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Project Gutenberg's An Australian in China, by George Ernest Morrison12This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with3almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or4re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included5with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org678Title: An Australian in China9Being the Narrative of a Quiet Journey Across China to Burma1011Author: George Ernest Morrison1213Release Date: September 4, 2006 [EBook #19172]1415Language: English1617Character set encoding: ASCII1819*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AN AUSTRALIAN IN CHINA ***2021222324Produced by Thierry Alberto and the Online Distributed25Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net262728293031* * * * *32+------------------------------------------------------------+33| Transcriber's Note: |34| |35| Obvious typographical errors have been corrected in |36| this text. For a complete list, please see the bottom of |37| this document. |38| |39| Macrons are shown as [=o] and [=u] |40| |41+------------------------------------------------------------+4243* * * * *4445[Illustration: THE AUTHOR IN WESTERN CHINA.]464748AN AUSTRALIAN IN CHINA4950BEING THE NARRATIVE OF A QUIET JOURNEY ACROSS CHINA TO BURMA5152BY GEORGE ERNEST MORRISON M.D. EDIN., F.R.G.S.535455_THIRD EDITION_5657LONDON: HORACE COX WINDSOR HOUSE, BREAM'S BUILDINGS E.C.5859MDCCCCII606162TO6364JOHN CHIENE, M.D.,6566F.R.C.S.E., F.R.S.E., ETC.,6768PROFESSOR OF SURGERY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH,6970WHO GAVE ME BACK THE POWER OF LOCOMOTION.7172I GRATEFULLY7374INSCRIBE THIS VOLUME.7576777879CONTENTS.80818283CHAPTER I. PAGES84INTRODUCTORY--MAINLY ABOUT MISSIONARIES AND THE CITY85OF HANKOW 1-118687CHAPTER II.88FROM HANKOW TO WANHSIEN, WITH SOME ACCOUNT OF89CHINESE WOMEN AND THE RAPIDS OF THE YANGTSE 12-239091CHAPTER III.92THE CITY OF WANHSIEN, AND THE JOURNEY FROM WANHSIEN93TO CHUNGKING 24-349495CHAPTER IV.96THE CITY OF CHUNGKING--THE CHINESE CUSTOMS--THE97FAMOUS MONSIEUR HAAS, AND A FEW WORDS ON98THE OPIUM FALLACY 35-4999100CHAPTER V.101THE JOURNEY FROM CHUNGKING TO SUIFU--CHINESE INNS 50-62102103CHAPTER VI.104THE CITY OF SUIFU--THE CHINA INLAND MISSION, WITH105SOME GENERAL REMARKS ABOUT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA 63-75106107CHAPTER VII.108SUIFU TO CHAOTONG, WITH SOME REMARKS ON THE109PROVINCE OF YUNNAN--CHINESE PORTERS, POSTAL110ARRANGEMENTS, AND BANKS 76-96111112CHAPTER VIII.113THE CITY OF CHAOTONG, WITH SOME REMARKS ON ITS114POVERTY, INFANTICIDE, SELLING FEMALE CHILDREN115INTO SLAVERY, TORTURES, AND THE CHINESE INSENSIBILITY116TO PAIN 97-106117118CHAPTER IX.119MAINLY ABOUT CHINESE DOCTORS 107-114120121CHAPTER X.122THE JOURNEY FROM CHAOTONG TO TONGCHUAN 115-124123124CHAPTER XI.125THE CITY OF TONGCHUAN, WITH SOME REMARKS UPON126INFANTICIDE 125-134127128CHAPTER XII.129TONGCHUAN TO YUNNAN CITY 135-147130131CHAPTER XIII.132AT YUNNAN CITY 148-157133134CHAPTER XIV.135GOLD, BANKS, AND TELEGRAPHS IN YUNNAN 158-170136137CHAPTER XV.138THE FRENCH MISSION AND THE ARSENAL IN YUNNAN CITY 171-182139140CHAPTER XVI.141THE JOURNEY FROM YUNNAN CITY TO TALIFU 183-201142143CHAPTER XVII.144THE CITY OF TALI--PRISONS--POISONING--PLAGUES AND145MISSIONS 202-217146147CHAPTER XVIII.148THE JOURNEY FROM TALI, WITH SOME REMARKS ON THE149CHARACTER OF THE CANTONESE, CHINESE EMIGRANTS,150CRETINS, AND WIFE-BEATING IN CHINA 218-232151152CHAPTER XIX.153THE MEKONG AND SALWEEN RIVERS--HOW TO TRAVEL154IN CHINA 233-243155156CHAPTER XX.157THE CITY OF TENGYUEH--THE CELEBRATED WUNTHO158SAWBWA--SHAN SOLDIERS 244-259159160CHAPTER XXI.161THE SHAN TOWN OF SANTA, AND MANYUEN, THE SCENE162OF CONSUL MARGARY'S MURDER 260-269163164CHAPTER XXII.165CHINA AS A FIGHTING POWER--THE KACHINS--AND THE166LAST STAGE INTO BHAMO 270-281167168CHAPTER XXIII.169BHAMO, MANDALAY, RANGOON, AND CALCUTTA 282-291170171172173174ILLUSTRATIONS.175176_Mostly from Photographs by_ MR. C. JENSEN _of the Imperial Chinese177Telegraphs._178179180THE AUTHOR IN WESTERN CHINA _Frontispiece._181182THE AUTHOR'S CHINESE PASSPORT _page_ 8183184ON A BALCONY IN WESTERN CHINA 14185186THE RIVER YANGTSE AT TUNG-LO-HSIA 34187188MEMORIAL ARCHWAY AT THE FORT OF FU-TO-KUAN 34189190CHUNGKING, FROM THE OPPOSITE BANK OF THE YANGTSE 38191192A TEMPLE THEATRE IN CHUNGKING 44193194ON THE MAIN ROAD TO SUIFU 52195196CULTIVATION IN TERRACES 58197198SCENE IN SZECHUEN 58199200OPIUM-SMOKING 72201202A TEMPLE IN SZECHUEN 84203204LAOWATAN 84205206THE OPIUM-SMOKER OF ROMANCE 93207208PAGODA BY THE WAYSIDE, WESTERN CHINA 118209210THE BIG EAST GATE OF YUNNAN CITY 146211212VIEW IN YUNNAN CITY 156213214SOLDIERS ON THE WALL OF YUNNAN CITY 168215216THE PAGODA OF YUNNAN CITY, 250 FEET HIGH 174217218THE VICEROY OF TWO PROVINCES 180219220THE AUTHOR'S CHINESE NAME 182221222THE GIANT OF YUNNAN 184223224THE "EAGLE NEST BARRIER," ON THE ROAD TO TALIFU 192225226SNOW-CLAD MOUNTAINS BEHIND TALIFU 204227228MEMORIAL IN A TEMPLE NEAR TALIFU 220229230THE DESCENT TO THE RIVER MEKONG 232231232INSIDE VIEW OF A SUSPENSION BRIDGE 236233234THE RIVER SALWEEN 240235236THE RIVER SHWELI AND ITS SUSPENSION BRIDGE 242237238THE SUBURB BEYOND THE SOUTH GATE OF TENGYUEH 250239240CHINESE MAP OF CHUNGKING 292241242ROUGH SKETCH-MAP OF CHINA AND BURMA _at end._243244245246247AN AUSTRALIAN IN CHINA.248249250251252CHAPTER I.253254INTRODUCTORY--MAINLY ABOUT MISSIONARIES AND THE CITY OF HANKOW.255256257In the first week of February, 1894, I returned to Shanghai from Japan.258It was my intention to go up the Yangtse River as far as Chungking, and259then, dressed as a Chinese, to cross quietly over Western China, the260Chinese Shan States, and Kachin Hills to the frontier of Burma. The261ensuing narrative will tell how easily and pleasantly this journey,262which a few years ago would have been regarded as a formidable263undertaking, can now be done.264265The journey was, of course, in no sense one of exploration; it consisted266simply of a voyage of 1500 miles up the Yangtse River, followed by a267quiet, though extended, excursion of another 1500 miles along the great268overland highway into Burma, taken by one who spoke no Chinese, who had269no interpreter or companion, who was unarmed, but who trusted implicitly270in the good faith of the Chinese. Anyone in the world can cross over to271Burma in the way I did, provided he be willing to exercise for a certain272number of weeks or months some endurance--for he will have to travel273many miles on foot over a mountainous country--and much forbearance.274275I went to China possessed with the strong racial antipathy to the276Chinese common to my countrymen, but that feeling has long since given277way to one of lively sympathy and gratitude, and I shall always look278back with pleasure to this journey, during which I experienced, while279traversing provinces as wide as European kingdoms, uniform kindness and280hospitality, and the most charming courtesy. In my case, at least, the281Chinese did not forget their precept, "deal gently with strangers from282afar."283284I left Shanghai on Sunday, February 11th, by the Jardine Matheson's285steamer _Taiwo_. One kind friend, a merchant captain who had seen life286in every important seaport in the world, came down, though it was past287midnight, to bid me farewell. We shook hands on the wharf, and for the288last time. Already he had been promised the first vacancy in Jardine289Matheson's. Some time after my departure, when I was in Western China,290he was appointed one of the officers of the ill-fated _Kowshing_, and291when this unarmed transport before the declaration of war was destroyed292by a Japanese gunboat, he was among the slain--struck, I believe, by a293Japanese bullet while struggling for life in the water.294295I travelled as a Chinese, dressed in warm Chinese winter clothing, with296a pigtail attached to the inside of my hat. I could not have been more297comfortable. I had a small cabin to myself. I had of course my own298bedding, and by paying a Mexican dollar a day to the Chinese steward,299"foreign chow," was brought me from the saloon. The traveller who cares300to travel in this way, to put his pride in his pocket and a pigtail down301his back, need pay only one-fourth of what it would cost him to travel302as a European in European dress.303304But I was, I found, unwittingly travelling under false pretences. When305the smart chief officer came for my fare he charged me, I thought, too306little. I expressed my surprise, and said that I thought the fare was307seven dollars. "So it is," he replied "but we only charge missionaries308five dollars, and I knew you were a missionary even before they told309me." How different was his acuteness from that of the Chinese compradore310who received me on the China Merchants' steamer _Hsin Chi_, in which I311once made a voyage from Shanghai to Tientsin, also in Chinese dress! The312conversation was short, sharp, and emphatic. The compradore looked at me313searchingly. "What pidgin belong you?" he asked--meaning what is your314business? Humbly I answered, "My belong Jesus Christ pidgin"; that is, I315am a missionary, to which he instantly and with some scorn replied, "No316dam fear!"317318We called at the river ports and reached Hankow on the 14th. Hankow, the319Chinese say, is the mart of eight provinces and the centre of the earth.320It is the chief distributing centre of the Yangtse valley, the capital321city of the centre of China. The trade in tea, its staple export, is322declining rapidly, particularly since 1886. Indian opium goes no higher323up the river than this point; its importation into Hankow is now324insignificant, amounting to only 738 piculs (44 tons) per annum. Hankow325is on the left bank of the Yangtse, separated only by the width of the326Han river from Hanyang, and by the width of the Yangtse from Wuchang;327these three divisions really form one large city, with more inhabitants328than the entire population of the colony of Victoria.329330Wuchang is the capital city of the two provinces of Hunan and Hupeh; it331is here that the Viceroy, Chang Chi Tung, resides in his official yamen332and dispenses injustice from a building almost as handsome as the333American mission-houses which overlook it. Chang Chi Tung is the most334anti-foreign of all the Viceroys of China; yet no Viceroy in the Empire335has ever had so many foreigners in his employ as he. "Within the four336seas," he says, "all men are brothers"; yet the two provinces he rules337over are closed against foreigners, and the missionaries are compelled338to remain under the shelter of the foreign Concession in Hankow. With a339public spirit unusual among Chinese Viceroys he has devoted the immense340revenues of his office to the modern development of the resources of his341vice-kingdom. He has erected a gigantic cotton-mill at Wuchang with342thirty-five thousand spindles, covering six acres and lit with the343electric light, and with a reservoir of three acres and a half. He has344built a large mint. At Hanyang he has erected magnificent iron-works and345blast furnaces which cover many acres and are provided with all the346latest machinery. He has iron and coal mines, with a railway seventeen347miles long from the mines to the river, and specially constructed348river-steamers and special hoisting machinery at the river-banks. Money349he has poured out like water; he is probably the only important official350in China who will leave office a poor man.351352Acting as private secretary to the Viceroy is a clever Chinese named Kaw353Hong Beng, the author of _Defensio Populi_, that often-quoted attack354upon missionary methods which appeared first in _The North China Daily355News_. A linguist of unusual ability, who publishes in _The Daily News_356translations from Heine in English verse, Kaw is gifted with a rare357command over the resources of English. He is a Master of Arts of the358University of Edinburgh. Yet, strange paradox, notwithstanding that he359had the privilege of being trained in the most pious and earnest360community in the United Kingdom, under the lights of the United361Presbyterian Kirk, Free Kirk, Episcopalian Church, and _The_ Kirk, not362to mention a large and varied assortment of Dissenting Churches of more363or less dubious orthodoxy, he is openly hostile to the introduction of364Christianity into China. And nowhere in China is the opposition to the365introduction of Christianity more intense than in the Yangtse valley. In366this intensity many thoughtful missionaries see the greater hope of the367ultimate conversion of this portion of China; opposition they say is a368better aid to missionary success than mere apathy.369370During the time I was in China, I met large numbers of missionaries of371all classes, in many cities from Peking to Canton, and they unanimously372expressed satisfaction at the progress they are making in China.373Expressed succinctly, their harvest may be described as amounting to a374fraction more than two Chinamen per missionary per annum. If, however,375the paid ordained and unordained native helpers be added to the number376of missionaries, you find that the aggregate body converts nine-tenths377of a Chinaman per worker per annum; but the missionaries deprecate their378work being judged by statistics. There are 1511 Protestant missionaries379labouring in the Empire; and, estimating their results from the380statistics of previous years as published in the _Chinese Recorder_, we381find that they gathered last year (1893) into the fold 3127 Chinese--not382all of whom it is feared are genuine Christians--at a cost of _L350,000_,383a sum equal to the combined incomes of the ten chief London hospitals.384385Hankow itself swarms with missionaries, "who are unhappily divided into386so many sects, that even a foreigner is bewildered by their number, let387alone the heathen to whom they are accredited." (Medhurst.)388389Dwelling in well-deserved comfort in and around the foreign settlement,390there are members of the London Missionary Society, of the Tract391Society, of the Local Tract Society, of the British and Foreign Bible392Society, of the National Bible Society of Scotland, of the American393Bible Society; there are Quaker missionaries, Baptist, Wesleyan, and394Independent missionaries of private means; there are members of the395Church Missionary Society, of the American Board of Missions, and of the396American High Church Episcopal Mission; there is a Medical Mission in397connection with the London Missionary Society, there is a flourishing398French Mission under a bishop, the "_Missions etrangeres de Paris_," a399Mission of Franciscan Fathers, most of whom are Italian, and a Spanish400Mission of the Order of St. Augustine.401402The China Inland Mission has its chief central distributing station at403Hankow, and here also are the headquarters of a Scandinavian Mission, of404a Danish Mission, and of an unattached mission, most of the members of405which are also Danish. Where there are so many missions, of so many406different sects, and holding such widely divergent views, it is, I407suppose, inevitable that each mission should look with some disfavour408upon the work done by its neighbours, should have some doubts as to the409expediency of their methods, and some reasonable misgivings as to the410genuineness of their conversions.411412The Chinese "Rice Christians," those spurious Christians who become413converted in return for being provided with rice, are just those who414profit by these differences of opinion, and who, with timely lapses from415grace, are said to succeed in being converted in turn by all the416missions from the Augustins to the Quakers.417418Every visitor to Hankow and to all other open ports, who is a supporter419of missionary effort, is pleased to find that his preconceived notions420as to the hardships and discomforts of the open port missionary in China421are entirely false. Comfort and pleasures of life are there as great as422in any other country. Among the most comfortable residences in Hankow423are the quarters of the missionaries; and it is but right that the424missionaries should be separated as far as possible from all425discomfort--missionaries who are sacrificing all for China, and who are426prepared to undergo any reasonable hardship to bring enlightenment to427this land of darkness.428429I called at the headquarters of the Spanish mission of Padres Agustinos430and smoked a cigarette with two of the Padres, and exchanged431reminiscences of Valladolid and Barcelona. And I can well conceive,432having seen the extreme dirtiness of the mission premises, how little433the Spaniard has to alter his ways in order to make them conform to the434more ancient civilisation of the Chinese.435436In Hankow there is a large foreign concession with a handsome embankment437lined by large buildings. There is a rise and fall in the river between438summer and winter levels of nearly sixty feet. In the summer the river439laps the edge of the embankment and may overflow into the concession; in440the winter, broad steps lead down to the edge of the water which, even441when shrunk into its bed, is still more than half a mile in width. Our442handsome consulate is at one end of the embankment; at the other there443is a remarkable municipal building which was designed by a former City444constable, who was, I hope, more expert with the handcuffs than he was445with the pencil.446447[Illustration: THE AUTHOR'S CHINESE PASSPORT.]448449Our interests in Hankow are protected by Mr. Pelham Warren, the Consul,450one of the ablest men in the Service. I registered at the Consulate as a451British subject and obtained a Chinese passport in terms of the Treaty452of Tientsin for the four provinces Hupeh, Szechuen, Kweichow, and453Yunnan, available for one year from the date of issue.454455I had no servant. An English-speaking "boy," hearing that I was in need456of one, came to me to recommend "his number one flend," who, he assured457me, spoke English "all the same Englishman." But when the "flend" came I458found that he spoke English all the same as I spoke Chinese. He was not459abashed, but turned away wrath by saying to me, through an interpreter,460"It is true that I cannot speak the foreign language, but the foreign461gentleman is so clever that in one month he will speak Chinese462beautifully." We did not come to terms.463464At Hankow I embarked on the China Merchants' steamer _Kweili_, the only465triple-screw steamer on the River, and four days later, on February46621st, I landed at Ichang, the most inland port on the Yangtse yet467reached by steam. Ichang is an open port; it is the scene of the468anti-foreign riot of September 2nd, 1891, when the foreign settlement469was pillaged and burnt by the mob, aided by soldiers of the Chentai470Loh-Ta-Jen, the head military official in charge at Ichang, "who gave471the outbreak the benefit of his connivance." Pleasant zest is given to472life here in the anticipation of another outbreak; it is the only473excitement.474475From Ichang to Chungking--a distance of 412 miles--the river Yangtse, in476a great part of its course, is a series of rapids which no steamer has477yet attempted to ascend, though it is contended that the difficulties of478navigation would not be insuperable to a specially constructed steamer479of elevated horse-power. Some idea of the speed of the current at this480part of the river may be given by the fact that a junk, taking thirty to481thirty-five days to do the upward journey, hauled most of the way by482gangs of trackers, has been known to do the down-river journey in two483days and a half.484485Believing that I could thus save some days on the journey, I decided to486go to Chungking on foot, and engaged a coolie to accompany me. We were487to start on the Thursday afternoon; but about midnight on Wednesday I488met Dr. Aldridge, of the Customs, who easily persuaded me that by taking489the risk of going in a small boat (a _wupan_), and not in an ordinary490passenger junk (a _kwatze_), I might, with luck, reach Chungking as soon491by water as I could reach Wanhsien at half the distance by land. The492Doctor was a man of surprising energy. He offered to arrange everything493for me, and by 6 o'clock in the morning he had engaged a boat, had494selected a captain (_laoban_), and a picked crew of four young men, who495undertook to land me in Chungking in fifteen days, and had given them496all necessary instructions for my journey. All was to be ready for a497start the same evening.498499During the course of the morning the written agreement was brought me by500the laoban, drawn up in Chinese and duly signed, of which a Chinese501clerk made me the following translation into English. I transcribe it502literally:--503504Yang Hsing Chung (the laoban) hereby contracts to convey Dr. M. to505Chungking on the following conditions:--5065071. The passage-money agreed upon is 28,000 cash (_L2 16s._),508which includes all charges.5095102. If Chungking is reached in twelve days, Dr. M. will give511the master 32,500 cash instead; if in thirteen days 31,000,512and if in fifteen days 28,000.5135143. If all goes well and the master does his duty515satisfactorily, Dr. M. will give him 30,000 cash, even if he516gets to Chungking in fifteen days.5175184. The sum of 14,000 cash is to be advanced to the master519before starting; the remainder to be paid on arrival at520Chungking.521522(Signed) YANG HSING CHUNG.523524Dated the 17th day of the 2nd moon,525K, shui 20th year.526527The Chinaman who wrote this in English speaks English better than many528Englishmen.529530531532533CHAPTER II.534535FROM ICHANG TO WANHSIEN, WITH SOME ACCOUNT OF CHINESE WOMEN AND THE536RAPIDS OF THE YANGTSE KIANG.537538539The agreement was brought me in the morning; all the afternoon I was540busy, and at 8 p.m. I embarked from the Customs pontoon. The boat was a541wupan (five boards), 28 feet long and drawing 8 inches. Its sail was542like the wing of a butterfly, with transverse ribs of light bamboo; its543stern was shaped "like a swallow's wings at rest." An improvised544covering of mats amidships was my crib; and with spare mats, slipt545during the day over the boat's hood, coverings could be made at night546for'ard for my three men and aft for the other two. It seemed a frail547little craft to face the dangers of the cataracts, but it was manned by548as smart a crew of young Chinese as could be found on the river. It was549pitch dark when we paddled into the stream amidst a discharge of550crackers. As we passed under the _Kweili_, men were there to wish me551_bon voyage_, and a revolver was emptied into the darkness to propitiate552the river god.553554We paddled up the bank under the sterns of countless junks, past the555walled city, and then, crossing to the other bank, we made fast and556waited for the morning to begin our journey. The lights of the city were557down the river; all was quiet; my men were in good heart, and there was558no doubt whatever that they would make every effort to fulfil their559contract.560561At daylight we were away again and soon entered the first of the great562gorges where the river has cleft its way through the mountains.563564With a clear and sunny sky, the river flowing smoothly and reflecting565deeply the lofty and rugged hills which fall steeply to the water's566edge, a light boat, and a model crew, it was a pleasure to lie at ease567wrapped in my Chinese pukai and watch the many junks lazily falling down568the river, the largest of them "dwarfed by the colossal dimensions of569the surrounding scenery to the size of sampans," and the fishing boats,570noiseless but for the gentle creaking of the sheers and dip-net,571silently working in the still waters under the bank.572573At Ping-shan-pa there is an outstation of the Imperial Maritime Customs574in charge of a seafaring man who was once a cockatoo farmer in South575Australia, and drove the first team of bullocks to the Mount Brown576diggings. He lives comfortably in a house-boat moored to the bank. He is577one of the few Englishmen in China married in the English way, as578distinct from the Chinese, to a Chinese girl. His wife is one of the579prettiest girls that ever came out of Nanking, and talks English580delightfully with a musical voice that is pleasant to listen to. I581confess that I am one of those who agree with the missionary writer in582regarding "the smile of a Chinese woman as inexpressibly charming." I583have seen girls in China who would be considered beautiful in any584capital in Europe. The attractiveness of the Japanese lady has been the585theme of many writers, but, speaking as an impartial observer who has586been both in Japan and China, I have never been able to come to any587other decision than that in every feature the Chinese woman is superior588to her Japanese sister. She is head and shoulders above the Japanese;589she is more intellectual, or, rather, she is more capable of590intellectual development; she is incomparably more chaste and modest.591She is prettier, sweeter, and more trustworthy than the misshapen592cackling little dot with black teeth that we are asked to admire as a593Japanese beauty. The traveller in China is early impressed by the594contrast between the almost entire freedom from apparent immorality of595the Chinese cities, especially of Western China, and the flaunting596indecency of the _Yoshiwaras_ of Japan, with "their teeming, seething,597busy mass of women, whose virtue is industry and whose industry is598vice."599600The small feet of the Chinese women, though admired by the Chinese and601poetically referred to by them as "three-inch gold lilies," are in our602eyes a very unpleasant deformity--but still, even with this deformity,603the walk of the Chinese woman is more comely than the gait of the604Japanese woman as she shambles ungracefully along with her little bent605legs, scraping her wooden-soled slippers along the pavement with a noise606that sets your teeth on edge. "Girls are like flowers," say the Chinese,607"like the willow. It is very important that their feet should be bound608short so that they can walk beautifully with mincing steps, swaying609gracefully, and thus showing to all that they are persons of610respectability." Apart from the Manchus, the dominant race, whose women611do not bind their feet, all chaste Chinese girls have small feet. Those612who have large feet are either, speaking generally, ladies of easy613virtue or slave girls. And, of course, no Christian girl is allowed to614have her feet bound.615616[Illustration: ON A BALCONY IN WESTERN CHINA.]617618Leaving Ping-shan-pa with a stiff breeze in our favour we slowly stemmed619the current. Look at the current side, and you would think we were doing620eight knots an hour or more, but look at the shore side, close to which621we kept to escape as far as possible from the current, and you saw how622gradually we felt our way along.623624At a double row of mat sheds filled with huge coils of bamboo rope of625all thicknesses, my laoban went ashore to purchase a towline; he took626with him 1000 cash (about two shillings), and returned with a coil 100627yards in length and 600 cash of change. The rope he brought was made of628plaited bamboo, was as thick as the middle finger, and as tough as629whalebone.630631The country was more open and terraced everywhere into gardens. Our632progress was most satisfactory. When night came we drew into the bank,633and I coiled up in my crib and made myself comfortable. Space was634cramped, and I had barely room to stretch my legs. My cabin was 5 feet 6635inches square and 4 feet high, open behind, but with two little doors in636front, out of which I could just manage to squeeze myself sideways round637the mast. Coir matting was next the floor boards, then a thick Chinese638quilt (a _pukai_), then a Scotch plaid made in Geelong. My pillow was639Chinese, and the hardest part of the bed; my portmanteau was beside me640and served as a desk; a Chinese candle, more wick than wax, stuck into a641turnip, gave me light.642643This, our first day's journey, brought us to within sound of the worst644rapid on the river, the Hsintan, and the roar of the cataract hummed in645our ears all night.646647Early in the morning we were at the foot of the rapid under the bank on648the opposite side of the river from the town of Hsintan. It was an649exciting scene. A swirling torrent with a roar like thunder was frothing650down the cataract. Above, barriers of rocks athwart the stream stretched651like a weir across the river, damming the deep still water behind it.652The shore was strewn with boulders. Groups of trackers were on the bank653squatting on the rocks to see the foreign devil and his cockleshell.654Other Chinese were standing where the side-stream is split by the655boulders into narrow races, catching fish with great dexterity, dipping656them out of the water with scoop-nets.657658We rested in some smooth water under shelter and put out our towline;659three of my boys jumped ashore and laid hold of it; another with his660bamboo boat-hook stood on the bow; the laoban was at the tiller; and I661was cooped up useless in the well under the awning. The men started662hauling as we pushed out into the sea of waters. The boat quivered, the663water leapt at the bow as if it would engulf us; our three men were664obviously too few. The boat danced in the rapid. My men on board665shrieked excitedly that the towrope was fouling--it had caught in a666rock--but their voices could not be heard; our trackers were brought to667with a jerk; the hindmost saw the foul and ran back to free it, but he668was too late, for the boat had come beam on to the current. Our captain669frantically waved to let go, and the next moment we were tossed bodily670into the cataract. The boat heeled gunwale under, and suddenly, but the671bowman kept his feet like a Blondin, dropped the boat-hook, and jumped672to unlash the halyard; a wave buried the boat nose under and swamped me673in my kennel; my heart stopped beating, and, scared out of my wits, I674began to strip off my sodden clothes; but before I had half done the675sail had been set; both men had miraculously fended the boat from a676rock, which, by a moment's hesitation, would have smashed us in bits or677buried us in the boiling trough formed by the eddy below it, and, with678another desperate effort, we had slid from danger into smooth water.679Then my men laughed heartily. How it was done I do not know, but I felt680keen admiration for the calm dexterity with which it had been done.681682We baled the water out of the boat, paid out a second towrope--this one683from the bow to keep the stern under control, the other being made fast684to the mast, and took on board a licensed pilot. Extra trackers, hired685for a few cash, laid hold of both towlines, and bodily--the water686swelling and foaming under our bows--the boat was hauled against the687torrent, and up the ledge of water that stretches across the river. We688were now in smooth water at the entrance to the Mi Tsang Gorge. Two689stupendous walls of rock, almost perpendicular, as bold and rugged as690the Mediterranean side of the Rock of Gibraltar seem folded one behind691the other across the river. "Savage cliffs are these, where not a tree692and scarcely a blade of grass can grow, and where the stream, which is693rather heard than seen, seems to be fretting in vain efforts to escape694from its dark and gloomy prison." In the gorge itself the current was695restrained, and boats could cross from bank to bank without difficulty.696It was an eerie feeling to glide over the sunless water shut in by the697stupendous sidewalls of rock. At a sandy spit to the west of the gorge698we landed and put things in order. And here I stood and watched the699junks disappear down the river one after the other, and I saw the truth700of what Hosie had written that, as their masts are always unshipped in701the down passage, the junks seem to be "passing with their human freight702into eternity."703704An immensely high declivity with a precipitous face was in front of us,705which strained your eyes to look at; yet high up to the summit and to706the very edge of the precipice, little farmsteads are dotted, and every707yard of land available is under cultivation. So steep is it that the708scanty soil must be washed away, you think, at the first rains, and only709an adventurous goat could dwell there in comfort. My laoban, Enjeh,710pointing to this mighty mass, said, "_Pin su chiao_;" but whether these711words were the name of the place, or were intended to convey to me his712sense of its magnificence, or dealt with the question of the713precariousness of tenure so far above our heads, I had no means to714determine.715716My laoban knew twelve words of English, and I twelve words of Chinese,717and this was the extent of our common vocabulary; it had to be carefully718eked out with signs and gestures. I knew the Chinese for rice,719flourcake, tea, egg, chopsticks, opium, bed, by-and-by, how many,720charcoal, cabbage, and customs. My laoban could say in English, or721pidgin English, chow, number one, no good, go ashore, sit down,722by-and-by, to-morrow, match, lamp, alright, one piecee, and goddam. This723last named exotic he had been led to consider as synonymous with "very724good." It was not the first time I had known the words to be misapplied.725I remember reading in the _Sydney Bulletin_, that a Chinese cook in726Sydney when applying for a situation detailed to the mistress his727undeniable qualifications, concluding with the memorable announcement,728"My Clistian man mum; my eat beef; my say goddam."729730There was a small village behind us. The villagers strolled down to see731the foreigner whom children well in the background called "_Yang732kweitze_" (foreign devil). Below on the sand, were the remains of a733junk, confiscated for smuggling salt; it had been sawn bodily in two.734Salt is a Government monopoly and a junk found smuggling it is735confiscated on the spot.736737Kueichow, on the left bank, is the first walled town we came to. Here738we had infinite difficulty in passing the rapids, and crossed and739recrossed the river several times. I sat in the boat stripped and740shivering, for shipwreck seemed certain, and I did not wish to be741drowned like a rat. For cool daring I never saw the equal of my boys,742and their nicety of judgment was remarkable. Creeping along close to the743bank, every moment in danger of having its bottom knocked out, the boat744would be worked to the exact point from which the crossing of the river745was feasible, balanced for a moment in the stream, then with sail set746and a clipping breeze, and my men working like demons with the oars,747taking short strokes, and stamping time with their feet, the boat shot748into the current. We made for a rock in the centre of the river; we749missed it, and my heart was in my mouth as I saw the rapid below us into750which we were being drawn, when the boat mysteriously swung half round751and glided under the lee of the rock. One of the boys leapt out with the752bow-rope, and the others with scull and boat-hook worked the boat round753to the upper edge of the rock, and then, steadying her for the dash754across, pushed off again into the swirling current and made like fiends755for the bank. Standing on the stern, managing the sheet and tiller, and756with his bamboo pole ready, the laoban yelled and stamped in his757excitement; there was the roar of the cataract below us, towards which758we were fast edging stern on, destruction again threatened us and all759seemed over, when in that moment we entered the back-wash and were again760in good shelter. And so it went on, my men with splendid skill doing761always the right thing, in the right way, at the right time, with762unerring certainty.763764At Yehtan rapid, which is said to be the worst on the river in the765winter, as the Hsintan rapid is in summer, three of the boys went766ashore to haul us up the ledge of water--they were plainly insufficient.767While we were hanging on the cataract extra trackers appeared from768behind the rocks and offered their services. They could bargain with us769at an advantage. It was a case well known to all Chinese "of speaking of770the price after the pig has been killed." But, when we agreed to their771terms, they laid hold of the towrope and hauled us through in a moment.772Here, as at other dangerous rapids on the river, an official lifeboat is773stationed. It is of broad beam, painted red. The sailors are paid eighty774cash (_2d._) a day, and are rewarded with 1000 cash for every life they775save, and 800 cash for every corpse.776777Wushan Gorge, the "Witches' Gorge," which extends from Kuantukou to778Wushan-hsien, a distance of twenty miles, is the longest gorge on the779river.780781Directly facing us as we emerged from the gorge was the walled town of782Wushan-hsien. Its guardian pagoda, with its seven stories and its783upturned gables, like the rim of an official hat, is down-stream from784the city, and thus prevents wealth and prosperity being swept by the785current past the city.786787Beyond there is a short but steep rapid. Before a strong wind with all788sail set we boldly entered it and determined which was the stronger, the789wind or the current. But, while we hung in the current calling and790whistling for the wind, the wind flagged for a moment; tension being791removed, the bow swung into the rocks; but the water was shallow, and in792a trice two of the boys had jumped into the water and were holding the793boat-sides. Then poling and pulling we crept up the rapid into smooth794water. Never was there any confusion, never a false stroke. To hear my795boys jabber in their unintelligible speech you pictured disorder, and796disaster, and wild excitement; to see them act you witnessed such797coolness, skill, and daring as you had rarely seen before. My boys were798all young. The captain was only twenty, and was a model of physical799grace, with a face that will gladden the heart of the Chinese maiden800whom he condescends to select to be the mother of his children.801802Junks were making slow progress up the river. The towpath is here on the803left bank, sixty feet above the present level of the river. Barefooted804trackers, often one hundred in a gang, clamber over the rocks "like a805pack of hounds in full cry," each with the coupling over his shoulder806and all singing in chorus, the junk they are towing often a quarter of a807mile astern of them. When a rapid intervenes they strain like bondmen at808the towrope; the line creaks under the enormous tension but holds fast.809On board the junk, a drum tattoo is beaten and fire-crackers let off,810and a dozen men with long ironshod bamboos sheer the vessel off the811rocks as foot by foot it is drawn past the obstruction. Contrast with812this toilsome slowness the speed of the junk bound down-stream. Its mast813is shipped; its prodigious bow-sweep projects like a low bowsprit; the814after deck is covered as far as midships with arched mat-roof; coils of815bamboo rope are hanging under the awning; a score or more of boatmen,816standing to their work and singing to keep time, work the yulos, as817looking like a modern whaleback the junk races down the rapids.818819Kweichou-fu, 146 miles from Ichang, is one of the largest cities on the820Upper Yangtse. Just before it is the Feng-hsiang Gorge the "Windbox821Gorge" where the mountains have been again cleft in twain to let pass822the river; this is the last of the great gorges of the Yangtse.823824We had left the province of Hupeh. Kweichou is the first prefectural825city that the traveller meets in Szechuen; for that reason my laoban826required me to give him my passport that he might take it ashore and827have it viseed by the magistrate. While he was away two Customs828officials searched my boat for contraband goods. When he returned, he829had to pay a squeeze at the Customs station. We clawed with our hooked830bamboos round the sterns of a hundred Szechuen junks, and were again831arrested at a likin boat, and more cash passed from my laoban to the832officials in charge. We went on again, when a third time we came face on833to a likin-barrier, and a third time my laoban was squeezed. After this834we were permitted to continue our journey. For the rest of the day835whenever the laoban caught my eye he raised three fingers and with a836rueful shake of the head said "Kweichou haikwan (customs) no good"; and837then he swore, no doubt.838839My little boat was the smallest on the river. In sailing it could hold840its own with all but the long ferry boats or tenders which accompany the841larger junks to land the trackers and towline. These boats carry a huge842square sail set vertically from sheer legs, and are very fast. But in843rowing, poling, and tracking we could beat the river.844845Anping was passed--a beautiful country town in a landscape of red hills846and rich green pastures, of groves of bamboo and cypress, of pretty847little farmhouses with overhanging eaves and picturesque temples in848wooded glens.849850At Chipatzu there are the remains of a remarkable embankment built of851huge blocks of dressed stone resting upon a noble brow of natural rock;852deep Chinese characters are cut into the stone; but the glory is853departed and there are now only a few straggling huts where there was854once a large city.855856The river was now at its lowest and at every point of sand and shingle,857meagre bands of gold puddlers were at work washing for gold in cradle858rockers. To judge, however, from the shabbiness of their surroundings859there was little fear that their gains would disturb the equilibrium of860the world's gold yield.861862863864865CHAPTER III.866867THE CITY OF WANHSIEN, AND THE JOURNEY FROM WANHSIEN TO CHUNGKING.868869870At daylight, on March 1st, we were abreast of the many storied pagoda,871whose lofty position, commanding the approach to the city, brings good872fortune to the city of Wanhsien. A beautiful country is this--the873chocolate soil richly tilled, the sides of the hills dotted with874farmhouses in groves of bamboo and cedar, with every variety of green in875the fields, shot through with blazing patches of the yellow rape-seed.876The current was swift, the water was shallow where we were tracking, and877we were constantly aground in the shingle; but we rounded the point, and878Wanhsien was before us. This is the half-way city between Ichang and879Chungking. My smart laoban dressed himself in his best to be ready to go880ashore with me; he was jubilant at his skill in bringing me so quickly.881"Sampan number one! goddam!" he said; and, holding up two hands, he882turned down seven fingers to show that we had come in seven days. Then883he pointed to other boats that we were passing, and counted on his884fingers fifteen, whereby I knew he was demonstrating that, had I gone in885any other boat but his, I should have been fifteen days on the way886instead of seven.887888An immense number of junks of all kinds were moored to the bank, bow on.889Many of them were large vessels, with hulls like that of an Aberdeen890clipper. Many carry foreign flags, by which they are exempt from the891Chinese likin duties, so capricious in their imposition, and pay instead892a general five per cent. _ad valorem_ duty on their cargoes, which is893levied by the Imperial Maritime Customs, and collected either in894Chungking or Ichang. From one to the other, with boathooks and paddle,895we crept past the outer wings of their balanced rudders till we reached896the landing place. On the rocks at the landing a bevy of women were897washing, beating their hardy garments with wooden flappers against the898stones; but they ceased their work as the foreign devil, in his uncouth899garb, stepped ashore in their midst. Wanhsien is not friendly to900foreigners in foreign garb. I did not know this, and went ashore dressed901as a European. Never have I received such a spontaneous welcome as I did902in this city; never do I wish to receive such another. I landed at the903mouth of the small creek which separates the large walled city to the904east from the still larger city beyond the walls to the west. My laoban905was with me. We passed through the washerwomen. Boys and ragamuffins906hanging about the shipping saw me, and ran towards me, yelling: "_Yang907kweitze, Yang kweitze_" (foreign devil, foreign devil).908909Behind the booths a story-teller had gathered a crowd; in a moment he910was alone and the crowd were following me up the hill, yelling and911howling with a familiarity most offensive to a sensitive stranger. My912sturdy boy wished me to produce my passport which is the size of an913admiral's ensign, but I was not such a fool as to do so for it had to914serve me for many months yet. With this taunting noisy crowd I had to915walk on as if I enjoyed the demonstration. I stopped once and spoke to916the crowd, and, as I knew no Chinese, I told them in gentle English of917the very low opinion their conduct led me to form of the moral918relations of their mothers, and the resignation with which it induced me919to contemplate the hyperpyretic surroundings of their posthumous920existence; and, borrowing the Chinese imprecation, I ventured to express921the hope that when their souls return again to earth they may dwell in922the bodies of hogs, since they appeared to me the only habitations meet923for them.924925But my words were useless. With a smiling face, but rage at my heart, I926led the procession up the creek to a stone bridge where large numbers927left me, only to have their places taken on the other bank by a still928more enthusiastic gathering. I stopped here a moment in the jostling929crowd to look up-stream at that singular natural bridge, which an930enormous mass of stone has formed across the creek, and I could see the931high arched bridge beyond it, which stretches from bank to bank in one932noble span, and is so high above the water that junks can pass under it933in the summer time when the rains swell this little stream into a broad934and navigable river.935936Then we climbed the steep bank into the city and entering by a dirty937narrow street we emerged into the main thoroughfare, the crowd still938following and the shops emptying into the street to see me. We passed939the Mohammedan Mosque, the Roman Catholic Mission, the City Temple, to a940Chinese house where I was slipped into the court and the door shut, and941then into another to find that I was in the home of the China Inland942Mission, and that the pigtailed celestial receiving me at the steps was943Mr. Hope Gill. It was my clothes I then learnt that had caused the944manifestation in my honour. An hour later, when I came out again into945the street, the crowd was waiting still to see me, but it was946disappointed to see me now dressed like one of themselves. In the947meantime I had resumed my Chinese dress. "Look," the people said, "at948the foreigner; he had on foreign dress, and now he is dressed in Chinese949even to his queue. Look at his queue, it is false." I took off my hat to950scratch my head. "Look," they shouted again, "at his queue; it is stuck951to the inside of his hat." But they ceased to follow me.952953There are three Missionaries in Wanhsien of the China Inland Mission,954one of whom is from Sydney. The mission has been opened six years, and955has been fairly successful, or completely unsuccessful, according to the956point of view of the inquirer.957958Mr. Hope Gill, the senior member of the mission, is a most earnest good959man, who works on in his discouraging task with an enthusiasm and960devotion beyond all praise. A Premillennialist, he preaches without961ceasing throughout the city; and his preaching is earnest and962indiscriminate. His method has been sarcastically likened by the963Chinese, in the words of one of their best-known aphorisms, to the964unavailing efforts of a "blind fowl picking at random after worms."965Nearly all the Chinese in Wanhsien have heard the doctrine described966with greater or less unintelligibility, and it is at their own risk if967they still refuse to be saved.968969During the cholera epidemic this brave man never left his post; he never970refused a call to attend the sick and dying, and, at the risk of his971own, saved many lives. And what is his reward? This work he did, the972Chinese say, not from a disinterested love of his fellows, which was his973undoubted motive, but to accumulate merit for himself in the invisible974world beyond the grave. "Gratitude," says this missionary, and it is the975opinion of many, "is a condition of heart, or of mind, which seems to be976incapable of existence in the body of a Chinaman." Yet other977missionaries tell me that no man can possess a livelier sense of978gratitude than a Chinaman, or manifest it with more sincerity. "If our979words are compared to the croaking of the frog, we heed it not, but980freely express the feelings of our heart," are actual words addressed by981a grateful Chinese patient to the first medical missionary in China. And982the Chinaman himself will tell you, says Smith, "that it does not follow983that, because he does not exhibit gratitude he does not feel it. When984the dumb man swallows a tooth he may not say much about it, but it is985all inside."986987Since its foundation in 1887, the Inland Mission of Wanhsien has been988conducted with brave perseverance. There are, unfortunately, no989converts, but there are three hopeful "inquirers," whose conversion990would be the more speedy the more likely they were to obtain employment991afterwards. They argue in this way; they say, to quote the words used by992the Rev. G. L. Mason at the Shanghai Missionary Conference of 1890, "if993the foreign teacher will take care of our bodies, we will do him the994favour to seek the salvation of our souls." This question of the995employment of converts is one of the chief difficulties of the996missionary in China. "The idea (derived from Buddhism) is universally997prevalent in China," says the Rev. C. W. Mateer, "that everyone who998enters any sect should live by it.... When a Chinaman becomes a999Christian he expects to live by his Christianity."10001001One of the three inquirers was shown me; he was described as the most1002advanced of the three in knowledge of the doctrine. Now I do not wish to1003write unkindly, but I am compelled to say that this man was a poor,1004wretched, ragged coolie, who sells the commonest gritty cakes in a1005rickety stall round the corner from the mission, who can neither read1006nor write, and belongs to a very humble order of blunted intelligence.1007The poor fellow is the father of a little girl of three, an only child,1008who is both deaf and dumb. And there is the fear that his fondness for1009the little one tempts him to give hope to the missionaries that in him1010they are to see the first fruit of their toil, the first in the district1011to be saved by their teaching, while he nurses a vague hope that, when1012the foreign teachers regard him as adequately converted, they may be1013willing to restore speech and hearing to his poor little offspring. It1014is a scant harvest.10151016After a Chinese dinner the missionary and I went for a walk into the1017country. In the main street we met a troop of beggars, each with a bowl1018of rice and garbage and a long stick, with a few tattered rags hanging1019round his loins--they were the poorest poor I had ever seen. They were1020the beggars of the city, who had just received their midday meal at the1021"Wanhsien Ragged Homes." There are three institutions of the kind in the1022city for the relief of the destitute; they are entirely supported by1023charity, and are said to have an average annual income of 40,000 taels.1024Wanhsien is a very rich city, with wealthy merchants and great salt1025hongs. The landed gentry and the great junk owners have their town1026houses here. The money distributed by the townspeople in private charity1027is unusually great even for a Chinese city. Its most public-spirited1028citizen is Ch'en, one of the merchant princes of China whose1029transactions are confined exclusively to the products of his own1030country. Starting life with an income of one hundred taels, bequeathed1031him by his father, Ch'en has now agents all over the empire, and1032mercantile dealings which are believed to yield him a clear annual1033income of a quarter of a million taels. His probity is a by-word; his1034benefactions have enriched the province. That cutting in the face of the1035cliff in the Feng-hsiang Gorge near Kweichou-fu, where a pathway for1036trackers has been hewn out of the solid rock, was done at his expense,1037and is said to have cost one hundred thousand taels. Not only by his1038benefactions has Ch'en laid up for himself merit in heaven, but he has1039already had his reward in this world. His son presented himself for the1040M.A. examination for the Hanlin degree, the highest academical degree in1041the Empire. Everyone in China knows that success in this examination is1042dependent upon the favour of Wunchang-te-keun, the god of literature1043(Taoist) "who from generation to generation hath sent his miraculous1044influence down upon earth", and, as the god had seen with approbation1045the good works done by the father, he gave success to the son. When the1046son returned home after his good fortune, he was met beyond the walls1047and escorted into the city with royal honours; his success was a triumph1048for the city which gave him birth.10491050A short walk and we were out of the city, following a flagged path with1051flights of steps winding up the hill through levelled terraces rich with1052every kind of cereal, and with abundance of poppy. Splendid views of one1053of the richest agricultural regions in the world are here unfolded. Away1054down in the valley is the palatial family mansion of Pien, one of the1055wealthiest yeomen in the province. Beyond you see the commencement of1056the high road, a paved causeway eight feet wide, which extends for1057hundreds of miles to Chentu, the capital of the province, and takes rank1058as the finest work of its kind in the empire. On every hill-top is a1059fort. That bolder than the rest commanding the city at a distance of1060five miles, is on the "Hill of Heavenly Birth." It was built, says1061Hobson, during the Taiping Rebellion; it existed, says the missionary,1062before the present dynasty; discrepant statements characteristic of this1063country of contradictions. But, whether thirty or two hundred and fifty1064years old, the fort is now one in name only, and is at present occupied1065by a garrison of peaceful peasantry.10661067Chinamen that we met asked us politely "if we had eaten our rice," and1068"whither were we going." We answered correctly. But when with equal1069politeness we asked the wayfarer where he was going, he jerked his chin1070towards the horizon and said, "a long way."10711072We called at the residence of a rich young Chinese, who had lately1073received it in his inheritance, together with 3000 acres of farmland,1074which, we were told, yield him an annual income of 70,000 taels. In the1075absence of the master, who was away in the country reading with his1076tutor for the Hanlin degree, we were received by the caretakers, who1077showed us the handsome guest chambers, the splendid gilded tablet, the1078large courts, and garden rockeries. A handsome residence is this,1079solidly built of wood and masonry, and with the trellis work carved with1080much elaboration.10811082It was late when we returned to the mission, and after dark when I went1083on board my little wupan. My boys had not been idle. They had bought new1084provisions of excellent quality, and had made the boat much more1085comfortable. The three kind missionaries came down to wish me Godspeed.1086Brave men! they deserve a kinder fortune than has been their fate1087hitherto. We crossed the river and anchored above the city, ready1088against an early start in the morning.10891090The day after leaving Wanhsien was the first time that we required any1091assistance on our journey from another junk; it was cheerfully given.1092Our towrope had chafed through, and we were in a difficulty, attempting1093to pass a bad rapid among the rocks, when a large junk was hauled bodily1094past us, and, seeing our plight, hooked on to us and towed us with them1095out of danger. On this night we anchored under the Sentinel Rock1096(Shih-pao-chai), perhaps the most remarkable landmark on the river. From1097two hundred to three hundred feet high, and sixty feet wide at the base,1098it is a detached rock, cleft vertically from a former cliff. A1099nine-storied pagoda has been inset into the south-eastern face, and1100temple buildings crown the summit.11011102It was surprising how well my men lived on board the boat. They had1103three good meals a day, always with rice and abundance of vegetables,1104and frequently with a little pork. Cooking was done while we were under1105way; for the purpose we had two little earthenware stoves, two pans, and1106a kettle. All along the river cabbages and turnips are abundant and1107cheap. Bumboats, laden to the rail, waylay the boats _en route_, and1108offer an armful of fresh vegetables for the equivalent in copper cash of1109three-eighths of a penny. Other boats peddle firewood, cut short and1110bound in little bundles, and sticks of charcoal. Coal is everywhere1111abundant, and there are excellent briquettes for sale, made of a mixture1112of clay and coal-dust.11131114All day long now for the rest of our voyage we sailed through a1115beautiful country. From the hill tops to the water's edge the hillsides1116are levelled into a succession of terraces; there are cereals and the1117universal poppy, pretty hamlets, and thriving little villages; a river1118half a mile wide thronged with every kind of river craft, and back in1119the distance snow-clad mountains. There are bamboo sheds at every point,1120with coils of bamboo towrope, mats, and baskets, and huge Szechuen hats1121as wide as an umbrella.11221123On the morning of March 5th I was awakened by loud screaming and yelling1124ahead of us. I squeezed out of my cabin, and saw a huge junk looming1125down upon us. In an awkward rapid its towline had parted, and the huge1126structure tumbling uncontrolled in the water, was bearing down on us,1127broadside on. It seemed as if we should be crushed against the rocks,1128and we must have been, but for the marvellous skill with which the1129sailors on the junk, just at the critical time, swung their vessel out1130of danger. They were yelling with discord, but worked together as one1131man.11321133In the afternoon we were at Feng-tu-hsien, a flourishing river port, one1134of the principal outlets of the opium traffic of the Upper Yangtse. Next1135day we were at Fuchou, the other opium port, whose trade in opium is1136greater still than that of Feng-tu-hsien. It is at the junction of a1137large tributary--the Kung-t'-an-ho, which is navigable for large vessels1138for more than two hundred miles. Large numbers of the Fuchou junks were1139moored here, which differ in construction from all other junks on the1140river Yangtse in having their great sterns twisted or wrung a quarter1141round to starboard, and in being steered by an immense stern sweep, and1142not by the balanced rudder of an ordinary junk.11431144The following day, after a long day's work, we moored beyond the town of1145Chang-show-hsien. Here I paid the laoban 2000 cash, whereupon he paid1146his men something on account, and then blandly suggested a game of1147cards. He was fast winning back his money, when I intervened and bade1148them turn in, as I wished to make an early start in the morning. The1149river seemed to get broader, deeper, and more rapid as we ascended; the1150trackers, on the contrary, became thinner, narrower, and more decrepit.11511152On March 8th, our fourteenth day out, disaster nearly overtook us when1153within a day's sail of our destination. Next day we reached Chungking1154safely, having done by some days the fastest journey on record up the1155Yangtse rapids. My captain and his young crew had finished the journey1156within the time agreed upon.11571158[Illustration: THE RIVER YANGTSE AT TUNG-LO-HSIA.]11591160[Illustration: MEMORIAL ARCHWAY AT THE FORT OF FU-TO-KUAN.]11611162116311641165CHAPTER IV.11661167THE CITY OF CHUNGKING--THE CHINESE CUSTOMS--THE FAMOUS MONSIEUR HAAS,1168AND A FEW WORDS ON THE OPIUM FALLACY.116911701171After passing through the gorge known as Tung-lo-hsia ten miles from1172Chungking, the laoban tried to attract my attention, calling me from my1173crib and pointing with his chin up the river repeating "Haikwan one1174piecee," which I interpreted to mean that there was an outpost of the1175customs here in charge of one white man; and this proved to be the case.1176The customs kuatze or houseboat was moored to the left bank; the1177Imperial Customs flag floated gaily over an animated collection of1178native craft. We drew alongside the junk and an Englishman appeared at1179the window.11801181"Where from?" he asked, laconically.11821183"Australia."11841185"The devil, so am I. What part?"11861187"Victoria."11881189"So am I. Town?"11901191"Last from Ballarat."11921193"My native town, by Jove! Jump up."11941195I gave him my card. He looked at it and said, "When I was last in1196Victoria I used to follow with much interest a curious walk across1197Australia, from the Gulf of Carpentaria to Melbourne done by a namesake.1198Any relation? The same man! I'm delighted to see you." Here then at the1199most inland of the customs stations in China, 1500 miles from the sea,1200I met my fellow countryman who was born near my home and whose father1201was a well-known Mayor of Ballarat City.12021203Like myself he had formerly been a student of Melbourne University, but1204I was many years his senior. What was his experience of the University I1205forgot to inquire, but mine I remember vividly enough; for it was not1206happy. In the examination for the Second-year Medicine, hoping the more1207to impress the Professors, I entered my name for honours--and they1208rejected me in the preliminary pass. It seems that in the examination in1209Materia Medica, I had among other trifling lapses prescribed a dose of1210Oleum Crotonis of "one half to two drachms _carefully increased_." I1211confess that I had never heard of the wretched stuff; the question was1212taken from far on in the text book and, unfortunately, my reading had1213not extended quite so far. When a deputation from my family waited upon1214the examiner to ascertain the cause of my misadventure, the only1215satisfaction we got was the obliging assurance "that you might as well1216let a mad dog loose in Collins Street" as allow me to become a doctor.1217And then the examiner produced my prescription. But I thought I saw a1218faint chance of escape. I pointed a nervous finger to the two words1219"carefully increased," and pleaded that that indication of caution ought1220to save me. "Save _you_ it might," he shouted with unnecessary1221vehemence; "but, God bless my soul, man, it would not save your1222patient." The examiner was a man intemperate of speech; so I left the1223University. It was a severe blow to the University, but the University1224survived it.12251226My countryman had been five years in China in the customs service, that1227marvellous organisation which is more impartially open to all the world1228than any other service in the world. As an example, I note that among1229the Commissioners of Customs at the ports of the River Yangtse alone, at1230the time of my voyage the Commissioner at Shanghai was an Austrian, at1231Kiukiang a Frenchman, at Hankow an Englishman, at Ichang a Scandinavian,1232and at Chungking a German.12331234The Australian had been ten months at Chungking. His up-river journey1235occupied thirty-eight days, and was attended with one moving incident.1236In the Hsintan rapid the towline parted, and his junk was smashed to1237pieces by the rocks, and all that he possessed destroyed. It was in this1238rapid that my boat narrowly escaped disaster, but there was this1239difference in our experiences, that at the time of his accident the1240river was sixty feet higher than on the occasion of mine.12411242Tang-chia-to, the customs out-station, is ten miles by river from1243Chungking, but not more than four miles by land. So I sent the boat on,1244and in the afternoon walked over to the city. A customs coolie came with1245me to show me the way. My friend accompanied me to the river crossing,1246walking with me through fields of poppy and sugarcane, and open beds of1247tobacco. At the river side he left me to return to his solitary home,1248while I crossed the river in a sampan, and then set out over the hills1249to Chungking. It was more than ever noticeable, the poor hungry1250wretchedness of the river coolies. For three days past all the trackers1251I had seen were the most wretched in physique of any I had met in China.1252Phthisis and malaria prevail among them; their work is terribly arduous;1253they suffer greatly from exposure; they appear to be starving in the1254midst of abundance. My coolie showed well by contrast with the trackers;1255he was sleek and well fed. A "chop dollar," as he would be termed down1256south, for his face was punched or chopped with the small-pox, he swung1257along the paved pathway and up and down the endless stone steps in a way1258that made me breathless to follow. We passed a few straggling houses and1259wayside shrines and tombstones. All the dogs in the district recognised1260that I was a stranger, and yelped consumedly, like the wolfish mongrels1261that they are. From a hill we obtained a misty view of the City of1262Chungking, surrounded on two sides by river and covering a broad expanse1263of hill and highland. I was taken to the customs pontoon on the south1264bank of the river, and then up the steep bank by many steps to the1265basement of an old temple where the two customs officers have their1266pleasant dwelling. I was kindly received, and stayed the night. We were1267an immense height above the water; the great city was across the broad1268expanse of river, here more than seven hundred yards in width. Away down1269below us, moored close to the bank, and guarded by three Chinese armed1270junks or gunboats, was the customs hulk, where the searching is done,1271and where the three officers of the outdoor staff have their offices.1272There is at present but little smuggling, because there are no Chinese1273officials. Smuggling may be expected to begin in earnest as soon as1274Chinese officials are introduced to prevent it. Chinese searchers do1275best who use their eyes not to see--best for themselves, that is. The1276gunboats guarding this Haikwan Station have a nominal complement of1277eighty men, and an actual complement of twenty-four; to avoid, however,1278unnecessary explanation, pay is drawn by the commanding officer, not for1279the actual twenty-four, but for the nominal eighty.12801281[Illustration: THE CITY OF CHUNGKING, AS SEEN FROM THE OPPOSITE BANK OF1282THE RIVER YANGTSE.]12831284My two companions in the temple were tidewaiters in the Customs. There1285are many storied lives locked away among the tidewaiters in China. Down1286the river there is a tidewaiter who was formerly professor of French in1287the Imperial University of St. Petersburg; and here in Chungking,1288filling the same humble post, is the godson of a marquis and the nephew1289of an earl, a brave soldier whose father is a major-general and his1290mother an earl's daughter, and who is first cousin to that enlightened1291nobleman and legislator the Earl of C. Few men so young have had so many1292and varied experiences as this sturdy Briton. He has humped his swag in1293Australia, has earned fifteen shillings a day there as a blackleg1294protected by police picquets on a New South Wales coal mine. He was at1295Harrow under Dr. Butler, and at Corpus Christi, Cambridge. He has been1296in the Dublin Fusiliers, and a lieutenant in Weatherby's Horse, enlisted1297in the 5th Lancers, and rose from private to staff-sergeant, and ten1298months later would have had his commission. He served with distinction1299in the Soudan and Zululand, and has three medals with four clasps. He1300was present at El Teb, and at the disaster at Tamai, when McNeill's1301zareeba was broken. He was at Tel-el-kebir; saw Burnaby go forth to meet1302a coveted death at Abu-klea, and was present at Abu-Kru when Sir Herbert1303Stewart received his death-wound. He was at Rorke's Drift, and appears1304with that heroic band in Miss Elizabeth Thompson's painting. Leaving the1305army, C. held for a time a commission in the mounted constabulary of1306Madras, and now he is a third class assistant tidewaiter in the Imperial1307Maritime Customs of China, with a salary as low as his spirits are high.13081309Chungking is an open port, which is not an open port. By the treaty of1310Tientsin it is included in the clause which states that any foreign1311steamer going to it, a closed port, shall be confiscated. Yet by the1312Chefoo Convention, Chungking is to become an open port as soon as the1313first foreign steamer shall reach there. This reminds one of the1314conflicting instructions once issued by a certain government in1315reference to the building of a new gaol. The instructions were1316explicit:--13171318Clause I.--The new gaol shall be constructed out of the1319materials of the old.13201321Clause II.--The prisoners shall remain in the old gaol till1322the new gaol is constructed.13231324In Chungking the Commissioner of Customs is Dr. F. Hirth, whose Chinese1325house is on the highest part of Chungking in front of a temple, which,1326dimly seen through the mist, is the crowning feature of the city. A1327distinguished sinologue is the doctor, one of the finest Chinese1328scholars in the Empire, author of "China and the Roman Orient," "Ancient1329Porcelain," and an elaborate "Textbook of Documentary Chinese," which is1330in the hands of most of the Customs staff in China, for whose assistance1331it was specially written. Dr. Hirth is a German who has been many years1332in China. He holds the third button, the transparent blue button, the1333third rank in the nine degrees by which Chinese Mandarins are1334distinguished.13351336The best site in Chungking has been fortunately secured by the Methodist1337Episcopalian Mission of the United States. Their missionaries dwell with1338great comfort in the only foreign-built houses in the city in a large1339compound with an ample garden. Their Mission hospital is a well-equipped1340Anglo-Chinese building attached to the city wall, and overlooking from1341its lofty elevation the Little River, and the walled city beyond it.13421343The wards of the hospital are comfortable and well lit; the floors are1344varnished; the beds are provided with spring mattresses; indeed, in the1345comfort of the hospital the Chinese find its chief discomfort. A1346separate compartment has been walled off for the treatment of1347opium-smokers who desire by forced restraint to break off the habit.1348Three opium-smokers were in durance at the time of my visit; they were1349happy and contented and well nourished, and none but the trained eye of1350an expert, who saw what he wished to see, could have guessed that they1351were addicted to the use of a drug which has been described in1352exaggerated terms as "more deadly to the Chinese than war, famine, and1353pestilence combined." (Rev. A. H. Smith, "Chinese Characteristics," p.1354187.)13551356Not long ago three men were admitted into the hospital suffering, on1357their own confession, from the opium habit. They freely expressed the1358desire of their hearts to be cured, and were received with welcome and1359placed in confinement. Every effort was made to wean them from the habit1360which, they alleged, had "seized them in a death grip." Attentive to the1361teacher and obedient to the doctor, they gave every hope of being early1362admitted into Church fellowship. But one night the desire to return to1363the drug became irresistible, and, strangely, the desire attacked all1364three men at the same time on the same night; and they escaped together.1365Sadly enough there was in this case marked evidence of the demoralising1366influence of opium, for when they escaped they took with them everything1367portable that they could lay their hands on. It was a sad trial.13681369Excellent medical work is done in the hospital. From the first annual1370report just published by the surgeon in charge, an M.D. from the United1371States, I extract the two following pleasing items.13721373_Medical Work._--"Mr. Tsang Taotai, of Kuei-Iang-fu, was an eye witness1374to several operations, as well as being operated upon for Internal1375Piles" (the last words in large capitals).13761377_Evangelistic Work._--"Mrs. Wei, in the hospital for suppurating glands1378of the neck, became greatly interested in the truth while there, left a1379believer, and attends Sunday service regular (_sic_), walking from a1380distant part of the city each Sunday. We regard her as very hopeful, and1381she is reported by the Chinese as being very warm-hearted. She will be1382converted when the first vacancy occurs in the nursing staff."13831384During my stay in Chungking I frequently met the French Consul "_en1385commission_," Monsieur Haas, who had lately arrived on a diplomatic1386mission, which was invested with much secrecy. It was believed to have1387for its object the diversion of the trade of Szechuen from its natural1388channel, the Yangtse River, southward through Yunnan province to1389Tonquin. Success need not be feared to attend his mission. "_Ils1390perdront et leur temps et leur argent._" Monsieur Haas has helped to1391make history in his time. The most gentle-mannered of men, he writes1392with strange rancour against the perfidious designs of Britain in the1393East. In his diplomatic career Monsieur Haas suffered one great1394disappointment. He was formerly the French Charge d'Affaires and1395Political Resident at the court of King Theebaw in Mandalay. And it was1396his "Secret Treaty" with the king which forced the hand of England and1397led to her hasty occupation of Upper Burma. The story is a very pretty1398one. By this treaty French influence was to become predominant in Upper1399Burma; the country was to become virtually a colony of France, with a1400community of interest with France, with France to support her in any1401difficulty with British Burma. Such a position England could not1402tolerate for one moment. Fortunately for us French intrigue outwitted1403itself, and the Secret Treaty became known. It was in this way. Draft1404copies of the agreement drawn up in French and Burmese were exchanged1405between Monsieur Haas and King Theebaw. But Monsieur Haas could not read1406Burmese, and he distrusted the King. A trusted interpreter was1407necessary, and there was only one man in Mandalay that seemed to him1408sufficiently trustworthy. To Signor A---- then, the Italian Charge1409d'Affaires and Manager of the Irrawaddy Flotilla Company, Monsieur Haas1410went and, pledging him to secrecy, sought his assistance as interpreter.14111412As Monsieur Haas had done, so did his Majesty the King. Two great minds1413were being guided by the same spirit. Theebaw could not read French, and1414he distrusted Monsieur Haas. An interpreter was essential, and, casting1415about for a trusted one, he decided that no one could serve him so1416faithfully as Signor A----, and straightway sought his assistance, as1417Monsieur Haas had done. Their fates were in his hands; which master1418should the Italian serve, the French or the Burmese? He did not1419hesitate--he betrayed them both. Within an hour the Secret Treaty was in1420possession of the British Resident. Action was taken with splendid1421promptitude. "M. de Freycinet, when pressed on the subject, repudiated1422any intention of acquiring for France a political predominance in1423Burma." An immediate pretext was found to place Theebaw in a dilemma;1424eleven days later the British troops had crossed the frontier, and Upper1425Burma was another province of our Indian Empire.14261427Monsieur Haas was recalled, and his abortive action repudiated. He had1428acted, of course, without orders, he had erred from too much zeal.1429Signor A---- was also recalled, but did not go because the order was not1430accompanied with the customary cheque to defray the cost of his passage.1431His services to England were rewarded, and he retained his engagement as1432Manager of the Flotilla Company; but he lost his appointment as the1433Representative of Italy--an honourable post with a dignified salary paid1434by the Italian Government in I.O.U.'s.14351436Chungking is an enormously rich city. It is built at the junction of the1437Little River and the Yangtse, and is, from its position, the great river1438port of the province of Szechuen. Water-ways stretch from here an1439immense distance inland. The Little River is little only in comparison1440with the Yangtse, and in any other country would be regarded as a mighty1441inland river. It is navigable for more than 2000 li (600 miles). The1442Yangtse drains a continent; the Little River drains a province larger1443than a European kingdom. Chungking is built at a great height above the1444present river, now sixty feet below its summer level. Its walls are1445unscalable. Good influences are directed over the city from a lofty1446pagoda on the topmost hill in the vicinity. Temples abound, and spacious1447yamens and rich buildings, the crowning edifice of all being the Temple1448to the God of Literature. Distances are prodigious in Chungking, and the1449streets so steep and hilly, with flights of stairs cut from the solid1450rock, that only a mountaineer can live here in comfort. All who can1451afford it go in chairs; stands of sedan chairs are at every important1452street corner.14531454[Illustration: A TEMPLE THEATRE IN CHUNGKING.]14551456During the day the city vibrates with teeming traffic; at night the1457streets are deserted and dead, the stillness only disturbed by a1458distant watchman springing his bamboo rattle to keep himself awake and1459warn robbers of his approach. In no city in Europe is security to life1460and property better guarded than in this, or, indeed, in any other1461important city in China. It is a truism to say that no people are more1462law-abiding than the Chinese; "they appear," says Medhurst, "to maintain1463order as if by common consent, independent of all surveillance."14641465Our Consul in Chungking is Mr. E. H. Fraser, an accomplished Chinese1466scholar, who fills a difficult post with rare tact and complete success.1467Consul Fraser estimates the population of Chungking at 200,000; the1468Chinese, he says, have a record of 35,000 families within the walls. Of1469this number from forty to fifty per cent. of all men, and from four to1470five per cent. of all women, indulge in the opium pipe. The city abounds1471in opium-shops--shops, that is, where the little opium-lamps and the1472opium-pipes are stacked in hundreds upon hundreds. Opium is one of the1473staple products of this rich province, and one of the chief sources of1474wealth of this flourishing city.14751476During the nine months that I was in China I saw thousands of1477opium-smokers, but I never saw one to whom could be applied that1478description by Lay (of the British and Foreign Bible Society), so often1479quoted, of the typical opium-smoker in China "with his lank and1480shrivelled limbs, tottering gait, sallow visage, feeble voice, and1481death-boding glance of eye, proclaiming him the most forlorn creature1482that treads upon the ground."14831484This fantastic description, paraded for years past for our sympathy, can1485be only applied to an infinitesimal number of the millions in China who1486smoke opium. It is a well-known fact that should a Chinese suffering1487from the extreme emaciation of disease be also in the habit of using1488the opium-pipe, it is the pipe and not the disease that in ninety-nine1489cases out of a hundred will be wrongly blamed as the cause of the1490emaciation.14911492During the year 1893 4275 tons of Indian opium were imported into China.1493The Chinese, we are told, plead to us with "outstretched necks" to cease1494the great wrong we are doing in forcing them to buy our opium. "Many a1495time," says the Rev. Dr. Hudson Taylor, "have I seen the Chinaman point1496with his thumb to Heaven, and say, 'There is Heaven up there! There is1497Heaven up there!' What did he mean by that? You may bring this opium to1498us; you may force it upon us; we cannot resist you, but there is a Power1499up there that will inflict vengeance." (_National Righteousness_, Dec.15001892, p. 13.)15011502But, with all respect to Dr. Hudson Taylor and his ingenious1503interpretation of the Chinaman's gesture, it is extremely difficult for1504the traveller in China to believe that the Chinese are sincere in their1505condemnation of opium and the opium traffic. "In some countries," says1506Wingrove Cooke, "words represent facts, but this is never the case in1507China." Li Hung Chang, the Viceroy of Chihli, in the well-known letter1508that he addressed to the Rev. F. Storrs Turner, the Secretary of the1509Society for the Suppression of the Opium Trade, on May 24th, 1881, a1510letter still widely circulated and perennially cited, says, "the poppy1511is certainly surreptitiously grown in some parts of China,1512notwithstanding the laws and frequent Imperial edicts prohibiting its1513cultivation."15141515Surreptitiously grown in some parts of China! Why, from the time I left1516Hupeh till I reached the boundary of Burma, a distance of 1700 miles, I1517never remember to have been out of sight of the poppy. Li Hung Chang1518continues, "I earnestly hope that your Society, and all right-minded1519men of your country, will support the efforts China is now making to1520escape from the thraldom of opium." And yet you are told in China that1521the largest growers of the poppy in China are the family of Li Hung1522Chang.15231524The Society for the Suppression of Opium has circulated by tens of1525thousands a petition which was forwarded to them from the1526Chinese--spontaneously, per favour of the missionaries. "Some tens of1527millions," this petition says, "some tens of millions of human beings in1528distress are looking on tiptoe with outstretched necks for salvation to1529come from you, O just and benevolent men of England! If not for the good1530or honour of your country, then for mercy's sake do this good deed now1531to save a people, and the rescued millions shall themselves be your1532great reward." (_China's Millions_, iv., 156.)15331534Assume, then, that the Chinese do not want our opium, and unavailingly1535beseech us to stay this nefarious traffic, which is as if "the Rivers1536Phlegethon and Lethe were united in it, carrying fire and destruction1537wherever it flows, and leaving a deadly forgetfulness wherever it has1538passed." (The Rev. Dr. Wells Williams. "The Middle Kingdom," i., 288.)15391540They do not want our opium, but they purchase from us 4275 tons per1541annum.15421543Of the eighteen provinces of China four only, Kiangsu, Cheh-kiang,1544Fuhkien, and Kuangtung use Indian opium, the remaining fourteen1545provinces use exclusively home-grown opium. Native-grown opium has1546entirely driven the imported opium from the markets of the Yangtse1547Valley; no Indian opium, except an insignificant quantity, comes up the1548river even as far as Hankow. The Chinese do not want our opium--it1549competes with their own. In the three adjoining provinces of Szechuen,1550Yunnan, and Kweichow they grow their own opium; but they grow more than1551they need, and have a large surplus to export to other parts of the1552Empire. The amount of this surplus can be estimated, because all1553exported opium has to pay customs and likin dues to the value of two1554shillings a pound, and the amount thus collected is known. Allowing no1555margin for opium that has evaded customs dues, and there are no more1556scientific smugglers than the Chinese, we still find that during the1557year 1893 2250 tons of opium were exported from the province of1558Szechuen, 1350 tons from Yunnan, and 450 tons from Kweichow, a total of15594050 tons exported by the rescued millions of three provinces only for1560the benefit of their fellow-countrymen, who, with outstretched necks,1561plead to England to leave them alone in their monopoly.15621563Edicts are still issued against the use of opium. They are drawn up by1564Chinese philanthropists over a quiet pipe of opium, signed by1565opium-smoking officials, whose revenues are derived from the poppy, and1566posted near fields of poppy by the opium-smoking magistrates who own1567them.15681569In the City Temple of Chungking there is a warning to opium-eaters. One1570of the fiercest devils in hell is there represented gloating over the1571crushed body of an opium-smoker; his protruding tongue is smeared with1572opium put there by the victim of "_yin_" (the opium craving), who wishes1573to renounce the habit. The opium thus collected is the perquisite of the1574Temple priests, and at the gate of the Temple there is a stall for the1575sale of opium fittings.15761577Morphia pills are sold in Chungking by the Chinese chemists to cure the1578opium habit. This profitable remedy was introduced by the foreign1579chemists of the coast ports and adopted by the Chinese. Its advantage1580is that it converts a desire for opium into a taste for morphia, a mode1581of treatment analogous to changing one's stimulant from colonial beer to1582methylated spirit. In 1893, 15,000 ounces of hydrochlorate of morphia1583were admitted into Shanghai alone.15841585The China Inland Mission have an important station at Chungking. It was1586opened seventeen years ago, in 1877, and is assisted by a representative1587of the Horsburgh Mission. The mission is managed by a charming English1588gentleman, who has exchanged all that could make life happy in England1589for the wretched discomfort of this malarious city. Every assistance I1590needed was given me by this kindly fellow who, like nearly all the China1591Inland Mission men, deserves success if he cannot command it. A more1592engaging personality I have rarely met, and it was sad to think that for1593the past year, 1893, no new convert was made by his Mission among the1594Chinese of Chungking. (_China's Millions_, January, 1894.) The Mission1595has been working short-handed, with only three missionaries instead of1596six, and progress has been much delayed in consequence.15971598The London Missionary Society, who have been here since 1889, have two1599missionaries at work, and have gathered nine communicants and six1600adherents. Their work is largely aided by an admirable hospital under1601Cecil Davenport, F.R.C.S., a countryman of my own. "Broad Benevolence"1602are the Chinese characters displayed over the entrance to the hospital,1603and they truthfully describe the work done by the hospital. In the1604chapel adjoining, a red screen is drawn down the centre of the church,1605and separates the men from the women--one of the chief pretexts that an1606Englishman has for going to church is thus denied the Chinaman, since he1607cannot cast an ogling eye through a curtain.16081609161016111612CHAPTER V.16131614THE JOURNEY FROM CHUNGKING TO SUIFU--CHINESE INNS.161516161617I left the boat at Chungking and started on my land journey, going west1618230 miles to Suifu. I had with me two coolies to carry my things, the1619one who received the higher pay having also to bring me my food, make my1620bed, and pay away my copper cash. They could not speak a single word of1621English. They were to be paid for the journey one _4s. 10d._ and the1622other _5s. 7d._ They were to be entitled to no perquisites, were to find1623themselves on the way, and take their chance of employment on the return1624journey. They were to lead me into Suifu on the seventh day out from1625Chungking. All that they undertook to do they did to my complete1626satisfaction.16271628On the morning of March 14th I set out from Chungking to cross 16001629miles over Western China to Burma. Men did not speak hopefully of my1630chance of getting through. There were the rains of June and July to be1631feared apart from other obstacles.16321633Pere Lorain, the Procureur of the French Mission, who spoke from an1634experience of twenty-five years of China, assured me that, speaking no1635Chinese, unarmed, unaccompanied, except by two poor coolies of the1636humblest class, and on foot, I would have _les plus grandes1637difficultes_, and Monsieur Haas, the Consul _en commission_, was equally1638pessimistic. The evening before starting, the Consul and my friend1639Carruthers (one of the _Inverness Courier_ Carruthers) gave me a lesson1640in Chinese. "French before breakfast" was nothing to this kind of1641cramming. I learnt a dozen useful words and phrases, and rehearsed them1642in the morning to a member of the Inland Mission, who cheered me by1643saying that it would be a clever Chinaman indeed who could understand1644Chinese like mine.16451646I left on foot by the West Gate, being accompanied so far by A. J.1647Little, an experienced traveller and authority on China, manager in1648Chungking of the Chungking Transport Company (which deals especially1649with the transport of cargo from Ichang up the rapids), whose book on1650"The Yangtse Gorges" is known to every reader of books on China.16511652I was dressed as a Chinese teacher in thickly-wadded Chinese gown, with1653pants, stockings, and sandals, with Chinese hat and pigtail. In my dress1654I looked a person of weight. I must acknowledge that my outfit was very1655poor; but this was not altogether a disadvantage, for my men would have1656the less temptation to levy upon it. Still it would have been awkward if1657my men had taken it into their heads to walk off with my things, because1658I could not have explained my loss. My chief efforts, I knew, throughout1659my journey would be applied in the direction of inducing the Chinese to1660treat me with the respect that was undoubtedly due to one who, in their1661own words, had done them the "exalted honour" of visiting "their mean1662and contemptible country." For I could not afford a private sedan chair,1663though I knew that Baber had written that "no traveller in Western China1664who possesses any sense of self-respect should journey without a sedan1665chair, not necessarily as a conveyance, but for the honour and glory of1666the thing. Unfurnished with this indispensable token of respectability1667he is liable to be thrust aside on the highway, to be kept waiting at1668ferries, to be relegated to the worst inn's worst room, and generally to1669be treated with indignity, or, what is sometimes worse, with1670familiarity, as a peddling footpad who, unable to gain a living in his1671own country, has come to subsist on China." ("Travels and Researches in1672Western China," p. 1.)16731674Six li out (two miles), beyond the gravemounds there is a small village1675where ponies are kept for hire. A kind friend came with me as far as the1676village to act as my interpreter, and here he engaged a pony for me. It1677was to carry me ten miles for fourpence. It was small, rat-like and1678wiry, and was steered by the "mafoo" using the tail like a tiller.1679Mounted then on this small beast, which carried me without wincing, I1680jogged along over the stone-flagged pathway, down hill and along valley,1681scaling and descending the long flights of steps which lead over the1682mountains. The bells of the pony jingled merrily; the day was fine and1683the sun shone behind the clouds. My two coolies sublet their contracts,1684and had their loads borne for a fraction of a farthing per mile by1685coolies returning empty-handed to Suifu.16861687[Illustration: ON THE MAIN ROAD TO SUIFU.]16881689Fu-to-kuan four miles from Chungking is a powerful hill-fort that guards1690the isthmus where the Yangtse and the Little River come nearly together1691before encircling Chungking. Set in the face of the cliff is a gigantic1692image of Buddha. Massive stone portals, elaborately carved, and huge1693commemorative tablets cut from single blocks of stone and deeply1694engraved, here adorn the highway. The archways have been erected by1695command of the Emperor, but at the expense of their relatives, to the1696memory of virtuous widows who have refused to remarry, or who have1697sacrificed their lives on the death of their husbands. Happy are those1698whose names are thus recorded, for not only do they obtain ten thousand1699merits in heaven, as well as the Imperial recognition of the Son of1700Heaven on earth; but as an additional reward their souls may, on1701entering the world a second time, enjoy the indescribable felicity of1702inhabiting the bodies of men.17031704Cases where the widow has thus brought honour to the family are1705constantly recorded in the pages of the _Peking Gazette_. One of more1706than usual merit is described in the _Peking Gazette_ of June 10th,17071892. The story runs:--17081709"The Governor of Shansi narrates the story of a virtuous wife who1710destroyed herself after the death of her husband. The lady was a native1711of T'ienmen, in Hupeh, and both her father and grandfather were1712officials who attained the rank of Taotai. When she was little more than1713ten years old her mother fell ill. The child cut flesh from her body and1714mixed it with the medicines and thus cured her parent. The year before1715last she was married to an expectant magistrate. Last autumn, just after1716he had obtained an appointment, he was taken violently ill. She mixed1717her flesh with the medicine but it was in vain, and he died shortly1718afterwards. Overcome with grief, and without parents or children to1719demand her care, she determined that she would not live. Only waiting1720till she had completed the arrangements for her husband's interment, she1721swallowed gold and powder of lead. She handed her trousseau to her1722relatives to defray her funeral expenses, and made presents to the1723younger members of the family and the servants, after which, draped in1724her state robes, she sat waiting her end. The poison began to work and1725soon all was over. The memorialist thinks that the case is one which1726should be recorded in the erection of a memorial arch, and he asks the1727Emperor to grant that honour to the deceased lady." ("_Granted._")17281729Near the base of the rock upon which the hill-fort is built, and between1730it and the city, the Methodist Episcopalian Mission of the U.S.A.1731commenced in 1886 to build what the Chinese, in their ignorance, feared1732was a foreign fort, but what was nothing more than a mission house in a1733compound surrounded by a powerful wall. The indiscreet mystery1734associated with its erection was the exciting cause of the anti-foreign1735riot of July, 1886.17361737From the fort the pathway led us through a beautiful country. We met1738numbers of sedan chairs, borne by two coolies, or three, according to1739the importance of the traveller. There were Chinese gentlemen mounted on1740ponies or mules; there were strings of coolies swinging along under1741prodigious loads of salt and coal, and huge bales of raw cotton.1742Buffaloes with slow and painful steps were ploughing the paddy fields,1743the water up to their middles--the primitive plough and share guided by1744half-naked Chinamen. Along the road there are inns and tea-houses every1745mile or two, for this is one of the most frequented roadways of China.1746At one good-sized village my cook signed to me to dismount; the mafoo1747and pony were paid off, and I sat down in an inn, and was served with an1748excellent dish of rice and minced beef. The inn was crowded and open to1749the street. Despite my Chinese dress anyone could see that I was a1750foreigner, but I was not far enough away from Chungking to excite much1751curiosity. The other diners treated me with every courtesy; they offered1752me of their dishes, and addressed me in Chinese--a compliment which I1753repaid by thanking them blandly in English.17541755Now I went on, on foot, though I had difficulty in keeping pace with my1756men. Behind the village we climbed a very steep hill by interminable1757steps, and passed under an archway at the summit. Descending the hill,1758my cook engaged in a controversy with a thin lad whom he had hired to1759carry his load a stage. The dispute waxed warm, and, while they stopped1760to argue it out at leisure, I went on. My cook, engaged through the kind1761offices of the Inland Mission, was a man of strong convictions; and in1762the last I saw of the dispute he was pulling the unfortunate coolie1763downhill by the pigtail. When he overtook me he was alone and smiling1764cheerfully, well satisfied with himself for having settled _that_ little1765dispute. The road became more level, and we got over the ground quickly.17661767Late in the evening I was led into a crowded inn in a large village,1768where we were to stay the night. We had come twenty-seven miles, and had1769begun well. I was shown into a room with three straw-covered wooden1770bedsteads, a rough table, lit by a lighted taper in a saucer of oil, a1771rough seat, and the naked earth floor. Hot water was brought me to wash1772with and tea to drink, and my man prepared me an excellent supper. My1773baggage was in the corner; it consisted of two light bamboo boxes with1774Chinese padlocks, a bamboo hamper, and a roll of bedding covered with1775oilcloth. An oilcloth is indispensable to the traveller in China, for1776placed next the straw on a Chinese bed it is impassable to bugs. And1777during all my journey in China I was never disturbed in my sleep by this1778unpleasant pest. Bugs in China are sufficiently numerous, but their1779numbers cannot be compared with the gregarious hosts that disturb the1780traveller in Spain.17811782My last night in Spain was spent in Cadiz, the most charming city in1783the peninsula. I had lost the last boat off to the steamer, on which I1784was a passenger; it was late at night, and I knew of no inn near the1785landing. At midnight, as I was walking in the Plaza, called after that1786revered monarch, Queen Isabel II., I was spoken to at the door of a1787fonda, and asked if I wanted a bedroom. It was the taberna "La1788Valenciana." I was delighted; it was the very thing I was looking for, I1789said. The innkeeper had just one room unoccupied, and he showed me1790upstairs into a plain, homely apartment, which I was pleased to engage1791for the night. "_Que usted descanse bien_" (may you sleep well), said1792the landlord, and left me. Keeping the candle burning I tumbled into1793bed, for I was very tired, but jumped out almost immediately, despite my1794fatigue. I turned down the clothes, and saw the bugs gathering in the1795centre from all parts of the bed. I collected a dozen or two, and put1796them in a basin of water, and, dressing myself, went out on the landing1797and called the landlord.17981799He came up yawning.18001801"Sir," he said, "do you wish anything?"18021803"Nothing; but it is impossible, absolutely impossible, for me to sleep1804in that bed."18051806"But why, senor?"18071808"Because it is full of bugs."18091810"Oh no, sir, that cannot be, that cannot be; there is not a bug in the1811house."18121813"But I have seen them."18141815"You must be mistaken; it is impossible that there can be a bug in the1816house."18171818"But I have caught some."18191820"It makes twenty years that I live in this house, and never have I seen1821such a thing."18221823"Pardon me, but will you do me the favour to look at this basin?"18241825"Sir, you are right, you are completely right; it is the weather; _every1826bed in Cadiz is now full of them_."18271828In the morning, and every morning, we were away at daylight, and walked1829some miles before breakfast. All the way to Suifu the road is a paved1830causeway, 3 feet 6 inches to 6 feet wide, laid down with dressed flags1831of stone; and here, at least, it cannot be alleged, as the Chinese1832proverb would have it, that their roads are "good for ten years and bad1833for ten hundred." There are, of course, no fences; the main road picks1834its way through the cultivated fields; no traveller ever thinks of1835trespassing from the roadway, nor did I ever see any question of1836trespass between neighbours. In this law-abiding country the peasantry1837conspicuously follow the Confucian maxim taught in China four hundred1838years before Christ, "Do not unto others what you would not have others1839do unto you." Every rood of ground is under tillage.18401841Hills are everywhere terraced like the seats of an amphitheatre, each1842terrace being irrigated from the one below it by a small stream of1843water, drawn up an inclined plain by a continuous chain bucket, worked1844with a windlass by either hand or foot. The poppy is everywhere abundant1845and well tended; there are fields of winter wheat, and pink-flowered1846beans, and beautiful patches of golden rape-seed. Dotted over the1847landscape are pretty Szechuen farmhouses in groves of trees. Splendid1848banyan trees give grateful shelter to the traveller. Of this country it1849could be written as a Chinese traveller wrote of England, "their fertile1850hills, adorned with the richest luxuriance, resemble in the outline of1851their summits the arched eyebrows of a fair woman."18521853The country is well populated, and a continuous stream of people is1854moving along the road. Grand memorial arches span the roadway, many of1855them notable efforts of monumental skill, with columns and architraves1856carved with elephants and deer, and flowers and peacocks, and the1857Imperial seven-tailed dragon of China. Chinese art is seen at its best1858in this rich province.18591860[Illustration: CULTIVATION IN TERRACES. In the foreground the poppy in1861bloom.]18621863[Illustration: SCENE IN SZECHUEN.]18641865I lived, of course, in the common Chinese inn, ate Chinese food, and was1866everywhere treated with courtesy and good nature; but at first I found1867it trying to be such an object of curiosity; to have to do all things in1868unsecluded publicity; to have to push my way through streets thronged by1869the curious to see the foreigner. My meals I ate in the presence of the1870street before gaping crowds. When they came too close I told them1871politely in English to keep back a little, and they did so if I1872illustrated my words by gesture. When I scratched my head and they saw1873the spurious pigtail, they smiled; when I flicked the dust off the table1874with my pigtail, they laughed hilariously.18751876The wayside inns are usually at the side of an arcade of grass and1877bamboo stretched above the main road. Two or three ponies are usually1878waiting here for hire, and expectant coolies are eager to offer their1879services. In engaging a pony you make an offer casually, as if you had1880no desire in the world of its being accepted, and then walk on as if you1881had no intention whatever of riding for the next month. The mafoo1882demands more, but will come down; you stick to your offer, though1883prepared to increase it; so demand and offer you exchange with the mafoo1884till the width of the village is between you, and your voices are almost1885out of hearing, when you come to terms.18861887Suppose I wanted a chair to give me a rest for a few miles--it was1888usually slung under the rafters--Laokwang (my cook) unobserved by anyone1889but me pointed to it with his thumb inquiringly. I nodded assent and1890apparently nothing more happened and the conversation, of which I was1891quite ignorant, continued. We left together on foot, my man still1892maintaining a crescendo conversation with the inn people till well away.1893When almost out of hearing he called out something and an answer came1894faintly back from the distance. It was his ultimatum as regards price1895and its acceptance--they had been bargaining all the time. My man1896motioned to me to wait, said the one word "_chiaodza_" (sedan chair) and1897in a few moments the chair of bamboo and wicker came rapidly down the1898road carried by two bearers. They put down the chair before me and bowed1899to me; I took my seat and was borne easily and pleasantly along at four1900miles an hour at a charge of less than one penny a mile.19011902My men received nearly 400 cash a day each; but from time to time they1903sweated their contract to unemployed coolies and had their loads carried1904for so little as sixty cash (one penny halfpenny), for two-thirds of a1905day's journey.19061907At nightfall we always reached some large village or town where my cook1908selected the best inn for my resting place, the best inn in such cases1909being usually the one which promised him the largest squeeze. All the1910towns through which the road passes swarm with inns, for there is an1911immense floating population to provide for. Competition is keen. Touts1912stand at the doorway of every inn, who excitedly waylay the traveller1913and cry the merits of their houses. At the counter inside the entrance,1914piles of pukais (the warm Chinese bedding), are stacked for hire--few of1915the travellers carry their own bedding. The inns are sufficiently1916comfortable. The bedrooms are in one or two stories and are arranged1917round one or more, or a succession of courts. The cheapness is to be1918commended. For supper, bed, and light, tea during the night and tea1919before starting in the morning, and various little comforts, such as hot1920water for washing, the total charge for the six nights of my journey1921from Chungking to Suifu was 840 cash (_1s. 9d._).19221923Rice was my staple article of diet; eggs, fowls, and vegetables were1924also abundant and cheap; but I avoided pork which is the flesh1925universally eaten throughout China by all but the Mohammedans and1926vegetarians. In case of emergency I had a few tins of foreign stores1927with me. I made it a point never to drink water--I drank tea. No1928Chinaman ever drinks anything cold. Every half hour or hour he can reach1929an inn or teahouse where tea can be infused for him in a few minutes.1930The price of a bowl of tea with a pinch of tea-leaves, filled and1931refilled with hot water _ad lib_, is two cash--equal to the twentieth1932part of one penny. Pork has its weight largely added to by being1933injected with water, the point of the syringe being passed into a large1934vein; this is usually described as the Chinese method of "watering1935stock."19361937On the third day we were at Yuenchuan, sixty-three miles from Chungking.1938On the 5th, we passed through Luchow, one of the richest and most1939populous cities on the Upper Yangtse, and at noon next day we again1940reached the Yangtse at the Temple of the Goddess of Mercy, two miles1941down the river from the large town of Lanchihsien. According to my1942interpretation of the gesticulations of Laokwang, we were then forty1943miles from Suifu, and a beautiful sunny afternoon before us, in which to1944easily cover one half the distance. But I must reckon with my guide. He1945wished to remain here; I wished to go on; but as I could not understand1946his Chinese explanation, nor advance any protest except in English, of1947which he was innocent, I could only look aggrieved and make a virtue of1948a necessity. He did, however, convey to me his solemn assurance that1949to-morrow (_ming tien_) he would conduct me into Suifu before sunset. An1950elderly Chinaman, who had given us the advantage of his company at1951various inns during the last three days, here entered into the1952conversation, produced his watch, and, with his hand over his heart,1953which, in a Chinaman, is in the centre of the breast-bone, added his1954sacred asseveration to my guide's. So I stayed. We were quite a friendly1955party travelling together.19561957In the middle of the night a light was flashed into our room and a voice1958pealed out an alarm that awoke even my two Chinese, who always1959obligingly slept in the same room with me. I had protested against their1960doing so, but they mistook my expostulation for approbation. We rose at1961once, and came down the steep bank to a boat that was lying stern to1962shore showing a light. I was charmed to get such an early start, and1963construed the indications into a ferry boat to take me across the river,1964whence we would go by a short route into Suifu. The boat was loaded with1965sugar and had a crew of two men and three boys. There was an awning over1966the cargo, but most of the space under it was already occupied by twelve1967amiable Chinese, among whom were six promiscuous friends, who had kept1968with us for several stages, and had, I imagine, derived some pecuniary1969advantages from my company. Yet this was not a ferry boat, but a1970passenger boat engaged especially for me to carry me to Suifu before1971nightfall. The Chinese passengers had courteously projected their1972companionship upon the inarticulate stranger. An elderly gentleman, with1973huge goggles and long nails, whose fingers were stained with opium, was1974the pacificator of the party, and calmed the frequent wranglings in1975which the other eighteen Chinese engaged with much earnestness.19761977Well, this boat--a leaky, heavy, old tub that had to be tracked nearly1978all the way--carried me the forty miles to Suifu within contract time.1979The boatmen on board worked sixteen hours without any rest except at two1980hasty meals; the frayed towrope never parted at any rapid, and only once1981did our boat get entangled with any other. Towards sundown we were1982abreast of the fine pagoda of Suifu, and a little later were at the1983landing. The city is on a high, level shelf of land with high hills1984behind it. It lies in the angle of bifurcation formed by the Yangtse1985river (here known as the "River of Golden Sand"), going west, and the1986Min, or Chentu river, going north to Chentu, the capital city of the1987province. I landed below the southern wall, and said good-bye to my1988companions. Climbing up the bank into the city, I passed by a busy1989thoroughfare to the pretty home of the Inland Mission, where I received1990a kind welcome from the gentleman and lady who conduct the mission, and1991a charming English girl, also in the mission, who lives with them.19921993199419951996CHAPTER VI.19971998THE CITY OF SUIFU--THE CHINA INLAND MISSION, WITH SOME GENERAL REMARKS1999ABOUT MISSIONARIES IN CHINA.200020012002At Suifu I rested a day in order to engage new coolies to go with me to2003Chaotong in Yunnan Province, distant 290 miles. Neither of my two2004Chungking men would re-engage to go further. Yet in Chungking Laokwang2005the cook had declared that he was prepared to go with me all the way to2006Talifu. But now he feared the loneliness of the road to Chaotong. The2007way, he said, was mountainous and little trodden, and robbers would see2008the smallness of our party and "come down and stab us." I was then glad2009that I had not paid him the retaining fee he had asked in Chungking to2010take me to Tali.20112012I called upon the famous Catholic missionaries, the Provicaire Moutot2013and Pere Beraud, saw the more important sights and visited some2014newly-arrived missionaries of the American Board of Missions. Four of2015the Americans were living together. I called with the Inland missionary2016at a time when they were at dinner. We were shown into the drawing-room,2017where the most conspicuous ornament was a painted scroll with a well2018executed drawing of the poppy in flower, a circumstance which would2019confirm the belief of the Chinese who saw it, that the poppy is held in2020veneration by foreigners. While we waited we heard the noise of dinner2021gradually cease, and then the door opened and one of the single ladies2022entered. She was fierce to look at, tall as a grenadier, with a stride2023like a camel; she was picking her teeth with a hairpin. She courteously2024expressed her regret that she could not invite us to dinner. "Waal now,"2025she said, looking at us from under her spectacles, "ahm real sorry I2026caan't ask you to have somethin' to eat, but we've just finished, and I2027guess there ain't nothin' left."20282029Fourteen American missionaries were lately imported into Suifu in one2030shipment. Most of them are from Chicago. One of their earliest efforts2031will be to translate into Chinese Mr. Stead's "If Christ came to2032Chicago," in order the better to demonstrate to the Chinese the lofty2033standard of morality, virtue, probity, and honour attained by the2034Christian community that sent them to China to enlighten the poor2035benighted heathen in this land of darkness.20362037Szechuen is a Catholic stronghold. There are nominally one hundred2038thousand Catholics in the province, representing the labours of many2039French missionaries for a period of rather more than two hundred years.2040Actually, however, there are only sixty thousand Chinese in the province2041who could be called Catholics. To use the words of the Provicaire, the2042Chinese are "_trop materialistes_" to become Christian, and, as they are2043all "liars and robbers," the faith is not easily propagated amongst2044them. Rarely have I met two more charming men than these brave2045missionaries. French, they told me, I speak with the "_vrai accent2046parisien_," a compliment which I have no doubt is true, though it2047conflicts with my experience in Paris, where most of the true Parisians2048to whom I spoke in their own language gave me the same look of2049intelligence that I observe in the Chinaman when I address him in2050English. Pere Moutot has been twenty-three years in China--six years at2051the sacred Mount Omi, and seventeen years in Suifu; Pere Beraud has been2052twenty-three years in Suifu. They both speak Chinese to perfection, and2053have been co-workers with the bishop in the production of a2054Mandarin-French dictionary just published at Sicawei; they dress as2055Chinese, and live as Chinese in handsome mission premises built in2056Chinese style. There is a pretty chapel in the compound with scrolls and2057memorial tablets presented by Chinese Catholics, a school for boys2058attended by fifty ragamuffins, a nunnery and girls' school, and a fit2059residence for the venerable bishop. When showing me the chapel, the2060Provicaire told me of the visit of one of Our Lord's Apostles to Suifu.2061He seemed to have no doubt himself of the truth of the story. Tradition2062says that St. Thomas came to China, and, if further proof were wanting,2063there is the black image of Tamo worshipped to this day in many of the2064temples of Szechuen. Scholars, however, identify this image and its2065marked Hindoo features with that of the Buddhist evangelist Tamo, who is2066known to have visited China in the sixth century.20672068In Suifu there is a branch of the China Inland Mission under an2069enthusiastic young missionary, who was formerly a French polisher in2070Hereford. He is helped by an amiable wife and by a charming English girl2071scarcely out of her teens. The missionary's work has, he tells me, been2072"abundantly blessed,"--he has baptised six converts in the last three2073years. A fine type of man is this missionary, brave and self-reliant,2074sympathetic and self-denying, hopeful and self-satisfied. His views as a2075missionary are well-defined. I give them in his own words:--"Those2076Chinese who have never heard the Gospel will be judged by the Almighty2077as He thinks fit"--a contention which does not admit of dispute--"but2078those Chinese who have heard the Christian doctrine, and still steel2079their hearts against the Holy Ghost, will assuredly go to hell; there is2080no help for them, they can believe and they won't; had they believed,2081their reward would be eternal; they refuse to believe and their2082punishment will be eternal." But the destruction that awaits the Chinese2083must be pointed out to them with becoming gentleness, in accordance with2084the teaching of the Rev. S. F. Woodin, of the American Baptist Mission,2085Foochow, who says:--"There are occasions when we must speak that awful2086word 'hell,' but this should always be done in a spirit of earnest2087love." (_Records_ of the Shanghai Missionary Conference, 1877, p. 91.)2088It was a curious study to observe the equanimity with which this2089good-natured man contemplates the work he has done in China, when to2090obtain six dubious conversions he has on his own confession sent some2091thousands of unoffending Chinese _en enfer bouillir eternellement_.20922093But, if the teaching of this good missionary is unwelcome to the2094Chinese, and there are hundreds in China who teach as he does, how2095infinitely more distasteful must be the teaching of both the Founder and2096the Secretary of the Mission which sent him to China.20972098"They are God's lost ones who are in China," says Mr. C. L. Morgan,2099editor of _The Christian_, "and God cares for them and yearns over2100them." (_China's Millions_, 1879, p. 94.) "The millions of Chinese,"2101(who have never heard the Gospel,) says Mr. B. Broomhall, secretary of2102the China Inland Mission, and editor of _China's Millions_, "where are2103they going, what is to be their future? What is to be their condition2104beyond the grave? Oh, tremendous question! It is an awful thing to2105contemplate--but they perish; that is what God says." ("Evangelisation2106of the World," p. 70.) "The heathen are all guilty in God's eyes; as2107guilty they perish." (_Id._, 101.) "Do we believe that these millions2108are without hope in the next world? We turn the leaves of God's Word in2109vain, for there we find no hope; not only that, but positive words to2110the contrary. Yes! we believe it." (_Id._, p. 199.)21112112The Rev. Dr. Hudson Taylor, the distinguished Founder of the Mission,2113certainly believes it, and has frequently stated his belief in public.2114Ancestral worship is the keystone of the religion of the Chinese; "the2115keystone also of China's social fabric." And "the worship springs," says2116the Rev. W. A. P. Martin, D.D., LL.D., of the Tung Wen College, Peking,2117"from some of the best principles of human nature. The first conception2118of a life beyond the grave was, it is thought, suggested by a desire to2119commune with deceased parents." ("The Worship of Ancestors--a plea for2120toleration.") But Dr. Hudson Taylor condemned bitterly this plea for2121toleration. "Ancestral worship," he said (it was at the Shanghai2122Missionary Conference of May, 1890), "Ancestral worship is idolatry from2123beginning to end, the whole of it, and everything connected with it."2124China's religion is idolatry, the Chinese are universally idolatrous,2125and the fate that befalls idolaters is carefully pointed out by Dr.2126Taylor:--"Their part is in the lake of fire."21272128"These millions of China," I quote again from Dr. Taylor, "These2129millions of China" (who have never heard the Gospel), "are unsaved. Oh!2130my dear friends, may I say one word about that condition? The Bible says2131of the heathen, that they are without hope; will you say there is good2132hope for them of whom the Word of God says, 'they are without hope,2133without God in the world'?" (Missionary Conference of 1888, _Records_,2134i., 176.)21352136"There are those who know more about the state of the heathen than did2137the Apostle Paul, who wrote under the inspiration of the Holy Ghost,2138'They that sin without law, perish without law,' nay, there are those2139who are not afraid to contradict the revelation of Jesus Christ, which2140God gave unto Him to shew unto His servants, in which He solemnly2141affirms that 'idolators and all liars, their part shall be in the lake2142that burneth with fire and brimstone.' Such being the state of the2143unsaved of China, do not their urgent needs claim from us that with2144_agonising eagerness_ we should hasten to proclaim everywhere the2145message through which alone deliverance can be found?" (_Ut supra_, ii.,214631.)21472148Look then at the enormous difficulty which the six hundred and eleven2149missionaries, of the China Inland Mission, raise up against themselves,2150the majority of whom are presumably in agreement with the teaching of2151their director, Dr. Hudson Taylor. They tell the Chinese inquirer that2152his unconverted father, who never heard the Gospel, has, like Confucius,2153perished eternally. But the chief of all virtues in China is filial2154piety; the strongest emotion that can move the heart of a Chinaman is2155the supreme desire to follow in the footsteps of his father. Conversion2156with him means not only eternal separation from the father who gave him2157life, but the "immediate liberation of his ancestors to a life of2158beggary, to inflict sickness and all manner of evil on the2159neighbourhood."21602161I believe that it is now universally recognised that the most difficult2162of all missionary fields--incomparably the most difficult--is China.2163Difficulties assail the missionary at every step; and every honest man,2164whether his views be broad or high or low, must sympathise with the2165earnest efforts the missionaries are making for the good and advancement2166of the Chinese.21672168Look for example at the difficulty there is in telling a Chinese, who2169has been taught to regard the love of his parents as his chief duty, as2170his forefathers have been taught for hundreds of generations before2171him--the difficulty there is in explaining to him, in his own language,2172the words of Christ, "If any man come to Me and hate not his father, he2173cannot be My disciple. For I am come to set a man at variance against2174his father."21752176In the patriarchal system of government which prevails in China, the2177most awful crime that a son can commit, is to kill his parent, either2178father or mother. And this is said to be, though the description is no2179doubt abundantly exaggerated, the punishment of his crime. He is put to2180death by the "_Ling chi_," or "degrading and slow process," and his2181younger brothers are beheaded; his house is razed to the ground and the2182earth under it dug up several feet deep; his neighbours are severely2183punished; his principal teacher is decapitated; the district magistrate2184is deprived of his office; and the higher officials of the province2185degraded three degrees in rank.21862187Such is the enormity of the crime of parricide in China; yet it is to2188the Chinese who approves of the severity of this punishment that the2189missionary has to preach, "And the children shall rise up against their2190parents and cause them to be put to death."21912192The China Inland Mission, as a body of courageous workers, brave2193travellers, unselfish and kindly men endowed with every manly virtue2194that can command our admiration, is worthy of all the praise that can2195be bestowed on it. Most of its members are men who have been saved after2196reaching maturity, and delicately-nurtured emotional girls with2197heightened religious feelings.21982199Too often entirely ignorant of the history of China, a mighty nation2200which has "witnessed the rise to glory and the decay of Egypt, Assyria,2201Babylonia, Persia, Greece, and Rome, and still remains the only monument2202of ages long bygone," of its manners and polity, customs and religions,2203and of the extraordinary difficulties in the acquirement of its2204language, too often forgetful that the Chinese are a people whose2205"prepossessions and prejudices and cherished judgments are the growth of2206millenniums," they come to China hoping that miraculous assistance will2207aid them in their exposition of the Christian doctrine, in language2208which is too often impenetrable darkness to its hearers.22092210"They are God's lost ones who are in China, and God cares for them and2211yearns over them," and men who were in England respectable artisans,2212with an imperfect hold of their own language, come to China, in response2213to the "wail of the dying millions," to stay this "awful ruin of souls,"2214who, at the rate of 33,000 a day, are "perishing without hope, having2215sinned without law."22162217Six months after their arrival they write to _China's Millions_: "Now2218for the news! Glorious news this time! Our services crowded! Such bright2219intelligent faces! So eager to hear the good news! They seemed to drink2220in every word, and to listen as if they were afraid that a word might be2221lost." Five years later they write: "The first convert in Siao Wong Miao2222was a young man named Sengleping, a matseller. He was very earnest in2223his efforts to spread the Gospel, but about the beginning of the year2224he became insane. The poor man lost his reason, but not his piety."2225(_China's Millions_, iv., 5, 95, and 143).22262227A young English girl at this mission, who has been more than a year in2228China, tells me that she has never felt the Lord so near her as she has2229since she came to China, nor ever realised so entirely His abundant2230goodness. Poor thing, it made me sad to talk to her. In England she2231lived in a bright and happy home with brothers and sisters, in a2232charming climate. She was always well and full of life and vigour,2233surrounded by all that can make life worth living. In China she is never2234well; she is almost forgetting what is the sensation of health; she is2235anaemic and apprehensive; she has nervous headaches and neuralgia; she2236can have no pleasure, no amusement whatever; her only relaxation is2237taking her temperature; her only diversion a prayer meeting. She is2238cooped up in a Chinese house in the unchanging society of a married2239couple--the only exercise she can permit herself is a prison-like walk2240along the top of the city at the back of the mission. Her lover, a2241refined English gentleman who is also in the mission, lives a week's2242journey away, in Chungking, a depressing fever-stricken city where the2243sun is never seen from November to June, and blazes with unendurable2244fierceness from July to October. In England he was full of strength and2245vigour, fond of boating and a good lawn-tennis player. In China he is2246always ill, anaemic, wasted, and dyspeptic, constantly subject to low2247forms of fever, and destitute of appetite. But more agonising than his2248bad health is the horrible reality of the unavailing sacrifice he is2249making--no converts but "outcasts subsidised to forsake their family2250altars;" no reward but the ultimate one which his noble self-devotion2251is laying up for himself in Heaven. No man with a healthy brain can2252discern "Blessing" in the work of these two missionaries, nor be blind2253to the fact that it is the reverse of worshipful to return effusive2254thanks to the great Almighty, "who yearns over the Chinese, His lost2255ones," for "vouchsafing the abundant mercies" of a harvest of six2256doubtful converts as the work of three missionaries for three years.22572258There are 180,000 people in Suifu, and, as is the case with Chinese2259cities, a larger area than that under habitation is occupied by the2260public graveyard outside the city, which covers the hill slopes for2261miles and miles. The number of opium-smokers is so large that the2262question is not, who does smoke opium, but who doesn't. In the mission2263street alone, besides the Inland Mission, the Buddhist Temple,2264Mohammedan Mosque, and Roman Catholic Mission, there are eight2265opium-houses. Every bank, silk shop, and hong, of any pretension2266whatever, throughout the city, has its opium-room, with the lamp always2267lit ready for the guest. Opium-rooms are as common as smoking rooms are2268with us. A whiff of opium rather than a nip of whisky is the preliminary2269to business in Western China.22702271[Illustration: OPIUM-SMOKING.]22722273An immensely rich city is Suifu with every advantage of position, on a2274great waterway in the heart of a district rich in coal and minerals and2275inexhaustible subterranean reservoirs of brine. Silks and furs and2276silverwork, medicines, opium and whitewax, are the chief articles of2277export, and as, fortunately for us, Western China can grow but little2278cotton, the most important imports are Manchester goods.22792280Szechuen is by far the richest province of the eighteen that constitute2281the Middle Kingdom. Its present Viceroy, Liu, is a native of Anhwei; he2282is, therefore, a countryman of Li Hung Chang to whom he is related by2283marriage, his daughter having married Li Hung Chang's nephew. Its2284provincial Treasurer is believed to occupy the richest post held by any2285official in the empire. It is worth noticing that the present provincial2286Treasurer, Kung Chao-yuan, has just been made (1894) Minister2287Plenipotentiary to Great Britain, France, Italy, Belgium, Sweden and2288Norway, and one can well believe how intense was his chagrin when he2289received this appointment from the "Imperial Supreme" compelling him, as2290it did, to forsake the tombs of his ancestors--to leave China for2291England on a fixed salary, and vacate the most coveted post in the2292empire, a post where the opportunities of personal enrichment are simply2293illimitable.22942295In Suifu there are two magistrates, both with important yamens. The Fu2296magistrate is the "Father of the City," the Hsien magistrate is the2297"Mother of the City;" and the "Mother of the City" largely favours the2298export opium trade. When Protestant missionaries first came to the city2299in 1888 and 1889 there was little friendliness shown to them. Folk would2300cry after the missionary, "There goes the foreigner that eats children,"2301and children would be hurriedly hidden, as if from fear. These taunts2302were at first disregarded. But there came a time when living children2303were brought to the mission for sale as food; whereupon the mission made2304formal complaint in the yamen, and the Fu at once issued a proclamation2305checking the absurd tales about the foreigners, and ordering the2306citizens, under many pains and penalties, to treat the foreigners with2307respect. There has been no trouble since, and, as we walked through the2308crowded streets, I could see nothing but friendly indifference.2309Reference to this and other sorrows is made in the missionary's report2310to _China's Millions_, November, 1893:--23112312"Soon after this trial had passed away (the rumours of baby eating),2313still more painful internal sorrow arose. One of the members, who had2314been baptised three years before and had been useful as a preacher of2315the Gospel, fell into grievous sin, and had to be excluded from Church2316fellowship. Then a little later a very promising inquirer, who had been2317cured of opium-smoking and appeared to be growing in grace, fell again2318under its power. While still under a cloud he was suddenly removed2319during the cholera visitation."23202321The China Inland Mission has pleasant quarters close under the city2322wall. Their pretty chapel opens into the street, and displays2323prominently the proclamation of the Emperor concerning the treaty rights2324of foreign missionaries. Seven children, all of whom are girls, are2325boarded on the premises, and are being brought up as Christians. They2326are pretty, bright children, the eldest, a girl of fourteen,2327particularly so. All are large-footed, and they are to be married to2328Christian converts. When this fact becomes known it is hoped that more2329young Chinamen than at present may be emulous to be converted. All seven2330are foundlings from Chungking where, wrapped in brown paper, they were2331at different times dropped over the wall into the Mission compound. They2332have been carefully reared by the Mission.23332334At the boys' school fifty smart boys, all heathens, were at their2335lessons. They were learning different subjects, and were teaching their2336ears the "tones" by reading at the top of their voices. The noise was2337awful. None but a Chinese boy could study in such a din. In China, when2338the lesson is finished, the class is silent; noise, therefore, is the2339indication of work in a Chinese school--not silence.23402341The schoolmaster was a ragged-looking loafer, dressed in grey. He was2342in mourning, and had been unshaven for forty-two days in consequence of2343the death of his father. This was an important day of mourning, because2344on this day, the forty-second after his death, his dead father became,2345for the first time, aware of his own decease. A week later, on the2346forty-ninth day, the funeral rites would cease.23472348234923502351CHAPTER VII.23522353SUIFU TO CHAOTONG, WITH SOME REMARKS ON THE PROVINCE OF YUNNAN--CHINESE2354PORTERS, POSTAL ARRANGEMENTS, AND BANKS.235523562357I engaged three new men in Suifu, who undertook to take me to Chaotong,2358290 miles, in thirteen days, special inducement being held out to them2359in the shape of a reward of one shilling each to do the journey in2360eleven days. Their pay was to be seven shillings and threepence each,2361apart from the bonus, and of course they had to find themselves. They2362brought me from the coolie-hong, where they were engaged, an agreement2363signed by the hong-master, which was to be returned to them in Chaotong,2364and remitted to their master as a receipt for my safe delivery.23652366Every condition detailed in the agreement they faithfully carried out,2367and they took me to Chaotong in ten days and a half, though the ordinary2368time is fourteen days.23692370One of the three was a convert, one of the six surviving converts made2371by the aggregate Inland Mission of Suifu in six years. He was an2372excellent good fellow, rather dull of wits, but a credit to the Mission.2373To him was intrusted the paying away of my money--he carried no load.2374When he wanted money he was to show me his empty hands, and say "_Muta2375tsien! muta tsien!_" (I have no money! I have no money!).23762377I knew that perfect confidence could be placed in the convert, apart2378from the reason of his conversion, because he had a father living in2379Suifu. Were he to rob me or do me a wrong and run away, we could arrest2380his father and have him detained in the yamen prison till his son2381returned. Nothing in China gives one greater protection against fraud2382and injury than the law which holds a father responsible for the2383wrongdoing of his son, or, where there is no father, an elder son2384culpable for the misdeed of the younger.23852386On the morning of March 22nd we started for Chaotong in Yunnan province.2387The Inland Missionary and a Brother from the American Baptist Mission2388kindly came with me for the first thirteen miles. My route lay west on2389the north bank of the Yangtse, but later, after crossing the Yangtse,2390would be nearly south to Chaotong.23912392Shortly before leaving, the _chairen_ or yamen-runner--the policeman,2393that is to say--sent by the Magistrate to shadow me to Tak-wan-hsien,2394called at the Mission to request that the interpreter would kindly2395remind the traveller, who did not speak Chinese, that it was customary2396to give wine-money to the chairen at the end of the journey. The request2397was reasonable. All the way from Chungking I had been accompanied by2398yamen-runners without knowing it. The chairen is sent partly for the2399protection of the traveller, but mainly for the protection of the2400Magistrate; for, should a traveller provided with a passport receive any2401injury, the Magistrate of the district would be liable to degradation.2402It was arranged, therefore, with the convert that, on our arrival in2403Tak-wan-hsien, I was to give the chairen, if satisfied with his2404services, 200 cash (five pence); but, if he said "_gowshun! gowshun!_"2405(a little more! a little more!) with sufficient persistence, I was to2406increase the reward gradually to sevenpence halfpenny. This was to be2407the limit; and the chairen, I was assured, would consider this a2408generous return for accompanying me 227 miles over one of the most2409mountainous roads in China.24102411It was a pleasant walk along the river-bank in the fertile alluvial,2412where the poppy in white flower and tobacco were growing, and where2413fields of yellow rape-seed alternated with beds of rushes--the rape-seed2414yielding the oil, and the rushes the rushlights of Chinese lamps. Flocks2415of wild geese were within easy shot on the sandbanks--the "peaceful2416geese," whose virtues are extolled by every Chinaman. They live in2417pairs, and, if one dies, its mate will be for ever faithful to its2418memory. Such virtue is worthy of being recorded on the arch which here2419spans the roadway, whose Chinese characters, _Shen_ (holy), _Chi_2420(will), show that it was erected by the holy decree of the Emperor to2421perpetuate the memory of some widow who never remarried.24222423As we walked along the missionary gave instructions to my men. "In my2424grace I had given them very light loads; hurry and they would be richly2425rewarded"--one shilling extra for doing fourteen stages in eleven days.24262427At an inn, under the branches of a banyan tree, we sat down and had a2428cup of tea. While we waited, a hawker came and sat near us. He was2429peddling live cats. In one of his two baskets was a cat that bore a2430curious resemblance to a tortoise-shell tabby, that till a week ago had2431been a pet in the Inland Mission. It had disappeared mysteriously; it2432had died, the Chinese servant said; and here it was reincarnated.24332434At the market town the missionaries left me to go on alone with my three2435men. I had seventeen miles still to go before night.24362437It was midday, and the sun was hot, so a chair was arranged for to take2438me the seventeen miles to Anpien. It was to cost 320 cash (eightpence),2439but, just before leaving, the grasping coolies refused to carry me for2440less than 340 cash. "Walk on," said the missionary, "and teach them a2441Christian lesson," so I walked seventeen miles in the sun to rebuke them2442for their avarice and save one halfpenny. In the evening I am afraid2443that I was hardly in the frame of mind requisite for conducting an2444evangelical meeting.24452446Anpien is a considerable town. It is on the Yangtse River just below2447where it bifurcates into two rivers, one of which goes north-west, the2448other south-west. Streets of temporary houses are built down by the2449river; they form the winter suburb, and disappear in the summer when the2450river rises in consequence of the melting of the snows in its mountain2451sources. At an excellent inn, with a noisy restaurant on the first2452floor, good accommodation was given me. No sooner was I seated than a2453chairen came from the yamen to ask for my Chinese visiting card; but he2454did not ask for my passport, though I had brought with me twenty-five2455copies besides the original.24562457At daybreak a chair was ready, and I was carried to the River, where a2458ferry boat was in waiting to take us across below the junction. Then we2459started on our journey towards the south, along the right bank of the2460Laowatan branch of the Yangtse. The road was a tracking path cut into2461the face of the cliff; it was narrow, steep, winding, and slippery.2462There was only just room for the chair to pass, and at the sudden turns2463it had often to be canted to one side to permit of its passage. We were2464high above the river in the mountain gorges. The comfort of the2465traveller in a chair along this road depends entirely upon the sureness2466of foot of his two bearers--a false step, and chair and traveller would2467tumble down the cliff into the foaming river below. Deep and narrow was2468the mountain river, and it roared like a cataract, yet down the passage2469a long narrow junk, swarming with passengers, was racing, its oars and2470bow-sweep worked by a score of sailors singing in chorus. The boat2471appeared, passed down the reach, and was out of sight in a moment; a2472single error, the slightest confusion, and it would have been smashed in2473fragments on the rocks and the river strewn with corpses.24742475We did a good stage before breakfast. Every few li where the steepness2476of the valley side permits it, there are straw-thatched, bamboo and2477plaster inns. Here rice is kept in wooden bins all ready steaming hot2478for the use of travellers; good tea is brewed in a few minutes; the2479tables and chopsticks are sufficiently clean.24802481Leaving the river, we crossed over the mountains by a short cut to the2482river again, and at a wayside inn, much frequented by Chinese, the chair2483stage finished. I wished to do some writing, and sat down at one of the2484tables. A crowd gathered round me, and were much interested. One elderly2485Chinese with huge glasses, a wag in his own way, seeing that I did not2486speak Chinese, thought to make me understand and divert the crowd by the2487loudness of his speech, and, insisting that I was deaf, yelled into my2488ears in tones that shook the tympanum. I told the foolish fellow, in2489English, that the less he talked the better I could understand him; but2490he persisted, and poked his face almost into mine, but withdrew it and2491hobbled off in umbrage when I drew the attention of the bystanders to2492the absurd capacity of his mouth, which was larger than any mule's.24932494I must admit that my knowledge of Chinese was very scanty, so scanty2495indeed as to be almost non-existent. What few words I knew were rarely2496intelligible; but, as Mrs. General Baynes, when staying at Boulogne,2497found Hindostanee to be of great help in speaking French, so did I2498discover that English was of great assistance to me in conversing in2499Chinese. Remonstrance was thus made much more effective. Whenever I was2500in a difficulty, or the crowd too obtrusive, I had only to say a few2501grave sentences in English, and I was master of the situation. This2502method of speaking often reminded me of that employed by a Cornish lady2503of high family whose husband was a colleague of mine in Spain. She had2504been many years in Andalusia, but had never succeeded in mastering2505Spanish. At a dinner party given by this lady, at which I was present,2506she thus addressed her Spanish servant, who did not "possess" a single2507word of English: "Bring me," she said in an angry aside, "bring me the2508_cuchillo_ with the black-handled heft," adding, as she turned to us and2509thumped her fist on the table, while the servant stood still mystified,2510"D---- the language! I wish I had never learnt it."25112512The inn, where the sedan left me, was built over the pathway, which was2513here a narrow track, two feet six inches wide. Mountain coolies on the2514road were passing in single file through the inn, their backs bending2515under their huge burdens. Pigs and fowls and dogs, and a stray cat, were2516foraging for crumbs under the table. Through the open doorways you saw2517the paddy-fields under water and the terraced hills, with every arable2518yard under cultivation. The air was hot and enervating. "The country of2519the clouds," as the Chinese term the province of Szechuen, does not2520belie its name. An elderly woman was in charge of the oven, and toddled2521about on her deformed feet as if she were walking on her heels. Her2522husband, the innkeeper, brought us hot water every few minutes to keep2523our tea basins full. "_Na kaishui lai_" (bring hot water), you heard on2524all sides. A heap of bedding was in one corner of the room, in another2525were a number of rolls of straw mattresses; a hollow joint of bamboo was2526filled with chopsticks for the common use, into another bamboo the2527innkeeper slipped his takings of copper cash. Hanging from the rafters2528were strings of straw sandals for the poor, and hemp sandals for moneyed2529wayfarers like the writer. The people who stood round, and those seated2530at the tables, were friendly and respectful, and plied my men with2531questions concerning their master. And I did hope that the convert was2532not tempted to backslide and swerve from the truth in his answers.25332534My men were now anxious to push on. Over a mountainous country of2535surpassing beauty, I continued my journey on foot to Fan-yien-tsen, and2536rested there for the night, having done two days' journey in one.25372538On March 24th we were all day toiling over the mountains, climbing and2539descending wooded steeps, through groves of pine, with an ever-changing2540landscape before us, beautiful with running water, with cascades and2541waterfalls tumbling down into the river, with magnificent glens and2542gorges, and picturesque temples on the mountain tops. At night we were2543at the village of Tanto, on the river, having crossed, a few li before,2544over the boundary which separates the province of Szechuen from the2545province of Yunnan.25462547From Tanto the path up the gorges leads across a rocky mountain creek2548in a defile of the mountains. In England this creek would be spanned by2549a bridge; but the poor heathen, in China, how do they find their way2550across the stream? By a bridge also. They have spanned the torrent with2551a powerful iron suspension bridge, 100 feet long by ten feet broad,2552swung between two massive buttresses and approached under handsome2553temple-archways.25542555Mists clothe the mountains--the air is confined between these walls of2556rock and stone. Population is scanty, but there is cultivation wherever2557possible. Villages sparsely distributed along the mountain path have2558water trained to them in bamboo conduits from tarns on the hillside.2559Each house has its own supply, and there is no attempt to provide for2560the common good. Besides other reasons, it would interfere with the2561trade of the water-carriers, who all day long are toiling up from the2562river.25632564The mountain slope does not permit a greater width of building space2565than on each side of the one main street. And on market days this street2566is almost impassable, being thronged with traffickers, and blocked with2567stalls and wares. Coal is for sale, both pure and mixed with clay in2568briquettes, and salt in blocks almost as black as coal, and three times2569as heavy, and piles of drugs--a medley of bones, horns, roots, leaves,2570and minerals--and raw cotton and cotton yarn from Wuchang and Bombay,2571and finished goods from Manchester. At one of the villages there was a2572chair for hire, and, knowing how difficult was the country, I was2573willing to pay the amount asked--namely, _7d._ for nearly seven miles;2574but my friend the convert, who arranged these things, considered that2575between the _5d._ he offered and the _7d._ they asked the discrepancy2576was too great, and after some acrimonious bargaining it was decided2577that I should continue on foot, my man indicating to me by gestures, in2578a most sarcastic way, that the "_chiaodza_" men had failed to overreach2579him.25802581[Illustration: A TEMPLE IN SZECHUEN.]25822583[Illustration: LAOWATAN.]25842585At Sengki-ping it rained all through the night, and I had to sleep under2586my umbrella because of a solution in the continuity of the roof2587immediately above my pillow. And it rained all the day following; but my2588men, eager to earn their reward of one shilling, pushed on through the2589slush. It was hard work following the slippery path above the river. Few2590rivers in the world flow between more majestic banks than these,2591towering as they do a thousand feet above the water. Clad with thick2592mountain scrub, that has firm foothold, the mountains offer but a poor2593harvest to the peasant; yet even here high up on the precipitous sides2594of the cliffs, ledges that seem inaccessible are sown with wheat or2595peas, and, if the soil be deep enough, with the baneful poppy. As we2596plodded on through the mud and rain, we overtook a poor lad painfully2597limping along with the help of a stick. He was a bright lad, who unbound2598his leg and showed me a large swelling above the knee. He spoke to me,2599though I did not understand him, but with sturdy independence did not2600ask for alms, and when I had seen his leg he bound it up again and2601limped on. Meeting him a little later at an inn, where he was sitting at2602a table with nothing before him to eat, I gave him a handful of cash2603which I had put in my pocket for him. He thanked me by raising his2604clasped hands, and said something, I knew not what, as I hurried on. A2605little while afterwards I stopped to have my breakfast, when the boy2606passed. As soon as he saw me he fell down upon his knees and "kotow'd"2607to me, with every mark of the liveliest gratitude. I felt touched by the2608poor fellow's gratitude--he could not have been more than fifteen--and2609mean, to think that the benefaction, which in his eyes appeared so2610generous, was little more than one penny. There can be no doubt that I2611gained merit by this action, for this very afternoon as I was on the2612track a large stone the size of a shell from a 50-ton gun fell from the2613crag above me, struck the rock within two paces of me, and shot past2614into the river. A few feet nearer and it would have blotted out the life2615of one whom the profession could ill spare. We camped at Laowatan.26162617A chair with three bearers was waiting for me in the morning, so that I2618left the town of Laowatan in a manner befitting my rank. The town had2619risen to see me leave, and I went down the street amid serried ranks of2620spectators. We crossed the river by a wonderful suspension bridge, 2502621feet long and 12 feet broad, formed of linked bars of wrought iron. It2622shows stability, strength, and delicacy of design, and is a remarkable2623work to have been done by the untutored barbarians of this land of2624night. We ascended the steep incline opposite, and passed the likin2625barrier, but at a turn in the road, higher still in the mountain, a2626woman emerged from her cottage and blocked our path. Nor could the chair2627pass till my foremost bearer had reluctantly given her a string of cash.2628"With money you can move the gods," say the Chinese; "without it you2629can't move a man."26302631For miles we mounted upwards. We were now in Yunnan, "south of the2632clouds"--in Szechuen we were always under the clouds--the sun was warm,2633the air dry and crisp. Ponies passed us in long droves; often there were2634eighty ponies in a single drove. All were heavily laden with copper and2635lead, were nozzled to keep them off the grass, and picked their way down2636the rocky path of steps with the agility and sureness of foot of2637mountain goats. Time was beaten for them on musical gongs, and the2638echoes rang among the mountains. Many were decorated with red flags and2639tufts, and with plumes of the Amherst pheasant. These were official pack2640animals, which were franked through the likin barriers without2641examination.26422643The path, rising to the height of the watershed, where at a great2644elevation we gain a distant view of water, descends by the counterslope2645once more to the river Laowatan. A wonderful ravine, a mountain riven2646perpendicularly in twain, here gives passage to the river, and in full2647view of this we rested at the little town of Taoshakwan, with the roar2648of the river hundreds of feet below us. Midway up the face of the2649precipice opposite there is a sight worth seeing; a mass of coffin2650boards, caught in a fault in the precipice, have been lying there for2651untold generations, having been originally carried there by the "ancient2652flying-men who are now extinct."26532654A poor little town is Taoshakwan, with a poor little yamen with2655pretentious tigers painted on its outflanking wall, with a poor little2656temple, and gods in sad disrepair; but with an admirable inn, with a2657charming verandah facing a scene of alpine magnificence.26582659We were entering a district of great poverty. At Tchih-li-pu, where we2660arrived at midday the next day, the houses are poor, the people2661poverty-stricken and ill-clad, the hotel dirty, and my room the worst I2662had yet slept in. The road is a well-worn path flagged in places,2663uneven, and irregular, following at varying heights the upward course of2664the tortuous river. The country is bald; it is grand but lonely;2665vegetation is scanty and houses are few; we have left the prosperity of2666Szechuen, and are in the midst of the poverty of Yunnan. Farmhouses2667there are at rare intervals, amid occasional patches of cultivation;2668there are square white-washed watch towers in groves of sacred trees;2669there are a few tombstones, and an occasional rudely carved god to guard2670the way. There are poor mud and bamboo inns with grass roofs, and dirty2671tables set out with half a dozen bowls of tea, and with ovens for the2672use of travellers. Food we had now to bring with us, and only at the2673larger towns where the stages terminate could we expect to find food for2674sale. The tea is inferior, and we had to be content with maize meal,2675bean curds, rice roasted in sugar, and sweet gelatinous cakes made from2676the waste of maize meal. Rice can only be bought in the large towns. It2677is not kept in roadside inns ready steaming hot for use, as it is in2678Szechuen. Rarely there are sweet potatoes; there are eggs, however, in2679abundance, one hundred for a shilling (500 cash), but the coolies cannot2680eat them because of their dearness. A large bowl of rice costs four2681cash, an egg five cash, and the Chinaman strikes a balance in his mind2682and sees more nourishment in one bowl of rice than in three eggs. Of2683meat there is pork--pork in plenty, and pork only. Pigs and dogs are the2684scavengers of China. None of the carnivora are more omnivorous than the2685Chinese. "A Chinaman has the most unscrupulous stomach in the world,"2686says Meadows; "he will eat anything from the root to the leaf, and from2687the hide to the entrails." He will not even despise the flesh of dog2688that has died a natural death. During the awful famine in Shansi of26891876-1879 starving men fought to the death for the bodies of dogs that2690had fattened on the corpses of their dead countrymen. Mutton is2691sometimes for sale in Mohammedan shops, and beef also, but it must not2692be imagined that either sheep or ox is killed for its flesh, unless on2693the point of death from starvation or disease. And the beef is not from2694the ox but from the water buffalo. Sugar can be bought only in the2695larger towns; salt can be purchased everywhere.26962697Beggars there are in numbers, skulking about almost naked, with unkempt2698hair and no queue, with a small basket for gathering garbage and a staff2699to keep away dogs. Only beggars carry sticks in China, and it is only2700the beggars that need beware of dogs. To carry a stick in China for2701protection against dogs is like carrying a red flag to scare away bulls.2702Dogs in China are lowly organised; they are not discriminating animals;2703and, despite the luxurious splendour of my Chinese dress--it cost more2704than seven shillings--dogs frequently mistook my calling. In Szechuen,2705as we passed through the towns, there was competition among the inns to2706obtain our custom. Hotel runners were there to shout to all the world2707the superior merits of their establishments. But here in Yunnan it is2708different. There is barely inn accommodation for the road traffic, and2709the innkeepers are either too apathetic or too shamefaced to call the2710attention of the traveller to their poor, dirty accommodation houses.27112712In Szechuen, one of the most flourishing of trades is that of the2713monumental mason and carver in stone. Huge monoliths are there cut from2714the boulders which have been dislodged from the mountains, dressed and2715finished _in situ_, and then removed to the spot where they are to be2716erected. The Chinese thus pursue a practice different from that of the2717Westerns, who bring the undressed stone from the quarry and carve it in2718the studio. With the Chinese the difficulty is one of transport--the2719finished work is obviously lighter than the unhewn block. In Yunnan, up2720to the present, I had seen no mason at work, for no masonry was needed.2721Houses built of stone were falling into ruin, and only thatched,2722mud-plastered, bamboo and wood houses were being built in their places.27232724At Laowatan I told my Christian to hire me a chair for thirty or forty2725li, and he did so, but the chair, instead of carrying me the shorter2726distance, carried me the whole day. The following day the chair kept2727company with me, and as I had not ordered it, I naturally walked; but2728the third day also the chair haunted me, and then I discovered that my2729admirable guide had engaged the chair not for thirty or forty li, as I2730had instructed him in my best Chinese, but for three hundred and sixty2731li, for four days' stages of ninety li each. He had made the agreement2732"out of consideration for me," and his own pocket; he had made an2733agreement which gave him wider scope for a little private arrangement of2734his own with the chair-coolies. For two days I was paying fifteen cash a2735li for a chair and walking alongside of it charmed by the good humour of2736the coolies, and unaware that they were laughing in their sleeves at my2737folly. Trifling mistakes like this are inevitable to one who travels in2738China without an interpreter.27392740My two coolies were capital fellows, full of good humour, cheerful, and2741untiring. The elder was disposed to be argumentative with his2742countrymen, but he could not quarrel. Nature had given him an2743uncontrollable stutter, and, if he tried to speak quickly, spasm seized2744his tongue, and he had to break into a laugh. Few men in China, I think,2745could be more curiously constructed than this coolie. He was all neck;2746his chin was simply an upward prolongation of his neck like a second2747"Adam's apple." Both were very pleasant companions. They were naturally2748in good humour, for they were well paid, and their loads, as loads are2749in China, were almost insignificant; I had only asked them to carry2750sixty-seven pounds each.27512752We, who live amid the advantages of Western civilisation, can hardly2753realise how enormous are the weights borne by those human beasts of2754burthen, our brothers in China. The common fast-travelling coolie of2755Szechuen contracts to carry eighty catties (107lbs.), forty miles a day2756over difficult country. But the weight-carrying coolie, travelling2757shorter distances, carries far heavier loads than that. There are2758porters, says Du Halde, who will carry 160 of our pounds, ten leagues a2759day. The coolies, engaged in carrying the compressed cakes of Szechuen2760tea into Thibet, travel over mountain passes 7000 feet above their2761starting place; yet there are those among them, says Von Richthofen, who2762carry 324 catties (432lbs.). A package of tea is called a "_pao_" and2763varies in weight from eleven to eighteen catties, yet Baber has often2764seen coolies carrying eighteen of the eighteen-catty _pao_ (the "_Yachou2765pao_") and on one occasion twenty-two, in other words Baber has often2766seen coolies with more than 400lbs. on their backs. Under these enormous2767loads they travel from six to seven miles a day. The average load of the2768Thibetan tea-carrier is, says Gill, from 240lbs. to 264lbs. Gill2769constantly saw "little boys carrying 120lbs." Bundles of calico weigh2770fifty-five catties each (73-1/3lbs.), and three bundles are the average2771load. Salt is solid, hard, metallic, and of high specific gravity, yet I2772have seen men ambling along the road, under loads that a strong2773Englishman could with difficulty raise from the ground. The average load2774of salt, coal, copper, zinc, and tin is 200lbs. Gill met coolies2775carrying logs, 200lbs. in weight, ten miles a day; and 200lbs., the2776Consul in Chungking told me, is the average weight carried by the2777cloth-porters between Wanhsien and Chentu, the capital.27782779Mountain coolies, such as the tea-carriers, bear the weight of their2780burden on their shoulders, carrying it as we do a knapsack, not in the2781ordinary Chinese way, with a pliant carrying pole. They are all provided2782with a short staff, which has a transverse handle curved like a2783boomerang, and with this they ease the weight off the back, while2784standing at rest.27852786We were still ascending the valley, which became more difficult of2787passage every day. Hamlets are built where there is scarce foothold in2788the detritus, below perpendicular escarpments of rock, cut clean like2789the facades of a Gothic temple. A tributary of the river is crossed by2790an admirable stone bridge of two arches, with a central pier and2791cut-water of magnificent boldness and strength, and with two images of2792lions guarding its abutment. Just below the branch the main stream can2793be crossed by a traveller, if he be brave enough to venture, in a bamboo2794loop-cradle, and be drawn across the stream on a powerful bamboo cable2795slung from bank to bank.27962797We rested by the bridge and refreshed ourselves, for above us was an2798ascent whose steepness my stuttering coolie indicated to me by fixing my2799walking stick in the ground, almost perpendicularly, and running his2800finger up the side. He did not exaggerate. A zigzag path set with stone2801steps has been cut in the vertical ascent, and up this we toiled for2802hours. At the base of the escalade my men sublet their loads to spare2803coolies who were waiting there in numbers for the purpose, and climbed2804up with me empty-handed. At every few turns there were rest-houses where2805one could get tea and shelter from the hot sun. The village of2806Tak-wan-leo is at the summit; it is a village of some little importance2807and commands a noble view of mountain, valley, and river. Its largest2808hong is the coffin-maker's, which is always filled with shells of the2809thickest timber that money can buy.28102811Stress is laid in China upon the necessity of a secure resting-place2812after death. The filial affection of a son can do no more thoughtful act2813than present a coffin to his father, to prove to him how composedly he2814will lie after he is dead. And nothing will a father in China show the2815stranger with more pride than the coffin-boards presented to him by his2816dutiful son.28172818Tak-wan-leo is the highest point on the road between Suifu and Chaotong.2819For centuries it has been known to the Chinese as the highest point;2820how, then, with their defective appliances did they arrive at so2821accurate a determination? Twenty li beyond the village the stage ends at2822the town of Tawantzu, where I had good quarters in the pavilion of an2823old temple. The shrine was thick with the dust of years; the three gods2824were dishevelled and mutilated; no sheaves of joss sticks were2825smouldering on the altar. The steps led down into manure heaps and a2826piggery, into a garden rank and waste, which yet commands an outlook2827over mountain and river worthy of the greatest of temples.28282829[Illustration: THE OPIUM-SMOKER OF ROMANCE.]28302831On March 30th I reached Tak-wan-hsien, the day's stage having been2832seventy li (twenty-three and one-third miles). I was carried all the way2833by three chair-coolies in a heavy chair in steady rain that made the2834unpaved track as slippery as ice--and this over the dizzy heights of a2835mountain pathway of extraordinary irregularity. Never slipping, never2836making a mistake, the three coolies bore the chair with my thirteen2837stone, easily and without straining. From time to time they rested a2838minute or two to take a whiff of tobacco; they were always in good2839humour, and finished the day as strong and fresh as when they began it.2840Within an hour of their arrival all these three men were lying on their2841sides in the room opposite to mine, with their opium-pipes and little2842wooden vials of opium before them, all three engaged in rolling and2843heating in their opium-lamps treacly pellets of opium. Then they had2844their daily smoke of opium. "They were ruining themselves body and2845soul." Two of the men were past middle age; the third was a strapping2846young fellow of twenty-five. They may have only recently acquired the2847habit, I had no means of asking them; but those who know Western China2848will tell you that it is almost certain that the two elder men had used2849the opium-pipe as a stimulant since they were as young as their2850companion. All three men were physically well-developed, with large2851frames, showing unusual muscular strength and endurance, and differed,2852indeed, from those resurrected corpses whose fleshless figures, drawn by2853imaginative Chinese artists, we have known for years to be typical of2854our poor lost brothers--the opium-smoking millions of China. For their2855work to-day, work that few men out of China would be capable of2856attempting, the three coolies were paid sevenpence each, out of which2857they found themselves, and had to pay as well one penny each for the2858hire of the chair.28592860On arriving at the inn in Tak-wan-hsien my estimable comrade, one of the2861six surviving converts of Suifu, indicated to me that his cash belt was2862empty--up the road he could not produce a single cash for me to give a2863beggar--and pointing in turn to the bag where I kept my silver, to the2864ceiling and to his heart, he conveyed to me the pious assurance that if2865I would give him some silver from the bag he would bring me back the2866true change, on his honour, so witness Heaven! I gave him two lumps of2867silver which I made him understand were worth 3420 cash; he went away,2868and after a suspicious absence returned quite gleefully with 3050 cash,2869the bank, no doubt, having detained the remainder pending the2870declaration of a bogus dividend. But he also brought back with him what2871was better than cash, some nutritious maize-meal cakes, which proved a2872welcome change from the everlasting rice. They were as large as an2873English scone, and cost two cash apiece, that is to say, for one2874shilling I could buy twenty dozen.28752876Money in Western China consists of solid ingots of silver, and copper2877cash. The silver is in lumps of one tael or more each, the tael being a2878Chinese ounce and equivalent roughly to between 1400 and 1500 cash.2879Speaking generally a tael was worth, during my journey, three shillings,2880that is to say, forty cash were equivalent to one penny. There are2881bankers in every town, and the Chinese methods of banking, it is well2882known, are but little inferior to our own. From Hankow to Chungking my2883money was remitted by draft through a Chinese bank. West from Chungking2884the money may be sent by draft, by telegraph, or in bullion, as you2885choose. I carried some silver with me; the rest I put up in a package2886and handed to a native post in Chungking, which undertook to deliver it2887intact to me at Yunnan city, 700 miles away, within a specified time. By2888my declaring its contents and paying the registration fee, a mere2889trifle, the post guaranteed its safe delivery, and engaged to make good2890any loss. Money is thus remitted in Western China with complete2891confidence and security. My money arrived, I may add, in Yunnan at the2892time agreed upon, but after I had left for Talifu. As there is a2893telegraph line between Yunnan and Tali, the money was forwarded by2894telegraph and awaited my arrival in Tali.28952896There are no less than four native post-offices between Chungking and2897Suifu. All the post-offices transmit parcels, as well as letters and2898bullion, at very moderate charges. The distance is 230 miles, and the2899charges are fifty cash (_1-1/4d._) the catty (1-1/3lb.), or any part2900thereof; thus a single letter pays fifty cash, a catty's weight of2901letters paying no more than a single letter.29022903From Chungking to Yunnan city, a distance of 630 miles, letters pay two2904hundred cash (fivepence) each; packages of one catty, or under, pay2905three hundred and fifty cash; while for silver bullion there is a2906special fee of three hundred and fifty cash for every ten taels,2907equivalent to ninepence for thirty shillings, or two-and-a-half per2908cent., which includes postage registration, guarantee, and insurance.29092910Tak-wan-hsien is a town of some importance, and was formerly the seat of2911the French missionary bishop. It is a walled town, ranking as a Hsien2912city, with a Hsien magistrate as its chief ruler. There are 10,0002913people (more or less), within the walls, but the city is poor, and its2914poverty is but a reflex of the district. Its mud wall is crumbling; its2915houses of mud and wood are falling; the streets are ill-paved and the2916people ill-clad.29172918291929202921CHAPTER VIII.29222923THE CITY OF CHAOTONG, WITH SOME REMARKS ON ITS POVERTY, INFANTICIDE,2924SELLING FEMALE CHILDREN INTO SLAVERY, TORTURES, AND THE CHINESE2925INSENSIBILITY TO PAIN.292629272928By the following day we had crossed the mountains, and were walking2929along the level upland that leads to the plain of Chaotong. And on2930Sunday, April 1st, we reached the city. Cedars, held sacred, with2931shrines in the shelter of their branches, dot the plain; peach-trees and2932pear-trees were now in full bloom; the harvest was ripening in the2933fields. There were black-faced sheep in abundance, red cattle with short2934horns, and the ubiquitous water-buffalo. Over the level roads primitive2935carts, drawn by red oxen, were rumbling in the dust. There were mud2936villages, poor and falling into ruins; there were everywhere signs of2937poverty and famine. Children ran about naked, or in rags. We passed the2938likin-barrier, known by its white flag, and I was not even asked for my2939visiting card, nor were my boxes looked into--they were as beggarly as2940the district--but poor carriers were detained, and a few cash unjustly2941wrung from them. At a crowded teahouse, a few miles from the city, we2942waited for the stragglers, while many wayfarers gathered in to see me.2943Prices were ranging higher. Tea here was 4 cash, and not 2 cash as2944hitherto. But even this charge was not excessive. In Canton one day,2945after a weary journey on foot through the crowded streets, I was taken2946to a five-storied pagoda overlooking the city. At the topmost story tea2947was brought me, and I drank a dozen cups, and was asked threepence in2948payment. I thought that the cheapest refreshment I ever had. Yet here I2949was served as abundantly with better tea at a charge compared with which2950the Canton charge was twenty-five times greater. Previously in this2951province the price I had paid for tea in comparison with the price at2952Canton was as one to fifty.29532954Early in the afternoon we passed through the south gate into Chaotong,2955and, picking our way through the streets, were led to the comfortable2956home of the Bible Christian Mission, where I was kindly received by the2957Rev. Frank Dymond, and welcomed as a brother missionary of whose arrival2958he had been advised. Services were ended, but the neighbours dropped in2959to see the stranger, and ask my exalted age, my honourable name, and my2960dignified business; they hoped to be able to congratulate me upon being2961a man of virtue, the father of many sons; asked how many thousands of2962pieces of silver I had (daughters), and how long I proposed to permit my2963dignified presence to remain in their mean and contemptible city.29642965Mr. Dymond is a Devonshire man, and that evening he gave me for tea2966Devonshire cream and blackberry jam made in Chaotong, and native oatmeal2967cakes, than which I never tasted any better in Scotland.29682969Chaotong is a walled Fu city with 40,000 inhabitants. Roman Catholics2970have been established here for many years, and the Bible Christian2971Mission, which is affiliated to the China Inland Mission, has been2972working here since 1887.29732974There were formerly five missionaries; there are now only two, and one2975of these was absent. The missionary in charge, Mr. Frank Dymond, is one2976of the most agreeable men I met in China, broad-minded, sympathetic and2977earnest--universally honoured and respected by all the district. Since2978the mission was opened three converts have been baptised, one of whom is2979in Szechuen, another is in Tongchuan, and the third has been gathered to2980his fathers. The harvest has not been abundant, but there are now six2981promising inquirers, and the missionary is not discouraged. The mission2982premises are built on land which cost two hundred and ninety taels, and2983are well situated not far from the south gate, the chief yamens, the2984temples, and the French Mission. People are friendly, but manifest2985dangerously little interest in their salvation.29862987At Chaotong I had entered upon a district that had been devastated by2988recurring seasons of plague and famine. Last year more than 5000 people2989are believed to have died from starvation in the town and its immediate2990neighbourhood. The numbers are appalling, but doubt must always be2991thrown upon statistics derived from Chinese sources. The Chinese and2992Japanese disregard of accuracy is characteristic of all Orientals.2993Beggars were so numerous, and became such a menace to the community,2994that their suppression was called for; they were driven from the2995streets, and confined within the walls of the temple and grounds beyond2996the south gate, and fed by common charity. Huddled together in rags and2997misery, they took famine fever and perished by hundreds. Seventy dead2998were carried from the temple in one day. Of 5000 poor wretches who2999crossed the temple threshold, the Chinese say that 2000 never came out3000alive. For four years past the harvests had been very bad, but there was3001now hope of a better time coming. Opportune rains had fallen, and the3002opium crop was good. More than anything else the district depends for3003its prosperity upon the opium crop--if the crop is good, money is3004plentiful. Maize-cobs last harvest were four times the size of those of3005the previous harvest, when they were no larger than one's finger. Wheat3006and beans were forward; the coming rice crop gave every hope of being a3007good one. Food was still dear, and all prices were high, because rice3008was scarce and dear, and it is the price of rice which regulates the3009market. In a good year one sheng of rice (6-2/3lbs.) costs thirty-five3010cash (less than one penny), it now costs 110 cash. The normal price of3011maize is sixteen cash the sheng, it now cost sixty-five cash the sheng.3012To make things worse, the weight of the sheng had been reduced with the3013times from twelve catties to five catties, and at the same time the3014relation of cash to silver had fallen from 1640 to 1250 cash the tael.30153016The selling of its female children into slavery is the chief sorrow of3017this famine-stricken district. During last year it is estimated, or3018rather, it is stated by the Chinese, that no less than three thousand3019children from this neighbourhood, chiefly female children and a few3020boys, were sold to dealers and carried like poultry in baskets to the3021capital. At ordinary times the price for girls is one tael (three3022shillings) for every year of their age, thus a girl of five costs3023fifteen shillings, of ten, thirty shillings, but in time of famine3024children, to speak brutally, become a drug in the market. Female3025children were now offering at from three shillings and fourpence to six3026shillings each. You could buy as many as you cared to, you might even3027obtain them for nothing if you would enter into an agreement with the3028father, which he had no means of enforcing, to take care of his child,3029and clothe and feed her, and rear her kindly. Starving mothers would3030come to the mission beseeching the foreign teachers to take their babies3031and save them from the fate that was otherwise inevitable.30323033Girls are bought in Chaotong up to the age of twenty, and there is3034always a ready market for those above the age of puberty; prices then3035vary according to the measure of the girl's beauty, an important feature3036being the smallness of her feet. They are sold in the capital for wives3037and _yatows_; they are rarely sold into prostitution. Two important3038factors in the demand for them are the large preponderance in the number3039of males at the capital, and the prevalence there of goitre or thick3040neck, a deformity which is absent from the district of Chaotong.3041Infanticide in a starving city like this is dreadfully common. "For the3042parents, seeing their children must be doomed to poverty, think it3043better at once to let the soul escape in search of a more happy asylum3044than to linger in one condemned to want and wretchedness." The3045infanticide is, however, exclusively confined to the destruction of3046female children, the sons being permitted to live in order to continue3047the ancestral sacrifices.30483049One mother I met, who was employed by the mission, told the missionary3050in ordinary conversation that she had suffocated in turn three of her3051female children within a few days of birth; and, when a fourth was born,3052so enraged was her husband to discover that it was also a girl that he3053seized it by the legs and struck it against the wall and killed it.30543055Dead children, and often living infants, are thrown out on the common3056among the gravemounds, and may be seen there any morning being gnawed by3057dogs. Mr. Tremberth of the Bible Christian Mission, leaving by the south3058gate early one morning, disturbed a dog eating a still living child3059that had been thrown over the wall during the night. Its little arm was3060crunched and stript of flesh, and it was whining inarticulately--it died3061almost immediately. A man came to see me, who for a long time used to3062heap up merit for himself in heaven by acting as a city scavenger. Early3063every morning he went round the city picking up dead dogs and dead cats3064in order to bury them decently--who could tell, perhaps the soul of his3065grandfather had found habitation in that cat? While he was doing this3066pious work, never a morning passed that he did not find a dead child,3067and usually three or four. The dead of the poor people are roughly3068buried near the surface and eaten by dogs.30693070An instance of the undoubted truth of the doctrine of transmigration3071occurred recently in Chaotong and is worth recording. A cow was killed3072near the south gate on whose intestine--and this fact can be attested by3073all who saw it--was written plainly and unmistakably the character3074"_Wong_," which proved, they told me, that the soul of one whose name3075was Wong had returned to earth in the body of that cow.30763077I stayed two days in Chaotong, and strolled in pleasant company through3078the city. Close to the Mission is the yamen of the Chentai or3079Brigadier-General, the Military Governor of this portion of the3080province, and a little further is the more crowded yamen of the Fu3081Magistrate. Here, as in all yamens, the detached wall or fixed screen of3082stone facing the entrance is painted with the gigantic representation of3083a mythical monster in red trying to swallow the sun--the Chinese3084illustration of the French saying "_prendre la lune avec les dents_." It3085is the warning against covetousness, the exhortation against squeezing,3086and is as little likely to be attended to by the magistrate here as it3087would be by his brother in Chicago. We visited the Confucian Temple3088among the trees and the examination hall close by, and another yamen,3089and the Temple of the God of Riches. In the yamen, at the time of our3090visit, a young official, seated in his four-bearer chair, was waiting in3091the outer court; he had sent in his visiting card, and attended the3092pleasure of his superior officer. China may be uncivilised and may yearn3093for the missionaries, but there was refined etiquette in China, and an3094interchange of many of the pleasantest courtesies of modern3095civilisation, when we noble Britons were grubbing in the forest, painted3096savages with a clout.30973098As we went out of the west gate, I was shown the spot where a few days3099before a young woman, taken in adultery, was done to death in a cage3100amid a crowd of spectators, who witnessed her agony for three days. She3101had to stand on tiptoe in the cage, her head projecting through a hole3102in the roof, and here she had to remain until death by exhaustion or3103strangulation ensued, or till some kind friend, seeking to accumulate3104merit in heaven, passed into her mouth sufficient opium to poison her,3105and so end her struggles.31063107On the gate itself a man not so long ago was nailed with red-hot nails3108hammered through his wrists above the hands. In this way he was exposed3109in turn at each of the four gates of the city, so that every man, woman,3110and child could see his torture. He survived four days, having3111unsuccessfully attempted to shorten his pain by beating his head against3112the woodwork, an attempt which was frustrated by padding the woodwork.3113This man had murdered and robbed two travellers on the high road, and,3114as things are in China, his punishment was not too severe.31153116No people are more cruel in their punishments than the Chinese, and3117obviously the reason is that the sensory nervous system of a Chinaman is3118either blunted or of arrested development. Can anyone doubt this who3119witnesses the stoicism with which a Chinaman can endure physical pain3120when sustaining surgical operation without chloroform, the comfort with3121which he can thrive amid foul and penetrating smells, the calmness with3122which he can sleep amid the noise of gunfire and crackers, drums and3123tomtoms, and the indifference with which he contemplates the sufferings3124of lower animals, and the infliction of tortures on higher?31253126Every text-book on China devotes a special chapter to the subject of3127punishment. Mutilation is extremely common. Often I met men who had been3128deprived of their ears--they had lost them, they explained, in battle3129facing the enemy! It is a common punishment to sever the hamstrings or3130to break the ankle-bones, especially in the case of prisoners who have3131attempted to escape. And I remember that when I was in Shanghai, Mr.3132Tsai, the Mixed Court Magistrate, was reproved by the papers because he3133had from the bench expressed his regret that the foreign law of Shanghai3134did not permit him to punish in this way a prisoner who had twice3135succeeded in breaking from gaol. The hand is cut off for theft, as it3136was in England not so many years ago. I have seen men with the tendon of3137Achilles cut out, and it is worth noting that the Chinese say that this3138"acquired deformity" can be cured by the transplantation in the seat of3139injury of the tendon of a sheep. One embellishment of the Chinese3140punishment of flogging might with good effect be introduced into3141England. After a Chinese flagellation, the culprit is compelled to go3142down on his knees and humbly thank the magistrate for the trouble he has3143been put to to correct his morals.31443145There is a branch of the _Missions Etrangeres de Paris_ in Chaotong. I3146called at the mission and saw their school of fifteen children, and3147their tiny little church. One priest lives here solitary and alone; he3148was reading, when I entered, the famous Chinese story, "The Three3149Kingdoms." He gave me a kindly welcome, and was pleased to talk in his3150own tongue. An excellent bottle of rich wine was produced, and over the3151glass the Father painted with voluble energy the evil qualities of the3152people whom he has left his beautiful home in the Midi of France to lead3153to Rome. "No Chinaman can resist temptation; all are thieves. Justice3154depends on the richness of the accused. Victory in a court of justice is3155to the richer. Talk to the Chinese of Religion, of a God, of Heaven or3156Hell, and they yawn; speak to them of business and they are all3157attention. If you ever hear of a Chinaman who is not a thief and a liar,3158do not believe it, Monsieur Morrison, do not believe it, they are3159thieves and liars every one."31603161For eight years the priest had been in China devoting his best energies3162to the propagation of his religion. And sorry had been his recompense.3163The best Christian in the mission had lately broken into the mission3164house and stolen everything valuable he could lay his impious hands on.3165Remembrance of this infamy rankled in his bosom and impelled him to this3166expansive panegyric on Chinese virtue.31673168Some four months ago the good father was away on a holiday, visiting a3169missionary brother in an adjoining town. In his absence the mission was3170entered through a rift made in the wall, and three hundred taels of3171silver, all the money to the last sou that he possessed, were stolen.3172Suspicion fell upon a Christian, who was not only an active Catholic3173himself, but whose fathers before him had been Catholics for3174generations. It was learned that his wife had some of the money, and3175that the thief was on his way to Suifu with the remainder. There was3176great difficulty in inducing the yamen to take action, but at last the3177wife was arrested. She protested that she knew nothing; but, having been3178triced up by the wrists joined behind her back, she soon came to reason,3179and cried out that, if the magistrate would release her hands, she would3180confess all. Two hundred taels were seized in her house and restored to3181the priest, and the culprit, her husband, followed to Tak-wan-hsien by3182the satellites of the yamen, was there arrested, and was now in prison3183awaiting punishment. The goods he purchased were likewise seized and3184were now with the poor father.31853186318731883189CHAPTER IX.31903191MAINLY ABOUT CHINESE DOCTORS.319231933194Chaotong is an important centre for the distribution of medicines to3195Szechuen and other parts of the empire. An extraordinary variety of3196drugs and medicaments is collected in the city. No pharmacopoeia is more3197comprehensive than the Chinese. No English physician can surpass the3198Chinese in the easy confidence with which he will diagnose symptoms that3199he does not understand. The Chinese physician who witnesses the3200unfortunate effect of placing a drug of which he knows nothing into a3201body of which he knows less, is no more disconcerted than is his Western3202brother under similar circumstances; he retires, sententiously observing3203"there is medicine for sickness but none for fate." "Medicine," says the3204Chinese proverb, "cures the man who is fated not to die." "When Yenwang3205(the King of Hell) has decreed a man to die at the third watch, no power3206will detain him till the fifth."32073208The professional knowledge of a Chinese doctor largely consists in3209ability to feel the pulse, or rather the innumerable pulses of his3210Chinese patient. This is the real criterion of his skill. The pulses of3211a Chinaman vary in a manner that no English doctor can conceive of. For3212instance, among the seven kinds of pulse which presage approaching3213death, occur the five following:--32143215"1. When the pulse is perceived under the fingers to bubble irregularly3216like water over a great fire, if it be in the morning, the patient will3217die in the evening.32183219"2. Death is no farther off if the pulse seems like a fish whose head is3220stopped in such a manner that he cannot move, but has a frisking tail3221without any regularity; the cause of this distemper lies in the kidneys.32223223"3. If the pulse seems like drops of water that fall into a room through3224some crack, and when in its return it is scattered and disordered much3225like the twine of a cord which is unravelled, the bones are dried up3226even to the very marrow.32273228"4. Likewise if the motion of the pulse resembles the pace of a frog3229when he is embarrassed in the weeds, death is certain.32303231"5. If the motion of the pulse resembles the hasty pecking of the beak3232of a bird, there is a defect of spirits in the stomach."32333234Heredity is the most important factor in the evolution of a doctor in3235China, success in his career as an "hereditary physician" being3236specially assured to him who has the good fortune to make his first3237appearance in the world feet foremost. Doctors dispense their own3238medicines. In their shops you see an amazing variety of drugs; you will3239occasionally also see tethered a live stag, which on a certain day, to3240be decided by the priests, will be pounded whole in a pestle and mortar.3241"Pills manufactured out of a whole stag slaughtered with purity of3242purpose on a propitious day," is a common announcement in dispensaries3243in China. The wall of a doctor's shop is usually stuck all over with3244disused plasters returned by grateful patients with complimentary3245testimonies to their efficiency; they have done what England is alleged3246to expect of all her sons--their duty.32473248Medicines, it is known to all Chinamen, operate variously according to3249their taste, thus:--"All sour medicines are capable of impeding and3250retaining; bitter medicines of causing looseness and warmth as well as3251hardening; sweet possess the qualities of strengthening, of harmonising,3252and of warming; acids disperse, prove emollient, and go in an athwart3253direction; salt medicines possess the properties of descending; those3254substances that are hard and tasteless open the orifices of the body and3255promote a discharge. This explains the use of the five tastes."32563257Coming from Szechuen, we frequently met porters carrying baskets of3258armadillos, leopard skins, leopard and tiger bones. The skins were for3259wear, but the armadillos and bones were being taken to Suifu to be3260converted into medicine. From the bones of leopards an admirable tonic3261may be distilled; while it is well known that the infusion prepared from3262tiger bones is the greatest of the tonics, conferring something of the3263courage, agility, and strength of the tiger upon its partaker.32643265Another excellent specific for courage is a preparation made from the3266gall bladder of a robber famous for his bravery, who has died at the3267hands of the executioner. The sale of such a gall bladder is one of the3268perquisites of a Chinese executioner.32693270Ague at certain seasons is one of the most common ailments of the3271district of Chaotong, yet there is an admirable prophylactic at hand3272against it: write the names of the eight demons of ague on paper, and3273then eat the paper with a cake; or take out the eyes of the paper3274door-god (there are door-gods on all your neighbours' doors), and devour3275them--this remedy never fails.32763277Unlike the Spaniard, the Chinese disapproves of blood-letting in fevers,3278"for a fever is like a pot boiling; it is requisite to reduce the fire3279and not diminish the liquid in the vessel, if we wish to cure the3280patient."32813282Unlike the Spaniard, too, the Chinese doctors would not venture to3283assert, as the medical faculty of Madrid in the middle of last century3284assured the inhabitants, that "if human excrement was no longer to be3285suffered to accumulate as usual in the streets, where it might attract3286the putrescent particles floating in the air, these noxious vapours3287would find their way into the human body and a pestilential sickness3288would be the inevitable consequence."32893290For boils there is a certain cure:--There is a God of Boils. If you have3291a boil you will plaster the offending excrescence without avail, if that3292be _all_ you plaster; to get relief you must at the same time plaster3293the corresponding area on the image of the God. Go into his temple in3294Western China, and you will find this deity dripping with plasters, with3295scarcely an undesecrated space on his superficies.32963297At the yamen of the Brigadier-General in Chaotong, the entrance is3298guarded by the customary stone images of mythical shape and grotesque3299features. They are believed to represent lions, but their faces are not3300leonine--they are a reproduction, exaggerated, of the characteristic3301features of the bulldog of Western China. The images are of undoubted3302value to the city. One is male and the other female. On the sixteenth3303day of the first month they are visited by the townspeople, who rub them3304energetically with their hands, all over from end to end. Every spot so3305touched confers immunity from pain upon the corresponding region of3306their own bodies for the ensuing year. And so from year to year these3307images are visited. Pain accordingly is almost absent from the city,3308and only that man suffers pain who has the temerity to neglect the3309opportunity of insuring himself against it.33103311I was called to a case of opium-poisoning in Chaotong. A son came in3312casually to seek our aid in saving his father, who had attempted suicide3313with a large over-dose of opium. He had taken it at ten in the morning3314and it was now two. We were led to the house and found it a single small3315unlit room up a narrow alley. In the room two men were unconcernedly3316eating their rice, and in the darkness they seemed to be the only3317occupants; but, lying down behind them on a narrow bed, was the dim3318figure of the dying man, who was breathing stertorously. A crowd quickly3319gathered round the door and pent up the alley-way. Rousing the man, I3320caused him to swallow some pints of warm water, and then I gave him a3321hypodermic injection of apomorphia. The effect was admirable, and3322pleased the spectators even more than the patient.33233324Opium is almost exclusively the drug used by suicides. No Chinaman would3325kill himself by the mutilation of the razor or pistol-shot because awful3326is the future punishment of him who would so dare to disturb the3327integrity of the body bequeathed to him by his fathers.33283329China is the land of suicides. I suppose more people die from suicide in3330China in proportion to the population than in any other country. Where3331the struggle for existence is so keen, it is hardly to be wondered at3332that men are so willing to abandon the struggle. But poverty and misery3333are not the only causes. For the most trivial reason the Chinaman will3334take his own life. Suicide with a Chinaman is an act that is recorded in3335his honour rather than to his opprobrium.33363337Thus a widow, as we have seen, may obtain much merit by sacrificing3338herself on the death of her husband. But in a large proportion of cases3339the motive is revenge, for the spirit of the dead is believed to "haunt3340and injure the living person who has been the cause of the suicide." In3341China to ruin your adversary you injure or kill yourself. To vow to3342commit suicide is the most awful threat with which you can drive terror3343into the heart of your adversary. If your enemy do you wrong, there is3344no way in which you can cause him more bitterly to repent his misdeed3345than by slaying yourself at his doorstep. He will be charged with your3346murder, and may be executed for the crime; he will be utterly ruined in3347establishing, if he can establish, his innocence; and he will be haunted3348ever after by your avenging spirit.33493350Occasionally two men who have quarrelled will take poison together, and3351their spirits will fight it out in heaven. Opium is very cheap in3352Chaotong, costing only fivepence an ounce for the crude article. You see3353it exposed for sale everywhere, like thick treacle in dirty besmeared3354jars. It is largely adulterated with ground pigskin, the adulteration3355being detected by the craving being unsatisfied. Mohammedans have a holy3356loathing of the pig, and look with contempt on their countrymen whose3357chief meat-food is pork. But each one in his turn. It is, on the other3358hand, a source of infinite amusement to the Chinese to see his3359Mohammedan brother unwittingly smoking the unclean beast in his3360opium-pipe.33613362On our way to the opium case we passed a doorway from which pitiful3363screams were issuing. It was a mother thrashing her little boy with a3364heavy stick--she had tethered him by the leg and was using the stick3365with both hands. A Chinese proverb as old as the hills tells you, "if3366you love your son, give him plenty of the cudgel; if you hate him, cram3367him with delicacies." He was a young wretch, she said, and she could do3368nothing with him; and she raised her baton again to strike, but the3369missionary interposed, whereupon she consented to stay her wrath and did3370so--till we were round the corner.33713372"Extreme lenity alternating with rude passion in the treatment of3373children is the characteristic," says Meadows, "of the lower stages of3374civilisation." I mention this incident only because of its rarity. In no3375other country in the world, civilised or "heathen," are children3376generally treated with more kindness and affection than they are in3377China. "Children, even amongst seemingly stolid Chinese, have the3378faculty of calling forth the better feelings so often found latent.3379Their prattle delights the fond father, whose pride beams through every3380line of his countenance, and their quaint and winning ways and touches3381of nature are visible even under the disadvantages of almond eyes and3382shaven crowns" (Dyer Ball).33833384A mother in China is given, both by law and custom, extreme power over3385her sons whatever their age or rank. The Sacred Edict says, "Parents are3386like heaven. Heaven produces a blade of grass. Spring causes it to3387germinate. Autumn kills it with frost. Both are by the will of heaven.3388In like manner the power of life and death over the body which they have3389begotten is with the parents."33903391And it is this law giving such power to a mother in China which tends,3392it is believed, to nullify that other law whereby a husband in China is3393given extreme power over his wife, even to the power in some cases of3394life and death.33953396The Mohammedans are still numerous in Chaotong, and there are some 30003397families--the figures are Chinese--in the city and district. Their3398numbers were much reduced during the suppression of the rebellion of33991857-1873, when they suffered the most awful cruelties. Again, thirteen3400years ago, there was an uprising which was suppressed by the Government3401with merciless severity. One street is exclusively occupied by Moslems,3402who have in their hands the skin trade of the city. Their houses are3403known by a conspicuous absence from door and window of the coloured3404paper door-gods that are seen grotesquely glaring from the doors of the3405unbelievers. Their mosque is well cared for and unusually clean. In the3406centre, within the main doorway, as in every mosque in the empire, is a3407gilt tablet of loyalty to the living Emperor. "May the Emperor reign ten3408thousand years!" it says, a token of subjection which the mosques of3409Yunnan have especially been compelled to display since the insurrection.3410At the time of my visit an aged mollah was teaching Arabic and the Koran3411to a ragged handful of boys. He spoke to me through an interpreter, and3412gave me the impression of having some little knowledge of things outside3413the four seas that surround China. I told him that I had lived under the3414shelter of two of the greatest mosques, but he seemed to question my3415contention that the mosque in Cordova and the Karouin mosque in Fez are3416even more noble in their proportions than his mosque in Chaotong. In3417some of the skin-hongs that I entered, the walls were ornamented with3418coloured plans of Mecca and Medinah, bought in Chentu, the capital city3419of the province of Szechuen.34203421342234233424CHAPTER X.34253426THE JOURNEY FROM CHAOTONG TO TONGCHUAN.342734283429In Chaotong I engaged three new men to go with me to Tongchuan, a3430distance of 110 miles, and I rewarded liberally the three excellent3431fellows who had accompanied me from Suifu. My new men were all active3432Chinamen. The headman Laohwan was most anxious to come with me.3433Recognising that he possessed characteristics which his posterity would3434rejoice to have transmitted to them, he had lately taken to himself a3435wife and now, a fortnight later, he sought rest. He would come with me3436to Burma, the further away the better; he wished to prove the truth of3437the adage about distance and enchantment. The two coolies who were to3438carry the loads were country lads from the district. My men were to3439receive _4s. 6d._ each for the 110 miles, an excessive wage, but all3440food was unusually dear, and people were eating maize instead of rice;3441they were to find themselves on the way, in other words, they were "to3442eat their own rice," and, in return for a small reward, they were to3443endeavour to do the five days' stages in three days. I bought a few3444stores, including some excellent oatmeal and an annular cake of that3445compressed tea, the "Puerh-cha," which is grown in the Shan States and3446is distributed as a luxury all over China. It is in favour in the palace3447of the Emperor in Peking itself; it is one of the finest teas in China,3448yet, to show how jealous the rivalry now is between China tea and3449Indian, when I submitted the remainder of this very cake to a well-known3450tea-taster in Mangoe Lane, Calcutta, and asked his expert opinion, he3451reported that the sample was "of undoubted value and of great interest,3452as showing what _muck can be called tea_."34533454We left on the 3rd, and passed by the main-street through the crowded3455city, past the rich wholesale warehouses, and out by the west gate to3456the plain of Chaotong. The country spread before us was smiling and3457rich, with many farmsteads, and orchards of pears and peaches--a pretty3458sight, for the trees were now in full blossom. Many carts were lumbering3459along the road on their uneven wheels. Just beyond the city there was a3460noisy altercation in the road for the possession apparently of a blunt3461adze. Carts stopped to see the row, and all the bystanders joined in3462with their voices, with much earnestness. It is rare for the disputants3463to be injured in these questions. Their language on these occasions is,3464I am told, extremely rich in allusions. It would often make a _gendarme_3465blush. Their oaths are more ornate than the Italians'; the art of3466vituperation is far advanced in China. A strong wind was blowing in our3467faces. We rested at some mud hovels where poverty was stalking about3468with a stick in rags and nakedness. Full dress of many of these beggars3469would disgrace a Polynesian. Even the better dressed were hung with3470garments in rags, tattered, and dirty as a Paisley ragpicker's. The3471children were mostly stark-naked. In the middle of the day we reached a3472Mohammedan village named Taouen, twenty miles from Chaotong, and my man3473prepared me an _al fresco_ lunch. The entire village gathered into the3474square to see me eat; they struggled for the orange peel I threw under3475the table.34763477From here the road rises quickly to the village of Tashuitsing (73803478feet above sea level), where my men wished to remain, and apparently3479came to an understanding with the innkeeper; but I would not understand3480and went on alone, and they perforce had to follow me. There are only3481half-a-dozen rude inns in the village, all Mohammedan; but just outside3482the village the road passes under a magnificent triple archway in four3483tiers made of beautifully cut stone, embossed with flowers and images,3484and richly gilt--a striking monument in so forlorn a situation. It was3485built two years ago, in obedience to the will of the Emperor, by the3486richest merchant of Chaotong, and is dedicated to the memory of his3487virtuous mother, who died at the age of eighty, having thus experienced3488the joy of old age, which in China is the foremost of the five measures3489of felicity. It was erected and carved on the spot by masons from3490Chungking. Long after dark we reached an outlying inn of the village of3491Kiangti, a thatched mud barn, with a sleeping room surrounded on three3492sides by a raised ledge of mud bricks upon which were stretched the3493mattresses. The room was dimly lit by an oil-lamp; the floor was earth;3494the grating under the rafters was stored with maize-cobs. Outside the3495door cooking was done in the usual square earthen stove, in which are3496sunk two iron basins, one for rice, the other for hot water; maize3497stalks were being burnt in the flues. The room, when we entered, was3498occupied by a dozen Chinese, with their loads and the packsaddles of a3499caravan of mules; yet what did the good-natured fellows do? They must3500all have been more tired than I; but, without complaining, they all got3501up when they saw me, and packed their things and went out of the room,3502one after the other, to make way for myself and my companions. And,3503while we were comfortable, they crowded into another room that was3504already crowded.35053506Next day a tremendously steep descent took us down to Kiangti, a3507mountain village on the right bank of a swift stream, here spanned in3508its rocky pass by a beautiful suspension bridge, which swings gracefully3509high above the torrent. The bridge is 150 feet long by 12 feet broad,3510and there is no engineer in England who might not be proud to have been3511its builder. At its far end the parapets are guarded by two sculptured3512monkeys, hewn with rough tools out of granite, and the more remarkable3513for their fidelity of form, seeing that the artist must have carved them3514from memory. The inevitable likin-barrier is at the bridge to squeeze a3515few more cash out of the poor carriers. That the Inland Customs dues of3516China are vexatious there can be no doubt; yet it is open to question if3517the combined duties of all the likin-barriers on any one main road3518extending from frontier to frontier of any single province in China are3519greater than the _ad valorem_ duties imposed by our colony of Victoria3520upon the protected goods crossing her border from an adjoining colony.35213522[Illustration: PAGODA BY THE WAYSIDE, WESTERN CHINA.]35233524Leaving the bridge, the road leads again up the hills. Poppy was now in3525full flower, and everywhere in the fields women were collecting opium.3526They were scoring the poppy capsules with vertical scratches and3527scraping off the exuded juice which had bled from the incisions they3528made yesterday. Hundreds of pack horses carrying Puerh tea met us on the3529road; while all day long we were passing files of coolies toiling3530patiently along under heavy loads of crockery. They were going in the3531same direction as ourselves to the confines of the empire, distributing3532those teacups, saucers, and cuplids, china spoons, and rice-bowls that3533one sees in every inn in China. Most of the crockery is brought across3534China from the province of Kiangsi, whose natural resources seems to3535give it almost the monopoly of this industry. The trade is an immense3536one. In the neighbourhood of King-teh-chin, in Kiangsi, at the outbreak3537of the Taiping rebellion, more than one million workmen were employed in3538the porcelain manufactories. Cups and saucers by the time they reach so3539far distant a part of China as this, carried as they are so many3540hundreds of miles on the backs of coolies, are sold for three or four3541times their original cost. Great care is taken of them, and no piece can3542be so badly broken as not to be mended. Crockery-repairing is a3543recognised trade, and the workmen are unusually skilful even for3544Chinese. They rivet the pieces together with minute copper clamps. To3545have a specimen of their handiwork I purposely in Yunnan broke a cup and3546saucer into fragments, only to find when I had done so that there was3547not a mender in the district. Rice bowls and teacups are neatly made,3548tough, and well finished; even the humblest are not inelegantly3549coloured, while the high-class china, especially where the imperial3550yellow is used, often shows the richest beauty of ornamentation.35513552Inns on this road were few and at wide distances; they were scarcely3553sufficient for the numbers who used them. The country was red sandstone,3554open, and devoid of all timber, till, descending again into a valley,3555the path crossed an obstructing ridge, and led us with pleasant surprise3556into a beautiful park. It was all green and refreshing. A pretty stream3557was humming past the willows, its banks covered with the poppy in full3558flower, a blaze of colour, magenta, white, scarlet, pink and blue picked3559out with hedges of roses. The birds were as tame as in the Garden of3560Eden; magpies came almost to our feet; the sparrows took no notice of3561us; the falcons knew we would not molest them; the pigeons seemed to3562think we could not. All was peaceful, and the peasants who sat with us3563under the cedars on the borders of the park were friendly and3564unobtrusive. Long after sundown we reached, far from the regular stage,3565a lonely pair of houses, at one of which we found uncomfortable3566accommodation. Fire had to be kindled in the room in a hollow in the3567ground; there was no ventilation, the wood was green, the smoke almost3568suffocating. My men talked on far into the night until I lost patience3569and yelled at them in English. They thought that I was swearing, and3570desisted for fear that I should injure their ancestors. There was a3571shrine in this room for private devotions, the corresponding spot in the3572adjoining room being a rough opium-couch already occupied by two lusty3573thickset "slaves to this thrice-accursed drug." My men ate the most3574frugal of suppers. Food was so much in advance of its ordinary price3575that my men, in common with thousands of other coolies, were doing their3576hard work on starvation rations.35773578On the 5th we did a long day's stage and spent the night at a bleak3579hamlet 8500 feet above sea level, in a position so exposed that the3580roofs of the houses were weighted with stones to prevent their being3581carried away by the wind. This was the "Temple of the Dragon King," and3582it was only twenty li from Tongchuan.35833584Next day we were astir early and soon after daylight we came suddenly to3585the brow of the tableland overlooking the valley of Tongchuan. The3586compact little walled city, with its whitewashed buildings glistening in3587the morning sun, lay beyond the gleaming plats of the irrigated plain,3588snugly ensconced under rolling masses of hills, which rose at the far3589end of the valley to lofty mountains covered with snow. All the plain is3590watered with springs; large patches of it are under water all the year3591round, and, rendered thus useless for cultivation, are employed by the3592Chinese for the artificial rearing of fish and as breeding grounds for3593the wild duck and the "faithful bird," the wild goose. A narrow dyke3594serpentining across the plain leads into the pretty city, where, at the3595north-east angle of the wall, I was charmed to find the cheerful home of3596the Bible Christian Mission, consisting of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Pollard and3597two lady assistants, one of whom is a countrywoman of my own. This is, I3598believe, the most charming spot for a mission station in all China. Mr.3599Pollard is quite a young man, full of enthusiasm, modest, and clever.3600Everywhere he is received kindly; he is on friendly terms with the3601officials, and there is not a Chinese home within ten miles of the city3602where he and his pretty wife are not gladly welcomed. His knowledge of3603Chinese is exceptional; he is the best Chinese scholar in Western China,3604and is examiner in Chinese for the distant branches of the Inland3605Mission.36063607The mission in Tongchuan was opened in 1891, and the results are not3608discouraging, seeing that the Chinaman is as difficult to lead into the3609true path as any Jew. No native has been baptized up to date. The3610convert employed by the mission as a native helper is one of the three3611converts of Chaotong. He is a bright-faced lad of seventeen, as ardent3612an evangelist as heart of missionary could desire, but a native preacher3613can never be so successful as the foreign missionary. The Chinese listen3614to him with complacency, "You eat Jesus's rice and of course you speak3615his words," they say. The attitude of the Chinese in Tongchuan towards3616the Christian missionary is one of perfect friendliness towards the3617missionary, combined with perfect apathy towards his religion. Like any3618other trader, the missionary has a perfect right to offer his goods,3619but he must not be surprised, the Chinese thinks, if he finds difficulty3620in securing a purchaser for wares as much inferior to the home3621production as is the foreign barbarian to the subject of the Son of3622Heaven.36233624There is a Catholic Mission in Tongchuan, but the priest does not3625associate with the Protestant. How indeed can the two associate when3626they worship different Gods!36273628The difficulty is one which cannot be easily overcome while there exists3629in China that bone of contention among missionaries which is known as3630the "Term Question."36313632The Chinese recognise a supreme God, or are believed by some to3633recognise a supreme God--"High Heaven's ruler" (_Shangtien hou_), who is3634"probably intended," says Williams, "for the true God." The Mohammedans,3635when they entered China, could not recognise this god as identical with3636the only one God, to whom they accordingly gave the Chinese name of3637"true Lord" (_Chen Chu_). The Jesuits, when they entered China, could3638not recognise either of these gods as identical with the God of the3639Hebrews, whom they accordingly represented in Chinese first by the3640characters for "Supreme Ruler" (_Shang ti_), and subsequently by the3641characters for "Lord of Heaven" (_Tien Chu_). The Protestants naturally3642could not be identified with the Catholics, and invented another Chinese3643name, or other Chinese names, for the true God; while the Americans,3644superior to all other considerations, discovered a different name still3645for the true God to whom they assigned the Chinese characters for "the3646true Spirit" (_Chen Shen_), thereby suggesting by implication, as Little3647observes, that the other spirits were false. But, as if such divergent3648terms were not sufficiently confusing for the Chinese, the Protestants3649themselves have still more varied the Chinese characters for God. Thus,3650in the first translation of the Bible, the term for God used is the3651Chinese character for "Spirit" (_Shen_); in the second translation this3652term is rejected and "Supreme Ruler" (_Shang ti_), substituted; the3653third translation reverts to the "Spirit"; the fourth returns to the3654"Supreme Ruler"; and the fifth, by Bishop Burdon of Hong Kong, and Dr.3655Blodget of Peking, in 1884, rejects the title that was first accepted by3656the Jesuits, and accepts the title "Lord of Heaven" (_Tien Chu_), that3657was first rejected by the Jesuits.36583659"Many editions," says the Rev. J. Wherry, of Peking, "with other terms3660have since been published." "Bible work in particular," says the Rev.3661Mr. Muirhead, of Shanghai, "is carried on under no small disadvantage in3662view of this state of things." "It is true, however," adds Mr. Muirhead,3663"that God has blest all terms in spite of our incongruity." But3664obviously the Chinese are a little puzzled to know which of the3665contending gods is most worthy of their allegiance.36663667But apart from the "Term Question" there must be irreconcilable3668antagonism between the two great missionary churches in China, for it3669cannot be forgotten that "in the development of the missionary idea3670three great tasks await the (Protestant) Church.... The second task is3671_to check the schemes of the Jesuit_. In the great work of the world's3672evangelisation the Church has no foe at all comparable with the3673Jesuit.... Swayed ever by the vicious maxim that the end justifies the3674means, he would fain put back the shadow of the dial of human progress3675by half a dozen centuries. Other forms of superstition and error are3676dangerous, but Jesuitism overtops them all, and stands forth an3677organised conspiracy against the liberties of mankind. This foe is not3678likely to be overcome by a divided Protestantism. If we would conquer in3679this war we must move together, and in our movements must manifest a3680patience, a heroism, a devotion equal to anything the Jesuit can claim."3681(The Rev. A. Sutherland, D.D., Delegate from Canada to the Missionary3682Conference, 1888, _Records_, i., 145.)36833684And, on the other hand, the distracted Chinese reads3685that:--"Protestantism is not only a veritable Babel, but a horrible3686theory, and an immoral practice which blasphemes God, degrades man, and3687endangers society." (Cardinal Cuesta's Catechism cited in "China and3688Christianity," by Michie, p. 8.)36893690369136923693CHAPTER XI.36943695THE CITY OF TONGCHUAN, WITH SOME REMARKS UPON INFANTICIDE.369636973698When I entered Tongchuan the town was in commotion; kettledrums and3699tomtoms were beating, and crackers and guns firing; the din and clatter3700was continuous and deafening. An eclipse of the sun was commencing--it3701was the 6th of April--"the sun was being swallowed by the Dog of3702Heaven," and the noise was to compel the monster to disgorge its prey.3703Five months ago the Prefect of the city had been advised of the3704impending disaster, and it was known that at a certain hour he would3705publicly intervene with Heaven to avert from the city the calamity of3706darkness. I myself saw with my own eyes the wonderful power of this man.3707The sun was darkened when I went to the Prefect's yamen. A crowd was3708already gathered in the court. At the foot of the steps in the open air,3709a loosely built framework of wood ten feet high was standing, displaying3710on its vertex a yellow disc of paper inscribed with the characters for3711"voracity."37123713As we waited the sun became gradually clearer, when, just as the moon3714was disappearing across its edge, the Prefect in full dress, stepped3715from his yamen into the court, accompanied by the city magistrate and a3716dozen city fathers. Every instrument of discord was still clanging over3717the city. Then all these men of weight walked solemnly three times3718round the scaffold, and halted three times, while the Prefect went down3719on his knees, and did obeisance with nine kotows to the rickety frame3720and its disc of yellow paper. There was almost immediate answer to his3721prayer. With a sigh of relief we saw the lingering remnant of darkness3722disappear, and the midday sun shone full and bright. Then the Prefect3723retired, his suite dividing to let him pass, and we all went home3724blessing the good man whose intercession had saved the town from3725darkness. For there can be little doubt, I hope, that it is due to the3726action of this Prefect that the sun is shining to-day in Tongchuan. The3727Chinese might well ask if any barbarian missionary could do as he did.37283729Eclipses in China are foretold by the Government almanac published3730annually in Peking by a bureau of astrology attached to the Board of3731Rites. The almanac is a Government monopoly, and any infraction of its3732copyright is a penal offence. "It monopolises the management of the3733superstitions of the people, in regard to the fortunate or unlucky3734conjunctions of each day and hour. No one ventures to be without it,3735lest he be liable to the greatest misfortunes and run the imminent3736hazard of undertaking important events on blackballed days."37373738The Chinese almanac is much more comprehensive than ours, for even3739eclipses are foretold that never happen. Should an error take place in3740their almanac, and an expected eclipse not occur, the royal astronomers3741are not disconcerted--far from it; they discover in their error reason3742for rejoicing; they then congratulate the Emperor that "the heavens have3743dispensed with this omen of ill-luck in his favour." For eclipses3744forebode disaster, and every thoughtful Chinaman who has heard of the3745present rebellion of the Japanese must attribute the reverses caused by3746the revolt to the eclipse of April 6th, occurring immediately before the3747insurrection.37483749Tongchuan is one of the most charming towns I have ever visited; it is3750probably the cleanest city in China, and the best governed. Its prefect3751is a man of singular enlightenment, who rules with a justice that is3752rarely known in China. His people regard him as something more than3753mortal. Like Confucius "his ear is an obedient organ for the reception3754of truth." Like the Confucian Superior Man "his dignity separates him3755from the crowd; being reverent he is beloved; being loyal he is3756submitted to; and being faithful he is trusted. By his word he directs3757men, and by his conduct he warns them."37583759For several years he was attached to the Embassy in Japan, and he boasts3760that he has made Tongchuan as clean a city as any to be found in the3761empire of the Mikado. The yamen is a model of neatness. Painted on the3762outflanking wall there is the usual huge representation of the fabulous3763monster attempting to swallow the sun--the admonition against3764extortion--and probably the only magistrate in China who does not stand3765in need of the warning is the Prefect of Tongchuan.37663767Prices in Tongchuan at the time of my visit were high and food was3768scarce. It was difficult to realise that men at that moment were dying3769of starvation in the pretty town. Rice cost 400 cash for the same3770quantity that in a good season can be bought for 60 cash; maize was 3003771cash the sheng, whereas the normal price is only 40 cash. Sugar was 153772cash the cake instead of 6 cash the cake, and so on in all things. Poppy3773is not grown in the valley to the same extent as hitherto, because3774poppy displaces wheat and beans, and the people have need of all the3775land they can spare to grow breadstuffs. In the other half of the year,3776rice, maize, and tobacco are grown together on the plain, and at the3777same season potatoes, oats, and buckwheat are grown in the hills.37783779Part of the plain is permanently under water, but it was the drought in3780the winter and the rains in the summer of successive years that caused3781the famine. There are no Mohammedans in the town--there have been none3782since the rebellion--but there are many small Mohammedan villages across3783the hills. No district in China is now more peaceful than the Valley of3784Tongchuan. The Yangtse River--"The River of Golden Sand"--is only two3785days distant, but it is not navigable even by Chinese boatmen. Sugarcane3786grows in the Yangtse Valley in little pockets, and it is from there that3787the compressed cakes of brown sugar seen in all the markets of Western3788Yunnan are brought. Coal comes from a mine two or three days inland;3789white-wax trees provide an important industry; the hills to the west3790contain the most celebrated copper mines in the empire.37913792The cash of Tongchuan are very small and inferior, 2000 being equivalent3793to one tael, whereas in Chaotong, 110 miles away, the cash vary from37941260 to 1640 the tael. Before the present Prefect took office the cash3795were more debased still, no less than 4000 being then counted as one3796tael, but the Prefect caused all these cash to be withdrawn from3797circulation.37983799Unlike Chaotong, no children are permitted to be sold in the city, but3800during last year no less than 3000 children (the figures are again3801Chinese) were carried through the town on their way from Chaotong to the3802capital. The edict of the Prefect which forbids the selling of children3803increases the cases of infanticide, and in time of famine there are few3804mothers among the starving poor who can truthfully assert that they have3805never abandoned any of their offspring.38063807The subject of infanticide in China has been discussed by a legion of3808writers and observers; and the opinion they come to seems to be3809generally that the prevalence of the crime, except in seasons of famine,3810has been enormously overstated. The prevalent idea with us Westerns3811appears to be, that the murder of their children, especially of their3812female children, is a kind of national pastime with the Chinese, or, at3813the best, a national peculiarity. Yet it is open to question whether the3814crime, excepting in seasons of famine, is, in proportion to the3815population, more common in China than it is in England. H. A. Giles of3816H.B.M. Chinese Consular Service, one of the greatest living authorities3817on China, says "I am unable to believe that infanticide prevails to any3818great extent in China.... In times of famine or rebellion, under stress3819of exceptional circumstances, infanticide may possibly cast its shadow3820over the empire, but as a general rule I believe it to be no more3821practised in China than in England, France, the United States and3822elsewhere." (_Journal, China Branch R.A.S._, 1885, p. 28.)38233824G. Eugene Simon, formerly French Consul in China, declares that3825"infanticide is a good deal less frequent in China than in Europe3826generally, and particularly in France." A statement that inferentially3827receives the support of Dr. E. J. Eitel. (_China Review_, xvi., 189.)38283829The prevailing impression as to the frequency of infanticide in China is3830derived from the statements of missionaries, who, no doubt3831unintentionally, exaggerate the prevalence of the crime in order to3832bring home to us Westerns the deplorable condition of the heathen among3833whom they are labouring. But, even among the missionaries, the3834statements are as divergent as they are on almost every other subject3835relating to China. Thus the Rev. Griffith John argues "from his own3836experience that infanticide is common all over the Empire," the Rev. Dr.3837Edkins on the other hand says that "infanticide is a thing almost3838unknown in Peking." And the well known medical missionary, Dr. Dudgeon3839of Peking (who has left the London Mission), agrees with another medical3840missionary, Dr. Lockhart, "that infanticide is almost as rare in China3841as in England."38423843The Rev. A. H. Smith ("Chinese Characteristics," p. 207) speaks "of the3844enormous infanticide which is known to exist in China." The Rev. Justus3845Doolittle ("Social Life of the Chinese," ii. p. 203) asserts that "there3846are most indubitable reasons for believing that infanticide is tolerated3847by the Government, and that the subject is treated with indifference and3848with shocking levity by the mass." ... But Bishop Moule "has good reason3849to conclude that the prevalence of the crime has been largely3850exaggerated." (_Journal, China Branch R.A.S._, _ut supra_.)38513852One of the best known Consuls in China, who lately retired from the3853Service, told the writer that in all his thirty years' experience of3854China he had only had personal knowledge of one authentic case of3855infanticide.38563857"Exaggerated estimates respecting the frequency of infanticide," says3858the Rev. Dr. D. J. MacGowan, "are formed owing to the withholding3859interment from children who die in infancy." And he adds that "opinions3860of careful observers will be found to vary with fields of observation."3861(_China Review_, xiv., 206.)38623863Whatever the relative frequency of infanticide in China and Europe may3864be, it cannot, I think, admit of question that the crime of infanticide3865is less common among the barbarian Chinese than is the crime of3866foeticide among the highly civilised races of Europe and America.38673868There are several temples in Tongchuan, and two beyond the walls which3869are of more than ordinary interest. There is a Temple to the Goddess of3870Mercy, where deep reverence is shown to the images of the Trinity of3871Sisters. They are seated close into the wall, the nimbus of glory which3872plays round their impassive features being represented by a golden3873aureola painted on the wall. The Goddess of Mercy is called by the3874Chinese "_Sheng-mu_," or Holy Mother, and it is this name which has been3875adopted by the Roman Catholic Church as the Chinese name of the Virgin3876Mary.38773878There is a fine City Temple which controls the spirits of the dead of3879the city as the yamens of the magistrates control the living of the3880city. The Prefect and the City Magistrate are here shown in their3881celestial abodes administering justice--or its Chinese equivalent--to3882the spirits who, when living, were under their jurisdiction on earth.3883They hold the same position in Heaven and have the same authority as3884they had on earth; and may, as spirits, be bribed to deal gently with3885the spirits of departed friends just as, when living, they were open to3886offers to deal leniently with any living prisoner in whose welfare the3887friends were prepared to express practical sympathy.38883889In the Buddhist Temple are to be seen, in the long side pavilions, the3890chambers of horrors with their realistic representations of the torments3891of a soul in its passage through the eight Buddhist hells. I looked on3892these scenes with the calmness of an unbeliever; not so a poor woman to3893whom the horrors were very vivid truths. She was on her knees before3894the grating, sobbing piteously at a ghastly scene where a man, while3895still alive, was being cast by monsters from a hill-top on to red-hot3896spikes, there to be torn in pieces by serpents. This was the torture her3897dead husband was now enduring; it was this stage he had reached in his3898onward passage through hell--the priest had told her so, and only money3899paid to the priests could lighten his torment.39003901Beyond the south gate, amid groves of lofty pine trees, are the temple3902and grounds, the pond and senior wrangler bridge, of the Confucian3903Temple--the most beautifully-finished temple I have seen in China. We3904have accustomed ourselves to speak in ecstacies of the wood-carving in3905the temples of Japan, but not even in the Sh[=o]gun chapels of the Shiba3906temples in Tokyo have I seen wood-carving superior to the exquisite3907delicacy of workmanship displayed in the carving of the Imperial dragons3908that frame with their fantastic coils the large Confucian tablet of this3909temple. Money has been lavished on this building. The inclined marble3910slabs that divide the terrace steps are covered with fanciful tracery;3911the parapets of the bridge are chiselled in marble; sculptured images of3912elephants with howdahs crown the pillars of the marble balustrades; the3913lattice work under the wide eaves is everywhere beautifully carved.3914Lofty pillars of wood support the temple roofs. They are preserved by a3915coating of hemp and protected against fire by an outer coating of3916plaster stained the colour of the original wood. Gilding is used as3917freely in the decoration of the grand altar and tablets of this temple,3918as it is in a temple in Burma.39193920On a hill overlooking the city and valley is the Temple to the God of3921Literature. The missionary and I climbed to the temple and saw its3922pretty court, its ancient bronze censer, and its many beautiful flowers,3923and then sat on the terrace in the sun and watched the picturesque3924valley spread out before us.39253926As we descended the hill again, a lad, who had attached himself to us,3927offered to show us the two common pits in which are cast the dead bodies3928of paupers and criminals. The pits are at the foot of the hill,3929open-mouthed in the uncut grass. With famine in the city, with people3930dying at that very hour of starvation, there was no lack of dead, and3931both pits were filled to within a few feet of the surface. Bodies are3932thrown in here without any covering, and hawks and crows strip them of3933their flesh, a mode of treating the dead grateful to the Parsee, but3934inexpressibly hateful to the Chinese, whose poverty must be overwhelming3935when he can be found to permit it. Pigtails were lying carelessly about3936and skulls separated from the trunk. Human bones gnawed by dogs were to3937be picked up in numbers in the long grass all round the hill; they were3938the bones of the dead who had been loosely buried close to the surface,3939through which dogs--the domestic dogs one met afterwards in the3940street--had scraped their way. Many, too, were the bones of dead3941children; for poor children are not buried, but are thrown outside the3942wall, sometimes before they are dead, to be eaten perhaps by the very3943dog that was their playmate since birth.39443945I called upon the French priest, Pere Maire, and he came with much3946cordiality to the door of the mission to receive me. His is a pretty3947mission, built in the Chinese style, with a modest little church and a3948nice garden and summer-house. The father has been four years in3949Tongchuan and ten in China. Like most of the French priests in China he3950has succeeded in growing a prodigious beard whose imposing length adds3951to his influence among the Chinese, who are apt to estimate age by the3952length of the beard. Only three weeks ago he returned from the capital.3953Signs of famine were everywhere apparent. The weather was very cold, and3954the road in many places deeply covered with snow. Riding on his mule he3955passed at different places on the wayside eight bodies, all recently3956dead from hunger and cold. No school is attached to the mission, but3957there is an _orphelinat_ of little girls, _ramassees dans les rues_, who3958had been cast away by their parents; they are in charge of Chinese3959Catholic nuns, and will be reared as nuns. As we sat in the pavilion in3960the garden and drank wine sent to him by his brother in Bordeaux--true3961French wine--the priest had many things to tell me of interest, of the3962native rebellion on the frontier of Tonquin, of the mission of Monsieur3963Haas to Chungking, and the Thibetan trade in tea. "The Chinese? ah! yes.3964He loves the Chinese because he loves all God's creatures, but they are3965liars and thieves. Many families are converted, but even the Christians3966are never Christian till the third generation." These were his words.39673968396939703971CHAPTER XII.39723973TONGCHUAN TO YUNNAN CITY.397439753976From Tongchuan to Yunnan city, the provincial seat of Government and3977official residence of the Viceroy, whither I was now bound, is a3978distance of two hundred miles. My two carriers from Chaotong had been3979engaged to go with me only as far as Tongchuan, but they now re-engaged3980to go with Laohwan, my third man, as far as the capital. The conditions3981were that they were to receive _6s. 9d._ each (2.25 taels), one tael3982(_3s._) to be paid in advance and the balance on arrival, and they were3983to do the distance in seven days. The two taels they asked the3984missionary to remit to their parents in Chaotong, and he promised to3985receive the money from me and do so. There was no written agreement of3986any kind--none of the three men could read; they did not even see the3987money that the missionary was to get for them; but they had absolute3988confidence in our good faith.39893990I had a mule with me from Tongchuan to Yunnan, which saved me many miles3991of walking, and increased my importance in the eyes of the heathen. I3992was taking it to the capital for sale. It was a big-boned rough-hewn3993animal, of superior intelligence, and I was authorised to sell it,3994together with its saddle and bridle, for four pounds. Like most Chinese3995mules it had two corns on the forelegs, and thus could see at night.3996Every Chinaman knows that the corns are adventitious eyes which give the3997mule this remarkable power.39983999We were on our way early in the afternoon of the 7th, going up the4000valley. Below the curiously draped pagoda which commands Tongchuan we4001met two pairs of prisoners, who were being led into the city under4002escort. They were coupled by the neck; they were suffering cruelly, for4003their wrists were so tightly manacled that their hands were4004strangulated, a mode of torture to which, it will be remembered, the4005Chinese Government in 1860 subjected Bowlby, the _Times_ correspondent,4006and the other prisoners seized with him "in treacherous violation of a4007flag of truce," till death ended their sufferings. These men were4008roadside robbers caught red-handed. Their punishment would be swift and4009certain. Found guilty on their own confession, either tendered4010voluntarily to escape torture, or under the compulsion of torture,4011"self-accusation wrested from their agony," they would be sentenced to4012death, carried in baskets without delay--if they had not previously4013"died in prison"--died, that is, from the torture having been pushed too4014far--to the execution ground, and there beheaded.40154016We stopped at an inn that was not the ordinary stage, where in4017consequence we had few comforts. In the morning my men lay in bed till4018late, and when I called them they opened the door and pointed to the4019road, clearly indicating that rain had fallen, and that the roads were4020too slippery for traffic. But what was my surprise on looking myself to4021find the whole country deeply under snow, and that it was still snowing.4022All day, indeed, it snowed. The track was very slippery, but my mule,4023though obstinate, was sure-footed, and we kept going. We passed a huge4024coffin--borne by a dozen men with every gentleness, not to disturb the4025dead one's rest--preceded, not followed, by mourners, two of whom were4026carrying a paper sedan chair, which would be burnt, and so, rendered4027invisible, would be sent to the invisible world to bear the dead man's4028spirit with becoming dignity. All day we were in the mountains4029travelling up the bed of a creek with mountains on both sides of us. We4030passed Chehki, ninety li from Tongchuan, and thirty li further were glad4031to escape from the cold and snow to the shelter of a poor thatched mud4032inn, where we rested for the night.40334034A hump-back was in charge. The only bedroom was half open to the sky,4035but the main room was still whole, though it had seen better days. There4036was a shrine in this room with ancestral tablets, and a sheet of4037many-featured gods, conspicuous amongst them being the God of Riches,4038who had been little attentive to the prayers offered him in this poor4039hamlet. In a stall adjoining our bedroom the mule was housed, and4040jingled his bell discontentedly all through the night. A poor man,4041nearly blind with acute inflammation of the eyes, was shivering over the4042scanty embers of an open fire which was burning in a square hole scooped4043in the earthern floor near the doorway. He ate the humblest dishful of4044maize husks and meal strainings. That night I wondered did he sleep out4045in the open under a hedge, or did the inn people give him shelter with4046my mule in the next room. My men and I had to sleep in the same room.4047They were still on short rations. They ate only twice a day, and then4048sparingly, of maize and vegetables; they took but little rice, and no4049tea, and only a very small allowance of pork once in two days. Food was4050very dear, and, though they were receiving nearly double wages to carry4051half-loads, they must needs be careful. What admirable fellows they4052were! In all my wanderings I have never travelled with more good-natured4053companions. The attendant Laohwan was a powerful Chinese, solid and4054determined, but courteous in manner, voluble of speech, but with an4055amusing stammer; he had a wide experience of travel in Western China. He4056seemed to enjoy his journey--he never appeared lovesick; but, of course,4057I had no means of asking if he felt keenly the long separation from his4058bride.40594060At the inn there was no bedding for my men; they had to cover4061themselves, as best they could, with some pieces of felt brought them by4062the hunchback, and sleep all huddled together from the cold. They had a4063few hardships to put up with, but their lot was a thousand times better4064than that of hundreds of their countrymen who were dying from hunger as4065well as from cold.40664067On the 9th, as I was riding on my mule up the mountain road, with the4068bleak, bare mountain tops on every side, I was watching an eagle4069circling overhead, when my men called out to me excitedly and pointed to4070a large wolf that leisurely crossed the path in front of us and slunk4071over the brow. It had in its mouth a haunch of flesh torn from some poor4072wretch who had perished during the night. This was the only wolf I saw4073on my journey, though they are numerous in the province. Last year, not4074twenty li from Chaotong, a little girl of four, the only child of the4075mission cook, was killed by a wolf in broad daylight before its mother's4076eyes, while playing at the cabin door.40774078Again, to-day, I passed a humpbacked dwarf on the hills, making his4079solitary way towards Tongchuan, and I afterwards saw others, an4080indication of the prosperity that had left the district, for in time of4081famine no child who was badly deformed at birth would be suffered to4082live.40834084We stopped the night at Leitoupo, and next day from the bleak tableland4085high among the mountains, where the wind whistled in our faces, we4086gradually descended into a country of trees and cultivation and4087fertility. We left the bare red hills behind us, and came down into a4088beautiful glade, with pretty streams running in pebbly beds past4089terraced banks. At a village among the trees, where the houses made some4090pretension to comfort, and where poppies with brilliantly coloured4091flowers, encroached upon the street itself, we rested under a sunshade4092in front of a teahouse. A pretty rill of mountain water ran at our feet.4093Good tea was brought us in new clean cups, and a sweetmeat of peanuts,4094set in sugar-like almond toffee. The teahouse was filled. In the midst4095of the tea drinkers a man was lying curled on a mat, a bent elbow his4096pillow, and fast asleep, with the opium pipe still beside him, and the4097lamp still lit. A pretty little girl from the adjoining cottage came4098shyly out to see me. I called her to me and gave her some sweetmeat. I4099wished to put it in her mouth but she would not let me, and ran off4100indoors. I looked into the room after her and saw her father take the4101lolly from her and give it to her fat little baby brother, who seemed4102the best fed urchin in the town. But I stood by and saw justice done,4103and saw the little maid of four enjoy the first luxury of her life-time.4104Girls in China early learn that they are, at best, only necessary evils,4105to be endured, as tradition says Confucius taught, only as the possible4106mothers of men. Yet the condition of women in China is far superior to4107that in any other heathen country. Monogamy is the rule in China,4108polygamy is the exception, being confined to the three classes, the4109rich, the officials, and those who can by effort afford to take a4110secondary wife, their first wife having failed to give birth to a son.41114112It is impossible to read the combined experiences of many missionaries4113and travellers in China without forming the opinion that the condition4114of women in China is as nearly satisfactory as could be hoped for, in a4115kingdom of "civilised and organised heathenism," as the Rev. C. W.4116Mateer terms it. The lot of the average Chinese woman is certainly not4117one that a Western woman need envy. She cannot enjoy the happiness which4118a Western woman does, but she is happy in her own way nevertheless.4119"Happiness does not always consist in absolute enjoyment--but in the4120idea which we have formed of it."41214122There was no impertinent curiosity to see the stranger. The people in4123Yunnan seem cowed and crushed. That arrogance which characterises the4124Chinese elsewhere is entirely wanting here. They have seen the horrors4125of rebellion and civil war, of battle, murder and sudden death, of4126devastation by the sword, famine, ruin, and misery. They are resigned4127and spiritless. But their friendliness is charming; their courtesy and4128kindliness is a constant delight to the traveller. At meal time you are4129always pressed to join the table in the same manner, and with the4130identical phrases still used by the Spaniards, but the request is one of4131politeness only, and like the "_quiere Vd. gustar?_" is not meant to be4132accepted.41334134We continued on our way. Comparatively few coolies now met us, and the4135majority of those who did were travelling empty-handed; but there were4136many ponies and mules coming from the capital, laden with tea and with4137blocks of white salt like marble. Every here and there a rude shelter4138was erected by the wayside, where a dish of cabbage and herbs could be4139obtained, which you ate out of cracked dishes at an improvised bench4140made from a coffin board resting on two stones. Towards sundown we4141entered the village of Kong-shan, a pretty place on the hill slope, with4142views across a fertile hollow that was pleasant to see. Here we found an4143excellent inn with good quarters. Our day's journey was thirty-seven4144miles, of which I walked fifteen miles and rode twenty-two miles. We4145were travelling quickly. Distances in China are, at first, very4146confusing. They differ from ours in a very important particular: they4147are not fixed quantities; they vary in length according to the nature of4148the ground passed over. Inequalities increase the distance; thus it by4149no means follows that the distance from A to B is equal to the distance4150from B to A--it may be fifty per cent. or one hundred per cent. longer.4151The explanation is simple. Distance is estimated by time, and, speaking4152roughly, ten li (3-1/3 miles) is the unit of distance equivalent to an4153hour's journey. "Sixty li still to go" means six hours' journey before4154you; it may be uphill all the way. If you are returning downhill you4155need not be surprised to learn that the distance by the same road is4156only thirty li.41574158To-night before turning in I looked in to see how my mule was faring. He4159was standing in a crib at the foot of some underground stairs, with a4160huge horse trough before him, the size and shape of a Chinese coffin. He4161was peaceful and meditative. When he saw me he looked reproachfully at4162the cut straw heaped untidily in the trough, and then at me, and asked4163as clearly as he could if that was a reasonable ration for a4164high-spirited mule, who had carried my honourable person up hill and4165down dale over steep rocks and by tortuous paths, a long spring day in4166a warm sun. Alas, I had nothing else to offer him, unless I gave him the4167uncut straw that was stitched into our paillasses. What straw was before4168him was Chinese chaff, cut into three-inch lengths, by a long knife4169worked on a pivot and board, like the tobacco knife of civilisation. And4170he had to be content with that or nothing.41714172Next day we had an early start soon after sunrise. It was a lovely day4173with a gentle breeze blowing and a cloudless sky. The village of4174Kong-shan was a very pretty place. It was built chiefly on two sides of4175a main road which was as rugged as the dry bed of a mountain creek. The4176houses were better and the inns were again provided with heaps of4177bedding at the doorways. Advertisement bills in blue and red were4178displayed on the lintels and doorposts, while fierce door-gods guarded4179against the admission of evil spirits. Brave indeed must be the spirits4180who venture within reach of such fierce bearded monsters, armed with4181such desperate weapons, as were here represented. I stood on the edge of4182the town overlooking the valley while my mule was being saddled. Patches4183of wheat and beans were scattered among fields of white-flowered poppy.4184Coolies carrying double buckets of water were winding up the sinuous4185path from the border of the garden where "a pebbled brook laughs upon4186its way." Boys were shouting to frighten away the sparrows from the4187newly-sown rice beds; while women were moving on their little feet among4188the poppies, scoring anew the capsules and gathering the juice that had4189exuded since yesterday. Down the road coolies were filing laden with4190their heavy burdens--a long day's toil before them; rude carts were4191lumbering past me drawn by oxen and jolting on wheels that were solid4192but not circular. Then the mule was brought to me, and we went on4193through an avenue of trees that were half hidden in showers of white4194roses, by hedges of roses in full bloom and wayside flowers, daisies and4195violets, dandelions and forget-me-nots, a pretty sight all fresh and4196sparkling in the morning sun.41974198We went on in single file, my two coolies first with their light loads4199that swung easily from their shoulders, then myself on the mule, and4200last my stalwart attendant Laohwan with his superior dress, his huge sun4201hat, his long pipe, and umbrella. A man of unusual endurance was4202Laohwan. The day's journey done--he always arrived the freshest of the4203party--he had to get ready my supper, make my bed, and look after my4204mule. He was always the last to bed and the first to rise. Long before4205daybreak he was about again, attending to the mule and preparing my4206porridge and eggs for breakfast. He thought I liked my eggs hard, and4207each morning construed my look of remonstrance into one of approbation.4208It is very true of the Chinaman that precedent determines his action.4209The first morning Laohwan boiled the eggs hard and I could not reprove4210him. Afterwards of course he made a point of serving me the eggs every4211morning in the same way. I could say in Chinese "I don't like them," but4212the morning I said so Laohwan applied my dislike to the eggs not to4213their condition of cooking, and saying in Chinese "good, good," he4214obligingly ate them for me.42154216Leaving the valley we ascended the red incline to an open tableland,4217where the soil is arid, and yields but a reluctant and scanty harvest.4218Nothing obstructs the view, and you can see long distances over the4219downs, which are bereft of all timber except an occasional clump of4220pines that the axe has spared because of the beneficial influence the4221geomancers declare they exercise over the neighbourhood. The roadway in4222places is cut deeply into the ground; for the path worn by the4223attrition of countless feet soon becomes a waterchannel, and the roadway4224in the rains is often the bed of a rapid stream. At short intervals are4225vast numbers of grave mounds with tablets and arched gables of well4226dressed stone. No habitations of the living are within miles of them, a4227forcible illustration of the devastation that has ravaged the district.4228This was still the famine district. In the open uncultivated fields4229women were searching for weeds and herbs to save them from starvation4230till the ingathering of the winter harvest. Their children it was4231pitiful to see. It is rare for Australians to see children dying of4232hunger. These poor creatures, with their pinched faces and fleshless4233bones, were like the patient with typhoid fever who has long been4234hovering between life and death. There were no beggars. All the beggars4235were dead long ago. All through the famine district we were not once4236solicited for either food or money, but those who were still living were4237crying for alms with silent voices a hundred times more appealing. When4238we rested to have tea the poor children gathered round to see us,4239skeletons dressed in skins and rags, yet meekly independent and4240friendly. Their parents were covered with ragged garments that hardly4241held together. Many wore over their shoulders rude grass cloths made4242from pine fibre that appear to be identical with the native petticoats4243worn by the women of New Guinea.42444245Leaving the poor upland behind us, we descended to a broad and fertile4246plain where the travelling was easy, and passed the night in a large4247Moslem inn in the town of Iangkai.42484249All next day we pursued our way through fertile fields flanked by pretty4250hills, which it was hard to realise were the peaks of mountains 10,0004251to 11,000 feet above sea-level. Before sundown we reached the prosperous4252market town of Yanglin, where I had a clean upstairs room in an4253excellent inn. The wall of my bedroom was scrawled over in Chinese4254characters with what I was told were facetious remarks by Chinese4255tourists on the quality of the fare.42564257In the evening my mule was sick, Laohwan said, and a veterinary surgeon4258had to be sent for. He came with unbecoming expedition. Then in the same4259way that I have seen the Chinese doctors in Australia diagnose the4260ailments of their human patients of the same great family, he examined4261the poor mule with the inscrutable air of one to whom are unveiled the4262mysteries of futurity, and he retired with his fee. The medicine came4263later in a large basket, and consisted of an assortment of herbs so4264varied that one at least might be expected to hit the mark. My Laohwan4265paid the mule doctor, so he said, for advice and medicine 360 cash4266(ninepence), an exorbitant charge as prices are in China.42674268On Friday, April 13th, we had another pleasant day in open country,4269leading to the low rim of hills that border the plain and lake of Yunnan4270city. Ruins everywhere testify to the march of the rebellion of thirty4271years ago--triumphal arches in fragments, broken temples, battered idols4272destroyed by Mohammedan iconoclasts. Districts destitute of habitations,4273where a thriving population once lived, attest that suppression of a4274rebellion in China spells extermination to the rebels.42754276On the road I met a case of goitre, and by-and-by others, till I counted4277twenty or more, and then remembered that I was now entering on a4278district of Asia extending over Western Yunnan into Thibet, Burma, the4279Shan States, and Siam, the prevailing deformity of whose people is4280goitre.42814282[Illustration: THE BIG EAST GATE OF YUNNAN CITY.]42834284Ten miles before Yunnan my men led me off the road to a fine building4285among the poplars, which a large monogram on the gateway told me was the4286Catholic College of the _Missions Etrangeres de Paris_, known throughout4287the Province as Jinmaasuh. Situated on rising ground, the plain of4288Yunnan widening before it, the College commands a distant view of the4289walls and turretted gateways, the pagodas and lofty temples of the4290famous city. Chinese students are trained here for the priesthood. At4291the time of my visit there were thirty students in residence, who, after4292their ordination, will be scattered as evangelists throughout the4293Province. Pere Excoffier was at home, and received me with4294characteristic courtesy. His news was many weeks later than mine. M.4295Gladstone had retired from the Premiership, and M. Rosebery was his4296successor. England had determined to renew the payment of the tribute4297which China formerly exacted by right of suzerainty from Burma. The4298Chinese were daily expecting the arrival of two white elephants from4299Burma, which were coming in charge of the British Resident in Singai4300(Bhamo), M. Warry, as a present to the Emperor, and were the official4301recognition by England that Burma is still a tributary of the Middle4302Kingdom. I may here say that I often heard of this tribute in Western4303China. The Chinese had been long waiting for the arrival of the4304elephants, with their yellow flags floating from the howdahs,4305announcing, as did the flags of Lord Macartney's Mission to Peking,4306"Tribute from the English to the Emperor of China," and I suppose that4307there are governments idiotic enough to thus pander to Chinese4308arrogance. No doubt what has given rise to the report is the knowledge4309that the Government of India is bound, under the Convention of 1886, to4310send, every ten years, a complimentary mission from the Chief4311Commissioner of Burma to the Viceroy of Yunnan.43124313It was late when I left Jinmaasuh, and long after sundown before I4314reached the city. The flagged causeway across the plain was slippery to4315walk on, and my mule would not agree with me that there was any need to4316hurry. He knew the Chinese character better than I did. Gunfire, the4317signal for the closing of the gates, had sounded when we were two miles4318from the wall; but sentries are negligent in China and the gates were4319still open. Had we been earlier we should have entered by the south4320gate, which is always the most important of the gates of a Chinese city,4321and the one through which all officials make their official entry; but,4322unable to do this, we entered by the big east gate. Turning sharply to4323the right along the city wall we were conducted in a few minutes to the4324Telegraph Offices, where I received a cordial welcome from Mr. Christian4325Jensen, the superintendent of telegraphs in the two great provinces of4326Yunnan and Kweichow. These are his headquarters, and here I was to rest4327a delightful week. It was a pleasant change from silence to speech, from4328Chinese discomfort to European civilisation. Chinese fare one evening,4329pork, rice, tea, and beans; and the next, chicken and the famed Shuenwei4330ham, mutton and green peas and red currant jelly, pancakes and4331aboriginal Yunnan cheese, claret, champagne, port, and cordial Medoc.43324333433443354336CHAPTER XIII.43374338AT YUNNAN CITY.433943404341Yunnan City is one of the great cities of China, not so much in size as4342in importance. It is within easy access at all seasons of the year of4343the French colony of Tonquin, whereas the trade route from here to4344British Burma is long, arduous, and mountainous, and in its Western4345portions is closed to traffic during the rains. From Yunnan City to4346Mungtze on the borders of Tonquin, where there is a branch of the4347Imperial Maritime Customs of China, is a journey of eight days over an4348easy road. Four days from Mungtze is Laokai on the Red River, a river4349which is navigable by boat or steamer to Hanoi, the chief river port of4350Tonquin. In the middle of 1889 the French river steamer, _Le Laokai_,4351made the voyage from Hanoi to Laokai in sixty hours.43524353From Yunnan City to Bhamo on the Irrawaddy, in British Burma, is a4354difficult journey of thirty-three stages over a mountainous road which4355can never by any human possibility be made available for other traffic4356than caravans of horses or coolies on foot. The natural highway of4357Central and Southern Yunnan is by Tonquin, and no artificial means can4358ever alter it. At present Eastern Yunnan sends her trade through the4359provinces of Kweichow and Hunan to the Yangtse above Hankow, or via the4360two Kuangs to Canton. Shortness of distance, combined with facility of4361transport, must soon tap this trade or divert it into the highways of4362Tonquin. Northern Yunnan must send her produce and receive her imports,4363via Szechuen and the Yangtse. As for the trade of Szechuen, the richest4364of the provinces of China, no man can venture to assert that any other4365trade route exists, or can ever be made to exist, than the River4366Yangtse; and all the French Commissioners in the world can no more alter4367the natural course of this trade than they can change the channel of the4368Yangtse itself.43694370I am not, of course, the first distinguished visitor who has been in4371Yunnan City. Marco Polo was here in 1283, and has left on record a4372description of the city, which, in his time, was known by the name of4373Yachi. Jesuit missionaries have been propagating the faith in the4374province since the seventeenth century. But the distinction of being the4375first European traveller, not a missionary priest, to visit the city4376since the time of Marco Polo rests with Captain Doudart de la Gree of4377the French Navy, who was here in 1867.43784379Margary, the British Consul, who met a cruel death at Manwyne, passed4380through Yunnan in 1875 on his famous journey from Hankow; and two years4381later the tardy mission under Grosvenor, with the brilliant Baber as4382interpreter, and Li Han Chang, the brother of Li Hung Chang, as delegate4383for the Chinese, arrived here in the barren hope of bringing his4384murderers to justice.43854386Hosie, formerly H.B.M. Consul in Chungking, and well known as a4387traveller in Western China, was in Yunnan City in 1882.43884389In September, 1890, Bonvalot and Prince Henri d'Orleans stopped here at4390the French Mission on their way to Mungtze in Tonquin. It was on the4391completion of their journey along the eastern edge of _Tibet4392Inconnu_--"Unknown Thibet!" as they term it, although the whole route4393had been traversed time and again by missionary priests, a journey whose4394success was due--though few have ever heard his name--to its true4395leader, interpreter, and guide, the brave Dutch priest from Kuldja, Pere4396Dedeken.43974398Another famous missionary traveller, Pere Vial, who led Colquhoun out of4399his difficulty in that journey "Across Chryse," which Colquhoun4400describes as a "Journey of Exploration" (though it was through a country4401that had been explored and accurately mapped a century and a half before4402by Jesuit missionaries), and conducted him in safety to Bhamo in Burma,4403has often been in Yunnan City, and is a possible successor to the4404Bishopric.44054406M. Boell, who left the Secretaryship of the French Legation in Peking to4407become the special correspondent of _Le Temps_, was here in 1892 on his4408way from Kweiyang, in Kweichow, to Tonquin, and a few months later4409Captain d'Amade, the Military Secretary of the French Legation,4410completed a similar journey from Chungking. In May, 1892, the4411Commissioner from the French Government opium farm in Hanoi, M. Tomme,4412arrived in Yunnan City from Mungtze, sent by his Government in search of4413improved methods of poppy cultivation--the Yunnan opium, with the4414exception of the Shansi opium, being probably the finest in China.4415Finally, in May, 1893, Lenz, the American bicyclist, to the profound4416amazement of the populace, rode on his "living wheel" to the4417_Yesu-tang_. This was the most remarkable journey of all. Lenz4418practically walked across China, surmounting hardships and dangers that4419few men would venture to face. I often heard of him. He stayed at the4420mission stations. All the missionaries praise his courage and endurance,4421and the admirable good humour with which he endured every discomfort.4422But one missionary lamented to me that Lenz did not possess that close4423acquaintance with the Bible which was to be expected of a man of his4424hardihood. It seems that at family prayers at this good missionary's,4425the chapter for reading was given out when poor Lenz was discovered4426feverishly seeking the Epistle to the Galatians in the Old Testament.4427When his mistake was gently pointed out to him he was not discouraged,4428far from it; it was the missionary who was dismayed to hear that in the4429United States this particular Epistle is always reckoned a part of the4430Pentateuch.44314432I paid an early visit of courtesy to my nominal host, Li Pi Chang, the4433Chinese manager of the Telegraphs. He received me in his private office,4434gave me the best seat on the left, and handed me tea with his own fat4435hands. A mandarin whose rank is above that of an expectant Taotai, Li is4436to be the next Taotai of Mungtze, where, from an official salary of 4004437taels per annum, he hopes to save from 10,000 to 20,000 taels per annum.44384439"Squeezing," as this method of enrichment is termed, is, you see, not4440confined to America. Few arts, indeed, seem to be more widely4441distributed than the art of squeezing. "Dives, the tax-dodger," is as4442common in China as he is in the United States. Compare, however, any4443city in China, in the midst of the most ancient civilisation in the4444world, with a city like Chicago, which claims to have reached the4445highest development of modern civilisation, and it would be difficult to4446assert that the condition of public morals in the heathen city was even4447comparable with the corruption and sin of the American city, a city4448"nominally Christian, which is studded with churches and littered with4449Bibles," but still a city "where perjury is a protected industry." No4450community is more ardent in its evangelisation of the "perishing4451Chinese" than Chicago, but where in all China is there "such a supreme4452embodiment of fraud, falsehood, and injustice," as prevails in Chicago?4453An alderman in Chicago, Mr. Stead tells us (p. 172 _et seq._) receives4454only 156 dollars a year salary; but, in addition to his salary, he4455enjoys "practically unrestricted liberty to fill his pockets by4456bartering away the property of the city." "It is expected of the4457alderman, as a fundamental principle, that he will steal," and, in a4458fruitful year, says the _Record_, the average crooked alderman makes445915,000 to 20,000 dollars. An assessorship in Chicago is worth nominally44601500 dollars per annum, but "everyone knows that in Chicago an4461assessorship is the shortest cut to fortune."44624463Squeezing in China may be common, but it is a humble industry compared4464with the monumental swindling which Mr. Stead describes as existing in4465Chicago.44664467Besides being manager in Yunnan City, Li is the chief telegraph director4468of the two provinces of Yunnan and Kweichow. That he is entirely4469innocent of all knowledge of telegraphy, or of the management of4470telegraphs, is no bar to such an appointment. He is a mandarin, and is,4471therefore, presumably fitted to take any position whatever, whether it4472be that of Magistrate or Admiral of the Fleet, Collector of Customs, or4473General commanding in the field. Of the mandarin in China it is truly4474said that "there is nothing he isn't."44754476Li is also Chief Secretary of the _Shan-hao-Tsung-Kuh_, "The Supreme4477Board of Reorganisation" of the province, the members of which are the4478four highest provincial officials next below the Governor4479(_Futai_)--viz., the Treasurer (_Fantai_), Provincial Judge (_Niehtai_),4480the Salt Comptroller, and the Grain Intendant.44814482Li, it may be said at once, is a man of no common virtue. He is the4483father of seven sons and four daughters; he can die in peace; in his4484family there is no fear of the early extinction of male descendants, for4485the succession is as well provided against as it is in the most fertile4486Royal family in Europe. His family is far spreading, and it is worth4487noting as an instance of the patriarchal nature of the family in China,4488that Li is regarded as the father of a family, whose members dependent4489upon him for entire or partial support number eighty persons. He has had4490three wives. His number one wife still lives at the family seat in4491Changsha; another secondary wife is dead; his present number two wife4492lives with him in Yunnan. This is his favourite wife, and her story is4493worth a passing note. She was not a "funded houri," but a poor _yatow_,4494a "forked head" or slave girl, whom he purchased on a lucky day, and,4495smitten with her charms, made her his wife. It was a case of love at4496first sight. Her conduct since marriage has more than justified the4497choice of her master. Still a young woman, she has already presented her4498lord with nine children, on the last occasion surpassing herself by4499giving birth to twins. She has a most pleasant face, and really charming4500children; but the chief attraction of a Chinese lady is absent in her4501case. Her feet are of natural size, and not even in the exaggerated4502murmurings of love could her husband describe them as "three-inch gold4503lilies."45044505That this was a marriage of inclination there can be no doubt whatever.4506It is idle to argue that the Chinese are an unemotional people,4507incapable of feeling the same passions that move us. We ridicule the4508image of a Chinaman languishing in love, just as the Chinaman derides4509the possibility of experiencing the feelings of love for the average4510foreign woman he has seen in China. Their poetry abounds in love4511episodes. Students of Chinese civilisation seem to agree that a _mariage4512de convenance_ in China is more likely even than on the Continent to4513become instantly a marriage of affection. The pleasures of female4514society are almost denied the Chinaman; he cannot fall in love before4515marriage because of the absence of an object for his love. "The faculty4516of love produces a subjective ideal; and craves for a corresponding4517objective reality. And the longer the absence of the objective reality,4518the higher the ideal becomes; as in the mind of the hungry man ideal4519foods get more and more exquisite."45204521In Meadows' "Essay on Civilisation in China," there is a charming story,4522translated from the Chinese, of love at first sight, given in4523illustration of the author's contention that "it is the men to whom4524women's society is almost unknown that are most apt to fall violently in4525love at first sight. Violent love at first sight is a general4526characteristic of nations where the sexes have no intercourse before4527marriage.... The starved cravings of love devour the first object":--45284529"A Chinese who had suffered bitter disenchantments in marriage retired4530with his infant son to the solitude of a mountain inaccessible for4531little-footed Chinese women. He trained up the youth to worship the gods4532and stand in awe and abhorrence of devils, but he never mentioned even4533the name of woman to him. He always descended to market alone, but when4534he grew old and feeble he was at length compelled to take the young man4535with him to carry the heavy bag of rice. He very reasonably argued, 'I4536shall always accompany my son, and take care that if he does see a4537woman by chance, he shall never speak to one; he is very obedient; he4538has never heard of woman; he does not know what they are; and as he has4539lived in that way for twenty years already, he is, of course, now pretty4540safe.'45414542"As they were on the first occasion leaving the market town together,4543the son suddenly stopped short, and, pointing to three approaching4544objects, inquired: 'Father, what are these things? Look! look! what are4545they?' The father hastily answered: 'Turn away your head. They are4546devils.' The son, in some alarm, instantly turned away from things so4547bad, and which were gazing at his motions with surprise from under their4548fans. He walked to the mountain top in silence, ate no supper, and from4549that day lost his appetite and was afflicted with melancholy. For some4550time his anxious and puzzled parent could get no satisfactory answer to4551his inquiries; but at length the poor young man burst out, almost crying4552from an inexplicable pain: 'Oh, father, that tallest devil! that tallest4553devil, father!'"45544555Girls for Yunnan City are bought at two chief centres--at Chaotong, as4556we have seen, and at Bichih. They are carried to the city in baskets.4557They are rarely sold into prostitution, but are bought as slave girls4558for domestic service, as concubines, and occasionally as wives. Their4559great merit is the absence of the "thickneck," goitre.45604561The morning after my visit, Li sent me his card, together with a leg of4562mutton and a pile of sweet cakes. I returned my card, and gave the4563bearer 200 cash (fivepence), not as a return gift to the mandarin, but4564as a private act of generosity to his servant--all this being in4565accordance with Chinese etiquette.45664567My host in Yunnan, and the actual manager and superintendent of the4568telegraphs of the two provinces, is a clever Danish gentleman, Mr.4569Christian Jensen, an accomplished linguist, to whom every European4570resident and traveller in the province is indebted for a thousand acts4571of kindness and attention. He has a rare knowledge of travel in China.4572Mr. Jensen arrived in China in 1880 in the service of the Great Northern4573Telegraph Company--a Danish company. From December, 1881, when the first4574Chinese telegraph line was opened (that from Shanghai to Tientsin), till4575the spring of 1883, he was one of eight operatives and engineers lent by4576the Company to the Chinese Government. In December 1883, having returned4577in the meantime to the Great Northern he accepted an engagement under4578the Imperial Government and he has been in their employ ever since.4579During this time he has superintended the construction of 7000 li (23504580miles) of telegraph lines, and it was he who, on the 20th May, 1890,4581effected the junction of the Chinese system with the French lines at4582Laokai. Among the more important lines constructed by him are those4583joining the two capital cities of the provinces of Yunnan and Kweichow;4584that from Yunnan City to Mungtze, on the frontier of Tonquin; that from4585Canton to the boundary of Fuhkien province; and that from Yunnan City4586through Tali to Tengyueh (Momien), this last line being the one which4587will eventually unite with the marvellous Indian telegraph system at the4588Burmese frontier. In the course of his many journeys through China, Mr.4589Jensen has been invariably well treated by the Chinese, and it is4590pleasant to hear one who has seen so much of the inner life of the4591country speak as he does of the universal courtesy and hospitality,4592attention, and kindness that has been shown him by all classes of4593Chinese from the highest officials to the humblest coolies.45944595[Illustration: VIEW IN YUNNAN CITY.]45964597Many interesting episodes have marked his stay in China. Once, when4598repairing the line from Pase, in Kwangsi, to Mungtze, during the rainy4599season of 1889, fifty-six out of sixty men employed by him died of what4600there can be little doubt was the same plague that has lately devastated4601Hong Kong. On this occasion, of twelve men who at different times were4602employed as his chair-bearers, all died.46034604In October, 1886, he came to Yunnan City, and made this his4605headquarters. He has always enjoyed good health.46064607One of the chief difficulties that formerly impeded the extension of the4608telegraph in China was the belief that the telegraph poles spoil the4609"_fungshui_"--in other words, that they divert good luck from the4610districts they pass through. This objection has been everywhere4611overcome. It last revealed itself in the extreme west of the line from4612Yunnan. Villagers who saw in the telegraph a menace to the good fortune4613of their district would cut down the poles--and sell the wire in4614compensation for their trouble. The annoyance had to be put a stop to.4615An energetic magistrate took the matter in hand. He issued a warning to4616the villagers, but his warning was unheeded. Then he took more vigorous4617measures. The very next case that occurred he had two men arrested, and4618charged with the offence. They were probably innocent, but under the4619persuasion of the bamboo they were induced to acquiesce in the4620magistrate's opinion as to their guilt. They were sentenced to be4621deprived of their ears, and then they were sent on foot, that all might4622see them, under escort along the line from Yunnan City to Tengyueh and4623back again. No poles have been cut down since.46244625462646274628CHAPTER XIV.46294630GOLD, BANKS, AND TELEGRAPHS IN YUNNAN.463146324633Yunnan City is the great gold emporium of China, for most of the gold4634found in China comes from the province of which it is the capital. When4635a rich Chinaman returns from Yunnan to another province, or is summoned4636on a visit to the Emperor at Peking, he carries his money in gold not4637silver. Gold leaf sent from Yunnan gilds the gods of Thibet and the4638temples and pagodas of Indo-China. No caravan returns to Burma from4639Western China whose spare silver has not been changed into gold leaf. In4640the Arracan Temple in Mandalay, as in the Shway-dagon Pagoda in Rangoon,4641you see the gold leaf that Yunnan produces, and in the future will4642produce in infinitely greater quantities.46434644Gold comes chiefly from the mines of Talang, eighteen days journey by4645land S.W. from Yunnan City, on the confines of the district which4646produces the famous Puerh tea. The yield must be a rich one despite the4647ineffective appliances that are employed in its extraction. Gold has4648always been abundant in this province; at the time of Marco Polo's visit4649it was so abundant that its value in relation to silver was only as one4650to six.46514652When gold is worth in Shanghai 35 times its weight in silver, it may be4653bought in Yunnan City or Talifu for from 25 to 27.5 times its weight in4654silver, and in quantities up to hundreds of ounces. To remit silver by4655telegraphic transfer from Shanghai or Hong Kong to Yunnan city costs six4656per cent., and either of the two leading banks in the city will4657negotiate the transfer from their agents at the seaports of any amount4658up to 10,000 ounces of silver in a single transaction. The gold can4659always be readily sold in Shanghai or Hong Kong, and the only risk is in4660the carriage of the gold from the inland city to the seaport. So far as4661I could learn, no gold thus sent has gone astray. It is carried overland4662by the fastest trade route--that through Mungtze to Laokai--and thence4663by a boat down stream to Hanoi in Tonquin, from which port it is sent by4664registered post to Saigon and Hong Kong. Here then is a venture open to4665all, with excitement sufficient for the most _blase_ speculator. Ample4666profits are made by the dealer. For instance, a large quantity of gold4667was purchased in Yunnan city on the 21st January, 1894, at 23.2, its4668value in Shanghai on the same date being 30.9; but on the date that the4669gold arrived in Shanghai its value had risen to 35, at which price it4670was sold. At the time of my visit gold was 25.5 to 27 in Yunnan, and 354671in Shanghai, and I have since learnt that, while gold has become cheaper4672in the province, it has become dearer at the seaport.46734674The gold is brought to the buyer in the form of jewellery of really4675exquisite workmanship, of rings and bracelets, earrings and head4676ornaments, of those tiny images worn by rich children in a half circlet4677over the forehead, and bridal charms that would make covetous the heart4678of a nun. Ornaments of gold such as these are 98 per cent. fine and are4679sold, weighed on the same scales, for so many times their weight in4680silver. They are sold not because of the poverty of their owners, but4681because their owners make a very large profit on their original cost by4682so disposing of them. If, however, the purchaser prefer it, gold will be4683brought him in the leaf 99 per cent. fine, and this is undoubtedly the4684best form into which to convert your silver. The gold beaters of Yunnan4685are a recognised class, and are so numerous that they have a powerful4686guild or trade's union of their own.46874688Gold-testing is also a recognised profession, but the methods are4689primitive and require the skill of an expert, consisting, as they do, of4690a comparison of the rubbing on a stone of the unknown gold, with a4691similar rubbing of gold whose standard has been accurately determined.4692One of the best gold-testers in the city has been taught electric4693gilding by Mr. Jensen and does some skilful work.46944695The principle of self-protection restrains the Chinaman from the4696ostentatious exhibition of his wealth--he fears being squeezed by the4697officials who are apt to regard wealth as an aggravation of crime, to be4698the more severely punished the better able is the accused to purchase4699exemption from punishment. I have seen a stranger come into the room4700where Mr. Jensen and I were sitting, who from his appearance seemed to4701be worth perhaps a five-dollar bill, and after a preliminary interchange4702of compliments, I have seen his hand disappear up his long sleeve and4703produce a package of gold leaf worth perhaps 2000 taels of silver. This4704he would offer for sale; there was some quiet bargaining; when, should4705they agree, the gold was weighed, the purchaser handed a cheque on his4706Chinese banker for the amount in silver, and the transaction was4707finished as quickly and neatly as if it had taken place in Bond Street,4708and not in the most inland capital of an "uncivilised country"; whose4709civilisation has nevertheless kept it intact and mighty since the dawn4710of history, and whose banking methods are the same now as they were in4711the days of Solomon.47124713The silver of Yunnan is of the same standard as the silver of Shanghai,4714namely 98 per cent. pure, and differs to the eye from the absolutely4715unalloyed silver of Szechuen.47164717The cash of Yunnan vary in a way that is more than usually bewildering.4718Let me explain, in a few sentences, the "cash" currency of the Middle4719Kingdom. The current coin of China as everyone knows is the brass cash,4720which is perforated so that it may be carried on a string. Now,4721theoretically, a "string of cash" contains 100 coins, and in the Eastern4722provinces ten strings are the theoretical equivalent of one Mexican4723dollar. But there are eighteen provinces in China, and the number of4724brass cash passing for a string varies in each province from the full4725100, which I have never seen, to 83 in Taiyuen, and down to 33 in the4726Eastern part of the province of Chihli. In Peking I found the system4727charmingly simple. One thousand cash are there represented by 100 coins,4728whereas 1000 "old cash" consist of 1000 coins, though 1000 "capital4729cash" are only 500 coins. The big cash are marked as 10 capital cash,4730but count the same as 5 old cash. Nowhere does a Chinaman mean 1000 cash4731when he speaks of 1000 cash. In Tientsin 1000 cash means 500 cash--that4732is to say 5 times 100 cash, the 100 there being any number you can pass4733except 100, though by agreement the 100 is usually estimated at 98. In4734Nanking I found a different system to prevail. There cash are 1075 the47351000, but of the 10 strings of 100 cash, 7 contain only 98 cash each,4736and 3 only 95, yet the surplus 75 cash--that is to say the number which4737for the time being is the Nanking equivalent of 75--are added all the4738same. At Lanchow in Chihli on the Imperial Chinese Railway near4739Shanhai-kwan, 16 old cash count as 100 cash, yet 33 are required to make4740up 200; in Tientsin from which point the railway starts, 1000 cash are4741really 500 cash and 98 count there as 100. Now 2000 Chihli cash are4742represented by 325 coins, and 1000 by 162 coins, and 6000 by 975 coins,4743which again count as 1000 large cash and equal on an average one Mexican4744dollar. Therefore to convert Lanchow cash into Tientsin cash you must4745divide the Lanchow cash by 3, count 975 as 1000, and consider this equal4746to a certain percentage of a theoretical amount of silver known as a4747tael, which is always varying of itself as well as by the fluctuations4748in the market value of silver, and which is not alike in any two places,4749and may widely vary in different portions of the same place.47504751Could anything be simpler? And yet there are those who say that the4752system of money exchange in China is both cumbrous and exasperating.4753Take as a further instance the cash in Yunnan. Everyone knows that4754theoretically there are 2000 cash in the tael, each tael containing 204755"strings," and each "string" 100 cash, but in Yunnan 2000 cash are not47562000 cash--they are only 1880 cash. This does not mean that 1880 cash4757are represented by 1880 coins, not at all; because 62 cash in Yunnan are4758counted as 100. Eighteen hundred and eighty cash are therefore4759represented by only 1240 cash coins and all prices must be paid in this4760proportion. Immediately outside the city, however, a string of cash is a4761"full string" and contains 100 cash or rather it contains as few cash as4762possibly can be passed for 100, a fair average number being 98.47634764Silver is weighed in the City banks and at the wholesale houses on the4765"capital scale," but in the retail stores on scales that are heavier by476614 per cent. (one mace and 4 candareens in the tael). Outside the city4767on the road to Tali there is a loss on exchange varying according to4768your astuteness from 3 to 6 per cent. on the capital scale.47694770There are two chief banks in Yunnan city. Wong's whose bank, the4771signboard tells us, is "Beneficent, Rich, United," and Mong's "Bank of4772the Hundred Streams," which is said to be still richer.47734774With Mr. Jensen I called one evening upon Wong, and found him with his4775sons and chief dependents at the evening meal. All rose as we entered4776and pressed us to take a seat with them, and when we would not, the4777father and grown-up son showed us into the guest-room and seated us on4778the opium-dais under the canopy. The opium-lamps were already lit; on a4779beautiful tray inlaid with mother-of-pearl there were pipes for4780visitors, and phials of prepared opium. Here we insisted on their4781leaving us and returning to their supper; they finished speedily and4782returned to their visitors. We were given good tea and afterwards a4783single cigar was handed to each of us. In offering you a cigar it is not4784the Chinese custom to offer you your choice from the cigar box; the4785courtesy is too costly, for there are few Chinamen in these4786circumstances who could refrain from helping themselves to a handful.4787"When one is eating one's own" says the Chinese proverb, "one does not4788eat to repletion; when one is eating another's, one eats till the tears4789run."47904791Wong is one of the leading citizens of Yunnan, and is held in high4792honour by his townsmen. His house is a handsome Chinese mansion; it has4793a dignified entrance and the garden court is richly filled with plants4794in porcelain vases. It may thus be said of him, as of the Confucian4795Superior Man, "riches adorn his house and virtue his person, his heart4796is expanded, and his body is at ease."47974798A Szechuen man, a native of Chungking, fifty-nine years of age, Wong is4799a man of immense wealth, his bank being known all over China, and having4800branches in capital cities so far distant from each other as Peking,4801Canton, Kweiyang, Shanghai, Hankow, Nanchang, Soochow, Hangchow, and4802Chungking. I may add that he has smoked opium for many years.48034804I formed a high opinion of the intelligence of Wong. He questioned me4805like an insurance doctor as to my family history, and professed himself4806charmed with the amazing richness in sons of my most honourable family.4807He had heard of my native country, which he called _Hsin Chin Shan_, the4808"New Gold Mountain," to distinguish it from the _Lao Chin Shan_, the4809"Old Gold Mountain," as the Chinese term California. I was the more4810pleased to find that Wong had some knowledge of Australia and its gold,4811because a few months before I had been pained by an incident bearing on4812this very subject, which occurred to me in the highly civilised city of4813Manila, in the Philippine Islands. On an afternoon in August, 1893, I4814stood in the Augustine Church, in Old Manila, to witness the funeral4815service of the Padre Provincial of the Augustines. It was the first4816occasion for one hundred and twenty-three years that the Provincial of4817the Order had died while in the actual exercise of his office, and it4818was known that the ceremony would be one of the most imposing ever seen4819in the Islands. The fine old church, built by the son of the architect4820of the Escorial--the only building in Manila left standing by the4821earthquake of 1645--was crowded with mourners, and almost every4822notability of the province was said to be present. During the service4823two young Spaniards, students from the University close by, pushed their4824way in beside me. Wishing to learn who were the more distinguished of4825the mourners, I asked the students to kindly point out to me the4826Governor-General (Blanco), and other prominent officials, and they did4827so with agreeable courtesy. When the service was finished I thanked them4828for the trouble they had taken and was coming away, when one of them4829stopped me.48304831"Pardon me, Caballero," he said, "but will you do me the favour to tell4832me where you come from?"48334834"I am from Australia."48354836"From Austria! so then you come from Austria?"48374838"No, sir, from Australia."48394840"But 'Australia'--where is it?"48414842"It is a rich colony of England of immense importance."48434844"But where is it?" he persisted.48454846"_Dios mio!_" I exclaimed aghast, "it is in China."48474848But his friend interposed. "The gentleman is talking in fun," he said.4849"Thou knowest, Pepe, where is Australia, where is Seednay, and4850Melboornay, where all the banks have broken one after the other in a4851bankruptcy colossal."48524853"_Ya me figuraba donde era_," Pepe replied, as I edged uncomfortably4854away.48554856During my journey across China it was not often that I was called upon4857to make use of my profession. But I was pleased to be of some service to4858this rich banker. He wished to consult me professionally, because he had4859heard from the truthful lips of rumour of the wonderful powers of4860divination given to the foreign medical man. What was his probable4861tenure of life? That was the problem. I gravely examined two of his4862pulses--every properly organised Chinaman has four hundred--and finding4863his heart where it should be in the centre of his body, with the other4864organs ranged round it like the satellites round the sun--every Chinaman4865is thus constructed--I was glad to be able to assure him that he will4866certainly live forty years longer--if Heaven permit him.48674868Wong has a grown-up son of twenty who will succeed to the bank; he is at4869present the managing proprietor of a small general store purchased for4870him by his father. The son has been taught photography by Mr. Jensen,4871and has an excellent camera obtained from Paris. He is quite an4872enthusiast. In his shop a crowd is always gathered round the counter4873looking at the work of this Chinese amateur. There are a variety of4874stores for sale on the shelves, and I was interested to notice the4875cheerful promiscuity with which bottles of cyanide of potassium and4876perchloride of mercury were scattered among bottles of carbonate of4877soda, of alum, of Moet and Chandon (spurious), of pickles, and Howard's4878quinine. The first time that cyanide of potassium is sold for alum, or4879corrosive sublimate for bicarbonate of soda there will be an _eclat_4880given to the dealings of this shop which will be very gratifying to its4881owner.48824883The telegraph in Yunnan is very largely used by the Chinese, especially4884by the bankers and officials. By telegraph you can remit, as I have4885said, through the Chinese banks, telegraphic transfers to the value of4886thousands of taels in single transactions. It is principally the banks4887and the Government who make use of the telegraph, and their4888communications are sent by private code. When the Tsungli Yamen in4889Peking sends a telegram to the Viceroy in Yunnan it is in code that the4890message comes; and it is by private code also that a Chinese bank in4891Shanghai telegraphs to its far inland agents. Messages are sent in China4892by the Morse system. The method of telegraphing Chinese characters,4893whose discovery enabled the Chinese to make use of the telegraph, was4894the ingenious invention of a forgotten genius in the Imperial Maritime4895Customs of China. The method is simplicity itself. The telegraph code4896consists of ten thousand numbers of four numerals each, and each group4897so constituted represents a Chinese character. Any operator, however4898ignorant of Chinese, can thus telegraph or receive a message in Chinese.4899He receives, for instance, a message containing a series of numbers such4900as 0018, 0297, 5396, 8424. He has before him a series of ten thousand4901wood blocks on which the number is cut at one end and the corresponding4902Chinese character at the other, he takes out the number, touches the4903inkpad with the other end, and stamps opposite each group its Chinese4904character. The system permits, moreover, of the easy arrangement of4905indecipherable private codes, because by adding or subtracting a certain4906number from each group of figures, other characters than those4907telegraphed can be indicated.49084909I need hardly add that the system of wood blocks is not in practical4910use, for the numbers and their characters are now printed in code-books.4911And here we have an instance of the marvellous faculty of memorising4912characteristic of the Chinese. A Chinaman's memory is something4913prodigious. From time immemorial the memory of the Chinese has been4914developed above all the other faculties. Memory is the secret of success4915in China, not originality. Among a people taught to associate innovation4916with impiety, and with whom precedent determines all action, it is4917inevitable that the faculty of recollection should be the most highly4918developed of all the mental faculties. Necessity compels the Chinaman to4919have a good memory. No race has ever been known where the power of4920memory has been developed even in rare individual cases to the degree4921that is common to all classes of the Chinese, especially to the4922literati.49234924The Chinese telegraph clerk quickly learns all the essential portion of4925the code-book by heart. The book then lies in the drawer a superfluity.4926It is claimed for Chiang, the second Chinese clerk in Yunnan, that he4927knows all the 10,000 numbers and their corresponding characters.49284929Telegrams from Yunnan to Shanghai cost twenty-two tael cents (at the4930present value of the tael this is equal to sixpence) for each Chinese4931character; but each word in any other language is charged double, that4932is, forty-four cents.49334934[Illustration: SOLDIERS ON THE WALL OF YUNNAN CITY.]49354936From Yunnan to Talifu is a distance of 307 miles. The native banker in4937the capital will remit for you by wire to his agent in Tali the sum of49381000 taels, for a charge of eight taels, exclusive of the cost of the4939telegram, and, as the value of silver in Tali is one per cent. higher4940than it is in Yunnan, the traveller can send his money by wire with4941perfect safety, and lose nothing in the remittance, not even the cost of4942the telegram.49434944The telegraph offices are separated from the city wall by a small4945common, which is quite level, and which the Chinaman of the future will4946convert into a bowling green and lawn-tennis ground. There is a handsome4947entrance. The large portal is painted with horrific gods armed with4948monstrous weapons. The Chinese still seem to adhere to the belief that4949the deadliness of a weapon must be in proportion to the savageness of4950its aspect. Inside, there are spacious courts and well-furnished guest4951rooms, roomy apartments, and offices for the mandarin, as well as4952comfortable quarters for Mr. Jensen and his body of Chinese clerks and4953operators. There is a pretty garden all bright and sunny, with a pond of4954gold fish and ornamental parapet. Wandering freely in the enclosure are4955peacocks and native companions, while a constant playmate of the4956children is a little laughing monkey of a kind that is found in the4957woods beyond Tali. At night a watchman passes round the courts every two4958hours, striking a dismal gong under the windows, and waking the4959foreigner from his slumbers; but the noise he makes does not disturb the4960sleep of the Chinese--indeed, it is open to question if there is any4961discord known which, as mere noise, _could_ disturb a Chinaman.49624963The walls that flank the entrance are covered with official posters4964giving the names of the men of Yunnan City who contributed to the relief4965of the sufferers by a recent famine in Shansi, together with the amounts4966of their contributions and the rewards to which their gifts entitled4967them. The Chinese are firm believers in the doctrine of justification by4968works, and on these posters one could read the exact return made in this4969world for an act of merit, apart, of course, from the reward that will4970be reaped in Heaven. In a case like this it is usually arranged that for4971"gifts amounting to a certain percentage of the sums ordinarily4972authorised, subscribers may obtain brevet titles, posthumous titles,4973decorations, buttons up to the second class, the grade of licentiate,4974and brevet rank up to the rank of Colonel. Disgraced officials may apply4975to have their rank restored. Nominal donations of clothes, if the money4976value of the articles be presented instead, will entitle the givers to4977similar honours."--_The Peking Gazette_, August 22, 1892.49784979In the centre of the green stands the hollow pillar in which Chinese4980printed waste-paper is reverently burnt. "When letters were invented,"4981the Chinese say, "Heaven rejoiced and Hell trembled." "Reverence the4982characters," is an injunction of Confucius which no Chinaman neglects to4983follow. He remembers that "he who uses lettered paper to kindle the fire4984has ten demerits, and will have itchy sores"; he remembers that "he who4985tosses lettered paper into dirty water, or burns it in a filthy place,4986has twenty demerits and will frequently have sore eyes or become blind,"4987whereas "he who goes about and collects, washes, and burns lettered4988paper, has 5000 merits, adds twelve years to his life, will become4989honoured and wealthy, and his children and grandchildren will be4990virtuous and filial." But his reverence has strict limits, and while he4991reverences the piece of paper upon which a moral precept is written, he4992often thinks himself absolved from reverencing the moral precept itself,4993just as a deacon in England need not necessarily be one who never4994over-reached his neighbours or swindled his creditors.49954996499749984999CHAPTER XV.50005001THE FRENCH MISSION AND THE ARSENAL IN YUNNAN CITY.500250035004The most prominent structure within the city walls is the Heavenly Lord5005Hall (_Tien-chu-tang_), the pile of buildings which form the5006headquarters of the French Mission in the province of Yunnan. It was a5007master-stroke to secure possession of so important a site. The palace is5008on a higher level even than the yamen of the Viceroy, and must intercept5009much of the good fortune that would otherwise flow into the city. The5010facade of the central hall has been ornamented with a superb cross of5011porcelain mosaic, which is a conspicuous object from the city wall. A5012large garden, where the eucalyptus has been wisely planted, surrounds5013the buildings. In residence in the Heavenly Hall are the venerable5014Vicaire Apostolique of the province, Monseigneur Fenouil, the5015Provicaire, and four missionary priests, all four of whom are from5016Alsace. In the province altogether there are twenty-two French priests5017and eight ordained Chinese priests--thirty in all; their converts number501815,000. Monseigneur Fenouil is a landmark of Western China; he first set5019foot in the province in 1847, and is the oldest foreign resident in the5020interior of China. No Chinaman speaks purer Chinese than he; he thinks5021in Chinese. Present in the province throughout the Mohammedan5022insurrection, he was an eye-witness of the horrors of religious warfare.5023Few men have had their path in life marked by more thrilling episodes.5024He was elected Bishop, in 1880, by the unanimous vote of all the priests5025in the province, a vote confirmed by Rome; which is, I am told, the mode5026of election by which Catholic Missionary Bishops in China are always5027chosen.50285029The grand old Bishop seemed much amused at my journey. "I suppose you5030are riding a mule," he said, "for you English have large bones, and the5031Chinese ponies are very small." I said that I had come so far most of5032the way on foot. "You speak Chinese, of course?"50335034"Hardly at all; I speak only a dozen words of Chinese."50355036"Then you have a Chinese interpreter? No! An English companion who can5037speak Chinese? No! A Chinese servant who can speak English? No, and no5038escort! But without doubt you are armed? No! No escort, no revolver, no5039companion, and you can live on Chinese food. Ah! you have a brave heart,5040Monsieur."50415042At the time of my visit to Yunnan, Pere de Gorostarza, the accomplished5043Provicaire, was absent at Mungtze deciding a question of discipline.5044Four months before one of the most trusted converts of the mission had5045been sent to Mungtze to purchase a property for the use of the mission.5046He was given the purchase-money of 400 taels, but, when he arrived in5047Mungtze, and the eye of the mission was no longer upon him, he invested5048the money, not in premises for the mission, but in a coolie-hong for5049himself. His backsliding had availed him little. And he was now5050defending his conduct as best he could before the Bishop's deputy.50515052Converts of the French mission in China, it is well to remember, are no5053longer French subjects or _proteges_; the objection is no longer5054tenable that the mission shields bad characters who only become5055converted in order to escape from the consequences of their guilt.50565057How wonderful has been the pioneer work done by the Jesuit Missionaries5058in China! It may almost be said that the foundation of all that we know5059about China we owe to the Jesuit Missionaries. All maps on China are5060founded upon the maps of the Jesuit Missionaries employed for the5061purpose by the Emperor Kanghi (1663-1723), "the greatest prince who ever5062graced the throne of China." Their accuracy has been the wonder of all5063geographers for a century past. "Now that the 'Great River' (the5064Yangtse) has been surveyed," says Captain Blakiston, "for nearly 16005065miles from the ocean, and with instruments and appliances such as were5066unknown in the days of those energetic and persevering men, no small5067praise is due to the first Christian explorers for the extraordinary5068correctness of their maps and records." The reports of the early Jesuit5069Missionaries even Voltaire describes as the "productions of the most5070intelligent travellers that have extended and embellished the fields of5071science and philosophy."50725073Yet we, as Protestants, are warned by a great missionary that we must5074not be deluded by these insidious compliments; we must not forget that5075the work of the Jesuits in China "overtops all other forms of5076superstition and error in danger, and stands forth an organised5077conspiracy against the liberties of mankind. The schemes of the Jesuits5078must be checked."50795080One Sunday morning Mr. Jensen and I rode round the city wall. This is5081one of the most massive walls in a country of walled cities. It is built5082of brick and stone over a body of earth thirty feet thick; it is of5083imposing height, and wide enough for a carriage drive. When I was5084mounted on my mule the upper edge of the parapet was on a level with my5085forehead. There are six city gates. The great north gate is closely5086barred all through the rains to prevent the entrance of the "Flood God,"5087who, fortunately, his intelligence being limited, knows no other way to5088enter the city than by this gate. The great turreted south gate is the5089most important of all, as it is in all Chinese cities. Near this gate5090the Viceroy's Yamen is situated, and the Yamen of the Futai (Governor of5091the Province); both buildings, of course, looking to the south, as did5092the Temple of Solomon and the tombs of the Mings, and as Chinese custom5093requires that every building of importance shall do, whether temple or5094yamen, private residence or royal palace. But why should they look5095south? Because from the south the sun comes, bringing with it "genial5096and animating influence," and putting new life into plant and animal5097after the winter.50985099The south gate is a double gate in a semi-circular bastion. Beyond it is5100a splendid triumphal arch erected by a grateful community to the memory5101of the late viceroy. A thickly-populated suburb extends from here to the5102wide common, where stands the lofty guardian pagoda of the city, 2505103feet high, a conspicuous sight from every part of the great Yunnan5104plain. Rich temples are all around it, their eaves hung with sweet-toned5105bells, which tinkle with every breath of wind, giving forth what the5106Chinese poetically describe as "the tribute of praise from inanimate5107nature to the greatness of Buddha."51085109[Illustration: THE PAGODA OF YUNNAN CITY, 250 FEET HIGH.]51105111In the early morning the traveller is awakened by the steam whistle of5112the arsenal, a strange sound to be heard in so far inland a city in5113China. The factory is under Chinese management, a fact patent to any5114visitor. Its two foremen were trained partly in the arsenal in Nanking5115under Dr. Macartney (now Sir Halliday Macartney), and partly in the5116splendid Shanghai arsenal under Mr. Cornish. I went to the arsenal, and5117was received as usual in the opium-room. There was nothing to conceal,5118and I was freely shown everything. The arsenal turns out Krupp guns of51197-1/2 centimetres calibre, but the iron is inferior, and the workmen are5120in need of better training. Cartridges are also made here. And in one5121room I saw two men finishing with much neatness a pure silver opium-tray5122intended for the Fantai (provincial treasurer), but why made in the5123arsenal only a Chinaman could tell you. Work in the furnace is done at a5124disadvantage owing to the shortness of the furnace chimney, which is5125only 25 feet high. All attempts to increase its height are now forbidden5126by the authorities. There was agitation in the city when the chimney was5127being heightened. Geomancers were consulted, who saw the feeling of the5128majority, and therefore gave it as their unprejudiced opinion that, if5129the chimney were not stunted, the _fungshui_ (good luck) of the Futai's5130yamen (provincial governor), and of that portion of the city under its5131protection, would depart for ever. All the machinery of the arsenal is5132stamped with the name of Greenwood, Battley and Co., Leeds. Rust and5133dirt are everywhere, and the 100 workmen for whom pay is drawn never5134number on the rare pay days more than sixty persons, a phenomenon5135observed in most establishments in China worked by government. Yet with5136a foreigner in charge excellent work could be turned out from the5137factory. The buildings are spacious, the grounds are ample.51385139The powder factory is outside the city, near the north-eastern angle of5140the wall, but the powder magazine is on some rising ground inside the5141city. No guns are stationed anywhere on the walls, though they may be in5142concealment in the turrets; but near the small west gate I saw some5143small cannon of ancient casting, built on the model of the guns cast by5144the Jesuit missionaries in China two centuries ago, if they were not the5145actual originals. They were all marked in relief with a cross and the5146device I.H.S.--a motto that you would think none but a Chinaman could5147select for a weapon designed to destroy men, yet characteristic of this5148country of contradictions. "The Chinese statesman," says Wingrove Cooke,5149the famous _Times_ correspondent, "cuts off 10,000 heads, and cites a5150passage from Mencius about the sanctity of human life. He pockets the5151money given him to repair an embankment and thus inundates a province,5152and he deplores the land lost to the cultivator of the soil."51535154Du Halde tells us that "the first Chinese cannon were cast under the5155directions of Pere Verbiest in 1682, who blest the cannon, and gave to5156each the name of a saint." "A female saint!" says Huc.51575158Near the arsenal and drill ground there is a large intramural swamp or5159reedy lake, the reeds of which have an economic value as wicks for5160Chinese candles. Dykes cross the swamp in various directions, and in the5161centre there is a well known Taoist Temple, a richly endowed edifice,5162with superior gods and censers of great beauty. Where the swamp deepens5163into a pond at the margin of the temple, a pretty pavilion has been5164built, which is a favourite resort of the Yunnan gentry. The most _chic_5165dinner parties in the province are given here. The pond itself swarms5166with sacred fish; they are so numerous that when the masses move the5167whole pond vibrates. Many merits are gained by feeding the fish, and,5168as it happened at the time of my visit that I had no money, I was5169constrained to borrow fifteen cash from my chair coolies, with which I5170purchased some of the artificial food that women were vending and threw5171it to the fish, so that I might add another thousand to the innumerable5172merits I have already hoarded in Heaven.51735174Upon a pretty wooded hill near the centre of the city is the Confucian5175Temple, and on the lower slope of the hill, in an admirable position,5176are the quarters of the China Inland Mission, conducted by Mr. and Mrs.5177X., assisted by Mr. Graham, who at the time of my visit was absent in5178Tali, and by two exceedingly nice young girls, one of whom comes from5179Melbourne. The single ladies live in quarters of their own on the edge5180of a swamp, and suffer inevitably from malarial fever. Mr. X. "finds the5181people very hard to reach," he told me, and his success has only been5182relatively cheering. After labouring here nearly six years--the mission5183was first opened in 1882--he has no male converts, though there are two5184promising nibblers, who are waiting for the first vacancy to become5185adherents. There _was_ a convert, baptised before Mr. X. came here, a5186poor manure-coolie, who was employed by the mission as an evangelist in5187a small way; but "Satan tempted him, he fell from grace, and had to be5188expelled for stealing the children's buttons." It was a sad trial to the5189mission. The men refuse to be saved, recalcitrant sinners! but the women5190happily are more tractable. Mr. X. has up to date (May, 1894), baptised5191his children's nurse girl, the "native helper" of the single ladies, and5192his wife's cook. Mr. X. works hard, far too hard. He is of the type that5193never can be successful in China. He was converted when nearing middle5194age, is narrow and uncompromising in his views, and is as stern as a5195Cameronian. It is a farce sending such men to China. At his services5196there is never any lack of listeners, who marvel greatly at the new5197method of speaking Chinese which this enterprising emissary--in London5198he was in the oil trade--is endeavouring to introduce into the province.5199Of "tones" instead of the five used by the Chinese, he does not5200recognise more than two, and these he uses indifferently. He hopes,5201however, to be understood by loud speaking, and he bellows at the placid5202coolies like a bull of Bashan.52035204I paid an early visit to my countrymen at the _Yesu-tang_ (Jesus Hall),5205the mission home, as I thought that my medical knowledge might be of5206some service. I wished to learn a little about their work, but to my5207great sorrow I was no sooner seated than they began plying me with5208questions about the welfare of my soul. I am a "poor lost sinner," they5209told me. They flung texts at my head, and then sang a terrifying ballad,5210by which I learnt for the first time the awful fate that is to be mine.5211It is something too dreadful to contemplate. And the cheerful equanimity5212with which they announced it to me! I left the _Yesu-tang_ in a cold5213sweat, and never returned there.52145215Missionary work is being pursued in the province with increasing vigour.5216Among its population of from five to seven millions, spread over an area5217of 107,969 square miles, there are eighteen Protestant missionaries,5218nine men and nine ladies (this is the number at present, but the usual5219strength is twenty-three). Stations are open at Chaotong (1887),5220Tongchuan (1891), Yunnan City (1882), Tali (1881), and Kuhtsing (1889).5221The converts number--the work, however, must not be judged by5222statistics--two at Chaotong, one at Tongchuan, three at Yunnan City,5223three at Tali, and two at Kuhtsing.52245225That the Chinese are capable of very rapid conversion can be proved by5226numberless instances quoted in missionary reports on China. The Rev. S.5227F. Woodin (in the _Records_ of the Missionary Conference, 1877, p. 91)5228states that he converted a "grossly immoral Chinaman, who had smoked5229opium for more than twenty years," simply by saying to him "in a spirit5230of earnest love, elder brother Six, as far as I can see, you must5231perish; you are Hell's child."52325233Mr. Stanley P. Smith, B.A., who was formerly stroke of the Cambridge5234eight, had been only seven months in China when he performed that5235wonderful conversion, so applauded at the Missionary Conference of 1888,5236of "a young Chinaman, a learned man, a B.A. of his University," who5237heard Mr. Smith speak in the Chinese that can be acquired in seven5238months, and "accepted Him there and then." (_Records_ of the Missionary5239Conference, 1888, i., 46). Indeed, the earlier the new missionaries in5240China begin to preach the more rapid are the conversions they make.52415242Now, in this province of Yunnan, conversions will have to be infinitely5243more rapid before we can say that there is any reasonable hope of the5244proximate conversion of the province. The problem is this: In a5245population of from five to seven millions of friendly and peaceable5246people, eighteen missionaries in eight years (the average time during5247which the mission stations have been opened), have converted eleven5248Chinese; how long, then, will it take to convert the remainder?52495250"I believe," said a late member of the House of Commons, who was once5251Lord Mayor of London, speaking at the anniversary meeting of the China5252Inland Mission in 1884, "I believe God intends to accomplish great5253things in China," and, undoubtedly, the opinion of an ex-Lord Mayor on5254such a subject is entitled to great weight.52555256"The Gospel," he said, "is making rapid progress in China.... We are5257amazed at the great things God hath wrought" (in the conversion of the5258Chinese).52595260Let us examine for a moment an instance of the rapid progress which5261excited the amazement of this good man. No missionary body in China is5262working with greater energy than the China Inland Mission. Their5263missionaries go far afield in their work, and they are, what their5264mission intends them to be, pioneer Protestant missionaries in Inland5265China. At the present time, the beginning of 1894, the Inland Mission5266numbers 611 male and female missionaries. They are assisted by 261 paid5267native helpers, and the combined body of 872 Evangelists baptised during5268the year just passed (1893) 821 Chinese. These figures, taken from5269_China's Millions_, 1894, p. 122, attest a rather lower rate of progress5270than the other missions can boast of; but a considerable part of the5271inland work, it must be remembered, is the most difficult work of5272all--the preaching of the Gospel for the first time in newly-opened5273districts.52745275[Illustration: THE VICEROY OF THE TWO PROVINCES OF YUNNAN AND KWEICHOW.]52765277The Viceroy of the two provinces of Yunnan and Kweichow, Wong-wen-shao,5278is one of the most enlightened rulers in China. No stranger could fail5279to be impressed with his keen intellectual face and courtly grace of5280manner. His career has been a distinguished one. Good fortune attended5281him even at his birth. He is a native of Hangchow, in Chehkiang, a city5282famous in China for its coffins. Every Chinaman will tell you that true5283felicity consists in three things: to be born in Peking (under the5284shadow of the Son of Heaven); to live in Soochow (where the girls are5285prettiest); and to die in Hangchow (where the coffins are grandest).5286Twelve years ago he was Governor of the province of Hunan. Called then5287to Peking as one of the Ministers of State of the "Tsungli Yamen," or5288Foreign Office, he remained there four years, his retirement being then5289due to the inexorable law which requires an official to resign office5290and go into mourning for three years on the death of one of his parents.5291In this case it was his mother. (A Chinese mother suckles her child two5292and a half years, and, as the age of the child is dated from a time5293anterior by some months to birth, the child is three years old before it5294leaves its mother's breast. Three years, therefore, has been defined as5295the proper period for mourning.) At the termination of the three years,5296Wong was reappointed Governor of Hunan, and a year and a half later, in5297May, 1890, he was appointed to his present important satrapy, where he5298has the supreme control of a district larger than Spain and Portugal,5299and with a population larger than that of Canada and Australia combined.5300In May, 1893, he made application to the throne to be allowed to return5301to his ancestral home to die, but the privilege was refused him.53025303Before leaving Yunnan city the Mandarin Li kindly provided me with a5304letter of introduction to his friend Brigadier-General Chang-chen Nien,5305in Tengyueh. Since it contained a communication between persons of rank,5306the envelope was about the size of an ordinary pillow-slip. The General5307was presumably of higher rank than the traveller; I had, therefore, in5308accordance with Chinese etiquette, to provide myself with a suitable5309visiting card of a size appropriate to his importance. Now Chinese5310visiting cards differ from ours in differing in size according to the5311importance of the person to whom they are to be presented. My ordinary5312card is eight inches by three, red in colour--the colour of5313happiness--and inscribed in black with the three characters of my5314Chinese name. But the card that I was expected to present to the5315General was very much larger than this. Folded it was of the same size,5316but unfolded it was ten times the size of the other (eight by thirty5317inches), and the last page, politely inscribed in Chinese, contained5318this humiliating indication of its purport: "Your addlepated nephew5319Mo-li-son bows his stupid head, and pays his humble respects to your5320exalted Excellency."53215322[Illustration]53235324I still have this card in my possession; and I should be extremely5325reluctant to present it to any official in the Empire of lower rank than5326the Emperor.53275328532953305331CHAPTER XVI.53325333THE JOURNEY FROM YUNNAN CITY TO TALIFU.533453355336I sold the mule in Yunnan City, and bought instead a little white pony5337at a cost, including saddle, bridle, and bells, of _L3 6s._ In doing5338this I reversed the exchange that would have been made by a Chinaman. A5339mule is a more aristocratic animal than a pony; it thrives better on a5340journey, and is more sure-footed. If a pony, the Chinese tell you, lets5341slip one foot, the other three follow; whereas a mule, if three feet5342slip from under him, will hold on with the fourth.53435344My men, who had come with me from Chaotong, were paid off in Yunnan; but5345it was pleasant to find all three accept an offer to go on with me to5346Talifu. Coolies to do this journey are usually supplied by the coolie5347agents for the wage of two _chien_ a day each (_7d._), each man to carry5348seventy catties (93lbs.), find himself by the way, and spend thirteen5349days on the journey. But no coolies, owing to the increase in the price5350of food, were now willing to go for so little. Accordingly I offered my5351two coolies three taels each (_9s._), instead of the hong price of _7s.53529d._, and loads of fifty catties instead of seventy catties. I offered5353to refund them 100 cash each (_2-1/2d._) a day for every day that they5354had been delayed in Yunnan, and, in addition, I promised them a reward5355of five mace each (_1s. 6d._) if they would take me to Tali in nine5356days, instead of thirteen, the first evening not to count. To Laohwan,5357who had no load to carry, but had to attend to me and the pony and pay5358away the cash, I made a similar offer. These terms, involving me in an5359outlay of _36s._ for hiring three men to go with me on foot 915 li, and5360return empty-handed, were considered liberal, and were agreed to at5361once.53625363The afternoon, then, of the 19th April saw us again _en route_, bound to5364the west to Talifu, the most famous city in western China, the5365headquarters of the Mohammedan "Sultan" during the great rebellion of53661857-1873.53675368By the courtesy of the Mandarin Li, two men were detailed to "sung"5369me--to accompany me, that is--and take the responsibility for my safe5370delivery at the next hsien. One was a "wen," a chairen, or yamen runner;5371the other was a "wu," a soldier, with a sightless right eye, who was5372dressed in the ragged vestiges of a uniform that reflected both the5373poverty of his environment and, inversely, the richness of his5374commanding officer. For in China the officer enriches himself by the5375twofold expedient of drawing pay for soldiers who have no existence,5376except in his statement of claim, and by diverting the pay of his5377soldiers who do exist from their pockets into his own.53785379[Illustration: THE GIANT OF YUNNAN.]53805381As I was leaving, a colossal Chinaman, sent by the Fantai to speed the5382foreign gentleman on his way, strode into the court. He was dressed in5383military jacket and official hat and foxtails. He was the Yunnan giant,5384Chang Yan Miun, a kindly-featured monster, whom it is a pity to see5385buried in China when he might be holding _levees_ of thousands in a5386Western side-show. For the information of those in search of novelties,5387I may say that the giant is thirty years of age, a native of Tongchuan,5388born of parents of ordinary stature; he is 7ft. 1in. in his bare feet,5389and weighs, when in condition, 27st. 6lb. With that ingenious5390arrangement for increasing height known to all showmen, this giant might5391be worth investing in as a possible successor to his unrivalled5392namesake. There is surely money in it. Chang's present earnings are5393rather less than _7s._ a month, without board and lodging; he is5394unmarried, and has no incumbrance; and he is slightly taller and much5395more massively built than a well-known American giant whom I once had5396permission to measure, who has been shown half over the world as the5397"tallest man on earth," his height being attested as "7ft. 11in. in his5398stockings' soles," and who commands the salary of an English admiral.53995400We made only a short march the first evening, but after that we5401travelled by long stages. The country was very pretty, open glades with5402clumps of pine, and here and there a magnificent sacred tree like the5403banyan, under whose far-reaching branches small villages are often half5404concealed. Despite the fertility of the country, poverty and starvation5405met us at every step; the poor were lingering miserably through the5406year. Goitre, too, was increasing in frequency. It was rarely that a5407group gathered to see us some of whose members were not suffering from5408this horrible deformity. And everywhere in the pretty country were signs5409of the ruthless devastation of religious war. That was a war of5410extermination. "A storm of universal fire blasted every field, consumed5411every house, destroyed every temple."54125413Crumbling walls are at long distances from the towns they used to guard;5414there are pastures and waste lands where there were streets of5415buildings; walls of houses have returned whence they came to the mother5416earth; others are roofless. In the open country, far from habitation,5417the traveller comes across groups of bare walls with foundations still5418uncovered, and dismantled arches, and broken images in the long grass,5419that were formerly yamens and temples in the midst of thriving5420communities. Yet there are signs of a renaissance; many new houses are5421being built along the main road; walls are being repaired, and bridges5422reconstructed. When an exodus takes place from Szechuen to this5423province, there is little reason why Yunnan should not become one of the5424richest provinces in China. It has every advantage of climate, great5425fertility of soil, and immense mineral resources hardly yet developed.5426It needs population. It needs the population that dwelt in the province5427before the rebellion involved the death of millions. It can absorb an5428immense proportion of the surplus population of China. During, and5429subsequent to, the Taiping rebellion the province of Szechuen increased5430by 45,000,000 in forty years (1842-82); given the necessity, there seems5431no reason why the population of Yunnan should not increase in an almost5432equal proportion.54335434On the 22nd we passed Lu-feng-hsien, another ruined town. The finest5435stone bridge I have seen in Western China, and one that would arrest5436attention in any country in the world, is at this town. It crosses the5437wide bed of a stream that in winter is insignificant, but which grows in5438volume in the rains of summer to a broad and powerful river. It is a5439bridge of seven beautiful arches; it is 12 yards broad and 150 yards5440long, of perfect simplicity and symmetry, with massive piers, all built5441of dressed masonry and destined to survive the lapse of centuries.5442Triumphal archways with memorial tablets and pedestals of carved lions5443are befitting portals to a really noble work.54445445On the 23rd we reached the important city of Chuhsing-fu, a walled city,5446still half-in-ruins, that was long occupied by the Mohammedans, and5447suffered terrible reprisals on its recapture by the Imperialists. For5448four days we had travelled at an average rate of one hundred and five li5449(thirty-five miles) a day. I must, however, note that these distances as5450estimated by Mr. Jensen, the constructor of the telegraph line, do not5451agree with the distances in Mr. Baber's itinerary. The Chinese distances5452in li agree in both estimates; but, whereas Mr. Jensen allows three li5453for a mile, Mr. Baber allows four and a-half, a wide difference indeed.5454For convenience sake I have made use of the telegraph figures, but Mr.5455Baber was so scrupulously accurate in all that he wrote that I have no5456doubt the telegraph distances are over-estimated.54575458We were again in a district almost exclusively devoted to the poppy; the5459valley-plains sparkled with poppy flowers of a multiplicity of tints.5460The days were pleasant, and the sun shone brightly; every plant was in5461flower; doves cooed in the trees, and the bushes in blossom were bright5462with butterflies. Lanes led between hedges of wild roses white with5463flower, and, wherever a creek trickled across the plain, its5464willow-lined borders were blue with forget-me-nots. And everywhere a5465peaceful people, who never spoke a word to the foreigner that was not5466friendly.54675468On the evening of the 24th, at a ruined town thirty li from Luho, we5469received our first check. It was at a walled town, with gateways and a5470pagoda that gave some indication of its former prosperity, prettily5471situated among the trees on the confines of a plain of remarkable5472fertility. Near sundown we passed down the one long street, all battered5473and dismantled, which is all that is left of the old town. News of the5474foreigner quickly spread, and the people gathered into the street to5475see me--no reception could be more flattering. We did not wait, but,5476pushing on, we passed out by the west gate and hastened on across the5477plain. But I noticed that Laohwan kept looking back at the impoverished5478town, shaking his head and stuttering "_pu-pu-pu-pu-hao! pu-pu-pu-hao!_"5479(bad! bad!) We had thus gone half a mile or so, when we were arrested by5480cries behind us, and our last chairen was seen running, panting, after5481us. We waited for him; he was absurdly excited, and could hardly speak.5482He made an address to me, speaking with great energy and gesticulation;5483but what was its purport, _Dios sabe_. When he had finished, not to be5484outdone in politeness, I thanked him in English for the kindly phrases5485in which he had spoken to me, assured him of my continued sympathy, and5486undertook to say that, if ever he came to Geelong, he would find there a5487house at his disposition, and a friend who would be ever ready to do him5488a service. He seemed completely mystified, and began to speak again,5489more excitedly than before. It was getting late, and a crowd was5490collecting, so I checked him by waving my left hand before my face and5491bawling at him with all my voice: "_Putung_, you stupid ass, _putung_ (I5492don't understand)! Can't you see I don't understand a word you say, you5493benighted heathen you? _Putung_, man, _putung_! Advance Australia, _dzo_5494(go)!" And, swinging open my umbrella, I walked on. His excitement5495increased--we must go back to the town; he seized me by the wrists, and5496urged me to go back. We had a slight discussion; his feet gave from5497under him and he fell down, and I was going on cheerfully when he burst5498out crying. This I interpreted to mean that he would get into trouble if5499I did not return, so, of course, I turned back at once, for the tears5500of a Chinaman are sadly affecting. Back, then, we were taken to an5501excellent inn in the main street, where a respectful _levee_ of the5502townsfolk had assembled to welcome me. A polite official called upon me,5503to whom I showed, with simulated indignation, my official card and my5504Chinese passport, and I hinted to him in English that this interference5505with my rights as a traveller from England, protected by the favour of5506the Emperor, would--let him mark my word--be made an international5507question. While saying this, I inadvertently left on my box, so that all5508might see it, the letter of introduction to the Brigadier-General in5509Tengyueh, which was calculated to give the natives an indication of the5510class of Chinese who had the privilege to be admitted to my friendship.5511The official was very polite and apologetic. I freely forgave him, and5512we had tea together.55135514He had done it all for the best. A moneyed foreigner was passing through5515his town near sundown without stopping to spend a single cash there. Was5516it not his duty, as a public-spirited man, to interfere and avert this5517loss, and compel the stranger to spend at least one night within his5518gates?55195520This was what I wrote at the time. I subsequently found that I had been5521sent for to come back because the road was believed to be dangerous,5522there was no secure resting-place, and the authorities could not5523guarantee my safety. Imagine a Chinese in a Western country acting with5524the bluster that I did, although in good humour; I wonder whether he5525would be treated with the courtesy that those Chinamen showed to me!55265527On the 25th an elderly chairen was ready to accompany us in the morning,5528and he remained with us all day. All day he was engrossed in deep5529thought. He spoke to no one, but he kept a watchful eye over his charge,5530never leaving me a moment, but dogging my very footsteps all the5531hundred li we travelled together. Poorly clad, he was better provided5532than his brother of yesterday in that he wore sandals, whereas the5533chairen of yesterday was in rags and barefoot. He was, of course,5534unprovided with weapon of any kind--it was moral force that he relied5535on. Over his shoulder was slung a bag from which projected his5536opium-pipe; a tobacco pipe and tobacco box hung at his girdle; a green5537glass bottle of crude opium he carried round his neck.55385539The chairen is the policeman of China, the lictor of the magistrate, the5540satellite of the official; the soldier is the representative of military5541authority. Now, China, in the person of her greatest statesman, Li Hung5542Chang, has, through the secretary of the Anti-Opium Society, called upon5543England "to aid her in the efforts she is now making to suppress opium."5544If, then, China is sincere in her alleged efforts to abolish opium, it5545is the chairen and the soldier who must be employed by the authorities5546to suppress the evil; yet I have never been accompanied by either a5547chairen or a soldier who did not smoke opium, nor have I to my knowledge5548ever met a chairen or a soldier who was not an opium-smoker. Through all5549districts of Yunnan, wherever the soil permits it, the poppy is grown5550for miles, as far as the sight can reach, on every available acre, on5551both sides of the road.55525553But why does China grow this poppy? Have not the _literati_ and elders5554of Canton written to support the schemes of the Anti-Opium Society in5555these thrilling words: "If Englishmen wish to know the sentiments of5556China, here they are:--If we are told to let things go on as they are5557going, then there is no remedy and no salvation for China. Oh! it makes5558the blood run cold, and we want in this our extremity to ask the5559question of High Heaven, what unknown crimes or atrocity have the5560Chinese people committed beyond all others that they are doomed to5561suffer thus?" (Cited by Mr. S. S. Mander, _China's Millions_, iv., 156.)55625563And the women of Canton, have they not written to the missionaries "that5564there is no tear that they shed that is not red with blood because of5565this opium?" ("China," by M. Reed, p. 63). Why, then, does China, while5566she protests against the importation of a drug which a Governor of5567Canton, himself an opium-smoker, described as a "vile excrementitious5568substance" ("Barrow's Travels," p. 153), sanction, if not foster, with5569all the weight of the authorities in the ever-extending opium-districts5570the growth of the poppy? To the Rev. G. Piercy (formerly of the W.M.S.,5571Canton), we are indebted for the following explanation of this anomaly:5572China, it appears, is growing opium in order to put a stop to5573opium-smoking.55745575"Moreover, China has not done with the evils of opium, even if our hands5576were washed of this traffic to-day. China in her desperation has invoked5577Satan to cast out Satan. She now grows her own opium, vainly dreaming5578that, if the Indian supply lapse, she can then deal with this rapidly5579growing evil. But Satan is not divided against himself; he means his5580kingdom to stand. Opium-growing will not destroy opium-smoking."5581(Missionary Conference of 1888, _Records_, ii., 546.)55825583"Yet the awful guilt remains," said the Ven. Archdeacon Farrar on a5584recent occasion in Westminster Abbey, "that we, 'wherever winds blow and5585waters roll,' have girdled the world with a zone of drunkenness, until I5586seem to shudder as I think of the curses, not loud but deep, muttered5587against our name by races which our fire-water has decimated and our5588vice degraded." (_National Righteousness_, December 1892, p. 4.)55895590And this patriotic utterance of a distinguished Englishman the Chinese5591will quote in unexpected support of the memorial "On the Restriction of5592Christianity" addressed to the Throne of China in 1884 by the High5593Commissioner Peng Yue-lin, which memorial stated in severe language that5594"_since the treaties have permitted foreigners from the West to spread5595their doctrines, the morals of the people have been greatly injured_."5596("The Causes of the Anti-Foreign Disturbances in China." Rev. Gilbert5597Reid, M.A., p. 9.)55985599Forty li from our sleeping place we came to the pretty town of5600Shachiaokai, on some undulating high ground well sheltered with trees.5601Justice had lately been here with her headsman and brought death to a5602gang of malefactors. Their heads, swinging in wooden cages, hung from5603the tower near the gateway. They could be seen by all persons passing5604along the road, and, with due consideration for the feelings of the5605bereaved relatives, they were hung near enough for the features to be5606recognised by their friends. Each head was in a cage of its own, and was5607suspended by the pigtail to the rim, so that it might not lie upside5608down but could by-and-by rattle in its box as dead men's bones should5609do. To each cage a white ticket was attached giving the name of the5610criminal and his confession of the offence for which he was executed.5611They were the heads of highway robbers who had murdered two travellers5612on the road near Chennan-chow, and it was this circumstance which5613accounted for the solicitude of the officials near Luho to prevent our5614being benighted in a district where such things were possible.56155616[Illustration: THE "EAGLE NEST BARRIER," ON THE ROAD BETWEEN YUNNAN AND5617TALIFU.]56185619Midway between Shachiaokai and Pupeng there was steep climbing to be5620done till we reached Ying-wu-kwan, the "Eagle Nest Barrier," which is5621more than 8000 feet above the sea. Then by very hilly and poor country5622we came to Pupeng, and, pursuing our way over a thickly-peopled plateau,5623we reached a break in the high land from which we descended into a wide5624and deep valley, skirted with villages and gleaming with sheets of5625water--the submerged rice-fields. At the foot of the steep was a poor5626mud town, but, standing back from it in the fields, was a splendid5627Taoist temple fit for a capital. In this village we were delayed for5628nearly an hour while my three men bargained against half the village for5629the possession of a hen that was all unconscious of the comments,5630flattering and deprecatory, that were being passed on its fatness. It5631was secured eventually for 260 cash, the vendors having declared that5632the hen was a family pet, hatched on a lucky day, that it had been5633carefully and tenderly reared, and that nothing in the world could5634induce them to part with it for a cash less than 350. My men with equal5635confidence, based upon long experience in the purchase of poultry,5636asserted that the real value of the hen was 200 cash, and that not a5637single cash more of the foreign gentleman's money could they5638conscientiously invest in such a travesty of a hen as _that_. But little5639by little each party gave way till they were able to _tomber d'accord_.56405641A pleasant walk across the busy plain brought us to Yunnan Yeh, where we5642passed the night.56435644On the 27th we had an unsatisfactory day's journey. We travelled only5645seventy li over an even road, yet with four good hours of daylight5646before us my men elected to stop when we came to the village of5647Yenwanshan. We had left the main road for some unknown reason, and were5648taking a short cut over the mountains to Tali. But a short-cut in China5649often means the longest distance, and I was sure that this short-cut5650would bring us to Tali a day later than if we had gone by the main5651road--in ten days, that is, from Yunnan, instead of the nine which my5652men had promised me. Laohwan, who, like most Chinaman I met, persisted5653in thinking that I was deaf, yelled to me in the presence of the village5654that the next stopping place was twenty miles distant, that "_mitte5655liao! mitte liao!_" ("there were no beans") on the way for the pony, and5656that assuredly we would reach Tali to-morrow, having given the pony the5657admirable rest that here offered. As he stammered these sentences the5658people supported what he said. Obviously their statements were _ex5659parte_, and were promoted solely by the desire to see the distinguished5660foreign mandarin sojourn for one night in their hungry midst. So here I5661was detained in a tumble-down inn that had formerly been a temple. All5662of us, men and master, were housed in the old guest-room. Beds were5663formed of disused coffin boards, laid between steps made of clods of dry5664clay; the floor was earth, the windows paper. The pony was feeding from5665a trough in the temple hall itself, an armful of excellent grass before5666it, while a bucket of beans was soaking for him in our corner. Other5667mules and ponies were stationed in the side pavilions where formerly5668were displayed the scenes of torture in the Buddhist Hells.56695670As I wrote at a table by the window, a crowd collected, stretching5671across the street and quarrelling to catch a glimpse of the foreign5672teacher and his strange method of writing, so different from the5673Chinese. Poor sickly people were these--of the ten in the first row5674three were suffering from goitre, one from strabismus, and two from5675ophthalmia. All were poorly clad and poorly nourished; all were very5676dirty, and their heads were unshaven of the growth of days. But, despite5677their poverty, nearly all the women, the children as well as the5678grandmothers, wore silver earrings of pretty filigree.56795680Now, even among these poor people, I noticed that there was a5681disposition rather to laugh at me than to open the eyes of wonder; and5682this is a peculiarity of the Chinese which every traveller will be5683struck with. It often grieved me. During my journey, although I was5684treated with undeniable friendliness, I found that the Chinese, instead5685of being impressed by my appearance, would furtively giggle when they5686saw me. But they were never openly rude like the coloured folk were in5687Jamaica, when, stranded in their beautiful island, I did them the honour5688to go as a "walk-foot buccra" round the sugar plantations from Ewarton5689to Montego Bay. Even poor ragged fellows, living in utter misery, would5690laugh and snigger at me when not observed, and crack jokes at the5691foreigner who was well-fed, well-clad, and well-mounted in a way you5692would think to excite envy rather than derision. But Chinese laughter5693seems to be moved by different springs from ours. The Chinaman makes5694merry in the presence of death. A Chinaman, come to announce to you the5695death of a beloved parent or brother, laughs heartily as he tells5696you--you might think he was overflowing with joy, but he is really sick5697and sore at heart, and is only laughing to deceive the spirits. So it5698may be that the poor beggars who laughed at that noble presence which5699has been the admiration of my friends in four continents, were moved to5700do so by the hope to deceive the evil spirits who had punished them with5701poverty, and so by their apparent gaiety induce them to relax the5702severity of their punishment.57035704To within two or three miles of this village the road was singularly5705level; I do not think that it either rose or fell 100 feet in twenty5706miles. Forty li from where we slept the night before, having previously5707left the main road, we came to the large walled town of Yunnan-hsien.5708The streets were crowded, for it was market day, and both sides of the5709main thoroughfares, especially in the vicinity of the Confucian Temple,5710were thronged with peasant women selling garden produce, turnips, beans5711and peas, and live fish caught in the lake beyond Tali. Articles of5712Western trade were also for sale--stacks of calico, braid, and thread,5713"new impermeable matches made in Trieste," and "toilet soap of the5714finest quality." I had a royal reception as I rode through the crowd,5715and the street where was situated the inn to which we went for lunch5716speedily became impassable. There was keen competition to see me. Two5717thieves were among the foremost, with huge iron crowbars chained to5718their necks and ankles, while a third prisoner, with his head pilloried5719in a _cangue_, obstructed the gaze of many. There was the most admirable5720courtesy shown me; it was the "foreign teacher" they wished to see, not5721the "foreign devil." When I rose from the table, half a dozen guests5722sitting at the other tables rose also and bowed to me as I passed out.5723Of all people I have ever met, the Chinese are, I think, the politest.5724My illiterate Laohwan, who could neither read nor write, had a courtesy5725of demeanour, a well-bred ease of manner, a graceful deference that5726never approached servility, which it was a constant pleasure to me to5727witness.57285729As regards the educated classes, there can be little doubt, I think,5730that there are no people in the world so scrupulously polite as the5731Chinese. Their smallest actions on all occasions of ceremony are5732governed by the most minute rules. Let me give, as an example, the5733method of cross-examination to which the stranger is subjected, and5734which is a familiar instance of true politeness in China.57355736When a well-bred Chinaman, of whatever station, meets you for the first5737time, he thus addresses you, first asking you how old you are:57385739"What is your honourable age?"57405741"I have been dragged up a fool so many years," you politely reply.57425743"What is your noble and exalted occupation?"57445745"My mean and contemptible calling is that of a doctor."57465747"What is your noble patronymic?"57485749"My poverty-struck family name is Mo."57505751"How many honourable and distinguished sons have you?"57525753"Alas! Fate has been niggardly; I have not even one little bug."57545755But, if you can truthfully say that you are the honourable father of5756sons, your interlocutor will raise his clasped hands and say gravely,5757"Sir, you are a man of virtue; I congratulate you." He continues--57585759"How many tens of thousands of pieces of silver have you?" meaning how5760many daughters have you?57615762"My yatows" (forked heads or slave children), "my daughters," you answer5763with a deprecatory shrug, "number so many."57645765So the conversation continues, and the more minute are the inquiries the5766more polite is the questioner.57675768Unlike most of the Western nations, the Chinese have an overmastering5769desire to have children. More than death itself the Chinaman fears to5770die without leaving male progeny to worship at his shrine; for, if he5771should die childless, he leaves behind him no provision for his support5772in heaven, but wanders there a hungry ghost, forlorn and forsaken--an5773"orphan" because he has no children. "If one has plenty of money," says5774the Chinese proverb, "but no children, he cannot be reckoned rich; if5775one has children, but no money, he cannot be considered poor." To have5776sons is a foremost virtue in China; "the greatest of the three unfilial5777things," says Mencius, "is to have no children." (Mencius, iv., pt. i.,577826).57795780In China longevity is the highest of the five grades of felicity.5781Triumphal arches are erected all over the kingdom in honour of those who5782have attained the patriarchal age which among us seems only to be5783assured to those who partake in sufficient quantity of certain5784fruit-salts and pills. Age when not known is guessed by the length of5785the beard, which is never allowed to grow till the thirty-second year.5786Now it happens that I am clean-shaven, and, as it is a well-known fact5787that the face of the European is an enigma to the Oriental, just as the5788face of the Chinaman is an inscrutable mystery to most of us, I have5789often been amused by the varying estimates of my age advanced by curious5790bystanders. It has been estimated as low as twelve--"look at the5791foreigner," they said, "there's a fine fat boy!"--and never higher than5792twenty-two. But it is not only in China that a youthful appearance has5793hampered me in my walk through life.57945795I remember that on one occasion, some years ago, I obliged a medical5796friend by taking his practice while he went away for a few days to be5797married. It was in a semi-barbarian village named Portree, in a5798forgotten remnant of Scotland called the Isle of Skye. The time was5799winter. The first case I was called to was that of a bashful matron, the5800baker's wife, who had lately given birth to her tenth child. I entered5801the room cheerfully. She looked me over critically, and then greatly5802disconcerted me by remarking that: "She was gey thankfu' to the Lord5803that it was a' by afore I cam', as she had nae wush to be meddled wi' by5804a laddie of nineteen." Yet I was two years older than the doctor who had5805attended her.58065807If in China you are so fortunate as to be graced with a beard, the5808Chinaman will add many years to your true age. In the agreeable company5809of one of the finest men in China, I once made a journey to the Nankow5810Pass in the Great Wall, north of Peking. My friend had a beard like a5811Welsh bard's, and, though a younger man than his years, forty-four,5812there was not a native who saw him, who did not gaze upon him with awe,5813as a possible Buddha, and not one who attributed to him an age less than5814eighty.58155816Next day, the 28th of April, despite my misgivings, my men fulfilled5817their promise, and led me into Tali on the ninth day out from Yunnan. We5818had come 307 miles in nine days. They walked all the way, living5819frugally on scanty rations. I walked only 210 miles; I was better fed5820than they, and I had a pony at my hand ready to carry me whenever I was5821tired.58225823My men thus earned a reward of eighteen pence each for doing thirteen5824stages in nine days. Long before daylight we were on our way. For miles5825and miles in the early morning we were climbing up the mountains, till5826we reached a plateau where the wind blew piercingly keen, and my fingers5827ached with the cold, and the rarefaction in the atmosphere made5828breathing uneasy. The road was lonely and unfrequented. We were5829accompanied by a muleteer who knew the way, by his sturdy son of twelve,5830and his two pack horses. By midday we had left the bare plateau, had5831passed the three pagoda peaks, and were standing on the brow of a steep5832hill overlooking the valleys of Chaochow and Tali. The plains were5833studded with thriving villages, in rich fields, and intersected with5834roadways lined with hedges. There on the left was the walled city of5835Chaochow, beyond, to the right, was the great lake of Tali, hemmed in by5836mountains, those beyond the lake thickly covered with snow, and rising58377000 feet above the lake, which itself is 7000 feet above the sea.58385839We descended into the valley, and, as we picked our way down the steep5840path, I could count in the lap of the first valley eighteen villages5841besides the walled city. Crossing the fields we struck the main road,5842and mingled with the stream of people who were bending their steps5843towards Hsiakwan. Many varieties of feature were among them, a diversity5844of type unlooked for by the traveller in China who had become habituated5845to the uniformity of type of the Chinese face. There were faces plainly5846European, others as unmistakably Hindoo, Indigenes of Yunnan province,5847Thibetans, Cantonese pedlars, and Szechuen coolies. A broad flagged road5848brought us to the important market town of Hsiakwan, which guards the5849southern pass to the Valley of Tali. It is on the main road going west5850to the frontier of Burma, and is the junction where the road turns north5851to Tali. It is a busy town. It is one of the most famous halting places5852on the main road to Burma. The two largest caravanserais in Western5853China are in Hsiakwan, and I do not exaggerate when I say that a5854regiment of British cavalry could be quartered in either of them. At a5855restaurant near the cross-road we had rice and a cup of tea, and a bowl5856of the vermicelli soup known as _mien_, the muleteer and his son sitting5857down with my men. When the time came to go, the muleteer, unrolling a5858string of cash from his waistband, was about to pay his share, when5859Laohwan with much civility refused to permit him. He insisted, but5860Laohwan was firm; had they been Frenchmen, they could not have been more5861polite and complimentary. The muleteer gave way with good grace, and5862Laohwan paid with my cash, and gained merit by his courtesy.58635864586558665867CHAPTER XVII.58685869THE CITY OF TALI--PRISONS--POISONING--PLAGUES AND MISSIONS.587058715872Three hours later we were in Tali. A broad paved road, smooth from the5873passage of countless feet, leads to the city. Rocky creeks drain the5874mountain range into the lake; they are spanned by numerous bridges of5875dressed stone, many of the slabs of which are well cut granite blocks5876eighteen feet in length. At a stall by the roadside excellent ices were5877for sale, genuine ices, made of concave tablets of pressed snow5878sweetened with treacle, costing one cash each--equal to one penny for5879three dozen. We passed the Temple to the Goddess of Mercy, and entered5880Tali by the south gate. Then by the yamen of the Titai and the Great5881Five Glory Gate, the northern entrance of what was for seventeen years5882the palace of the Mohammedan king during the rebellion, we turned down5883the East street to the _Yesu-tang_, the Inland Mission, where Mr. and5884Mrs. John Smith gave me a cordial greeting.58855886Tali has always been an important city. It was the capital of an5887independent kingdom in the time of Kublai Khan and Marco Polo. It was5888the headquarters of the Mohammedan Sultan or Dictator, Tu Wen Hsiu,5889during the rebellion, and seemed at one time destined to become the5890capital of an independent Moslem Empire in Western China.58915892The city surrendered to the Mohammedans in 1857. It was recaptured by5893the Imperialists under General Yang Yu-ko on January 15th, 1873, the5894Chinese troops being aided by artillery cast by Frenchmen in the arsenal5895of Yunnan and manned by French gunners. At its recapture the carnage was5896appalling; the streets were ankle-deep in blood. Of 50,000 inhabitants589730,000 were butchered. After the massacre twenty-four panniers of human5898ears were sent to Yunnan city to convince the people of the capital that5899they had nothing more to fear from the rebellion.59005901In March, 1873, Yang was appointed _Titai_ or Commander-in-chief of5902Yunnan Province, with his headquarters in Tali, not in the capital, and5903Tali has ever since been the seat of the most important military command5904in the province.59055906The subsequent history of Yang may be told in a few words. He assumed5907despotic power over the country he had conquered, and grew in power till5908his authority became a menace to the Imperial Government. They feared5909that he aspired to found a kingdom of his own in Western China, and5910recalled him to Peking--to do him honour. He was not to be permitted to5911return to Yunnan. At the time of his recall another rebellion had broken5912out against China--the rebellion of the French--and, like another Uriah,5913the powerful general was sent to the forefront in Formosa, where he was5914opportunely slain by a French bullet, or by a misdirected Chinese one.59155916After his death it was found that Yang had made a noble bequest to the5917City of Tali. During his residence he had built for himself a splendid5918yamen of granite and marble. This he had richly endowed and left as a5919free gift to the city as a college for students. It is one of the5920finest residences in China, and, though only seventy undergraduates were5921living there at the time of my visit, the rooms could accommodate in5922comfort many hundreds.59235924[Illustration: SNOW-CLAD MOUNTAINS BEHIND TALIFU.]59255926Tali is situated on the undulating ground that shelves gently from the5927base of snow-clad mountains down to the lake. The lower slopes of the5928mountain, above the town, are covered with myriads of grave-mounds,5929which in the distance are scarcely distinguishable from the granite5930blocks around them. Creeks and rills of running water spring from the5931melting of the snows far up the mountain, run among the grave-mounds,5932and are then trained into the town. The Chinese residents thus enjoy the5933privilege of drinking a diluted solution of their ancestors. Half-way to5934the lake, there is a huge tumulus of earth and stone over-grown with5935grass, in which are buried the bones of 10,000 Mohammedans who fell5936during the massacre. There is no more fertile valley in the world than5937the valley of Tali. It is studded with villages. Between the two passes,5938Hsiakwan on the south, and Shang-kwan on the north, which are distant5939from each other a long day's walk, there are 360 villages, each in its5940own plantation of trees, with a pretty white temple in the centre with5941curved roof and upturned gables. The sunny reaches of the lake are busy5942with fleets of fishing boats. The poppy, grown in small pockets by the5943margin of the lake, is probably unequalled in the world; the flowers, as5944I walked through the fields, were on a level with my forehead.59455946Tali is not a large city; its wall is only three and a half miles in5947circumference. Before the rebellion populous suburbs extended half-way5948to Hsiakwan, but they are now only heaps of rubble. In the town itself5949there are market-gardens and large open spaces where formerly there5950were narrow streets of Chinese houses. The wall is in fairly good5951repair, but there are no guns in the town, except a few old-fashioned5952cannon lying half buried in the ground near the north gate.59535954One afternoon we climbed up the mountain intending to reach a famous5955cave, "The Phoenix-eyed Cave" (_Fung-yen-tung_) which overlooks a5956precipice, of some fame in years gone by as a favourite spot for5957suicides. We did not reach the cave. My energy gave out when we were5958only half-way, so we sat down in the grass and, to use a phrase that I5959fancy I have heard before, we feasted our eyes on the scene before us.5960And here we gathered many bunches of edelweiss.59615962As we were coming back down the hill, picking our way among the graves,5963a pensive Chinaman stopped us to ask our assistance in finding him a5964lucky spot in which to bury his father, who died a year ago but was5965still above ground. He was sorry to hear that we could not pretend to5966any knowledge of such things. He was of an inquiring mind, for he then5967asked us if we had seen any precious stones in the hillside--every5968Chinaman knows that the foreigner with his blue eyes can see four feet5969underground--but he was again disappointed with our reply, or did not5970believe us.59715972At the poor old shrine to the God of Riches, half a dozen Chinamen in5973need of the god's good offices were holding a small feast in his honour.5974They had prepared many dishes, and, having "dedicated to the god the5975spiritual essence, were now about to partake of the insipid remains."5976"_Ching fan_," they courteously said to us when we approached down the5977path. "We invite (you to take) rice." We raised our clasped hands:5978"_Ching, ching_," we replied, "we invite (you to go on), we invite," and5979passed on. They were bent upon enjoyment. They were taking as an5980_aperitif_ a preliminary cup of that awful spirit _tsiu_, which is5981almost pure alcohol and can be burnt in lamps like methylated spirit.59825983On the level sward, between this poor temple and the city, the annual5984Thibetan Fair is held on the 17th, 18th, and 19th of April, when5985caravans of Thibetans, with herds of ponies, make a pilgrimage from5986their mountain villages to the ancient home of their forefathers. But5987the fair is falling into disfavour owing to the increasing number of5988likin-barriers on the northern trade routes.59895990There are many temples in Tali. The finest is the Confucian Temple, with5991its splendid halls and pavilions, in a beautiful garden. Kwanti, the God5992of War, has also a temple worthy of a god whose services to China in the5993past can never be forgotten. Every Chinaman knows, that if it had not5994been for the personal aid of this god, General Gordon could never have5995succeeded in suppressing the Taiping rebellion. In the present rebellion5996of the Japanese, the god appears to have maintained an attitude of5997strict neutrality.59985999The City Temple is near the drill-ground. As the Temple of a Fu city it6000contains the images of both Fu magistrate and Hsien magistrate, with6001their attendants. In its precincts the _Kwan_ of the beggars, (the6002beggar king or headman), is domiciled, who eats the Emperor's rice and6003is officially responsible for the good conduct of the guild of beggars.60046005In the main street there is a Memorial Temple to General Yang, who won6006the city back from the Mohammedans. But the temple where prayer is6007offered most earnestly, is the small temple near the _Yesu-tang_,6008erected to the goddess who has in her power the dispensation of the6009pleasures of maternity. Rarely did I pass here without seeing two or6010three childless wives on their knees, praying to the goddess to remove6011from them the sin of barrenness.60126013Some of the largest caravanserais I have seen in China are in Tali. One6014of the largest belongs to the city, and is managed by the authorities6015for the benefit of the poor, all profits being devoted to a poor-relief6016fund. There are many storerooms here, filled with foreign goods and6017stores imported from Burma, and useful wares and ornamental nick-nacks6018brought from the West by Cantonese pedlars. Prices are curiously low. I6019bought condensed milk, "Milkmaid brand," for the equivalent of _7d._ a6020tin. In the inn there is stabling accommodation for more than a hundred6021mules and horses, and there are rooms for as many drivers. The tariff6022cannot be called immoderate. The charges are: For a mule or horse per6023night, fodder included, one farthing; for a man per night, a supper of6024rice included, one penny.60256026Even larger than the city inn is the caravanserai where my pony was6027stabled; it is more like a barracks than an inn. One afternoon the6028landlord invited the missionary and me into his guest-room, and as I was6029the chief guest, he insisted, of course, that I should occupy the seat6030of honour on the left hand. But I was modest and refused to; he6031persisted and I was reluctant; he pushed me forward and I held back,6032protesting against the honour he wished to show me. But he would take no6033refusal and pressed me forward into the seat. I showed becoming6034reluctance of course, but I would not have occupied any other. By-and-by6035he introduced to me with much pride his aged father, to whom, when he6036came into the room, I insisted upon giving my seat, and humbly sat on6037an inferior seat by his side, showing him all the consideration due to6038his eighty years. The old man bore an extraordinary resemblance to6039Moltke. He had smoked opium, he told Mr. Smith, the missionary, for6040fifty years, but always in moderation. His daily allowance was two6041_chien_ of raw opium, rather more than one-fifth of an ounce, but he6042knew many Chinese, he told the missionary, who smoked daily five times6043as much opium as he did without apparent injury.60446045In Tali there are four chief officials: the Prefect or Fu Magistrate,6046the Hsien or City Magistrate, the Intendant or Taotai, and the Titai.6047The yamen of the Taotai is a humble residence for so important an6048official; but the yamen of the Titai, between the South Gate and the6049Five Glory Tower, is one of the finest in the province. The Titai is not6050only the chief military commander of the province of Yunnan, but he is a6051very much married man. An Imperialist, he has yet obeyed the Mohammedan6052injunction and taken to himself four wives in order to be sure of6053obtaining one good one. He has been abundantly blessed with children. In6054offices at the back of the Titai's yamen and within its walls, is the6055local branch of the Imperial Chinese telegraphs, conducted by two6056Chinese operators, who can read and write English a little, and can6057speak crudely a few sentences.60586059The City Magistrate is an advanced opium-smoker, a slave to the pipe,6060who neglects his duties. In his yamen I saw the wooden cage in which6061prisoners convicted of certain serious crimes are slowly done to death6062by starvation and exhaustion, as well as the wooden cages of different6063shape in which criminals of another class condemned to death are carried6064to and from the capital.60656066The City prison is in the Hsien's yamen, but permission to enter was6067refused me, though the missionary has frequently been admitted. "The6068prison," explained the Chinese clerk, "is private, and strangers cannot6069be admitted." I was sorry not to be allowed to see the prison, all the6070more because I had heard from the missionary nothing but praise of the6071humanity and justice of its management.60726073The gaols of China, or, as the Chinese term them, the "hells," just as6074the prison hulks in England forty years ago were known as "floating6075hells," have been universally condemned for the cruelties and6076deprivations practised in them. They are probably as bad as were the6077prisons of England in the early years of the present century.60786079The gaolers purchase their appointments, as they did in England in the6080time of John Howard, and, as was the case in England, they receive no6081other pay than what they can squeeze from the prisoners or the6082prisoners' friends. Poor and friendless, the prisoners fare badly. But I6083question if the cruelties practised in the Chinese gaols, allowing for6084the blunted nerve sensibility of the Chinaman, are less endurable than6085the condition of things existing in English prisons so recently as when6086Charles Reade wrote "It is Never Too Late to Mend." The cruelties of6087Hawes, the "punishment jacket," the crank, the dark cell, and6088starvation, "the living tortured, the dying abandoned, the dead kicked6089out of the way"; when boys of fifteen, like Josephs, were driven to6090self-slaughter by cruelty. These are statements published in 1856,6091"every detail of which was verified, every fact obtained, by research6092and observation." ("Life of Charles Reade," ii., 33.)60936094And it cannot admit, I think, of question that there are no cruelties6095practised in the Chinese gaols greater, even if there are any equal to6096the awful and degraded brutality with which the England of our fathers6097treated her convicts in the penal settlements of Norfolk Island, Fort6098Arthur, Macquarie Harbour, and the prison hulks of Williamstown. "The6099convict settlements were terrible cesspools of iniquity, so bad that it6100seemed, to use the words of one who knew them well, 'the heart of man6101who went to them was taken from him, and there was given to him the6102heart of a beast.'"61036104Can the mind conceive of anything more dreadful in China than the6105incident narrated by the Chaplain of Norfolk Island, the Rev. W.6106Ullathorne, D.D., afterwards Roman Catholic Bishop of Birmingham, in his6107evidence before the Commission of the House of Commons in 1838: "As I6108mentioned the names of those men who were to die, they one after6109another, as their names were pronounced, dropped on their knees and6110thanked God that they were to be delivered from that horrible place,6111whilst the others remained standing mute, weeping. It was the most6112horrible scene I have ever witnessed."61136114Those who have read Marcus Clarke's "For the Term of His Natural Life,"6115remember the powerfully-drawn character of Maurice Frere, the Governor6116of Norfolk Island. It is well known, of course, that the story is6117founded upon fact, and is a perfectly true picture of the convict days.6118The original of Maurice Frere is known to have been the late Colonel6119----, who was killed by the convicts in the prison hulk "Success," at6120Williamstown, in 1853. To this day there is no old lag that was ever6121exposed to his cruelty but reviles his memory. I once knew the convict6122who gave the signal for his murder. He was sentenced to death, but was6123reprieved and served a long term of imprisonment. The murder happened6124forty-one years ago, yet to this day the old convict commends the6125murder as a just act of retribution, and when he narrates the story he6126tells you with bitter passion that the "Colonel's dead, and, if there's6127a hell, he's frizzling there yet."61286129Captain Foster Fyans, a former Governor of Norfolk Island Convict6130Settlement, spent the last years of his life in the town I belong to,6131Geelong, in Victoria. The cruelties imposed on the convicts under his6132charge were justified, he declared, by the brutalised character of the6133prisoners. On one occasion, he used to tell, a band of convicts6134attempted to escape from the Island; but their attempt was frustrated by6135the guard. The twelve convicts implicated in the outbreak were put on6136their trial, found guilty, and sentenced to death by strangulation, as6137hanging really was in those days. Word was sent to headquarters in6138Sydney, and instructions were asked for to carry the sentence into6139effect. The laconic order was sent back from Sydney to "hang half of6140them." The Captain acknowledged the humour of the despatch, though it6141placed him in a difficulty. Which half should he hang, when all were6142equally guilty? In his pleasant way the Captain used to tell how he6143acted in the dilemma. He went round to the twelve condemned wretches,6144and asked each man separately if, being under sentence of death, he6145desired a reprieve or wished for death. As luck would have it, of the6146twelve men, six pleaded for life and six as earnestly prayed that they6147might be sent to the scaffold. So the Captain hanged the six men who6148wished to live, and spared the six men who prayed for death to release6149them from their awful misery. This is an absolutely true story, which I6150have heard from men to whom the Captain himself told it. Besides, it6151bears on its face the impress of truth. And yet we are accustomed to6152speak of the Chinese as centuries behind us in civilisation and6153humanity.61546155I went to two opium-poisoning cases in Tali, both being cases of6156attempted suicide. The first was that of an old man living not _at_ the6157South Gate as the messenger assured us, who feared to discourage us if6158he told the truth, but more than a mile beyond it. On our way we bought6159in the street some sulphate of copper, and a large dose made the old man6160so sick that he said he would never take opium again, and, if he did, he6161would not send for the foreign gentleman.61626163The other was that of a young bride, a girl of unusual personal6164attraction, only ten days married, who thus early had become weary of6165the pock-marked husband her parents had sold her to. She was dressed6166still in her bridal attire, which had not been removed since marriage;6167she was dressed in red--the colour of happiness. "She was dressed in her6168best, all ready for the journey," and was determined to die, because6169dead she could repay fourfold the injuries which she had received while6170living. In this case many neighbours were present, and, as all were6171anxious to prevent the liberation of the girl's evil spirit, I proved to6172them how skilful are the barbarian doctors. The bride was induced to6173drink hot water till it was, she declared, on a level with her neck,6174then I gave her a hypodermic injection of that wonderful emetic6175apomorphia. The effect was very gratifying to all but the patient.61766177Small-pox, or, as the Chinese respectfully term it, "Heavenly Flowers,"6178is a terrible scourge in Western China. It is estimated that two6179thousand deaths--there is a charming vagueness about all Chinese6180figures--from this disease alone occur in the course of a year in the6181valley of Tali. Inoculation is practised, as it has been for many6182centuries, by the primitive method of introducing a dried pock-scab, on6183a lucky day, into one of the nostrils. The people have heard of the6184results of Western methods of inoculation, and immense benefit could be6185conferred upon a very large community by sending to the Inland Mission6186in Talifu a few hundred tubes of vaccine lymph. Vaccination introduced6187into Western China would be a means, the most effective that could be6188imagined, to check the death rate over that large area of country which6189was ravaged by the civil war, and whose reduced population is only a6190small percentage of the population which so fertile a country needs for6191its development. Infanticide is hardly known in that section of Yunnan6192of which Tali may be considered the capital. Small-pox kills the6193children. There is no need for a mother to sacrifice her superfluous6194children, for she has none.61956196Another disease endemic in Yunnan is the bubonic plague, which is, no6197doubt, identical with the plague that has lately played havoc in Hong6198Kong and Canton. Cantonese peddlers returning to the coast probably6199carried the germs with them.62006201The China Inland Mission in Tali was the last of the mission stations6202which I was to see on my journey. This is the furthest inland of the6203stations of the Inland Mission in China. It was opened in 1881 by Mr.6204George W. Clarke, the most widely-travelled, with the single exception6205of the late Dr. Cameron, of all the pioneer missionaries of this brave6206society; I think Mr. Clarke told me that he has been in fourteen out of6207the eighteen provinces. His work here was not encouraging; he was6208treated with kindness by the Chinese, but they refused to accept the6209truth when he placed it before them.62106211"For the Bible and the Light of Truth," says Miss Guinness, in her6212charming but hysterical "Letters from the Far East"--a book that has6213deluded many poor girls to China--"For the Bible and the Light of Truth6214the Chinese cry with outstretched, empty, longing hands" (p. 173). But6215this allegation unhappily conflicts with facts when applied to Tali.62166217For the first eleven years the mission laboured here without any success6218whatever; but now a happier time seems coming, and no less than three6219converts have been baptised in the last two years.62206221There are now three missionaries in Tali--there are usually four; they6222are universally respected by the Chinese; they have made their little6223mission home one of the most charming in China. Mr. John Smith, who6224succeeded Mr. Clarke, has been ten years in Tali. He is welcomed6225everywhere, and in every case of serious sickness or opium-poisoning he6226is sent for. During all the time he has been in Tali he has never6227refused to attend a summons to the sick, whether by day or night. In the6228course of the year he attends, on an average, between fifty and sixty6229cases of attempted suicide by opium in the town or its environs, and, if6230called in time, he is rarely unsuccessful. Should he be called to a case6231outside the city wall and be detained after dark, the city gate will be6232kept open for him till he returns. The city magistrate has himself6233publicly praised the benevolence of this missionary, and said, "there is6234no man in Tali like Mr. Smith--would that there were others!" He is a6235Christian in word and deed, brave and simple, unaffected and6236sympathetic--the type of missionary needed in China--an honour to his6237mission. I saw the courageous man working here almost alone, far distant6238from all Western comforts, cut off from the world, and almost unknown,6239and I contrasted him with those other missionaries--the majority--who6240live in luxurious mission-houses in absolute safety in the treaty ports,6241yet whose courage and self-denial we have accustomed ourselves to6242praise in England and America, when with humble voices they parade the6243dangers they undergo and the hardships they endure in preaching, dear6244friends, to the "perishing heathen in China, God's lost ones!"62456246In addition to the three converts who have been baptised in Tali in the6247last two years, there are two inquirers--one the mission cook--who are6248nearly ready for acceptance. At the Sunday service I met the three6249converts. One is the paid teacher in the mission school; another is a6250humble pedlar; the third is a courageous native belonging to one of the6251indigenous tribes of Western China, a Minchia man, whose conversion,6252judged by all tests, is one of those genuine cases which bring real joy6253to the missionary. He has only recently been baptised. Every Sunday he6254comes in fifteen li from the small patch of ground he tills to the6255mission services. His son is at the mission school, and is boarded on6256the premises. There is a small school in connection with the mission6257under the baptised teacher, where eight boys and eight girls are being6258taught. They are learning quickly, their wonderful gifts of memory being6259a chief factor in their progress. At the service there was another6260worshipper, a sturdy boy of fourteen, who slept composedly all through6261the exhortation. If any boy should feel gratitude towards the kind6262missionaries it is he. They have reared him from the most degraded6263poverty, have taught him to read and write, and are now on the eve of6264apprenticing him to a carpenter. He was a beggar boy, the son of a6265professional beggar, who, with unkempt hair and in rags and filth, used6266to shamble through the streets gathering reluctant alms. The father6267died, and some friends would have sold his son to pay the expenses of6268his burial; but the missionaries intervened and, to save the son from6269slavery, buried his father. This action gave them some claim to help the6270boy, and the boy has accordingly been with them since in a comfortable,6271kindly home, instead of grovelling round the streets in squalor and6272nakedness.62736274The mission-house, formerly occupied by Mr. George Clarke is near the6275City Temple. We went to see it a day or two after my arrival. It is now6276in the possession of a family of Mohammedans, one of the very few Moslem6277families still living in the valley of Tali. "When we were in possession6278of the valley," said the father sorrowfully, "we numbered '12,000 tens'6279(120,000 souls), now we are '100 fives' (500 souls). Our men were slain,6280our women were taken in prey, only a remnant escaped the destroyer."6281Several members of the family were in the court when we entered, and6282among the men were three with marked Anglo-Saxon features, a peculiarity6283frequently seen in Western China, where every traveller has given a6284different explanation of the phenomenon. One especially moved my6285curiosity, for he possessed to an absurd degree the closest likeness to6286myself. Could I give him any higher praise than that?62876288That the Mohammedan Chinese is physically superior to his Buddhist6289countryman is acknowledged by all observers; there is a fearlessness and6290independence of bearing in the Mohammedan, a militant carriage that6291distinguishes him from the Chinese unbeliever. His religion is but a6292thinly diluted Mohammedanism, and excites the scorn of the true6293believers from India who witness his devotion, or rather his want of6294devotion.62956296One of the men talking to us in the old mission-house was a6297comical-looking fellow, whose head-dress differed from that of the6298other Chinese, in that, in addition to his queue, lappets of hair were6299drawn down his cheeks in the fashion affected by old ladies in England.6300I raised these strange locks--impudent curiosity is often polite6301attention in China--whereupon the reason for them was apparent. The body6302bequeathed to him by his fathers had been mutilated--he had suffered the6303removal of both ears. He explained to us how he came to lose them, but6304we knew even before he told us; "he had lost them in battle facing the6305enemy"--and of course we believed him. The less credulous would6306associate the mutilation with a case of theft and its detection and6307punishment by the magistrate; but "a bottle-nosed man," says the Chinese6308proverb, "may be a teetotaller and yet no one will think so."63096310Our milkman at the mission was a follower of the Prophet, and the milk6311he gave us was usually as reduced in quality as are his co-religionists6312in number. In the milk he supplied there was what a chemist describes as6313a remarkable absence of butter fat. Yet, when he was reproached for his6314deceit, he used piously to say, even when met coming from the well, "I6315could not put a drop of water in the milk, for there is a God up6316there"--and he would jerk his chin towards the sky--"who would see me if6317I did."63186319632063216322CHAPTER XVIII.63236324THE JOURNEY FROM TALI, WITH SOME REMARKS ON THE CHARACTER OF THE6325CANTONESE, CHINESE EMIGRANTS, CRETINS, AND WIFE-BEATING IN CHINA.632663276328The three men who had come with me the six hundred and seventeen miles6329from Chaotong left me at Tali to return all that long way home on foot6330with their well-earned savings. I was sorry to say good-bye to them; but6331they had come many miles further than they intended, and their friends,6332they said, would be anxious: besides Laohwan, you remember, was newly6333married.63346335I engaged three new men in their places. They were to take me right6336through to Singai (Bhamo). Every day was of importance now with four6337hundred and fifty miles to travel and the rainy season closing in.6338Laotseng was the name of the Chinaman whom I engaged in place of6339Laohwan. He was a fine young fellow, active as a deer, strong, and6340high-spirited. I agreed to pay him the fancy wage of _24s._ for the6341journey. He was to carry no load, but undertook, in the event of either6342of my coolies falling sick, to carry his load until a new coolie could6343be engaged. The two coolies I engaged through a coolie-hong. One was a6344strongly-built man, a "chop dollar," good-humoured, but of rare6345ugliness. The other was the thinnest man I ever saw outside a Bowery6346dime-show. He had the opium habit. He was an opium-eater rather than an6347opium-smoker; and he ate the ash from the opium-pipe, instead of the6348opium itself--the most vicious of the methods of taking opium. He was6349the nearest approach I saw in China to the Exeter Hall type of6350opium-eater, whose "wasted limbs and palsied hands" cry out against the6351sin of the opium traffic. Though a victim of the injustice of England,6352this man had never tasted Indian opium in his life, and, perishing as he6353was in body and soul, going "straight to eternal damnation," his "dying6354wail unheard," he yet undertook a journey that would have deterred the6355majority of Englishmen, and agreed to carry, at forced speed, a far6356heavier load than the English soldier is ever weighted with on march.6357The two coolies were to be paid 4 taels each (_12s._) for the twenty6358stages to Singai, and had to find their own board and lodging. But I6359also stipulated to give them _churo_ money (pork money) of 100 cash each6360at three places--Yungchang, Tengyueh, and Bhamo--100 cash each a day6361extra for every day that I detained them on the way, and, in addition, I6362was to reward them with 150 cash each a day for every day that they6363saved on the twenty days' journey, days that I rested not to count.63646365Of course none of the three men spoke a word of English. All were6366natives of the province of Szechuen, and all carried out their agreement6367to the letter.63686369On May 3rd I left Tali. The last and longest stage of all the journey6370was before me, a distance of some hundreds of miles, which I had to6371traverse before I could hope to meet another countryman or foreigner6372with whom I could converse. The two missionaries, Mr. Smith and Mr.6373Graham, kindly offered to see me on my way, and we all started together6374for Hsiakwan, leaving the men to follow.63756376Ten li from Tali we stopped to have tea at one of the many tea-houses6377that are grouped round the famous temple to the Goddess of Mercy, the6378_Kwanyin-tang_. The scene was an animated one. The open space between6379the temple steps and the temple theatre opposite was thronged with6380Chinese of strange diversity of feature crying their wares from under6381the shelter of huge umbrellas. There is always a busy traffic to6382Hsiakwan, and every traveller rests here, if only for a few minutes. For6383this is the most famous temple in the valley of Tali. The Goddess of6384Mercy is the friend of travellers, and no thoughtful Chinese should6385venture on a journey without first asking the favour of the goddess and6386obtaining from her priests a forecast of his success. The temple is a6387fine specimen of Chinese architecture. It was built specially to record6388a miracle. In the chief court, surrounded by the temple buildings, there6389is a huge granite boulder lying in an ornamental pond. It is connected6390by marble approaches, and is surmounted by a handsome monument of6391marble, which is faced on all sides with memorial tablets. This boulder6392was carried to its present position by the goddess herself, the monument6393and bridges were built to detain it where it lay, and the temple6394afterwards erected to commemorate an event of such happy augury for the6395beautiful valley.63966397[Illustration: MEMORIAL IN THE TEMPLE OF THE GODDESS OF MERCY, NEAR6398TALIFU.]63996400But the temple has not always witnessed only scenes of mercy. Two years6401ago a tragedy was enacted here of strange interest. At a religious6402festival held here in April, 1892, and attended by all the high6403officials and by a crowd of sightseers, a thief, taking advantage of the6404crush, tried to snatch a bracelet from the wrist of a young woman, and,6405when she resisted, he stabbed her. He was seized red-handed, dragged6406before the Titai, who happened to be present, and ordered to be6407beheaded there and then. An executioner was selected from among the6408soldiers; but so clumsily did he do the work, hacking the head off by6409repeated blows, instead of severing it by one clean cut, that the6410friends of the thief were incensed and vowed vengeance. That same night6411they lay in wait for the executioner as he was returning to the city,6412and beat him to death with stones. Five men were arrested for this6413crime; they were compelled to confess their guilt and were sentenced to6414death. As they were being carried out to the execution-ground, one of6415the condemned pointed to two men, who were in the crowd of sightseers,6416and swore that they were equally concerned in the murder. So these two6417men were also put on their trial, with the result that one was found6418guilty and was equally condemned to death. As if this were not6419sufficient, at the execution the mother of one of the prisoners, when6420she saw her son's head fall beneath the knife, gave a loud scream and6421fell down stone-dead. Nine lives were sacrificed in this tragedy: the6422woman who was stabbed recovered of her wound.64236424Hsiakwan was crowded, as it was market day. We had lunch together at a6425Chinese restaurant, and then, my men having come up, the kind6426missionaries returned, and I went on alone. A river, the Yangki River,6427drains the Tali Lake, and, leaving the south-west corner of the lake,6428flows through the town of Hsiakwan, and so on west to join the Mekong.6429For three days the river would be our guide. A mile from the town the6430river enters a narrow defile, where steep walls of rock rise abruptly6431from the banks. The road here passes under a massive gateway. Forts, now6432dismantled, guard the entrance; the pass could be made absolutely6433impregnable. At this point the torrent falls under a natural bridge of6434unusual beauty. We rode on by the narrow bank along the river, crossed6435from the left to the right bank, and continued on through a beautiful6436country, sweet with the scent of the honeysuckle, to the charming little6437village of Hokiangpu. Here we had arranged to stay. The inn was a large6438one, and very clean. Many of its rooms were already occupied by a large6439party of Cantonese returning home after the Thibetan Fair with loads of6440opium.64416442The Cantonese, using the term in its broader sense as applied to the6443natives of the province of Kuangtung, are the Catalans of China. They6444are as enterprising as the Scotch, adapt themselves as readily to6445circumstances, are enduring, canny, and successful; you meet them in the6446most distant parts of China. They make wonderful pilgrimages on foot.6447They have the reputation of being the most quick-witted of all Chinese.6448Large numbers come to Tali during the Thibetan Fair, and in the opium6449season. They bring all kinds of foreign goods adapted for Chinese6450wants--cheap pistols and revolvers, mirrors, scales, fancy pictures, and6451a thousand gewgaws useful as well as attractive--and they return with6452opium. They travel in bands, marching in single file, their carrying6453poles pointed with a steel spearhead two feet long, serving a double6454use--a carrying pole in peace, a formidable spear in trouble.64556456Everywhere they can be distinguished by their dress, by their enormous6457oiled sunshades, and by their habit of tricing their loads high up to6458the carrying pole. They are always well clad in dark blue; their heads6459are always cleanly shaved; their feet are well sandalled, and their6460calves neatly bandaged. They have a travelled mien about them, and carry6461themselves with an air of conscious superiority to the untravelled6462savages among whom they are trading. To me they were always polite and6463amiable; they recognised that I was, like themselves, a stranger far6464from home.64656466This is the class of Chinese who, emigrating from the thickly-peopled6467south-eastern provinces of China, already possess a predominant share of6468the wealth of Borneo, Sumatra, Java, Timor, the Celebes and the6469Philippine Islands, Burma, Siam, Annam and Tonquin, the Straits6470Settlements, Malay Peninsula, and Cochin China. "There is hardly a tiny6471islet visited by our naturalists in any part of these seas but Chinamen6472are found." And it is this class of Chinese who have already driven us6473out of the Northern Territory of Australia, and whose unrestricted entry6474into the other colonies we must prevent at all hazards. We cannot6475compete with Chinese; we cannot intermix or marry with them; they are6476aliens in language, thought, and customs; they are working animals of6477low grade but great vitality. The Chinese is temperate, frugal,6478hard-working, and law-evading, if not law-abiding--we all acknowledge6479that. He can outwork an Englishman, and starve him out of the6480country--no one can deny that. To compete successfully with a Chinaman,6481the artisan or labourer of our own flesh and blood would require to be6482degraded into a mere mechanical beast of labour, unable to support wife6483or family, toiling seven days in the week, with no amusements,6484enjoyments, or comforts of any kind, no interest in the country,6485contributing no share towards the expense of government, living on food6486that he would now reject with loathing, crowded with his fellows ten or6487fifteen in a room that he would not now live in alone, except with6488repugnance. Admitted freely into Australia, the Chinese would starve6489out the Englishman, in accordance with the law of currency--that of two6490currencies in a country the baser will always supplant the better. "In6491Victoria," says Professor Pearson, "a single trade--that of6492furniture-making--was taken possession of and ruined for white men6493within the space of something like five years." In the small colony of6494Victoria there are 9377 Chinese in a population of 1,150,000; in all6495China, with its population of 350,000,000, there are only 80816496foreigners (Dyer Ball), a large proportion of whom are working for6497China's salvation.64986499There is not room for both in Australia. Which is to be our colonist,6500the Asiatic or the Englishman?65016502In the morning we had another beautiful walk round the snow-clad6503mountains to the village of Yangpi, at the back of Tali. There was a6504long delay here. News of my arrival spread, and the people hurried along6505to see me. No sooner was I seated at an inn than two messengers from the6506yamen called for my passport. They were officious young fellows, sadly6507wanting in respect, and they asked for my passport in a noisy way that I6508did not like, so I would not understand them. I only smiled at them in6509the most friendly manner possible. I kept them for some time in a fever6510of irritation at their inability to make me understand; I listened with6511imperturbable calmness to their excited phrases till they were nearly6512dancing. Then I leisurely produced my passport, as if to satisfy a6513curiosity of my own, and began scanning it. Seeing this, they rudely6514thrust forth their hands to seize it; but I had my eye on them. "Not so6515quick, my friends," I said, soothingly. "Be calm; nervous irritability6516is a fruitful source of trouble. See, here is my passport; here is the6517official seal, and here the name of your unworthy servant. Now I fold it6518up carefully and--put it back in my pocket. But here is a copy, which6519is at your service. If you wish to show the original to the magistrate,6520I will take it to his honour myself, but out of my hands it does not6521pass." They looked puzzled, as they did not understand English; they6522debated a minute or two, and then went away with the copy, which in due6523time they politely returned to me.65246525If you wish to travel quickly in China, never be in a hurry. Appear6526unconscious of all that is passing; never be irritated by any delay, and6527assume complete indifference, even when you are really anxious to push6528on. Emulate, too, that leading trait in the Chinese character, and never6529understand anything which you do not wish to understand. No man on earth6530can be denser than a Chinaman, when he chooses.65316532Let me give an instance. It was not so long ago, in a police court in6533Melbourne, that a Chinaman was summoned for being in possession of a6534tenement unfit for human habitation. The case was clearly proved, and he6535was fined _L1_. But in no way could John be made to understand that a fine6536had been inflicted. He sat there with unmoved stolidity, and all that6537the court could extract from him was: "My no savvy, no savvy." After6538saying this in a voice devoid of all hope, he sank again into silence.6539Here rose a well-known lawyer. "With your worship's permission, I think6540I can make the Chinaman understand," he said. He was permitted to try.6541Striding fiercely up to the poor Celestial, he said to him in a loud6542voice, "John, you are fined two pounds." "No dam fear! Only _one_!"65436544Crossing now the river by a well-constructed suspension bridge, we had a6545fearful climb of 2000 feet up the mountain. My coolie "Bones" nearly6546died on the way. Then there was a rough descent by a jagged path down6547the rocky side of the mountain-river to the village of Taiping-pu. It6548was long after dark when we arrived; and an hour later stalked in the6549gaunt form of poor "Bones," who, instead of eating a good meal, coiled6550up on the _kang_ and smoked an opium-pipe that he borrowed from the6551chairen. All the next day, and, indeed, for every day till we reached6552Tengyueh, our journey was one of the most arduous I have ever known. The6553road has to surmount in succession parallel ridges of mountains. The6554road is never even, for it cannot remain where travelling is easiest,6555but must continually dip from the crest of the ranges to the depths of6556the valleys.65576558Shortly before reaching Huanglien-pu my pony cast a shoe, and it was6559some time before we were able to have it seen to; but I had brought half6560a dozen spare shoes with me, and by-and-by a muleteer came along who6561fixed one on as neatly as any farrier could have done, and gladly6562accepted a reward of one halfpenny. He kept the foot steady while6563shoeing it by lashing the fetlock to the pony's tail.65646565Caravans of cotton coming from Burma were meeting us all day. Miles away6566the booming of their gongs sounded in the silent hills; a long time6567afterwards their bells were heard jingling, and by-and-by the mules and6568horses appeared under their huge bales of cotton, the foremost decorated6569with scarlet tufts and plumes of pheasant tails, the last carrying the6570saddle and bedding of the headman, as well as the burly headman himself,6571perched above all. A man with a gong always headed the way; there was a6572driver to every five animals. In the sandy bed of the river at one place6573a caravan was resting. Their packs were piled in parallel rows; their6574horses browsed on the hillside. I counted 107 horses in this one6575caravan.65766577The prevailing pathological feature of the Chinese of Western Yunnan is6578the deformity goitre. It may safely be asserted that it is as common in6579many districts as are the marks of small-pox. Goitre occurs widely in6580Annam, Siam, Upper Burma, the Shan States, and in Western China as far6581as the frontier of Thibet. It is distinctly associated with cretinism6582and its interrupted intellectual development. And the disease must6583increase, for there is no attempt to check it. To be a "thickneck" is no6584bar to marriage on either side. The goitrous intermarry, and have6585children who are goitrous, or, rather, who will, if exposed to the same6586conditions as their parents, inevitably develop goitre. Frequently the6587disease is intensified in the offspring into cretinism, and I can6588conceive of no sight more disgusting than that which so often met our6589view, of a goitrous mother suckling her imbecile child. On one6590afternoon, among those who passed us on the road, I counted eighty6591persons with the deformity. On another day nine adults were climbing a6592path, by which we had just descended, every one of whom had goitre. In6593one small village, out of eighteen full-grown men and women whom I met6594in the street down which I rode, fifteen were affected. My diary in the6595West, especially from Yunnan City to Yungchang, after which point the6596cases greatly diminished in number, became a monotonous record of cases.6597At the mission in Tali three women are employed, and of these two are6598goitrous; the third, a Minchia woman, is free from the disease, and I6599have been told that among the indigenes the disease is much less common6600than among the Chinese. On all sides one encounters the horrible6601deformity, among all classes, of all ages. The disease early manifests6602itself, and I have often seen well-marked enlargement in children as6603young as eight. Turn any street corner in any town of importance in6604Western Yunnan and you will meet half a dozen cases; there must be few6605families in the western portion of the province free from the taint.66066607On a day, for example, like this (May 5th), when the road was more than6608usually mountainous, though that may have been an accident, my chairen6609was a "thickneck" and my two soldiers were "thicknecks." At the village6610of Huanglien-pu, where I had lunch, the landlady of the inn had a6611goitrous neck that was swelled out half-way to the shoulder, and her son6612was a slobbering-mouthed cretin with the intelligence of an animal. And6613among the people who gathered round me in a dull, apathetic way every6614other one was more or less marked with the disease and its attendant6615mental phenomena. Again, at the inn in a little mountain village, where6616we stopped for the night, mother, father, and every person in the house,6617to the number of nine, above the age of childhood was either goitrous or6618cretinous, dull of intelligence, mentally verging upon dementia in three6619cases, in two of which physical growth had been arrested at childhood.66206621Rarely during my journey to Burma was I offended by hearing myself6622called "_Yang kweitze_" (foreign devil), although this is the universal6623appellation of the foreigner wherever Mandarin is spoken in China.6624To-day, however, (May 6th), I was seated at the inn in the town of6625Chutung when I heard the offensive term. I was seated at a table in the6626midst of the accustomed crowd of Chinese. I was on the highest seat, of6627course, because I was the most important person present, when a6628bystander, seeing that I spoke no Chinese, coolly said the words "_Yang6629kweitze_" (foreign devil). I rose in my wrath, and seized my whip. "You6630Chinese devil" (_Chung kweitze_), I said in Chinese, and then I assailed6631him in English. He seemed surprised at my warmth, but said nothing, and,6632turning on his heel, walked uncomfortably away.66336634I often regretted afterwards that I did not teach the man a lesson, and6635cut him across the face with my whip; yet, had I done so, it would have6636been unjust. He called me, as I thought, "_Yang kweitze_," but I have no6637doubt, having told the story to Mr. Warry, the Chinese adviser to the6638Government of Burma, that he did not use these words at all, but others6639so closely resembling them that they sounded identically the same to my6640untrained ear, and yet signified not "foreign devil," but "honoured6641guest." He had paid me a compliment; he had not insulted me. The6642Yunnanese, Mr. Warry tells me, do not readily speak of the devil for6643fear he should appear.66446645On my journey I made it a rule, acting advisedly, to refuse to occupy6646any other than the best room in the inn, and, if there was only one6647room, I required that the best bed in the room, as regards elevation,6648should be given to me. So, too, at every inn I insisted that the best6649table should be given me, and, if there were already Chinese seated at6650it, I gravely bowed to them, and by a wave of my hand signified that it6651was my pleasure that they should make way for the distinguished6652stranger. When there was only the one table, I occupied, as by right,6653its highest seat, refusing to sit in any other. I required, indeed, by6654politeness and firmness, that the Chinese take me at my own valuation.6655And they invariably did so. They always gave way to me. They recognised6656that I must be a traveller of importance, despite the smallness of my6657retinue and the homeliness of my attire; and they acknowledged my6658superiority. Had I been content with a humbler place, it would quickly6659have been reported along the road, and, little by little, my complacence6660would have been tested. I am perfectly sure that, by never verging from6661my position of superiority, I gained the respect of the Chinese, and it6662is largely to this I attribute the universal respect and attention shown6663me during the journey. For I was unarmed, entirely dependent upon the6664Chinese, and, for all practical purposes, inarticulate. As it was, I6665never had any difficulty whatever.66666667Chinese etiquette pays great attention to the question of position; so6668important, indeed, is it that, when a carriage was taken by Lord6669Macartney's Embassy to Peking as a present, or, as the Chinese said, as6670tribute to the Emperor Kienlung, great offence was caused by the6671arrangement of the seats requiring the driver to sit on a higher level6672than His Majesty. A small enough mistake surely, but sufficient to mar6673the success of an expedition which the Chinese have always regarded as6674"one of the most splendid testimonials of respect that a tributary6675nation ever paid their Court."66766677On the morning of May 7th, as we were leaving the village where we had6678slept the night before, we were witnesses of a domestic quarrel which6679might well have become a tragedy. On the green outside their cabin a6680husband with goitre, enraged against his goitrous wife, was kept from6681killing her by two elderly goitrous women. All were speaking with6682horrible goitrous voices as if they had cleft palates, and the husband6683was hoarse with fury. Jealousy could not have been the cause of the6684quarrel, for his wife was one of the most hideous creatures I have seen6685in China. Throwing aside the bamboo with which he was threatening her,6686the husband ran into the house, and was out again in a moment6687brandishing a long native sword with which he menaced speedy death to6688the joy of his existence. I stood in the road and watched the6689disturbance, and with me the soldier-guard, who did not venture to6690interfere. But the two women seized the angry brute and held him till6691his wife toddled round the corner. Now, if this were a determined woman,6692she could best revenge herself for the cruelty that had been done her by6693going straightway and poisoning herself with opium, for then would her6694spirit be liberated, ever after to haunt her husband, even if he escaped6695punishment for being the cause of her death. If in the dispute he had6696killed her, he would be punished with "strangulation after the usual6697period," the sentence laid down by the law and often recorded in the6698_Peking Gazette_ (_e.g._, May 15th, 1892), unless he could prove her6699guilty of infidelity, or want of filial respect for his parents, in6700which case his action would be praiseworthy rather than culpable. If,6701however, in the dispute the wife had killed her husband, or by her6702conduct had driven him to suicide, she would be inexorably tied to the6703cross and put to death by the "_Ling chi_," or "degrading and slow6704process." For a wife to kill her husband has always been regarded as a6705more serious crime than for a husband to kill his wife; even in our own6706highly favoured country, till within a few years of the present century,6707the punishment for the man was death by hanging, but in the case of the6708woman death by burning alive.67096710Let me at this point interpolate a word or two about the method of6711execution known as the _Ling chi_. The words are commonly, and quite6712wrongly, translated as "death by slicing into 10,000 pieces"--a truly6713awful description of a punishment whose cruelty has been6714extraordinarily misrepresented. It is true that no punishment is more6715dreaded by the Chinese than the _Ling chi_; but it is dreaded, not6716because of any torture associated with its performance, but because of6717the dismemberment practised upon the body which was received whole from6718its parents. The mutilation is ghastly and excites our horror as an6719example of barbarian cruelty: but it is not cruel, and need not excite6720our horror, since the mutilation is done, not before death, but after.6721The method is simply the following, which I give as I received it6722first-hand from an eye-witness:--The prisoner is tied to a rude cross:6723he is invariably deeply under the influence of opium. The executioner,6724standing before him, with a sharp sword makes two quick incisions above6725the eyebrows, and draws down the portion of skin over each eye, then he6726makes two more quick incisions across the breast, and in the next moment6727he pierces the heart, and death is instantaneous. Then he cuts the body6728in pieces; and the degradation consists in the fragmentary shape in6729which the prisoner has to appear in heaven. As a missionary said to me:6730"He can't lie out that he got there properly when he carries with him6731such damning evidence to the contrary."67326733[Illustration: THE DESCENT TO THE RIVER MEKONG.]67346735In China immense power is given to the husband over the body of his6736wife, and it seems as if the tendency in England were to approximate to6737the Chinese custom. Is it not a fact that, if a husband in England6738brutally maltreats his wife, kicks her senseless, and disfigures her for6739life, the average English bench of unpaid magistrates will find6740extenuating circumstances in the fact of his being the husband, and will6741rarely sentence him to more than a month or two's hard labour?67426743674467456746CHAPTER XIX.67476748THE MEKONG AND SALWEEN RIVERS--HOW TO TRAVEL IN CHINA.674967506751To-day, May 7th, we crossed the River Mekong, even at this distance from6752Siam a broad and swift stream. The river flows into the light from a6753dark and gloomy gorge, takes a sharp bend, and rolls on between the6754mountains. Where it issues from the gorge a suspension bridge has been6755stretched across the stream. A wonderful pathway zigzags down the face6756of the mountain to the river, in an almost vertical incline of 2000ft.6757At the riverside an embankment of dressed stone, built up from the rock,6758leads for some hundreds of feet along the bank, where there would6759otherwise have been no foothold, to the clearing by the bridge. The6760likin-barrier is here, and a teahouse or two, and the guardian temple.6761The bridge itself is graceful and strong, swinging easily 30ft. above6762the current; it is built of powerful chains, carried from bank to bank6763and held by masses of solid masonry set in the bed-rock. It is 60 yards6764long and 10ft. wide, is floored with wood, and has a picket parapet6765supported by lateral chains. From the river a path led us up to a small6766village, where my men rested to gather strength. For facing us were the6767mountain heights, which had to be escaladed before we could leave the6768river gulch. Then with immense toil we climbed up the mountain path by6769a rocky staircase of thousands of steps, till, worn out, and with6770"Bones" nearly dead, we at length reached the narrow defile near the6771summit, whence an easy road brought us in the early evening to Shuichai6772(6700ft.).67736774In the course of one afternoon we had descended 2000ft. to the river6775(4250ft. above the sea), and had then climbed 2450ft. to Shuichai. And6776the ascent from the river was steeper than the descent into it; yet the6777railway which is to be built over this trade-route between Burma and6778Yunnan will have other engineering difficulties to contend with even6779greater than this.67806781My soldier to-day was a boy of fifteen or sixteen. He was armed with a6782revolver, and bore himself valiantly. But his revolver was more6783dangerous in appearance than in effect, for the cylinder would not6784revolve, the hammer was broken short off, and there were no cartridges.6785Everywhere the weapon was examined with curiosity blended with awe, and6786I imagine that the Chinese were told strange tales of its deadliness.67876788Next morning we continued by easy gradients to Talichao (7700ft.),6789rising 1000ft. in rather less than seven miles. It was bitterly cold in6790the mists of the early morning. But twenty miles further the road dipped6791again to the sunshine and warmth of the valley of Yungchang, where, in6792the city made famous by Marco Polo, we found comfortable quarters in an6793excellent inn.67946795Yungchang is a large town, strongly walled. It is, however, only a6796remnant of the old city, acres of houses having been destroyed during6797the insurrection, when for three years, it is said, Imperialists and6798Mohammedans were contending for its possession. There is a telegraph6799station in the town. The streets are broad and well-paved, the inns6800large, and the temples flourishing. One fortunate circumstance the6801traveller will notice in Yungchang--there is a marked diminution in the6802number of cases of goitre. And the diminution is not confined to the6803town, but is apparent from this point right on to Burma.68046805Long after our arrival in Yungchang my opium-eating coolie "Bones" had6806not come, and we had to wait for him in anger and annoyance. He had my6807hamper of eatables and my bundle of bedding. Tired of waiting for him, I6808went for a walk to the telegraph office and was turning to come back,6809when I met the faithful skeleton, a mile from the inn, walking along as6810if to a funeral, his neck elongating from side to side like a camel's, a6811lean and hungry look in his staring eyes, his bones crackling inside his6812skin. Continuing in the direction that he was going when I found him, he6813might have reached Thibet in time, but never Burma. I led him back to6814the hotel, where he ruefully showed me his empty string of cash, as if6815that had been the cause of his delay; he had only 6 cash left, and he6816wanted an advance.68176818This was the worst coolie I had in my employ during my journey. But he6819was a good-natured fellow and honest. He was better educated, too, than6820most of the other coolies, and could both read and write. His dress on6821march was characteristic of the man. He was nearly naked; his clothes6822hardly hung together; he wore no sandals on his feet; but round his neck6823he carried a small earthenware phial of opium ash. In the early stages6824he delayed us all an hour or two every day, but he improved as we went6825further. And then he was so long and thin, so grotesque in his gait, and6826afforded me such frequent amusement, that I would not willingly have6827exchanged him for the most active coolie in China.68286829[Illustration: INSIDE VIEW OF A SUSPENSION BRIDGE IN FAR WESTERN CHINA.]68306831On the 9th we had a long and steep march west from the plain of6832Yungchang. At Pupiao I had a public lunch. It was market day, and the6833country people enjoyed the rare pleasure of seeing a foreigner feed. The6834street past the inn was packed in a few minutes, and the innkeeper had6835all he could do to attend to the many customers who wished to take tea6836at the same time as the foreigner. I was now used to these6837demonstrations. I could eat on with undisturbed equanimity. On such6838occasions I made it a practice, when I had finished and was leaving the6839inn, to turn round and bow gravely to the crowd, thanking them in a few6840kindly words of English, for the reception they had accorded me. At the6841same time I took the opportunity of mentioning that they would6842contribute to the comfort of future travellers, if only they would pay a6843little more attention to their table manners. Then, addressing the6844innkeeper, I thought it only right to point out to him that it was6845absurd to expect that one small black cloth should wipe all cups and6846cup-lids, all tables, all spilt tea, and all dishes, all through the6847day, without getting dirty. Occasionally, too, I pointed out another6848defect of management to the innkeeper, and told him that, while I6849personally had an open mind on the subject, other travellers might come6850his way who would disapprove, for instance--he would pardon my6851mentioning it--of the manure coolie passing through the restaurant with6852his buckets at mealtime, and halting by the table to see the stranger6853eat.68546855When I spoke in this way quite seriously and bowed, those whose eyes met6856mine always bowed gravely in return. And for the next hour on the track6857my men would tell each other, with cackles of laughter, how Mo Shensen,6858their master, mystified the natives.68596860From Pupiao we had a pleasant ride over a valley-plain, between hedges6861of cactus in flower and bushes of red roses, past graceful clumps of6862bamboo waving like ostrich feathers. By-and-by drizzling rain came on6863and compelled us to seek shelter in the only inn in a poor6864out-of-the-way hamlet. But I could not stop here, because the best room6865in the inn was already occupied by a military officer of some6866distinction, a colonel, on his way, like ourselves, to Tengyueh. An6867official chair with arched poles fitted for four bearers was in the6868common-room; the mules of his attendants were in the stables, and were6869valuable animals. The landlord offered me another room, an inferior one;6870but I waved the open fingers of my left hand before my face and said,6871"_puyao! puyao!_" (I don't want it, I don't want it). For I was not so6872foolish or inconsistent as to be content with a poorer quarter of the6873inn than that occupied by the officer, whatever his button. I could not6874acknowledge to the Chinese that any Chinaman travelling in the Middle6875Kingdom was my equal, let alone my superior. Refusing to remain, I6876waited in the front room until the rain should lift and allow us to6877proceed. But we did not require to go on. It happened as I expected. The6878Colonel sent for me, and, bowing to me, showed by signs that one half6879his room was at my service. In return for his politeness he had the6880privilege of seeing me eat. With both hands I offered him in turn every6881one of my dishes. Afterwards I showed him my photographs--I treated him,6882indeed, with proper condescension.68836884On the 10th we crossed the famous River Salween (2600 ft.). Through an6885open tableland, well grassed and sparsely wooded, we came at length to6886the cleft in the hills from which is obtained the first view of the6887river valley. There was a small village here, and, while we were taking6888tea, a soldier came hurriedly down the road, who handed me a letter6889addressed in Chinese. I confess that at the moment I had a sudden6890misgiving that some impediment was to be put in the way of my journey.6891But it was nothing more than a telegram from Mr. Jensen in Yunnan,6892telling me of the decision of the Chinese Government to continue the6893telegraph to the frontier of Burma. The telegram was written by the6894Chinese operator in Yungchang in a neat round hand, without any error of6895spelling; it had come to Yungchang after my departure, and had been6896courteously forwarded by the Chinese manager. The soldier who brought it6897had made a hurried march of thirty-eight miles before overtaking me, and6898deserved a reward. I motioned Laotseng, my cash-bearer, to give him a6899present, and he meanly counted out 25 cash, and was about to give them,6900when I ostentatiously increased the amount to 100 cash. The soldier was6901delighted; the onlookers were charmed with this exhibition of Western6902munificence. Suppose a rich Chinese traveller in England, who spoke no6903English, were to offer Tommy Atkins twopence halfpenny for travelling on6904foot thirty-eight miles to bring him a telegram, having then to walk6905back thirty-eight miles and find himself on the way, would the English6906soldier bow as gratefully as did his perishing Chinese brother when I6907thus rewarded him?69086909We descended by beautiful open country into the Valley of the Shadow of6910Death--the valley of the River Salween. No other part of Western China6911has the evil repute of this valley; its unhealthiness is a by-word. "It6912is impossible to pass," says Marco Polo; "the air in summer is so impure6913and bad and any foreigner attempting it would die for certain."69146915The Salween was formerly the boundary between Burma and China, and it is6916to be regretted that at the annexation of Upper Burma England did not6917push her frontier back to its former position. But the delimitation of6918the frontier of Burma is not yet complete. No time could be more6919opportune for its completion than the present, when China is distracted6920by her difficulties with Japan. China disheartened could need but little6921persuasion to accede to the just demand of England that the frontier of6922Burma shall be the true south-western frontier of China--the Salween6923River.69246925There are no Chinese in the valley, nor would any Chinaman venture to6926cross it after nightfall. The reason of its unhealthiness is not6927apparent, except in the explanation of Baber, that "border regions,6928'debatable grounds,' are notoriously the birthplace of myths and6929marvels." There can be little doubt that the deadliness of the valley is6930a tradition rather than a reality.69316932By flights of stone steps we descended to the river, where at the6933bridge-landing, we were arrested by a sight that could not be seen6934without emotion. A prisoner, chained by the hands and feet and cooped in6935a wooden cage, was being carried by four bearers to Yungchang to6936execution. He was not more than twenty-one years of age, was6937well-dressed, and evidently of a rank in life from which are recruited6938few of the criminals of China. Yet his crime could not have been much6939graver. On the corner posts of his cage white strips of paper were6940posted, giving his name and the particulars of the crime which he was so6941soon to expiate. He was a burglar who had escaped from prison by killing6942his guard, and had been recaptured. Unlike other criminals I have seen6943in China, who laugh at the stranger and appear unaffected by their lot,6944this young fellow seemed to feel keenly the cruel but well-deserved fate6945that was in store for him. Three days hence he would be put to death by6946strangulation outside the wall of Yungchang.69476948[Illustration: THE RIVER SALWEEN, THE FORMER BOUNDARY BETWEEN CHINA AND6949BURMA.]69506951Another of those remarkable works which declare the engineering skill of6952the Chinese, is the suspension bridge which spans the Salween by a6953double loop--the larger loop over the river, the smaller one across the6954overflow. A natural piece of rock strengthened by masonry, rising from6955the river bed, holds the central ends of both loops. The longer span is695680 yards in length, the shorter 55; both are 12ft. wide, and are formed6957of twelve parallel chain cables, drawn to an appropriate curve. A rapid6958river flows under the bridge, the rush of whose waters can be heard high6959up the mountain slopes.69606961None but Shans live in the valley. They are permitted to govern6962themselves under Chinese supervision, and preserve their own laws and6963customs. They have a village near the bridge, of grass-thatched huts and6964open booths, where travellers can find rest and refreshment, and where6965native women prettily arrayed in dark-blue, will brew you tea in6966earthenware teapots. Very different are the Shan women from the Chinese.6967Their colour is much darker; their head-dress is a circular pile formed6968of concentric folds of dark-blue cloth; their dress closely resembles6969with its jacket and kilt the bathing dress of civilisation; their arms6970are bare, they have gaiters on their legs, and do not compress their6971feet. All wear brooches and earrings, and other ornaments of silver6972filigree.69736974From the valley the main road rises without intermission 6130 feet to6975the village of Fengshui-ling (8730 feet), a climb which has to be6976completed in the course of the afternoon. We were once more among the6977trees. Pushing on till I was afraid we should be benighted, we reached6978long after dark an encampment of bamboo and grass, in the lonely bush,6979where the kind people made us welcome. It was bitterly cold during the6980night, for the hut I slept in was open to the air. My three men and the6981escort must have been even colder than I was. But at least we all slept6982in perfect security, and I cannot praise too highly the constant care of6983the Chinese authorities to shield even from the apprehension of harm one6984whose only protection was his British passport.69856986All the way westward from Yunnan City I was shadowed both by a6987yamen-runner and a soldier; both were changed nearly every day, and the6988further west I went the more frequently were they armed. The6989yamen-runner usually carried a long native sword only, but the soldier,6990in addition to his sword, was on one occasion, as we have seen, armed6991with the relics of a revolver that would not revolve. On May 10th, for6992the first time, the soldier detailed to accompany me was provided with a6993rusty old musket with a very long barrel. I examined this weapon with6994much curiosity. China is our neighbour in Eastern Asia, and is, it is6995often stated, an ideal power to be intrusted with the government of the6996buffer state called for by French aggression in Siam. In China, it is6997alleged, we have a prospective ally in Asia, and it is preferable that6998England should suffer all reasonable indignities and humilities at her6999hands rather than endanger any possible relations, which may7000subsequently be entered into, with a hypothetically powerful neighbour.70017002On my arrival in Burma I was often amused by the serious questions I was7003asked concerning the military equipment of the Chinese soldiers of7004Western Yunnan. The soldier who was with me to-day was a type of the7005warlike sons of China, not only in the province bordering on Burma, but,7006with slight differences, all over the Middle Kingdom. Now, physically,7007this man was fit to be drafted into any army in the world, but, apart7008from his endurance, his value as a fighting machine lay in the weapon7009with which the military authorities had armed him. This weapon was7010peculiar; I noted down its peculiarities on the spot. In this weapon the7011spring of the trigger was broken so that it could not be pulled; if it7012had been in order, there was no cap for the hammer to strike; if there7013had been a cap, it would have been of no use because the pinhole was7014rusted; even if the pinhole had been open, the rifle would still have7015been ineffective because it was not loaded, for the very good reason7016that the soldier had not been provided with powder, or, if he had, he7017had been compelled to sell it in order to purchase the rice which the7018Emperor, "whose rice he ate," had neglected to send him.70197020An early start in the morning and we descended quickly to the River7021Shweli.70227023[Illustration: THE RIVER SHWELI AND ITS SUSPENSION BRIDGE.]70247025The Salween River is at an elevation of 2600 feet. Forty-five li further7026the road reaches at Fengshui-ling a height of 8730, from which point, in7027thirty-five li, it dips again to the River Shweli, 4400 feet above sea7028level. There was the usual suspension bridge at the river, and the7029inevitable likin-barrier. For the first time the Customs officials7030seemed inclined to delay me. I was on foot, and separated from my men by7031half the height of the hill. The collectors, and the underlings who are7032always hanging about the barriers, gathered round me and interrogated me7033closely. They spoke to me in Chinese, and with insufficient deference.7034The Chinese seem imbued with the mistaken belief that their language is7035the vehicle of intercourse not only within the four seas, but beyond7036them, and are often arrogant in consequence. I answered them in English.7037"I don't understand one word you say, but, if you wish to know," I said,7038energetically, "I come from Shanghai." "Shanghai," they exclaimed, "he7039comes from Shanghai!" "And I am bound for Singai" (Bhamo);--"Singai,"7040they repeated, "he is going to Singai!"--"unless the Imperial7041Government, suspicious of my intentions, which the meanest intelligence7042can see are pacific, should prevent me, in which case England will find7043a coveted pretext to add Yunnan to her Burmese Empire." Then, addressing7044myself to the noisiest, I indulged in some sarcastic speculations upon7045his probable family history, deduced from his personal peculiarities,7046till he looked very uncomfortable indeed. Thereupon I gravely bowed to7047them, and, leaving them in dumb astonishment, walked on over the bridge.7048They probably thought I was rating them in Manchu, the language of the7049Emperor. Two boys staggering under loads of firewood did not escape so7050easily, but were detained and a log squeezed from each wherewith to7051light the likin fires.70527053A steep climb of another 3000 or 4000 feet over hills carpeted with7054bracken, with here and there grassy swards, pretty with lilies and7055daisies and wild strawberries, and then a quick descent, and we were in7056the valley of Tengyueh (5600ft.). A plain everywhere irrigated, flanked7057by treeless hills; fields shut in by low embankments; villages in7058plantations round its margin; black-faced sheep in flocks on the7059hillsides; and, away to the right the crenellated walls of Tengyueh. A7060stone-flagged path down the centre of the plain led us into the town. We7061entered by the south gate, and, turning to the left, were conducted into7062the telegraph compound, where I was to find accommodation, the clerk in7063charge of the operators being able to speak a few words of English. I7064was an immediate object of curiosity.70657066706770687069CHAPTER XX.70707071THE CITY OF TENGYUEH--THE CELEBRATED WUNTHO SAWBWA--SHAN SOLDIERS.707270737074I was given a comfortable room in the telegraph offices, but I had7075little privacy. My room was thronged during all the time of my visit.7076The first evening I held an informal and involuntary reception, which7077was attended by all the officials of the town, with the dignified7078exception of the Brigadier-General. The three members of the Chinese7079Boundary Commission, which had recently arranged with the British7080Commission the preliminaries to the delimitation of the boundary between7081Burma and China, were here, disputing with clerks, yamen-runners, and7082chair-coolies for a sight of my photographs and curiosities. The7083telegraph Manager Pen, Yeh (the magistrate), and a stalwart soldier7084(Colonel Liu), formed the Commission, and they retain hallowed7085recollections of the benignity of the Englishmen, and the excellence of7086their champagne. Colonel Liu proved to be the most enlightened member of7087the party. He is a tall, handsome fellow, fifty years of age, a native7088of Hunan, the most warlike and anti-foreign province in China. He was7089especially glad to see a foreign doctor. The gallant Colonel confided to7090me a wish that had long been uppermost in his heart. From some member,7091unknown, of the British Commission he had learnt of the marvellous7092rejuvenating power of a barbarian medicine--could I get him some?7093_Could I get him a bottle of hair-dye?_ Unlike his compatriots, who7094regard the external features of longevity as the most coveted attribute7095of life, this gentleman, in whose brain the light of civilisation was7096dawning, wished to frustrate the doings of age. Could I get him a bottle7097of hair-dye? He was in charge of the fort at Ganai, two days out on the7098way to Bhamo, and would write to the officer in charge during his7099absence directing him to provide me with an escort worthy of my7100benefaction.71017102One celebrity, who lives in the neighbourhood of Tengyueh, did not7103favour me with a visit. That famous dacoit, the outlawed Prince of7104Wuntho--the Wuntho Sawbwa--lives here, an exile sheltered by the Chinese7105Government. A pure Burmese himself, the father-in-law of the amiable7106Sawbwa of Santa, he is believed by the Government of Burma to have been7107"concerned in all the Kachin risings of 1892-1893." A reward of 50007108rupees is offered for his head, which will be paid equally whether the7109head be on or off the shoulders. Another famous outlaw, the Shan Chief7110Kanhliang, is also believed to be in hiding in the neighbourhood of7111Tengyueh. The value of _his_ head has been assessed at 2000 rupees.71127113Tengyueh is more a park than a town. The greater part of the city within7114the walls is waste land or gardens. The houses are collected mainly near7115the south gate, and extend beyond the south gate on each side of the7116road for half a mile on the road to Bhamo. There is an excellent wall in7117admirable order, with an embankment of earth 20ft. in width. But I saw7118no guns of any kind whatever, nor did I meet a single armed man in the7119town or district.71207121Tengyueh is so situated that the invading army coming from Burma will7122find a pleasant pastime in shelling it from the open hills all around7123the town. This was the last stronghold of the Mohammedans. It was7124formerly a prosperous border town, the chief town in all the fertile7125valley of the Taiping. It was in the hands of the rebels till June 10th,71261873, when it was delivered over to the Imperialists to carnage and7127destruction. The valley is fertile and well populated, and prosperity is7128quickly returning to the district.71297130There is only one yamen in Tengyueh of any pretension, and it is the7131official residence of a red-button warrior, the Brigadier-General7132(_Chentai_) Chang, the successor, though not, of course, the immediate7133successor, of Li-Sieh-tai, who was concerned in the murder of Margary7134and the repulse of the expedition under Colonel Horace Browne in 1875. A7135tall, handsome Chinaman is Chang, of soldierly bearing and blissful7136innocence of all knowledge of modern warfare. Yungchang is the limit of7137his jurisdiction in one direction, the Burmese boundary in the other;7138his only superior officer is the Titai in Tali.71397140The telegraph office adjoins the City Temple and Theatre of Tengyueh. At7141this time the annual festival was being celebrated in the temple.7142Theatrical performances were being given in uninterrupted succession7143daily for the term of one month. Play began at sunrise, and the curtain7144fell, or would have fallen if there had been a curtain, at twilight. Day7145was rendered hideous by the clangour of the instruments which the7146blunted senses of Chinese have been misguided into believing are7147musical. Already the play, or succession of plays, had continued fifteen7148days, and another thirteen days had yet to be endured before its7149completion. Crowds occupied the temple court during the performance,7150while a considerable body of dead-heads witnessed the entertainment from7151the embankment and wall overlooking the open stage. My host, the7152telegraph Manager Pen, and his two friends Liu and Yeh, were given an7153improvised seat of honour outside my window, and here they sat all day7154and sipped tea and cracked jokes. No actresses were on the stage; the7155female parts were taken by men whose make-up was admirable, and who7156imitated, with curious fidelity, the voice and gestures of women. The7157dresses were rich and varied. Scene-shifters, band, supers, and friends7158remained on the stage during the performance, dodging about among the7159actors. There is no drop curtain in a Chinese theatre, and all scenes7160are changed on the open stage before you. The villain, whose nose is7161painted white, vanquished by triumphant virtue, dies a gory death; he7162remains dead just long enough to satisfy you that he _is_ dead, and then7163gets up and serenely walks to the side. There is laughter at sallies of7164indecency, and the spectators grunt their applause. The Chinaman is7165rarely carried away by his feelings at the theatre; indeed, it may be7166questioned if strong emotion is ever aroused in his breast, except by7167the first addresses of the junior members of the China Inland Mission,7168the thrilling effect of whose Chinese exhortations is recorded every7169month in _China's Millions_.71707171The Manager of the telegraph, to show his good feeling, presented me7172with a stale tin of condensed milk. His second clerk and operator was7173the most covetous man I met in China. He begged in turn for nearly every7174article I possessed, beginning with my waterproof, which I did not give7175him, and ending with the empty milk tin, which I did, for "Give to him7176that asketh," said Buddha, "even though it be but a little." The chief7177operator in charge of the telegraph offices speaks a little English, and7178is the medium by which English messages and letters are translated into7179Chinese for the information of the officials. His name is Chueh. His7180method of translation is to glean the sense of a sentence by the7181probable meaning, derived from an inaccurate Anglo-Chinese dictionary,7182of the separate words of the sentence. He is a broken reed to trust to7183as an interpreter. Chueh is not an offensively truthful man. When he7184speaks to you, you find yourself wondering if you have ever met a7185greater liar than he. "Three men's strength," he says, "cannot prevail7186against truth;" yet he is, I think, the greatest liar I have met since I7187left Morocco. Indeed, the way he spoke of my head boy Laotseng, who was7188undoubtedly an honest Chinese, and the opinion Laotseng emphatically7189held of Chueh, was a curious repetition of an experience that I had not7190long ago in Morocco. I was living in Tangier, when I had occasion to go7191to Fez and Mequinez. My visit was arranged so hurriedly that I had no7192means of learning what was the degree of personal esteem attaching to7193the gentleman, a resident of Tangier, who was to be my companion. I7194accordingly interrogated the hotel-keeper, Mr. B. "What kind of a man is7195D.?" I asked. "Not a bad fellow," he replied, "if he wasn't such a7196blank, blank awful liar!" On the road to Wazan I became very friendly7197with D., and one day questioned him as to his private regard for Mr. B.7198of the hotel. "A fine fellow B. seems," I said, "very friendly and7199entertaining. What do you think of him?" "What do I think of him?" he7200shouted in his falsetto. "I _know_ he's the biggest blank liar in7201Morocco." It was pleasant to meet, even in Morocco, such a rare case of7202mutual esteem.72037204My pony fared badly in Tengyueh. There was a poor stable in the7205courtyard with a tiled roof that would fall at the first shower. There7206were no beans. The pony had to be content with rice or paddy, which it7207disliked equally. The rice was _1-1/2d._ the 7-1/2lbs. There was no7208grass, Chueh said, to be obtained in the district. He assured me so on7209his honour, or its Chinese equivalent; but I sent out and bought some in7210the street round the corner.72117212Silver in Tengyueh is the purest Szechuen or Yunnanese silver. Rupees7213are also current, and at this time were equivalent to 400 cash--the tael7214at the same time being worth 1260 cash. Every 10 taels, costing me7215_30s._ in Shanghai, I could exchange in Tengyueh for 31 rupees. Rupees7216are the chief silver currency west from Tengyueh into Burma.72177218On May 31st I had given instructions that we were to leave early, but my7219men, who did not sleep in the telegraph compound, were late in coming.7220To still further delay me, at the time of leaving no escort had made its7221appearance. I did not wait for it. We marched out of the town7222unaccompanied, and were among the tombstones on the rise overlooking the7223town when the escort hurriedly overtook us. It consisted of a7224quiet-mannered chairen and two soldiers, one of whom was an impudent cub7225that I had to treat with every indignity. He was armed with a sword7226carried in the folds of his red cincture, in which was also concealed an7227old muzzle-loading pistol, formidable to look at but unloaded. This was7228one of the days on my journey when I wished that I had brought a7229revolver, not as a defence in case of danger, for there was no danger,7230but as a menace on occasion of anger.72317232Rain fell continuously. At a small village thronged with muleteers from7233Bhamo we took shelter for an hour. The men sipping tea under the7234verandahs had seen Europeans in Bhamo, and my presence evoked no7235interest whatever. Many of these strangers possessed an astonishing7236likeness to European friends of my own. Contact with Europeans, causing7237the phenomena of "maternal impression," was probably in a few cases7238accountable for the moulding of their features, but the general7239prevalence of the European type has yet to be explained. "My conscience!7240Who could ever have expected to meet _you_ here?" I was often on the7241point of saying to some Chinese Shan or Burmese Shan in whom, to my7242confusion, I thought I recognised a college friend of my own.72437244Leaving the village, we followed the windings of the River Taiping,7245coasting along the edge of the high land on the left bank of the river.72467247[Illustration: THE SUBURB BEYOND THE SOUTH GATE OF TENGYUEH. (Stalls7248under the Umbrellas.)]72497250Rain poured incessantly; the creeks overflowed; the paths became7251watercourses and were scarcely fordable. "Bones," my opium-eating coolie7252with the long neck, slipped into a hole which was too deep even for his7253long shanks, and all my bedding was wetted. It was ninety li to Nantien,7254the fort we were bound to beyond Tengyueh, and we finished the distance7255by sundown. The town is of little importance. It is situated on an7256eminence and is surrounded by a wall built, with that strange spirit of7257contrariness characteristic of the Chinese, and because it incloses a7258fort, more weakly than any city wall. It is not more substantial nor7259higher than the wall round many a mission compound. Some 400 soldiers7260are stationed in the fort, which means that the commander draws the pay7261for 1000 soldiers, and represents the strength of his garrison as 1000.7262Their arms are primitive and rusty muzzle-loaders of many patterns;7263there are no guns to be seen, if there are any in existence--which is7264doubtful. The few rusty cast-iron ten-pounders that lie _hors de combat_7265in the mud have long since become useless. There may be ammunition in7266the fort; but there is none to be seen. It is more probable, and more in7267accordance with Chinese practice in such matters, that the ammunition7268left by his predecessor (if any were left, which is doubtful) has long7269ago been sold by the colonel in command, whose perquisite this would7270naturally be.72717272The fort of Nantien is a fort in name only--it has no need to be7273otherwise, for peace and quiet are abroad in the valley. Besides, the7274mere fact of its being called a fort is sufficiently misleading to the7275neighbouring British province of Burma, where they are apt to picture a7276Chinese fort as a structure seriously built in some accordance with7277modern methods of fortification.72787279I was given a comfortable room in a large inn already well filled with7280travellers. All treated me with pleasant courtesy. They were at supper7281when I entered the room, and they invited me to share their food. They7282gave me the best table to myself, and after supper they crowded into7283another room in order to let me have the room to myself.72847285Next day we continued along the sandy bed of the river, which was here7286more than a mile in width. The river itself, shrunk now into its7287smallest size, flowed in a double stream down the middle. Then we left7288the river, and rode along the high bank flanking the valley. All paved7289roads had ended at Tengyueh, and the track was deeply cut and jagged by7290the rains. At one point in to-day's journey the road led up an almost7291vertical ascent to a narrow ledge or spur at the summit, and then fell7292as steeply into the plain again. It was a short-cut, that, as you would7293expect in China, required five times more physical effort to compass7294than did the longer but level road which it was intended to save. So7295narrow is the ridge that the double row of open sheds leaves barely room7296for pack mules to pass. The whole traffic on the caravan route to Burma7297passes by this spot. The long bamboo sheds with their grass roofs are7298divided into stalls, where Shan women in their fantastic turbans, with7299silver bracelets and earrings, their lips and teeth stained with7300betel-juice, sit behind the counters of raised earth, and eagerly7301compete for the custom of travellers. More than half the women had7302goitre. Before them were laid out the various dishes. There were pale7303cuts of pork, well soaked in water to double their weight, eggs and7304cabbage and salted fish, bean curds, and a doubtful tea flavoured with7305camomile and wild herbs. There were hampers of coarse grass for the7306horses, and wooden bowls of cooked rice for the men, while hollow7307bamboos were used equally to bring water from below, to hold sheaves of7308chopsticks where the traveller helped himself, and to receive the cash.7309Trade was busy. Muleteers are glad to rest here after the climb, if only7310to enjoy a puff of tobacco from the bamboo-pipe which is always carried7311by one member of the party for the common use of all.73127313Descending again into the river valley, I rode lazily along in the sun,7314taking no heed of my men, who were soon separated from me. The broad7315river-bed of sand was before me as level as the waters of a lake. As I7316was riding slowly along by myself, away from all guard, I saw7317approaching me in the lonely plain a small body of men. They were moving7318quickly along in single file, and we soon met and passed each other.7319They were three Chinese Shan officers on horseback, dressed in Chinese7320fashion, and immediately behind them were six soldiers on foot, who I7321saw were Burmese or Burmese Shans. They were smart men, clad in loose7322jerseys and knickerbockers, with sun-hats and bare legs, and they7323marched like soldiers. Cartridge-belts were over their left shoulders,7324and Martini-Henry rifles, carried muzzle foremost, on their right. I7325took particular note of them because they were stepping in admirable7326order, and, though small of stature, I thought they were the first armed7327men I had met in all my journey across China who could without shame be7328presented as soldiers in any civilised country.73297330They passed me, but seemed struck by my appearance; and I had not gone a7331dozen yards before they all stopped by a common impulse, and when I7332looked back they were still there in a group talking, with the officers'7333horses turned towards me; and it was very evident I was the subject of7334their conversation. I was alone at the time, far from all my men,7335without weapon of any kind. I was dressed in full Chinese dress and7336mounted on an unmistakably Chinese pony. I rode unconcernedly on, but I7337must confess that I did not feel comfortable till I was assured that7338they did not intend to obtrude an interview upon me. At length, to my7339relief, the party continued on its way, while I hurried on to my7340coolies, and made them wait till my party was complete. I was probably7341alarmed without any reason. But it was not till I arrived in Burma that7342I learnt that this was the armed escort of the outlawed Wuntho Sawbwa,7343the dacoit chief who has a price set on his head. The soldiers' rifles7344and cartridge-belts had been stripped from the dead bodies of British7345sepoys, killed on the frontier in the Kachin Hills.73467347My men, when we were all together again, indicated to me by signs that7348I would shortly meet an elephant, and I thought that at last I was about7349to witness the realisation of that story, everywhere current in Western7350China, of the British tribute from Burma. Sure enough we had not gone7351far when, at the foot of a headland which projected into the plain, we7352came full upon a large elephant picking its way along the margin of the7353rocks--a remarkable sight to my Chinese. Its scarlet howdah was empty;7354its trappings were scarlet; the mahout was a Shan. It was the elephant7355of the Wuntho Prince--a little earlier and I might have had the7356privilege of meeting the dacoit himself. The elephant passed7357unconcernedly on, and we continued down the plain of sand to the village7358of Ganai, where we were to stay the night.73597360It was market-day in the town. A double row of stalls extended down the7361main street, each stall under the shelter of a huge umbrella. Japanese7362matches from Osaka were for sale here, and foreign nick-nacks, needles7363and braid and cotton, and Manchester dress stuffs mixed with the7364multitudinous articles of native produce. This is a Shan town, but large7365numbers of native women--Kachins--were here also with their ugly black7366faces, and coarse black fringes hiding their low foreheads. Far away7367from the town an obliging Shan had attached himself to us as guide. He7368was dressed in white cotton jacket and dark-blue knickerbockers, with a7369dark-blue sash round his waist. He was barelegged, and rode as the7370Chinese do, and as you would expect them to do who do everything _al7371reves_, with the heel in the stirrup instead of the toe. His turban was7372dark-blue, and the pigtail was coiled up under it, and did not hang down7373from under the skull cap as with the Chinese. When I rode into the town7374accompanied by the guide, all the people forsook the market street and7375followed the illustrious stranger to the inn which had been selected for7376his resting-place. It was a favourite inn, and was already crowded. The7377best room was in possession of Chinese travellers, who were on the road7378like myself. They were dozing on the couches, but what must they do when7379I entered the room but, thinking that I should wish to occupy it by7380myself, rise and pack up their things, and one after another move into7381another apartment adjoining, which was already well filled, and now7382became doubly so. Their thoughtfulness and courtesy charmed me. They7383must have been more tired than I was, but they smiled and nodded7384pleasantly to me as they left the room, as if they were grateful to me7385for putting them to inconvenience. They may be perishing heathen, I7386thought, but the average deacon or elder in our enlightened country7387could scarcely be more courteous.73887389Ganai is a mud village thatched with grass. It is a military station7390under the command of the red-button Colonel Liu, whom I met in Tengyueh.7391The Colonel had earned his bottle of hair-dye. He had written to have me7392provided with an escort, and by-and-by the two officers who were to7393accompany me on the morrow came in to see me. As many spectators as7394could find elbow-room squeezed into my room behind them. Both were7395gentlemanly young fellows, very amiable and inquisitive, and keenly7396desirous to learn all they could concerning my honourable family. Their7397curiosity was satisfied. By the help of my Chinese phrase-book I gave7398them all particulars, and a few more. You see it was important that I7399should leave as favourable an impression as possible for the benefit of7400future travellers. More than one of my ancestors I brought to life again7401and endowed with a patriarchal age and a beard to correspond. As to my7402own age they marvelled greatly that one so young-looking could be so7403old, and when, in answer to their earnest question, I modestly confessed7404that I was already the unhappy possessor of two unworthy wives, five7405wretched sons, and three contemptible daughters, their admiration of my7406virtue increased tenfold.74077408The officers left me after this, but till late at night I held _levees_7409of the townsfolk, our landlady, who was most zealous, no sooner7410dismissing one crowd than another pressed into its place. The courtyard,7411I believe, remained filled till early in the morning, but I was allowed7412to sleep at last.74137414A large crowd followed me out of the town in the morning, and swarmed7415with me across the beautiful sward, as level as the Oval, which here7416widens into the country. No guest was ever sped on his way with a7417kindlier farewell. The fort is outside the town; we passed it on our7418left; it is a square inclosure of considerable size, inclosed by a mud7419wall 15 feet high; it is in the unsheltered plain, and presents no7420formidable front to an invader. At each of the four corners outside the7421square are detached four-sided watch-towers. No guns of any kind are7422mounted on the walls, and there are no sentries; one could easily7423imagine that the inclosure was a market-square, but imagination could7424never picture it as a serious obstacle to an armed entry into Western7425China. The river was well on our right. The plain down which we rode is7426of exceeding richness and highly cultivated, water being trained into7427the paddy-fields in the same way that everywhere prevails in China7428proper. Buffaloes were ploughing--wearily plodding through mud and water7429up to their middles. We were now among the Shans, and those working in7430the fields were Shans, not Chinese. Ganai, Santa, and other places are7431but little principalities or Shan States, governed by hereditary7432princelets or Sawbwas, and preserving a form of self-government under7433the protection of the Chinese. There are no more charming people in the7434world than the Shans. They are courteous, hospitable, and honest, with7435all the virtues and few of the vices of Orientals. "The elder brothers7436of the Siamese, they came originally from the Chinese province of7437Szechuen, and they can boast of a civilisation dating from twenty-three7438centuries B.C." So Terrien de Lacouperie tells us, who had a happy7439faculty of drawing upon his imagination for his facts.74407441Under the wide branches of a banyan tree I made my men stop, for I was7442very tired, and while they waited I lay down for an hour on the grass7443and had a refreshing sleep. While I slept, the rest of the escort sent7444to "_sung_" me to Santa arrived. Within a few yards of my resting place7445there is a characteristic monument, dating from the time when Burma7446occupied not only this valley but the fertile territory beyond it, and7447beyond Tengyueh to the River Salween. It is a solid Burmese pagoda,7448built of concentric layers of brick and mortar, and surmounted with a7449solid bell-shaped dome that is still intact. It stands alone on the7450plain near a group of banyans, and its erection no doubt gained many7451myriads of merits for the conscience-stricken Buddhist who found the7452money to build it. All goldleaf has been peeled off the pagoda years7453ago.74547455It was a picturesque party that now enfiladed into the wide stretch of7456sand which in the rainy season forms the bed of the river. Mounted on7457his white pony, there was the inarticulate European who had discarded7458his Chinese garb and was now dressed in the aesthetic garments of the7459Australian bush; there were his two coolies and Laotseng his boy, none7460of whom could speak any English, the two officers in their loose Chinese7461clothes, mounted on tough little ponies, and eight soldiers. They were7462Shans of kindly feature, small and nimble fellows, in neat7463uniforms--green jackets edged with black and braided with yellow, yellow7464sashes, and loose dark-blue knickerbockers--the uniform of the Sawbwa of7465Ganai. They were armed with Remington rifles, carried their cartridges7466in bandoliers, and seemed to be of excellent fighting material. All7467their accoutrements were in good order.74687469Now we had to cross the broad stream, here running with a swift current7470over the sand, in channels of varying depths that are frequently7471changing. For the width of nearly half a mile at the crossing place the7472water was never shallower than to my knee, nor deeper than to my waist.7473We all crossed safely, but, to my tribulation, the soldier who was7474carrying my two boxes tripped in the deepest channel and let both boxes7475slip from the carrying pole into the water. All the notes and papers7476upon which this valuable record is founded were much damaged. But it7477might have been worse. I had a presentiment that an accident would7478happen, and had waded back to the channel and was standing by at the7479time. But for this the papers might have been floated down to the7480Irrawaddy and been lost to the world--loss irreparable!74817482The sun was very hot. I laid out my things on the bank and dried them.7483Long and narrow dugouts, as light and swift as the string-test gigs of7484civilisation, paddled or poled, were gliding with extraordinary speed7485down the channel near the bank. Riding then a little way, we dismounted7486under a magnificent banyan tree, one of the finest specimens, I should7487think, in the world. Ponies and men were dwarfed into Lilliputians under7488the amazing canopy of its branches. A number of villagers, come to see7489the foreigner, were clambering like monkeys over its roots, which7490"writhed in fantastic coils" over half an acre. Their village was hard7491by, a poor array of mud houses; the teak temple to which we were7492conducted was raised on piles in the centre of the village. The temple7493was lumbered like an old curiosity shop with fragmentary gods and torn7494missals. Yet the ragged priest in his smirched yellow gown, and shaven7495head that had been a week unshaven, seemed to enjoy a reputation for no7496common sanctity, to judge by the reverence shown him by my followers,7497and the contemptuous indifference with which he regarded their7498obeisance. He was club-footed and could only hobble about with7499difficulty--an excuse he would, no doubt, urge for the disorder of his7500sanctuary. To me, of course, he was very polite, and gave me the best7501seat he had, while Laotseng prepared me a bowl of cocoa. Then we rode7502along the right bank of the river, but kept moving away from the stream7503till in the distance across the plain at the foot of the hills, we saw7504the Shan town of Santa, the end of our day's stage.75057506Native women, returning from the town, were wending their way across the7507plain--lank overgrown girls with long thin legs and overhanging mops of7508hair like deck-swabs. They were a favourite butt of my men, who chaffed7509them in the humorous Eastern manner, with remarks that were, I am7510afraid, more coarse than witty. Kachins are not virtuous. Their customs7511preclude such a possibility. No Japanese maiden is more innocent of7512virtue than a Kachin girl.75137514751575167517CHAPTER XXI.75187519THE SHAN TOWN OF SANTA, AND MANYUEN, THE SCENE OF CONSUL MARGARY'S7520MURDER.752175227523It was market day in Santa, and the accustomed crowd gathered round me7524as I stood in the open square in front of the Sawbwa's yamen. I was hot7525and hungry, for it was still early in the afternoon, and the attentions7526of the people were oppressive. Presently two men pushed their way7527through the spectators, and politely motioning to me to follow them,7528they led me to a neighbouring temple, to the upper storey, where the7529side pavilion off the chief hall was being prepared for my reception. My7530quarters overlooked the main court; the pony was comfortably stabled in7531the corner below me. Nothing could have been pleasanter than the7532attention I received here. Two foreign chairs were brought for my use,7533and half a dozen dishes of good food and clean chopsticks were set7534before me. The chief priest welcomed me, whose smiling face was7535good-nature itself. With clean-shaven head and a long robe of grey, with7536a rosary of black and white beads hung loosely from his neck, the kind7537old man moved about my room giving orders for my comfort. He held7538authority over a number of priests, some in black, others in yellow, and7539over a small band of choristers. Religion was an active performance in7540the temple, and the temple was in good order, with clean matting and7541well-kept shrines, with strange pictures on the walls of elephants and7542horses, with legends and scrolls in Burmese as well as in Chinese.75437544Towards evening the Santa Sawbwa, the hereditary prince (what a7545privilege it was to meet a prince! I had never met even a lord before in7546my life, or anyone approaching the rank of a lord, except a spurious7547Duke of York whom I sent to the lunatic asylum), the _Prince_ of Santa7548paid me a State call, accompanied by a well-ordered retinue, very7549different indeed from the ragged reprobates who follow at the heels of a7550Chinese grandee when on a visit of ceremony. The Sawbwa occupied one7551chair, his distinguished guest the other, till the chief priest came in,7552when, with that deep reverence for the cloth which has always7553characterised me, I rose and gave him mine. He refused to take it, but I7554insisted; he pretended to be as reluctant to occupy it as any Frenchman,7555but I pushed him bodily into it, and that ended the matter.75567557A pleasant, kindly fellow is the Prince; even among the Shans he is7558conspicuous for his courtesy and amiability. He was a great favourite7559with the English Boundary Commission, and in his turn remembers with7560much pleasure his association with them. Half a dozen times, when7561conversation flagged, he raised his clasped hands and said "Warry7562_Ching, ching_!" and I knew that this was his foolish heathen way of7563sending greeting to the Chinese adviser of the Government of Burma. The7564Shan dialect is quite distinct from the Chinese, but all the princes or7565princelets dress in Chinese fashion and learn Mandarin, and it was of7566course in Mandarin that the Santa Sawbwa conversed with Mr. Warry. This7567Sawbwa is the son-in-law of the ex-Wuntho Sawbwa. He rules over a7568territory smaller than many squatters' stations in Victoria. He is one7569of the ablest of Shans, and would willingly place his little7570principality under the protection of England. He is thirty-five years of7571age, dresses in full Chinese costume, with pigtail and skullcap, is7572pock-marked, and has incipient goitre. He is polite and refined, chews7573betel nut "to stimulate his meditative faculties," and expectorates on7574the floor with easy freedom. I showed him my photographs, and he7575graciously invited me to give him some. I nodded cheerfully to him in7576assent, rolled them all up again, and put them back in my box. He knew7577that I did not understand.75787579We had tea together, and then he took his leave, "Warry _Ching, ching_!"7580being his parting words.75817582As soon as he had gone the deep drum--a hollow instrument of wood shaped7583like a fish--was beaten, and the priests gathered to vespers, dressed in7584many-coloured garments of silk; and, as evening fell, they intoned a7585sweet and mournful chant.75867587The service over, all but the choristers entered the room off the7588gallery in which I was lying, where, looking in, I saw them throw off7589their gowns and coil themselves on the sleeping benches. Opium-lamps7590were already lit, and all were soon inhaling opium; all but one who had7591rheumatism, and who, lying down, stretched himself at full length, while7592a brother priest punched him all over in that primitive method of7593massage employed by every native race the wide world over.75947595In the City Temple some festival was being celebrated, and night was7596turbulent with the beating of gongs and drums and the bursting of7597crackers. Long processions of priests in their yellow robes were passing7598the temple in the bright moonlight. Priests were as plentiful as7599blackberries; if they had been dressed in black instead of yellow, the7600traveller might have imagined that he was in Edinburgh at Assembly time.76017602In the morning another escort of half a dozen men was ready to accompany7603me for the day's stage to Manyuen. They were in the uniform of the Santa7604Sawbwa, in blue jackets instead of green. They were armed with rusty7605muzzle-loaders, unloaded, and with long Burmese swords (_dahs_). They7606were the most amiable of warriors, both in feature and manner, and were7607unlike the turbaned braves of China, who, armed no better than these7608men, still regard, as did their forefathers, fierceness of aspect as an7609important factor in warfare (_rostro feroz ao enemigo!_)--an illusion7610also shared in the English army, where monstrous bearskin shakos were7611introduced to increase the apparent height of the soldiers. The officer7612in command was late in overtaking me. As soon as he came within7613horse-length he let down his queue and bowed reverently, and I could see7614pride lighting his features as he confessed to the honour that had been7615done him in intrusting such an honourable and illustrious charge to the7616mean and unworthy care of so contemptible an officer.76177618The country before us was open meadow-land, pleasant to ride over, only7619here and there broken by a massive banyan tree. Herds of buffaloes were7620grazing on the hillsides. The mud villages were far apart on the margin7621of the river-plain, inclosed with superb hedges of living bamboo.76227623Thirty li from Santa is the Shan village of Taipingkai. It was7624market-day, and the broad main street was crowded. We were taken to the7625house of an oil-merchant, who kindly asked me in and had tea brewed for7626me. Earthenware jars of oil were stacked round the room. The basement7627opened to the street, and was packed in a moment. "_Dzo! Dzo!_" (Go!7628go!) cried the master, and the throng hustled out, to be renewed in a7629minute by a fresh body of curious who had waited their turn.76307631Then we rode on, over a country as beautiful as a nobleman's park, to7632the town of Manyuen. Every here and there by the roadside there are7633springs of fresh water, where travellers can slake their thirst. Bamboo7634ladles are placed here by devotees, whose action will be counted unto7635them for righteousness, for "he that piously bestows a little water7636shall receive an ocean in return." And, where there are no springs, neat7637little bamboo stalls with shelves are built, and in the cool shelter7638pitchers of water and bamboo cups are placed, so that the thirsty may7639bless the unknown hand which gives him to drink.76407641Manyuen--or, to use the name by which it is better known to foreigners,7642Manwyne--is a large and straggling town overlooking the river-plain. It7643was here that Margary, the British Consular Agent, was murdered in 1875.7644I had a long wait at the yamen gate while they were arranging where to7645send me, but by-and-by two yamen-runners came and conducted me to the7646City Temple. It was the same temple that Margary had occupied. Many7647shaven-pated Buddhist priests were waiting for me, and received me7648kindly in the temple hall. A table was brought for me and the only7649foreign chair, and Laotseng was shown where to spread my bedding in the7650temple hall itself. And here I held _levees_ of the townspeople of all7651shades of colour and variety of feature--Chinese, Shan, Burmese, Kachin,7652and hybrid. The people were very amiable, and I found on all sides the7653same courtesy and kindliness that Margary describes on his first visit.7654But the crowd was quiet for only a little while; then a dispute arose.7655It began in the far corner, and the crowd left me to gather round the7656disputants. Voices were raised, loud and excited, and increased in7657energy. A deadly interest seemed to enthral the bystanders. It was easy7658to imagine that they were debating to do with me as they had done with7659Margary. The dispute waxed warmer. Surely they will come to blows? When7660suddenly the quarrel ceased as it had begun, and the crowd came smiling7661back to me. What was the dispute? The priests were cheapening a chicken7662for my dinner.76637664The temple was built on teak piles, and teak pillars supported the7665triple roof. It was like a barn or lumber room but for the gilt Buddhas7666on the altar and the gilt cabinets by its side, containing many smaller7667gilt images of Buddha and his disciples. Umbrellas, flags, and the7668tawdry paraphernalia used in processions were hanging from the beams.7669Sacerdotal vestments of dingy yellow--the yellow of turmeric--were7670tumbled over bamboo rests. When the gong sounded for prayers, men you7671thought were coolies threw these garments over the left shoulder,7672hitched them round the waist, and were transformed into priests, putting7673them back again immediately after the service. Close under the tiles was7674a paper sedan-chair, to be sent for the use of some rich man in heaven.7675Painted scrolls of paper were on the walls, and on old ledges were torn7676books in the Burmese character, which a few boys made a pretence of7677reading. Where I slept the floor was raised some feet from the ground,7678and underneath, seen through the gaping boards--though previously7679detected by another of the senses--were a number of coffins freighted7680with dead, waiting for a fit occasion for interment. Heavy stones were7681placed on the lids to keep the dead more securely at rest. The lucky7682day for burial would be determined by the priests--it would be7683determined by them as soon as the pious relatives had paid sufficiently7684for their fears. So long, then, as the coffins remained where they were,7685they might be described as capital invested by the priests and returning7686heavy interest; removed from the temple, they ceased to be productive.76877688As is the case in so many temples, there is an opium-room in the temple7689at the back of the gilded shrine, where priests and neophytes, throwing7690aside their office, can while away the licentious hours till the gong7691calls them again to prayers.76927693In the early morning, while I was still lying in my pukai on the floor,7694I saw many women, a large proportion of whom were goitrous, come to the7695hall, and make an offering of rice, and kneel down before the Buddha. As7696time went on, and more kept coming in, small heaps of rice had collected7697in front of the chief altar and before the cabinets. And when the women7698retired, a chorister came round and swept with his fingers all the7699little heaps into a basket. To the gods the spirit! To the priests the7700solid remains!77017702It was in Manyuen, as I have mentioned, that Margary met his death on7703February 21st, 1875. He had safely traversed China from Hankow to Bhamo,7704had been everywhere courteously treated by the Chinese and been given7705every facility and protection on his journey. He had passed safely7706through Manyuen only five weeks before, and had then written: "I come7707and go without meeting the slightest rudeness among this charming7708people, and they address me with the greatest respect." And yet five7709weeks later he was killed on his return! Even assuming that he was7710killed in obedience to orders issued by the cruel Viceroy at Yunnan7711City, the notorious Tsen Yue-ying, and not by a lawless Chinese7712train-band which then infested the district and are believed by Baber to7713have been the real murderers, the British Government must still be held7714guilty of contributory negligence. Margary, having passed unmolested to7715Bhamo, there met the expedition under Colonel Horace Browne, and7716returned as its forerunner to prepare for its entry into China by the7717route he had just traversed. The expedition was a "peace expedition"7718sent by the Government of Burma, and numbered only "fifty persons in7719all, together with a Burmese guard of 150 armed soldiers."77207721Seven years before, an expedition under Major Sladen had advanced from7722Burma into Western China as far as Tengyueh; had remained in Tengyueh7723from May 25th to July 13th, 1868; had entered into friendly negotiations7724with the military governor and other Mohammedan officials in revolt7725against China; and had remained under the friendly protection of the7726Mohammedan insurgents who were then in possession of Western China from7727Tengyueh to near Yunnan City. "To what principles," it has been asked,7728"of justice or equity can we attribute the action of the British in7729retaining their Minister at the capital of an empire while sending a7730peaceful mission to a rebel in arms at its boundaries?"77317732The Mohammedan insurrection was not quelled till the early months of77331874. And less than a year later the Chinese learned with alarm that7734another peaceful expedition was entering Western China, by the same7735route, under the same auspices, and with the identical objects of the7736expedition which had been welcomed by the leaders of the insurrection.77377738The Chinese mind was incapable of grasping the fact that the second7739expedition was planned solely to discover new fields for international7740commerce and scientific investigation. Barbarians as they are, they7741feared that England thereby intended to "foster the dying embers of the7742rebellion." No time for such an expedition, a peaceful trade expedition,7743could have been more ill-chosen. The folly of it was seen in the murder7744of Margary and the repulse of Colonel Horace Browne, whose expedition7745was driven back at Tsurai within sight of Manyuen. And this murder,7746known to all the world, is the typical instance cited in illustration of7747the barbarity of the Chinese.77487749China may be a barbarous country; many missionaries have said so, and it7750is the fashion so to speak; but let us for a moment look at facts.7751During the last twenty-three years foreigners of every nationality and7752every degree of temperament, from the mildest to the most fanatical,7753have penetrated into every nook and cranny of the empire. Some have been7754sent back, and there has been an occasional riot with some destruction7755of property. But all the foreigners who have been killed can be numbered7756on the fingers of one hand, and in the majority of these cases it can7757hardly be denied that it was the indiscretion of the white man which was7758the exciting cause of his murder. In the same time how many hundreds of7759unoffending Chinese have been murdered in civilised foreign countries?7760An anti-foreign riot in China--and at what rare intervals do7761anti-foreign riots occur in its vast empire--may cause some destruction7762of property; but it may be questioned if the destruction done in China7763by the combined anti-foreign riots of the last twenty-three years7764equalled the looting done by the civilised London mob who a year or two7765ago on a certain Black Monday played havoc in Oxford-street and7766Piccadilly. "It is less dangerous," says one of the most accurate7767writers on China, the Rev. A. H. Smith, himself an American missionary,7768"for a foreigner to cross China than for a Chinese to cross the United7769States." And there are few who give the matter a thought but must admit7770the correctness of Mr. Smith's statement.77717772On May 17th I was on the road again. The fort of Manyuen is outside the7773town, and some little distance beyond it the dry creek bends into the7774pathway at a point where it is bordered with cactus and overshadowed by7775a banyan tree. This is said to be the exact spot where Margary was7776killed.77777778777977807781CHAPTER XXII.77827783CHINA AS A FIGHTING POWER--THE KACHINS--AND THE LAST STAGE INTO BHAMO.778477857786We now left the low land and the open country, the pastures and meadows,7787and climbed up the jungle-clad spurs which form the triangular dividing7788range that separates the broad and open valley of the Taiping, where7789Manyuen is situated, from the confined and tropical valley of the7790Hongmuho, which lies at the foot of the English frontier fort of7791Nampoung, the present boundary of Burma. Two miles below Nampoung the7792two rivers join, and the combined stream flows on to enter the Irrawaddy7793a mile or two above Bhamo.77947795No change could be greater or more sudden. We toiled upwards in the7796blazing sun, and in two hours we were deep in the thickest jungle, in7797the exuberant vegetation of a tropical forest. We had left the valley of7798the peaceful Shans and were in the forest inhabited by other "protected7799barbarians" of China--the wild tribes of Kachins, who even in Burma are7800slow to recognise the beneficent influences of British frontier7801administration. Nature serenely sleeps in the valley; nature is7802throbbing with life in the forest, and the humming and buzzing of all7803insect life was strange to our unaccustomed ears.78047805A well-cut path has been made through the forest, and caravans of mules7806laden with bales of cotton were in the early stages of the long7807overland journey to Yunnan. Their bells tinkled through the forest,7808while the herd boy filled the air with the sweet tones of his bamboo7809flute, breathing out his soul in music more beautiful than any bagpipes.7810Cotton is the chief article of import entering China by this highway.7811From Talifu to the frontier a traveller could trace his way by the7812fluffs of cotton torn by the bushes from the mule-packs.78137814The road through the forest reaches the highest points, because it is at7815the highest points that the Chinese forts are situated, either on the7816road or on some elevated clearing near it.78177818The forts are stockades inclosed in wooden palisades, and guarded by7819_chevaux de frise_ of sharp-cut bamboo. The barracks are a few native7820straw-thatched wooden huts. Perhaps a score or two of men form the7821garrison of each fort; they are badly armed, if armed at all. There are7822no guns and no store supplies. Water is trained into the stockades down7823open conduits of split bamboo. To anyone who has seen the Chinese7824soldiers at home in Western China, it is diverting to observe the7825credence which is given to Chinese statements of the armed strength of7826Western China. How much longer are we to persist in regarding the7827Chinese, as they now are, as a warlike power? In numbers, capacity for7828physical endurance, calm courage when well officered, and powers7829unequalled by any other race of mankind of doing the greatest amount of7830labour on the smallest allowance of food, their potential strength is7831stupendous. But they are not advancing, they are stationary; they look7832backwards, not forwards; they live in the past. Weapons with which their7833ancestors subdued the greater part of Asia they are loath to believe7834are unfitted for conducting the warfare of to-day. Should Japan bring7835China to terms, she can impose no terms that will not tend towards the7836advancement of China. Victories such as Japan has won over China might7837affect any other nation but China; but they are trifling and7838insignificant in their effect upon the gigantic mass of China. Suppose7839China has lost 20,000 men in this war, in one day there are 20,0007840births in the Empire, and I am perfectly sure that, outside the7841immediate neighbourhood of the seat of operations, the Chinese as a7842nation, apart from the officials, are profoundly ignorant that there is7843even a war, or, as they would term it, a rebellion, in progress.7844Trouble, serious trouble, will begin in China in the near future, for7845the time must be fast approaching when the effete and alien dynasty now7846reigning in China--the Manchu dynasty--shall be overthrown, and a7847Chinese Emperor shall rule on the throne of China.78487849At a native village called Schehleh there is a likin-barrier. The yellow7850flag was drooping over the roadway in the hot sun. The customs officer,7851an amiable Chinese Shan, invited me in to tea, and brought his pukai for7852me to lie down upon. Like thousands of his countrymen, he had played for7853fortune in the Manila lottery. Two old lottery tickets and the prize7854list in Chinese were on one wall of his room, on the other were a number7855of Chinese visiting cards, to which I graciously permitted him to add7856mine.78577858Soldiers accompanied me from camp to camp, Chinese soldiers from7859districts many hundreds of miles distant in China. Some were armed, some7860were unarmed, and there was equal confidence to be reposed in the one as7861in the other; but all were civil, and watched me with a care that was7862embarrassing.78637864At the first camp beyond Schehleh the gateway was ornamented with7865trophies of valour. From two bare tree-trunks baskets of heads were7866hanging, putrefying in the heat. They were the heads of Kachin dacoits.7867And thus shall it be done with all taken in rebellion against the Son of7868Heaven, whose mighty clemency alone permits the sun to shine on any7869kingdom beyond his borders. Kachin villages are scattered through the7870forest, among the hills. You see their native houses, long bamboo7871structures raised on piles and thatched with grass, with low eaves7872sloping nearly to the ground. In sylvan glades sacred to the _nats_ you7873pass wooden pillars erected by the roadside, rudely cut, and rudely7874painted with lines and squares and rough figures of knives, and close7875beside them conical grass structures with coloured weathercocks. Split7876bamboos support narrow shelves, whereon are placed the various7877food-offerings with which is sought the goodwill of the evil spirits.78787879The Kachin men we met were all armed with the formidable _dah_ or native7880sword, whose widened blade they protect in a univalvular sheath of wood.7881They wore Shan jackets and dark knickerbockers; their hair was gathered7882under a turban. They all carried the characteristic embroidered Kachin7883bag over the left shoulder.78847885The Kachin women are as stunted as the Japanese, and are disfigured with7886the same disproportionate shortness of legs. They wear Shan jackets and7887petticoats of dark-blue; their ornaments are chiefly cowries; their legs7888are bare. Unmarried, they wear no head-dress, but have their hair cut in7889a black mop with a deep fringe to the eyebrows. If married, their7890head-dress is the same as that of the Shan women--a huge dark-blue7891conical turban. Morality among the Kachin maidens, a missionary tells7892me, is not, as we understand the term, believed to exist. There is a7893tradition in the neighbourhood concerning a virtuous maiden; but little7894reliance can be placed on such legendary tales. Among the Kachins each7895clan is ruled by a Sawbwa, whose office "is hereditary, not to the7896eldest son, but to the youngest, or, failing sons, to the youngest7897surviving brother." (Anderson.) All Kachins chew betel-nut and nearly7898all smoke opium--men, women and children. Goitre is very prevalent among7899them; in some villages Major Couchman believes that as many as 25 per7900cent. of the inhabitants are afflicted with the disease. They have no7901written language, but their spoken language has been romanised by the7902American missionaries in Burma.79037904We camped within five miles of the British border at the Chinese fortlet7905of Settee, a palisaded camp whose gateway also was hung with heads of7906dacoits. A Chinese Shan was in command, a smart young officer with a7907Burmese wife. He was active, alert, and intelligent, and gave me the7908best room in the series of sheds which formed the barracks. I was made7909very comfortable. There were between forty and fifty soldiers stationed7910in the barracks--harmless warriors--who were very attentive. At7911nightfall the tattoo was beaten. The gong sounded; its notes died away7912in a distant murmur, then brayed forth with a stentorian clangour that7913might wake the dead. At the same time a tattoo was beaten on the drum,7914then a gun was fired and the noise ceased, to be repeated again during7915the night at the change of guard. All foes, visible and invisible, were7916in this way scared away from the fort.79177918Hearing that I was a doctor, the commandant asked me to see several of7919his men who were on the sick list. Among them was one poor young fellow7920dying, in the next room to mine, of remittent fever. When I went to the7921bedside the patient was lying down deadly ill, weak, and emaciated; but7922two of his companions took him by the arms, and, telling him to sit up,7923would have pulled him into what they considered a more respectful7924attitude. In the morning I again went to see the poor fellow. He was7925lying on his side undergoing treatment. An opium-pipe was held to his7926lips by one comrade, while another rolled the pellet of opium and placed7927it heated in the pipe-bowl, so that he might inhale its fumes.79287929In the morning the officer accompanied me to the gate of the stockade7930and bade me good-bye, with many unintelligible expressions of good will.7931His eight best soldiers were told off to escort me to the frontier,7932distant only fifteen li. It was a splendid walk through the jungle7933across the mountains to the Hongmuho. We passed the outlying stockade of7934the Chinese, and, winding along the spur, came full in view of the7935British camp across the valley, half-way up the opposite slope. By a7936very steep path we descended through the forest to the frontier fort of7937the Chinese, and emerged upon the grassy slope that shelves below it to7938the river.79397940There are a few bamboo huts on the sward, and here the Chinese guard7941left me; for armed guards are allowed no further. I was led to the ford,7942my pony plunged into the swift stream, and a moment or two later I was7943on British soil and passing the Sepoy outpost, where the guard, to my7944great alarm, for I feared being shot, turned out and saluted me. Then I7945climbed up the steep hill to the British encampment, where the English7946officer commanding, Captain R. G. Iremonger, of the 3rd Burma Regiment,7947gave me a kind reception, and congratulated me upon my successful7948journey. He telegraphed to headquarters the news of my arrival. It was7949of no earthly interest to anybody that I, an unknown wanderer, should7950pass through safely; but it was of interest to know that anyone could7951pass through so easily. Reports had only recently reached the Government7952that Western China was in a state of disaffection; that a feeling7953strongly anti-foreign had arisen in Yunnan; and that now, of all times,7954would it be inexpedient to despatch a commission for the delimitation of7955the boundary. My quiet and uninterrupted journey was in direct conflict7956with all such reports.79577958The encampment of Nampoung is at an elevation of 1500 feet above the7959river. It is well exposed on all sides, and has been condemned by7960military experts. But the law of fortifications which applies to any7961ordinary frontier does not apply to the frontier of China, where there7962is no danger whatsoever. The palisade is irregularly made, and is not7963superior, of course, to any round the Chinese stockades.79647965The houses are built of bamboo, are raised on piles, and thatched with7966grass. A company of the 3rd Burma Regiment is permanently stationed here7967under an English officer, and consists of 100 men, who are either Sikhs7968or Punjabis, all of splendid stature and military bearing. A picket of7969six men under a non-commissioned native officer guards the ford, and7970permits no armed Chinese to cross the border.79717972There are numbers of transport mules and ponies. In the creek there are7973plenty of fish; the rod, indeed, is the chief amusement of the officers7974who are exiled on duty to this lonely spot to pass three months in turn7975in almost uninterrupted solitude. There is a telegraph line into Bhamo,7976and it is at this point that connection will be made with the Imperial7977Chinese Telegraphs.79787979At the ford from fifty to one hundred loaded pack-animals, mostly7980carrying cotton, cross into China daily. A toll of six annas is levied7981upon each pack-animal, the money so collected being distributed by the7982Government among those Kachin Sawbwas who have an hereditary right to7983levy this tribute. The money is collected by two Burmese officials, and7984handed daily to the officer commanding. No duty is paid on entering7985Burma. Chinese likin-barriers begin to harass the caravans at Schehleh.79867987Beautiful views of the surrounding hills, all covered with "lofty forest7988trees, tangled with magnificent creepers, and festooned with orchids,"7989are obtained from the camp. All the country round is extremely fertile,7990yielding with but little labour three crops a year. Cultivation of the7991soil there is none. Fire clears the jungle, and the ashes manure the7992soil; the ground is then superficially scratched, and rice is sown.7993Nothing more is done. Every seed germinates; the paddy ripens, and,7994where one basketful is sown, five hundred basketfuls are gathered. And7995the field lies untouched till again covered with jungle. Thus is the7996heathen rewarded five-hundred-fold in accordance with the law of Nature7997which gives blessing to the labour of the husbandman inversely as he7998deserves it.79998000In the evening the officer walked down with me to the creek, where I8001bathed in the shadow of the bank, in a favourite pool for fishing. As we8002crossed the field on our return, we met the two Burmese8003tribute-gatherers. They had occasion to speak to the officer, when,8004instead of standing upright like a stalwart and independent Chinaman,8005they squatted humbly on their heels, and, resting their elbows on their8006knees in an attitude of servility, conversed with their superior. How8007different the Chinaman, who confesses few people his superior, and none8008of any race beyond the borders of China!80098010From Nampoung to Bhamo is an easy walk of thirty-three miles. This is8011usually done in two stages, the halting place being the military station8012of Myothit, which is fourteen miles from Nampoung. On leaving Nampoung,8013an escort of a lance-corporal and two soldiers was detailed to accompany8014me. They were Punjabis, men of great stature and warlike aspect; but8015they were presumably out of training, for they arrived at Myothit, limp8016and haggard, an hour or more after we did. There is an admirable road8017through the jungle, maintained in that excellent order characteristic of8018military roads under British supervision. My Chinese from time to time8019questioned me as to the distance. We had gone fifteen li when Laotseng8020asked me how much farther it was to Santien (Myothit). "Three li," I8021said. We walked ten li further. "How far is it now?" he asked. "Only8022five li further," I replied, gravely. We went on another six li, when8023again he asked me: "Teacher Mo, how many li to Santien?" "Only eight8024more li," I said, and he did not ask me again. I was endeavouring to8025give him information in the fashion that prevails in his own country.80268027At Myothit we camped in the dak bungalow, an unfurnished cottage kept8028for the use of travellers. The encampment is on the outskirts of a8029perfectly flat plain, skirted with jungle-clad hills and covered with8030elephant grass. Through the plain the broad river Taiping flows on its8031muddy way to the Irrawaddy. One hundred sepoys are stationed here under8032a native officer, a Sirdar, Jemadar, or Subadar (I am not certain8033which), who called upon me, and stood by me as I ate my tiffin, and, to8034my great embarrassment, saluted me in the most alarming way every time8035my eye unexpectedly caught his. I confess that I did not know the8036gentleman from Adam. I mistook him for an ornamental head-waiter, and,8037as I regarded him as a superfluous nuisance, I told him not to stand8038upon the order of his going but go. I pointed to the steps; and he went,8039sidling off backwards as if from the presence of royalty. Drawing his8040heels together, he saluted me at the stair-top and again at the bottom,8041murmuring words which were more unintelligible to me even than Chinese.80428043During the night our exposed bungalow was assailed by a fearful storm of8044wind and rain, and for a time I expected it to be bodily lifted off the8045piles and carried to the lee-side of the settlement. The roof leaked in8046a thousand places, rain was driven under the walls, and everything I had8047was soaked with warm water.80488049Next day we had a pleasant walk into Bhamo, that important military8050station on the left bank of the Irrawaddy. We crossed the Taiping at8051Myothit by a bridge, a temporary and very shaky structure, which is8052every year carried away when the river rises, and every year renewed8053when the caravans take the road after the rains.80548055Bhamo is 1520 miles by land from Chungking; and it is an equal distance8056further from Chungking to Shanghai. The entire distance I traversed in8057exactly one hundred days, for I purposely waited till the hundredth day8058to complete it. And it surely speaks well of the sense of responsibility8059innate in the Chinese that, during all this time, I never had in my8060employ a Chinese coolie who did not fulfil, with something to spare, all8061that he undertook to do. I paid off my men in Bhamo. To Laotseng I gave8062400 cash too many, and asked him for the change. At once with much8063readiness he ranged some cash on the table in the form of an abacus,8064and, setting down some hieroglyphics on a sheet of paper, he worked out8065a calculation, by which he proved that I owed _him_ 400 cash, and,8066therefore, the accounts were now exactly balanced. For my own expenses I8067gave him 1175 cash in Tengyueh and 400 more in Bhamo, so that my entire8068personal expenses between two points nine days distant from each other8069were rather more than _3s._ My entire journey from Shanghai to Bhamo8070cost less than _L20_ sterling, including my Chinese outfit. Had I8071travelled economically, I estimate that the journey need not have cost8072me more than _L14_. Had I carried more silver with me, I would still8073further have reduced the total cost of my tour. The gold I bought in8074Yunnan with my surplus silver, I sold in Burma for 20 per cent. profit,8075the rupees which I purchased in Tengyueh for _11d._ were worth _13d._ in8076Bhamo. For some curios which I purchased in the interior for _L2 5s._ I8077was offered when I reached civilisation _L14_. Without doubt the journey8078across China is the cheapest that can be done in all the world.80798080I was sorry to say good-bye to my men, who had served me so faithfully.8081And I cannot speak more highly of the pleasure of my journey than to8082declare that I felt greater regret when it was finished than I ever felt8083on leaving any other country. The men all through had behaved admirably,8084and it is only fair to add that mine was the common experience of8085travellers in far Western China. Thus a very great traveller in China8086and Thibet (W. W. Rockhill), writing in the _Century_, April, 1894, on8087the discomforts of his recent journey, says:80888089"But never a word of complaint from either the Thibetans or my Chinese.8090They were always alert, always good-tempered, always attentive to me,8091and anxious to contribute to my comfort in every way in their power. And8092so I have ever found these peoples, with whom I am glad to say, after8093travelling over 20,000 miles in their countries, I have never exchanged8094a rough word, and among whom I think I have left not one enemy and not a8095few friends."80968097Two days after their arrival in Bhamo my three men started on their8098return journey to Talifu. They were laden with medicines, stores,8099newspapers, and letters for the mission in Tali, which for months had8100been accumulating in the premises of the American Mission in Bhamo, the8101missionary in charge, amid the multifarious avocations pertaining to his8102post, having found no time to forward them to their destination to his8103lonely Christian brother in the far interior. And, had I not arrived8104when I did, they could not have been sent till after the rains. A coolie8105will carry eighty pounds weight from Bhamo to Tali for _12s._; and I8106need hardly point out that a very small transaction in teak would cover8107the cost of many coolies. Besides, any expenditure incurred would have8108been reimbursed by the Inland Mission. My three men were pursued by8109cruel fate on their return; they all were taken ill at Pupiao. Poor8110"Bones" and the pock-marked coolie died, and Laotseng lay ill in the8111hotel there for weeks, and, when he recovered sufficiently to go on to8112Tali, he had to go without the three loads, which the landlord of the8113inn detained, pending the payment of his board and lodging and the8114burial expenses of his two companions.81158116811781188119CHAPTER XXIII.81208121BHAMO, MANDALAY, RANGOON, AND CALCUTTA.812281238124The finest residence in Bhamo is, of course, the American mission.8125America nobly supports her self-sacrificing and devoted sons who go8126forth to arrest the "awful ruin of souls" among the innumerable millions8127of Asia, who are "perishing without hope, having sinned without law."8128The missionary in charge told me that he labours with a "humble heart to8129bring a knowledge of the Saving Truth to the perishing heathen among the8130Kachins." His appointment is one which even a worldly-minded man might8131covet. I will give an instance of his methods. This devoted evangelist8132told me that a poor woman, a Kachin Christian, in whose welfare he felt8133deep personal interest, was, he greatly feared, dying from8134blood-poisoning at a small Christian village one hour's ride up the8135river from Bhamo; and he had little doubt that some surgical8136interference in her case would save her life. I at once offered to go8137and see her. I had received great kindness from many American8138missionaries in China, and it would give me great pleasure, I said, if I8139could be of any service.81408141The missionary professed to be grateful for my offer, but, instead of8142arranging to go that afternoon, named seven o'clock the following8143morning as the hour when he would call for me to take me to the village.8144At the time appointed I was ready; I waited, but no missionary came.8145There was a slight drizzle, sufficient to prevent his going to the sick8146woman but not sufficient to deter him from going to market to the8147Irrawaddy steamer, where I accidentally met him. So far from being8148abashed when he saw me, he took the occasion to tell me what he will, I8149know, pardon me for thinking an inexcusable untruth. He had written, he8150said, to the poor woman telling her, dying as he believed her to be, to8151come down to Bhamo by boat to see me.81528153In Bhamo I stayed in the comfortable house of the Deputy Commissioner,8154and was treated with the most pleasant hospitality. To my regret, the8155Deputy Commissioner was down the river, and I did not see him. He is8156regarded as one of the ablest men in the service. His rise has been8157rapid, and he was lately invested with the C.I.E.--there seems, indeed,8158to be no position in Burma that he might not aspire to. In his absence8159his office was being administered by the Assistant Commissioner, a8160courteous young Englishman, who gave me my first experience of the Civil8161Service. I could not but envy the position of this young fellow, and8162marvel at the success which attends our method of administering the8163Indian Empire. Here was a young man of twenty-four, acting as governor8164with large powers over a tract of country of hundreds of square miles--a8165new country requiring for its proper administration a knowledge of law,8166of finance, of trade, experience of men, and ability to deal with the8167conflicting interests of several native races. Superior to all other8168authorities, civil and military, in his district, he was considered fit8169to fill this post--and success showed his fitness--because a year or two8170before he had been one of forty crammed candidates out of 200 who had8171taken the highest places in a series of examinations in Latin, English,8172mathematics, &c. With the most limited experience of human life, he had8173obtained his position in exactly the same way that a Chinese Mandarin8174does his--by competitive examination in subjects which, even less than8175in the case of the Chinese, had little bearing upon his future work; and8176now, like a Chinese Mandarin, "there are few things he isn't."81778178On the face of it no system appears more preposterous; in its results no8179system was ever more successful. The Assistant Commissioner early learns8180self-reliance, decision, and ability to wield authority; and he can8181always look forward to the time when he may become Chief Commissioner.81828183There is a wonderful mixture of types in Bhamo. Nowhere in the world,8184not even in Macao, is there a greater intermingling of races. Here live8185in cheerful promiscuity Britishers and Chinese, Shans and Kachins, Sikhs8186and Madrasis, Punjabis, Arabs, German Jews and French adventurers,8187American missionaries and Japanese ladies.81888189There are many ruined pagodas and some wooden temples which, however, do8190not display the higher features of Burmese architecture. There is a8191club, of course; a polo and football ground, and a cricket ground.8192Inside the fort, among the barracks, there is a building which has a8193double debt to pay, being a theatre at one end and a church at the8194other, the same athletic gentleman being the chief performer at both8195places. But, at its best, Bhamo is a forlorn, miserable, and wretched8196station, where all men seem to regard it as their first duty to the8197stranger to apologise to him for being there.81988199The distinguished Chinese scholar and traveller, E. Colborne Baber, who8200wrote the classic book of travel in Western China, was formerly British8201Resident in Bhamo. He spoke Chinese unusually well and was naturally8202proud of his accomplishment. Now the ordinary Chinaman has this feature8203in common with many of the European races, that, if he thinks you cannot8204speak his language, he _will_ not understand you, even if you speak to8205him with perfect correctness of idiom and tone. And Baber had an8206experience of this which deeply hurt his pride. Walking one day in the8207neighbourhood of Bhamo, he met two Chinese--strangers--and began8208speaking to them in his best Mandarin. They heard him with unmoved8209stolidity, and, when he had finished, one turned to his companion and8210said, as if struck with his discovery, "the language of these foreign8211barbarians sounds not unlike our own!"82128213In Bhamo I had the pleasure of meeting the three members of the Boundary8214Commission who represented us in some preliminary delimitation questions8215with the Chinese Government. A better choice could not have been made.8216M. Martini, a Frenchman, has been twenty years in Upper Burma, and is8217our D.S.P. (District Superintendent of Police). Mr. Warry, the Chinese8218adviser to the Burmese Government, is one of the ablest men who ever8219graduated from the Consular Staff in China; while Captain H. R. Davies,8220of the Staff Corps, who is on special duty in the Intelligence8221Department, is not only an exceptionally able officer, but is the most8222accomplished linguist of Upper Burma. These were the three8223representatives.82248225I sold my pony in Bhamo. I was exceedingly sorry to part with it, for it8226had come with me 800 miles in thirty days, over an unusually difficult8227road, at great variations of altitude, and amid many changes of climate.8228And it was always in good spirit, brave and hardy, carrying me as surely8229the last twenty miles as it had the first twenty. Yet, when I came to8230sell it, I was astonished to learn how many were its defects. Its8231height, which was 12.3 in Nampoung, had shrunk three days later to 11.38232in Bhamo. This one subaltern told me who came to look at the pony with8233the view, he said, of making me an offer. Another officer proved to me8234that the off foreleg was gone hopelessly; a third confirmed this8235diagnosis of his friend, and in a clinical lecture demonstrated that the8236poor beast was spavined, and that its near hind frog was rotten, "as all8237Chinese ponies' are," he added. One of the mounted constabulary, a smart8238officer, fortunately discovered in time that the pony was a roarer;8239while the Hungarian Israelite who lends help on notes of hand,8240post-obits, personal applications, and other insecurities, and is on8241terms of friendly intimacy with most of the garrison, when about to make8242an offer, found, to his great regret, that the pony's hind legs were8243even more defective than the fore. The end of it was that I had to sell8244the pony--for what it cost me. I am indebted to the Reverend Mr.8245Roberts, of the American Baptist Mission, for helping me to sell my8246pony. Mr. Roberts has a pious gift for buying ponies and selling8247them--at a profit. He offered me 40 rupees for my pony. I mentioned this8248offer at the Bhamo Club, when a civilian present at once offered me 508249rupees for the pony; he did not know the pony, he explained, but--he8250knew Roberts.82518252In a steamer of the Irrawaddy Flotilla Company I came down the river8253from Bhamo to Mandalay. When I left the Commissioner's bungalow, the8254entire staff of the establishment and of some neighbouring bungalows8255assembled to do me honour, creeping up to me, and with deep humility8256carrying each an article of my possessions from my room down to the8257porch. There were the _dhobie_ and _bearer_, the waterman with his8258goatskin waterbag, the washerman who washed my blue Chinese garments as8259white as his own, the _syce_ who did not collect grass, the cook who8260sent me ten bad eggs in three days, and the Christian Madrasi, the8261laziest rascal in Bhamo, who early confessed to me his change of faith8262and the transformation it had effected in the future prospects of his8263soul. There was the Burmese watchman, and the English-speaking Burmese8264clerk, and the coolie who went to the bazaar for me, and many others.8265They lined the stairs as I came out, and placed their hands reverently8266to their foreheads when I passed by. It was pleasant to see such8267disinterested evidence of their good will, and my only regret was that I8268could not reward them according to their deserts. But to the Chinese8269coolie who was grinning to see my paltry outfit carried by so many8270hands, and who gathered together all I possessed and swung off with it8271down past the temples to the steamer landing in the native city, I gave8272a day's pay, and cheerfully--though he then asked for more.82738274In Mandalay I was taken to the club, and passed many hours there reading8275the home papers and wandering through its gilded halls. Few clubs in the8276world have such a sumptuous setting as this, for it is installed in the8277throne-room and chambers and reception-halls of the palace of King8278Theebaw.82798280In the very centre of the building is a seven-storeyed spire,8281"emblematic of royalty and religion," which the Burmese look upon as the8282"exact centre of creation." The reception-hall at the foot of the8283throne is now the English chapel; the reading-room with its gilded dais8284where the Queen sat on her throne, with its lofty roof, its pillars of8285teak, and walls all ablaze with gilding, was the throne-room of8286Theebaw's chief Queen.82878288Mandalay is largely Chinese, and on the outskirts of the city there is a8289handsome temple which bears the charming inscription, so characteristic8290of the Chinese, "enlightenment finds its way even among the outer8291barbarians."82928293There is a military hospital with two nursing sisters, highly trained8294ladies from Bart.'s. Australians are now so widely distributed over the8295world that it did not surprise me to find that one of the two sisters8296comes from Melbourne.82978298From Mandalay I went by train to Rangoon, where I lived in a pretty8299villa among noble trees on the lower slope of the hill which is crowned8300with the famous golden pagoda, the "Shway-dagon," the most sacred temple8301of Indo-China. We looked out upon the park and the royal lake. I early8302went to the Intelligence Department and saw Major Couchman. In his8303office I met the chief Chinese interpreter, a Chinaman with a rare8304genius for languages. He is a native of Fuhkien province, and, of8305course, speaks the Fuhkien dialect; he knows also Cantonese and8306Mandarin. In addition, he possesses French, Hindustani, Burmese, Shan,8307and Sanscrit, and, in an admirable translation which he has made of a8308Chinese novel into English, he frequently quotes Latin. Fit assistant he8309would make to Max Mueller; his services command a high salary.83108311The Chinese in Rangoon are a predominating force in the prosperity of8312the city. They have deeply impressed their potentiality upon the8313community. "It seems almost certain," says a great authority, perhaps8314_the_ greatest authority on Burma--J. G. Scott (Shway Yoe)--"that in no8315very long time Burma, or, at any rate, the large trading towns of Burma,8316will be for all practical purposes absorbed by the Chinese traders, just8317as Singapore and Penang are virtually Chinese towns. Unless some8318marvellous upheaval of energy takes place in the Burmese character, the8319plodding, unwearying Chinaman is almost certainly destined to overrun8320the country to the exclusion of the native race."83218322The artisans of Rangoon are largely Chinese, and the carpenters8323exclusively so. The Chinese marry Burmese women, and, treating their8324wives with the consideration which the Chinaman invariably extends to8325his foreign wife in a foreign country, they are desired as husbands even8326above the Burmans. Next to the British, the only indispensable element8327in the community is now the Chinese.83288329The best known figure in Burma is the Reverend John Ebenezer Marks,8330D.D., Principal of the St. John's College of the S.P.G. Dr. Marks has8331been thirty-five years in Burma, is still hale and hearty, brimful of8332reminiscences, and is one of the most amusing companions in the world. I8333think it was he who converted King Theebaw to Christianity. His school8334is a curiosity. It is an anthropological institute with perhaps the8335finest collection of human cross-breeds in existence. It is away out8336beyond the gaol, in large wooden buildings set in extensive playgrounds.8337Here he has 550 students, all but four of whom are Asiatics of fifteen8338different nationalities--Chinese, Karens, Kachins, Shans, and a varied8339assortment of Hindoos and Malays, both pure and blended with the native8340Burmese. All the different races represented in Burma have intermarried8341with the native Burmese, and the resulting half-breeds have crossed8342with other half-breeds. Most of the better class Eurasian boys8343(European-Asian) are educated here, some being supported by their8344fathers, some not. The former Dr. Marks ingeniously calls after their8345mothers; the latter, who have been neglected, retain the names (when8346they are known), of their fathers. It is amusing to meet among the8347latter the names of so many brave Englishmen who, in the earlier days8348when morals had not attained the strictness that now characterises them,8349gallantly served their country in Burma.83508351No woman in the world is more catholic in her tastes than the Burmese.8352She bestows her loves as variously as the Japanese. She marries with8353equal readiness Protestant or Catholic, Turk, Infidel, or Jew. She8354clings cheerfully to whichever will support her; but above all she8355desires the Chinaman. No one treats her so well as the Chinaman. If she8356is capable of experiencing the emotion of love for any being outside her8357own race, she feels it for the Chinaman, who is of a cognate race to her8358own, is hard-working, frugal, and industrious, permits her to live in8359idleness, and delights her with presents, loving her children with that8360affection which the Chinaman has ever been known to bestow upon his8361offspring. The Chino-Burmese is not quite the equal of his father, but8362he is markedly superior to the Burmese. The best half-caste in the East8363is, of course, the Eurasian of British parentage. Englishmen going to8364Burma are, as a rule, picked men, physically powerful, courageous,8365energetic, and enterprising; for it is the possession of these qualities8366which has sent them to the East, either for business or in the service8367of their country. And their Burmese companions--of course I speak of a8368condition of things which is gradually ceasing to exist--are all picked8369women, selected for the comeliness of their persons and the sweetness of8370their manners.83718372After a stay of two or three weeks in Rangoon, I went round by the8373British India steamer to Calcutta. Ill fortune awaited me here. The8374night after my arrival I was laid down with remittent fever, and a few8375days later I nearly died. The reader will, I am sure, pardon me for8376obtruding this purely personal matter. But, as I opened this book with a8377testimony of gratitude to the distinguished surgeon who cut a spear8378point from my body, where nine months before it had been thrust by a8379savage in New Guinea, so should I be sorry to close this narrative8380without recording a word of thanks to those who befriended me in8381Calcutta.83828383I was a stranger, knowing only two men in all Calcutta; but they were8384friends in need, who looked after me during my illness with the greatest8385kindness. A leading doctor of Calcutta attended me, and treated me with8386unremitting attention and great skill. To Mr. John Bathgate and Mr.8387Maxwell Prophit and to Dr. Arnold Caddy I owe a lasting debt of8388gratitude. And what shall I say of that kind nurse--dark of complexion,8389but most fair to look upon--whose presence in the sick room almost8390consoled me for being ill? Bless her dear heart! Even hydrochlorate of8391quinine tasted sweet from her fingers.839283938394THE END.83958396[Illustration: CHINESE MAP OF CHUNGKING.]83978398839984008401INDEX.840284038404Adridge, Dr., of Ichang, 1084058406d'Amade, Capt., in Yunnan, 15084078408Ancestral worship, 6784098410Anderson, Dr. J., cited, 274, 27784118412Anpien, 7984138414Anti-foreign riots, 9, 54, 26884158416Arsenal in Yunnan, 17584178418Augustine mission, 6841984208421Baber, E. C., cited, 51, 90, 239, 267;8422in Yunnan, 149;8423in Bhamo, 285;8424on distances, 18784258426Ball, Dyer, cited, 113, 22484278428Baller, Rev. F. W., cited, 11384298430Banks and banking, 95, 96, 163, 16484318432Barrow, Sir John, cited, 101, 110, 19184338434Beraud, Pere, of Suifu, 63, 6584358436Bhamo (Singai), 279-28784378438Bible Christian mission, in Chaotong, 99;8439in Tongchuan, 12184408441Blakiston, Capt., cited, 17384428443Blodget, Rev. Dr., cited, 12384448445Boell, M., of _Le Temps_, in Yunnan, 15084468447Bonvalot, G., in Yunnan, 14984488449Bridges, some notable, 26, 83, 85, 118, 186, 233, 240, 24284508451Broomhall, B., cited, 66, 6784528453Browne, Col. Horace, 246, 267, 26884548455Bugs in China and Spain, 55, 5684568457Burdon, Bishop, cited, 123845884598460Cameron, Dr., missionary traveller, 21384618462Cantonese, 207;8463in Australia, 222-22484648465Caravans of cotton, 226, 27184668467Carruthers, A. G. H., assistant commissioner of customs, Chungking, 5184688469Cash currency of China, 161, 16284708471Chairen, the policeman of China, 77, 19084728473Chang-chen Nien, Brigadier-General, Tengyueh, 181, 24684748475Chang Chi Tung, the viceroy, 3, 484768477Chang-show-hsien, 3384788479Chang Yan Miun, the giant of Yunnan, 184, 18584808481Chaochow, 20084828483Chaotong, the city of, 97-116;8484its converts, 17884858486Chehki, 13784878488Ch'en, merchant prince, 29, 3084898490Chennan-chow, 19284918492Chentu, city, 62;8493river, 6284948495Chiang, telegraph clerk, Yunnan, 16884968497China Inland Mission, in Hankow, 6;8498in Wanhsien, 27-29;8499in Chungking, 49;8500in Suifu, 65, 73, 75;8501in Yunnan, 177;8502in Tali, 213-216;8503results in Yunnan province, 178;8504in China generally, 180;8505its teaching, 65-7185068507Chinese, in Australia, 222-224;8508in Burma, 288-29085098510Chinese, avarice, 79;8511benevolence, 29;8512beauty of women, 13;8513cards, visiting, 181, 182;8514characters, reverence for, 170;8515courtesy, 255;8516desire to have children, 197, 198;8517etiquette, 230;8518friendliness, 140;8519good nature, 117;8520gratitude, 27, 28;8521inaccuracy, 99;8522indifference to pain, 104,8523to sound, 74, 169;8524irreverence, 195;8525justification by works, 169;8526kindness to children, 113, 290;8527laughter, 195;8528love at first sight, 153-155;8529politeness, 196, 197, 201, 255;8530respect for old age, 117, 198;8531thoughtfulness, 189;8532true felicity, 180;8533wonderful memory, 167, 16885348535Chipatzu, 2285368537Chueh, telegraph operator and interpreter, 24885388539Chungking, city of, 34-3985408541Chuhsing-fu, 18785428543Clarke, Mr. G. W., missionary traveller, 21385448545Clarke, Marcus, cited, 21085468547Coal on the Yangtse, 3285488549Coffins in China, 92, 137, 26585508551Colquhoun, A. R., in Yunnan, 15085528553Conversion, instances of rapid, 17985548555Converts, in China, 5;8556Wanhsien, 28;8557Chungking, 49;8558Suifu, 65;8559Chaotong, 99;8560Tongchuan, 121;8561Yunnan City, 177;8562Yunnan Province, 178, 179;8563Talifu, 21485648565Cooke, G. W., cited, 46, 17685668567Coolies' enormous loads, 90, 9185688569Couchman, Major, cited, 274;8570in Rangoon, 28885718572Crockery, 118, 11985738574Customs, China Inland (likin-barriers), 21, 48, 97, 118, 242, 272, 27785758576Customs, Imperial Maritime, 13, 25, 35-38857785788579Davenport, Dr. Cecil, medical missionary, Chungking, 4985808581Davies, Capt. H. R., Bhamo, 28585828583Davis, Sir J. F., cited, 5785848585Dedeken, Pere, of Kuldja, 15085868587De Gorostarza, Pere, Provicaire in Yunnan, 17285888589De Guignes, cited, 14085908591Distances in China, 141, 27885928593Doctors in China, 107-110; mule-doctor, 14585948595Doolittle, Rev. Justus, cited, 69, 130, 17085968597Doudart de la Gree, in Yunnan, 14985988599Douglas, R. K., cited, 12786008601Dudgeon, Dr. J., cited, 112, 13086028603Du Halde, cited, 90, 108, 17686048605Dymond, Rev. Frank, missionary, Chaotong, 98, 99860686078608Eclipse of the Sun, 125, 12686098610Edkins, Rev. Dr. J., cited, 13086118612Eitel, Rev. Dr. E. J., cited, 12986138614Excoffier, Pere, of Yunnan, 146861586168617Famine in Chaotong, 99;8618in Tongchuan, 127;8619on the way to Yunnan, 137-14486208621Fan-yien-tsen, 8286228623Farrar, Ven. Archdeacon, cited, 19186248625Feng-hsiang, Gorge, 21, 3086268627Fengshui-ling, 24086288629Feng-tu-hsien, 3386308631Fenouil, Monseigneur, of Yunnan, 171, 17286328633Fraser, Consul E. H., Chungking, 4586348635Fuchou, 3386368637_Fungshui_, 157, 17586388639Fung-yen-tung, 20586408641Fu-to-kuan, fort of, 52864286438644Ganai, Shan town, 254-25686458646Gates of a Chinese city, 17486478648Geary, H. Grattan, cited, 4386498650Giles, H. A., cited, 12986518652Gill, Mr. Hope, missionary, Wanhsien, 2786538654Gill, Capt. W., cited, 17, 9086558656Girls in China, 13, 14, 139, 140;8657bought, 155;8658sold, 100, 101;8659price of, 10086608661Goitre, 101, 145, 155, 185;8662its prevalence, 227, 22886638664Gold, on the Yangtse, 23;8665in Yunnan, 158-16086668667Graham, Mr., missionary, Yunnan, 177, 21986688669Grosvenor Mission in Yunnan, 14986708671Guinness, Miss G., cited, 213867286738674Haas, M., 42-4486758676Hankow, the city of, 3-886778678Hanyang, 386798680Heads of criminals, 192;8681of dacoits, 273, 27486828683Hirth, Dr. F., Commissioner of Customs, 4086848685Hobson, H. E., cited, 3186868687Hokiangpu, 22286888689Hongmuho, 270, 275-27786908691Hosie, A. M., cited, 17;8692in Yunnan, 14986938694Hsiakwan, 200, 219, 22186958696Hsintan rapids, 1586978698Huanglien-pu, 226;8699goitre at, 22887008701Huc, Abbe, cited, 176870287038704Iangkai, 14487058706Ichang, 987078708Infanticide in China, 129, 130;8709in Chaotong, 101;8710in Tongchuan, 12987118712Inquirers at Wanhsien, 28;8713Yunnan, 177;8714Tali, 21587158716Iremonger, Capt. R. G., Nampoung, 275871787188719Jensen, Mr. C., in Yunnan, 147;8720experiences in China, 156, 157;8721on distances, 187;8722to construct line to Burma, 23887238724Jesuit Missionaries in China, 123, 173, 17687258726John, Rev. Dr. Griffith, cited, 130872787288729Kachins ("protected barbarians"), 254, 259, 270, 273, 27487308731Kanhliang, Shan chief, 24587328733Kaw Hong Beng, Private Secretary to Viceroy, 4, 587348735Kiangti, 11787368737Kong-shan, 14187388739Kueichow on the Yangtse, 1887408741Kuhtsing, its converts, 17887428743Kung Chao-yuan, Minister to Great Britain, 7387448745Kung-t'-an-ho, 3387468747Kweichou-fu, 21874887498750Lacouperie, Terrien de, cited, 25787518752Lanchihsien, 6087538754Laokai, 148, 15987558756Laowatan river, 79; town, 8587578758Lay, G. T., cited, 13, 4587598760Leitoupo, 13987618762Lenz, F. G., in Yunnan, 150, 15187638764Li Han Chang, in Yunnan, 14987658766Li Hung Chang, 72, 149;8767on opium, 46, 19087688769_Ling chi_, 69, 231, 23287708771Li Pi Chang, Telegraph Manager, Yunnan, 151-153, 181, 18487728773Li-Sieh-tai, of Tengyueh, 24687748775Little, A. J., cited, 13, 122;8776in Chungking, 5187778778Little river, 40, 44, 5287798780Liu, Colonel, of Chinese Boundary Commission, 244, 245, 25587818782Liu, the Viceroy, 7287838784Lockhart, Dr. W., cited, 28, 13087858786Loh-Ta-Jen, Chentai at Ichang, 987878788London Missionary Society, Hankow, 6;8789Chungking, 4987908791Lorain, Pere, Procureur in Chungking, 5087928793Luchow, 6087948795Lu-feng-hsien, 18687968797Luho, 187879887998800MacCarthy, Justin, cited, 21088018802MacGowan, Rev. Dr. D. J., cited, 13088038804Maire, Pere, of Tongchuan, 13388058806Mander, S. S., cited, 47, 19188078808Manyuen (Manwyne), 264-26988098810Marco Polo, cited, 238;8811in Yunnan, 14988128813Margary, A. R., cited, 266;8814in Yunnan, 149, 246;8815his murder, 264-26988168817Marks, Rev. Dr. J. E., 289, 29088188819Martin, Rev. Dr. W. A. P., cited, 67, 17088208821Martini, M. (D.S.P.), in Bhamo, 28588228823Mason, Rev. G. L., cited, 2888248825Mateer, Rev. C. W., cited, 28, 14088268827Meadows, T. T., cited, 113, 15488288829Medhurst, Rev. W. H., cited, 87 (wrongly written "Meadows"), 19788308831Medhurst, Sir W. H., cited, 5, 45, 10888328833Medicines in China, 83, 107-11088348835Mekong river, 221, 233, 23488368837Mencius, cited, 19888388839Methodist Episcopalian Mission, 40, 5488408841Michie, A., cited, 12488428843Missionaries, success in China, 5;8844numbers in Hankow, 688458846Missions Etrangeres de Paris, 6, 64, 65, 105, 122, 146, 17188478848Mi Tsang Gorge, 1788498850Mohammedans, and opium, 112;8851in Chaotong, 113, 114;8852near Tongchuan, 128;8853in Tali, 216;8854insurrection, 145, 185, 187, 203;8855superiority, 216;8856the milkman, 21788578858Momien (Tengyueh), the city of, 243-24988598860Money, changing, 95;8861remittance of, 9588628863Morgan, C. L., cited, 66, 7088648865Morphia, imported, 48, 4988668867Moule, Bishop, cited, 13088688869Moutot, Pere, Provicaire in Suifu, 63, 6588708871Muirhead, Rev. W., cited, 12388728873Mungtze, 148-150, 15988748875Myothit (Santien), 278, 279887688778878Nampoung, encampment, 270, 275-27888798880Nantien, fort of, 250, 251888188828883Opium, imports and exports of, 46-48;8884in Hankow, 3;8885in Chungking, 45;8886in Suifu, 72, 73;8887demoralising influence of, 41;8888---- refuge, Chungking, 41;8889---- ports, 33;8890poisoning by, 111, 112, 212;8891my chairbearers and, 94;8892my coolie and, 219;8893appeal for suppression, 190, 19188948895d'Orleans, Prince Henri, cited, 148;8896in Yunnan, 149889788988899Parricide in China, 6989008901Pearson, Prof. C. H., cited, 186, 22489028903_Peking Gazette_, cited, 53, 169, 23189048905Pen, telegraph manager, Tengyueh, 24489068907Peng Yue-lin, high commissioner, cited, 19289088909Pidgin-English, 3, 9, 1889108911Piercy, Rev. G., cited, 19189128913Ping-shan-pa, 1389148915Pits for the dead, 13389168917Plague, bubonic, in Yunnan, 21389188919Pollard, Rev. S., missionary, Tongchuan, 12189208921Poppy, 37, 57, 78, 84, 118, 142;8922surreptitiously grown, 4689238924Post-offices, 95, 9689258926Prisons in China, 209-21189278928Punishments in China, 103, 104, 136, 23989298930Pupeng, 19389318932Pupiao, 236;8933my men die at, 281893489358936Reade, Charles, cited, 20989378938Reed, Miss M., cited, 19189398940Reid, Rev. G., cited, 41, 19289418942"Rice Christians," 689438944Roberts, Rev. Mr., missionary, Bhamo, 28689458946Rockhill, W. W., cited, 280, 281894789488949St. Thomas, visit to Suifu, 6589508951Salween river, 237-24089528953Santa, Shan town, 259-26389548955Schehleh, 272, 27789568957Scott, J. G., cited, 287, 28989588959Sengki-ping, 8489608961Settee, fort of, 274, 27589628963Shachiaokai, 19289648965Shang-kwan, 20489668967Shans, 240, 252, 254, 256-26989688969Shih-pao-chai, 3289708971Shuichai, 23489728973Shweli river, 24289748975Silver in Yunnan, 161, 163;8976in Tengyueh, 24989778978Singai (Bhamo), 21889798980Sladen, Major, 26789818982Small feet, 14, 101, 15389838984Small-pox, 212, 21389858986Smith, Rev. A. H., cited, 41, 26989878988Smith, Rev. John, missionary, Talifu, 202, 209, 214, 21989898990Smith, Mr. Stanley P., his rapid conversion of a Chinaman, 27989918992Soldiers, their weapons, 234, 241, 249;8993fierceness of aspect, 263;8994courage, 27189958996"Squeezing" in China, 151, 15289978998Stead, W. T., cited, 15289999000Suicide by opium, 111;9001land of, 111, 11290029003Suifu, the city of, 62-7590049005Sutherland, Rev. Dr. A., cited, 123, 17390069007Swinburne, A. C., cited, 1490089009Szechuen, "country of the clouds," 82;9010population, 186;9011contrasted with Yunnan, 85-88;9012Catholic stronghold, 64901390149015Taipingkai, Shan town, 26390169017Taiping-pu, 22690189019Taiping river, 246, 250, 252, 258, 278, 27990209021Tak-wan-hsien, 92, 94, 9690229023Tak-wan-leo, 9290249025Talichao, 23490269027Talifu, the city of, 202-219;9028its converts, 17890299030Tanto, 8290319032Taoshakwan, 8690339034Tao[=u]en, 11690359036Tawantzu, 9290379038Taylor, Rev. Dr. J. Hudson, cited, 46, 67, 68, 70, 179;9039on opium, 46;9040on ancestral worship, 67;9041Chinese in lake of fire, 67, 6890429043Tchih-li-pu, 8690449045Telegraph, in Yunnan, 147;9046in Tali, 208;9047in Yungchang, 234;9048in Tengyueh, 243-248;9049system of telegraphing Chinese characters, 166-168;9050telegraphic transfers, 95, 15990519052Tengyueh (Momien), the city of, 243-24990539054"Term question," 122, 12390559056Theatre in Tengyueh, 246, 24790579058Tomme, M., in Yunnan, 15090599060Tongchuan, the city of, 120-134;9061its converts, 17890629063Tonquin, 148, 14990649065Tragedy of the Tali valley, 220, 22190669067Tremberth, Rev. Mr., missionary, Chaotong, 10190689069Tsen Yue-ying, the cruel Viceroy, 26790709071Tung-lo-hsia, 3590729073Turner, Rev. F. Storrs, cited, 4690749075Tu Wen Hsiu, the Mohammedan Sultan, 203907690779078Ullathorne, Bishop, cited, 210907990809081Vial, Pere, of Yunnan, 15090829083Voltaire, cited, 17390849085Von Richthofen, cited, 90908690879088Wanhsien, the city of, 24-3190899090Warren, Consul Pelham, of Hankow, 890919092Warry, Mr., Chinese adviser to the Burmese Government, 229, 261, 28590939094Wherry, Rev. J., cited, 12390959096Widows, virtuous, 52, 53, 7890979098Williams, Rev. Dr. S. Wells, cited, 47, 110, 126, 197, 26790999100Williamson, Rev. Dr. A. W., cited, 70, 22391019102Wong, banker in Yunnan, 163-16691039104Wong-wen-shao, the Viceroy, 180, 18191059106Woodin, Rev. S. F., cited, 66, 17991079108Woolston, Miss S. H., cited, 1491099110Wuchang, 391119112Wuntho Sawbwa, 245, 253, 25491139114Wushan Gorge, 2091159116Wushan-hsien, 20911791189119Yangki river, 22191209121"_Yang kweitze_", 18, 25, 228, 22991229123Yanglin, 14591249125Yangpi, 22491269127Yang Yu-ko, Imperialist general, 203, 20491289129Yeh, of the Chinese Boundary Commission, 22491309131Yehtan rapid, 1991329133Yenwanshan, 19391349135Ying-wu-kwan, 19391369137Yuenchuan, 6091389139Yungchang, the city of, 234, 23591409141Yunnan, the city of, 147-183;9142its converts, 177;9143the province of, 85-88;9144its converts, 17891459146Yunnanhsien, 19691479148Yunnan Yeh, 19391499150[Illustration: ROUGH SKETCH-MAP OF CHINA AND BURMA SHOWING AUTHOR'S9151ROUTE FROM SHANGHAI TO RANGOON.]91529153* * * * *91549155+------------------------------------------------------------+9156| Typographical errors corrected in text: |9157| |9158| Page vii: Hankow replaced with Ichang in chapter title |9159| Page ix: Teng-yueh replaced with Tengyueh |9160| Page 8: "My Chinese Passport" replaced with "The |9161| Author's Chinese Passport" |9162| Page 9: Kweichou replaced with Kweichow |9163| Page 22: Kueichou replaced with Kweichou |9164| Page 29: mid-day replaced with midday; mission replaced |9165| with missionary |9166| Page 30: Kueichou replaced with Kweichou |9167| Page 32: hill-sides replaced with hillsides |9168| Page 33: tow-line replaced with towline |9169| Page 34: Tung-to-hsia replaced with Tung-lo-hsia |9170| Page 44: Chung-king replaced with Chungking |9171| Page 47: Fuh-kien replaced with Fuhkien |9172| Page 57: rape seed replaced with rape-seed |9173| Page 58: mainroad replaced with main road |9174| Page 61: Comma after "Chinese, who," removed |9175| Page 62: tow-rope replaced with towrope |9176| Page 63: Tali-fu replaced with Talifu |9177| Page 64: trop materialistes italicised |9178| Page 69: ling-chi replaced with Ling chi |9179| Page 76: Semi-colon following Chaotong replaced with |9180| comma |9181| Page 77: Takwan-hsien replaced with Tak-wan-hsien, twice |9182| Page 78: Comma after "yellow rape-seed" removed; |9183| half-penny replaced with halfpenny |9184| Page 91: Chen-tu replaced with Chentu |9185| Page 96: ill paved replaced with ill-paved |9186| Page 97: Semi-colon following Chaotong replaced with |9187| comma |9188| Page 105: Etrangeres replaced with Etrangeres |9189| Page 111: trival replaced with trivial |9190| Page 118: main-road replaced with main road |9191| Page 125: Semi-colon after Tongchuan replaced with comma |9192| Page 139: Comma after "other heathen country" replaced |9193| with full stop |9194| Page 142: Kongshan replaced with Kong-shan |9195| Page 149: Chung-king corrected to Chungking |9196| Page 150: Yesutang replaced with Yesu-tang |9197| Page 154: Double quotes inside double quotes replaced with |9198| single quotes (single quotes used for the last |9199| reported speech in the story) |9200| Page 155: Single quote after "pretty safe" added; |9201| thick-neck replaced with thickneck |9202| Page 156: Momein replaced with Momien |9203| Page 161: uncivilized and civilization replaced with |9204| uncivilised and civilisation |9205| Page 162: Mexican Dollar replaced with Mexican dollar |9206| Page 164: Chung-king replaced with Chungking |9207| Page 172: Muntze replaced with Mungtze |9208| Page 184: Tong-chuan replaced with Tongchuan |9209| Page 186: Tai-ping replaced with Taiping |9210| Page 190: Full stop added after "in rags and barefoot" |9211| Page 192: Tali replaced with Talifu |9212| Page 193: a'accord replaced with d'accord |9213| Page 197: Question mark after "...that of a doctor?" |9214| replaced with full stop |9215| Page 199: mid-day replaced with midday |9216| Page 200: Yunnen replaced with Yunnan |9217| Page 204: Hsia-kwan replaced with Hsiakwan, twice |9218| Page 206: Commas added after "we replied" and "(you to go |9219| on)" |9220| Page 208: Mahommedan replaced with Mohammedan |9221| Page 219: Yung-chang replaced with Yungchang |9222| Page 220: Tali-fu replaced with Talifu |9223| Page 230: splended replaced with splendid |9224| Page 233: Full stop removed after Rivers; tea house |9225| replaced with teahouse |9226| Page 236: inn-keeper replaced with innkeeper |9227| Page 238: Laotseng replaced with Laotseng |9228| Page 246: Yung-chang replaced with Yungchang; "and other" |9229| replaced with "and another" |9230| Page 249: Yunnaness replaced with Yunnanese |9231| Page 259: Liliputians replaced with Lilliputians |9232| Page 270: Full stops after Power and Kachins removed |9233| Page 294: Chunking replaced with Chungking |9234| Page 295: Fenghsiang replaced with Feng-hsiang |9235| Page 296: Lingchi replaced with Ling chi |9236| Page 298: Subtopics under entry "Soldiers" separated with |9237| semi-colons |9238| |9239| Inconsistent capitalisations between the Table of |9240| Contents and individual chapter titles have been retained. |9241| |9242| Discrepancies between illustration captions and those in |9243| the list of illustrations retained, unless noted above. |9244| As the illustrations were not included with the original |9245| scans but were located during processing of this book, |9246| where there have been small differences the List of |9247| Illustrations has generally been preferred. |9248| |9249| One instance of Taouen with an unclear mark above the |9250| /u/, one instance of Tao[=u]en. This has been left as is. |9251| |9252| Punctuation of standard abbreviations (Mr., Mrs., per |9253| cent., s. ) has been standardised. |9254| |9255| Pounds, shillings and pence have all been italicised. |9256| |9257+------------------------------------------------------------+92589259* * * * *926092619262926392649265End of Project Gutenberg's An Australian in China, by George Ernest Morrison92669267*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AN AUSTRALIAN IN CHINA ***92689269***** This file should be named 19172.txt or 19172.zip *****9270This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:9271http://www.gutenberg.org/1/9/1/7/19172/92729273Produced by Thierry Alberto and the Online Distributed9274Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net927592769277Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions9278will be renamed.92799280Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no9281one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation9282(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without9283permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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