, Fusan (Corean, Pu-san) soon became a bustling place of trade,
-with a population of two thousand, many of whom, however, were poor people from Tsushima.
-Among the public buildings were those of the Consulate, Chamber of Commerce, Bank,
-Mitsu Bishi (Three Diamonds) Steamship Company, and a hospital, under care of Dr.
-Yano, in which, up to 1882, four thousand Coreans and many Japanese have been treated.
-A Japanese and Corean newspaper, <i>Chō-sen Shimpo</i>, restaurants, places of amusements of various grades of morality, and a variety of
-establishments for turning wits and industry into money, have been established. The
-decayed gentry of Japan, starting in business with the capital obtained by commuting
-their hereditary pensions, found it difficult to compete with the trained merchants
-of Tōkiō and Ozaka. Great trouble from the lock of a gold and silver currency has
-been experienced, as only the copper and iron <i>sapeks</i>, or ‘cash,’ are in circulation. In Corean political economy to let gold go out of
-the country is to sell the kingdom; and so many rogues have attempted the sale of
-brass or gilt nuggets that an assaying office at the consulate has been provided.
-The government of Tōkiō has urged upon that of Seoul the adoption of a circulating
-medium based on the precious metals; and, perhaps, Corean coins may yet be struck
-at the superb mint at Ozaka. While gold in dust and nuggets has been exported for
-centuries, rumor credits the vaults at Seoul with being full of Japanese gold <i>koban</i>, the <span class="pageNum" id="pb426">[<a href="#pb426">426</a>]</span>mountains to be well packed with auriferous quartz, and the rivers to run with golden
-sands.
-</p>
-<p>Among the callers, with diplomatic powers, from the outside world in 1881, each eager
-and ambitious to be the first in wresting the coveted prize of a treaty, were two
-British captains of men-of-war, who arrived on May 21st and 28th; a French naval officer,
-June 16th, who sailed away after a rebuff June 18th; while at Gensan, June 7th, the
-British man-of-war, Pegasus, came, and saw, but did not conquer.
-</p>
-<p>After six years of mutual contact at Fusan, the Coreans, though finding the Japanese
-as troublesome as the latter discovered foreigners to be after their own ports were
-opened, have, with much experience learned, settled down to endure them, for the sake
-of a trade which undoubtedly enriches the country. The Coreans buy cotton goods, tin-plate,
-glass, dyes, tools, and machinery, clocks, watches, petroleum, flour, lacquer-work,
-iron, hollow-ware, and foreign knick-knacks. A good sign of a desire for personal
-improvement is a demand for bath-tubs. Soap will probably come next.
-</p>
-<p>The exports are gold dust, silver, ox hides and bones, beche-de-mer, fish, rice, raw
-silk, fans, cotton, and bamboo paper, ginseng, furs of many kinds, tobacco, shells
-for inlaying, dried fish, timber, beans and peas, hemp, jute, various plants yielding
-paper-stock, peony-bark, gall-nuts, varnishes and oils, and a variety of other vegetable
-substances having a universal commercial value.
-</p>
-<p>Even Riu Kiu has seen the benefits of trade, and five merchants from what is now the
-Okinawa <i>ken</i> of the mikado’s empire—formerly the Loo Choo island kingdom—came to Tōkiō in February,
-1882, to form a company with a view to establishing an agency in Fusan, and exchanging
-Corean products for Riu Kiu sugar, grain, and fish.
-</p>
-<p>Gensan (Corean, Won-san) was opened May 1, 1880. In a fertile region, traversed by
-two high roads, with the fur country near, and a magnificent harbor in front, the
-prospects of trade are good. The Japanese concession, on which are some imposing public
-buildings, includes about forty-two acres. An exposition of Japanese, European, and
-American goods was established which was visited by 25,000 people, its object being
-to open the eyes and pockets of the natives, who seemed, to the Tōkiō merchants, taller,
-stouter, and better looking than those of Fusan. One twenty-sixth of the goods sold
-was Japanese, the rest, mostly cotton <span class="pageNum" id="pb427">[<a href="#pb427">427</a>]</span>goods and ‘notions,’ were American and European. The busy season of trade is in autumn
-and early winter. For the first three months the settlers were less troubled by tigers
-than by continual rumors of the approach of a band of a thousand “foreigner-haters,”
-who were sworn to annihilate the aliens on the sacred soil of Chō-sen. The bloodthirsty
-braves, however, postponed the execution of their purpose. The Japanese merchants,
-so far from finding the Coreans innocently verdant, soon came in contact with monopolies,
-rings, guilds, and tricks of trade that showed a surprising knowledge of business.
-Official intermeddling completed their woe, and loud and long were the complaints
-of the mikado’s subjects. Yet profits were fair, and the first anniversary of the
-opening of the port was celebrated in grand style. Besides dinners and day fireworks,
-the police played the ancient national game of polo, to the great amusement of the
-Coreans. Among the foreign visitors in May, 1881, was Doctor Frank Cowan, an American
-gentleman, and surgeon on the Japanese steamer Tsuruga Maru, who made a short journey
-in the vicinity among the good-natured natives. Besides spying out the land, and returning
-well laden with trophies, he records, in a letter to the State Department at Washington,
-this prophecy: “Next to the countries on the golden rim of the Pacific, … to disturb
-the monetary equilibrium of the world, will be Corea.” “The geological structure is
-not incompatible with the theory that the whole region [east coast] is productive
-of the precious metal.”
-</p>
-<p>To regulate some points of the treaty, and if possible postpone the opening of the
-new port of In-chiŭn (Japanese, Nin-sen) a second embassy was despatched to Japan,
-which arrived at Yokohama, August 11, 1880. The procession of tall and portly men
-dressed in green, red, and pink garments of coarse cloth, with Chinese shoes, and
-hats of mighty diameter, moved through the streets amid the rather free remarks of
-the spectators, who commented in no complimentary language on the general air of dinginess
-which these Rip Van Winkles of the orient presented. The Coreans remained in Tōkiō
-until September 8th. Perfect courtesy was everywhere shown them, as they visited schools
-and factories, and studied Japan’s modern enginery of war and peace. The general attitude
-of the Tōkiō press and populace was that of condescending familiarity, of generous
-hospitality mildly flavored with contempt, and tempered by a very uncertain hope that
-these people might develop into good pupils—and customers.
-</p>
-<p>Chō-sen did not lack attentions from the outside world—Russia, <span class="pageNum" id="pb428">[<a href="#pb428">428</a>]</span>England, France, Italy, and the United States—during the year 1880. Whether missionaries
-of the Holy Synod of Russia attempted to cross the Tumen, we do not know; but in the
-spring of 1880, a Muscovite vessel appeared off one of the ports of Ham-Kiung, to
-open commercial relations. The offer was politely declined. The Italian war-vessel
-Vettor Pisani, having on board H.&nbsp;R.&nbsp;H. the Duke of Genoa, arrived off Fusan, August
-1, 1880, at 1 <span class="asc">P.M<span class="corr" id="xd31e6171" title="Not in source">.</span></span>—a few hours after the Corean embassy had left for Japan. One survivor of the Italian
-ship, Bianca Portia, wrecked near Quelpart in 1879, had been kindly treated by the
-Corean authorities and sent to Nagasaki. The duke, through the Japanese consul, forwarded
-a letter of thanks to the governor of Tong-nai, who, however, returned the missive,
-though with a courteous answer. After seven days, the Vettor Pisani sailed northward,
-and avoiding Gensan and the Japanese consul, anchored off Port Lazareff, where, during
-his six days’ stay, he was visited by the local magistrate, to whom he committed a
-letter of application for trade. Some native cards of silk-worm’s eggs were also secured
-to test their value for Italy. After a three days’ visit to Gensan the ship sailed
-away, the Italian believing that <span class="corr" id="xd31e6173" title="Source: negociations">negotiations</span> with the Coreans would succeed better without Japanese aid, and congratulating himself
-upon having been more successful than the previous attempts by the British, and especially
-by the French (Captain Fourmier, of the Lynx) and American (Commodore Shufeldt) diplomatic
-agents, whose letters were returned unread.
-</p>
-<p>The Government of the United States had not forgotten Corea, and Japan had signified
-her willingness to assist in opening the hermit nation to American commerce. On April
-8, 1878, Senator Sargent, of California, offered a resolution that President Hayes
-“appoint a commissioner to represent this country in an effort to arrange, by peaceful
-means and with the aid of the friendly offices of Japan, a treaty of peace and commerce
-between the United States and the Kingdom of Corea.” The bill passed to a second reading,
-but, the Senate adjourning, no action was taken. In 1879, the U.&nbsp;S. steamship Ticonderoga,
-under Commodore R.&nbsp;W. Shufeldt, was sent on a cruise around the world in the interests
-of American commerce, and to make, if possible, a treaty with Corea. Entering the
-harbor of Fusan, May 14, 1880, Commodore Shufeldt begged the Japanese consul, who
-visited the ship, to forward his papers to Seoul. The consul complied, but, unfortunately,
-neither the interpreters nor the governor of Tong-nai—preferring present <span class="pageNum" id="pb429">[<a href="#pb429">429</a>]</span>pay and comfort to possible future benefit—would have anything to do with such dangerous
-business. Japanese rumor asserts that the Coreans seeing the letter addressed on the
-outside to “the King of Corea,” declined to receive it, partly because their sovereign
-was “not King of Korai” but “King of Chō-sen.” Under the circumstances, the American
-could do nothing more than withdraw, which he did amid the usual salute from a Corean
-fort near by. A second visit being equally fruitless, the Ticonderoga again turned
-her stern toward “the last outstanding and irreconcilable scoffer among nations at
-western alliances,” and her prow homeward.
-</p>
-<p>The Corean embassy, failing in their attempts to have the Japanese go slowly, Hanabusa,
-the mikado’s envoy at Seoul, now vigorously urged the opening of the third port, and,
-after much discussion, In-chiŭn,<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e6182src" href="#xd31e6182">2</a> twenty-five miles from Seoul, was selected; in December, 1880, Hanabusa and his suite,
-crossing the frozen rivers, went thither, and selected the ground for the Japanese
-concession.
-</p>
-<p>The old questions upon which political parties in the hermit nation had formed themselves,
-now sank out of sight, and the new element of excitement was the all-absorbing question
-of breaking the seals of national seclusion. The “Civilization Party,” or the Progressionists,
-were opposed to the Exclusionists, Port-closers, and Foreigner-haters. Heading the
-former or liberal party were the young king and queen, Bin Kenko, Bin Shoshoko, Ri
-Saiwo, and other high dignitaries, besides Kin Giokin and Jo Kohan, former envoys
-to Japan. The leader of the Conservatives was the Tai-wen-kun, father of the king
-and late regent. The neutrals clustered around Kin Koshiu.
-</p>
-<p>Physically speaking, the Coreans see the sun rise over Japan and set over China, but
-morally, and in rhetoric, their sun of prosperity has ever risen and set in China.
-Some proposed to buy all machinery, arms, and government material in China, and imitate
-her plans and policy, and conform to the advice of her statesmen. The other side urged
-the adoption of Japanese methods and materials. The pro-Chinese gentry imitated the
-Peking mandarins in <span class="pageNum" id="pb430">[<a href="#pb430">430</a>]</span>details of dress, household decoration, and culture; while all their books conveying
-Western science must be read from Chinese translations. The pro-Japanese Coreans had
-their houses furnished with Japanese articles, they read and studied Japanese literature
-and translations of European books, and when out of Corea the most radical among them
-wore coats and pantaloons. The long and hot disputes between the adherents of both
-parties seriously hampered the government, while precipitating a revolution in the
-national policy; for serious debate in a despotic country is a sign of awakening life.
-</p>
-<p>About this time, early in 1881, a remarkable document, composed by Kwo-in-ken, adviser
-to the Chinese Minister to Japan, had a lively effect upon the court of Seoul. It
-was entitled “Policy for Corea.” It described the neighbors of Chō-sen, and pointed
-out her proper attitude to each of them. From Russia, devoted as she is to a policy
-of perpetual aggrandizement at the expense of other countries, and consumed by lust
-for land, Corea is in imminent danger. China, on the contrary, is Corea’s natural
-ally and friend, ever ready with aid in men and money; both countries need each other,
-and their union should be as close as lips and teeth. For historical and geographical
-reasons, Corea and Japan should also be one in friendship, and thus guard against
-“Russia the ravenous.” The next point treated is the necessity of an alliance between
-Corea and the United States, because the Americans are the natural friends of Asiatic
-nations. Pointing out the many advantages of securing the friendship of the Americans,
-and making a treaty with them first, the memorialist urges the Coreans to seize the
-golden opportunity at once.
-</p>
-<p>About the same time, Li Hung Chang, China’s liberal statesman, wrote a letter to a
-Corean gentleman, in which the advice to seek the friendship of China and the United
-States was strongly expressed, and a treaty with the Americans urged as a matter of
-national safety. Many, though not all, of the members of the embassies to Japan returned
-full of enthusiasm for Western civilization. It soon became evident that the king
-and many of his advisers were willing to make treaties. In Peking, the members of
-the embassy, before the winter of 1881 was over, began diplomatic flirtations with
-the American Legation. At that time, however, neither Minister J.&nbsp;B. Angell, in Peking,
-nor John A. Bingham, in Tōkiō, had any authority to make a treaty with Corea. While
-the way was thus made ready, the representations of Messrs. Bingham <span class="pageNum" id="pb431">[<a href="#pb431">431</a>]</span>and Angell to the State Department at Washington impressed upon our Government the
-necessity of having a diplomatic agent near at hand to take advantage of the next
-opportunity. Hitherto the only avenue of entrance seemed through the Japanese good
-offices; but the apparent willingness of Coreans in Peking, the experience of the
-Italians in the Vettor Pisani at Fusan and Port Lazareff, the advice of Chinese statesmen
-to Corea to have faith in the United States, and to open her ports to American commerce,
-convinced the American minister at Peking that China, rather than Japan, would furnish
-the better base of diplomatic operations for breaking down the Corean repulsive policy.
-</p>
-<p>The Government at Washington responded to the suggestion, and in the spring of 1881,
-Commodore Shufeldt was sent by the State Department to Peking as naval attaché to
-the Legation, so as to be near the American Minister and be ready with his experience,
-should a further attempt “to bring together the strange States of the Extreme Sea”
-be made.
-</p>
-<p>Shortly after the presentation of Kwo-in-ken’s memorial in Seoul, a party of thirty-four
-prominent men of the civilization party, led by Giō Inchiu and Kio Yeichoku, set out
-from Seoul to visit Japan and further study the problem of how far Western ideas were
-adapted to an oriental state.
-</p>
-<p>The proposition to open a port so near the capital to the Japanese, and to treat with
-the Americans, was not left unchallenged. The ultra-Confucianists, headed by Ni Mansun,
-stood ready to oppose it with word and weapon. In swelling Corean rhetoric, this bigoted
-patriot from Chung-chong proved to his own satisfaction that all the nations except
-China and Corea were uncivilized, and that the presence of foreigners would pollute
-the holy land. Gathering an array of seven hundred of his followers, he dressed in
-mourning to show his grief, and with the figure of an axe on his shoulders, in token
-of risking his life by his act, he presented his memorial to the king, and sat for
-seven days in front of the royal palace. He demanded that In-chiŭn should not be opened,
-the two Bin should be deposed, and all innovations should cease.
-</p>
-<p>The popular form of the dread of foreigners was shown in delegations of country people,
-who came into Seoul to forward petitions and protestations. Placards were posted on
-or near the palace gates, full of violent language, and prophesying the most woful
-results of Western blight and poison upon the country which had ever been the object
-of the special favor of the <span class="corr" id="xd31e6203" title="Source: sprits">spirits</span>.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb432">[<a href="#pb432">432</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Another party of two thousand literary men, fanatical patriots, had assembled at Chō-rio
-to go up to Seoul to overawe the progressive ministers, but were met by messengers
-from the court and turned back by the promise that the party about to visit Japan
-under royal patronage should be recalled. For a moment the king had thrown a sop to
-these cerberian zealots, whose three heads of demand would keep Chō-sen as inaccessible
-as Hades.
-</p>
-<p>The order came too late, the progressionists had left the shores, and were in Nagasaki.
-Thence to Ozaka, where some remained to study the arts and sciences; the majority
-proceeded to Tōkiō to examine modern civilization in its manifold phases. Unlike Peter
-the Great, some of these reformers began with themselves, clothing mind and body with
-the nineteenth century. Dropping the garments of picturesque mediævalism, they put
-on the work-suit of buttoned coat and trousers and learned the value of minutes from
-American watches. The cutting off their badge of nationality—the top-knot—was accompanied
-with emotions very similar to those of bereavement by death.
-</p>
-<p>Giō Inchiu<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e6211src" href="#xd31e6211">3</a> after his return from Japan was despatched on a mission to China, where his conference
-was chiefly with Li Hung Chang. He returned home by way of Fusan, December 29, 1881.
-He had now a good opportunity of judging the relative merits of Japan and China. His
-patriotic eye saw that the first need of Corean reform was in strengthening the army;
-though the poverty of the country gave slight hope of speedy success.
-</p>
-<p>The results of this mission were soon apparent, for shortly after, eighty young men,
-of the average age of twenty, were sent to Tientsin, where they are now, 1882, diligently
-pursuing their studies; some in the arsenal, learning the manufacture of firearms,
-others learning the English language. A returned Chinese student—one of the number
-lately recalled from New England—while severely sarcastic at the Corean government’s
-“poor discrimination in selecting the country from which her students could profit
-most,” added, “they possess a far better physique for the navy than any of our future
-imperial midshipmen.”
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb433">[<a href="#pb433">433</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e6123">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e6123src">1</a></span> The Japanese refused to have the Mikado designated by any title but that of Whang
-Ti (Japanese Kōtei) showing that he was peer to the Emperor of China; while the Coreans
-would not, in the same document, have their sovereign written down as Wang (Japanese
-Ō) because they wished him shown to be an equal of the Mikado, though ceremonially
-subordinate to the Whang Ti or Emperor of China. The poor Coreans were puzzled at
-there being two suns in one heaven, and two equal and favorite Sons of Heaven.
-</p>
-<p class="footnote cont">The commissioners from Seoul attempted to avoid the dilemma by having the treaty drawn
-up in the names of the respective envoys only; this the Japanese refused to do. A
-compromise was attempted by having the titles of the Mikado of Japan, and the Hap-mun
-of Chō-sen inserted at the beginning; and, in every necessary place thereafter, “the
-government” of Dai Nippon (Great Japan), or of Dai Chō-sen (Great Corea); this also
-failed. Finally, neither ruler was mentioned by name or title, nor was reference made
-to either, and the curious document was drawn up in the name of the respective “Governments.”&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e6123src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e6182">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e6182src">2</a></span> This <i>fu</i> city, called by the Japanese Ninsen, or Nii-gawa, was well known by the Japanese,
-as is shown on their maps of the sixteenth century. The name means Two Rivers. The
-rise and fall of the tides here is very great, sometimes amounting to a difference
-of twenty-nine feet; and in winter the shore-water is frozen. Large vessels cannot
-anchor within a mile of the shore. The port Chi-mul-po is at some distance from the
-city.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e6182src" title="Return to note 2 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e6211">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e6211src">3</a></span> In this and the following chapter the names of Corean noblemen have been given in
-their Japanese form, <i>i.e.</i>, Bin for Min, etc., but in the Supplementary Chapter according to Corean pronunciation.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e6211src" title="Return to note 3 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch48" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1242">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XLVIII.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE YEAR OF THE TREATIES.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The year 1882 opened ominously. A fire broke out in the royal palace in Seoul, on
-January 27th, in which two buildings, nearly completed for the heir apparent, were
-burned down. The fire was at first believed to have political significance, and the
-tension of the public mind was not relaxed until it was shown that the fire was the
-result of pure accident.
-</p>
-<p>The spirit of progress made advance, but discussion reached fever-heat in deciding
-whether the favor of Japan or China should be most sought, and which foreign nation,
-the United States, France, or England, should be admitted first to treaty rights.
-Bin, opposed to the arbitrary spirit of the Japanese, edged his argument by proposing
-an alliance with foreigners in order to checkmate the designs of Japan.
-</p>
-<p>An event not unlooked for increased the power of the progressionists. One Kozaikai
-urged the plea of expulsion of foreigners in such intemperate language that he was
-accused of reproaching the sovereign. At the same time, a conspiracy against the life
-of the king, involving forty persons, was discovered, and the sword and torture came
-into play. Kozaikai was put to death, many of the conspirators were exiled, and the
-ringleaders were sentenced to be broken alive on the wheel, the revolutions of which
-tore off hands and feet in succession. Six of those doomed to death were spared, through
-the intercession of a minister, and one, the king’s cousin, who delivered himself
-up, was pardoned by his sovereign on the ground of the prisoner’s insanity. The Progressionists
-had now the upper hand, and early in the spring Giō Inchiu and Riōsen left on a mission
-to Tientsin, to acquaint the Americans and Chinese with the information that the Corean
-government was ready to make treaties, and that the proper officer would be at In-chiŭn
-to sign the compact and complete the negotiations.
-</p>
-<p>Meanwhile the reforms in military affairs were begun with energy. <span class="pageNum" id="pb434">[<a href="#pb434">434</a>]</span>Japanese officers, at the head of whom was Lieutenant Horimoto, drilled picked men
-in Seoul, with creditable success, in spite of their unwieldy hats and costume, and
-the jeers of the anti-foreign people, in public as well as in private. Substantial
-proof of the adoption of Japan’s military system was shown in an order sent to Tōkiō
-for a few hundred Snider rifles with equipments—the weapon of the British army—and
-one for twenty thousand of the rifles made at the Japanese arsenal in Tōkiō, which,
-combining the merits of the best-known military fire-arm, contained improvements invented
-and patented by Colonel Murata, of the mikado’s army. Two Corean notables later again
-visited Japan in April of this year, and were annoyed to find a report spread abroad
-in Nagasaki that they had come to raise a money loan. Nevertheless, they proceeded
-to Kiōto and Tōkiō. Some of their suite went into the printing-offices and silk-worm
-breeding establishments to learn these arts, while type, presses, and printing material
-were ordered for use at home.
-</p>
-<p>Affairs had so shaped themselves that even to outsiders it became evident that the
-Corean apple was ripe even to falling. By March 4th it was known at the American Legation
-in Peking that “Barkis was willin’,” while to the Japanese envoy then in Tōkiō it
-became certain that, unless he made all haste to In-chiŭn, the American commodore
-would have his treaty signed and be off without even waiting for a call. Hastily bidding
-his friends good-by, he left in the Japanese steamer, Iwaki Kuan, and arrived in the
-harbor just one hour before the American corvette Swatara arrived with Commodore Shufeldt
-on board. With the Swatara were three Chinese men-of-war, one of them an iron-clad.
-</p>
-<p>The American diplomatic agent, Commodore R.&nbsp;W. Shufeldt, having spent nearly a year
-in China, surmounting difficulties that few will know of until the full history of
-the American treaty with Corea is written, arrived in the Swatara off Chimulpo, May
-7th. Accompanied by three officers, Commodore Shufeldt went six miles into the interior
-to the office of the Corean magistrate to formulate the treaty. Though surrounded
-every moment by curious crowds, no disrespect was shown in any way. Two days afterward,
-the treaty document was signed on a point of land in a temporary pavilion opposite
-the ship. Thus, in the most modest manner the negotiations were concluded, and a treaty
-with the United States was, after repeated failures, secured by the gallant officer
-who, by this act <span class="pageNum" id="pb435">[<a href="#pb435">435</a>]</span>of successful diplomacy, closed a long and brilliant professional career.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e6235src" href="#xd31e6235">1</a>
-</p>
-<p>Both on the American and Corean side the results had been brought about only after
-severe toil. The Corean nobleman Bin, a cousin of the queen, had so labored in Seoul
-night and day to commit the government to the policy of making treaties with the Americans,
-that, when the messengers had been despatched with the order for Commodore Shufeldt
-to appear in Imperatrice Gulf, he fell ill, and was unable to appear at In-chiŭn.
-The American envoy was so worn out with anxiety and toil by his efforts to have Corea
-opened under Chinese auspices, that on landing at San Francisco, he retired to the
-naval hospital at Mare’s Island to recover his exhausted strength.
-</p>
-<p>Four days after the signing of the American and Chinese treaties, the Corean capital
-was full of mirth and gayety, on account of a wedding in the royal family. The crown
-prince, a lad of nine years old, was wedded to the daughter of Jun, a nobleman of
-high rank, who had postponed a visit to Japan until the nuptials were accomplished.
-A brilliant procession in the streets of Seoul marked the event, and for a moment
-the excitement concerning foreigners was forgotten. None foresaw the bloody ending
-of this honeymoon so happily begun.
-</p>
-<p>The British minister at Tōkiō, Sir Harry Parkes, who had left no stone unturned to
-secure a personal interview with the ambassador <span class="pageNum" id="pb436">[<a href="#pb436">436</a>]</span>in 1876, and, since that time, British trade with Corea, was still on the alert. He
-at once ordered Admiral Willes to proceed to In-chiŭn. Leaving his large fleet in
-Japanese waters, Admiral Willes left Nagasaki in the Vigilant, May 27th, while Mr.
-William G. Aston, the accomplished linguist and Corean scholar, received orders to
-follow. The Admiral’s business was soon despatched, a treaty was made, and his return
-to Yokohama was accomplished June 14th, the U.&nbsp;S. steamship Ashuelot saluting him
-on his arrival. The French and Germans were the next to improve the long-awaited opportunity.
-The German admiral left Japan in the man-of-war Stosch, on May 31st, while a vessel
-of the French navy entered the port of In-chiŭn June 5th. There had thus appeared
-in this sequestered nook of creation, within a few days, two American, three British,
-one French, one Japanese, and five Chinese armed vessels. All of them, except the
-French, had left by June 8th, to the great relief of the country folks and old men
-and women, many of whom, with the children, had fled to the hills when the big guns
-began to waste their powder in salutes, to the detriment of the thatched roofs of
-the houses.
-</p>
-<p>China lost no time in taking advantage of the position secured her by treaty. No vexatious
-delays of ratification troubled her. Everything had been arranged beforehand with
-the Coreans, so that, on the return of the vessels from In-chiŭn, officers were despatched
-to Shanghae to sail for Gensan and Fusan, and select land for public buildings.
-</p>
-<p>During the present year the Japanese legation in Seoul has numbered about forty persons,
-including secretaries, interpreters, military officers, policemen, students, and servants.
-Notwithstanding their precarious situation, amid the turbulent elements at work around
-them, they seemed to enjoy the spectacle before their eyes of a repetition of the
-history of their own country after Perry’s arrival in 1853. The young men of the legation
-visited the historic sites near the capital, enjoyed the mountain and river scenery,
-and studied the Corean language and literature. At first the common people believed
-that their visitors sucked the blood of the children lured away by them; and so carefully
-guarded their little ones. By and by, however, as more liberty was afforded them,
-the occasional pelting with vegetables and pebbles became less frequent, and even
-the women would talk with them.
-</p>
-<p>The light-hearted Japanese seemed to suspect no imminent danger, although the old
-fanatic and tyrant Tai-wen Kun was still alive and plotting. To insure perfect secrecy
-for his plans, it is said <span class="pageNum" id="pb437">[<a href="#pb437">437</a>]</span>that he employed two or three mutes to wait on him, and act as his messengers. He
-was the centre of all the elements hostile to innovation, and being a man of unusual
-ability, was possessed of immense influence. The populace of Seoul and of the country
-had been taught to believe that “the Japanese were inebriated with the manners of
-Christian nations, and were enchanted by the Western devils, and that as a Europeanized
-country of the devil was being created in their immediate neighborhood, they must
-expel the barbarians.” Every means had been used to inflame the people against foreigners.
-Stone monuments had been set up on the high roads and market-places which bore this
-inscription—“The Western barbarians will come to invade our soil, there are but two
-alternatives for Chō-sen; to go to war, or to maintain peace. To submit peacefully
-means to sell the country; therefore we Coreans must resort to arms.” Many thousands
-of these inscribed stones had been set up, and an edict had been issued, commanding
-the ink-makers to inscribe their sticks of ink with this inflammatory declaration.
-When nobles of high rank would advocate progresssive views, Tai-wen Kun would sneeringly
-dare them to remove these anti-foreign monuments.
-</p>
-<p>During the nine years of his nominal retirement from office, from 1873 to 1882, this
-bigoted Confucianist, who refused to know anything of the outer world, bided his time
-and waited his opportunity, which came during the summer of the present year. Just
-when the populace was most excited over the near presence of the Americans and other
-foreigners at In-chiŭn, the usual rainfall was withheld, the wells dried up, and in
-the consequent drouth, the rice crop was threatened with total failure. The diviners,
-sorcerers, and anti-foreign party took advantage of the situation to play on the fears
-of the superstitious people. The spirits, displeased at the intrusion of the Western
-devils, were angry and were cursing the land. At the same time the soldiery of the
-capital were disaffected, as some say on account of arrearages of wages, or as others
-aver, because the old warriors of the bow and arrow hated the Japanese method of drilling
-as a foreign innovation insulting to the gods. A more probable reason is that on account
-of the failure of the rice-harvest, the soldiers’ rations were cut down, and they
-were deprived of this choice cereal for food. Among the first Corean officers killed
-was the superintendent of the rice storehouses, which were pillaged by the hungry
-mob.
-</p>
-<p>On July 23d, while the king was out in the open air praying <span class="pageNum" id="pb438">[<a href="#pb438">438</a>]</span>for rain, a mob of sympathizers with Tai-wen Kun attempted to seize his person. The
-king escaped to the castle. According to one account, some mischief-maker then started
-the report in the city that the Japanese had attacked the royal castle, and had seized
-the king and queen, and that the prime minister with the palace-guards in vainly endeavoring
-to beat back the assailants, had been defeated; and that every Corean should take
-up arms. Forthwith the mob rushed with frantic violence upon the legation, murdering
-the Japanese policemen and students whom they met in the streets and the Japanese
-military instructors in the barracks. Not satisfied with this, the rioters, numbering
-4,000 men, attacked and destroyed the houses of the ministers favoring foreign intercourse.
-Before quiet was restored, the queen, Min, the heir apparent and his wife, the chief
-ministers of the government, Min Thai Ho and Min Yong Ik, were, as was supposed, murdered;
-but all these emerged alive. Many of the Mins and seven Japanese were killed.
-</p>
-<p>The Japanese, by their own account, had suspected no danger until the day of the riot,
-when they noticed great excitement among the people, and that crowds were assembling
-and rushing to and fro. They sent out a policeman to inquire into the nature of the
-disturbance, and at two o’clock <span class="asc">P.M.</span> they learned from a native that the mob would attack the legation. Word was also
-sent to the Japanese by the Corean officer in charge of the drill-ground where the
-troops were trained by Lieutenant Horimoto, saying that the troops drilled in Japanese
-tactics had been attacked, and the legation would next be in danger. Hanabusa and
-his suite then arranged a plan of defence. While thus engaged, a Corean employed at
-the legation informed them that the mob had destroyed the houses of the two ministers
-Bin, and were attacking three Japanese students. Three policemen well armed then left
-to succor the students, but nothing was heard from either policemen or students again.
-A Corean officer now appeared and warned the Japanese to escape to the hill back of
-the legation; and being requested by Hanabusa to ask the government for soldiers,
-he left on this errand. At 5.50 <span class="asc">P.M.</span> the mob reached the legation, and raising a united yell, fired volleys of bullets,
-arrows, and big stones at the legation, but dared not enter the gate to face the revolvers
-of the policemen. In hurling stones the ruffians showed remarkable skill. The mob
-set on fire a house, near by, and in the rising wind—then boding a coming storm—two
-out-houses of the legation were burned, the police shooting down the incendiaries
-when they could see them. It was now <span class="pageNum" id="pb439">[<a href="#pb439">439</a>]</span>about ten o’clock, and the ruffians having thrown up barricades to hem in their victims
-and to shield their cowardly carcases while shooting, the Japanese fired the remaining
-buildings, and armed only with swords and pistols, formed themselves into a circle,
-charged the mob, and cut their way through to the house of the chief magistrate, which
-they found empty. Finding no one in the official residence, they marched to the southern
-gate of the royal castle. Instead of opening it, the soldiers on the wall above pelted
-them with stones.
-</p>
-<p>Hanabusa now resolved to cross the river with his party and make his way to In-chiŭn.
-Turning their backs on the flames, they arrived at the river and, on the ferryman
-refusing to convey them across, they seized the boat and crossed safely to the other
-side. It was now past midnight and the rain began to fall heavily, and with occasional
-thunderstorms continued to pour down all night. The refugees plunged on through the
-darkness, often losing their way, but next day at ten o’clock, they procured some
-raw barley to eat, and through the pelting rain pushed on, reaching In-chiŭn at 3
-<span class="asc">P.M.</span> The governor received them kindly and supplied food and dry clothing. The Japanese
-officers slept in the official residence, and the servants, police, and others in
-a guard-house about fifteen yards distant. The governor posted his own sentinels to
-watch so that the Japanese could get some rest. In a few minutes the tired men were
-sleeping the sleep of exhaustion.
-</p>
-<p>About five o’clock, Hanabusa and his officers were suddenly awakened by the shouting
-of a mob outside; and in a moment more a Japanese entered covered with blood, and
-with a drawn sword in his hand with which he had cut his way. The mob had attacked
-them while they were asleep, and the soldiers of the local garrison were joining the
-rioters, firing from behind fences. All the Japanese now hurried on their clothes,
-and charging a body of about forty soldiers, armed with swords and spears, who were
-blocking the gateway, made for Chi-mul-po seaport, having lost three killed and two
-missing.
-</p>
-<p>Meeting two Japanese on horseback from the port, who reported that the road was free
-from ambuscades, they put the wounded man on one horse, and by another despatched
-one of their number to hasten forward and have a boat ready. They reached Chi-mul-po,
-the port, about seven o’clock, and immediately crossed over to Roze Island for safety.
-About midnight, having procured a junk, they put to sea, toward Nanyo Bay, where they
-knew the British gunboat <span class="pageNum" id="pb440">[<a href="#pb440">440</a>]</span>Flying Fish was then on survey. Encountering a southerly wind, they made little or
-no progress, and on the 26th a dense fog set in; but at 11.30 <span class="asc">A.M.</span>, it cleared up and the welcome sight of a three-masted vessel greeted their eyes.
-Hoisting the flag of Japan, they saw their signal answered, and soon the party of
-twenty-six half-naked, hungry, and cold refugees were on board the ship, where kindest
-treatment awaited them. That night at ten o’clock the Flying Fish sailed for Nagasaki.
-On August 3d a religious service in memory of their slain comrades was held by the
-survivors, at Shimonoséki. “The deep silence was only broken by the sobbing of the
-audience, overcome by deep sympathy for the murdered men.” On the 8th Hanabusa had
-an audience with the mikado in Tōkiō.
-</p>
-<p>Without hesitation, the Japanese government ordered the army to assemble at <span class="corr" id="xd31e6281" title="Source: Shinonoséki">Shimonoséki</span> and Tsushima, with naval forces to co-operate. Hanabusa and his suite were sent back,
-escorted by a military force. He re-entered Seoul, August 16th, and was received with
-courtesy. A fleet of Chinese war-vessels with a force of four thousand troops was
-also at hand. Apparently everything was under the control of Tai-wen Kun, who professed
-to be friendly to foreigners, and to ascribe the recent riot to a sudden uprising
-of the unpaid soldiery, which the government had not force at hand to suppress. Two
-Corean officers coming on board the Flying Fish, August 10th, informed Captain Hoskyn
-that the soldiery, dissatisfied with the unfair treatment of their superiors, had
-incited the peasantry to rebellion; that by orders of Tai-wen Kun, who bitterly regretted
-the recent outrages, the dead Japanese had been honorably buried; that the old regent
-while usurping the royal power, had professed a total change of views and was in favor
-of a progressive policy.
-</p>
-<p>At his audience with the king, August 20th, Hanabusa presented the demands of his
-government. These were nominally agreed to, but several days passing without satisfactory
-action, Hanabusa having exhausted remonstrance and argument, left Seoul August 25th
-and returned to his ship. This unexpected move—a menace of war—brought the usurper
-to terms. On receipt of Tai-wen Kun’s apologies, the Japanese envoy returned to the
-capital August 30th and full agreement was given to the demands of Japan, at which
-time it would appear, Tai-wen Kun, forcibly kidnapped by the envoy of China, had begun
-his travels into the country of Confucius.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb441">[<a href="#pb441">441</a>]</span></p>
-<p>The following telegram to the <i>New York Tribune</i> of October 2d, summarizes the news from Yokohama up to September 13th:
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">The Corean Government pledged itself to the following conditions: To arrest the insurgents
-within twenty days and inflict due punishment upon them, Japanese delegates to be
-present at the trial; to bury properly the bodies of those murdered and pay 50,000
-yen (dollars) to their families; to pay Japan 500,000 yen as indemnity for expenditure,
-etc., in five yearly instalments; to allow Japanese troops in Seoul for the protection
-of the legation, and to provide proper accommodations for them; to send an apology
-by a special embassy to Japan; to extend gradually privileges to the Japanese residents
-and traders; to afford proper conveniences for travel throughout Corea for the Japanese
-Government officials.
-</p>
-<p>While this was going on the Chinese envoy, who had remained inactive with his escort
-until August 25th, suddenly called up the full body of his troops, about three or
-four thousand, to the capital. What degree of pressure he may have exercised is not
-yet known, but it is certain that the chief rebel and assassin, the Tai-wen Kun, was
-taken on board a Chinese ship and carried to Tien-tsin. It is alleged that his departure
-was by no means voluntary, and that some physical effort was required to get him ashore
-on arriving at his destination. Whatever was the object of this proceeding, it must
-have been dictated by Li Hung Chang, the Chinese Viceroy at Tien-tsin, who seems to
-have quite abandoned his demeanor of calm stolidity during these active Corean transactions.
-It is declared by one Chinese party that the only purpose was to rescue the Tai-wen
-Kun from the dangers that threatened him, and by another that the intent was still
-to maintain the theory of sovereign control over Corea’s rulers, which Li Hung Chang
-has been straining for throughout.
-</p>
-<p>During the recent prospect of trouble with Corea, the Japanese Government received
-offers of military service from twenty thousand volunteers, and of money gifts to
-the value of 200,000 yen.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>At this stage of affairs, when Corea ceases to be a “hermit nation,” and stands in
-the glare of the world’s attention, we bring our imperfect story to a close. The pivot
-of the future history of Eastern Asia is Corea. On her soil will be decided the problem
-of supremacy, by the jealous rivals China, Japan, and Russia. The sudden assumption
-of self-imposed tutelary duties by China proves her lively interest in the little
-country, which has been called both “her right arm of defense,” and “her gloved hand”—the
-one to force back the ravenous Muscovite, the other to warn off the ambitious Japanese.
-Whether the Middle Kingdom has deliberately chosen the Land of Morning Calm to affront
-and humiliate “the neighbor-disturbing nation,” that twice humbled her pride in the
-fairest islands of the sea—Formosa and Riu Kiu—the events of the not distant future
-will soon determine. Whether the hoary empire <span class="pageNum" id="pb442">[<a href="#pb442">442</a>]</span>shall come in collision with the young northern giant, and the dragon and the bear
-tear each other in the slime of war in Corean valleys, may be a question the solution
-of which is not far off. We trust that amid all dangers, the integrity of the little
-kingdom may be preserved; but whatever be the issue upon the map of the world, let
-us hope that paganism, bigotry, and superstition in Corea, and in all Asia, may disappear;
-and that in their places, the religion of Jesus, science, education, and human brotherhood
-may find an abiding dwelling-place.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb443">[<a href="#pb443">443</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e6235">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e6235src">1</a></span> Commodore B.&nbsp;W. Shufeldt was born in Dutchess County, New York, in 1822, and entered
-the navy in 1839, serving ten years on foreign stations and in the coast survey. One
-cruise to the west coast of Africa interested him in the negro colony of Liberia,
-in which he has ever since felt concern. From 1850 to 1860, our navy being in a languishing
-state, he was engaged in the mercantile marine service, and in organizing a transit
-route across the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. In 1860 an article of his on the slave trade
-between the Island of Cuba and the coast of Africa, drew the attention of the government
-to him, and led to his appointment of Consul-General at Havana. The slave-trade was
-soon effectually broken up, and through the trying period of the first half of the
-civil war, he was occupied in his civil duties, at one time going to Mexico on a confidential
-mission to President Juarez, passing unrecognized through the French lines. He was
-on blockade duty during the last two years of the civil war. In 1865 he went to China,
-as flag-captain of the Hartford, and commanding the Wachusett visited Corea. In 1870
-he organized a party for the survey of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, his report being
-made the basis of Captain Eads’ ship-railway project. The official history of the
-semi-diplomatic cruise of the Ticonderoga round the world (1878–1880) has been written,
-but has not yet been published.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e6235src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch49" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1250">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER XLIX.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE ECONOMIC CONDITION OF COREA.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">For nearly a quarter of a century Corea, the once hermit nation, has been opened to
-intercourse with the world, and the student has had facilities for understanding the
-country and people and realizing what are the social and political problems of humanity
-in the peninsula.
-</p>
-<p>As in most old Asiatic states, so in Corea, there is an almost total absence of an
-intelligent middle class, which in the West is the characteristic of progressive nations.
-In the Land of Morning Radiance there is a governing minority consisting of about
-one-tenth of the whole population. These, the Yangban (civil and military), living
-in ancient privilege and prerogative and virtually paying no taxes or tolls, prey
-upon the common people. The great bulk, that is, nine-tenths of the population, is
-agricultural and is gathered in hamlets and villages.
-</p>
-<p>The typical Corean tills the soil, in which occupation, after ages of unprogressive
-routine, he has come to his present mental status. There is not even a distinct manufacturing
-class in Corea, for nearly all industry is still in the cottage. The few articles
-needed by the laborer for the floor, the wall, and the kitchen are made by the farmer
-during his winter hours, and his women-folk weave and make up the clothing. The average
-carpenter, blacksmith, and stone mason is simply a laborer on the land with added
-skill in a special line. Even the fisherman cultivates the soil. The village schoolmaster
-is a son of the farmer of the better class. There are groups of population-office-holders
-and their retainers and hangers-on, shopkeepers and traders, butchers, porters, miners,
-junk-sailors, and innkeepers, sorcerers, gamblers, and fortune-tellers, but, all told,
-the number of men who do not live on the soil form but a decimal fraction in the national
-household.
-</p>
-<p>For these compelling reasons the problems of internal government <span class="pageNum" id="pb444">[<a href="#pb444">444</a>]</span>relate almost wholly to the woe or weal of the tillers of the soil. During the summer
-of six months the average Corean stands bare-legged in the mud, planting or cultivating
-grain. His wife and children, especially his daughters, help him in the raising of
-rice, barley, wheat, and beans, and in the harvesting and securing of the final products.
-During the four cold months of the year he is at work gathering fuel or making mats,
-sandals, screens, or thatch. During the first and seventh moons he enjoys an easy
-time, doing little or nothing, and these two months are like holiday. The average
-income of a Corean farmer is about thirty dollars a year. The average house in Corea
-consists only of mud, straw, twine, and wood, above a foundation of earth faced with
-stone and worth but a few dollars. The price of waste land is from one to five dollars
-an acre, and of cultivated fertile soil from ten to sixty dollars an acre. The lots
-are poorly marked and boundary quarrels are incessant. The Corean farmer knows little
-about scientific irrigation or variety in fertilizers, dried grass being his chief
-manure. The mountains are greatly denuded of their forests, and alternate droughts
-and floods work awful disasters. With a naturally good soil and fine climate, agriculture
-is yet in a backward condition. It is said that the Japanese in the sixteenth century
-taught the Coreans the cultivation of rice, millions of bushels of which, under stimulus
-from the same source, they are now able to export annually. In recent years the Japanese
-have attempted to secure control of the waste lands of Corea so as to develop them,
-not only for the production of cereals, vegetable wax, paper fibre, and stuff for
-weaving, but also for cotton to supply the demands of the Osaka mills. Their demands,
-pressed too severely in July, 1904, were the cause of vigorous native protest in great
-public meetings.
-</p>
-<p>The Corean rustic is, as a rule, illiterate. Probably only about four out of ten males
-of the farming class can read either Chinese or Corean, but counting in the women
-it is estimated that about eighty-five per cent of the people can neither read nor
-write, though the percentage varies greatly with the locality. As a general thing,
-there is more acquaintance with books and writing in the southern than in the northern
-provinces. It is pitiful to find in the Budget for 1904 that but $27,718 are appropriated
-for schools outside of Seoul, the latter receiving $135,074, of which <span class="pageNum" id="pb445">[<a href="#pb445">445</a>]</span>the sum of $44,220 goes to foreign teachers in the English, French, German, Russian,
-Chinese, and Japanese language schools. Although since 1895 the old civil-service
-examinations have been abolished and there has been a Department of Education, it
-has thus far had little influence upon the country at large. In the central office
-in 1904, out of $28,617 appropriated, $19,857 went for salaries and office expenses,
-$6,500 being for text-book printing.
-</p>
-<p>The Corean farmer is simple in his dress, food, and habits. He does not journey far
-from home. Although the high-roads are lively with travellers, one sees not the farmer
-but the literati, the traders, and the porters. Few country folks ever visit the large
-cities, and in regions near the capital few have seen Seoul. Custom is the eternal
-law to the rustic, who is patient, bearing extortion until flesh and blood can stand
-it no longer, when he rises in revolt against his oppressor. Yet it is against the
-bad man, not the system itself, that he protests. After the obnoxious officer has
-been recalled or driven away and temporary relief is obtained, the Corean farmer settles
-down into a good tax-paying subject as of yore, and unless something like the Tong
-Hak movement stirs him, his wheel of life quickly slips again into the rut of routine.
-As long as he can get enough to eat he is content. When oppression and robbery are
-joined to Nature’s niggardliness, he and his comrades are transformed into a howling
-mob of starving malcontents, ready for bloody vengeance.
-</p>
-<p>The son of the soil is superstitious to the last degree. He lives in constant terror
-of the demons and spirits that overpopulate earth, air, and water, for he is without
-the protection that the certainties of science or the strength of pure religion furnishes.
-No unifying, uplifting, and inspiring knowledge of one God is his. His thatched hut
-or mud-floored hovel is a museum of fetiches. Often he will give the best fruits of
-the fields to what seems to an alien a mass of straw or rags. The sorceress thrives
-like a fat parasite on the farmer, getting well paid for her songs, dances, incantations,
-and presence at the feasts. Yet the Corean enjoys the religious festivals. He is at
-least just to himself, while professing generosity to the spirits. He honors the gods
-but ultimately puts the well-cooked offerings far from them—even into his own interior;
-for above all things, the worshipper is orthodox in his belief in a well-filled stomach.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb446">[<a href="#pb446">446</a>]</span></p>
-<p>With such a people, both Confucianism and Buddhism become the grossest of superstitions.
-The Corean’s face is toward the past. He invokes and worships the dead, and to him
-the graveyard contains more than the future can bring him. Besides the extortions
-of the nobles, officials, and other parasitic or predatory classes, the expense of
-offerings to his dead ancestors amounts to many millions of dollars a year, far exceeding
-in their total the national revenue. In Seoul alone there are three thousand sorceresses,
-each earning at least $7.50 a month. The farmer is poor, but he is hospitable and
-liberal. He has untold reverence for learning and for rank, he loves flowers and beautiful
-scenery, but he is stupid in the presence of an innovation. His area of vision is
-bounded by the hills within the circle of which he was born. His chief recreation
-is in going to market, for, generally speaking, there are few shops in the peninsula,
-but there is a market every five or six days, where the natives exchange their products
-and their opinions. According to the state of weather conditions, the native is happy
-or suffers, a large harvest making all smile, a scant crop causing famine and hunger
-and the outbreak of banditti and rapine. Besides buying and selling, huckstering and
-gossiping, there are at the markets plenty of fighting and drunkenness as diversions.
-Going out for wool the farmer frequently comes home shorn, but he has had his fun,
-or rather a variation of deadly monotony. Furthermore, he is fond of a joke and loves
-to chaff his fellows.
-</p>
-<p>As the country itself is governed out of the graveyard, and sovereign, court, and
-people are driven by imaginary demons and spirits, so the farmers, both as individuals,
-as families, and as clans, guard jealously and in fear the ancestral mounds with superstitious
-reverence. Hence one large element of village excitement is in quarrelling and fighting
-over graves. About fifty per cent of the cases brought before the country magistrates
-are said to be connected with these grave fights. These bitter struggles involve whole
-clans and result in bloodshed and loss of life. Even the dead are not allowed to rest
-in peace. The digging up of corpses and the tumbling of them beyond the limits in
-dispute is a common occurrence. This ghoulish activity is varied by an occasional
-abduction of widows or by other infractions of the law. Another large element of anxiety
-to the farmer is the protection <span class="pageNum" id="pb447">[<a href="#pb447">447</a>]</span>of the water supply for his rice-swamp. The damming of the stream above or the draining
-off of the water below may ruin his crop. The breaking of the mud boundaries, and
-the stealing of water from a neighbor’s field is mirrored in proverbs and folk-lore.
-It is sufficiently habitual to furnish a plentiful supply of pretexts for quarrels
-and fighting.
-</p>
-<p>There are four classes of agriculturists. The lowest tiller of the soil is a serf,
-owning no land, working by the day or contract, and virtually bound to the glebe.
-The men of the next class, though owning no lands, work the farms of others on shares.
-These farm-hands and farm-tenants make up the great mass of the Corean people. They
-live in thatched mud huts, with enough plain food to keep them alive and often fat,
-but with scanty change of garments and few or no comforts of life. They are occupied
-during the working months from daybreak to twilight in unremitting toil. The third
-class consists of the small owners with possessions worth from five hundred to five
-thousand dollars and numbering three per cent of the farming population. In the fourth
-or highest class are the landed proprietors, the aristocracy of the land, the richest
-member being worth as much as four or five million dollars, with an annual income
-of at least a quarter of a million. Insignificant in numbers, they are mighty in power,
-for it is these great landowners who rule the realm, and most of them live in Seoul.
-</p>
-<p>To the great mass of the people in Corea there is no motive for much industry beyond
-danger of starvation, and but little incentive to enterprise. Under old normal conditions
-now being slowly ameliorated, the official, the yangban, and the landed aristocracy,
-in a word, the predatory classes, seize upon the common man’s earnings and accumulations,
-so that it seems to him useless and even foolish to work for more than enough to support
-life, while as for the “civilization nonsense,” does it not mean more taxation? On
-the 13th of November, 1902, the announcement was made of the increase in land tax
-from $10 per measure of ground to $16 per measure. So argues the average man in Corea,
-the land long ruled by real oppressors and imaginary demons.
-</p>
-<p>The researches of scholars have also revealed the actual economic conditions of the
-nation in the days of hermitage. Old Corea was not, as in feudal Japan, straitened
-in its production of food. <span class="pageNum" id="pb448">[<a href="#pb448">448</a>]</span>In the island empire only about one-twelfth of the soil was or could be cultivated.
-Hence Japan was rigidly limited in her food-producing area, so that the population,
-besides being kept down through such natural checks as famine, pestilence, storm and
-flood, was further diminished to fit the food supply by such artificial means as sumptuary
-laws, licensed prostitution, infanticide, cruel punishments, and frequent decapitation.
-In Corea, also, where the fertile earth, though formed to be inhabited and abundant
-in area of plain and valley, was neither properly replenished nor subdued, many checks
-upon population existed. Local famines were frequent and often long continued, and
-neither religion nor the means of transportation furnished the means of saving life
-to any large amount. Artificial checks on too rapid multiplication of humanity operated
-powerfully. The lesser care and kindness given to female children resulted in a heavy
-death-rate as compared with that of the boys, the cruel punishments and frequent torture
-and decapitation and the lack of incentive to industry all wrought together to make
-both the land and the human life on it of comparatively slight value.
-</p>
-<p>The whole situation was changed when Corea ceased to be a hermit land and began to
-be fertilized by foreign commerce and ideas. Confronted by new methods of trade, science,
-and religion, the thinking native was summoned to thought and action. Into the Corean
-mind, long held in bondage by Confucianism, which degrades woman and narrows man’s
-intellect, the universal religion entered to compel the Corean man to think of other
-lands and people besides his own, to search his own heart, to attempt to make himself
-and his neighbors better, and to take a new outlook on the universe. The new doctrines
-delivered believers from the paralyzing thrall of demons and evil spirits, from ancestor
-worship, and from the sceptre held by the hand rising out of the grave. Into the Corea
-clamped as in iron bands by false economic notions entered the spirit of free competition.
-Into a land that knew no such thing as a foreign market the railway brings an eager
-purchaser to the farmer’s door, and by carrying his goods to the seaports it enables
-him to give to and receive manifold benefits from the world at large.
-</p>
-<p>Already, through the energy of the canny islanders from the east, the crops in Corea
-have quadrupled, though under native <span class="pageNum" id="pb449">[<a href="#pb449">449</a>]</span>mismanagement this does not necessarily mean immediate benefit to the man on the soil,
-but rather to the official class, or to the landholder in the capital. It has been
-computed that the production of sixty million bushels of grain have thus been developed
-in Corea through the Japanese demand. Between the feverish enterprise of the Japanese
-on the one side and the tireless thrift of the Chinese on the other, “the good old
-days” of primitive routine are gone forever. Corea has 4,500,000 acres under cultivation,
-or about eight and a half per cent of her 82,000 square miles of area, so that 3,500,000
-available acres await the plough. From her arable soil six millions more of population
-might easily find subsistence, and nearly ten millions of dollars of crops could be
-raised. The peninsula needs in every great valley the railway, which “quadruples the
-<span class="corr" id="xd31e6338" title="Source: valley">value</span> of every foot of land within twenty miles of its line.” The line from Fusan to Seoul
-has already raised the value of town property in elect places hundreds of per cent
-and measurably all along between the terminals. This railway was begun in August,
-1901, but though the work slackened for lack of capital, by December 1, 1903, thirty-one
-miles at either end had been built. The outbreak of the war with Russia revealed its
-military value and promise was at once given that by Japanese Government aid it would
-be completed with its thirty-one tunnels and 20,500 feet of bridges by the end of
-1904. This Fusan-Seoul railway, 287 miles long, will traverse four provinces in the
-richest part of Corea, wherein are seven-tenths of all the houses and five-sevenths
-of all the cultivated area in the empire. Here also are the sites of the great fairs
-held six times monthly, the thirty-nine stations of the road being located at or near
-these places of trade, the total business of which amounts to over sixty-five per
-cent of the internal trade of the empire.
-</p>
-<p>The Corean social and political system, sufficiently weak in hermit days, has shown
-itself unable to withstand the repeated shock of attack by eager and covetous foreigners,
-nor will it ever be able, even in a measure, to defend itself against the fierce and
-unrelenting greed of the strong nations intrenched upon its soil, except by complete
-reorganization. Both the outward forms and the inward spirit must change if the Coreans
-are to preserve their national identity. The nation has been the bone of contention
-between jealous and greedy rivals. One foreign government by <span class="pageNum" id="pb450">[<a href="#pb450">450</a>]</span>crafty diplomacy secures the right of cutting timber valued at millions of dollars,
-another gets mining concessions, others propose this or that industry or supposed
-line of production which depleted the treasury. The impoverished kingdom has not only
-wasted many millions of treasure in foolish enterprises, but is deprived of its natural
-assets in timber, metals, fisheries, and industries.
-</p>
-<p>The problem of bringing Corea into harmony with her modern environment is only in
-some features like that of Japan, for there have been wanting in the peninsula what
-was so effective in Japan’s case. In the island empire, the long previous preparation
-by means of the infiltration of Western ideas during two centuries of communication
-with Europe through the Dutch merchants, the researches of her own scholars furnishing
-inspiration from their national history, the exercise during many generations of true
-patriotism and self-sacrifice for the public good prepared the island nation to cope
-with new conditions and situations. In the clash with the West, Japan came out victor.
-Corea has no samurai. She lacks what Japan has always had—a cultured body of men,
-superbly trained in both mind and body, the soldier and scholar in one, who held to
-a high ideal of loyalty, patriotism, and sacrifice for country. The island samurai
-enjoying the same prerogative and privilege as the Corean yangban (civil and military)
-not only abolished feudalism, but after giving up their hereditary pensions and privileges,
-joined the productive classes, while at the same time the Japanese merchants and mechanics
-were raised in the social scale, the pariahs given citizenship, and then all lines
-of promotion opened to all in the army, navy, schools, courts, and civil service.
-The fertilizing streams of foreign commerce, the inspiration that comes from brotherhood
-with other nations, and above all, the power brought to Nippon through the noble labors
-and object lessons of the Christian missionaries, enabled the Japanese to take equal
-place in the world with the nations of the West. Corea, on the contrary, by still
-allowing the existence of predatory classes—nobles, officials, and great landowners—by
-denying her people education, by being given to superstition from palace to hut and
-from sovereign to serf, remains still in weakness and poverty. What Corea above all
-needs, is that the lazy yangban cut their long finger-nails and get to work.
-</p>
-<p>Yet dark as is the situation, it is not without hope. Slowly <span class="pageNum" id="pb451">[<a href="#pb451">451</a>]</span>and painfully the Coreans are learning that no nation is born in a day. Under the
-training of Christian teachers, a generation with new motives to action and new mental
-horizons, and fed with food to sustain the spirit, is coming on. Christianity is,
-with a remnant at least, making headway against the vices so common to this mild-mannered
-nation—skill in lying, stealing, gambling, drunkenness, and the social evil.
-</p>
-<p>For ages and until Japan humbled China in 1894, Corea was so thoroughly and in all
-things the vassal and pupil of the Middle Kingdom, from which most of the elements
-of her civilization had been borrowed, that in the tributary kingdom there could be
-no patriotism in its highest sense, nor could political parties and cliques have any
-reason for existence except as they were concerned with aims that ended in selfishness.
-With the people in general, there was only anxiety to pay taxes, win the favor of
-the local magistrate, and escape the clutches of the law. With masters and rulers,
-there was ever pitiful fear of the great country China, and, under Confucianism, a
-desire to keep things as they were, mixed with impotent dread of change. Of pure love
-of country, of willingness to make sacrifices for their native land—that is almost
-a new thought as yet nourished by a few far-seeing patriots. In the evolution of the
-Corean, social and psychic, his present ethical stage is not beyond that of the group,
-clan, or neighborhood. It has not yet reached the individual. The majority of the
-people have that kind of patriotism which means the instinctive desire to preserve
-national identity. The one thing which they now fear, being in the vortex of the great
-storm of war and in the centre of the economic typhoon of the twentieth century, is
-national extinction. Even to-day the Coreans feel that they would rather live without
-the new things of civilization, such as railways, education, public hygiene, or even
-of righteous government, than be subject to an alien Power. History to the peninsular
-gives no uncertain sound as to what foreign intervention has always meant, that is,
-more oppression and even rapine. Seeing what has happened in half a lifetime, through
-the coming of the alien to Corea, the native does not want civilization at the hands
-of foreigners, though it may be that he will have to take it. Possibly through education
-and a new outlook upon the universe he will be glad to get it, even struggling for
-it until by assimilation <span class="pageNum" id="pb452">[<a href="#pb452">452</a>]</span>it becomes his own. In ancient history and the old days of the separation of nations,
-there were many civilizations and varying standards. In these latter days of the world’s
-brotherhood there is but one standard of civilization, and but one body of international
-law, which all must obey. The nation or kingdom that will not serve and obey this
-standard will pass out of history and perish. The signs that Corea realizes this truth
-and that her best men are seeking fraternity with their fellows for help and uplift
-are not wanting. Naturally they turn to the great republic, which since its beginning
-has steadfastly followed the policy of healing, helping, teaching, and uplifting the
-Asiatic nations.
-</p>
-<p>Corea sent a delegate to the International Postal Union, which met in Washington,
-and in 1896 a postal system with stamps of four kinds was established, and under French
-auspices has been working in excellent condition. The stamps, as well as the national
-flag and documents, coins and other expressions of what is essentially representative
-of the Coreans as a nation, illustrate their repertoire of symbolism. The flag in
-blue, red, black, and white contains the two great emblems of the primitive Chinese
-philosophy and theory of the universe. Through these, the Corean sees all things visible
-and invisible produced as the results of their endless working and counteraction in
-combination and dissolution. The forces of heaven and earth, light and darkness, the
-positive and the negative, the male and the female, the <i>in</i> and the <i>yo</i>, are represented as two germs or commas in constant embrace or movement. This figure
-occupies the centre of the field and in each corner are the broken lines of the Pal
-Kwai, or eight diagrams of primitive Chinese tradition concerning the origin of language
-and writing. On the stamps we read the Chinese characters Tai han and Corea. Like
-China, old Japan, Russia, Turkey and other church nations, which unite more or less
-closely Church and State and are governed, in spite of all outward development and
-manifestations, by primitive or mediæval notions, Corea is a “Tei Koku,” or “divinely
-governed” realm, and so makes profession in Chinese characters, as does even modern
-Japan, though furnished with a Constitution and Diet. Besides these Chinese ideographs,
-we read in English, “Imperial Corean Post,” and in the en-mun or native script, a
-sentence to the same effect. The national flower is the plum blossom, and is figured
-with its leaves on either side of the <span class="pageNum" id="pb453">[<a href="#pb453">453</a>]</span>stem. The value or denomination of the stamp is given below both in English with Roman
-letters, and in Corean or en-mun. The date-mark made by the ink-stamp shows in the
-French spelling of the name of the country and capital the international character
-of the postal system. The national colors, as judged by the hangings in the royal
-palace, are yellow, red, and green.
-</p>
-<p>Imitating other things imperial in adjoining or Western nations, the Government at
-Seoul established a Bureau of Decorations. These baubles, being liberally distributed,
-have helped handsomely to deplete the treasury of the little empire, most of whose
-people live in a state of semi-starvation or righteous discontent. The Emperor himself
-and his generals and ministers have had their breasts liberally adorned with various
-marks of the regard of the rulers of Japan, Great Britain, Russia, France, and Belgium,
-while between August 5, 1900, and December 20, 1902, the Corean Government had bestowed
-forty-two decorations, requiring a liberal outlay of bullion and artistic workmanship.
-To the Emperor of Japan, Queen Victoria, the Czar of Russia, the Kaiser of the German
-Empire, the President of the French Republic, the King of Italy, the King of the Belgians,
-the Emperor of Austria, and the Crown Prince of Japan, the Great Decoration of the
-Golden Measure was awarded. This contains the emblem in the centre of the flag. No
-Americans have been thus officially adorned, but the Great Decoration of the Golden
-Measure was offered to President McKinley, only to be declined; he having, happily
-for the American people, nothing to offer in return. The Great Decoration of the Plum
-Blossom has been given to Prince Kwacho of Japan and the Russian Prince Cyril, while
-the other decorations, containing the Pal Kwai of the eight mystic diagrams and the
-plum blossom or the national flower, in several grades or classes, have been offered
-to various servants or guests of the Government. Along with this brilliancy on foreign
-coat breasts, it is suggestive to read in the imperial budget for 1904 that of $19,560
-appropriated to the bureau of decorations, the amount expended on bullion, medals,
-etc., was $7,431, and for salaries $10,130. Another interesting item, illuminating
-economic methods in Seoul, is that of $10,453 appropriated for the Mining Bureau.
-Of this amount the sum of $8,173 was spent for salaries and travelling, all the rest,
-except one item marked “miscellaneous $744,” being for office <span class="pageNum" id="pb454">[<a href="#pb454">454</a>]</span>expenses. In the Ceremonial Bureau $19,000 were used on salaries and office expenses
-out of a total of $21,508. Similar titbits of economic information are frequent under
-the heads of the Board of Generals (who supervise an army supposed to be five thousand
-strong) and that of Imperial Sacrifices, and others, explain very clearly the condition
-of a country in which there is no clear line of demarcation between the palace and
-the Government or administration, while eloquent in suggestions as to the reason why
-the larger part of Corea remains in a state of more or less chronic insurrection.
-</p>
-<p>The budget for 1904 shows a total revenue of $14,214,573 made up of the following
-items: land tax, $9,703,591; house tax, $460,295; taxes on salt, fish, etc., $210,000;
-poll tax, $850,000; miscellaneous taxes, $200,000; arrears from 1903, $2,790,687.
-</p>
-<p>The items of disbursement are as follows: Imperial privy purse, $1,013,359; imperial
-sacrifices, $186,641; household department, $327,541; war department, $5,180,614;
-finance department, $42,741,999; communications, $637,648; incidentals and extras,
-$1,843,503. Other items, of which the police bureau, $406,925, and the foreign department,
-$287,367, and educational, $205,673, are the more important, are pension bureau, board
-of generals, the cabinet government records, bureau of decorations, law department,
-department of agriculture, privy council, and special palace guard. It is pleasant
-to note that there is a surplus of $275, but the amount given for education and expended
-under the head of agriculture seems pitiful. The large items of the budget deal almost
-wholly with the salaries of native officials. One interesting and redeeming item among
-the “extras” is that “for helping shipwrecked men, $5,000.”
-</p>
-<p>The greatest immediate need of Corea is a uniform and stable currency. Added to ancient
-evils was the action of Japan in adopting the gold standard in 1899, which threw all
-things commercial in Corea into dire confusion. On the 15th of December, 1901, the
-coinage law was published, by which Corea adopted the gold standard; but this law
-was never put into effect. The Japanese have frequently endeavored by various means
-to secure a standard currency.
-</p>
-<p>Under the stimulus and pressure of foreign trade, Corea has now at least nine ports
-open to the residence and business of foreigners <span class="pageNum" id="pb455">[<a href="#pb455">455</a>]</span>besides the three or four inland places of traffic. Wonsan (Gensan), Fusan, and Chemulpo
-were opened by the treaties of 1876 and 1882, and have thriving settlements. The ginseng
-crop exported from these places is usually bought by Japanese, whose usual practice
-is that, for example, of May, 1902, when of the fifty thousand catties, ten thousand
-catties were burnt at Chemulpo, in order to keep up the price. On the 1st of October,
-1898, Chinnampo and Mokpo were added to the list of open ports. The former lies on
-the northern shore of Ping-an inlet, twenty miles from the sea and forty miles from
-Ping-an city. It is now a thriving town with well laid-out streets. As the river leading
-to Ping-an is for ten miles or so below the city not navigable even by very small
-sea-going steamers, it can never be “a port” in the ordinary sense, but the returns
-of its trade are tabulated with those of Chinnampo, its outlet. Wiju (Ai-chiu) and
-Anju are almost the only other ports of value in the province of Ping-an. Anju is
-the landing stage of the American Mining Company for its mining materials and explosives.
-</p>
-<p>Yongampo is in north latitude 38° 52′ and east longitude 126° 04′. When it was opened
-in 1898, Russians and Japanese took up land so eagerly that a collision seemed imminent.
-Later it came very near being made a Russian fortress as “Port Nicholas.” Mokpo, in
-the southwestern part of Chullado, is the natural maritime outlet of “the Garden of
-Corea.” Soon after it was made port of entry and trade, the wisdom shown in its selection
-was justified, for its growth has been healthy and rapid. From this point, in the
-autumn of 1902, a Boston gentleman went into the interior for a hunting trip of two
-months, during which time he killed three large tigers, besides deer and wild boar.
-</p>
-<p>On May 1, 1899, Kunsan, Masampo, and Songchin were thrown open to foreign trade and
-residence. Kunsan is on the west coast, and like Mokpo, long famous for its abundant
-export of rice paid as revenue. It lies at the mouth of the river dividing the two
-rich and warm provinces of Chulla and Chung Chong, about half-way between Chemulpo
-and Mokpo, whence the rice, wheat, beans, hides, grasscloth, paper, manufactured articles
-in bamboo, fans, screens, mats, and marine products of many kinds are exported. Masampo,
-a few miles to the southwest of Fusan, in north latitude 35° 09′ and east longitude
-128° 40′, has one of the finest harbors <span class="pageNum" id="pb456">[<a href="#pb456">456</a>]</span>in the world, which, when well fortified, might command the entrance to the Sea of
-Japan. In the negotiations between Japan and Russia, in 1903, this spot was jealously
-coveted by both Powers as the prize of the future, as the party possessing it might
-make it a Dardanelles, closing the sea between the island empire and the continent
-and making this body of water a Euxine. Russia tried to bind Japan not to fortify
-this or any other place on the east coast of Corea. Japanese, Russians, Chinese, and
-Coreans soon flocked to this favored port and have made business lively. Songchin,
-once the seat of an old stronghold, in the large northeastern province of Ham Kiung,
-bordering on Russia, which has no long navigable rivers, as in the south, lies about
-120 miles from Wonsan and sends most of its products thither. It has a poor harbor
-in a foggy region, but fertile soil, fat cattle, and mineral riches are within reach.
-The Customs Reports for 1903 show a growing trade of $328,891. Eleven other landing
-stages bring up the total value of trade in Ham Kiung province to $1,676,714. In 1902
-the total imports were nearly balanced by the exports from all Corea. Cotton is becoming
-an important item of sale abroad. Gold in 1902 was exported to the amount of $2,532,053.
-The total value of foreign trade has doubled during the past decade. So far the steamer
-tonnage is, like the general foreign trade, over three-fourths Japanese. Most emphatically
-and luminously does the modern economic as well as political history of the peninsula
-prove that the best interests of Japan and Corea are closely interwoven. Mutual benefit
-follows unity and friendship, reciprocal injury results from estrangement.
-</p>
-<p>All these open ports are the gateways of a commerce that must steadily and healthfully
-increase, and which under stable and just government would rapidly enlarge. So long
-as there is uncertainty as to the political status of the Land of Morning Calm, the
-chief importance of the maritime gateways into the country will be strategic and military,
-rather than commercial. A permanent settlement of the political question, in debate
-ever since the modern renascence of Japan, ought to act on the development of the
-natural resources of Corea as the warm spring rains act upon soil long chilled and
-fallow under winter’s frost. Few regions, whether we consider its geographical location
-for commerce, the fertility of its soil, its animal wealth, the richness of its mineral
-deposits, or <span class="pageNum" id="pb457">[<a href="#pb457">457</a>]</span>the abundance of its treasures in the sea, are more highly favored than Corea. When
-man, society, and government in the peninsula answer Nature’s challenge and match
-the opportunity, the world will find that history’s storehouse of surprises has not
-been empty. Toward the development of the kind of man needed, the Christian missionaries
-are, above all other teachers and forces, working, and with every sign of promise.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb458">[<a href="#pb458">458</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch50" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1258">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER L.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">INTERNAL POLITICS: CHINESE AND JAPANESE.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">The preponderating influence of China was the mainspring in the intricate machinery
-of old Corean politics, though within the two clearly defined parties in Seoul there
-are also factional and family differences. “From 1834 to 1864 the royal clan was shorn
-of much of its power, all offices were in the hands of the Kim clan, whose head, Kim
-Pyong-gi, was virtually ruler of the land for the years ending that epoch.” The Kims
-hoped to continue the lease of their power, but the Tai-wen Kun humbled this clan
-and exalted his own, meanwhile doing much for the common people and compelling the
-yangban to bear a share of the burdens of government in paying a house tax. In his
-whole course toward these predatory gentry, he was “a blundering anticipator” of the
-great reforms of 1894. He began the suppression of the Tong-haks. He was a great builder
-of public edifices, not only in Seoul, but in the provinces. He protected the country
-against the foreigner. He meant well in his ignorance, but he knew nothing of the
-world at large. His first lease of power came to an end in 1873.
-</p>
-<p>The first Corean noblemen, Kim and Pom, left their homes in 1875 to travel in lands
-beyond China. They went to Japan, and coming back, boldly told the King what they
-had seen and advocated the adoption of Western civilization. They tried to win over
-the powerful Min clan and the Queen to a liberal policy, but this to the Regent, Tai-wen
-Kun, meant nothing else than Christianity and radical reform, which involved popular
-education. That is exactly the sort of reform that every Confucian mandarin in any
-country of Asia hates most heartily, because he sees in the general enlightenment
-of the people the end of the power of the literati. The bold and crafty statesman,
-who, as Prince Parent, held his son the King as his puppet and had already shed the
-blood of thousands of native Christians, nearly succeeded in putting the <span class="pageNum" id="pb459">[<a href="#pb459">459</a>]</span>two young champions of Western civilization to death. When the American treaty negotiations
-were impending, the Min clansmen held aloof until China, as represented by Li Hung
-Chang, gave the nod. Then they showed so much energy in the matter as to seem to foreigners
-the party of progress. This roused the wrath of the Regent, who determined to crush
-the Min clan and to nullify the treaty. We have seen how, in July, 1882, by a masterly
-appeal to local bigotry and superstition, he directed the soldiers’ riot into a revolt
-against the pro-Chinese clan. After destroying, as he imagined, their leading men
-and the Queen, he seized the government himself, enjoying for a few days full lease
-of power.
-</p>
-<p>When the news of the usurpation reached China and Japan, a fleet with soldiers was
-despatched from each country. The Chinese force landed first, marched to Seoul, built
-forts to command the river against the Japanese, and established their camp inside
-the walls. By this move China held a new lien on her “vassal state.” The Chinese general
-made his formal call on the Tai-wen Kun, and when this lord of the land returned the
-courtesy, he was seized and deported to China. Meanwhile the Queen, for whom a palace
-maid had suffered vicarious death, together with some of her chief helpers and advisers,
-re-entered the palace October 9, 1882. The star of the Min clan was again in the ascendant.
-</p>
-<p>Thus the results of the Regent’s smart trickery were not pleasant for the Coreans,
-for now they had both the Chinese and the Japanese soldiers encamped in the capital
-and on the ground where nearly three hundred years before they had met in battle.
-By good discipline on both sides, collision between the soldiers was avoided, but
-the Government at once made provision to replace the foreign soldiery by native troops.
-Four battalions of Corean infantry were organized and put under Chinese drill masters,
-introduced by the Min leaders. Fourteen young men, mostly members of Progressive families,
-were sent to Tokio to study in the military school.
-</p>
-<p>The treaty negotiated by Commodore Shufeldt was promptly ratified by the United States
-Senate, and on February 26th President Chester A. Arthur sent in the name of General
-Lucius H. Foote as Minister to Corea. Reaching Chemulpo May 13th in the <abbr title="United States Steamship">U.S.Ss.</abbr> Monocacy, the formal ratifications of the treaty were exchanged in the capital May
-19th. The same cannon, and served <span class="pageNum" id="pb460">[<a href="#pb460">460</a>]</span>by some of the same sailors that in 1871 had shelled the Han forts,<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e6402src" href="#xd31e6402">1</a> peacefully saluted the new national flag, emblazoned with the proofs of Corea’s intellectual
-servitude to Chinese philosophy and fantastic traditions. Keeping clear of the native
-factions, Mr. Foote dealt as directly as possible with the sovereign. He made an earnest
-plea for the toleration of religion, a promise to proclaim which was secured from
-the King.
-</p>
-<p>The Corean Government responded to the American courtesy by despatching a special
-mission, consisting of eleven persons headed by Min Yong Ik, which arrived in San
-Francisco September 2d. President Arthur being then in New York, these quaintly apparelled
-Oriental strangers were given audience in the parlor of the Fifth Avenue Hotel. After
-three months’ stay in the eastern cities, one part of the embassy, headed by Han Yong
-Sik, returned home by way of San Francisco. A few days later, on the U.S.Ss. Trenton
-(afterward lost at Samoa) with Ensign G.&nbsp;C. Foulke (afterward of the Doshisha University,
-Kioto) and Lieutenant J.&nbsp;G. Bernadou, U.S.N. (afterward distinguished in the Spanish-American
-War of 1898, on the U.S.Ss. Winslow), as naval attachés to the American legation in
-Seoul, Min Yong Ik and two other Coreans returned home by way of Europe and the Suez
-Canal.
-</p>
-<p>On November 27th, at the Victoria Hotel in the city of New York, I had the pleasure
-of spending an agreeable evening with the three Corean gentlemen, Min Yong Ik, So
-Kuang Pom, and Pien Su, the two latter being able to talk Japanese.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e6408src" href="#xd31e6408">2</a> <span class="pageNum" id="pb461">[<a href="#pb461">461</a>]</span>Though many of my questions were answered and a number of subjects discussed, nothing
-could be learned of Corean Christianity, or of the relics or reminders of Hendrik
-Hamel and his Dutchmen.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e6413src" href="#xd31e6413">3</a> Before leaving, Min Yong Ik, like a true Corean gentleman, brought out a large package
-of choicest ginseng roots, without which no well-to-do native of the Land of Morning
-Calm would think of travelling abroad. He presented me with several choice specimens
-of the man-shaped drug, each wrapped up in its own “arms” and “legs.”
-</p>
-<p>On the same evening in Seoul, November 27th, a banquet was spread in the English-language-school
-building to celebrate the signing on the day before of two treaties, one with Great
-Britain and the other with the German Empire, the negotiator of the English treaty
-being Sir Harry Parkes.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e6418src" href="#xd31e6418">4</a> The music was furnished by the band of the German man-of-war Leipsic. Seoul now began
-to be the residence of foreigners from Christendom, nine of whom were already in the
-city.
-</p>
-<p>New Year’s Day, January 20, 1884, dawned brightly. The little children who during
-the summer are “dressed in a hair ribbon,” made the streets brilliant with their bright
-clothes of many colors, and the sky was gay with kites. In the royal palace audience
-was given to the envoys of China, Japan, and the United States. On February 28th the
-electric submarine cable between Nagasaki and Fusan was completed and messages from
-the once hermit nation were sent into the outside world. Han Yong Sik was appointed
-postmaster with power to organize a national postal system, stamps for which were
-engraved in Tokio. From this Japanese base of supplies many novelties from the Western
-world poured in, and the body politic, long insulated from other nations, thrilled
-with new currents of life. Treaties were made with Russia and Italy, June 25th and
-26th. Later on, telegraph lines connecting <span class="pageNum" id="pb462">[<a href="#pb462">462</a>]</span>Seoul with Peking and with Fusan were completed. The year following the arrival home
-of the first Coreans who had gone round the world was a year of progress, such as
-Corea had never known before or has known since.
-</p>
-<p>Through the advice of Ensign Foulke, several reformatory measures, political and industrial,
-were promulgated. The most ardent member of the reform party, Pak Yong Hio, being
-made mayor of Seoul, immediately set to work at sanitary and municipal improvement.
-Some progress was made in dress improvement. A model farm, for which California live
-stock had been ordered, was sown by American seeds liberally given in Washington.
-Edison electric lights, American rifles and Gatling guns, a powder mill, a mint, a
-printing office for the dissemination of useful literature for the people, together
-with Japanese artisans to establish or improve properties, paper factories, and other
-industries, not excepting the fisheries and whale hunting, gave indications of the
-new path of national progress upon which Corea had entered. Altogether the early days
-of 1884 were as a morning of bright promise, for public opinion, so far as it existed,
-that is, among the nobles and gentry, seemed to be entirely in favor of progress.
-The most hopeful felt that the Corean Government, having begun lo relay the foundations
-of the kingdom, would persevere and possibly even excel Japan.
-</p>
-<p>On the other hand, with the tide of Confucian bigotry rising and the Conservatives
-encouraged by Chinese reactionaries on the soil, how could there be any real advance?
-Yuan, the Chinese commissioner, living at the barracks in front of the palace, was
-ceaselessly active in the interests of his own Government, which meant active support
-of the Conservative party and opposition to reform. Over against enlightened liberalism,
-several incidents stood out in dark contrast, showing the inherent barbarism, the
-low state of Corean humanity, and the slight value set on human life. When the Chinese
-soldiery arrived, they seized ten of the rioters of 1882, court-martialled them, tied
-their limbs to bullocks, and tore them to pieces. Even after these men in office had
-returned from civilization they had eight more men, suspected of complicity with the
-Regent, executed by poison. Furthermore, the Kwang Wang temple was built, devoted
-to the interests of three thousand or more sorcerers and exorcists in Seoul, who enjoyed
-the <span class="pageNum" id="pb463">[<a href="#pb463">463</a>]</span>direct patronage of the Queen, and sucked the vitals of the nation, making respectable
-government impossible.
-</p>
-<p>The innovations effected by the Progressives, who thought that they had the King and
-Queen in full sympathy with them, led them to hope that they would be able soon to
-reorganize the Government, to differentiate the Court from the Administration, and
-to make Corea a modern state. But according to the measure of their success, so also
-was the suspicion and hostility of the Conservatives. Min Yong Ik while abroad might
-be a Liberal, an individual with personal convictions and opinions, but once back
-in the bosom of his family and under pressure of his clan, he lost interest in reform.
-The Progressive leaders began to look upon him as a traitor to their cause. He took
-his stand with the Conservatives and it was soon evident that the Queen was withdrawing
-her sympathy and support from the Liberals, whose hopes seemed about to be dashed
-to the ground. These men therefore turned more and more to the Japanese and to their
-methods and spirit. They saw the revenues for the promised industries and enterprise
-diverted to warlike enterprises. It looked as if Corea, as tributary vassal, was to
-help China against France in the Tonkin complication. Added to the fears of the Liberals
-was the local irritation caused by the insolent behavior of the ill-disciplined native
-troops who had been recruited almost wholly from the peddlers and hucksters of the
-country fairs. The peddler’s guilds in Corea hold a truly feudal relation to the Government,
-often preparing the roads and escorting officials on their journeys, acting as detectives,
-and forming militia according to the occasion. Some astonishing proofs of their power
-and discipline, especially in mountain regions, were given by Min Yong Ik to Lieutenant
-Foulke. Instead of their being independent, as they had hoped for under the American
-treaty, it seemed to the progressive men that the Chinese were more than ever ruling
-their country, and that the Mins were their tools.
-</p>
-<p>It was about October 25th that the Liberals, feeling that their heads were likely
-to remain on their shoulders only so long as it pleased their enemies to bring no
-charge against them, declared to their American friend that “for the sake of Corea,
-about ten of the prominent Conservatives would have to be killed.” They proposed to
-play the same old Asiatic game of first seizing the person <span class="pageNum" id="pb464">[<a href="#pb464">464</a>]</span>of the sovereign and then in his name proclaiming their own measures and reforms.
-The preliminaries would be a fire and a riot. Then, in the confusion, the man with
-a programme, knowing just what to do, would direct affairs. They believed that the
-Powers would condone and approve their action, make new and more favorable treaties,
-and loan money for national improvement. Though the Conservatives had at their call
-a rabble of rapacious militia eager to try their new tools of war upon their hereditary
-enemies, the Japanese, the Liberals knew full well the sterling qualities of the little
-body of Japanese infantry then in the capital, most of whom were from northern Japan
-and many of them deer hunters and dead shots with the rifle. There were fifteen hundred
-Chinese soldiers still in camp, under Yuan Shi Kai, then the lieutenant and later
-the successor of Li Hung Chang, but the Progressive plotters in their craft expected
-to secure the employment of the two hundred or more Japanese soldiers for their own
-purposes. The moment for action seemed to be propitious for early December. A Japanese
-man-of-war was expected to arrive in Chemulpo on the 5th or 6th of that month. China,
-pressed by France, had withdrawn half her troops. Japan with a view to strengthening
-her influence in Corea had, a few days before, remitted $400,000 of the indemnity
-exacted for the riot of 1882. The golden moment to strike off forever the chains of
-political slavery to China was approaching. The date was set for the 7th of December.
-</p>
-<p>When, however, news arrived that the Japanese gunboat had broken down and was delayed
-and it was known that the Conservatives had got some intimation of what was coming,
-it was decided to start the fire, the riot, the <i lang="fr">coup d’état</i> a few days earlier. On the night of the 4th of December, Han Yong Sik, the Postmaster-General,
-gave a dinner at the new post-office, situated in the very heart of the city. The
-guests were three Chinese, Yuan, Chin, and Wang, two Americans, General Foote and
-his secretary, Mr. Scudder, the British Consul-General, W.&nbsp;G. Aston, the German Foreign
-Adviser, Von Möllendorf, and a dozen or more Corean high officers, both Conservatives
-and Progressives, Han Yong Sik, Kim Ok Kiun, Min Yong Ik, Pak Yong Hio, and So Kwang
-Pom. Others also were present. The Japanese minister was absent on the plea of ill-health.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb465">[<a href="#pb465">465</a>]</span></p>
-<p>It was noticed that Kim Ok Kiun rose and left the table several times, going out into
-the courtyard, but nothing was thought of this action. The guests sat down at six.
-At seven a fire broke out, a house just in front of the post-office being in flames.
-Min Yong Ik, who had charge of the city fire-brigade, rose from the table, and calling
-on his servants to follow him, passed out. As he did so, a man dressed in Japanese
-clothes leaped out of the shadow of the gateway and struck at him fiercely with a
-sword. Min Yong Ik fell heavily, but though wounded in head and body he recovered
-through the skilful surgery of Dr. Horace N. Allen. The assassin escaped, and the
-Corean guests, instead of leaving by the door, got away over the back wall. Hastening
-immediately to the old palace, the leaders of the conspiracy reached the royal presence,
-announced that the Chinese were coming to seize the King’s person and that he must
-hasten to a place of safety. Reaching the small gate leading into the Kiong-u Palace,
-Kim Ok Kiun requested the King to send to the Japanese minister for a body-guard,
-but his Majesty refused. Thereupon So Kwang Pom drew out a piece of foreign note-paper
-and a pencil and wrote in Chinese the words “Let the Japanese minister come and give
-me his help.”<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e6444src" href="#xd31e6444">5</a> This was despatched by a servant.
-</p>
-<p>When the little company reached the Kiong-u Palace, the King was saluted by the Japanese
-minister and his interpreter, the twelve students who had been in Japan, and two hundred
-soldiers under Captain Murakami drawn up in line, who by some magic were all waiting
-there. Here then was the new Government, king, army, and counsellors. Word was sent
-to three of the Corean Liberals to come and receive office under the reconstructed
-authority. With amazing promptness they were present within half an hour. The programme
-had thus far been carried out with the precision of actors on a well-regulated theatrical
-stage. The “summoning tablet” was sent early in the morning by royal messenger to
-six of the Conservative leaders. Going to the palace in the expectation of losing
-their lives, they first sent word to the Chinese Yuan, warning him of the state of
-affairs and asking his <span class="pageNum" id="pb466">[<a href="#pb466">466</a>]</span>help. As soon as they had passed inside the palace gates their heads were chopped
-off. The royal eunuch was put to death in spite of the entreaties and remonstrances
-of the King himself. While the Japanese surrounded the gates of the palace, Kim Ok
-Kiun gave passes to those who were to be allowed to go in and out. In the reconstructed
-Government Yo Cha Wun and Han Yong Sik were prime ministers, Pak Yong Hio was made
-General-in-Chief, So Kwang Pom Minister of Foreign Affairs, Kim Ok Kiun Minister of
-Finance, and Su Ja Pil Lieutenant-General. The young men who had studied in Tokio
-were also given official positions. All these proceedings simply illustrate the Corean
-method of the Opposition’s moving a vote of censure of the Government.
-</p>
-<p>The Chinese “resident” Yuan took no immediate action, but the next morning, December
-5th, great surging crowds of Coreans begged that he would interfere, because they
-said the Japanese were holding the King as a prisoner in his palace. Yuan sent a messenger
-to the Japanese minister, inquiring why he had surrounded the King with soldiers and
-killed the ministers, demanding that he immediately evacuate the palace. After three
-hours had passed, and no answer coming, Yuan moved with his Chinese troops and the
-Corean military, making a force of four or five thousand men, toward the old palace.
-He found the entrance strongly guarded with the Japanese. The battle which ensued
-lasted from about 3 to 4 <span class="asc">P.M.</span>, several score of the combatants being killed. As darkness drew near, the Japanese
-made their way to the northeastern part of the palace grounds, whence the King escaped
-from them with a few of the Progressive leaders and the party of students. The Corean
-soldiers carried the King to the north temple, where he was saved, but Han Yong Sik
-and seven of the students were hacked to pieces by the mob. About 8 <span class="asc">P.M.</span> Captain Murakami led off his soldiers and making a masterly retreat reached the Japanese
-legation after forty-eight hours of absence. Pak Yong Hio, Kim Ok Kiun, So Kwang Pom,
-Su Ja Pil, and a half dozen or so of the military students accompanied the Japanese.
-</p>
-<p>All day long on December 6th, with the cry of “Death to the Japanese,” the Corean
-militia and the ruffians were let loose on a wild revelry of outrage, butchery, and
-incendiarism. The nine white foreigners in Seoul, of whom three were ladies, together
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb467">[<a href="#pb467">467</a>]</span>with twenty-two Japanese who had escaped bullets, stones, and knives, found refuge
-in the American legation, which was put in a state of defence by Lieutenant Bernadou.
-The twenty soldiers left behind in the Japanese legation, aided by a hundred or more
-of their fellow refugee countrymen, defended the walled enclosure from the mob. On
-the afternoon of the 7th, provisions being exhausted, the Japanese with admirable
-coolness, discipline, and success began the march to Chemulpo. The women, children,
-and refugees were put inside of a hollow square formed by the soldiers, the legation
-buildings were fired, and despite hostile soldiers, Chinese and Corean with rifles
-and cannon, and armed men firing from roof and wall, they unbarred the city gates
-and with their wounded crossed the river. Reaching Chemulpo on the 8th, they were
-fed by the sailors on the Japanese man-of-war, which had happily arrived. A Japanese
-steamer carried the news to Nagasaki.
-</p>
-<p>The short-lived Liberal Government came to an end after forty-eight hours’ existence.
-The conspirators fled to Japan, whence most of them reached America. A month later
-Count Inouye, with a guard of six hundred troops, took up his quarters outside the
-west gate in Seoul and negotiations were opened. On January 9th a convention was signed
-by which the Corean Government agreed to pay an indemnity of six hundred thousand
-yen, and Herr Von Möllendorf and Su Sang Yu were sent to Japan to arrange terms for
-the renewal of friendly relations. The Coreans, to show their regret, chopped up and
-distributed around the streets the flesh and bones of eleven human beings supposed
-to have been active in the killing of defenceless Japanese in Seoul. At Tientsin,
-May 7, 1885, the Marquis Ito and Li Hung Chang signed a convention, by which it was
-agreed that the troops of both countries should be withdrawn and that neither government
-should land a military force in Corea without notifying the other. Early in the spring
-the Japanese legation was built at Corean expense in Occidental style, this being
-the first of the many foreign edifices which now adorn Seoul. The Chinese and Japanese
-troops embarked for their respective countries at Chemulpo on the 21st of May. On
-October 5, 1885, the Tai-wen Kun, fresh and rosy after his sojourn in Tientsin, re-entered
-Seoul. He was escorted by Chinese warriors and many thousands of Coreans. Most of
-his immediate followers being dead or in exile, his name was not often <span class="pageNum" id="pb468">[<a href="#pb468">468</a>]</span>mentioned during the decade of years following. He lived in comparative seclusion
-until the outbreak of the Chino-Japanese war.
-</p>
-<p>The Progressives of 1884 were in too much of a hurry. They had tried to hatch the
-egg of reform by warming it in the fire. The affair of December, in its origin an
-anti-Chinese uprising of Radicals, became at its end an anti-Japanese demonstration
-in which about three hundred lives were lost. Yet as if to show that revolutions never
-go backward, this bloody business pushed open the gateway through which science and
-Christianity entered to hasten the exit of barbarism. Dr. Horace N. Allen, an American
-missionary physician, had arrived in Seoul in September, 1884. When called on the
-night of December 4th to minister to the Min Yong Ik, he found the native doctors
-stopping up the sword wounds with wax. Dr. Allen, by treating the injured man in scientific
-fashion, saved his life. The superiority of Western methods having been demonstrated,
-the wounded Chinese soldiers and Coreans, with their shattered bones and torn flesh,
-over which they had plastered the reeking hides cut from living dogs, or had utilized
-other appliances of helpless ignorance, came to him in crowds. Unable to attend to
-all these sufferers, application was made for a hospital. The Government at once set
-apart the dwelling occupied by Han Yong Sik and, naming it the House of Civilized
-Virtue, established April 10, 1885, a hospital.
-</p>
-<p>Following this event, American missionaries arrived in increasing numbers. The Government
-engaged three American young men, Messrs. D.&nbsp;A. Bunker, G.&nbsp;W. Gilmore, and H.&nbsp;B. Hurlbert,
-as teachers, who with thirty-five sons of noble families as their pupils opened a
-school September 23, 1885. Missionaries with unquenchable patience began the instruction
-of a people much better acquainted with malevolent demons than with beneficent beings
-or with one living and true God, whose only idea of sin is that it is a civil offence,
-and whose language has no word for the love of a superior to an inferior. In apathetic
-faces they were to light the fire of a new hope. To become a Christian in Corea means
-a complete revolution in a man’s life, especially in that of a yangban, who has the
-intellectual power of a man with only the actual knowledge of a child. Nevertheless,
-with orphanages, Sunday-schools, Christian women’s work in the home, organized Christian
-churches, hospitals, schools for boys and girls, and a printing <span class="pageNum" id="pb469">[<a href="#pb469">469</a>]</span>establishment, most of the forms of active Christianity were soon visible in Corea,
-the country which, in 1904, with its tens of thousands of believers, is the most hopeful
-of missionary fields.
-</p>
-<p>A treaty with France, negotiated in the summer of 1886 and ratified May 30, 1887,
-enabled the French Roman Catholic missionaries to come forth into open day. They at
-once made preparations for the erection of a cathedral, which, when completed and
-dedicated, May 29, 1897, was the tallest and most imposing edifice in the capital.
-It is 202 feet long and from 60 to 90 feet wide, and cost $60,000. The French minister
-endeavored to secure the same magisterial rights for the bishops and priests in Corea
-which have been long enjoyed by prelates of the Roman form of Christianity in China.
-Although at first the Government resisted, yet these claims have been virtually validated,
-and France acts in Corea, as elsewhere in Asia, as the protector of Roman Catholics.
-Much disquiet and local disorder in various parts of the country, especially in Quelparte
-and the provinces of Whang Hai, may be traced to popular notions and the procedure
-of the priests based on this peculiarity of French foreign policy.
-</p>
-<p>Corea soon found that diplomacy could not be one-sided. Having dealings with foreign
-nations, it was not sufficient that Western governments should have their representatives
-in Seoul, while there were no Corean legations or consulates abroad. An episode arising
-from international jealousies soon caused this desire to take tangible form, despite
-active opposition from China. On April 14, 1885, the British Government, in view of
-eventualities with Russia, ordered the temporary occupation of Port Hamilton in the
-Nan How group of islands, about thirty-five miles from the northeastern end of Quelparte.
-Corea at once protested against this seizure of territory, and, in spite of all offers
-of gold for purchase, and all diplomatic pressure, she secured, after voluminous correspondence
-and the assurance that Russia would not occupy any part of Corea, the evacuation of
-Port Hamilton by the British. The flag of the double cross was hauled down February
-27, 1887. At once the Government at Seoul prepared to send embassies to Japan, Europe,
-and the United States to establish permanent legations. This plan was of course opposed
-by Yuan Shi Kai, the Chinese “resident,” as he called himself, in an active, impudent,
-and villainous manner, he acting at the beck of his chief, <span class="pageNum" id="pb470">[<a href="#pb470">470</a>]</span>Li Hung Chang. The right to make a treaty carries with it the right of a legation
-abroad, and the American minister, the Honorable Hugh N. Densmore, by order of the
-Government of the United States, invited the embassy to take passage in the U.S.Ss.
-Omaha, which was done. With his secretary, Dr. H.&nbsp;N. Allen, Pak Chung Wang, envoy
-plenipotentiary, arrived in Washington and had audience of President Cleveland in
-January, 1888. A minister of equal rank went also to Europe and another to Japan.
-The Chinese “resident” then planned, by transferring his headquarters three miles
-from Seoul, to get all other foreigners removed from Seoul in order to have more power,
-but the scheme was frustrated in good season.
-</p>
-<p>The road out of fetichism, superstition, and ignorance into light and civilization
-was not an easy one and had many a drawback. Until schools dispel ignorance, and the
-certainties of science dominate the minds of the natives terrorized by superstition,
-Corea, long intoxicated with sorcery, will suffer from continual attacks of the <i>delirium tremens</i> of paganism. Even the importation of condensed milk acted on the diseased imagination
-of the people to develop the disease. In 1888 what is known as the “baby war” agitated
-the people. The report was spread abroad that Americans and Europeans were stealing
-children and boiling them in kettles for food, and that foreigners caught women and
-cut off their breasts. The absence of cows led the Coreans to believe that the condensed
-milk, so much used among them, came wholly from a human source. For a time there was
-imminent danger of an uprising, but a proclamation from the King couched in strong
-language calmed the excitement, which gradually died away. The local revolts against
-unjust taxation and dishonest officials occurred with the usual regularity of such
-events in Corea.
-</p>
-<p>Provision was made for a stable revenue in a system which was organized under Herr
-Von Möllendorf on an independent Corean basis, but after his dismissal in July, 1885,
-the customs service was put under the management of Sir Robert Hart, and an entirely
-new staff of men was sent from China. Mr. H.&nbsp;N. Merrill was made chief commissioner
-and the three open ports were given in charge of men directly from the Chinese customs
-staff, one of the most able and valuable among whom was Dr. McLeavy Brown. Financially
-promising as this movement seemed <span class="pageNum" id="pb471">[<a href="#pb471">471</a>]</span>and has proved, it gave China her great prestige and furnished the strongest lever
-for carrying out her ambitious plans in the peninsula, which some Coreans suspected
-of going even so far as to dethrone the King and to set up a new heir—a plot which
-Min Yong Ik exposed. Yuan, the Chinese resident, made himself practically a Chinese
-mayor of the palace. In ostentatious display of gorgeous costume, palanquin and retinue,
-as he vibrated between the royal residence and the Chinese legation, he and his procession
-formed one of the notable sights of the Corean capital. In a word, Li Hung Chang’s
-policy, working in conjunction with the Mins at court, headed by the Queen, resulted
-in a vigorous and undisputed reassertion of Chinese control, so that in the emergency
-which was soon to arise, the Peking Government felt perfectly safe in speaking of
-Corea as “our tributary state.” Apparently the influence of Japan had become a cipher,
-while that of the United States had dwindled into a merely academic theory of Corean
-independence. Potentially Japan was insulted and defied by her old rival and modern
-enemy. To make her grip on Corea sure, China massed her forces on the frontier, bought
-large quantities of Nagasaki coal for her steel-clad fleet at Port Arthur, and with
-her German-drilled army and great fortresses on the promontories guarding the sea-gates
-to the capital, she seemed herself defiantly ready to maintain her prestige regained
-in the peninsula which she called her “tributary state.”
-</p>
-<p>Thus stood, or rather, thus crouched, in the early days of 1894, the pigmy, Corea,
-between the continental colossus on the one hand and the insular athlete on the other.
-To add to troubles imported from abroad, the long-standing intestine disturbances
-again broke out and the Tong Hak rebellion culminated in civil war, at the local causes
-of which we may now glance. This uprising of sectarians became not the cause, but
-the occasion of the clash between China and Japan, which ended in the destruction
-of China’s claim of suzerainty over Corea, and the independence of the peninsular
-state.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb472">[<a href="#pb472">472</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e6402">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e6402src">1</a></span> On which tablets erected to the memory of the slain have been erected by the Coreans.
-See the article, Kang-wha, by Rev. M.&nbsp;N. Trollope, (Corean) Asiatic Society Transactions,
-Vol. II, Part I.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e6402src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e6408">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e6408src">2</a></span> At that time I was engaged in editing and annotating Hamel’s Narrative, which is the
-first account in any European language of Corea. Hamel and his party of Dutchmen were
-shipwrecked and spent fourteen years in Corea (see pp. 167–76). I have examined and
-read several copies in the original Dutch editions, printed in cheap pamphlet form
-at Rotterdam in Holland in 1668, and now preserved in the Royal Library at The Hague.
-The full narrative in English is given in the book Corea Without and Within. Philadelphia,
-1884. Mr. Percival Lowell, the Secretary of the Corean Special Mission, returned with
-Han Yong Sik, and as the guest of the king spent a winter in Seoul, the literary fruit
-of which is the charming volume Chosen, the Land of Morning Calm, in which the proper
-names are transliterated according to Aston’s Manual of Corean Geographical and Other
-Proper Names Romanized. Yokohama, 1883.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e6408src" title="Return to note 2 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e6413">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e6413src">3</a></span> Nevertheless, in 1886 there were unearthed in Seoul two Dutch vases, as described
-in Mr. Scott’s paper in Vol. XXVIII, 1893–94, of the Transactions of the North China
-Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society. The figures of Dutch farm-life told their own
-story, and the well-worn rings of the handles bore evidence of constant use for years.
-Mr. Scott suggests that the presence of these Dutchmen might perhaps explain the anomaly
-often noticed in Corea—namely, blue eyes and fair hair.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e6413src" title="Return to note 3 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e6418">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e6418src">4</a></span> See his biography by Lane-Poole and Dickens, 1894.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e6418src" title="Return to note 4 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e6444">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e6444src">5</a></span> See the forthcoming Korean History, by Homer B. Hulbert, in the Korean Review (April,
-1904, p. 180). This work is a complete survey of the story of Chō-sen from prehistoric
-to recent times.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e6444src" title="Return to note 5 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch51" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1266">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER LI.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">THE WAR OF 1894: COREA AN EMPIRE.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">In Asia and in semi-civilized states, as in the old European world, each sovereignty
-is a church nation. Religion and the state are one. China, Corea, and Japan, in their
-normal oriental condition, are all acute illustrations of the evils of the union of
-church and state. Like Turkey and Russia, they are persecuting nations, allowing no
-freedom of conscience to the subject. Any attempt to think differently from the orthodox
-and established cult, or philosophy, is sure to call down persecution, torture, and
-death. Modern Japan, by ceasing to be oriental and adopting freedom of conscience,
-has simplified the relations between ruler and ruled. China still persecutes in bigotry,
-and during the course of her history has shed more blood in the name of religion and
-government than probably the mediæval states of Europe.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e6495src" href="#xd31e6495">1</a> In all Asiatic countries in which religious despotism still flourishes, practical
-Christianity, especially that form of it which is founded on the Bible in the vernacular,
-is the great disturbing force, even as it is the hope of the future. It comes at once
-into collision with the theory of the union of Church and State. Giving the common
-man a new outlook on the universe makes him exactly the kind of man that despots and
-men of privilege and prerogative most bitterly fear, hate, and oppose. Of this truth
-Corea is a striking illustration.
-</p>
-<p>The religious history of the people in the Corean peninsula is first that of fetichism
-and shamanism, then of Buddhism, which brought in culture and made a nation, giving
-also to the land its permanent monuments, its art, manners, and most of its folk-lore
-and general traditions. In the intellectual clash which, in every country in eastern
-Asia, has at one time or another taken <span class="pageNum" id="pb473">[<a href="#pb473">473</a>]</span>place between Confucianism and Buddhism, Buddhism remained victorious. Running a splendid
-career for over a thousand years, it finally reached corruption through wealth, worldliness,
-and political ambition. Yet intrenched in office and revenue, it held its own until
-overthrown with the dynasty in 1392, when Confucianism, after a long struggle, became
-the state church system. Buddhism, left to stagnation and decay, and as the religion
-of the peasants, remained in a frightfully corrupt form, while the scholars and thinking
-men were almost wholly devoted to Confucianism. As this system of Chinese ethics lends
-itself most admirably to despotism and the continuance in power of the privileged
-classes over the masses, so also under stereotyped Confucianism, Corea’s type of civilization,
-as we see it to-day, seems to mean for the nation at large only a general degradation
-as compared with the splendor of the mediæval Buddhist age. Allied with Chinese bigotry
-of race and ignorance of the world, Corean Confucianism degenerated still further
-into the savagery of conceit, of which the Tai-wen Kun seemed an incarnation, and
-made Chō-sen, as a body politic, a country eaten up with parasites—one-tenth of the
-population living on the other nine-tenths. In the persecution of the Christian converts
-to that form of Christianity which entered in 1777, Corean Confucianism showed itself
-as barbarous and as devilish as the Spanish Inquisition, or anything else in history
-which masks man’s lower nature under the garb of noble pretexts. Nevertheless, the
-very patience of the Christians under their tortures, the zeal and consecration of
-both the natives and their foreign priests, so impressed a Corean scholar named Choi,
-that in 1859 he set himself to ponder the question whether, after all, Christianity,
-though foreign, were not the true religion.
-</p>
-<p>After severe sickness and a revelation, as he believed, from the Lord of Heaven, Choi
-felt himself called to found a new religion. He proceeded to do so after the time-honored
-manner most fashionable in China, Corea, and Japan, where originality is not too common,
-that is, make an eclectic system. From the ethics of Confucius and the philosophy
-of his commentators, from the writings of Lao-tsze and his interpreters, and from
-the Buddhist sutras and their accretions, he composed a book entitled the Great Holy
-Scripture and wrote out the brief prayer which his <span class="pageNum" id="pb474">[<a href="#pb474">474</a>]</span>followers still daily repeat. As Christianity was a Western sect, he gave to his new
-religion the name of Tong Hak, Eastern Doctrine or Culture. Many, perhaps most, of
-his followers laid their emphasis in the new religion upon the idea of maintaining
-Orientalism as against Occidentalism. Beginning in the town of Kion Chiu, forty-five
-miles north of Fusan, the movement spread quickly into the provinces of Chung Chong
-and Chullado. Entering the sphere of politics, it gave the downtrodden peasants hope
-and new life, in the midst of the awful night of ever-increasing official corruption
-and oppression. It was about this time that the tenure of office by the provincial
-governors was changed from three years to one year. This move, made in the interests
-of the official class, vastly increased the burdens laid upon the people, since the
-political spoilsman, who usually bought his office, having now less time wherein to
-recoup and fill his own chest, became threefold more grasping than before.
-</p>
-<p>The influence of Christianity is very manifest in the history of the Tong Haks and
-in the literary, dogmatic, and devotional manifestations of their leader. Within six
-years, under the fierce initiative of the Tai-wen Kun, Choi and his disciples were
-officially charged with being “foreigner Coreans” and followers of the Lord of Heaven,
-that is, Roman Catholic Christians. Choi was tried, tortured, and beheaded, and his
-doctrines were outlawed. As with the Boxer and other common delusions among the ignorant,
-the Tong Haks believed that “by the influence of their god they could dance the sword
-dance and ascend into the air.” The sect kept on spreading year after year, its animus
-blending with that spirit of revolution and resistance to intolerable official oppression
-then rampant in the southern provinces, the two movements melted into each other and
-became one.
-</p>
-<p>Early in 1893, before the palace gate at Seoul, there was a wonderful sight. With
-pathetic ceremonies and long and patient waiting, fifty of Choi’s followers presented
-a petition that their founder be rehabilitated and their sect be tolerated even as
-the Christians were. They intimated that if they were kept under ban they would drive
-all aliens out of the country. Their prayer for toleration was refused, and they were
-driven away by the palace guards. In the springtime the Tong Haks led a great uprising
-of the peasantry in the southern provinces. The soldiers sent to <span class="pageNum" id="pb475">[<a href="#pb475">475</a>]</span>Seoul to put down the insurrection were scattered like chaff before the wind. The
-insurgents occupied the chief city of Chullado and the danger seemed to threaten the
-whole kingdom. The Corean general, Hong, notified the Court of his inability to cope
-with the situation. Then the pro-Chinese faction in Seoul, instigated by Yuan, applied
-to Peking asking for military aid to put down the Tong Hak rebels. According to the
-Li-Ito convention of May 7, 1885, neither China or Japan could send soldiers into
-Corea without first notifying the other Power.
-</p>
-<p>Meanwhile Kim Ok Kiun was in Japan. Though the Government at Seoul repeatedly demanded
-his extradition and both in Corea and Japan assassins continually plotted to kill
-him, he received the same asylum and protection which, under the laws of civilization,
-the Government in Tokio gave to all foreigners. Finally, in 1894 Kim Ok Kiun was lured
-to Shanghai by a false telegram and a forged bank-draft. On his arrival at the hotel
-he was promptly murdered. His assassin was rewarded with honor, fame, and money from
-Seoul, and in China looked on as a hero. With indecent haste, but following its ancient
-barbarous traditions, the Chinese Government made itself the express company which
-carried the victim’s body in a man-of-war to Corea, where it was cut to pieces and
-the head and limbs exposed on the public highway. This action of China raised a storm
-of popular wrath in Japan, while about the same time, China, first on June 7th forwarding
-her troops into Corea, in violation of the treaty of 1885, sent a defiant insult to
-the Tokio Government. Following this action, a despatch was sent to the Japanese legation
-in Peking, in which were the words which we italicize: “It is in harmony with our
-constant practice to protect <i>our tributary states</i> by sending our troops to assist them.… General Weh has been ordered to proceed to
-Zenra … to restore the peace of <i>our tributary state</i>.” Thus by force of arms China defied Western diplomacy, and, trampling on the treaties,
-asserted her ancient claims of suzerainty over Corea as her vassal state.
-</p>
-<p>The reply of the Tokio Government was the announcement, on June 12, 1894, of the despatch
-of a body of the Mikado’s troops under strict discipline to Chō-sen. On June 17th
-China was invited to co-operate with Japan in financial and administrative reforms
-in Corea, in order to preserve the peace of the Far East. <span class="pageNum" id="pb476">[<a href="#pb476">476</a>]</span>China curtly refusing this request, demanded the immediate return to Japan of her
-soldiers, at the same time ordering her Tartar forces in Manchuria to cross that ancient
-Rubicon of Eastern Asia—the Yalu River. Chartering the British ship Kow Shing, she
-put on board eleven hundred soldiers with ammunition and artillery to reinforce the
-Chinese camp at Asan in the northwest of Chung Chong province. The reply from Tokio
-was, that, pending an amicable settlement of the questions in dispute, any further
-despatch of Chinese troops into Corea would mean war.
-</p>
-<p>As soon as it was known in Tokio that the Tartar forces had been mobilized and that
-the Kow Shing was being loaded, the Japanese fleet sailed and orders were given to
-the troops, railways, and steamers to be ready for the embarking of an army. Within
-twelve days a Japanese army corps was landed at Chemulpo, marched to Seoul, the Han
-River bridged by pontoons in twenty minutes, and the military cordon around Seoul
-completed. On the 20th of July Yuan fled the Corean capital, leaving his nationals
-to shift for themselves. On the 23d Mr. Hoshi Toru, envoy of the Mikado, with a military
-guard entered the palace and demanded of the King an answer to the question of Corea’s
-independence and willingness to stand by her treaty with Japan. The royal answer was
-in the affirmative. The King called in the Tai-wen Kun to allay his fears and aid
-him in the formation of a new cabinet, to which he invited, for the most part, the
-Liberals exiled in 1884. Prince Pak Yong Hio, who had been declared an arch-traitor
-and his house razed to the ground, was again received into royal favor.
-</p>
-<p>On July 25th the Japanese cruiser Naniwa, under Captain, now Admiral, Togo, met the
-Kow Shing. After four hours of parley and refusal to surrender, the transport was
-sunk by the guns of the Naniwa. On July 29th and 30th the Japanese met the Chinese
-forces at Asan, routed them and occupied their stronghold. The declarations of war
-between the emperors of China and Japan, the old rival Sons of Heaven, were published
-to the world on the same day, August 1, 1894. The former was full of arrogance and
-ignorance, the latter was clear in phrase and temperate in tone. The Chinese lady
-then on the throne called on her soldiers to “root the pigmies out of their lair.”
-With the conceit and stupidity of the giant, China went to war against the intelligent
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb477">[<a href="#pb477">477</a>]</span>and splendidly armed Jack of the islands. In results it was an affair of Goliath and
-David over again. Ancient and overweening orthodoxy met culture and intelligence in
-the field and on the wave, to be confronted by what was despised as too small to do
-harm. At bottom the Chino-Japanese war meant the right of a nation to change its civilization.
-Japan, already a signatory to the Geneva Convention and her officers trained in the
-ways of civilization, even though her people were dubbed heathen by some semi-enlightened
-folks of the West, went to war in Christian style. The Japanese had a superb Red Cross
-organization, a corps of surgeons, and a body of fifteen hundred trained nurses, while
-their hospitals were equipped according to scientific ideas. With each army corps
-and fleet went a lawyer versed in international law, to see that nothing should be
-done against the laws of nations. The literary fruits of these precautions and this
-loyalty to the high standards of civilization are seen in Mr. Takahashi’s masterly
-work “International Law During the Chino-Japanese War,” and in Mr. Ariga’s “<span lang="fr">La guerre Sino-Japonaise au point de vue du droit internationale</span>.” The Chinese had not yet (or before the year 1904) recognized the laws of civilization
-and had scarcely the beginning of hospital corps, hospitals, or surgeons. It was not
-wonderful, therefore, that her wounded usually crawled away to die like dogs, or that
-her ignorant soldiers frequently fired upon those bringing succor to the wounded.
-The official organization of the Chinese was honeycombed with corruption, but with
-their thirty thousand drilled troops and fleet, including battle-ships, of which the
-Japanese had none, they expected easy victory. Occupying Ping-an, they built between
-fifty and sixty forts. At sea their fleets were busy in convoying transports full
-of soldiers to the mouth of the Yalu River to prevent the Japanese from advancing
-beyond Corea and in the hope of overwhelming them at one onset. On the site of their
-previous victory three centuries before, they expected to rout the Japanese and then
-to drive them southward and out of Corea.
-</p>
-<p>The Japanese, centuries ago, learned the difference between bulk and brain, and are
-but slightly overawed in the presence of mere weight or size. They knew that the military
-reputation of China only existed on paper, and their excellent system of <i>jiu-jitsu</i> had taught them how to turn an enemy’s strength against himself. <span class="pageNum" id="pb478">[<a href="#pb478">478</a>]</span>Her soldiers had grown up in the new era of ideas which had come to fruit under Christian
-civilization. Borrowing these ideas and forces and combining them with their own resources
-and informing them with their own genius, they gave the world a surprise. They had
-long grieved in spirit over their non-recognition by the world at large of their peaceful
-ambitions and of the principles that lie at the basis of their civilization. They
-mourned that war and bloodshed were necessary to impress the world and secure respect.
-Within six months they humbled China and compelled her to sue for peace.
-</p>
-<p>In three divisions, up from the south, eastward from the mouth of the Ta Tong River,
-and westward from Gensan, the three columns of the Japanese army marched and met at
-Ping-an (Ping Yang). After two days’ fighting, September 15th and 16th, the Chinese
-hosts were routed. The next day, at sea, off the mouth of the Yalu River, the Chinese
-fleet, in the first great battle of modern steel ships, was disabled and was never
-afterward able to resume the offensive. Before October 1st Corea was entirely cleared
-of Chinese. On the continent of Asia, chiefly in Manchuria, they held an area larger
-than their own empire. Port Arthur fell on November 21st, and the great fortress of
-Wei-hai-wei was surrendered January 31, 1895.
-</p>
-<p>Then Russia unmasked. Calling to her aid France and Germany, this triple alliance
-compelled Japan to give up all claims upon the continent and to be content with an
-indemnity and the island of Formosa. Had the Japanese possessed a fleet of battle-ships,
-they would have refused this insolent demand and declared war on Russia. As it was,
-the treaty of <span class="corr" id="xd31e6539" title="Source: Shimonoseki">Shimonoséki</span>, between Li Hung Chang and Ito and Mutsu, was signed. The Japanese spent the indemnity
-money on a new navy and proceeded to gird themselves for their next war with another
-giant, and to show again the difference between bulk and brain.
-</p>
-<p>Corea suffered surprisingly little from the presence of two great armies on her soil.
-Her people were paid liberally for labor and materials which they so grudgingly furnished
-to the Japanese, who were not, in this instance, sufferers on account of their own
-excess of politeness, while the Chinese troops were within her borders too short a
-time to be a very heavy tax. Only around Ping-an was there much public or private
-suffering.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb479">[<a href="#pb479">479</a>]</span></p>
-<p>In Seoul, the Mikado’s envoy, as early as August, began to insist upon a programme
-of reforms, which, had they been carried out, would have amounted virtually to a new
-constitution.
-</p>
-<p>In the reconstruction of the administration of the seven departments, that of Public
-Works was broadened to include Agriculture and Commerce, and in place of the Department
-of Ceremonies there was created one of Education co-ordinate with the others. A mighty
-programme of reforms, twenty-three in number, was prepared, but enough to make up
-several social tornadoes, some of which were possible, while others seemed too radical
-and absurd on their faces. A new mint began to issue coins in European form.
-</p>
-<p>The second son of the King was sent to Tokio to bear the thanks of the nation and
-Government for having secured the independence of <span class="corr" id="xd31e6549" title="Source: Cho-sen">Chō-sen</span>. The Corean sovereign, on January 8, 1895, with tremendous picturesqueness of procession,
-pomp, and circumstance, proceeded to the temple of his ancestors and with imposing
-ceremonies solemnly adjured all vassalage and dependence upon China. The official
-name of the new empire is Dai Han or Ta Han, that is, the Great Han, single and sovereign,
-as contrasted with the three (San Han) of ancient history. With this royal act vanished
-from history the strangest anomaly in diplomacy, and one of the last of the dual sovereignties
-in Asia. Furthermore, from this time forth, the whole tissue and complexion of Corean
-politics altered. The native scholars began to seek a new intellectual climate and
-the culture of the West. Scores of students were sent abroad and many foreigners were
-employed, as in the new Japan of 1868.
-</p>
-<p>When, however, Count Inouye, one of the purest and best statesmen in Japan, in co-operation
-with the Reform Committee of the Corean Government began his labors, the old chronic
-difficulties at once presented themselves and in legions. There seemed to be no real
-patriotism in the country. Rare indeed was the native of ability who was not hopelessly
-inoculated with the vices of the old clans and noble families, whose only idea of
-the relation between government and office holders was that of the udder and the sucking
-pig. Plots and jealousies continually hampered reform. The real problem was to separate
-the functions of the Court from those of the Government, which in Corea, as in China,
-had never been <span class="pageNum" id="pb480">[<a href="#pb480">480</a>]</span>fully done. In Japan the holding of office by females in the palace had been abolished.
-In the palace at Seoul their influence could secretly nullify public business. The
-question of succession to the throne without Court intrigue through the influence
-of the Queen and the mob of palace underlings, and the reconstruction of the military
-system and that of civil and criminal law were grappled with. Over one hundred young
-men were sent to Japan to study. On June 20, 1895, a royal ordinance was issued dividing
-the kingdom into thirteen prefectures, five of the large provinces being divided into
-two parts, with 151 districts and 339 magistracies. A cabinet, with nine boards of
-administration, was organized, and a judiciary system for the entire country formed,
-a postal system inaugurated, and the army, consisting of 5,000 men, was put under
-the instruction of Japanese and American officers. For all these enterprises, money
-was of the first necessity. Attempts, therefore, were made to reform the revenue,
-making taxes payable in money instead of in kind, while lands illegally seized were
-restored to their rightful owners.
-</p>
-<p>All seemed to promise well, notwithstanding that many of the old-style gentry, who
-saw in the change a lessening of their income, still opposed what they called the
-“civilization nonsense.” The Chinese merchants gradually returned after the war and
-resumed business. Foreign trade in 1895 amounted to nearly thirteen million dollars.
-Commercial prosperity seemed to be general and increasing. A fitful insurrection of
-the Tong Haks, in the summer of 1895, was completely subdued by Japanese troops. All
-was proceeding auspiciously until Count Inouye left Corea for a visit home. The Queen,
-who feared that her father-in-law, the Regent, might make a bad use of the Japanese
-troops, was anxious. Count Inouye assured her that the Mikado’s Government “would
-not fail to protect the royal house of Corea.” Thus allaying her well-grounded suspicions,
-Count Inouye left Seoul about September 15th.
-</p>
-<p>There were still living in the peninsula the two ablest characters, man and woman,
-in modern Corean history; the Queen, bound to overcome, and nullify by her craft and
-the power of the Min clan, the reforms begun by the Japanese, and the old Regent,
-who was bent on getting his son’s wife out of the way, by fire, sword, poison, or
-dynamite. Nominally about seventeen thousand <span class="pageNum" id="pb481">[<a href="#pb481">481</a>]</span>useless persons in Government employ and pay had been discharged, and the Queen’s
-palace attendants reduced from hundreds to a dozen. But after Inouye had gone away,
-these parasites gradually returned at her invitation, until the palace was crowded
-again as of old with her women, eunuchs, servants, and underlings of all sorts, while
-her clansfolk prepared for another of those plots so characteristic of unregenerated
-Corea. At the signs of danger, Prince Pak Yong Hio, minister of Home Affairs, fled
-the capital. It looked to the Japanese as if all their work and influence were to
-come to nothing. They had been foiled by a woman.
-</p>
-<p>The Tokio Government had appointed as its envoy, in place of Count Inouye, a military
-officer named Miura, who, like the French Zouave de Bellonet, of whom we have read
-before, brought to his work in Seoul the habits of the camp and the methods of the
-soldier, rather than the patience, tact, and civil abilities of his immediate predecessor.
-About this time there were in Seoul many Japanese, of all grades of character, especially
-<i>soshi</i>, political bullies or “heelers” from Tokio, angry at the Queen, who, as they professed
-to believe, was the friend of Russia. These men gathered many other spirits like unto
-themselves from among the native soldiers who had been discharged through the Queen’s
-influence. Soon both the native and the foreign worthies concluded, with the Tai-wen
-Kun, that for the good of Corea the Queen would have to be killed. On the early morning
-of October 8th the Japanese troops were conveniently and purposely posted so as to
-make possible the entrance into the palace of a motley band of ruffians, some sixty
-in number. Seizing the Queen in her own apartments, they murdered her, dragged her
-corpse into one of the areas outside, poured petroleum over the rice straw mats and
-clothing and set the heap on fire. Thus perished one of the ablest women in Corean
-annals. A new Government was quickly formed under the instigation of the Tai-wen Kun.
-A radical programme of reforms was published, new officers were appointed at home
-and envoys sent abroad. With horrible mockery of history and justice, this “rebel
-cabinet”—as the King later stigmatized it in public documents—pretended that the Queen
-was alive and forthwith conducted an absurd travesty of publicly trying some native
-accused of her murder. In the name of his Majesty a proclamation was forged degrading
-the Queen to the level of a servant. All this was done by men, some <span class="pageNum" id="pb482">[<a href="#pb482">482</a>]</span>of whom, it seems impossible to doubt, were implicated in the palace slaughter. When
-on November 27th some ultra-patriotic Coreans, opposed to the Japanese and the policy
-of the Tai-wen Kun, made an effort to drive out their new rulers by an attack on the
-palace and failed, the chief participants, as well as those alleged on trumped-up
-charges to have been in the affair of October 8th, were executed December 8th. Meanwhile
-there were anti-Japanese riots in many parts of the country.
-</p>
-<p>On hearing of the strange use of the Mikado’s soldiery in Seoul, the Japanese Government
-promptly recalled Miura and arrested forty-seven persons supposed to have taken part
-in the assault on the palace in Seoul. Nevertheless, in the court at Hiroshima, technical
-evidence against them was lacking and the whole band of this new I-ro-ha of modern
-Japanese heroism was discharged free of blame, or at least without the stigma of condemnation.
-It is probable that the whole affair of October 8th was connived at by a reckless
-diplomatic blunderer, to the regret and mortification of the Mikado’s ministers and
-the national sentiment of Japan. In any event, it proved the death-blow, for a time
-at least, of Japanese prestige in Corea. In December the troops of Japan evacuated
-the country.
-</p>
-<p>This was almost the last appearance in public of “Yi Ha-eung, Prince of Heung Song,”
-the Tai-wen Kun, or Prince Parent. He emerged fitfully on one occasion before the
-police authorities to secure the release of one of his retainers, and then retired
-to his estate in Kiodang. He died peacefully, on the 22d of February, 1898, and was
-buried with due ceremonies. His mausoleum, made according to all the proprieties of
-Corean taste and mortuary art, makes an attractive sight on the landscape of Corea.
-On August 18, 1900, Corea being now an empire, he was by imperial decree raised to
-the rank of Wang, or King. He will ever be remembered by the Coreans as one of the
-most powerful personalities in the modern history of their nation. According to traditional
-usage, Corean princes cannot hold office, and for that reason many of them decline
-the title, in order to avoid the poverty which acceptance of it brings, and get Government
-appointments to office with salary. The Tai-wen Kun, born in Seoul, January 22, 1811,
-made good use of his opportunity, which came both with his title and his office. Besides
-doing a great many bad things, to the <span class="pageNum" id="pb483">[<a href="#pb483">483</a>]</span>injury of his country, he made some great improvements. He was, according to his lights,
-a statesman and a patriot, and he foresaw to some extent the designs of Russia. In
-methods he never rose above the atmosphere of the environment within which he had
-been educated. In person he was five feet six inches in height, but looked a leader
-of men. He was the great-grandson of one king, the nephew of another, and the father
-of a third. “He became the leader of the small remnant of the imperial clan left,
-and really preserved it from extinction.”<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e6573src" href="#xd31e6573">2</a>
-</p>
-<p>The passing away of these two eminent characters, Queen Min and Tai-wen Kun, marked
-the end of an era.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb484">[<a href="#pb484">484</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e6495">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e6495src">1</a></span> See Sectarianism and Religious Persecution in China, by J.&nbsp;J. de Groot. Amsterdam,
-1904.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e6495src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e6573">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e6573src">2</a></span> See in the Korean Repository for July, 1898, a sketch of his life by Rev. G.&nbsp;H. Jones.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e6573src" title="Return to note 2 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch52" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1275">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER LII.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">JAPAN AND RUSSIA IN CONFLICT.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">From the night of the murder of his consort until his escape, four months later, to
-the Russian legation, the sovereign of Corea was to all intents and purposes a prisoner
-in his own palace. Unable to trust anybody and feeling in constant danger, he sought
-the American missionaries for food, for companionship, and even for protection.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e6585src" href="#xd31e6585">1</a> To him the new Government consisted of his jailers. The Corean people, sympathizing
-with their King, hated the Japanese all the more, for they felt that their sovereign
-was a virtual prisoner in the hands of the Tai-wen Kun and the pro-Japanese conspirators.
-Under these circumstances, he determined to break the palace jail. On the morning
-of February 11, 1896, according to a plan elaborated by the women and arranged with
-the Russians, he entered one of the ordinary box chairs in which female servants are
-carried. A few minutes later, pale and trembling, the King of Corea knocked at the
-north gate of the legation of Russia and was promptly admitted. It has been insisted
-that “no Russian had been to the palace or near it, nor had any Russian been to any
-of the public offices,” yet by some curious coincidence the Russian legation guards
-had been increased on the evening of the 10th by nearly one hundred men from the Czar’s
-men-of-war at Chemulpo. Furthermore, the Russians welcomed not only the King but later
-also the Crown Prince and the Queen Dowager.
-</p>
-<p>His Majesty was scarcely within the walls of his new shelter before he issued an edict
-against his “rebel cabinet,” ordering his soldiers to “cut off their heads at once
-and bring them,” but in the afternoon another edict decreed that the six traitors
-should be degraded and delivered to the courts for trial. This royal order was the
-signal for another outburst of riot, savagery, and bloodshed. The Corean prime minister
-and the Minister of Agriculture were <span class="pageNum" id="pb485">[<a href="#pb485">485</a>]</span>killed and their corpses mutilated and dragged round the streets. The prisons were
-emptied and the innocent and guilty alike released. Sixty-six Japanese, mostly workmen
-on the telegraphs, were murdered and the line partially destroyed.
-</p>
-<p>The pro-Japanese party, beginning with the bloody morning of October 8, 1895, when
-Queen Min was murdered, had been in power during four months, during which time a
-tremendous blow was dealt to the prestige of Japan in Corea. For eleven months the
-King transacted the national business in the Russian legation buildings, going only
-occasionally to the palace to give audiences to the foreign envoys. One of these from
-the Mikado presented a claim of indemnity for $146,000 for his subjects slain during
-the riot.
-</p>
-<p>The flight of Corea’s sovereign was like that pictured in the proverb “from the frying
-pan into the fire.” In fierce reality, it was escape from bloody to inky tyranny,
-from an iron to a silken chain; but in both cases it was humiliation and slavery.
-While the guest of the Russians, the King paid well his bill as tenant by signing
-a concession to his hosts, permitting them to cut timber “in the Yalu valley.” The
-Russian Government liberally interpreted this document, according to the vast scale
-of Muscovite geography, as meaning the whole basin drained by the Yalu and its tributaries,
-that is, a region half as large as Corea. The Russians thus obtained for a year’s
-rent of part of their legation buildings a lien on Corean property valued at fifty
-millions of dollars.
-</p>
-<p>Revolutions do not go backward, and the general proceeding of the Government was along
-the line of progress. The external reforms are particularly noticeable in the capital,
-in which Corean officers trained in Washington have greatly improved the streets,
-the methods of cleaning and the drainage. The police and soldiery were uniformed and
-disciplined, and preparations made for a national census. The untrustworthy “census”
-of Seoul showed a population of 144,626 in 27,527 houses, and in the suburbs 75,189
-in 18,093 houses, or a total of 219,815, and of houses 45,350, in which district are
-36 Buddhist temples with 442 priests and 204 nuns. The original width of the streets,
-as laid out in 1392, of 55 feet, has been regained over many miles of the city thoroughfares.
-Foreign trade steadily increased. American capital and energy helped to make what
-was once one of the filthiest and most unprogressive <span class="pageNum" id="pb486">[<a href="#pb486">486</a>]</span>cities of the Far East a clean and attractive place, bright with electric lights and
-railway and modern water-works. A railroad was built from the seaport to the capital
-and opened for traffic September 1, 1899. The steel bridge, made at Chattanooga, Tenn.,
-spanning the Han River is nearly a mile long. The electroliers give light to the palace
-and to part of the city of Seoul. The trolley line, besides traversing the city, runs
-to the mausoleum of the Queen, which has been built in superb style. There her scant
-remains, escorted by a vast procession characterized in all its features by the old
-barbaric grandeur of Corea, were laid with appropriate ceremonies.
-</p>
-<p>In the spring of 1896 the Independence Club, with a membership of over 2,000, was
-formed. It was composed entirely of natives actively interested in social and material
-development as well as in the independence of Corea. On October 21st the cornerstone
-of Independence Arch was laid on a site but a few yards distant from the old Chinese
-Gate under which the ambassadors of China had for centuries received the vassalage
-of the Corean sovereign. It is a structure in stone, alike of architectural beauty
-and of political significance. The subsequent history of this club and of the general
-movement, in which the publication of a daily newspaper in both English and native
-script, <i>The Korean Independent</i>, were prominent features, is not a happy one. It showed clearly that independence
-or freedom must be something more than a word, in order to bring forth the fruits
-seen in America or among the nations that have most cultivated liberty, safeguarded
-by law. In this Seoul movement the seed may have been good, but good and well prepared
-soil did not exist. Rock, brambles, and the beaten road of bad precedent, in which
-Corea is so rich, received the sower’s hopes. The movement ended in sedition or evaporated.
-Nevertheless, it was vastly better than the Seoul mobs that so often dictated imperial
-policy to the ministers of the Government. As late as May, 1902, the former members
-of the Independence Club were being arrested and executed. More promising in ultimate
-results was the celebration on September 2d of the forty-fifth birthday of the King
-by a great gathering of Corean Christians in the pavilion near the old Chinese Gate.
-</p>
-<p>After a stay of one year and nine days, the King left his Russian quarters and took
-up his residence in the new palace of Kyeng-wun, <span class="pageNum" id="pb487">[<a href="#pb487">487</a>]</span>built in 1896 in the western part of the city, where are gathered the foreign legations
-and residences, some of them very handsome and substantial.
-</p>
-<p>Corea, being now free and independent, between the two great empires of Japan and
-China, and Corean conceit of national history and antiquity, real or supposed, being
-never at any time lacking, it was thoroughly appropriate and financially very profitable
-for the yangban and palace officials to take measures to proclaim the once “little
-outpost state” an “empire,” and their sovereign an “emperor.” Besides suffering from
-imperialism in an acute form, the Corean office-holders knew well the significance
-of this nominally political act, in relation to their own fortunes; for in the assumption
-of the King of Corea of the title of Emperor, $100,000 was taken out of the treasury
-to celebrate the event, most of which, as a matter of course, went into the pockets
-of the King’s faithful servants. His Majesty protested in vain against the proceedings,
-but finally yielded gracefully. At 3 <span class="asc">A.M.</span> on October 12, 1896, with great pomp and state, before the altars of the Spirits
-of the Land, the King assumed the title of Emperor of Ta Han, or the Great Han—in
-distinction from the ancient San Han. “The King is dead, long live the Emperor.”
-</p>
-<p>This, too, was the time of Russia’s political dominance, when a Russian military commission
-of fourteen were drilling the Corean military and when the Minister of Foreign Affairs
-at Seoul and the Russian envoy, Mr. Speyer, signed an agreement, November 5th, by
-which Dr. McLeavy Brown, the Englishman in charge of the national finances—able, faithful,
-and unterrified—should be ousted and a Russian, Mr. Kuril Alexieff, put in his place.
-Mr. Brown’s contract not having expired, he refused to vacate his post, and a large
-British and Japanese fleet having appeared off Chemulpo, he was able to maintain his
-ground. The three countries, Russia, Great Britain, and Japan, made an agreement that
-Mr. Brown should remain in office and that a Russian and a Japanese commissioner of
-customs should share in the collection of foreign duties at the ports. On December
-23, 1897, a telegram was received from the Czar of Russia recognizing the Emperor
-of Corea, whereat the imperial party in Seoul was greatly elated. This whole incident
-illustrates the rather theatrical methods of Russian diplomacy in Corea during the
-past twenty years, showing <span class="pageNum" id="pb488">[<a href="#pb488">488</a>]</span>how entirely her interests were military and strategic, but not commercial, she having
-usually scarcely a score, and never at any time a hundred, of subjects in the empire
-commercially engaged, and only a few fishermen who are whale hunters on the coast.
-One Baron Guntzburg was busy as a promoter of Russian interests, and the wife of the
-Russian minister was not inactive in social affairs and even as an influencer of political
-action.
-</p>
-<p>It was not long before there were signs of a popular reaction against Russia. On January
-22, 1898, an attempt was made to assassinate Kim, the native Russian interpreter.
-By March 10th this feeling had taken form in a great anti-Russian demonstration, which
-ended in the apparently total though not real withdrawal of Russian influence in the
-peninsula. The military commission soon after departed and the Russo-Corean Bank was
-closed. After much excitement, Russia and Japan, on April 25th, agreed on a modus
-vivendi, both recognizing the sovereignty of Corea and engaging to refrain from direct
-interference in her internal affairs. No military or financial adviser was to be nominated
-without mutual agreement, and Russia bound herself not to impede the commercial relations
-between Japan and Corea. It was evident (probably in large measure on account of Russia’s
-new interests in Manchuria) that she considered Corea for the present beyond her sphere
-of influence. No serious revival of the claims of Russia to any part of Corea were
-made again openly until 1903. When the correspondence between Tokio and St. Petersburg,
-leading to the war of 1904, opened, the ambitions of Russia were seen to be serious
-and all-embracing.
-</p>
-<p>The first year of the Corean empire was completed after the celebration of the King’s
-birthday with unusual demonstrations of loyalty. The founder’s day (that of Ki-tsze,
-or Ki-ja, whose tomb and temple are at Ping-an and which suffered during the war of
-1894) and the 506th anniversary of the establishment of the dynasty, as well as the
-celebration of the coronation, were honored with unusual demonstrations, including
-the illumination of the capital. This year was noted for a revival of Confucianism
-among the yangban, Buddhism having already enjoyed a “recrudescence”—both systems
-being galvanized into a similitude of life by the powerful induction, and evidences,
-both in leaven and bloom, of the new faith. On the whole, the year 1898 <span class="pageNum" id="pb489">[<a href="#pb489">489</a>]</span>was characterized by an intense conservative reaction in the Government and by an
-absence of important diplomatic or political events, except the chronic local rebellions
-in the provinces and the plots of rivals and partisans in the capital. Notwithstanding
-that the solar calendar had been adopted in 1895, and had been officially observed,
-the people still celebrate New Year’s Day with a fortnight of oldtime rejoicings,
-merrymakings, and customs according to the lunar calendar.
-</p>
-<p>The year 1899 was one of comparative quiet in the capital and provinces. During the
-Boxer agitation in China, there was danger of eruptions across the border which were
-duly guarded against, and a Russian escort of fifty soldiers to the refugee Danish
-missionaries from China was given free passage. Corea virtually joined the allies
-marching to Peking, by giving aid and comfort in the form of a thousand bags of cleaned
-rice, two thousand bags of flour, and several hundred cases of cigarettes.
-</p>
-<p>In August, 1899, the written constitution of the kingdom was issued, the nine articles
-of which declare the absolute power of the King. It cannot be said that either the
-Coreans, the foreign diplomatic corps, or the world at large took this giving of a
-constitution as a very serious matter. To the special “imperial” envoy despatched
-from Seoul to Tokio, Japan flatly refused to promise the complete neutrality of Corea.
-Nevertheless, Corean subjects are expected to bow down and worship (either in the
-old English sense of the term or with more profound significance) the picture of the
-Emperor as in other pagan or semi-civilized countries. A memorial tablet and pagoda
-“to commemorate the virtues of his Majesty” was begun—on a day significant in the
-West—April 1, 1902. These will be in the main street at the junction of Palace Street
-in Seoul.
-</p>
-<p>It was noted as a great event in the history of a country that has never given very
-serious attention to its high-roads, that Dr. W.&nbsp;B. Magill, an American missionary,
-drove a horse and carriage from Gensan to Seoul. A system of lighthouses was decided
-upon October 31, 1901.
-</p>
-<p>The fiftieth anniversary of the Emperor’s birthday was celebrated December 7th, silver
-commemorative medals being given to each guest at the palace. A Corean band of musicians,
-trained by Mr. Franz Eckhart, a German, who arrived in the country February <span class="pageNum" id="pb490">[<a href="#pb490">490</a>]</span>19, 1901, played two pieces of foreign music very creditably to themselves and their
-instructor. On July 1, 1902, the Corean national hymn, an adaptation by Franz Eckhart,
-was published. This German musician had already made a good record in Japan.
-</p>
-<p>On May 30, 1902, the Emperor entered the Society of the Hall of Aged Men, having completed
-the first year of the sixth decade of his life (51 years), the foreign representatives
-being entertained at breakfast. Prominent among these, in influence and ability, was
-the American minister, Dr. Horace Newton Allen, born in Delaware, Ohio, in 1868, and
-resident in Corea since the summer of 1884, when he introduced modern methods of healing
-and surgery. He accompanied the first legation of Chō-sen in Washington. There he
-was appointed secretary to the American legation in Seoul, and since 1890 has been
-the chief guardian of American interests in Corea, being made minister in July, 1896.
-During the time of the Boxer insurrection in China, when the movement threatened to
-spread into Corea, he was especially alert in precautionary measures of safety. Previous
-to the outbreak of the Russo-Japanese war, he secured the presence of a guard of American
-marines in Seoul by which American rights, personal and commercial, were thoroughly
-secured.
-</p>
-<p>Events during the year 1903 showed a steady movement toward an inevitable end and
-pointed to the impending crisis between Russia and Japan. The situation in Seoul was
-dominated by Yi Yong Ik and Yi Keun Tak, who were in close communication with Port
-Arthur and the Russian authorities at that place. Their high-handed financial and
-other schemes, in opposition to the Japanese efforts at securing a stable currency,
-came to naught after severe pecuniary loss to natives and foreigners and the serious
-disturbance of trade. The Russians, on April 11, 1901, had secured a twenty-year extension
-of timber cutting and prosecuted vigorously their advances in the north. They now
-refused to allow the Corean Government any supervision over their work of denuding
-the forests in the Yalu valley. In May one of the Czar’s gunboats anchored in the
-harbor of Yongampo, which the Russians called Port Nicholas, and soon after began
-what were believed to be fortifications. A guard of twenty-six Russian marines reinforced
-the legation in Seoul, shortly after the violation by Russia of her pledge to evacuate
-Manchuria. A serious riot in November between <span class="pageNum" id="pb491">[<a href="#pb491">491</a>]</span>Nipponese and Muscovite soldiers at Chemulpo foreshadowed the impending clash on a
-large scale in 1904. During December Russia’s influence at Seoul blocked all attempts
-of the foreign representatives to have Wiju (Ai-chiu) opened as a port of trade.
-</p>
-<p>At this stage in the nation’s history, the once white-coated hermits who had hitherto
-lived under their own top-knots, and often under hats that were as big as a haycock,
-began numerously to go abroad as students. Scores of them have been in America and
-Europe and hundreds in Japan. In December, 1902, a party of nearly one hundred emigrants,
-men, women, and children, started for Hawaii. All of these were admitted, except eight
-who were sent back because of contagious eye disease. Other incidents showed healthful
-movement in a long-stagnant mass of population. Light and vision are coming to a people
-blind to nearly everything modern.
-</p>
-<p>Of all the moral and reformatory forces at work, that of active Christianity leads.
-The missionary pioneers, Allen, Underwood, Scranton, Appenzeller, Heron, Gale, Jones,
-Hulbert, and others, mastered the language and opened the treasures of native literature
-and history. Already the list of aids to the vernacular and of their writings descriptive
-of country and people is a very respectable one. These works, the fruit of earnest
-toil, contrast superbly in the quality of truthfulness with the sketchy and ephemeral
-writings of tourists and hasty travellers. With other scholars and civil servants
-of various governments, they sustain the editor in furnishing the richly freighted
-pages of the <i>Korea Review</i>, and have formed the Korea Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, from which already
-several creditable volumes of “Transactions” have appeared to delight the serious
-student, who values perspective and tone in his mind-pictures of this once hermit
-nation.
-</p>
-<p>Already the representatives of the Christian brotherhoods of English-speaking peoples
-have their row of graves in which sleep heroes, veterans, and some who “fell at the
-first fire.” Beginning in 1884, their prospective celebration of a double decennial,
-in September, 1904, was postponed under the clouds of war. Besides healing and helping,
-translating the Scriptures, and teaching the great uplifting truths which centre around
-the idea of one living and true God, gathering thousands of souls into churches and
-furnishing <span class="pageNum" id="pb492">[<a href="#pb492">492</a>]</span>Gospel nurture, they have taught the natives the grand lesson of self-support and
-self-propagation through a first-hand knowledge of the Bible. War, persecution, and
-manifold trials have tested and proved the quality of the converts, who in sincerity
-and power to stand in the midst of temptations are perhaps second to none in any field.
-</p>
-<p>It was evident at the opening of the year 1904 that Japanese armies were once again
-to tread the soil of Corea, this time the war being not between China and Japan, but
-between Japan and Russia. Against the Colossus of the North and Russian rapacity,
-the Island Empire had a long list of grievances. As far back as 1861 a Russian man-of-war
-had, not without shedding the blood of its defenders, landed marines on the Island
-of Tsushima. There they had planted seed and begun the formation of a settlement looking
-to permanent occupation. In those days of hermitage, weakness, and fear, nothing could
-be done by the Japanese authorities at Yedo; but Katsu Awa, the Shogun’s most far-seeing
-statesman, called the attention of the British minister at Peking to this invasion,
-and a British naval force was sent to compel the Russians to retire. A few years later
-Russia took possession of Saghalien, after the usual preliminary of “joint occupation,”
-compelling the Japanese to be satisfied with the Kurile Islands below 50° 56′ of north
-latitude. This was in the year 1875, but long before that, Japanese statesmen, especially
-Okubo, had penetrated the designs of Russia. The formation, out of feudal elements,
-of her national army in 1871 and the first of this character since the twelfth century,
-was largely with a view of defending Japan against Russian and other aggressions.
-On the return of the Japanese embassy from its trip round the world in 1873, Okubo,
-Kido, and others opposed the Corean war project (as we have seen in Chapter XLVII),
-because a war with Corea then meant playing into Russia’s hands. Something of the
-popular fear of Russia over the Japanese nation, which hung like an advancing black
-cloud, was seen in the attack by a fanatical policeman on the Crown Prince, now the
-Czar of Russia, during his visit to Japan in 1891, but the Government in Tokio, even
-in the person of the Mikado, besides making ample apology, scrupulously maintained
-propriety in all dealings with Russia, at home and in Corea, living on terms of perfect
-friendship. It was therefore a stunning disappointment, <span class="pageNum" id="pb493">[<a href="#pb493">493</a>]</span>though a not wholly unexpected procedure, when Russia, in 1895, summoning to her aid
-the French and Germans, deprived the Japanese of the fruits of their victories in
-the war with China, by compelling the islanders to relinquish all territory on the
-mainland of Asia, and to be content with Formosa and an indemnity. Exhausted as they
-were by the war with China, yet had the Japanese been possessed of five battle-ships,
-they would have declared war upon Russia as an abominable intermeddler and aggressor.
-The force of circumstances required them to swallow their humiliation, but as the
-Japanese, any more than certain Christian nations, never forgive an injury, they began
-immediately to gird themselves for the coming and inevitable struggle with the Power
-that seemed bent upon their destruction. When the Boxer uprising in 1899 called forth
-the military energies of eight nations, the Japanese Government at first held back,
-lest its motives in being too forward might be questioned. When finally urged to lead
-the van of the allied armies of rescue, Japan sent 21,000 of her ablest and best equipped
-soldiers into the campaign. Their experiences on the march to Peking were invaluable
-to the Japanese, for through becoming comrades with the <i>mujiks</i> in the camps and on the battle-field, they learned that they had nothing to fear
-from such foes when arrayed against them in anything like an equality of numbers in
-war. The Japanese officer found himself a modern man in the presence of his equals,
-who were men steeped in mediæval methods of thought.
-</p>
-<p>Steadily enlarging their navy and perfecting in every detail arms, ammunition, field
-equipment, army hygiene, and the physical development of their soldiers, the Japanese
-determined to stand for their rights, even though this might seem like Jack challenging
-the giant. No longer hermits on an island, which, having but a small fraction of arable
-fertile soil, could not feed its inhabitants, so that population had to remain stationary,
-the Japanese had become a nation of traders and manufacturers, with an annual increase
-of population of over 500,000 a year, with a total population of fifty millions, and
-with a foreign trade that had increased 543 per cent since 1890, with a total export
-trade consisting of 84.6 per cent of manufactured articles. With nearly thirty thousand
-Japanese subjects in Corea, most of them married and with homes, and with 10,000 of
-their people in Manchuria, <span class="pageNum" id="pb494">[<a href="#pb494">494</a>]</span>they took an interest in the affairs of Corea and Manchuria which was not like that
-of the Russians, chiefly military and strategic, but which, on the contrary, was commercial
-and vital. During the Boxer troubles, Russia sent a large army into Manchuria and
-finally took possession of the whole of that portion of the Chinese Empire. She promised
-solemnly to all the governments interested, to vacate the country on the 9th of October,
-1903.
-</p>
-<p>The world knows how this promise was broken. The correspondence between Tokio and
-St. Petersburg reveals the exasperating delays of the Russian Government, and its
-intention not only to remain permanently in Manchuria but to prevent if possible Japan
-from having anything to do with the matter. Russia even desired “recognition by Japan
-that Manchuria is outside her sphere of special interest” and requested a mutual engagement
-to establish “a neutral zone on the Corea-Manchuria frontier, extending fifty kilometers
-each side into which neutral zone neither of the contracting parties shall introduce
-troops without the consent of the other,” and “the engagement on the part of Japan
-not to undertake on the coast of Corea any military works capable of menacing the
-freedom of navigation in the straits of Corea.”
-</p>
-<p>In a word, what Japan claimed is, that “Japan has a perfect right to demand that the
-independence and territorial integrity of China shall be respected and the rights
-and interests of Japan in that region shall be formally guaranteed.”
-</p>
-<p>After innumerable delays and the situation growing more serious every day, the Russians
-continually reinforcing their naval and military forces in the far East, Mr. Kurino,
-the Mikado’s minister to St. Petersburg, having waited for an answer since the 13th
-of January, called on Count Lamsdorff at 8 <span class="asc">P.M.</span> February 4th for a definite reply, which was not forthcoming. Finding that in all
-probability there would be no changes in Russia’s claims of control over Manchuria
-and her demand for “a buffer region between confines of direct influence and action
-of the two countries in the far East,” being out of the question, the Japanese legation
-was on the 10th of February withdrawn from St. Petersburg and war began.
-</p>
-<p>The Russians were already on Corean soil with three hundred Cossacks guarding their
-timber cutters on the left bank of the Yalu River. Since June, 1903, they had reinforced
-their army <span class="pageNum" id="pb495">[<a href="#pb495">495</a>]</span>with 40,000 men and their navy with 26 vessels, ranging from battle-ship to torpedo
-boat, thus adding 83,000 tons to their sea power. Five days before, the Russian commander
-at Vladivostok had notified the Japanese commercial agent that a state of siege might
-be declared at any moment. With steam up, decks cleared for action, and search-lights
-in use for night work, the Russian seamen instantly replied to the fire and torpedoes
-of Admiral Togo’s attack. The Japanese thus anticipated a naval raid from the Russians,
-which was afterwards successfully carried out from Vladivostok. To the Czar’s advisers
-in Europe actual war may have come as a surprise. It did not come thus to his servants
-in the far East. Nevertheless, within three days after the rupture of peaceful relations
-the Russian war ships Variag and Koreetz had been sunk outside of the harbor of Chemulpo
-by the guns of Admiral Uriu and an army landed to begin its march northward. At Port
-Arthur three battle-ships and four cruisers had been sunk or damaged by Admiral Togo’s
-torpedoes. The first idea of the Japanese was to eliminate the sea power of Russia
-from the scene of the seat of war. Landing her armies in Corea, at Chemulpo, the march
-was made without serious opposition, until near Wiju, the Mikado’s hosts once more
-stood on the banks of the Yalu, the Rubicon of eastern Asia, confronting the forces
-of the White Czar.
-</p>
-<p>Meanwhile, a new protocol between Japan and Corea was signed, in March, 1904, in which
-the stronger Power bound itself to reform the weaker country without annexing it and
-to protect it without impairing its sovereignty. Corea pledged herself, as distinctly
-under Japan’s protection, to repose confidence in and to accept advice from the Japanese
-Government, and to make no agreement with a third Power which might seem to contravene
-the principles of the protocol. This document made Japan the champion of Corean independence,
-and is in spirit and letter the antipodes of Russia’s action in Manchuria.
-</p>
-<p>The new model army in Asia, and the most modern of all armies, was in its fitness
-of body and mind to cope with the problems of war in the twentieth century, the creation
-of the public schools of Japan. These soldiers, both veterans and youth, set a new
-standard of resourceful valor, celerity of movement, temperance in living, ability
-to endure hunger and hardship, and of self-abnegation in the presence of death. To
-a Japanese patriot, life, <span class="pageNum" id="pb496">[<a href="#pb496">496</a>]</span>apart from duty, has no value. On the 1st of May, this “public school army,” under
-Kuroki, having crossed the Yalu under fire, won a brilliant victory, capturing many
-guns and prisoners. They had met European troops and beaten them in fair fight.
-</p>
-<p>Then began the Japanese march through the old Border Gate and Feng-Wang Chang or Phœnix
-Castle, and over the mountain range dividing the Yalu from the Liao valley. The fortified
-passes were one after the other carried in victorious assault, and in the early days
-of September both Russian and Japanese main armies were marshalled before Liao Yang
-city, southwest of the ruins of the ancient Corean stronghold, for one of the great
-decisive battles of modern times and perhaps of human history.
-</p>
-<p>During this time other armies were landed in Manchuria and by May 15th Oku was in
-possession of the railway leading to Port Arthur. Dalny was occupied May 26th, and
-later Yinkow and Niu Chwang came under the sun banner. On August 25th Field-Marshal
-Oyama took command of all the Japanese forces and the armies of Kuroki, Nodzu, and
-Oku.
-</p>
-<p>After the great pitched battle in the early days of September, the Mikado’s flag floated
-over Liao Yang, and Kuropatkin fell back on Mukden, in masterly retreat.
-</p>
-<p>From Port Arthur, girdled by a wall of fire and under a rain of shells, the Czar’s
-battle-ships and cruisers made desperate efforts to escape, only to be sunk, driven
-back, or, torn and riven, to seek shelter in the ports of China, and elsewhere, their
-presence giving rise to perplexing questions in international diplomacy.
-</p>
-<p>As we close again, in the autumn of <span class="asc">A.D.</span> 1904, our story of the once “hermit nation,” the Japanese, confronted with the practical
-difficulties of assuming a real protectorate over Corea, while nominally but sincerely
-striving to maintain her independence, are still determined to control the peninsula
-as a vital possession. One hundred miles of the Seoul-Fusal railway are in operation.
-The sound of the blasting night and day in the deep rock-cuts near Seoul announce
-their purpose to finish speedily a highway of steel to the Chinese frontier. The real
-purpose of the war is the integrity of China, upon which depends the safety of Japan,
-perhaps even the political salvation of Asia.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb497">[<a href="#pb497">497</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e6585">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e6585src">1</a></span> See Fifteen Years Among the Topknots, by L.&nbsp;H. Underwood (1904).&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e6585src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch53" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1283">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER LIII.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">COREA A JAPANESE PROTECTORATE.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Having been responsible for two great foreign wars fought by Japan, it was natural
-that at the end of each campaign the position of Corea among nations should be notably
-altered. The war with the Middle Kingdom blew to pieces the Chinese doctrine of universal
-sovereignty, besides making the once vassal state independent. In name, at least,
-Corea was made an empire. The war with Russia annihilated the dogma so long held in
-Europe, that Asiatic nations exist for conquest and spoliation, with the corollary
-that “the break-up of China” was imminent. Japanese success in the war of 1894–95
-was a vindication of the American doctrine as expounded by men from the United States
-during a century, and formulated by John Hay—“China for the Chinese.”
-</p>
-<p>Had Corea been a state fitted, by the power of unselfish patriotism and love of industry
-among her leaders, to survive amid modern political and economic conditions, Japan’s
-triumph over Russia would have made her all the stronger. Her independence would have
-been assured, had the virtue of her own sons responded to the opportunity.
-</p>
-<p>On the contrary, the history of Corea since 1866, as outlined on these pages, reveals
-the fatal weakness of the ruling class in Corea. Instead of giving themselves to patriotic
-sacrifice and personal industry, the yang-ban, or men of privilege, have made their
-capital a hot-bed of intrigue and Corea the storm centre of the Far East. Instead
-of developing their own strength and the nation’s resources, they have plied the arts
-of cunning and the crafts of the weak. Yet modern civilization, rich in powerful governments,
-has no place for the weak. Least of all is self-chosen weakness allowable.
-</p>
-<p>Being neither skilful merchants like the Chinese, nor brave warriors like the Japanese,
-the Corean noblemen—on whom lies <span class="pageNum" id="pb498">[<a href="#pb498">498</a>]</span>the burden of responsibility—might at least have imitated the good example of their
-island neighbors. In Japan the outstanding event of modern times was the renunciation,
-in 1871, by 400,000 knights or gentry, of their hereditary pensions paid out of the
-public treasury.<a class="noteRef" id="n498.1src" href="#n498.1">1</a> After this sacrifice, made in the interests of true patriotism, they put off their
-swords and silk petticoats, got to work, paid taxes, and began to earn an honest living.
-Even China has broken with her unsocial past and conceit of perfection, and has entered
-upon the path of modern civilization.
-</p>
-<p>The Corean yang-ban abused their independence by intrigue. They failed to discern
-that the petty arts of the plotter endangered their existence as a nation. After her
-second great war, Japan saw clearly that to allow her neighbor state, wherein there
-was no sharp distinction between the Court and the Government, to remain, as of old,
-the hot-bed of intrigue, would jeopard her own existence. She therefore did for Corea
-what Great Britain has done for Egypt, the United States for Cuba, and the French
-for Annam. Corea is now numbered among protectorates.
-</p>
-<p>When our narrative closed in September, 1904, the Japanese were building a trunk line
-of railroad, nearly six hundred miles long, which should traverse the whole peninsula
-from Fusan to Wiju (Ai-chiu, pp. 181, 364). Port Arthur had not surrendered. The real
-goal of the Japanese armies, the city of Mukden, containing the mausoleums of the
-Manchiu dynasty now ruling in Peking, “the possession of which would put the heart
-of China in the palm of Japan’s hand,” was yet unreached. Yet those who in the early
-seventies had helped to train the boys who made the public-school army of Japan, had
-no fear of its ultimate triumph.<a class="pseudoNoteRef" id="xd31e6697src" href="#n498.1">1</a>
-</p>
-<p>On the 3d of January, 1905, Port Arthur was formally surrendered, and its evacuation
-completed January 7th. The main Japanese army fronting Mukden was quickly reënforced
-by Nogi’s division on the left, or west, and by Kawamura’s army, out of Corea, on
-the right, or east. The great campaign of hard fighting, destined to last nearly a
-month, opened amid a snow-storm on the 23d of February. By the 28th the fighting was
-general along the whole front of nearly one hundred miles. On the 10th of March <span class="pageNum" id="pb499">[<a href="#pb499">499</a>]</span>Oku’s columns entered, by the southern gate, the city of Mukden. The Russians lost
-nearly thirty thousand in dead and over forty thousand prisoners. The Japanese pursuit
-northward lasted until April 14th.
-</p>
-<p>On the 27th and 28th of March “the battle of The Sea of Japan” took place, in which
-the Russian armada of thirty-eight modern ships of war was, “by the grace of Heaven
-and the help of the gods,” annihilated.
-</p>
-<p>By invitation of President Roosevelt, the envoys of the two warring nations, de Witte
-and Rosen for Russia, and Komura and Takahira for Japan (both of the latter the writer’s
-former pupils in Tokio), met at Portsmouth, N. H.; whence, in the thirties, had sailed
-Captain Edmund Roberts, commissioned by President Jackson, and the first American
-diplomatist in the Far East. The Japanese won a signal diplomatic victory, securing
-the main points of their contention.
-</p>
-<p>The peace treaty which was signed recognized in the first article Japan’s predominant
-position in Corea, political, military, economic, as well as her right to supervise
-that country’s affairs and to protect it, Russia agreeing not to obstruct Japan’s
-proceedings in any respect. One of the first and worst results for Corea was the immediate
-entrance within her borders of a horde of low-class, insolent Japanese adventurers,
-who, by their cruelties and spoliations of natives, nearly neutralized the well-meant
-plans of good men in Tokio.
-</p>
-<p>Following up the results of the decisive war, the Mikado sent his highly honored servant,
-Baron Komura, to Peking to arrange matters amicably with China, and then turned his
-attention to Corea. The protocol of March, 1904 (p. 495), had been quickly followed
-by the abolition of the <span class="corr" id="xd31e6709" title="Source: Pedlers’">Peddlers’</span> Guild (so long used by pro-Russian intriguers) and by the visit of Marquis Ito, who
-bore a reassuring message of fraternity and good-will. Mr. I. Megata, one of the most
-experienced and skilful officers of the Treasury Department in Tokio, was sent to
-Seoul as financial adviser, and Mr. Durham Dwight Stevens, an American gentleman,
-who united ability and tact to long and varied experience in diplomacy in the Far
-East, accepted the post of assistant at the Corean Foreign Office. These gentlemen,
-like all their predecessors, encountered insuperable difficulties in dealing with
-a government that was <span class="pageNum" id="pb500">[<a href="#pb500">500</a>]</span>nominally carried on at the Council Board, but in reality directed from the harem
-or by clan factions in secret intrigue.
-</p>
-<p>Occupied so seriously with other matters, few attempts were made at first by the Japanese
-Government in the interest of real reforms that could benefit the Corean people. Meanwhile,
-it must be repeated, tens of thousands of the Mikado’s subjects, many of them of the
-most truculent temper and disreputable character, crowded into the peninsula, committing
-acts of rapine and brutality which neutralized many of the best measures of wise statesmen.
-When the proposition, approved of in Tokio, was made that all uncultivated land in
-the peninsula should be open to Japanese occupation and enterprise, and the water
-rights and supply be shared by these aliens, the Corean people, as a body, made systematic
-protest. All the circumstances considered, this sudden act of virtual spoliation was
-a colossal blunder. In the eyes of the Coreans it was not only “stealing water from
-another man’s field”—so terrible a crime in lands of rice culture, where irrigation
-is a vital necessity—but the theft of the very soil itself. At once a storm of opposition
-arose that swept the peninsula from end to end. The Corean Emperor was besieged with
-petitions to resist the Japanese demands. A society called Po-an, for the preservation
-of safety and peace, was formed, which met in Seoul in excited discussion, and began
-the propagation of what seemed to the Japanese authorities a campaign of sedition.
-The meetings of the Po-an were broken up by the police, and the Japanese garrison
-of Seoul was augmented to six thousand men. Though other Corean societies were formed,
-the excitement died out, the Japanese not pushing their scheme, the Corean noblemen
-showing little or no real patriotism, and the people little power of persistent unity.
-On October 13, 1904, General Hasegawa took control of the military situation.
-</p>
-<p>Yet it is the simple truth to state that while the Japanese soldier, superb in discipline
-and noble in human qualities, is respected by the Corean, the low Japanese, who so
-often proves himself a rascal, is feared and despised. It is unfortunate that these
-disreputable characters were so long under such slight control from Tokio. On the
-other hand, notwithstanding that Japan, in the treaty of 1904, had guaranteed the
-independence of Corea, yet the Government in Seoul, choked by palace <span class="corr" id="xd31e6717" title="Source: cl ques">cliques</span>, languished <span class="pageNum" id="pb501">[<a href="#pb501">501</a>]</span>in chronic feebleness. Unable to keep order at home, to pay its legation bills abroad,
-or to separate itself from that “Forbidden Interior” of mystery in the boudoir inhabited
-by a mob of women, eunuchs and hangers-on, which curses China, Corea, and so long
-cursed old Japan in both Yedo and Kioto, what guarantee was there for the peace of
-Asia and the world? For the preservation of this, the Mikado’s Government was responsible,
-while every complication in Corea involved Japan also.
-</p>
-<p>After long deliberation, the statesmen in Tokio agreed that the surest exit out of
-the labyrinthine difficulty was to take charge of Corea’s foreign relations and place
-a controller-general at the capital, with subordinates at the chief cities and seaports,
-leaving internal affairs to be directed from Seoul. The Mikado despatched Marquis
-Ito—“patient, able, and authoritative”—to Seoul.
-</p>
-<p>On the 17th of November, 1905, the Corean Emperor’s minister, Pak Che Soon, and the
-Mikado’s representative, Hayashi, signed a treaty, of which the following is the official
-translation into English:
-</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p class="first">The Governments of Japan and Corea, desiring to strengthen the principle of solidarity
-which unites the two Empires, have with that object in view agreed upon and concluded
-the following stipulations to serve until the moment arrives when it is recognized
-that Corea has attained national strength:—
-</p>
-<p>Article I. The Government of Japan, through the Department of Foreign Affairs at Tokio,
-will hereafter have control and direction of the external relations and affairs of
-Corea, and the diplomatic and consular representatives of Japan will have the charge
-of the subjects and interests of Corea in foreign countries.
-</p>
-<p>Art. II. The Government of Japan undertake to see to the execution of the treaties
-actually existing between Corea and other Powers, and the Government of Corea engage
-not to conclude hereafter any act or engagement having an international character,
-except through the medium of the Government of Japan.
-</p>
-<p>Art III. The Government of Japan shall be represented at the Court of His Majesty
-the Emperor of Corea by a Resident General, who shall reside at Seoul, primarily for
-the purpose of taking charge of and directing matters relating to diplomatic affairs.
-He shall have the right of private and personal audience of His Majesty the Emperor
-of Corea. The Japanese Government shall also have the right to station Residents at
-the several open ports and such other places in Corea as they may deem necessary.
-Such Residents shall, under the direction of the Resident General, exercise the powers
-and functions hitherto appertaining to Japanese Consuls in Corea, and shall perform
-such duties as may be necessary in order to carry into full effect the provisions
-of this agreement.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb502">[<a href="#pb502">502</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Art. IV. The stipulations of all treaties and agreements existing between Japan and
-Corea not inconsistent with the provisions of this agreement shall continue in force.
-</p>
-<p>Art. V. The Government of Japan undertake to maintain the welfare and dignity of the
-Imperial House of Corea.
-</p>
-<p>In faith whereof the undersigned, duly authorized by the Governments, have signed
-this agreement and affixed their seals.
-</p>
-<p class="signed">[Signed] <span class="sc">Hyashi Gonsuke</span>,
-<br>Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.
-</p>
-<p class="signed">[Signed] <span class="sc">Pak Che Soon</span>,
-<br>Minister for Foreign Affairs.
-</p>
-<p class="dateline">November 17, 1905.</p>
-</blockquote><p>
-</p>
-<p>Whatever may be the real history of the transfer thus made or the means taken to secure
-the document, it is certain that the governments of Europe and America were very prompt
-in withdrawing their legations from Seoul and in acknowledging Japan’s supremacy.
-In Washington the minds of the President and Secretary of State were quickly made
-up, because of the local eccentricities of Corean envoys, unable to pay their grocery
-bills, and despite the representations of more than one private emissary. On the accession
-of Theodore Roosevelt to the presidency by the election of the people and his change
-of diplomatic assistants, Minister Horace N. Allen, long our able representative in
-Seoul, was succeeded, in 1905, by Mr. Edwin Vernon Morgan, who had had experience
-in Samoa, Corea, Russia, and China. He being appointed to another position, the American
-legation in Seoul ceased, while the consul-general and consuls were retained as before.
-</p>
-<p>Meanwhile, under the energetic action of the Resident General Ito, real reforms were
-inaugurated and disorderly Japanese characters arrested and either sent out of the
-country or made to give pledges for good behavior. The whole prospect of things brightened.
-</p>
-<p>At a banquet given in his honor by his countrymen in Seoul, April 8, 1906, the Marquis
-Ito spoke as follows:
-</p>
-<p>“According to what His Corean Majesty has repeatedly condescended to say to me, I
-may be permitted to believe that I have the honor to enjoy his confidence and trust
-in no small measure. He has on more than one occasion been pleased to assure me that
-he wished to rely upon my loyal services for the regeneration of <span class="pageNum" id="pb503">[<a href="#pb503">503</a>]</span>the Corean Administration. His Majesty has also given orders to his Ministers to carry
-out this work of regeneration under my direction and guidance. As for the Corean Ministers,
-they have assured me of their determination to do their utmost to this end; they say
-that an opportunity like the present will not occur again, and, as a matter of fact,
-they are now actively engaged in the work of regeneration.”
-</p>
-<p>Apparently these words were as honestly applauded by the Corean Emperor’s servants
-as they were believed to be true by the speaker himself. In mutual confidence, Corean
-military officers were duly appointed, and both General Hasegawa and the Marquis Ito
-left with them for Japan, to witness the grand review of the returning victorious
-Japanese armies from Manchuria, which was held in Tokio April 30th.
-</p>
-<p>The opportunity for intrigue and conspiracy created by the absence of the two great
-men was too tempting to be lost by the factions of the boudoir and its inmates. The
-Corean Conservative and Progressive parties kept warring among themselves, hatching
-plots in which even the emperor’s privy councillors, palace eunuchs, and officers
-of the Imperial household were active. Two lines of policy looking to domestic and
-foreign disturbance were mapped out by the conspirators. One utilized the distress
-and almost chronic troubles in the southwestern provinces, the other was based on
-the hope of Russian intervention. The plot was planned by yang-ban in the palace itself.
-</p>
-<p>In Chung Chong Do (p. 194) a Min and in Chulla Do (p. 199) a Choi nobleman led the
-insurrections. Antiquated muskets, matchlocks, swords, and spears were laid in store
-against the Japanese. In Kang-wen Do (p. 208), also, troubles were reported. Four
-police (out of the 350 then in all Corea) were sent from the Residency in Seoul, but
-they were killed or driven away. The Corean provincial troops being supine, two companies
-of Japanese infantry were sent to the city. Attacking in daylight in order to spare
-the peaceful non-combatants, the soldiers blew up the gates with dynamite. After some
-street fighting the city was in the hands of the military, 69 Coreans being killed
-and 145 made prisoners. It was hoped that this affair would end further insurrection.
-</p>
-<p>But in a land so long governed by the sorcerer, where the <span class="pageNum" id="pb504">[<a href="#pb504">504</a>]</span>means of communication are slight and the people lack education and mental initiative,
-news travels slowly. Choi, in the more southern city, held out. Murderous attacks
-on Japanese settlers and fishermen continued. The Wi-pion party, representing inveterate
-conservatism, sided with the insurgents, while the Il Ching-hoi, or Liberal Progressive,
-set to work to unearth evidence and expose the Conservative plotters. Giving information
-at the Residency in Seoul, five high officers, Kim, Choi, Min, Hong, etc., of the
-Corean Court or Government, including a eunuch, were arrested. The twofold plan, first,
-to make the world believe that the whole Corean people was opposed to the Japanese
-protectorate, and second, to enlist Russian cooperation, was exposed. One immediate
-result of forcing the Japanese military hand was the quick surrender of Choi to Corean
-soldiers in Chulla Do. In his camp was found authorization from Seoul, sealed with
-the vermilion seal of the palace, to raise troops. Thus collapsed the plot for internal
-disturbance.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e6767src" href="#xd31e6767">2</a>
-</p>
-<p>The prospect of drawing Russia again into hostilities which might free Corea from
-the Japanese yoke shows the weak spot in the Russo-Chinese negotiations of Ignatieff
-in 1860 (p. 371). In the delimitation of frontiers then made, a strip of country containing
-nearly 3,000 square miles, called Han-do, or Island Circuit, between the Tumen and
-its affluent, the Hai-lan River, which, beginning about seventy-five miles from the
-sea, flows nearly parallel, was left as neutral territory to be uninhabited. This
-region is shown on the maps (pp. 210, 365), and though the Chinese characters describe
-an island, it is interfluvial only. In reality the land, being very fertile, did in
-course of time attract many settlers, both Chinese and Corean. When Russia began to
-assert her strenuous policy in the Far East, she demanded that this neutral strip
-should be cleared of Coreans, or that all settlers in this region between the rivers
-should be enrolled as Chinese subjects. The Japanese War coming on in 1904, nothing
-further was done. Since Russia, by the Portsmouth treaty, controls the railways of
-Kirin, she may by holding this region control the trade routes to the seaboard.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb505">[<a href="#pb505">505</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Here then was the bait to make the Russian bear bite. One of the Kims, an anti-Japanese
-ultra-conservative, secured a commission from the Corean Emperor appointing him virtually
-governor of this Hai-lan region. At Vladivostok, through the infamous pro-Russian
-Li Yong Ik and M. Pavloff, the late envoy of the Czar in Corea, the Court of St. Petersburg
-was to be sounded on the possibility of gaining control of this strategic territory.
-</p>
-<p>If it be asked, what ground of hope Kim Hseung-mun had of success, it must be remembered
-that while all other foreign consuls in Corea, under the new order of things, had
-received their <i>exequaturs</i>, or authorizations, from the Emperor of Japan, the new Russian Consul-General, M.
-Plancon, claimed that he should be recognized by the Corean and not the Japanese emperor,
-thus ignoring Corea’s denunciation of her old treaty with China and the convention
-of November 17, 1905. The Russian envoy, for a little while or until he withdrew his
-contention, consciously or unconsciously, gave encouragement to the Corean conspirator,
-Kim. This whole plot to embroil Russia and Japan was frustrated, getting no further
-than the palace, while the surrender of Choi in Chulla Do was made sure by the arrest,
-on the night of June 8th, of the chief conspirators as they were leaving the palace.
-The Liberals had turned state’s evidence.
-</p>
-<p>Without impeaching the Corean Emperor, the Japanese Government removed his evil advisers
-and resolved to persevere in using what authority he still possesses for the good
-of the Corean people—as their protectors see it.
-</p>
-<p>That policy requires the public finance of Corea to be known in ledgers and budgets,
-with strict accountability for every dollar; the purging of the palace, and the thorough
-differentiation of Court and Government, and of the “boudoir” from the council table;
-the creation of a public school system; the building of a railway from Ping An to
-Gen san; a coinage and stable monetary system; the reform of prison methods and the
-judiciary; the reclamation of the vast quantities of waste land; the encouragement
-of all moral forces; the development of trade, commerce, and industry; and last, but
-not least, the severe handling of unprincipled and truculent Japanese; or, in general,
-a policy of righteousness and conciliation that must overcome the traditional hatred
-between the Coreans and the Japanese. To make the <span class="pageNum" id="pb506">[<a href="#pb506">506</a>]</span>yang-ban get to work and earn their own living will be the great blessing to this
-long-oppressed land. If Japan can satisfy the enlightened judgment of the world that
-Corea is exploited for the good primarily of the Coreans and not the Japanese, humanity
-will approve and rejoice. The accomplished author of “The Passing of Korea,” which
-contains the severest arraignment of the Japanese thus far made, passes this verdict
-on the situation:
-</p>
-<p>“The Koreans have awakened to the fact that this, which should have been their first
-consideration many years ago, is now their last resort, and they are clamoring for
-education.… Korea can gain nothing by holding back and offering to the plans of Japan
-a sulky resistance. They are face to face with a definite condition, and theories
-as to the morality of the forces which brought about the condition are wholly academic.”
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb507">[<a href="#pb507">507</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="n498.1">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#n498.1src">1</a></span> See “The Mikado’s Empire,” pp. 533–535, and p. 682, of the eleventh edition, 1906,
-for the five points of prediction made at Hartford, Conn., February 8, 1904.&nbsp;<span class="fnarrow">↑&nbsp;</span><a class="fnreturn" href="#n498.1src" title="Return to note 1(a) in text.">a</a> <a class="fnreturn" href="#xd31e6697src" title="Return to note 1(b) in text.">b</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e6767">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e6767src">2</a></span> See the long letter in the London Times of August 8, 1906, from an unimpeachable authority—the
-author of the Oriental Series, nearly forty years in the Far East.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e6767src" title="Return to note 2 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div id="ch54" class="div1 chapter"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1291">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="label">CHAPTER LIV.</h2>
-<h2 class="main">CHŌ-SEN: A PROVINCE OF JAPAN.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Chō-sen is the official name of the country described in this volume and now a province
-of Japan, as declared in the Act of Annexation of August, 1910. Thus its oldest name,
-now to be better known to the world, is also its newest. Since 1392 the natives have
-known no other. The Chinese characters for Chō-sen, or Morning Calm, were stamped
-on the first and earlier editions of this book. The Japanese name of the capital is
-Kéijo.
-</p>
-<p>By the Russo-Japanese war, Corea was saved from being a Russian province and the king
-and court given the supreme occasion of reform, which, if carried out, would mean
-new national life. Corea would have remained a sovereign state, had the chief ruler
-and the governing classes risen to their opportunity.
-</p>
-<p>It was not to be. With despotism in the palace and a lettered class bound in cast-iron
-traditions, but profoundly ignorant of the world and the century, there lay beneath
-an oppressed populace, steeped in superstition, for which the Government did nothing.
-Lacking an intelligent middle class between, reform in Corea, except from without,
-was perhaps morally impossible.
-</p>
-<p>Old Corea, an unreformed Oriental state, with all the features inseparably associated
-with such a society, was thus described by Lord Curzon in 1894:
-</p>
-<p>“A royal figure-head, enveloped in the mystery of the palace and the harem, surrounded
-by concentric rings of eunuchs, Ministers of State, officials and retainers, and rendered
-almost intangible by the predominant atmosphere of intrigue; a hierarchy of office-holders
-and office-seekers, who are leeches in the thinnest disguise; a feeble and insignificant
-army, an impecunious exchequer, a debased currency, and an impoverished people—these
-are the invariable <span class="pageNum" id="pb508">[<a href="#pb508">508</a>]</span>symptoms of the fast-vanishing <i>régime</i> of the older and unredeemed Oriental type. Add to these the first swarming of the
-flock of foreign practitioners who scent the enfeebled constitution from afar and
-from the four winds of Heaven come pressing their <span class="corr" id="xd31e6800" title="Source: pharmacopæia">pharmacopœia</span> of loans, concessions, banks, mints, factories, and all the recognized machinery
-for filling Western purses at the expense of Eastern pockets, and you have a fair
-picture of Korea as she stands after ten years of emergence from her long seclusion
-and enjoyment of the intercourse of the nations.”
-</p>
-<p>Corea as represented by the yang-ban, or ruling class, numbering with their families
-200,000 souls, was dragged suddenly out into the world’s light and confronted with
-vital problems. Without that long interior intellectual preparation which enabled
-Japan in the nick of time to meet her new duties, the Coreans were neither able nor
-willing to grapple with the colossal tasks awaiting them. Yet this was no fault of
-the plain people, for it is to their credit that they welcomed foreigners. Except
-a morbid curiosity as to alien persons and ways, they have ever shown kindness, and
-politeness so far as they knew it. With amazing promptness the spiritually hungry
-and thirsty masses have responded with grateful appreciation to what their foreign
-teachers brought them. One secret of their readiness and docility lies in the fact
-that they were glad to be delivered from the oppression of rulers, whose one idea
-of government meant the grinding of the people for private benefit.
-</p>
-<p>After the treaty of November 17, 1905, by which a Resident-General from Japan was
-established in Seoul, and which took control of the foreign relations and affairs
-of the little kingdom, it was found that few of those who could have effected national
-reform gave any indication of their desire to do so. In 1907 a fresh agreement was
-made, “with the object of speedily providing for the wealth of Corea and of promoting
-its welfare,” and the Japanese Government spent millions of dollars in schemes of
-practical advantage to the Coreans. When, after four years, it was found that the
-age-old abuses continued, and reform by natives seemed impossible, the formal annexation
-of Corea was consummated on August 29, 1910. The full text of the treaty, in eight
-articles, with preamble, etc., and English translation, is printed in the <span class="pageNum" id="pb509">[<a href="#pb509">509</a>]</span><i>Journal of International Law</i> (<i lang="fr">Revue de Droit International</i>) for December, 1910, published in Tokio.
-</p>
-<p>The Amalgamation Convention provides:<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e6814src" href="#xd31e6814">1</a>
-</p>
-<p>“(1) The Emperor of Corea shall concede to the Emperor of Japan the Corean sovereignty,
-together with all territorial rights.
-</p>
-<p>“(2) The Sovereign Imperial Household is to be treated as a quasi-Imperial Family
-of Japan, continuing to have the annual allowance of 1,500,000 <i>yen</i>, while members of the Imperial Family and meritorious persons of the country are
-to be created peers, or endowed with certain grants.
-</p>
-<p>“(3) The name Corea shall be changed into ‘Chō-sen.’
-</p>
-<p>“(4) The Corean Cabinet being abolished, the Residency-General shall be changed into
-a government of Governor-General, while as to the administrative business and customs
-tariff, there will be no change for the present.”
-</p>
-<p>The cost to Japan of the amalgamation is estimated at <i>yen</i>, 30,000,000, or $15,000,000. Seventy-five Coreans of distinguished families were
-created peers of Japan, and the monetary grants in <i>yen</i> were conferred as follows: to a baron, 50,000; to a viscount, 100,000; to a count,
-150,000; and to a marquis, 200,000. As with the kugé, or court nobles, to prevent
-waste, the principal is retained in the Imperial Treasury, and the interest promptly
-paid at frequent intervals. Provision has been made for other meritorious persons,
-and the military conscription will not be put in force for ten years yet. Meanwhile,
-besides thousands of Corean students in Tokio, delegations of leading men and women
-of Chō-sen have visited and travelled in Japan.
-</p>
-<p>It has always been a sore spot with the Coreans that the United States refused to
-intervene, though in the first article of the treaty of May 22, 1882, promise was
-made that “if other Powers deal unjustly or oppressively with either Government, the
-other will exert their good offices, on being informed of the case, to bring about
-an amicable arrangement, thus showing their friendly feeling.” Yet apart from the
-settled policy of non-intervention in the affairs of foreign nations, the United States
-was but one of several nations that, with a significant promptness and unanimity,
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb510">[<a href="#pb510">510</a>]</span>gladly called home their legations and handed over the control of Corea to Japan.
-</p>
-<p>There is nothing mysterious to the student in the loss of Corea’s sovereignty and
-her absorption in the Japanese Empire. A survey of her history and a view of the world’s
-movement since 1866 shows inexorably the law of cause and effect. It was the weakness
-of Corea to be not only shut off from the world, but in her hermitage so to exaggerate
-antiquity and its importance as to leave the nation helpless in the modern clash of
-civilizations, when Orient and Occident are meeting to merge into one world society.
-The first infirmity of the Coreans of insular mind arises from long contact with the
-history and literature of the Chinese. Stimulating to the intellect, this has paralyzed
-mental initiative and swamped originality. The Corean imagined that China’s was the
-beginning and end of all wisdom. Added to this was the delusion that a knowledge of
-letters was in itself sufficient to preserve both society and national sovereignty.
-</p>
-<p>Old Japan suffered frightfully, but not fatally, from the same disease. In Corea’s
-case, this insanity of literary pride was exaggerated into a crime when, after 1392,
-the popular religion was ruthlessly destroyed, the people robbed of their teachers,
-and the country given over to superstition and ignorance by a Government which Lieutenant
-Foulk, in 1883, after prolonged tours within the country and study of the details
-of administration, declared was but armed robbery.
-</p>
-<p>There was no political or social unity in the Corean peninsula until the tenth century.
-The chief force in welding together the various tribes and peoples into the astonishing
-unity and similarity now visible among the people and villages from Quelpart to the
-Ever White Mountain was Buddhism. The missionaries of this faith, coming from Thibet
-and China, gave the peninsulars art, architecture, literature, folk-lore, a noble
-path of morals for guidance in this life, vast consolations for the future, and pretty
-much everything that means culture, refinement, and civilization. In very early days,
-before Mikadoism in Japan was formulated into a militant dogma, the islanders and
-the peninsulars, the Japanese and the Coreans, were virtually one and the same people,
-and in about the same stage of civilization. In the reaction of nature <span class="pageNum" id="pb511">[<a href="#pb511">511</a>]</span>upon man and of man upon nature, during ten centuries, the two peoples were differentiated,
-and the two languages—almost exactly the same in structure, thus proving their common
-origin—developed their vocabulary and local pronunciation. The two nations, according
-to their ethnic mixtures, heredity and environment, grew further and further apart.
-Nevertheless, to-day, after a millennium of separation, the underlying elements are
-so much greater than the surface differences that the prospects of an amalgamation
-of the two peoples are decidedly promising.
-</p>
-<p>In the main, the history of Corea is like its landscape. Her political annals, as
-thus far studied, seem like monotonous undergrowth among which loom indistinct figure-heads.
-As bare as her desolated coast or denuded mountains, the scene in historic perspective
-reminds one of the peninsula’s lava beds, her square leagues of disintegrated granite,
-or her waste lands, out of which rise sculptured rocks, and whence emerge the Miryeks,
-or stone colossi, amid ruins surrounded with forests. To a native scholar his nation’s
-chronicles are not without a rugged grandeur of their own, besides a rich coloring
-that recalls the rock-scenery of Corea when looked at in the sunlight.
-</p>
-<p>To the alien student, Buddhism looms as the chief civilizer and the mother of popular
-culture. It is certain that during its thousand years of growth and prosperity in
-the peninsula the people were as one flock led by one shepherd. They were trained
-in what was at least beautiful and human. Corea’s debt to Buddhism is unspeakable.
-Even to-day, in the land so often invaded, desolated, peeled, and scraped by Tartar,
-Chinese, and Japanese marauders, and raided by men from countries called Christian,
-almost everything that remains to touch the imagination, whether in architecture,
-rock sculpture, stone colossus, pagoda, in art, and even in literature, apart from
-erudition, is of Buddhist origin.
-</p>
-<p>When, after <span class="asc">A.D.</span> 1392, the popular faith was banned, its temples, schools, monasteries, and works
-of art destroyed or doomed to decay, its priesthood socially outlawed and oppressed
-even to beggary, the people were left to ignorance and superstition and were as sheep
-without shepherds. They became the prey alike of the ruling classes and of sorcerers
-and fortune-tellers, who, though densely ignorant, lived by their wits and wickedness.
-Parasitic <span class="pageNum" id="pb512">[<a href="#pb512">512</a>]</span>spoilers of all sorts, from the palace to the hovel, thrived, while the people, the
-foundation of the state, existed on life’s narrowest margins. Confucianism, as made
-into a state ritual since 1392, and as interpreted and developed by the yang-ban,
-or educated and office-holding classes, meant neglect of the land, the grinding of
-the people’s faces, the permanent destruction of popular wealth and comfort, the paralysis
-of the motives to industry, and the creation of a standing army of inquisitors, office-seekers,
-and office-holders, and their satellites and hangers-on, with headquarters in Seoul.
-In place of the spiritual bread of Buddhism, the new régime offered a stone. In government,
-instead of the egg for nourishment, they proffered a scorpion—even chronic extortion.
-A great gulf was fixed socially between the men to whom education meant the stifling
-of original thought, a ban on mental initiative and the oppression of the people.
-Monopoly of office and privilege, as held by one class, meant systematic robbery of
-the populace, the Government itself being an engine of oppression by which fewer than
-one-quarter million yang-ban subsisted upon eleven million of the common folk.
-</p>
-<p>When reform was called for which meant public benefit, apart from private rapine or
-individual advantage, manual as well as clerkly labor, continuous and unselfish toil
-with only slight pecuniary reward, the average high-class native proved a total failure.
-Despite the purging from the palace of several hundred women, and over a thousand
-male persons who drew salaries, the remainder within, or parasitic to royalty, proved
-worthless for the remaking of the nation.
-</p>
-<p>Ever under the spell of the Chinese characters, saturated with the ideas of Confucianism
-run to seed, having only one ideal of life—selfish advantage and the subordination
-of the lower classes—devoted to their sensual enjoyments, their long pipes, and their
-liquor, to checker-playing, gossip, and elaborate idleness, the yang-ban during five
-centuries did nothing to develop the soil or the resources of the country. On the
-contrary, the office-holding class systematically hindered the development of wealth,
-or even thrift, by extortion, unjust taxes, and dishonest manipulation of imposts,
-which were paid in kind instead of in coin, by exactions or forced loans never repaid—usually
-under the menace and reality of beating, <span class="pageNum" id="pb513">[<a href="#pb513">513</a>]</span>torture, and imprisonment. One innovation under the Japanese rule, which made taxes
-payable in cash and not in kind, wrought infinite blessing to the people and carried
-consternation to the army of extortioners.
-</p>
-<p>In the modern world-life, Japan and Corea are as necessary to each other as are man
-and woman. It soon became evident to the Tokio Government, after every step, that
-some stronger remedy than advice would be necessary to heal the age-old and deep-seated
-Corean disease that seemed as incurable as leprosy. Hence the measures of 1907, which
-put into the hands of the Mikado’s Resident-General still greater powers.
-</p>
-<p>To this work of reforming Corea, Nippon gave her ablest son, one who, both in feudal
-and constitutional Japan, had dedicated his life to promoting the evolution of the
-modern man. The statesmanship of Ito was that of a lover of humanity, who might well,
-after long and multifarious labors, have taken the rest which he craved and which
-his physical condition demanded. Nevertheless, with his unique experience and amazing
-abilities, he applied himself with unremitting toil to lead the once hermit nation
-into the twentieth century. According to Ito’s motto, “The secret of statesmanship
-consists in securing the contentment of the people.” He was all the better fitted
-for his colossal task by having known so well the late feudal Nippon with its political
-diseases. Neglect of the people and of the soil, official falsehood, and class oppression
-were characteristic of both countries. Ito took all the more encouragement because
-life in Chō-sen was but the mirror of that in old Japan. Having fought belated feudalism
-and grappled with the new problems of a modern state in Asia, none was better equipped
-than he for the task of making a progressive nation out of a people whose mental eyes
-were set even further back in their heads than those of the Chinese.
-</p>
-<p>For while China boasts of Confucius, Corea penetrates further into the primitive.
-She hails as the founder of her social order, Kija (Ki-Tsze, or Kishi, pp. 11–15),
-the distant ancestor of the Chinese sage. On this nursery fairy tale of the nation—since
-the peninsulars knew nothing of writing until, long after the Christian era, they
-obtained the Chinese ideographs—every Corean for a thousand years or more has been
-brought up. The early mythology <span class="pageNum" id="pb514">[<a href="#pb514">514</a>]</span>and legend of the peninsulars are about as trustworthy as those of the neighboring
-islanders, whose conceit of antiquity was once fully as great and whose official and
-orthodox chronology was fixed and published so long ago as <span class="asc">A.D.</span> 1872!
-</p>
-<p>This myth of Kija, as the actual founder of civilization east of the Yalu, took its
-literary form only in the eighth century, when the Coreans had become saturated with
-Chinese ideas. Then the peninsulars, made acquainted with Chinese historiography,
-and having but one model before them, faithfully followed it (as did the Japanese
-also), the Coreans surpassing even the greater nation in pride of antiquity and in
-the glorification of heroes, who loom up in vaster proportions according as the unrecorded
-centuries multiply and recede into the past. Historical science has already begun
-to change this perspective of antiquity as surely as hospitals have furnished object-lessons
-in the law of cause and effect. Corean gods and demons, more numerous even than old
-Japan’s mythical menagerie and pantheon, are being steadily banished to the realms
-of fairy-land.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e6868src" href="#xd31e6868">2</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ito, scorning delights and living laborious days, continued the labors, but vastly
-enlarged the plans of his predecessors. First of all, having deported hundreds of
-the bad subjects of the Mikado and curbed the rapacity and brutality of his own countrymen,
-he applied himself unceasingly to healing the wounds of war, to indemnifying the unjustly
-impoverished natives, and to giving Corea what she never had—or, if possessed of,
-had allowed to lapse during the five hundred years of the dynasty that had destroyed
-the people’s religion and had done nothing for national development. A system of good
-roads, honest coinage and currency, courts and justice, popular education, afforestation
-of the mountains, improvement of the soil through scientific agriculture and reclamation
-of waste land, preventive hygiene, honest taxation and collection now exists. Ito
-cleansed the palace, separating the functions of Court and Government, lessening by
-fifty per cent. the number of persons paid from the public treasury, both male and
-female, removing as far as possible the king and his advisers from the great mob of
-sorcerers, fortune-tellers, geomancers, and others who <span class="pageNum" id="pb515">[<a href="#pb515">515</a>]</span>prey upon the Corean people. The deposition of the incompetent emperor and the installation
-of his son in power were followed by the education of the crown prince in Tokio.
-</p>
-<p>The difficulties in the way of reform were appalling. The principal obstacles existed
-in the two classes of which Corean society is composed—oppressors and oppressed. The
-yang-ban, or privileged men, with more or less scholarship of a Chinese kind, seemed
-to have no conception of patriotism apart from pelf. Their chief trait was political
-vampirism. On the other hand, the supine attitude of the common people, accustomed
-for centuries to systematic oppression, was discouraging. To them even decent government,
-that is, the kind which could be tolerated to the point of rebellion, meant the grace
-of their masters and rule without robbery. One of the striking features of nearly
-every Corean town or city is seen in the long rows of tablets in stone or iron that
-celebrate the merits of “good,” that is, fairly decent, governors. A collection of
-all the local instruments of torture, stacked in one museum, would be impressive and
-furnish fuel for a vast conflagration.
-</p>
-<p>In education, progress was hampered by the general prevalence of fanaticism on the
-subject of “race suicide” and in the absurd measures taken for its prevention—measures
-that largely tend to hinder the end in view. In Corea the marriage and birth rate
-may possibly be in excess of that of any country in the world, while, almost as matter
-of course, and as a scientific corollary, the same may be said of the death rate,
-which, owing to superstition, ignorance, and dirt, is appalling. Corea, despite shining
-white clothes, is not a land of bath-tubs. In the schools, nearly all the boys were
-found to be married, and to girls older than themselves. These over-mature youths,
-of antediluvian frame of mind, too often seem to have eyes set too far back in their
-heads, which fix their gaze on duties appropriate to the time of Confucius rather
-than of the twentieth century.
-</p>
-<p>We have glanced at this subject before. Yet even to-day, with all the advantages afforded
-them, there is danger. Expecting, like their fathers before them, to be verse-makers,
-to quote from the ancient Chinese, to be literary, and to hold office, because of
-a knowledge of the characters, the young Corean yang-ban are indifferent to useful
-progress and scorn manual labor. Having already <span class="pageNum" id="pb516">[<a href="#pb516">516</a>]</span>lost nearly everything, they will, unless radically changed in mind, lose all. The
-one hope of Chō-sen is the raising up in a generation, now under new influences, of
-a new type of humanity. The Christian schools and churches are supplying this need.
-</p>
-<p>Indeed, the fall of yang-banism and the extinction of Corea’s sovereignty means Buddhism’s
-opportunity. It will be both logical and natural that one of the first effects of
-Christian missions will be, as in Japan, to quicken the spirit and improve the form
-and power of the older religion. Nor ought missionaries fear its vigorous competition,
-should it become potent for the abolition of demon-worship and the moral uplift of
-the masses otherwise neglected, especially in out-of-the-way places.
-</p>
-<p>Unfortunately, Corea of mediæval mind, like barbarous Japan of not so many years ago,
-sought a remedy for supposed wrongs in assassination. Rashly unintelligent, sword
-and bullet were resorted to in order to stop the car of progress. Quick to misjudge
-and impatient to wait for results, the assassin selected as his first victims his
-country’s best friends. The weak and disappointed tried suicide as a remedy and deterrent.
-The insurgents in the so-called Righteous Army, too often were robbers of their own
-people. In the name of patriotism they attempted redress, seeking to turn back “modern
-civilization which rides on a powder cart.” The list of Coreans who in cowardice or
-discouragement died by their own hands, who were slaughtered by their own compatriots,
-who fell beneath the bullets or the swords of rebels in civil strife, or who were
-mown down by the resistless fire of the Japanese infantry, is sadly great.<a class="noteRef" id="xd31e6885src" href="#xd31e6885">3</a>
-</p>
-<p>The Mikado’s soldiers were perhaps frequently unable to distinguish between the deserving
-and the undeserving. Their actions are not absolutely free from criticism. Yet with
-unrestrained frankness the statistics of the military operations are given in the
-Annual Reports on Reforms and Progress in Korea, in 1907, 1908–9, and 1909–10. From
-July, 1907, when the riots broke out in Seoul, on account of the disbanding of the
-Corean army, to the end of 1908, there were of Japanese soldiers 179 killed and 277
-wounded, besides 67 Japanese residents killed in 1907 and 16 in 1908. Of Corean <span class="pageNum" id="pb517">[<a href="#pb517">517</a>]</span>insurgents, 14,566 were “killed.” Besides positive military measures, the Corean Emperor’s
-rescripts urging those in arms to submit quietly were effective, and the total of
-those who surrendered and were pardoned to December 13, 1907, was 8,728. During the
-fiscal year 1909 the Japanese lost 38 men, but the number of insurgents killed (3,001),
-wounded, captured, or surrendered was 6,131. Those in arms who yielded or asked pardon
-were given employment in road-making and other useful occupations. By 1911, most of
-the activity of native insurgent bands had degenerated into the work of mere banditti.
-Military movements on a large scale were not required, and much of the desolation
-of villages was repaired with better hope of more comfortable existence. Frightful
-as is this frank showing, it is doubtful whether more lives were lost in the suppression
-of rebellion, from 1907 to 1911, than in the nearly chronic anarchy that prevailed
-in the southern provinces during the previous decade and a half.
-</p>
-<p>The Annual Reports above referred to show by text, pictures, and statistics, not only
-the purpose and results of the Japanese Government, but also the fearful cost of restoring
-order, a cost of life and treasure aggravated both by natives who have not scrupled
-to use the torch, the mulct, and the assassin’s weapon on their own native soil, and
-by foreigners who, in the name of liberty, abused the freedom of the press and kept
-the useless and dangerous embers of sedition in a flame. Not satisfied with murder
-at home, Coreans have made the United States, already the happy hunting ground of
-the Black Hand and the lyncher, the arena of their cowardly exploits.
-</p>
-<p>After Mr. Durham White Stevens, an American of long experience in the Far East, and
-Diplomatic Adviser to the Corean Government, had been shot and killed in San Francisco
-by a Corean, the most shining mark was Corea’s best friend, Ito. Made a prince and
-rewarded with every mark of honor possible to a subject by the Emperor of Japan, this
-man who, in unquailing discharge of his duty, had already braved the Japanese feudal
-sword wielded by cowards in Choshiu, and the infuriated Tokio mob in constitutional
-Japan, and who seemed immune from the assassins of which old Japan raised such a luxuriant
-crop, fell in Manchuria at the Harbin railway station, on October 26, 1909, before
-the <span class="pageNum" id="pb518">[<a href="#pb518">518</a>]</span>bullets of the petty revenger, who shot from behind. Amid the grief and the honor
-of the whole world, on November 4, 1909, Ito was given a State funeral such as has
-been bestowed upon few subjects of Japan. Ito shed his blood in the cause of peace.
-Whether these assassinations hastened the absorption of Corea by Japan, and the blotting
-out of a sovereignty unknown to the world until Japan, by peaceful diplomacy, conferred
-it in 1876, is not known. The Emperor at once appointed General Viscount Terauchi,
-then Minister of War, and already famous for his brilliant military record and notable
-organizing abilities, to be the successor of Ito in Corea. The record for energetic
-action, consummate tact, and ceaseless toil already made by Terauchi places his name
-very near that of Ito as a modern civilizer and lover of the victories of peace even
-more than those of war.
-</p>
-<p>Despite all the instances of individual wrong, private injustices, and public mistakes
-made by the Japanese in Corea, and in view of the severe criticisms of Terauchi by
-such leading Japanese newspapers as the <i>Kokumin</i> and <i>Kochi</i>, it is nevertheless manifest that the policy of the Tokio Government is antipodally
-the reverse of that of Hidéyoshi. Instead of the Ear-tomb, and the scooping of Corea
-clean of her artists, artisans, potters, and art treasures, there rise to-day the
-school, the hospital, and the temples of justice and finance. Plans are being perfected
-for the development of the soil and of the wealth of the nation, in the interest of
-the people, while to the missionary and alien philanthropist is given all encouragement.
-A new land survey is in operation for the equalization of taxes. Light-houses have
-reduced the dangers of a foggy and treacherous coast. Harbor works are in course of
-construction; well-made common roads are decreasing the difficulty of transport; while
-these and the highways of steel continually increase the value of the arable lands
-and of town lots. Rivers, even the wide Yalu and Han, are spanned by bridges. Many
-a place, historic because of war, is now famous for its commercial and industrial
-development. Piracy gives way before policemen in steam launches, and chronic brigandage
-is dying out. In all that relates directly to humanity, the reform of the judiciary
-methods of justice, prison procedure, the codification of laws, etc., the progress
-is marvellous. At the head of the judicial department is a Christian, Judge Watanabé,
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb519">[<a href="#pb519">519</a>]</span>and many men of this faith, Japanese and Corean, fill other high offices. Special
-schools, of medicine, surgery, nursing, scientific agriculture, forestry, live-stock
-improvement and manual training, are preparing young men and women to raise the standard
-of human life in Chō-sen and to reclaim the sixty-six per cent. of the arable land
-in the peninsula which has lain waste.
-</p>
-<p>The absorption of Corea by Japan has given the astonishingly successful Christian
-missionary work a new environment, and one for the better, despite the manifest dangers
-of misunderstanding arising temporarily from the political situation and the eager
-readiness of a few Japanese press correspondents to misrepresent. With full religious
-liberty, and under the protection of a firm, orderly, and impartial government, the
-great work of raising up the new type of man and woman in Chō-sen, now one of the
-most promising of mission fields, proceeds. In the Christian household, numbering
-roughly about 200,000, we discern the best promise for Chō-sen’s future. Into his
-new world of hope and cheer, the native, when enlightened and converted, brings the
-richest inheritances of the national culture, the best results of his training, and
-the most winning traits of his character. This is strikingly shown in the general
-eagerness to read and study the Holy Scriptures, in the wonderful powers of memory,
-and in the committing of large portions of the Bible, which is now accessible in the
-vernacular. The native’s generosity, good-nature, power of self-support, mutual desire
-and practice of helpfulness, patience, and power to endure persecution of any and
-all sorts fit him admirably for Christian service.
-</p>
-<p>Christianity has come to Corea to reveal the national treasures that are enduring.
-For centuries the beautiful phonetic alphabet, en-mun, and syllabary Nido (p. 47),
-lay neglected and scorned by the learned. Yet this was but one of many elements of
-potency for good that lay unused like barren rocks. At the smiting of the missionaries’
-hand of faith gushed forth the waters of life and healing. The new messages of hope
-and salvation came to the people not only in their own tongue, but in their own script.
-Christian teachers, after long years of discouragement, have made, through the patience
-of hope, of love and sympathy, a real conquest of the Corean heart. The faces of men
-and women are lighted up with <span class="pageNum" id="pb520">[<a href="#pb520">520</a>]</span>a new glow of interest in life here and hereafter as they find both body and soul
-ministered to by their friends from afar. With this spiritual invitation and challenge
-to enter into the promised land fully accepted by the Coreans, it is not too wild
-a dream to imagine even the strong conqueror conquered by the weaker. Samson’s experience
-and his riddle may be the Corean’s. Chō-sen may yet be to Nippon what Palestine was
-to Greece and Rome. Bereft of political sovereignty, from the land of the Hebrews
-went forth that salvation which “is of the Jews” to conquer Europe and the world.
-Already, by closer contact of the humbler classes of the two nations on Corean soil,
-the paganism of rustic Japan—hitherto almost untouched by the gospel—begins to disintegrate
-and ferment because of the leaven brought from Christian Chō-sen. This has the Corean
-left—and perhaps more abundantly than ever before—“power to become” the spiritual
-regenerator of Japan.
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb521">[<a href="#pb521">521</a>]</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="footnotes">
-<hr class="fnsep">
-<div class="footnote-body">
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e6814">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e6814src">1</a></span> <i>The Japan Mail</i>, August 27, 1910.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e6814src" title="Return to note 1 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e6868">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e6868src">2</a></span> See “The Unmannerly Tiger and Other Korean Fairy Tales,” by W.&nbsp;E. Griffis, New York,
-1911.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e6868src" title="Return to note 2 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-<div class="fndiv" id="xd31e6885">
-<p class="footnote"><span class="fnlabel"><a class="noteRef" href="#xd31e6885src">3</a></span> See also “The Tragedy of Korea,” by H.&nbsp;A. McKenzie, London, 1908.&nbsp;<a class="fnarrow" href="#xd31e6885src" title="Return to note 3 in text.">↑</a></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="back">
-<div id="ix" class="div1 index"><span class="pageNum">[<a href="#xd31e1298">Contents</a>]</span><div class="divHead">
-<h2 class="main">INDEX.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="divBody">
-<p class="first">Aborigines, <a href="#pb11" class="pageref">11</a>, <a href="#pb34" class="pageref">34</a>
-</p>
-<p>Adams, Arthur, <a href="#pb4" class="pageref">4</a>
-</p>
-<p>Adams, Will, <a href="#pb168" class="pageref">168</a>, <a href="#pb169" class="pageref">169</a>
-</p>
-<p>Adoption, <a href="#pb259" class="pageref">259</a>, <a href="#pb260" class="pageref">260</a>
-</p>
-<p>Agriculture, <a href="#pb198" class="pageref">198</a>, <a href="#pb298" class="pageref">298</a>, <a href="#pb443" class="pageref">443</a>–447
-</p>
-<p>Ai-chiu, <a href="#pb8" class="pageref">8</a>, <a href="#pb180" class="pageref">180</a>, <a href="#pb348" class="pageref">348</a>, <a href="#pb364" class="pageref">364</a>, <a href="#pb365" class="pageref">365</a>. <i>See Wiju.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Allen, Horace N., <a href="#pb468" class="pageref">468</a>, <a href="#pb470" class="pageref">470</a>, <a href="#pb490" class="pageref">490</a>
-</p>
-<p>Alligators, <a href="#pb198" class="pageref">198</a>
-</p>
-<p>Alphabets, <a href="#pb38" class="pageref">38</a>, <a href="#pb47" class="pageref">47</a>, <a href="#pb67" class="pageref">67</a>
-</p>
-<p>Amana, <a href="#pb31" class="pageref">31</a>
-</p>
-<p>American Relations with Corea, <a href="#pb388" class="pageref">388</a>–419, <a href="#pb428" class="pageref">428</a>, <a href="#pb429" class="pageref">429</a>, <a href="#pb431" class="pageref">431</a>, <a href="#pb434" class="pageref">434</a>, <a href="#pb435" class="pageref">435</a>, <a href="#pb459" class="pageref">459</a>–462
-</p>
-<p>Americans in Seoul, <a href="#pb461" class="pageref">461</a>
-</p>
-<p>An-am, <a href="#pb117" class="pageref">117</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ancestor-worship, <a href="#pb78" class="pageref">78</a>, <a href="#pb328" class="pageref">328</a>, <a href="#pb351" class="pageref">351</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ancestral tablets, <a href="#pb78" class="pageref">78</a>, <a href="#pb351" class="pageref">351</a>
-</p>
-<p>Angell, Hon. J. B., <a href="#pb430" class="pageref">430</a>
-</p>
-<p>Arabs in Corea, <a href="#pb1" class="pageref">1</a>, <a href="#pb2" class="pageref">2</a>, <a href="#pb48" class="pageref">48</a>, <a href="#pb69" class="pageref">69</a>
-</p>
-<p>Archery, <a href="#pb151" class="pageref">151</a>, <a href="#pb293" class="pageref">293</a>, <a href="#pb164" class="pageref">164</a>
-</p>
-<p>Archipelago of Corea, <a href="#pb4" class="pageref">4</a>
-</p>
-<p>Architecture, <a href="#pb135" class="pageref">135</a>, <a href="#pb136" class="pageref">136</a>, <a href="#pb262" class="pageref">262</a>
-</p>
-<p>Area of Corea, <a href="#pb3" class="pageref">3</a>, <a href="#pb447" class="pageref">447</a>
-</p>
-<p>Armor, <a href="#pb58" class="pageref">58</a>, <a href="#pb101" class="pageref">101</a>, <a href="#pb102" class="pageref">102</a>, <a href="#pb125" class="pageref">125</a>, <a href="#pb153" class="pageref">153</a>
-</p>
-<p>Arms, <a href="#pb58" class="pageref">58</a>, <a href="#pb101" class="pageref">101</a>, <a href="#pb102" class="pageref">102</a>, <a href="#pb140" class="pageref">140</a>. <i>See Sword.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Art, <a href="#pb1" class="pageref">1</a>, <a href="#pb33" class="pageref">33</a>, <a href="#pb48" class="pageref">48</a>, <a href="#pb220" class="pageref">220</a>, <a href="#pb331" class="pageref">331</a>, <a href="#pb264" class="pageref">264</a>, <a href="#pb300" class="pageref">300</a>–304, <a href="#pb330" class="pageref">330</a>
-</p>
-<p>Asiatic Society, <a href="#pb460" class="pageref">460</a>, <a href="#pb461" class="pageref">461</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ashikaga, <a href="#pb85" class="pageref">85</a>, <a href="#pb86" class="pageref">86</a>, <a href="#pb127" class="pageref">127</a>, <a href="#pb330" class="pageref">330</a>
-</p>
-<p>Arthur, President, <a href="#pb460" class="pageref">460</a>
-</p>
-<p>Aston, Mr. W. G., <a href="#pb338" class="pageref">338</a>, <a href="#pb460" class="pageref">460</a>, <a href="#pb464" class="pageref">464</a>
-</p>
-<p>Austin, Don. <i>See Konishi.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Baiji. <i>See Hiaksai.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Barbara Taylor, The, <a href="#pb424" class="pageref">424</a>
-</p>
-<p>Bears, <a href="#pb294" class="pageref">294</a>
-</p>
-<p>Beds, <a href="#pb263" class="pageref">263</a>
-</p>
-<p>Belcher, Captain Edward, <a href="#pb366" class="pageref">366</a>
-</p>
-<p>Bellonet, Mons., <a href="#pb377" class="pageref">377</a>, <a href="#pb386" class="pageref">386</a>
-</p>
-<p>Bernadou, J. G., <a href="#pb460" class="pageref">460</a>, <a href="#pb467" class="pageref">467</a>
-</p>
-<p><span class="corr" id="xd31e7259" title="Source: Berneaux">Berneux</span>, Bishop, <a href="#pb372" class="pageref">372</a>–373
-</p>
-<p>Bianca Portia, The, <a href="#pb428" class="pageref">428</a>
-</p>
-<p>Bingham, Hon. J., <a href="#pb430" class="pageref">430</a>
-</p>
-<p>Birds, <a href="#pb7" class="pageref">7</a>, <a href="#pb195" class="pageref">195</a>
-</p>
-<p>Blake, Com. Homer C., <a href="#pb409" class="pageref">409</a>, <a href="#pb412" class="pageref">412</a>
-</p>
-<p>Boats, <a href="#pb75" class="pageref">75</a>, <a href="#pb195" class="pageref">195</a>, <a href="#pb365" class="pageref">365</a>, <a href="#pb368" class="pageref">368</a>
-</p>
-<p>Bombs, <a href="#pb112" class="pageref">112</a>, <a href="#pb372" class="pageref">372</a>
-</p>
-<p>Books, <a href="#pb67" class="pageref">67</a>, <a href="#pb220" class="pageref">220</a>, <a href="#pb491" class="pageref">491</a>
-</p>
-<p>Border Gate, <a href="#pb83" class="pageref">83</a>, <a href="#pb158" class="pageref">158</a>, <a href="#pb180" class="pageref">180</a>, <a href="#pb364" class="pageref">364</a>
-</p>
-<p>Boxers, <a href="#pb474" class="pageref">474</a>, <a href="#pb489" class="pageref">489</a>, <a href="#pb490" class="pageref">490</a>
-</p>
-<p>Bridges, <a href="#pb258" class="pageref">258</a>, <a href="#pb285" class="pageref">285</a>, <a href="#pb486" class="pageref">486</a>
-</p>
-<p>Broughton, Captain, <a href="#pb203" class="pageref">203</a>, <a href="#pb214" class="pageref">214</a>
-</p>
-<p>Brown, McLeavy, <a href="#pb470" class="pageref">470</a>, <a href="#pb487" class="pageref">487</a>
-</p>
-<p>Buddhism, <a href="#pb35" class="pageref">35</a>, <a href="#pb39" class="pageref">39</a>, <a href="#pb66" class="pageref">66</a>, <a href="#pb67" class="pageref">67</a>, <a href="#pb80" class="pageref">80</a>, <a href="#pb81" class="pageref">81</a>, <a href="#pb96" class="pageref">96</a>, <a href="#pb154" class="pageref">154</a>, <a href="#pb330" class="pageref">330</a>–334, <a href="#pb337" class="pageref">337</a>–338, <a href="#pb473" class="pageref">473</a>
-</p>
-<p>Buddhist priests, <a href="#pb36" class="pageref">36</a>, <a href="#pb65" class="pageref">65</a>, <a href="#pb332" class="pageref">332</a>–333, <a href="#pb485" class="pageref">485</a>
-</p>
-<p>Budget, <a href="#pb454" class="pageref">454</a>
-</p>
-<p>Burial, <a href="#pb278" class="pageref">278</a>–279
-</p>
-<p>Cabinet, <a href="#pb480" class="pageref">480</a>, <a href="#pb484" class="pageref">484</a>
-</p>
-<p>Calendar, <a href="#pb489" class="pageref">489</a>
-</p>
-<p>Card playing, <a href="#pb295" class="pageref">295</a>, <a href="#pb369" class="pageref">369</a>
-</p>
-<p>Caricatures, <a href="#pb228" class="pageref">228</a>–229
-</p>
-<p>Cattle, <a href="#pb7" class="pageref">7</a>, <a href="#pb198" class="pageref">198</a>, <a href="#pb201" class="pageref">201</a>, <a href="#pb354" class="pageref">354</a>, <a href="#pb364" class="pageref">364</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ceramic art, <a href="#pb149" class="pageref">149</a>, <a href="#pb200" class="pageref">200</a>, <a href="#pb264" class="pageref">264</a>
-</p>
-<p>Cespedes, <a href="#pb121" class="pageref">121</a>–124
-</p>
-<p>Chamberlain, Mr. Basil Hall, <a href="#pb59" class="pageref">59</a>
-</p>
-<p>Chemulpo, <a href="#pb429" class="pageref">429</a>, <a href="#pb439" class="pageref">439</a>, <a href="#pb467" class="pageref">467</a>, <a href="#pb476" class="pageref">476</a>, <a href="#pb495" class="pageref">495</a>
-</p>
-<p>China, The, <a href="#pb396" class="pageref">396</a>–402
-</p>
-<p>Chin-chiu, <a href="#pb124" class="pageref">124</a>, <a href="#pb125" class="pageref">125</a>
-</p>
-<p>Chinese in Corea, <a href="#pb462" class="pageref">462</a>–468, <a href="#pb475" class="pageref">475</a>–478
-</p>
-<p>Chin Ikei, <a href="#pb109" class="pageref">109</a>, <a href="#pb118" class="pageref">118</a>, <a href="#pb124" class="pageref">124</a>, <a href="#pb128" class="pageref">128</a>
-</p>
-<p>Chinnampo, <a href="#pb455" class="pageref">455</a>
-</p>
-<p>Chino-Japanese war, <a href="#pb471" class="pageref">471</a>–478
-</p>
-<p>Civilization, <a href="#pb447" class="pageref">447</a>, <a href="#pb451" class="pageref">451</a>, <a href="#pb452" class="pageref">452</a>
-</p>
-<p>Cholera, <a href="#pb309" class="pageref">309</a>
-</p>
-<p>Choi, <a href="#pb473" class="pageref">473</a>, <a href="#pb474" class="pageref">474</a>
-</p>
-<p>Chosan harbor, <a href="#pb203" class="pageref">203</a>
-</p>
-<p>Christianity, Roman, <a href="#pb93" class="pageref">93</a>, <a href="#pb121" class="pageref">121</a>–123, <a href="#pb124" class="pageref">124</a>–128, <a href="#pb347" class="pageref">347</a>–376, <a href="#pb413" class="pageref">413</a>, <a href="#pb442" class="pageref">442</a>, <a href="#pb469" class="pageref">469</a>
-</p>
-<p>Christianity, Reformed, <a href="#pb450" class="pageref">450</a>, <a href="#pb451" class="pageref">451</a>, <a href="#pb457" class="pageref">457</a>, <a href="#pb468" class="pageref">468</a>, <a href="#pb491" class="pageref">491</a>, <a href="#pb492" class="pageref">492</a>
-</p>
-<p>Chulla-dō, <a href="#pb197" class="pageref">197</a>–201
-</p>
-<p>Church and State, <a href="#pb472" class="pageref">472</a>
-</p>
-<p>Chrysanthemum, <a href="#pb298" class="pageref">298</a>
-</p>
-<p>Cleveland, President, <a href="#pb470" class="pageref">470</a>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb522">[<a href="#pb522">522</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Climate, <a href="#pb5" class="pageref">5</a>, <a href="#pb6" class="pageref">6</a>, <a href="#pb172" class="pageref">172</a>
-</p>
-<p>Clocks, <a href="#pb136" class="pageref">136</a>, <a href="#pb344" class="pageref">344</a>
-</p>
-<p>Coins, <a href="#pb10" class="pageref">10</a>, <a href="#pb18" class="pageref">18</a>, <a href="#pb34" class="pageref">34</a>, <a href="#pb69" class="pageref">69</a>, <a href="#pb425" class="pageref">425</a>, <a href="#pb479" class="pageref">479</a>
-</p>
-<p>Comets, <a href="#pb173" class="pageref">173</a>, <a href="#pb175" class="pageref">175</a>
-</p>
-<p>Compass. <i>See Magnetic Needle.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Confucianism, <a href="#pb80" class="pageref">80</a>, <a href="#pb81" class="pageref">81</a>, <a href="#pb327" class="pageref">327</a>–330, <a href="#pb344" class="pageref">344</a>, <a href="#pb347" class="pageref">347</a>, <a href="#pb473" class="pageref">473</a>
-</p>
-<p>Corea a Japanese Protectorate, <a href="#pb497" class="pageref">497</a>–506
-</p>
-<p>Corea and Japan, <a href="#pb476" class="pageref">476</a>, <a href="#pb489" class="pageref">489</a>, <a href="#pb495" class="pageref">495</a>
-</p>
-<p>Corea-Manchurian frontier, <a href="#pb156" class="pageref">156</a>, <a href="#pb157" class="pageref">157</a>, <a href="#pb494" class="pageref">494</a>
-</p>
-<p>Coreans in China, <a href="#pb44" class="pageref">44</a>, <a href="#pb48" class="pageref">48</a>, <a href="#pb160" class="pageref">160</a>, <a href="#pb432" class="pageref">432</a>
-</p>
-<p>Coreans in Japan, <a href="#pb38" class="pageref">38</a>, <a href="#pb39" class="pageref">39</a>, <a href="#pb60" class="pageref">60</a>, <a href="#pb61" class="pageref">61</a>, <a href="#pb423" class="pageref">423</a>, <a href="#pb427" class="pageref">427</a>, <a href="#pb432" class="pageref">432</a>, <a href="#pb459" class="pageref">459</a>
-</p>
-<p>Coreans in Russia, <a href="#pb212" class="pageref">212</a>–213, <a href="#pb220" class="pageref">220</a>
-</p>
-<p>Coria, <a href="#pb85" class="pageref">85</a>
-</p>
-<p>Cossacks, <a href="#pb494" class="pageref">494</a>
-</p>
-<p>Costume, <a href="#pb81" class="pageref">81</a>, <a href="#pb273" class="pageref">273</a>–276
-</p>
-<p>Cotton, <a href="#pb153" class="pageref">153</a>, <a href="#pb444" class="pageref">444</a>, <a href="#pb456" class="pageref">456</a>
-</p>
-<p><i lang="fr">Coup d’état</i>, <a href="#pb463" class="pageref">463</a>–468
-</p>
-<p>Cowan, Dr. Frank, <a href="#pb427" class="pageref">427</a>
-</p>
-<p><span class="corr" id="xd31e7853" title="Source: Coxingo">Coxinga</span>, <a href="#pb162" class="pageref">162</a>
-</p>
-<p>Cremation, <a href="#pb278" class="pageref">278</a>
-</p>
-<p>Currency, <a href="#pb454" class="pageref">454</a>
-</p>
-<p>Dagelet Island, <a href="#pb110" class="pageref">110</a>, <a href="#pb206" class="pageref">206</a>
-</p>
-<p>Dalny, <a href="#pb496" class="pageref">496</a>
-</p>
-<p>Dan Kun, <a href="#pb12" class="pageref">12</a>, <a href="#pb308" class="pageref">308</a>
-</p>
-<p>Decorations, <a href="#pb453" class="pageref">453</a>, <a href="#pb454" class="pageref">454</a>
-</p>
-<p>Diet, <a href="#pb267" class="pageref">267</a>, <a href="#pb268" class="pageref">268</a>
-</p>
-<p>Dinners, <a href="#pb268" class="pageref">268</a>, <a href="#pb464" class="pageref">464</a>
-</p>
-<p>Dogs, <a href="#pb52" class="pageref">52</a>, <a href="#pb54" class="pageref">54</a>, <a href="#pb267" class="pageref">267</a>, <a href="#pb304" class="pageref">304</a>, <a href="#pb468" class="pageref">468</a>
-</p>
-<p>Dragon, <a href="#pb301" class="pageref">301</a>, <a href="#pb302" class="pageref">302</a>
-</p>
-<p>Don Austin. <i>See Konishi.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Dutch. <i>See Hollanders.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Ear-monument, <a href="#pb133" class="pageref">133</a>, <a href="#pb144" class="pageref">144</a>
-</p>
-<p>Education, <a href="#pb337" class="pageref">337</a>–344, <a href="#pb444" class="pageref">444</a>, <a href="#pb445" class="pageref">445</a>, <a href="#pb479" class="pageref">479</a>
-</p>
-<p>Edwards, Rev. Jonathan, <a href="#pb388" class="pageref">388</a>
-</p>
-<p>Embassies from Japan, <a href="#pb1" class="pageref">1</a>, <a href="#pb58" class="pageref">58</a>, <a href="#pb89" class="pageref">89</a>–93
-</p>
-<p>Embassies to Japan, <a href="#pb60" class="pageref">60</a>, <a href="#pb82" class="pageref">82</a>, <a href="#pb85" class="pageref">85</a>, <a href="#pb92" class="pageref">92</a>, <a href="#pb126" class="pageref">126</a>, <a href="#pb149" class="pageref">149</a>, <a href="#pb423" class="pageref">423</a>, <a href="#pb427" class="pageref">427</a>, <a href="#pb432" class="pageref">432</a>
-</p>
-<p>Embassy to United States, <a href="#pb459" class="pageref">459</a>, <a href="#pb460" class="pageref">460</a>
-</p>
-<p>Emigration, <a href="#pb491" class="pageref">491</a>
-</p>
-<p>Emperor of Corea, <a href="#pb487" class="pageref">487</a>
-</p>
-<p>Empire of Corea, <a href="#pb479" class="pageref">479</a>, <a href="#pb487" class="pageref">487</a>, <a href="#pb495" class="pageref">495</a>
-</p>
-<p>Etas, <a href="#pb61" class="pageref">61</a>, <a href="#pb118" class="pageref">118</a>, <a href="#pb334" class="pageref">334</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ethics, <a href="#pb329" class="pageref">329</a>, <a href="#pb360" class="pageref">360</a>, <a href="#pb376" class="pageref">376</a>
-</p>
-<p>Examinations for Civil Service, <a href="#pb339" class="pageref">339</a>, <a href="#pb341" class="pageref">341</a>–343
-</p>
-<p>Fairs, <a href="#pb166" class="pageref">166</a>, <a href="#pb181" class="pageref">181</a>, <a href="#pb215" class="pageref">215</a>, <a href="#pb364" class="pageref">364</a>–365
-</p>
-<p>Falcons, <a href="#pb76" class="pageref">76</a>, <a href="#pb323" class="pageref">323</a>
-</p>
-<p>Fans, <a href="#pb275" class="pageref">275</a>, <a href="#pb298" class="pageref">298</a>
-</p>
-<p>Famine, <a href="#pb58" class="pageref">58</a>, <a href="#pb118" class="pageref">118</a>
-</p>
-<p>Farmers, <a href="#pb443" class="pageref">443</a>–447
-</p>
-<p>Fauna, <a href="#pb7" class="pageref">7</a>, <a href="#pb195" class="pageref">195</a>, <a href="#pb197" class="pageref">197</a>, <a href="#pb198" class="pageref">198</a>, <a href="#pb206" class="pageref">206</a>
-</p>
-<p>Feng-shuey. <i>See Pung-sui.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Feng-Wang Chang, <a href="#pb180" class="pageref">180</a>, <a href="#pb496" class="pageref">496</a>
-</p>
-<p>Feron, the priest, <a href="#pb370" class="pageref">370</a>, <a href="#pb376" class="pageref">376</a>
-</p>
-<p>Festivals, <a href="#pb295" class="pageref">295</a>–299
-</p>
-<p>Feudalism, <a href="#pb22" class="pageref">22</a>, <a href="#pb23" class="pageref">23</a>, <a href="#pb41" class="pageref">41</a>, <a href="#pb43" class="pageref">43</a>, <a href="#pb237" class="pageref">237</a>–241
-</p>
-<p>Fire-arms, <a href="#pb84" class="pageref">84</a>, <a href="#pb93" class="pageref">93</a>, <a href="#pb102" class="pageref">102</a>, <a href="#pb112" class="pageref">112</a>
-</p>
-<p>Fire-signals, <a href="#pb74" class="pageref">74</a>, <a href="#pb185" class="pageref">185</a>, <a href="#pb350" class="pageref">350</a>, <a href="#pb369" class="pageref">369</a>
-</p>
-<p>Fish, <a href="#pb215" class="pageref">215</a>, <a href="#pb257" class="pageref">257</a>, <a href="#pb267" class="pageref">267</a>, <a href="#pb270" class="pageref">270</a>
-</p>
-<p>Flags, <a href="#pb320" class="pageref">320</a>, <a href="#pb332" class="pageref">332</a>, <a href="#pb368" class="pageref">368</a>
-</p>
-<p>Flora, <a href="#pb195" class="pageref">195</a>, <a href="#pb381" class="pageref">381</a>
-</p>
-<p>Flying Fish, H.B.M.S., <a href="#pb440" class="pageref">440</a>
-</p>
-<p>Folk-lore, <a href="#pb281" class="pageref">281</a>–283, <a href="#pb308" class="pageref">308</a>–316
-</p>
-<p>Food, <a href="#pb267" class="pageref">267</a>–271, <a href="#pb448" class="pageref">448</a>
-</p>
-<p>Foote, Lucius H., <a href="#pb459" class="pageref">459</a>, <a href="#pb460" class="pageref">460</a>, <a href="#pb464" class="pageref">464</a>
-</p>
-<p>Foulke, Ensign, <a href="#pb460" class="pageref">460</a>, <a href="#pb462" class="pageref">462</a>, <a href="#pb463" class="pageref">463</a>
-</p>
-<p>France, <a href="#pb363" class="pageref">363</a>–364, <a href="#pb368" class="pageref">368</a>, <a href="#pb426" class="pageref">426</a>, <a href="#pb436" class="pageref">436</a>
-</p>
-<p>Franciscans, <a href="#pb72" class="pageref">72</a>
-</p>
-<p>French, <a href="#pb165" class="pageref">165</a>, <a href="#pb361" class="pageref">361</a>–386, <a href="#pb469" class="pageref">469</a>
-</p>
-<p>Frois, Louis, <a href="#pb95" class="pageref">95</a>
-</p>
-<p>Frontiers, <a href="#pb82" class="pageref">82</a>, <a href="#pb383" class="pageref">383</a>, <a href="#pb421" class="pageref">421</a>, <a href="#pb494" class="pageref">494</a>, <a href="#pb496" class="pageref">496</a>
-</p>
-<p>Froez. <i>See Frois.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Fuku-Shin, <a href="#pb37" class="pageref">37</a>
-</p>
-<p>Funerals, <a href="#pb278" class="pageref">278</a>, <a href="#pb373" class="pageref">373</a>
-</p>
-<p>Fusan, <a href="#pb8" class="pageref">8</a>, <a href="#pb85" class="pageref">85</a>, <a href="#pb100" class="pageref">100</a>, <a href="#pb149" class="pageref">149</a>, <a href="#pb150" class="pageref">150</a>, <a href="#pb164" class="pageref">164</a>, <a href="#pb202" class="pageref">202</a>, <a href="#pb203" class="pageref">203</a>, <a href="#pb354" class="pageref">354</a>, <a href="#pb371" class="pageref">371</a>, <a href="#pb425" class="pageref">425</a>–426
-</p>
-<p>Fusan-Seoul railway, <a href="#pb449" class="pageref">449</a>, <a href="#pb496" class="pageref">496</a>
-</p>
-<p>Fuyu people, <a href="#pb19" class="pageref">19</a>, <a href="#pb21" class="pageref">21</a>–24, <a href="#pb29" class="pageref">29</a>
-</p>
-<p>Gambling, <a href="#pb295" class="pageref">295</a>
-</p>
-<p>Genghis Khan, <a href="#pb71" class="pageref">71</a>. <i>See Yoshitsuné.</i>
-</p>
-<p>General Sherman, The, <a href="#pb183" class="pageref">183</a>, <a href="#pb380" class="pageref">380</a>
-</p>
-<p>Gensan, <a href="#pb214" class="pageref">214</a>, <a href="#pb426" class="pageref">426</a>, <a href="#pb427" class="pageref">427</a>
-</p>
-<p>Germans in Corea, <a href="#pb461" class="pageref">461</a>
-</p>
-<p>Gillie, Rev., <a href="#pb391" class="pageref">391</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ginger, <a href="#pb2" class="pageref">2</a>, <a href="#pb267" class="pageref">267</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ginseng, <a href="#pb2" class="pageref">2</a>, <a href="#pb163" class="pageref">163</a>, <a href="#pb388" class="pageref">388</a>, <a href="#pb389" class="pageref">389</a>, <a href="#pb461" class="pageref">461</a>
-</p>
-<p>Glass, <a href="#pb265" class="pageref">265</a>, <a href="#pb391" class="pageref">391</a>, <a href="#pb426" class="pageref">426</a>
-</p>
-<p>Gold, <a href="#pb2" class="pageref">2</a>, <a href="#pb182" class="pageref">182</a>, <a href="#pb289" class="pageref">289</a>, <a href="#pb388" class="pageref">388</a>, <a href="#pb425" class="pageref">425</a>, <a href="#pb427" class="pageref">427</a>
-</p>
-<p>Grave fights, <a href="#pb446" class="pageref">446</a>
-</p>
-<p>Guilds, <a href="#pb463" class="pageref">463</a>
-</p>
-<p>Gutzlaff, <a href="#pb194" class="pageref">194</a>, <a href="#pb359" class="pageref">359</a>
-</p>
-<p>Hachiman, <a href="#pb133" class="pageref">133</a>
-</p>
-<p>Hair-dressing, <a href="#pb159" class="pageref">159</a>, <a href="#pb160" class="pageref">160</a>, <a href="#pb270" class="pageref">270</a>–271
-</p>
-<p>Haimi, <a href="#pb375" class="pageref">375</a>
-</p>
-<p>Hall, Captain Basil, <a href="#pb186" class="pageref">186</a>, <a href="#pb197" class="pageref">197</a>
-</p>
-<p>Hamel, Hendrik, <a href="#pb169" class="pageref">169</a>–176, <a href="#pb460" class="pageref">460</a>
-</p>
-<p>Hanabusa, <a href="#pb429" class="pageref">429</a>, <a href="#pb438" class="pageref">438</a>–440
-</p>
-<p>Han dynasty, <a href="#pb16" class="pageref">16</a>, <a href="#pb19" class="pageref">19</a>
-</p>
-<p>Han River, <a href="#pb187" class="pageref">187</a>, <a href="#pb188" class="pageref">188</a>, <a href="#pb367" class="pageref">367</a>, <a href="#pb378" class="pageref">378</a>, <a href="#pb380" class="pageref">380</a>–476, <a href="#pb486" class="pageref">486</a>
-</p>
-<p>Han Yang. <i>See Seoul.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Hats, <a href="#pb271" class="pageref">271</a>, <a href="#pb272" class="pageref">272</a>
-</p>
-<p>Hayes, Mr. A. A., Jr., <a href="#pb402" class="pageref">402</a>
-</p>
-<p>Head-dresses, <a href="#pb159" class="pageref">159</a>, <a href="#pb273" class="pageref">273</a>
-</p>
-<p>Hiaksai, <a href="#pb26" class="pageref">26</a>, <a href="#pb35" class="pageref">35</a>–39
-</p>
-<p>Hidéyori, <a href="#pb125" class="pageref">125</a>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb523">[<a href="#pb523">523</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Hidéyoshi, <a href="#pb87" class="pageref">87</a>, <a href="#pb88" class="pageref">88</a>–94, <a href="#pb96" class="pageref">96</a>, <a href="#pb98" class="pageref">98</a>, <a href="#pb144" class="pageref">144</a>
-</p>
-<p>Hoang-hai. <i>See Whang-hai.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Hollanders, <a href="#pb157" class="pageref">157</a>, <a href="#pb162" class="pageref">162</a>, <a href="#pb167" class="pageref">167</a>–176, <a href="#pb460" class="pageref">460</a>
-</p>
-<p>Hōmiō, <a href="#pb38" class="pageref">38</a>
-</p>
-<p>Horses, <a href="#pb7" class="pageref">7</a>, <a href="#pb198" class="pageref">198</a>, <a href="#pb201" class="pageref">201</a>, <a href="#pb332" class="pageref">332</a>, <a href="#pb385" class="pageref">385</a>
-</p>
-<p>Hōsho, <a href="#pb36" class="pageref">36</a>, <a href="#pb37" class="pageref">37</a>
-</p>
-<p>Hoskyn, Captain, <a href="#pb440" class="pageref">440</a>
-</p>
-<p>Hospitality, <a href="#pb288" class="pageref">288</a>, <a href="#pb368" class="pageref">368</a>, <a href="#pb391" class="pageref">391</a>, <a href="#pb405" class="pageref">405</a>
-</p>
-<p>Houses, <a href="#pb31" class="pageref">31</a>, <a href="#pb33" class="pageref">33</a>, <a href="#pb262" class="pageref">262</a>, <a href="#pb265" class="pageref">265</a>, <a href="#pb282" class="pageref">282</a>, <a href="#p355" class="pageref">355</a>
-</p>
-<p>Housekeeping, <a href="#pb262" class="pageref">262</a>–270
-</p>
-<p>Hulbert, Homer B., <a href="#pb468" class="pageref">468</a>
-</p>
-<p>Human sacrifices, <a href="#pb82" class="pageref">82</a>
-</p>
-<p>Hunters, <a href="#pb294" class="pageref">294</a>, <a href="#pb323" class="pageref">323</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ice, <a href="#pb6" class="pageref">6</a>, <a href="#pb268" class="pageref">268</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ignatieff, General, <a href="#pb370" class="pageref">370</a>, <a href="#pb371" class="pageref">371</a>
-</p>
-<p>Iki Island, <a href="#pb72" class="pageref">72</a>
-</p>
-<p>Imbert, Bishop, <a href="#pb362" class="pageref">362</a>
-</p>
-<p>Imperialism, <a href="#pb487" class="pageref">487</a>, <a href="#pb489" class="pageref">489</a>
-</p>
-<p><span class="corr" id="xd31e8806" title="Source: In-chiūn">In-chiŭn</span>, <a href="#pb429" class="pageref">429</a>, <a href="#pb431" class="pageref">431</a>, <a href="#pb434" class="pageref">434</a>, <a href="#pb436" class="pageref">436</a>, <a href="#pb439" class="pageref">439</a>
-</p>
-<p>Independence Arch, <a href="#pb486" class="pageref">486</a>
-</p>
-<p>Independence Club, <a href="#pb486" class="pageref">486</a>
-</p>
-<p>Inouyé Bunda (Count), <a href="#pb422" class="pageref">422</a>, <a href="#pb423" class="pageref">423</a>, <a href="#pb479" class="pageref">479</a>–481
-</p>
-<p>Ireland, <a href="#pb9" class="pageref">9</a>
-</p>
-<p>Iron, <a href="#pb218" class="pageref">218</a>, <a href="#pb380" class="pageref">380</a>
-</p>
-<p>Islands, <a href="#pb191" class="pageref">191</a>, <a href="#pb197" class="pageref">197</a>, <a href="#pb200" class="pageref">200</a>, <a href="#pb201" class="pageref">201</a>, <a href="#pb203" class="pageref">203</a>
-</p>
-<p>Italians, <a href="#pb428" class="pageref">428</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ito, Marquis, <a href="#pb467" class="pageref">467</a>, <a href="#pb478" class="pageref">478</a>
-</p>
-<p><span class="corr" id="xd31e8889" title="Source: Iyéyasu">Iyéyasŭ</span>, <a href="#pb146" class="pageref">146</a>, <a href="#pb148" class="pageref">148</a>
-</p>
-<p>Japanese, <a href="#pb24" class="pageref">24</a>, <a href="#pb75" class="pageref">75</a>, <a href="#pb163" class="pageref">163</a>, <a href="#pb496" class="pageref">496</a>
-</p>
-<p>Japanese in Corea, <a href="#pb444" class="pageref">444</a>, <a href="#pb449" class="pageref">449</a>, <a href="#pb493" class="pageref">493</a>
-</p>
-<p>Japanese pirates, <a href="#pb74" class="pageref">74</a>, <a href="#pb84" class="pageref">84</a>, <a href="#pb91" class="pageref">91</a>, <a href="#pb92" class="pageref">92</a>
-</p>
-<p>Jesuits, <a href="#pb162" class="pageref">162</a>, <a href="#pb165" class="pageref">165</a>, <a href="#pb376" class="pageref">376</a>, <a href="#pb401" class="pageref">401</a>
-</p>
-<p>Jingu Kōgō, <a href="#pb45" class="pageref">45</a>, <a href="#pb54" class="pageref">54</a>, <a href="#pb89" class="pageref">89</a>
-</p>
-<p>Jinsen. <i>See <span class="corr" id="xd31e8967" title="Source: In-chiǔn">In-chiŭn</span> and chemulpo.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Julla-dō. <i>See Chulla-dō.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Kaichow, <a href="#pb65" class="pageref">65</a>
-</p>
-<p>Kang-hoa. <i>See Kang-wa.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Kang-wa Island, <a href="#pb72" class="pageref">72</a>, <a href="#pb191" class="pageref">191</a>, <a href="#pb372" class="pageref">372</a>, <a href="#pb381" class="pageref">381</a>, <a href="#pb410" class="pageref">410</a>, <a href="#pb423" class="pageref">423</a>
-</p>
-<p>Kaokuli. <i>See Kokorai.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Karakuni, <a href="#pb59" class="pageref">59</a>
-</p>
-<p>Kasiwadé, <a href="#pb58" class="pageref">58</a>, <a href="#pb59" class="pageref">59</a>
-</p>
-<p>Kato Kiyomasa, <a href="#pb96" class="pageref">96</a>, <a href="#pb97" class="pageref">97</a>, <a href="#pb103" class="pageref">103</a>, <a href="#pb105" class="pageref">105</a>, <a href="#pb110" class="pageref">110</a>, <a href="#pb113" class="pageref">113</a>, <a href="#pb114" class="pageref">114</a>
-</p>
-<p>Khordadbeh, <a href="#pb2" class="pageref">2</a>
-</p>
-<p>Khublai Khan, <a href="#pb73" class="pageref">73</a>
-</p>
-<p>Kija. <i>See Ki Tsze.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Kim clan, <a href="#pb458" class="pageref">458</a>
-</p>
-<p>Kim Ok Kiun, <a href="#pb464" class="pageref">464</a>–466, <a href="#pb475" class="pageref">475</a>
-</p>
-<p>King-ki-tao. <i>See Seoul.</i>
-</p>
-<p><span class="corr" id="xd31e9079" title="Source: Kiōtō">Kiōto</span>, <a href="#pb92" class="pageref">92</a>, <a href="#pb330" class="pageref">330</a>
-</p>
-<p>Kirin, <a href="#pb303" class="pageref">303</a>
-</p>
-<p>Kishi. <i>See Ki Tsze.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Kitans, <a href="#pb67" class="pageref">67</a>, <a href="#pb68" class="pageref">68</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ki Tsze (Kija), <a href="#pb11" class="pageref">11</a>, <a href="#pb12" class="pageref">12</a>–15, <a href="#pb76" class="pageref">76</a>, <a href="#pb362" class="pageref">362</a>, <a href="#pb488" class="pageref">488</a>
-</p>
-<p>Kiushiu, <a href="#pb57" class="pageref">57</a>, <a href="#pb406" class="pageref">406</a>
-</p>
-<p>Klaproth, <a href="#pb458" class="pageref">458</a>
-</p>
-<p>Kokorai, <a href="#pb23" class="pageref">23</a>–26, <a href="#pb56" class="pageref">56</a>
-</p>
-<p>Kokun Island, <a href="#pb368" class="pageref">368</a>, <a href="#pb369" class="pageref">369</a>
-</p>
-<p>Kokwa. <i>See Kang-wa.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Kondera. <i>See Kuroda.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Konishi Yukinaga, <a href="#pb96" class="pageref">96</a>, <a href="#pb97" class="pageref">97</a>, <a href="#pb102" class="pageref">102</a>, <a href="#pb103" class="pageref">103</a>, <a href="#pb105" class="pageref">105</a>, <a href="#pb109" class="pageref">109</a>, <a href="#pb111" class="pageref">111</a>, <a href="#pb112" class="pageref">112</a>, <a href="#pb119" class="pageref">119</a>, <a href="#pb127" class="pageref">127</a>, <a href="#pb146" class="pageref">146</a>
-</p>
-<p>Korai, <a href="#pb19" class="pageref">19</a>, <a href="#pb26" class="pageref">26</a>–29, <a href="#pb34" class="pageref">34</a>, <a href="#pb65" class="pageref">65</a>–69, <a href="#pb76" class="pageref">76</a>, <a href="#pb429" class="pageref">429</a>
-</p>
-<p>Korea Review, <a href="#pb491" class="pageref">491</a>
-</p>
-<p>Korean Asiatic Society, <a href="#pb460" class="pageref">460</a>, <a href="#pb461" class="pageref">461</a>, <a href="#pb491" class="pageref">491</a>
-</p>
-<p>Kow Shing, <a href="#pb476" class="pageref">476</a>
-</p>
-<p>Kudara. <i>See Hiaksai.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Kung, Prince, <a href="#pb377" class="pageref">377</a>
-</p>
-<p>Kunsan, <a href="#pb455" class="pageref">455</a>
-</p>
-<p>Kurino, Mr., <a href="#pb494" class="pageref">494</a>
-</p>
-<p>Kuroda, <a href="#pb97" class="pageref">97</a>, <a href="#pb106" class="pageref">106</a>
-</p>
-<p>Kuroda Kiyotaku, <a href="#pb422" class="pageref">422</a>
-</p>
-<p>Kuroki, <a href="#pb494" class="pageref">494</a>
-</p>
-<p>Kuropatkin, <a href="#pb496" class="pageref">496</a>
-</p>
-<p>Lake Baikal, <a href="#pb65" class="pageref">65</a>, <a href="#pb67" class="pageref">67</a>
-</p>
-<p>Lake Hanka, <a href="#pb65" class="pageref">65</a>
-</p>
-<p><span class="corr" id="xd31e9296" title="Source: Lamsdorf">Lamsdorff</span>, Count, <a href="#pb494" class="pageref">494</a>
-</p>
-<p>Land, <a href="#pb444" class="pageref">444</a>–448
-</p>
-<p>Land owners, <a href="#pb444" class="pageref">444</a>
-</p>
-<p>Language, <a href="#pb51" class="pageref">51</a>, <a href="#pb123" class="pageref">123</a>
-</p>
-<p>La Perouse, <a href="#pb174" class="pageref">174</a>, <a href="#pb350" class="pageref">350</a>
-</p>
-<p>Lazareff, Port, <a href="#pb214" class="pageref">214</a>, <a href="#pb428" class="pageref">428</a>
-</p>
-<p>Liao Tung, <a href="#pb42" class="pageref">42</a>, <a href="#pb74" class="pageref">74</a>, <a href="#pb180" class="pageref">180</a>. <i>See Shing-king.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Liao Yang, <a href="#pb496" class="pageref">496</a>
-</p>
-<p>Liquors, <a href="#pb266" class="pageref">266</a>, <a href="#pb463" class="pageref">463</a>
-</p>
-<p>Literary examinations, <a href="#pb81" class="pageref">81</a>, <a href="#pb339" class="pageref">339</a>, <a href="#pb341" class="pageref">341</a>–343
-</p>
-<p>Literary style, <a href="#pb34" class="pageref">34</a>
-</p>
-<p>Li Hung Chang, <a href="#pb182" class="pageref">182</a>, <a href="#pb421" class="pageref">421</a>, <a href="#pb430" class="pageref">430</a>, <a href="#pb441" class="pageref">441</a>, <a href="#pb467" class="pageref">467</a>, <a href="#pb471" class="pageref">471</a>
-</p>
-<p>Li-yu-son, <a href="#pb111" class="pageref">111</a>, <a href="#pb117" class="pageref">117</a>, <a href="#pb156" class="pageref">156</a>
-</p>
-<p>Loo Choo. <i>See Riu Kiu.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Looking-glass, story of a, <a href="#pb315" class="pageref">315</a>
-</p>
-<p>Lotus, <a href="#pb136" class="pageref">136</a>, <a href="#pb331" class="pageref">331</a>
-</p>
-<p>Low, F. F., Minister, <a href="#pb403" class="pageref">403</a>–405, <a href="#pb408" class="pageref">408</a>
-</p>
-<p>Lowell, Percival, <a href="#pb460" class="pageref">460</a>
-</p>
-<p>Magnetic needle, <a href="#pb69" class="pageref">69</a>, <a href="#pb84" class="pageref">84</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ma-han, <a href="#pb31" class="pageref">31</a>, <a href="#pb32" class="pageref">32</a>
-</p>
-<p>Manchius, <a href="#pb154" class="pageref">154</a>–160, <a href="#pb367" class="pageref">367</a>, <a href="#pb421" class="pageref">421</a>
-</p>
-<p>Manchuria, <a href="#pb8" class="pageref">8</a>, <a href="#pb83" class="pageref">83</a>, <a href="#pb371" class="pageref">371</a>, <a href="#pb494" class="pageref">494</a>–496. <i>See Shing King.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Manchusri, <a href="#pb154" class="pageref">154</a>
-</p>
-<p>McCartee, Dr. D. B., <a href="#pb338" class="pageref">338</a>
-</p>
-<p>McCaslin, Captain, <a href="#pb391" class="pageref">391</a>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb524">[<a href="#pb524">524</a>]</span></p>
-<p>McKee, Lieutenant, <a href="#pb416" class="pageref">416</a>, <a href="#pb418" class="pageref">418</a>
-</p>
-<p>McKinley, President, <a href="#pb453" class="pageref">453</a>
-</p>
-<p>Maps, <a href="#pb162" class="pageref">162</a>, <a href="#pb165" class="pageref">165</a>, <a href="#pb367" class="pageref">367</a>
-</p>
-<p>Meals, <a href="#pb264" class="pageref">264</a>
-</p>
-<p>Military character, <a href="#pb42" class="pageref">42</a>, <a href="#pb43" class="pageref">43</a>, <a href="#pb325" class="pageref">325</a>, <a href="#pb416" class="pageref">416</a>
-</p>
-<p>Mile-stones, <a href="#pb285" class="pageref">285</a>
-</p>
-<p>Min clan, <a href="#pb459" class="pageref">459</a>
-</p>
-<p>Min Yong Ik, <a href="#pb460" class="pageref">460</a>, <a href="#pb463" class="pageref">463</a>, <a href="#pb465" class="pageref">465</a>–468, <a href="#pb470" class="pageref">470</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ming dynasty, <a href="#pb77" class="pageref">77</a>, <a href="#pb78" class="pageref">78</a>, <a href="#pb81" class="pageref">81</a>, <a href="#pb83" class="pageref">83</a>, <a href="#pb85" class="pageref">85</a>, <a href="#pb156" class="pageref">156</a>
-</p>
-<p>Minra, <a href="#pb481" class="pageref">481</a>, <a href="#pb482" class="pageref">482</a>
-</p>
-<p>Mokpo, <a href="#pb455" class="pageref">455</a>
-</p>
-<p><span class="corr" id="xd31e9604" title="Source: Mollendorf">Möllendorf</span>, Herr von, <a href="#pb467" class="pageref">467</a>, <a href="#pb470" class="pageref">470</a>
-</p>
-<p>Monasteries, <a href="#pb333" class="pageref">333</a>, <a href="#pb384" class="pageref">384</a>
-</p>
-<p>Mongols, <a href="#pb70" class="pageref">70</a>–75
-</p>
-<p>Mongolia, <a href="#pb8" class="pageref">8</a>
-</p>
-<p>Monocacy, U.&nbsp;S. S., <a href="#pb406" class="pageref">406</a>–409, <a href="#pb412" class="pageref">412</a>–414, <a href="#pb459" class="pageref">459</a>, <a href="#pb460" class="pageref">460</a>
-</p>
-<p>Monuments, <a href="#pb160" class="pageref">160</a>, <a href="#pb279" class="pageref">279</a>, <a href="#pb437" class="pageref">437</a>
-</p>
-<p>Mori Arinori, <a href="#pb422" class="pageref">422</a>
-</p>
-<p>Mountains, <a href="#pb5" class="pageref">5</a>, <a href="#pb189" class="pageref">189</a>, <a href="#pb203" class="pageref">203</a>, <a href="#pb206" class="pageref">206</a>
-</p>
-<p>Mourning, <a href="#pb277" class="pageref">277</a>–282
-</p>
-<p>Music, <a href="#pb292" class="pageref">292</a>, <a href="#pb293" class="pageref">293</a>, <a href="#pb424" class="pageref">424</a>
-</p>
-<p>Musselmans. <i>See Arabs.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Nagasaki, <a href="#pb123" class="pageref">123</a>, <a href="#pb149" class="pageref">149</a>, <a href="#pb150" class="pageref">150</a>, <a href="#pb162" class="pageref">162</a>, <a href="#pb175" class="pageref">175</a>, <a href="#pb205" class="pageref">205</a>, <a href="#pb370" class="pageref">370</a>, <a href="#pb398" class="pageref">398</a>, <a href="#pb408" class="pageref">408</a>, <a href="#pb440" class="pageref">440</a>
-</p>
-<p>Nai-po, <a href="#pb193" class="pageref">193</a>, <a href="#pb349" class="pageref">349</a>, <a href="#pb352" class="pageref">352</a>, <a href="#pb375" class="pageref">375</a>
-</p>
-<p>Nak-tong River, <a href="#pb5" class="pageref">5</a>, <a href="#pb164" class="pageref">164</a>, <a href="#pb202" class="pageref">202</a>, <a href="#pb203" class="pageref">203</a>
-</p>
-<p>Names, <a href="#pb165" class="pageref">165</a>, <a href="#pb261" class="pageref">261</a>, <a href="#pb348" class="pageref">348</a>
-</p>
-<p>Nanking, <a href="#pb40" class="pageref">40</a>, <a href="#pb48" class="pageref">48</a>, <a href="#pb69" class="pageref">69</a>
-</p>
-<p>Nan-on, <a href="#pb130" class="pageref">130</a>–133
-</p>
-<p>National anthem, <a href="#pb490" class="pageref">490</a>
-</p>
-<p>National emblems, <a href="#pb452" class="pageref">452</a>
-</p>
-<p>National flower, <a href="#pb452" class="pageref">452</a>
-</p>
-<p>Nature, <a href="#pb207" class="pageref">207</a>, <a href="#pb340" class="pageref">340</a>, <a href="#pb378" class="pageref">378</a>
-</p>
-<p>Naval battles, <a href="#pb108" class="pageref">108</a>, <a href="#pb129" class="pageref">129</a>, <a href="#pb130" class="pageref">130</a>, <a href="#pb134" class="pageref">134</a>
-</p>
-<p>Neutral strip, <a href="#pb7" class="pageref">7</a>, <a href="#pb8" class="pageref">8</a>, <a href="#pb84" class="pageref">84</a>, <a href="#pb156" class="pageref">156</a>, <a href="#pb182" class="pageref">182</a>, <a href="#pb421" class="pageref">421</a>, <a href="#pb494" class="pageref">494</a>
-</p>
-<p>Newspapers, <a href="#pb486" class="pageref">486</a>
-</p>
-<p>New Year’s Day, <a href="#pb1" class="pageref">1</a>, <a href="#pb111" class="pageref">111</a>, <a href="#pb297" class="pageref">297</a>, <a href="#pb461" class="pageref">461</a>
-</p>
-<p>Nido syllabary, <a href="#pb47" class="pageref">47</a>, <a href="#pb67" class="pageref">67</a>
-</p>
-<p>Niijun. <i>See Ninchi.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Ninchi, <a href="#pb68" class="pageref">68</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ningpo, <a href="#pb69" class="pageref">69</a>, <a href="#pb84" class="pageref">84</a>
-</p>
-<p>Nin-sen. <i>See In-chiŭn.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Nippon Machi, <a href="#pb164" class="pageref">164</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ni Taijo, <a href="#pb76" class="pageref">76</a>, <a href="#pb78" class="pageref">78</a>, <a href="#pb79" class="pageref">79</a>
-</p>
-<p>Nose, the history of a, <a href="#pb311" class="pageref">311</a>
-</p>
-<p>Noses, <a href="#pb171" class="pageref">171</a>, <a href="#pb317" class="pageref">317</a>
-</p>
-<p>Nuns, <a href="#pb59" class="pageref">59</a>, <a href="#pb335" class="pageref">335</a>
-</p>
-<p>Nye, Hon. Gideon, <a href="#pb389" class="pageref">389</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ogawuchi, <a href="#pb133" class="pageref">133</a>, <a href="#pb139" class="pageref">139</a>–144
-</p>
-<p>Ojin, <a href="#pb55" class="pageref">55</a>
-</p>
-<p>Oppert, Ernest, <a href="#pb375" class="pageref">375</a>, <a href="#pb392" class="pageref">392</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ouen-san. <i>See Gensan.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Pagodas, <a href="#pb32" class="pageref">32</a>, <a href="#pb383" class="pageref">383</a>
-</p>
-<p>Pak Yong Hio, <a href="#pb464" class="pageref">464</a>, <a href="#pb481" class="pageref">481</a>
-</p>
-<p>Palladius, <a href="#pb68" class="pageref">68</a>, <a href="#pb83" class="pageref">83</a>, <a href="#pb237" class="pageref">237</a>
-</p>
-<p>Paper, <a href="#pb153" class="pageref">153</a>, <a href="#pb263" class="pageref">263</a>, <a href="#pb265" class="pageref">265</a>
-</p>
-<p>Parkes, Sir Harry, <a href="#pb435" class="pageref">435</a>, <a href="#pb461" class="pageref">461</a>
-</p>
-<p>Patriotism, <a href="#pb451" class="pageref">451</a>, <a href="#pb479" class="pageref">479</a>
-</p>
-<p>Pears, <a href="#pb32" class="pageref">32</a>, <a href="#pb268" class="pageref">268</a>
-</p>
-<p>Peasantry, <a href="#pb447" class="pageref">447</a>
-</p>
-<p>Persecuting nations, <a href="#pb472" class="pageref">472</a>
-</p>
-<p>Petitions to the king, <a href="#pb82" class="pageref">82</a>, <a href="#pb222" class="pageref">222</a>, <a href="#pb431" class="pageref">431</a>, <a href="#pb474" class="pageref">474</a>
-</p>
-<p>Petsi. <i>See Hiaksai.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Pheasants, <a href="#pb32" class="pageref">32</a>, <a href="#pb60" class="pageref">60</a>
-</p>
-<p>Philosophy, <a href="#pb472" class="pageref">472</a>, <a href="#pb473" class="pageref">473</a>
-</p>
-<p>Phœnix, <a href="#pb304" class="pageref">304</a>
-</p>
-<p>Phonetic writing, <a href="#pb38" class="pageref">38</a>, <a href="#pb47" class="pageref">47</a>, <a href="#pb48" class="pageref">48</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ping-an city, <a href="#pb21" class="pageref">21</a>, <a href="#pb65" class="pageref">65</a>, <a href="#pb105" class="pageref">105</a>, <a href="#pb106" class="pageref">106</a>, <a href="#pb109" class="pageref">109</a>, <a href="#pb112" class="pageref">112</a>, <a href="#pb182" class="pageref">182</a>, <a href="#pb183" class="pageref">183</a>, <a href="#pb392" class="pageref">392</a>–395, <a href="#pb477" class="pageref">477</a>, <a href="#pb478" class="pageref">478</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ping-an Province, <a href="#pb179" class="pageref">179</a>–183
-</p>
-<p>Pipes, <a href="#pb253" class="pageref">253</a>, <a href="#pb369" class="pageref">369</a>
-</p>
-<p>Poetry, <a href="#pb59" class="pageref">59</a>, <a href="#pb297" class="pageref">297</a>, <a href="#pb344" class="pageref">344</a>
-</p>
-<p>Political parties, <a href="#pb224" class="pageref">224</a>–229, <a href="#pb356" class="pageref">356</a>, <a href="#pb362" class="pageref">362</a>, <a href="#pb429" class="pageref">429</a>
-</p>
-<p>Polo, Marco, <a href="#pb72" class="pageref">72</a>, <a href="#pb73" class="pageref">73</a>
-</p>
-<p>Polo, game of, <a href="#pb427" class="pageref">427</a>
-</p>
-<p>Population, <a href="#pb281" class="pageref">281</a>, <a href="#pb448" class="pageref">448</a>
-</p>
-<p>Porcelain, <a href="#pb2" class="pageref">2</a>, <a href="#pb264" class="pageref">264</a>
-</p>
-<p>Port Arthur, <a href="#pb478" class="pageref">478</a>, <a href="#pb495" class="pageref">495</a>, <a href="#pb496" class="pageref">496</a>
-</p>
-<p>Port Hamilton, <a href="#pb469" class="pageref">469</a>
-</p>
-<p>Port Lazareff, <a href="#pb214" class="pageref">214</a>
-</p>
-<p>Portuguese, <a href="#pb2" class="pageref">2</a>, <a href="#pb84" class="pageref">84</a>, <a href="#pb354" class="pageref">354</a>
-</p>
-<p>Postal Service, <a href="#pb452" class="pageref">452</a>
-</p>
-<p>Potters, <a href="#pb146" class="pageref">146</a>, <a href="#pb174" class="pageref">174</a>, <a href="#pb359" class="pageref">359</a>
-</p>
-<p>Pratt, Hon. Zadoc, <a href="#pb390" class="pageref">390</a>
-</p>
-<p>Prefectures, <a href="#pb480" class="pageref">480</a>
-</p>
-<p>Primogeniture, <a href="#pb260" class="pageref">260</a>
-</p>
-<p>Prince Jerome Gulf, <a href="#pb194" class="pageref">194</a>, <a href="#pb398" class="pageref">398</a>
-</p>
-<p>Printing, <a href="#pb67" class="pageref">67</a>, <a href="#pb369" class="pageref">369</a>
-</p>
-<p>Proverbs, <a href="#pb317" class="pageref">317</a>–319
-</p>
-<p>Provinces, <a href="#pb80" class="pageref">80</a>, <a href="#pb179" class="pageref">179</a>–217
-</p>
-<p>Puhai, <a href="#pb64" class="pageref">64</a>, <a href="#pb65" class="pageref">65</a>
-</p>
-<p>Pung-sui, <a href="#pb278" class="pageref">278</a>, <a href="#pb279" class="pageref">279</a>, <a href="#pb328" class="pageref">328</a>
-</p>
-<p>Queen Min, <a href="#pb421" class="pageref">421</a>, <a href="#pb438" class="pageref">438</a>, <a href="#pb480" class="pageref">480</a>–482
-</p>
-<p>Quelpart, <a href="#pb4" class="pageref">4</a>, <a href="#pb200" class="pageref">200</a>, <a href="#pb370" class="pageref">370</a>, <a href="#pb428" class="pageref">428</a>
-</p>
-<p>Railways, <a href="#pb448" class="pageref">448</a>, <a href="#pb486" class="pageref">486</a>, <a href="#pb496" class="pageref">496</a>
-</p>
-<p>Rain, <a href="#pb306" class="pageref">306</a>, <a href="#pb359" class="pageref">359</a>, <a href="#pb437" class="pageref">437</a>, <a href="#pb439" class="pageref">439</a>
-</p>
-<p>Religion, <a href="#pb326" class="pageref">326</a>–335
-</p>
-<p>Revenge, <a href="#pb227" class="pageref">227</a>
-</p>
-<p>Revenue, <a href="#pb454" class="pageref">454</a>
-</p>
-<p>Rice, <a href="#pb268" class="pageref">268</a>, <a href="#pb298" class="pageref">298</a>, <a href="#pb437" class="pageref">437</a>, <a href="#pb444" class="pageref">444</a>
-</p>
-<p>Riots, <a href="#pb438" class="pageref">438</a>, <a href="#pb467" class="pageref">467</a>
-</p>
-<p>Richthofen, <a href="#pb2" class="pageref">2</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ridel, Bishop, <a href="#pb372" class="pageref">372</a>, <a href="#pb375" class="pageref">375</a>, <a href="#pb378" class="pageref">378</a>, <a href="#pb413" class="pageref">413</a>
-</p>
-<p>Rin Yin River, <a href="#pb104" class="pageref">104</a>, <a href="#pb105" class="pageref">105</a>, <a href="#pb190" class="pageref">190</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ri Seiki. <i>See Ni Taijo.</i>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb525">[<a href="#pb525">525</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Riu Kiu, <a href="#pb91" class="pageref">91</a>, <a href="#pb146" class="pageref">146</a>, <a href="#pb426" class="pageref">426</a>
-</p>
-<p>Roads, <a href="#pb202" class="pageref">202</a>, <a href="#pb284" class="pageref">284</a>, <a href="#pb413" class="pageref">413</a>
-</p>
-<p>Rodgers, Admiral John, <a href="#pb13" class="pageref">13</a>, <a href="#pb403" class="pageref">403</a>–406, <a href="#pb408" class="pageref">408</a>, <a href="#pb418" class="pageref">418</a>
-</p>
-<p>Rona, The, <a href="#pb375" class="pageref">375</a>
-</p>
-<p>Ross, Rev. John, <a href="#pb22" class="pageref">22</a>
-</p>
-<p>Roze, Admiral, <a href="#pb376" class="pageref">376</a>–386
-</p>
-<p>Roze Island, <a href="#pb379" class="pageref">379</a>, <a href="#pb439" class="pageref">439</a>
-</p>
-<p>Russians, <a href="#pb162" class="pageref">162</a>, <a href="#pb163" class="pageref">163</a>, <a href="#pb205" class="pageref">205</a>, <a href="#pb210" class="pageref">210</a>, <a href="#pb371" class="pageref">371</a>, <a href="#pb428" class="pageref">428</a>, <a href="#pb469" class="pageref">469</a>, <a href="#pb484" class="pageref">484</a>, <a href="#pb487" class="pageref">487</a>, <a href="#pb488" class="pageref">488</a>, <a href="#pb492" class="pageref">492</a>, <a href="#pb494" class="pageref">494</a>–496
-</p>
-<p>Sacrifices, <a href="#pb329" class="pageref">329</a>, <a href="#pb454" class="pageref">454</a>
-</p>
-<p>Saghalin, <a href="#pb492" class="pageref">492</a>
-</p>
-<p>Saigo, <a href="#pb420" class="pageref">420</a>, <a href="#pb425" class="pageref">425</a>
-</p>
-<p>Sam-han, <a href="#pb30" class="pageref">30</a>, <a href="#pb34" class="pageref">34</a>, <a href="#pb487" class="pageref">487</a>
-</p>
-<p>Sanskrit, <a href="#pb334" class="pageref">334</a>
-</p>
-<p>Sargent, Senator, <a href="#pb428" class="pageref">428</a>
-</p>
-<p>Saris, <a href="#pb147" class="pageref">147</a>
-</p>
-<p>Satéhiko, <a href="#pb59" class="pageref">59</a>
-</p>
-<p>Schall, Adam, <a href="#pb160" class="pageref">160</a>
-</p>
-<p>Schools, <a href="#pb343" class="pageref">343</a>
-</p>
-<p>Seal of state, <a href="#pb218" class="pageref">218</a>, <a href="#pb373" class="pageref">373</a>
-</p>
-<p>Seoul, <a href="#pb79" class="pageref">79</a>, <a href="#pb85" class="pageref">85</a>, <a href="#pb104" class="pageref">104</a>, <a href="#pb115" class="pageref">115</a>, <a href="#pb158" class="pageref">158</a>, <a href="#pb163" class="pageref">163</a>, <a href="#pb164" class="pageref">164</a>, <a href="#pb189" class="pageref">189</a>–190, <a href="#pb220" class="pageref">220</a>, <a href="#pb223" class="pageref">223</a>, <a href="#pb341" class="pageref">341</a>, <a href="#pb436" class="pageref">436</a>–441, <a href="#pb485" class="pageref">485</a>, <a href="#pb486" class="pageref">486</a>
-</p>
-<p>Seoul-Fusan railway, <a href="#pb449" class="pageref">449</a>, <a href="#pb496" class="pageref">496</a>
-</p>
-<p>Serfdom, <a href="#pb23" class="pageref">23</a>, <a href="#pb237" class="pageref">237</a>–243
-</p>
-<p>Serpents, <a href="#pb305" class="pageref">305</a>
-</p>
-<p>Shamanism, <a href="#pb326" class="pageref">326</a>
-</p>
-<p>Shang-chiu, <a href="#pb102" class="pageref">102</a>, <a href="#pb164" class="pageref">164</a>, <a href="#pb203" class="pageref">203</a>
-</p>
-<p>Shang-ti, <a href="#pb327" class="pageref">327</a>
-</p>
-<p>Shangtung, <a href="#pb2" class="pageref">2</a>, <a href="#pb3" class="pageref">3</a>, <a href="#pb74" class="pageref">74</a>
-</p>
-<p>Shan-yan mountains, <a href="#pb213" class="pageref">213</a>
-</p>
-<p>Shaw, Captain Samuel, <a href="#pb389" class="pageref">389</a>
-</p>
-<p>Shimonoséki, <a href="#pb53" class="pageref">53</a>, <a href="#pb420" class="pageref">420</a>, <a href="#pb440" class="pageref">440</a>, <a href="#pb478" class="pageref">478</a>
-</p>
-<p>Shing-king, <a href="#pb3" class="pageref">3</a>, <a href="#pb180" class="pageref">180</a>, <a href="#pb353" class="pageref">353</a>, <a href="#pb361" class="pageref">361</a>, <a href="#pb364" class="pageref">364</a>, <a href="#pb421" class="pageref">421</a>
-</p>
-<p>Shin-han, <a href="#pb32" class="pageref">32</a>, <a href="#pb33" class="pageref">33</a>
-</p>
-<p>Shinra, <a href="#pb33" class="pageref">33</a>, <a href="#pb45" class="pageref">45</a>–49, <a href="#pb135" class="pageref">135</a>
-</p>
-<p>Shoes, <a href="#pb276" class="pageref">276</a>
-</p>
-<p>Shufeldt, Com. R. W., <a href="#pb186" class="pageref">186</a>, <a href="#pb428" class="pageref">428</a>, <a href="#pb435" class="pageref">435</a>, <a href="#pb459" class="pageref">459</a>
-</p>
-<p>Singing-girls, <a href="#pb90" class="pageref">90</a>, <a href="#pb291" class="pageref">291</a>
-</p>
-<p>Sinlo. <i>See Shinra.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Slavery. <i>See Serfdom.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Snow, <a href="#pb6" class="pageref">6</a>, <a href="#pb207" class="pageref">207</a>, <a href="#pb324" class="pageref">324</a>
-</p>
-<p>Songchin, <a href="#pb455" class="pageref">455</a>, <a href="#pb456" class="pageref">456</a>
-</p>
-<p>Sorceresses, <a href="#pb445" class="pageref">445</a>, <a href="#pb446" class="pageref">446</a>, <a href="#pb462" class="pageref">462</a>
-</p>
-<p>Sorio. <i>See Nippon Machi and Fusan.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Spear, Rev. Wm., <a href="#pb389" class="pageref">389</a>
-</p>
-<p>Spelling, <a href="#pb338" class="pageref">338</a>
-</p>
-<p>Spies, <a href="#pb122" class="pageref">122</a>
-</p>
-<p>Spirits of the air, <a href="#pb327" class="pageref">327</a>
-</p>
-<p>Stockbridge, <a href="#pb388" class="pageref">388</a>
-</p>
-<p>Straits of Corea, <a href="#pb174" class="pageref">174</a>, <a href="#pb494" class="pageref">494</a>
-</p>
-<p>Straw men, <a href="#pb383" class="pageref">383</a>
-</p>
-<p>Students sent abroad, <a href="#pb459" class="pageref">459</a>
-</p>
-<p>Succession to throne, <a href="#pb223" class="pageref">223</a>
-</p>
-<p>Sungari River, <a href="#pb20" class="pageref">20</a>, <a href="#pb371" class="pageref">371</a>
-</p>
-<p>Sunto, <a href="#pb66" class="pageref">66</a>, <a href="#pb77" class="pageref">77</a>. <i>See Kai-seng.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Superstitions, <a href="#pb445" class="pageref">445</a>, <a href="#pb470" class="pageref">470</a>
-</p>
-<p>Surprise, The, <a href="#pb391" class="pageref">391</a>
-</p>
-<p>Susanoö, <a href="#pb51" class="pageref">51</a>
-</p>
-<p>Suyematz, Mr. K., <a href="#pb71" class="pageref">71</a>
-</p>
-<p>Swords, <a href="#pb116" class="pageref">116</a>, <a href="#pb149" class="pageref">149</a>, <a href="#pb382" class="pageref">382</a>
-</p>
-<p>Syllabary, <a href="#pb67" class="pageref">67</a>, <a href="#pb338" class="pageref">338</a>. <i>See Alphabet.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Tablets, <a href="#pb460" class="pageref">460</a>, <a href="#pb489" class="pageref">489</a>
-</p>
-<p>Tai-in, or Tai-on Kun. <i>See Tai-wen Kun.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Taiko Sama. <i>See Hidéyoshi.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Tai-wen Kun, <a href="#pb230" class="pageref">230</a>, <a href="#pb373" class="pageref">373</a>, <a href="#pb380" class="pageref">380</a>, <a href="#pb420" class="pageref">420</a>, <a href="#pb437" class="pageref">437</a>, <a href="#pb458" class="pageref">458</a>, <a href="#pb459" class="pageref">459</a>, <a href="#pb467" class="pageref">467</a>, <a href="#pb476" class="pageref">476</a>, <a href="#pb482" class="pageref">482</a>
-</p>
-<p>Tang Dynasty, <a href="#pb36" class="pageref">36</a>, <a href="#pb37" class="pageref">37</a>, <a href="#pb47" class="pageref">47</a>
-</p>
-<p>Taxation, <a href="#pb447" class="pageref">447</a>
-</p>
-<p>Tea, <a href="#pb267" class="pageref">267</a>, <a href="#pb389" class="pageref">389</a>
-</p>
-<p>Telegraphs, <a href="#pb461" class="pageref">461</a>
-</p>
-<p>Temples, <a href="#pb331" class="pageref">331</a>, <a href="#pb334" class="pageref">334</a>, <a href="#pb336" class="pageref">336</a>, <a href="#pb485" class="pageref">485</a>
-</p>
-<p>Theatre, <a href="#pb291" class="pageref">291</a>
-</p>
-<p>“The” Corea, <a href="#pb3" class="pageref">3</a>
-</p>
-<p>Thibet, <a href="#pb2" class="pageref">2</a>, <a href="#pb318" class="pageref">318</a>
-</p>
-<p>Thomas, Rev., <a href="#pb391" class="pageref">391</a>
-</p>
-<p>Throne, <a href="#pb52" class="pageref">52</a>, <a href="#pb219" class="pageref">219</a>
-</p>
-<p>Timber concession, <a href="#pb490" class="pageref">490</a>, <a href="#pb494" class="pageref">494</a>
-</p>
-<p>Tien-tsin massacre, <a href="#pb386" class="pageref">386</a>, <a href="#pb418" class="pageref">418</a>
-</p>
-<p>Tigers, <a href="#pb59" class="pageref">59</a>, <a href="#pb135" class="pageref">135</a>, <a href="#pb301" class="pageref">301</a>, <a href="#pb320" class="pageref">320</a>–325, <a href="#pb455" class="pageref">455</a>
-</p>
-<p>Tobacco, <a href="#pb151" class="pageref">151</a>, <a href="#pb152" class="pageref">152</a>, <a href="#pb366" class="pageref">366</a>
-</p>
-<p>Togo, Admiral, <a href="#pb476" class="pageref">476</a>, <a href="#pb495" class="pageref">495</a>
-</p>
-<p>Tōkiō, <a href="#pb420" class="pageref">420</a>, <a href="#pb424" class="pageref">424</a>, <a href="#pb427" class="pageref">427</a>, <a href="#pb440" class="pageref">440</a>, <a href="#pb461" class="pageref">461</a>
-</p>
-<p>Tombs, <a href="#pb279" class="pageref">279</a>, <a href="#pb297" class="pageref">297</a>, <a href="#pb392" class="pageref">392</a>, <a href="#pb396" class="pageref">396</a>, <a href="#pb399" class="pageref">399</a>
-</p>
-<p>Tong-haks, <a href="#pb445" class="pageref">445</a>, <a href="#pb473" class="pageref">473</a>–475, <a href="#pb480" class="pageref">480</a>
-</p>
-<p>Tong Nai, <a href="#pb100" class="pageref">100</a>, <a href="#pb203" class="pageref">203</a>, <a href="#pb371" class="pageref">371</a>, <a href="#pb428" class="pageref">428</a>
-</p>
-<p>Torai fu. <i>See Tong Nai.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Tortoise, <a href="#pb218" class="pageref">218</a>, <a href="#pb303" class="pageref">303</a>
-</p>
-<p>Torture, <a href="#pb234" class="pageref">234</a>, <a href="#pb352" class="pageref">352</a>, <a href="#pb375" class="pageref">375</a>
-</p>
-<p>Translations into Corean, <a href="#pb349" class="pageref">349</a>, <a href="#pb430" class="pageref">430</a>
-</p>
-<p>Tribute, <a href="#pb58" class="pageref">58</a>, <a href="#pb159" class="pageref">159</a>, <a href="#pb160" class="pageref">160</a>
-</p>
-<p>Tsuruga, <a href="#pb53" class="pageref">53</a>, <a href="#pb54" class="pageref">54</a>
-</p>
-<p>Tsushima, <a href="#pb85" class="pageref">85</a>, <a href="#pb86" class="pageref">86</a>, <a href="#pb150" class="pageref">150</a>, <a href="#pb151" class="pageref">151</a>, <a href="#pb164" class="pageref">164</a>, <a href="#pb205" class="pageref">205</a>, <a href="#pb492" class="pageref">492</a>
-</p>
-<p>Tycoon, <a href="#pb149" class="pageref">149</a>, <a href="#pb380" class="pageref">380</a>
-</p>
-<p>Types, <a href="#pb67" class="pageref">67</a>, <a href="#pb434" class="pageref">434</a>
-</p>
-<p>Unmun, <a href="#pb67" class="pageref">67</a>
-</p>
-<p>Unyo Kuan, <a href="#pb422" class="pageref">422</a>
-</p>
-<p>Uru-san, <a href="#pb137" class="pageref">137</a>–144
-</p>
-<p>Varnish, <a href="#pb189" class="pageref">189</a>
-</p>
-<p>Vettor Pisani, The, <a href="#pb428" class="pageref">428</a>
-</p>
-<p>Village idols, <a href="#pb285" class="pageref">285</a>
-</p>
-<p>Vincent, <a href="#pb122" class="pageref">122</a>, <a href="#pb123" class="pageref">123</a>
-</p>
-<p>Vladivostok, <a href="#pb495" class="pageref">495</a>
-</p>
-<p>Von Brandt, Minister, <a href="#pb405" class="pageref">405</a>
-</p>
-<p>Von Siebold, <a href="#pb150" class="pageref">150</a>
-<span class="pageNum" id="pb526">[<a href="#pb526">526</a>]</span></p>
-<p>Wall of stakes, <a href="#pb84" class="pageref">84</a>, <a href="#pb182" class="pageref">182</a>
-</p>
-<p>Wang-ken, <a href="#pb65" class="pageref">65</a>
-</p>
-<p>Weigatz, <a href="#pb85" class="pageref">85</a>
-</p>
-<p>Wei-man, <a href="#pb16" class="pageref">16</a>
-</p>
-<p>Whales, <a href="#pb215" class="pageref">215</a>, <a href="#pb488" class="pageref">488</a>
-</p>
-<p>Whang-hai, <a href="#pb183" class="pageref">183</a>–187
-</p>
-<p>Whang-ti, <a href="#pb41" class="pageref">41</a>, <a href="#pb92" class="pageref">92</a>, <a href="#pb159" class="pageref">159</a>, <a href="#pb423" class="pageref">423</a>
-</p>
-<p>Wiju, <a href="#pb491" class="pageref">491</a>, <a href="#pb495" class="pageref">495</a>
-</p>
-<p>Williams, Hon. S. Wells, <a href="#pb394" class="pageref">394</a>, <a href="#pb403" class="pageref">403</a><span id="xd31e11392"></span>
-</p>
-<p>Wishes, the three, <a href="#pb310" class="pageref">310</a>
-</p>
-<p>Wood-cutters, <a href="#pb180" class="pageref">180</a>, <a href="#pb494" class="pageref">494</a>
-</p>
-<p>Xavier, <a href="#pb60" class="pageref">60</a>
-</p>
-<p>Yalu River, <a href="#pb179" class="pageref">179</a>, <a href="#pb485" class="pageref">485</a>, <a href="#pb495" class="pageref">495</a>
-</p>
-<p>Yangban, <a href="#pb443" class="pageref">443</a>, <a href="#pb450" class="pageref">450</a>
-</p>
-<p>Yasuhiro, <a href="#pb89" class="pageref">89</a>, <a href="#pb90" class="pageref">90</a>
-</p>
-<p>Yedo, <a href="#pb151" class="pageref">151</a><span class="corr" id="xd31e11444" title="Source: ,">.</span> <i>See Tōkiō.</i>
-</p>
-<p>Yongampo, <a href="#pb455" class="pageref">455</a>, <a href="#pb490" class="pageref">490</a>
-</p>
-<p>Yoshitsuné, <a href="#pb71" class="pageref">71</a>, <a href="#pb164" class="pageref">164</a>
-</p>
-<p>Yuan Shi Kai, <a href="#pb461" class="pageref">461</a>, <a href="#pb465" class="pageref">465</a>–468, <a href="#pb469" class="pageref">469</a>, <a href="#pb470" class="pageref">470</a>, <a href="#pb471" class="pageref">471</a>, <a href="#pb475" class="pageref">475</a>
-</p>
-<p>Yule, Colonel H., <a href="#pb72" class="pageref">72</a>
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="transcriberNote">
-<h2 class="main">Colophon</h2>
-<h3 class="main">Availability</h3>
-<p class="first">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 <a class="seclink xd31e40" title="External link" href="https://www.gutenberg.org/">www.gutenberg.org</a>.
-</p>
-<p>This eBook is produced by the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at <a class="seclink xd31e40" title="External link" href="https://www.pgdp.net/">www.pgdp.net</a>.
-</p>
-<p>The map at the end of the volume was missing from the available scan-set, and is thus
-omitted from this ebook.
-</p>
-<h3 class="main">Metadata</h3>
-<table class="colophonMetadata" summary="Metadata">
-<tr>
-<td><b>Title:</b></td>
-<td>Corea, the hermit nation</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><b>Author:</b></td>
-<td>William Elliot Griffis (1843–1928)</td>
-<td><a href="https://viaf.org/viaf/62346855/" class="seclink">Info</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><b>Language:</b></td>
-<td>English</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><b>Original publication date:</b></td>
-<td>1911</td>
-<td></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<h3 class="main">Revision History</h3>
-<ul>
-<li>2021-11-03 Started.
-</li>
-</ul>
-<h3 class="main">External References</h3>
-<p>This Project Gutenberg eBook contains external references. These links may not work
-for you.</p>
-<h3 class="main">Corrections</h3>
-<p>The following corrections have been applied to the text:</p>
-<table class="correctionTable" summary="Overview of corrections applied to the text.">
-<tr>
-<th>Page</th>
-<th>Source</th>
-<th>Correction</th>
-<th>Edit distance</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e247">ix</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">thing</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">things</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e329">xvi</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Bescriebung</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Beschreibung</td>
-<td class="bottom">3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e335">xvi</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">uber</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">über</td>
-<td class="bottom">1 / 0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e414">xviii</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Shing-King</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Shing-king</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e495">xx</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Darlegun</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Darlegung</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e1507">3</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">L’Allemande</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">L’Allemagne</td>
-<td class="bottom">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e1510">3</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">L’Amerique</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">L’Amérique</td>
-<td class="bottom">1 / 0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e1568">9</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">’</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">”</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e2034">46</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">dependant</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">dependent</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e2188">59</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">weathern-worn</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">weather-worn</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e2251">66</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Korain</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Koraian</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e2341">74</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">ike</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">like</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e2554">86</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Nordensköld’s</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Nordenskjöld’s</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e2634">96</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">invaders</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">invaders’</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e2672">101</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3845">237</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd31e4367">283</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">.</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">,</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e2955">139</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3432">196</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3514">206</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd31e4628">299</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd31e4717">307</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd31e6171">428</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">
-[<i>Not in source</i>]
-</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">.</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3147">164</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Chretienne</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Chrétienne</td>
-<td class="bottom">1 / 0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3179">167</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3192">168</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Hollandra</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Hollandia</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3186">168</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3197">168</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3204">169</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3209">169</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3212">169</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3226">170</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3229">170</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3256">172</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Wetterree</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Weltevree</td>
-<td class="bottom">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3189">168</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Rip</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">De Rijp</td>
-<td class="bottom">4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3217">169</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Sparwehr</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Sperwer</td>
-<td class="bottom">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3334">183</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">over loyal</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">overloyal</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3395">191</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">offer</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">offers</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3412">193</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">
-[<i>Not in source</i>]
-</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">(</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3467">200</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">earthern</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">earthen</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3541">209</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">.)</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">).</td>
-<td class="bottom">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3586">216</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">shipwrekced</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">shipwrecked</td>
-<td class="bottom">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3655">223</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">neccessary</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">necessary</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3668">223</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">years,</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">years’</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3722">228</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">dfficulties</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">difficulties</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3797">233</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">peninusla</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">peninsula</td>
-<td class="bottom">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3888">241</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">inheritence</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">inheritance</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3901">243</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">pedlers</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">peddlers</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3918">246</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd31e5827">397</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd31e5881">401</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">pedler</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">peddler</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3942">249</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Ater</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">After</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e3984">252</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">railery</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">raillery</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e4083">260</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">indivdual</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">individual</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e4104">261</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">tpyes</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">types</td>
-<td class="bottom">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e4115">262</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">neatnesss</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">neatness</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e4165">266</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">gentlemen’s</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">gentleman’s</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e4195">268</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">maccaroni</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">macaroni</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e4202">268</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Maccaroni</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Macaroni</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e4256">274</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd31e11392">526</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">,</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">
-[<i>Deleted</i>]
-</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e4340">281</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd31e4750">310</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd31e5231">338</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Coréene</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Coréenne</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e4403">285</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">effiges</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">effigies</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e4532">288</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">preparatons</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">preparations</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e4554">291</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">pantomine</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">pantomime</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e4578">294</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">simliar</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">similar</td>
-<td class="bottom">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e4586">295</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">uknown</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">unknown</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e4632">299</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Shimlun</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Shimbun</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e4653">302</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">appointemnt</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">appointment</td>
-<td class="bottom">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e4831">313</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">.</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">:</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e5011">321</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">’</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">
-[<i>Deleted</i>]
-</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e5057">323</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">immedately</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">immediately</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e5091">327</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">invisbile</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">invisible</td>
-<td class="bottom">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e5122">329</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">peninsla</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">peninsula</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e5160">333</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">politcial</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">political</td>
-<td class="bottom">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e5166">333</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">commisariat</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">commissariat</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e5654">382</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">victors</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">victors’</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e5819">397</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">
-[<i>Not in source</i>]
-</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">,</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e5824">397</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">negociate</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">negotiate</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e5839">398</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Manilla</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Manila</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e5960">406</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">armanent</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">armament</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e5973">407</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Guerriére</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Guerrière</td>
-<td class="bottom">1 / 0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e6042">414</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">cidadel</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">citadel</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e6106">421</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Cho</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Chō</td>
-<td class="bottom">1 / 0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e6173">428</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">negociations</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">negotiations</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e6203">431</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">sprits</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">spirits</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e6281">440</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Shinonoséki</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Shimonoséki</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e6338">449</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">valley</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">value</td>
-<td class="bottom">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e6539">478</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Shimonoseki</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Shimonoséki</td>
-<td class="bottom">1 / 0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e6549">479</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Cho-sen</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Chō-sen</td>
-<td class="bottom">1 / 0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e6709">499</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Pedlers’</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Peddlers’</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e6717">500</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">cl ques</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">cliques</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e6800">508</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">pharmacopæia</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">pharmacopœia</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e7259">521</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Berneaux</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Berneux</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e7853">522</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Coxingo</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Coxinga</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e8806">523</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">In-chiūn</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">In-chiŭn</td>
-<td class="bottom">1 / 0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e8889">523</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Iyéyasu</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Iyéyasŭ</td>
-<td class="bottom">1 / 0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e8967">523</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">In-chiǔn</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">In-chiŭn</td>
-<td class="bottom">1 / 0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e9079">523</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Kiōtō</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Kiōto</td>
-<td class="bottom">1 / 0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e9296">523</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Lamsdorf</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Lamsdorff</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e9604">524</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Mollendorf</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">Möllendorf</td>
-<td class="bottom">1 / 0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd31e11444">526</a></td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">,</td>
-<td class="width40 bottom">.</td>
-<td class="bottom">1</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<h3 class="main">Abbreviations</h3>
-<p>Overview of abbreviations used.</p>
-<table class="abbreviationtable" summary="Overview of abbreviations used.">
-<tr>
-<th>Abbreviation</th>
-<th>Expansion</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">B.A.</td>
-<td class="bottom">
-[<i>Expansion not available</i>]
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">H.B.M.S.</td>
-<td class="bottom">Her Britannic Majesty’s Ship</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">H.M.S.</td>
-<td class="bottom">Her Majesty’s Ship</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">M.A.</td>
-<td class="bottom">
-[<i>Expansion not available</i>]
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">M.D.</td>
-<td class="bottom">Medicinae Doctor</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">Ph.D.</td>
-<td class="bottom">
-[<i>Expansion not available</i>]
-</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">U.S.N.</td>
-<td class="bottom">United States Navy</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="bottom">U.S.Ss.</td>
-<td class="bottom">United States Steamship</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</div>
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