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1
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NEWFOUNDLAND TO
COCHIN CHINA.
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V/iTH KLi'uKTS U.^. UHiTISH TRADC AND (NTLHtbTo
IN CANADA, JAPAN, AND CHINA
JOWAKD VINCKNT. ',.:.}3., M J'.
Wilh fsUMEHOUi; ILLUi^Tt-JAnONS
SAMPS(;N LOW, ^iARSTO
COMPAiNY
t. V/Vi/i, .1
^l gijin»t»n'»
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BY
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NEWFOUNDLAND
i(»
COCHIN CHINA
BY THE GOLDEN WAVE, NEW NIPPON,
AND THE EORPIDDEN CPTY
UN-
Mrs. HOWARD VINCENT
AUTHORHSS OF "40,000 MII.KS OVER LAND AND WATER."
WITH REPORTS ON BRITISH TRADE AND INTERESTS
IN CANADA, JAPAN, AND CHINA
By Col. HOWARD VINCENT, C.B., MP.
WITH NUMEROUS ILLUSTRATIONS
LONDON
SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON & COMPANY
Limited
Fetter Lane, Fleet Street, E.G.
1892
[Ail rights reserved]
(3-
IN
39
. 142
• 144
• '5^
. 159
. 1 6.3
Xll
List of Illustrations.
My Carriage at Kioto .
A Chinese Street .
Our Home on the Peiho
How I went to Peking
A Gate of Peking .
A Street in Pekin'T-
Her Ladyship's Foot
All that is seen of the Forbidden City
Homage to " The Son of Heaven "
The Great W.ill . . ,
Harbour of Hon ij
34 Neto/oiindland to Cochin Chimin
Sound. This part of the line was laid by an
English engineer, who they say had never laid a
railway before; it was taken over by the C.P.R.
and was incorporated into their great line. It is not
difficult to believe that this was the case, for the
car narrowly escapes derailment by the roughness
of the road.
Owen Sound is the point of departure for the
C.P.R. steamers across the lakes of Huron and
Superior. I think it is a preferable route to the
railway, as it saves two days and two nights in the
cars. The steamers are very comfortable and
well arranged. They are constructed to carry a
large cargo. On this voyage the cargo consists of
agricultural machinery going out west for the
harvest, and soon it will be the grain of the north-
west which they will be carrying to the east.
They have a capacity for 40,000 bushels of grain,
and they are constructed in such a way that the
grain can be shipped direct to and from the steamer
by the grain elevator.
For several hours we steam through the Georgian
Bay or southern extremity of Lake Huron. It is
a pretty inlet with forested banks, and a great
expanse of smooth blue water. It is difficult to
realize the vast area of space covered by these
Canadian lakes. Lake Huron, which we have
been crossing all night, covers 28,000 square miles;
Lake Superior, which we arc about to enter, has
■
The Miin'/iiiic Provinces.
35
30,000 square miles. Lakes Erie, Winnipeg;,
Michigan, and Ontario, must be added to these
miniature oceans. And we arc not surprised to
find, that Canada claims to have one quarter of
the whole of the fresh water of the <^lobe on her
surface.
The next morning the banks of Lake Hin-on
are drawing closer together, leaving us a narrow
channel staked out in the centre. We are passing
a regular procession of barges. There are as
many as three being towed in line, and as the
passage is narrow and devious, we could shake
hands in passing. Also, as we salute each one,
and are saluted, with a threefold whistle, the noise
is continuous and wearing. 'J hcsf. barges are
laden chiefly with lumber, but some have coal,
grain, and ore.
We enter the narrow mouth of the Sault Stc.
Marie River, commonly called by the Americans
the " Soo." This river is the outlet between the
waters of Lake Huron and Lake Superior. There
is a fall of forty-two feet. It is a broad and muddy
river, and on the right hand we have American
soil, and on the left Canadian. Perched on the
bridge in the crisp morning air, the views are very
pretty. The mountains, as always, are covered
with the dark blue-green of the familiar pines.
The banks are clothed in brilliant green, just mellow-
ing into yellow under autumn's golden hand. We
D 2
6 Neiofoundland to Cochin China.
are shown a quarry of valuable variegated marble
in the mountain side, which is proving inexhausti-
ble. Then we pass the wreck of the Pontine.
She was run down by her sister ship four weeks
ago, and lies helplessly across the course, her bows
stove in, and the bridge and hurricane deck only
above water. They are pumping her out, gallons
of water pouring from her rent side.
Ten miles of this ascent of the river, and bending
round a corner, we come in sight of Sault Ste. Marie.
Like so many other places, the town has been
created by the developing energy of the C.P.R.,
whose cantilever railway bridge we sec crossing the
river, but it is typical of the energy and " go " of the
Americans, that on their side of the river there is
a town, whilst on the Canadian it is only a village.
At Sault Stc. Marie there are some pretty rapids
which you can shoot in a canoe. Communication
between the tvv'o great waterways of Lakes
Superior and Huron is by a lock, where the water
rises and falls sixteen feet. The lock is on the
American side, but the Canadians are making a
deeper one of twenty-two feet. This Soo Canal
is of the greatest commercial importance. Sixty
vessels, in the summer season, pass through it
daily, or more, they allege, than through the Suez
Canal.
There was a long procession of steamers and
barges waiting on either side for their turn. It is
The Maritime Provinces.
2>7
so shallow that little way can be allowed to the
ships in passing in and out, and for two hours and
a half we sat and were quite amused watching the
skill which packed three large steam barges into
this narrow canal. It must not be thought that
these steam barges are like our dirty barges on
the Thames or on English canals. They have a
tonnage of 1500 or 2000 tons, and are as smart
as white paint and polished brass can make them,
being lighted, too, by electricity.
These great lakes have a complete through
connection to the ocean by means of rivers,
locks, and canals. Recently the whale-back
boat was taken from Chicago by this route to the
Atlantic and across to London. But as the com-
merce from the West increases, the canals will
require widening and deepening. This through
waterway will have an important bearing on the
commercial development of Canada. Its draw-
back is that from November until April the lakes
are frozen. We, who travel through Canada in
the summer, forget what a different aspect the
country assumes, when for six months of the year
it is frost and snow bound.
A few hours after passing the Soo Canal, we
had left the flat banks behind us, and passed out
on to the ocean- like waters of Lake Superior,
across which we steamed for ten hours.
At eight o'clock there is the great purple pro-
38 Newfoundland to Cochin China,
montory of Cape Thunder in sight. It is a bold
outline against the pale morning sky, clear, with a
keen north wind. It shelters inside the circular
bay of Thunder, with Port Arthur at its head.
We pass Silver Island, where thousands of dollars'
worth of silver have been raised and sunk
again.
After the mine had been opened, the sea broke
in, and a crib had to be constructed. The silver is
there, but the difficulties in raising it seem insuper-
able. The whole of Cape Thunder is formed of
mineral deposits.
We land at Port Arthur. It is a sad place.
The C.P.R. has ruined the rising town by
choosing Fort William, five miles further up the
river, for its lake port. The once thriving place is
deserted, the shops closing, the large hotel empty.
Such is the power of a great monopoly ; it creates
and destroys by a stroke of the pen.
Before leaving the Alberta at Fort William, the
time is put back an hour. It recedes as we travel
westward, and advances for east-bound travellers.
The time of the Dominion is taken from Montreal,
and is numbered, for convenience and business
purposes, consecutively, that is to say, they have
no a.m. or p.m. to confuse their train-service, and
their watches have the double numbers, and one
p.m. becomes thirteen, and two p.m. fourteen, and
so on. A proposition has just been made in the
The Maritime Provinces,
Dominion Parliament to equalize the time, but it
will not pass, at all events, this session.
Fort William was one of the advanced posts of
the Hudson Bay Company. It is now a swamp
laid out in streets at right angles, with wooden
houses, overshadowed by some enormous grain
elevators. Doubtless it has a great future before
it.
We wait here five long hours for the west-bound
tram.
CHAPTER III.
BY THE GOLDEN WAVE TO THE FAR WEST.
Our journey to the Far West, through golden
wheat, began at Fort William ; from there the
Canadian Pacific takes us across to the ocean.
The C.P.R., with its 2990 miles of railway, is
the iron girdle that binds Canada together from
the Atlantic to the Pacific Oceans. She gives
cohesion to this conglomerate whole, with its
varieties of climate and production. Every mile of
the line is worth a mile of gold to the country, for
at every place where she lays down a station, that
place becomes a town, a centre of population,
civilization, and wealth to the surrounding district.
This railway has been the great explorer, the
great colonizer, the great wealth producer of
Canada. It is the artery of the body of the
Dominion.
One has constantly to remember that six or
seven years ago all this country through which
we are passing was an unexplored wilderness.
A little band of plate-layers, heade 1 by a surveyor,
To the Far West,
41
true pioneers, must have forced their way through,
hewing trees, blasting rock, and making the silent
woods resound with the voice of civilization,
occasionally coming across the track of some
Indian encampment or the marks of a bear. It
must have required
great
forethought and
organization from headquarters to have the plant
and stores ready to push on day by day, whilst
the railway in rear acted as the pioneers* single
communication with the outside world, as they
plunged deeper and deeper into the forests. The
average speed of construction was about five miles
a day, and the greatest length laid in one day
was twelve and a half miles. The portion of
line between Port Arthur and Fort William was
the most difficult to devise. Indeed, several
times the engineers despaired. The railway is
divided into divisional sections, with a suoer-
intendent at each. These again are divided into
sections, with a surveyor in charge ; and we
frequently pass their lonely section houses. Every
portion of the line is inspected once a day, the
workmen using a trolly, which can be lifted on and
off the track. It is a single line, and there is only
one passenger train daily east and west.
The trains are very long and heavy, often con-
sisting of eight or nine cars some eighty feet in
length, weighing as much as fifty tons each. They
would jump the track if lighter. Our train to-
42 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
day was of this length, and carried a human
freight of 286 persons, exclusive of the numerous
officials. The sleepers or sleeping-cars are most
elegant, with their polished pine wood inlaid with
mother-of-pearl, and their pale sea-green brocade
hangings.
The colonist cars on these trains are excellent,
and always, we noticed, well filled. They have
berths like the sleeper, only with no upholstery,
but the colonist can buy a mattress and pillow at
Montreal for a dollar or two. They have a stove
where they can cook their own provisions, and on
landing from the ocean steamers they get into this
car, live in it, and come as far west as they want
to without change or stoppage.
From Fort William we passed through a wild,
rocky country, following the line of the Kaminis-
tiquia, a shallow river scrambling over a rocky
course. There are a few of these soft liquid
Indian names, embodying some symbolical or
romantic ideal, still left ; but they are fast dying
out, and the practical settler is changing them to
a more prosaic but pronounceable nomenclature.
It was through this lonely district, then, un-
explored by white man, that for ninety-five days
Wolseley, in 1870, led his troops against the
Indians. They marched 1000 miles from Fort
William to Fort Garry, utilizing the water-way of
the lakes and rivers where possible. At Savanne
To (he Far West.
43
we sec two of his flat-bottomed boats, lyintj^ rottin^^
ill the stream near an Indian village.
We have dinner in the private car of Mr. I low-
land and Mr. Wilkie, the chairman and general
manager of the Imperial Bank of Toronto.
Seated at the end of the train, we watch the twin
lines of railway uncoiling themselves in a straight
line for mile after mile. An occasional section-
house, a station, which is often only a wooden shed
on a platform, a board with the number of the
section on it, and, at long intervals, a huge red tank
for watering the engine, is all we see. Night
closes in on this lonely country, and we sleep in
our berths, while the engine steams and pants
along into the darkness, hour after hour through
the long, long night.
In the cold early morning we reach Rat
Portage, passing from the state of Ontario into
Manitoba. Rat Portage is a wooden village of
1400 inhabitants (this is considered quite a goodly
population for this sparsely-peopled country) ;
and has the largest flour mill in Canada. It lies at
the outlet of the beautiful Lake of the Woods,
which is forty miles long and studded with
islands.
A brake has broken and the train is divided,
the first half taking on the dining-car. Hungry
and impatient, the passengers wait for another to be
attached, and stand on the carriage platform ready
44 Ncivfotindlanci to Cochin China.
to rush on board. But, as it passes, a howl of
disappointed hunger goes up, for some knowing
ones have jumped off the cars, and filled it before
it leaves the siding.
We are still travelling through the same rock-
bound countrj'', ungainly masses of rock protrud-
ing through a scrub growth of dwarf trees. We
continually pass beautiful lakes, placid sheets of
water hidden away in hollows. This is succeeded
by a run through some " muskeg " or black peaty
bog land, where flourish rank grasses against a
background of bushy poplar trees.
Thirty or forty miles from Winnipeg the
country opens out and gradually assumes a prairie
character. The land is quite flat now, covered
with coarse yellow grasses, and sprinkled with
wild flowers. It is a rich feast of colours. There
are great patches of gorgeous wild sunflowers,
masses of purple and white michaelmas daisies,
growing more plenteously here on the open prairie,
than when cultivated in our cottage gardens at
home ; there are bluebells and lupins, blue, pink,
and white, marsh mallows, cyclamen, and acres of
that weed-like growth, the golden rod. Isolated
houses, becoming more frequent, tell us we are
nearing Winnipeg. We cross the Red river and
are in the station.
Winnipeg is the old Fort Garry settlement
of the Hudson Bay Company. Twenty years ago.
To the Far JVcsL
45
or in 1 87 1, its population was 100, now, in 1 891, it
is 30,000.
Thie town is set down in the midst of the prairie.
Main street follows the winding of the old Indian
trail which takes in the deep bend of the Red
river. The City Hall in this street, or "on" as
the Canadians would say, is a very handsome
new-looking structure. It front of it stands the
column erected to the memory of the soldiers who
fell in the North-West rebellion of 1870. It is
surmounted by a volunteer on guard, wrapped in
his fur coat, and with his fur cap on his head.
The streets are paved with blocks of wood, but
the foot pavements are still boarded ; indeed
Winnipeg is a strange mixture, with Eastern
civilization meeting in this border city, the Western
or rough-and-ready methods of the settler. It is
only interesting on this account.
In the streets there are bullock carts bringing
in cradles of hay from the prairie ; sulkies, which
arc constructed of two wheels and a tiny board for
a driver's seat ; and buckboards, used for purposes
of all kinds. Nor must I forget the little carts with
their tandems of dogs. These are a mongrel breed,
and are much used, especially in winter, when they
are driven four, six, or a dozen in hand in sleighs.
As we get further west, the breed of horses
improves. There are country yokels with burnt
faces, coarse straw hat, and flannel shirt, gazing
:H'
46 Newfoundland to Coihin China,
open-mouthed at the store windows, for Winnipeg
is to them what London is to our country lads.
Here is a family party of Indians emerging from
a shop with numerous parcels, to the evident joy
of the squaw. But what strikes you so much is,
that you may pass from this handsome street of
fine stores, straight out on to the broad expanse of
prairie.
On the block of Government land stands the
fine group of stone buildings of the Parliament
Plouse, together with the Ministerial offices for the
Province of Manitoba, the Governor's residence,
and the wooden barracks enclosed in a square.
We stayed at the Clarendon Hotel, whose days are
I fear numbered, as the Northern Pacific Company
are just completing a magnificent red sandstone
hostelry. It is shown as one of the sights of
Winnipeg.
Mrs. Adams, wife of an old Royal Welsh brother-
officer of my husband's, kindly took m.e for a
drive in the afternoon. On the outskirts of the
town the Assiniboine river takes a deep bend, in
which there is some woodland. Trees are scarce
on the prairie, and what there are — poplar, oak
and maple — are all stunted in their growth from
exposure to the north-west blast, which sweeps in
winter across the great waste, a piercing, biting
wind blowing from over acres and acres of snow.
In this green belt there are many handsome
To the Far West.
47
houses, built in an ambitious style of architecture,
with towers and porticoes and balustrades. They
were chiefly constructed during the great " boom "
of nine years ago, a disastrous event that has left
its mark. The town still suffers from the troubles
which quickly followed. Families are yet living
under the cloud of the financial bankruptcy which
then overtook them.
In 1872, Winnipeg, with a sudden awakening,
realized the immense future before her as the
capital of the Far West. Land was quickly bought
up. Large prices given and realized. Houses
were built on a magnificent scale. Crowds
flocked in from all parts of Canada to share in the
coming prosperity, A complete collapse followed.
The bubble had burst.
The meaning of a " boom " may be thus simply
exemplified. A buys a piece of land from B,
and pays half the price down as a first instalment.
He sells to C at an increased price, who, in his
turn, does ditto to D. At length B, the original
seller, calls for payment. C and D are unable to
meet the call, and are ruined in endeavouring to
do so, and the land is thrown back on A, who is
in the same position, and B has it thrown on his
hands, and never having in the first place received
full payment, is also ruined, for he has speculated
with the money. All classes had taken part in
this " wild land speculation," and all were involved
4S Newfoundland to Cochin China.
in the collapse. Houses were closed (for they
could not be sold, as there were no purchasers) or
are only, as we now see them, partially lived in.
Winnipeg is slowly recovering from this ** boom,"
and with the youth and energy of a young city
will renew her prosperity.
Passing the ruined gateway of the old Fort
Garry, we appropriately come to the Hudson Bay
Store. It is contained in a larr^e block of build-
ings, and is a new departure in the trade once
absorbed by that great and powerful fur-trading
company. They first explored the country,
owned it, and kept up friendly relations with the
Indians. It was one of those great trading
monopolies, owned by merchants, and which have
done so much tor the wealth and commerce of
England. The Hudson Bay Company has accom-
plished in a minor degree for Canada, what the
East India Company did for India. This shop
may truly be called the Army and Navy stores of
the West, for it contains everything from brocades
and Paris mantles (which are bought by the
squaws) furs, carpets, groceries, to Indian blan^ ot
pipes and bead work. In this bead wo .*iw
blending of colours is exquisite. At th last
Louis Riel rebellion, the wholesale department
outfitted and provisioned at twenty-four hours'
notice, 600 soldiers for thirty days.
We then visited the tennis club. I am im-
To the Far Wc$f.
49
pressed with the immenst,' utih'ty of this popular
game, which, if useful in l^nijland, performs a
large social duty in all Canadian towns. It forms
a mild daily excitement, and a meeting place for
all, and is especially useful in a country where,
with the impossibility of obtaining servants, en-
tertaining is a difficult matter.
Canon O'Meara took us one morning to the
outskirts of the city to see the cathedral. Lying
out in the country and built of wood, it resembles
a simple village church. The surrounding
cemetery is full of handsome monuments, and
here lie many victims of the boom. The most
interesting monument is the granite sarcophagus,
engraved with seven names, surrounded by laurel
wreaths of the victims of the last rebellion. Their
remains were brought back here to be buried,
with an impressive public funeral.
We visited the Bishop of Rupert's Land in his
adjoining house. He is Metropolitan of eight
bishoprics, and has an enormous diocese reaching
into the unexplored regions of the Mackenzie
River. He has organized a college on the model
of an English University, and which confers
degrees.
Studying the working of the Church in Canada,
one ecognizes some arguments in favour of
Disf Lblishment. In Canada there is no State
cut ment, and the clergy are supported by
E
50 Newfoundland to Cochin C/iina.
voluntary contributions. This money comes
partly from pew rents, and is greatly assisted
by the envelope system. By this method the
parishioner covenants to give a certain sum a
year for the maintenance of his church, by fixed
weekly Sunday instalments. He is furnished with
fifty-two envelopes, on which his name is printed,
and these contributions are entered in a book.
There appears to be no difficulty in raising funds
by these means, particularly if the clergyman is
popular. If he is unpopular, or his doctrines un-
acceptable or extreme, he suffers by the falling off
of his income. This system, moreover, has the
advantage of giving every man an interest in his
church. A clergyman observed that several
members of his congregation appeared at church
for the first time on the establishment of this
envelope system. " Oh, yes," they said, in
response to his remark, " we have got some stock
in this concern now."
It works particularly smoothly where the bishop,
adapting himself to the needs of a new country,
admits the principle that those who pay must
choose. They require, however, a Clergy Dis-
cipline Act as much as we do.
Mr. Robinson took us in the afternoon for a drive
across the prairie to Sir Donald Smith's model
farm at Silver Heights, where there are three
splendid specimens of the now extinct buffalo.
To the Far West,
51
some of the few left of those vast herds that
used to roam the prairie. The farm takes its name
from the adjoining wood of silver poplar trees.
C. visited the venerable French Archbishop
Tache. He told him that he came out forty-six
years ago, and that it took him then sixty-two days
to travel from Montreal, what he can now perform in
sixty-two hours. He showed the inkstand from
which his uncle, the Premier of Quebec, Sir Etienne
Tache, signed the (Confederation Act of Canada.
TJiursday, August 2'jth. — Before leaving Winni-
peg Major Heward gave us an early inspection
at the barracks of the Mounted Infantry. They are
smart and well-mounted on brancho horses, reared
in the west. We also inspected the chief of the
three fire stations. They have a chemical
steamer. In this the water is mixed with carbolic
acid gas. Fire being supported by oxygen, the
carbolic gas, when thrown on it, extinguishes the
supply of oxygen, and with it the fire. The fire
bell, in sounding, throws open the stable door and
the horses trot out by themselves and place their
necks under the suspended collar, which descends
and is fastened by a patent bolt.
The west-bound trains all stop at Winnipeg for
five hours to allow time for the colonists to visit
the Railway and Dominion Land Offices, and to
obtain information respecting selections of lands.
The land in the North-West Provinces has now
E 2
52 Newfotindland to Cochin China,
been surveyed and allotted thus for twenty-four
miles each side of the line. In a township of
thirty-six sections of 640 acres, or one square mile
to each section, the Dominion retains roui^hly one
half, whilst the C.P.R. retains the other. There
are two sections reserved for school purposes,
that the value of the land may make the schools
free and self-supportin^^, two sections for the Hud-
son Bay Company, and the Canada North-West
Land Company have bought others. The diagram
on page 53 will show the division of section^.
The station was crowded with large parties of
emigrants, as many settlers leave their families
here, whilst choosing their sections further west.
There are bundles of bedding, tin cooking utensils,
with bird cages and babies in promiscuous heaps.
As we pass out of the station we see the enor-
mous plant and rolling stock of the C.P.R., which
has here its half-way depot between Montreal and
Vancouver. They have twenty miles of sidings,
which are now full of plant waiting to be pressed
forward, to bring down the harvest to the coast.
We are out on the prairie at once, on that great
billowy sea of brown and yellow grass ; monotonous
it is, and yet pleasing in its quiet, rich, monotones
of colour. The virgin soil is of rich black loam.
The belt of unsettled land round Winnipeg is
caused by the land being held by speculators, but
after that we pass many pleasant farms, clustering
To the Far West.
53
more thickly around Portage le Prairie, a rising
town. We pass a freight train entirely composed
TOWNSHIP DIAGRAM.
640 Acres.
s.
The above diagram shows the manner in which the
country is surveyed. It represents a township — that is, a
tract of land six miles square, containing 36 sections of one
mile square each. These sections are subdivided into
quarter sections of 160 acres each.
of refrigerator cars, containing that bright pink
salmon from British Columbia, which is a luxury
in the east and a drug in the west. The engine
54 Ncwfoiuidland to Cochin China.
bears a trophy of a sheaf of corn, to show that the
harvest in the west has already begun.
Out of the whole year we could not have chosen
a more favourable moment for visiting the North-
West, as the harvest is in full swing. We are at
this moment passing through a sea of golden grain,
acre after acre extending in an unbroken line to
the horizon. Indeed we are told that these wheat
fields form a continuous belt some forty miles deep
on either side of the railway.
It would be difficult for anyone living even in
the east of Canada, to realize the enormous interest
shown in the crops and weather out here. For
months and weeks beforehand it forms a general
topic of conversation, but, as August closes in, it
becomes the one and all absorbing concern. The
newspapers are scanned for the daily weather
reports. Warnings arc telegraphed broadcast
through the land. As Professor Goldwin Smith
says, in his book " Canada and the Canadian
Question," "Just before the harvest the weather
is no commonplace topic, and a deep anxiety
broods over the land."
The interests at stak are enormous, involving
as they do the question to many of prosperity or
ruin. One cold night, or one touch of frost may
destroy the labour of a year. This year the
promise is exceptional, and the prospect was bright
until a week ago. Then there were ominous
To the Far West,
55
whispers of frost. These early and late frosts are
the scourge of the farmer, and the lateness of the
harvest, owing to an exceptionally cold summer,
increases the anxiety. Day by day, hour by hour,
the temperature is discussed with earnestness, in-
creasing with intensity as evening approaches. The
other night there were people in Winnipeg going
up and down Main Street all night and striking
matches to look at the thermometer placed there.
The interest to all was so vital that they could not
rest. There are warnings published in bulletins to
farmers, to light smudge fires to keep the frost
from the wheat. These fires of stubble, lighted to
th« north or north-west of the fields, by raising the
temperature two or three degrees, keep off the
frost, and the dread of smutted wheat. We see
these smudge fires smouldering as we pass along.
The virgin soil will yield as much as forty to
fifty bushels of wheat an acre, and from fifty to
sixty of oats. Manures are unknown and un-
wanted by these western farmers. The land has
only to be "scratched with a plough," and the field
will often yield a rich harvest of 500 acres of
wheat. The hum of the harvest is heard in all the
land, and we see for miles the golden grain waiting
to be gathered, and the *' reapers and binders '
hard at work. This machine is an ingenious
American invention, which cuts and binds at the
same time.
rhere is a string inside which is given
56 Newfoundland to Cochin China,
a twist, a knife comes down and cuts the strings
and throws out the sheaf. It is pretty to watch
the rhythmical precision with which sheaf after
sheaf, thus cut and tied, is thrown out on the track
of the machine. The sheaves are then piled into
generous stacks and left for a fortnight to dry.
Labour is at a premium throughout Canada,
and machinery, chiefly of American manufacture,
is more largely used than in England. Sometimes
two chums will farm 200 acres alone. Nearly all
this grain we sec is the far-famed Manitoba No.
I hard. It is the finest wheat in the world.
We are now approaching Brandon, which is a
great wheat centre. This town has the largest
grain market in Manitoba, as is shown by five
elevators. "It is the distributing centre for an
extensive and well settled country." We should
have stayed here, but were deterred by accounts of
the hotel accommodation. Then came the pleasure
of an orange sunset, gilding the grain into more
golden glory. We passed the celebrated Bell
Farm at night where the furrows are usually four
miles long, and the work is done by military
organization, " ploughing by brigades, and reaping
by divisions."
At five o'clock we are left cold and shivering in
the just broken dawn on the prairie side at Regina.
We look wistfully after the disappearing train,
with the warm berths inside the car. Deceived by
To the Far West.
57
the high-sounding designation of Capital of the
Xorth-West Provinces, we had broken our journey
at Regina. There is a frontage to the line of
some wooden houses and stores, which extends
but a little way back, for the population of Regina
is only as yet 2000. The prairie extends to the
sky line on every side. It is a dreary prospect,
aud we are mutually depressed.
There being nothing else to do, I retire to bed
for some hours — the Sheffield-born landlady giving
us a true Sheffield welcome.
At one o'clock matters seem brighter, for
Colonel Herchmer, commanding the Mounted
Police of the North-West Territory, has kindly
sent a team for us to drive two miles out across
the prairie to the barracks. From the distance,
the dark red buildings look quite a town, sur-
mounted by the tower of the riding school. This
force is organized on military lines, and consists
of 1000 men, who maintain order over the Indian
Reservations, and an area of 800 miles. Their
uniform of scarlet patrol-jacket and black forage
cap, with long riding-boots is extremely smart.
You meet them in all parts of the North-West
Provinces.
After lunching with Mrs. Herchmer, we inspected
the officers' and men's mess rooms, the canteen,
store room, kitchens and forge, the reading-room,
bowling alley and theatre, and the guard room,
58 Nciufoundland lo Cochin China,
where we were shown the cell in which Louis
Riel was kept after his capture. The force is
under strict military discipline. They have a
football and cricket team, and a musical ride equal
to that of the Life Guards.
The horses are all " bronchos," or prairie horses,
bred chiefly from Indian ponies. They cost loo
dols. to 120 dols. each, and arc short and wiry.
They need to be strong, for the men must be five
feet eight inches in height, and measure thirty-five
inches round the chest, whilethe Californian saddles
they use are very heavy. These saddles are after the
model of the Spanish South American ones, with
a high pommel in front and a triangular wooden
stirrup. The horses are guaranteed to go forty
miles a day. There are many gentlemen in the
ranks of the force, some of whom have failed in
ranching and other walks of life. The wild
roving life on the out-stations maybe pleasant, but
there is no promotion from the ranks.
A drive of two miles further out on to the
prairie brought us to one of the Dominion
Schools, kept for the children of the Indian
Reservations. Mr. Hayter Reed, the Government
Inspector, who showed us over the school, told us
that they do not force the parents to give up the
children, but persuade them. It is uphill work at
first, civilizing and teaching English to the little
brown, bright-eyed children, with lank black hair,
To the Far West.
59
whom we saw in the schoolrooms. The bath and
the wearing of boots is a severe trial to these gipsy
children at first.
The Government acknowledges in the building
of these schools its responsibility towards the
natives. They made treaties with the Indians,
giving them rations, and setting apart certain
lands or Reservations for them, such as the Black
Foot and the Sarcee. The Americans did the
same with their Indians, but did not keep their
treaties as we have done. However, like all other
" indigenes," they are dying out with the advance
of the white man's civilization. We drove home
past Government House, and in the evening
M. Royat, the Lieut.-Governor, presided over an
enthusiastic meeting of the United Empire Trade
League.
Since very early morning, and all through this
interminably long hot day, we have been crossing
the great desert prairie. Hour after hour has
dragged wearily on, and still we look out from the
car on to the symmetrical lines of the rolling
plains.
For over 4CXD miles, from Retina to Medicine
Hat, this vast steppe extends. There is no green
thing on it — not a tree, or bush, or shrub — but it is
covered with coarse grass, burnt to a sere yellow.
The prairie is trackless as a desert ; lonely as the
ucean ; vast and colourless as a summer sky. And
6o Newfoundland to Cochin China.
yet the prairie pleases, its loneliness fascinates, its
very monotony charms, the deep stillness soothes,
the tints arc so pale and quiet. There is the faded
yellow of the grass, and the faint blue of the sky
meeting on the horizon in that never-ending
undulating line, unbroken and uninterrupted.
The atmosphere is so clear that the blades of
grass stand out alone, and a distant sage bush is
intensely blue. Occasionally the haze makes the
mirage of an ocean on the sky line. The only
variety to this unvarying scene are the great saline
lakes we frequently pass. A blue haze hangs over
them, caused by the active evaporation, and now
and again we see a shining patch of pure white
crystal, which is the crust of salt left from an ex-
hausted lake. At other times these dry basins arc
carpeted with a rich red and purple weed, that
forms an oasis in the wilderness of burnt- out
hues.
We see many buffalo trails, for though these
animals have been extinct for some years, their
prancings beat the trail so hard, that they are still
in existence. As manv as 160,000 were killed
yearly, and with them disappeared the chief
sustenance of the Indians. The prairie is strewn
with their bleached skulls and carcasses. By the
side of the stations there are stacks of their gigan-
tic bones, artistically built up with the skulls facing
outwards. Gophers start up and skurry away at
To the Far West.
6i
the noise of the train. They correspond to the
prairie dog of America, but arc smaller and about
the size of a rabbit.
Wc are impressed with the comparative fertility
of the Canadian prairie, when contrasted with the
similar belt of saline desert in America, for barren
as this looks, parts of it are good for cattle ranching.
We do, later in the day, occasionally pass a few
settlers' dwellings, and presently the first of the
Canadian Agricultural Company's farms. There
are ten of these farms, consisting of 10,000 acres
each, and situated at intervals of thirty miles
between this and Calgary. We see on them
frequent "fire breaks," or a ploughed acre left
bare to prevent a fire from spreading in the crops.
There are men, too, stationed along the line firing
the grass, so that a spark dropped from the engine
should not, by blazing this grass, spread to the
ripening corn.
We inquire what is the use of the mounds
by the tracks, and are told these are snow brakes.
In this flat country the smallest rise is sufficient
to make a drift, against which the snow piles to a
great height.
We pass Moosejaw. The name is an abridg-
ment of the Indian one, which literally means,
"The-creek-where-the-white-man-mended-the-cart
with-a-moose-jaw-bone." At Maple Creek there
are large stock yards, where the cattle are brought
62 Nciofoinidlaud (o Cochin China.
down from far distant ranches, and even from
over the American border at Montana, and put
on the train to Montreal and exported to
England.
The car had been up to 95^, but the intense
heat was beginning to subside. With the refresh-
ing coolness and the sun declining, we are also
gladdened by the sight of a gradually rising
slope on the dead level of the plain. It is the
beginning of the Cypress range. Then we see
a bush, some trees, some prairie flowers, and
soon we are dropping down into the compara-
tively fruitful valley of the South Saskatchawan,
and, crossing its broad river, we reach Medicine
Hat.
It is delightful after the stifling atmosphere of
the cars to get out and stroll in the station garden,
which is full of old-fashioned English flowers,
stocks, geraniums, verbenas, floxes, and migno-
nette. There are a picturesque party of Indians
with their squaws and papooses on the platform.
We have seen some at all the stations selling
polished buffalo horns, mocassins and bead work ;
but try and " kodak " them as we often did — and
the instant they saw the small black box, the
men turned away and the women put their shawls
over their heads.
On leaving Medicine Hat, we ascended the
valley above the river and passed on to a more
To I lie I'lir 11 \s/.
63
fertile prairie. There was just here a great
meeting-place for the buffaloes, and the ground
is full of their "wallows" or hollows made by
the weight of their unwieldly bodies. Alas,
that the law afr.'unst th
slaughter came
been wantonly killed !
at the atrocious hou
of a warm berth into a
foui
\ears after they had all
We reach Calgary
two a.m., and turn out
bed at the hotel.
Siinda)\ August loth. — We attended morning
service ?t the pretty little wooden church, the
Bishop of Saskatchawan officiating.
Calgary is the capital of Alberta and is in the
centre of a great ranche country. Like all these
towns out west it is an unfinished conglomeration
of houses, laid out in imaginary streets at right
angles, in which there are few houses and more
gaps. The whole is held together by a principal
street, in which there are two or three pretentious
new stone buildings. From here the houses
straggle away into the country, the unoccupied
lots being joined to them by a boarded foot-path.
These towns have no depth, they are all surface
and length. Laid down on the prairie there are
no trees near them and they have a bare un-
finished ugliness, peculiar to their new growth.
You are reminded at every turn of the reason
for Calgary's existence, for its shops indicate the
ranchers' wants. There arc many saddlers, dis-
64 Ncivfonndland to Cochin China.
playing Californian saddles, stock whips and
lassoos ; others have camp bedding and furniture ;
cpnncd goods, that stand-by of the rancher, are
evidently in great demand. The dry-goods stores
are full of flannel shirts, slouching broad-brim-
med hats and "chaps," or the cowboy's leather
leggings reaching to the thigh. Nearly evervone
you meet is English, there are few born Canadian .
The streets are full of cowboys riding thr'-'r
long-tailed, half-groomed bronchos at a hand
grilop, or of sulkies with the unmistakable
rancher, with shirt open at the throat, slouch
hat, and tanned face. The chief subject of con-
versation is the dimensions of the ranches, the
number of head of cattle and horses on each.
In the afternoon a Police team came vv'th Mrs.
Mclllree, to drive us oijt^ to see one of these
ranches. Out here anything from a single horse
to a four-in-hand is called a " team," but this was
one in our sense of the term.
We galloped across a trail on the prairie, and
then wound through a " coolie," as they call the
little valleys lying in between the rolling hills,
and which are so frequent in this country. There
are hundreds of gophers popping out of their
holes, and as we see them close, sitting up with
their long bodies, they look like tiny kangaroos.
We espy coveys of prairie chickens, which are
like our grouse.
To tJic Far ]Vcst.
6-^
As we reach the open ground there is a splendid
country spread out before us. Var as the
eye can reach, extending into the foot-hilL' at
the base of the Rockies, there are miles and
miles of rolling upland pastures, that resemble
our Wiltshire downs. The whole of this vast
area has been ** taken up," and is a succession
of ranches. We can see the little wooden houses
with their outbuildings, scattered at long intervals .
Those innumerable specks on the downs are
the cattle and horses, literally " feeding on a
thousand hills," We are following the sweeping
bends of the Elbow river, which lies below us in
a cool green ravine, full of trees, in pleasant con-
trast to the brown hills around.
The ranche we are going to belongs to Mr.
Robinson, and used t'^ be called the l^lbow Ranche,
but has lately changed its name to the Chippen-
ham, in accordance with the idea of calling the
ranches hereabouts after the great English hunts.
Messrs. Martin, Jameson, and Go.-don-Cumming
(the latter of whom we met at the hotel with his
pet black bear), have called their ranche the Quorn.
One ranche differs not from the other, except in
degrees of comfort. They are all built of wood,
generally with verandahs, and after the simplest
model of a square house, with a door in the centre
and uMudows on each side. There are no trees
or shrubs, or creepers scfircely even an attempt
F
♦)
66 Nca'/oiiJifl/and to Cochin China.
at a garden ; a rouci^h paling alone divides them
from the prairie. I^ol,^s walk in and out and
arc purt of the family. The plains are bare.
Yet what a world of romance lingers round the
I'he Kanclic Pupil.
expression, " out ranching in the West." We
dream of sunrise and sunset on the open prairie,
of wild gallops in the early morning with the
dew on the grass, of camping out under the
starlight. But I trow the rcalit\' is far removed
To the Far West,
6-
from the ideal, and that it ends with a bunk in
the cowboy's hut wrapped up in a blanket, with
tough prairie beef and doughy bread for their
fare. I am sure if some fond mother could see
her darling" boy in his cowboy's dress, and his
quarters in the log hut, she would never be
happy until she had him by her side again. It
is clearly a case of " where ignorance is bliss," etc.
But still, for a strong constitution there is nothing
to fear, and sobriet}- and industry may lead to
fortune.
We look at the " corral '' or wooden pen, sub-
divided into partitions, where, after the animals
have been driven in, the one required is gradually
separated by being shut off in pen after pen^ until
a narrow passage is reached. Here wooden
barriers are let down and he is thus confined in a
cage. They can then brand him u ith an iron
stamped with the mark of the ranchc. If it is a
colt to be broken, they saddle, bridle and mount
him before leaving the pen. Then comes the
struggle, in which the rough rider requires great
skill, tact, and experience, for a liorse will do any-
thing to unseat his rider the first time. Unmerci-
full)' sharp bits an-? used, but the horse is guided
more by the rein on the neck. The boys ride
loosely when galloping over the prairie, leaving
the horse to look out for the holes, and he rarely
makes a mistake.
I" 2
68 Newfoundland to Cocliin China.
The horses on this ranche arc bronchos, but they
have not sufficient blood for the English market*
and, added to this, the branding detracts from their
value. They are worth about 120 dols. each.
This firing is said to be a necessity, as the
ranches are often 500 acres in extent. The
animals roam at will, with perhaps a couple of
men, living in a log hut twenty miles away from
the ranche, told off to look after them. Twice a
year they " round up ; " that is, the owners meet
and appoint a place, where the cattle are driven in
and claimed by their owners, who know them by
their brands, and colts and calves are then marked.
This rounding up is done in the spring and the fall
of every year, and is beginning now. The brands
are some of them very ingenious in device.
Settlers advertise in the newspapers for lost animals,
giving their brands, which are well known to all
the country round.
Docs ranching pa}- ? They tell us it can and
does, but, as in every other walk of life, hard work,
capital and experience are required. Those who
are wise, before beginning ranching on their own
account, go through a cowboy apprenticeship on
some ranche. Our driver in Calgary confided to
us " that them young men didn't do no good to
themselves out here, but they did good to the
country, for they fr^el}' spent the remittances from
home."
To the Far West.
69
We came home by the Indian Sarcee Reserve.
On an open space over the river we saw some
poles placed together with a suspended hook. It
is the place where the Indians "make their braves."
In this terrible ordeal their young men have this
hook twisted into the muscles of their chests and
are drawn up b)' it. They must utter no cry of
pain. Indian encampments are met with all over
the prairie. You know their " topee " tents, by
the poles sticking up in the centre, in distinction
to the ordinary tents of the half-breeds. They
have numerous horses and cattle, which are
rounded up with others. They are kept by an
inspector within their reserves, and there is a large
fine for anyone selling them intoxicating drink.
They appear innocent and harmless, and only
given to paltry thieving.
CHAPTER IV.
THE CANADIAN ROCKIES AND THE SELKIRKS.
Since our arrival at Calvary we have been
mancEuvring to see by what means we could escape
the start at 2 o'clock in the morning. As the
C.P.R. has only one train westward each day,
1 1 owe J'asb.
you must continue )'our juurney at the >ame time
as you previously arrived. Now w c have received
permission to travel b}- a freight train, and Mr.
Niblock, the Superintendent of the division, has
kindly lent us his private car.
The Canadian Rockies and the Sclkirks. ; i
The freight train was due between six and seven
o'clock, and it was somewhat annoying, as we had
risen at 5 o'clock, to have to wait about the plat-
form at the station until nine. Early as it was,
the town was astir with sportsmen in their buggies
with their guns and dogs, off for a day's shooting
on the prairie. For this bright morning is the ist
of September, their \2th of Align st^ and there will
be massacre amongst the prairie chickens ere
nightfall. The shooting is open to all, and you
may roam over anybody's land.
We can sec the " Rockies " for the first time this
morning. Since we have been at Calgary the
mountains have sulked in clouds and mist, and
Calgary docs not, as some people would have you
believe, lie under \}cii:. Rockies, but fifty miles away.
In the clear morning air, they appear nearer to
us than they really are.
We arc soon well into the foot-hills, those grassy
rounded slopes, which are the first rising ground
from off the prairie, and which lead up to and end
in the Rocky Mountains. The blue Bow river flows
merrily in the valley ; there are hundreds of
horses and cattle feeding on these river terraces,
for there arc ranches lying up to and under the
foot of the Rockies.
The great Mmi)hithcatr(.' of mountains, which
has been coming nearer by leaps and bounds, is
beginning to impress us with its barren purple
72 Xcw/oiDidlami to Cochin China.
scars, and just as vvc arc entering among them
our guard stops the train, and takes us out to see
the Kananaskis Falls in the Bow river. We hear
their dull and distant thunder before we see the
clear mountain torrent, sliding down over ledges
of rock, forming a long white-flecked rapid, before
taking a final leap over a precipice. The con-
ductor then invites us to climb up into the caboose,
and scrambling up, we are perched inside the turret
of the van, where there are windows that command
the view on all sides. We share this elevated
position with the brakesman, who is ready to run
along the platform on the top of the waggons, and
turn on the brakes, for each waggon has a separate
one, connected with a wheel at the top. We sub-
sequently discussed whether to give this amiable
conductor a tip, but came to the conclusion that it
was superfluous, on learning from the car atten-
dant that his salary, calculated at three cents a
mile, gave him an income of 500/. a year.
We are now breaking through the outer barrier
of the Rockies, and penetrating deeper into the
mountains by a valley. The railway is challenging
the monarchs, for they rise up on every side and
could so easily crush us, as we wander through the
green valley by the side of the Bow river, our
travelling comrade for many days to come, its
waters are pale emerald green now, but later on
will be milk-blue with the meltinir snow and
The Canadian Rockies and the Selkirk's. 73
i^round-up moraine, brought down by its moun-
tain tributaries.
Wc shoot " the gap," described as
■' two vertical walls of dizzy height."
It would be truer to say that the line
turns sharply round a projection
of rock, whilst a mountain ap-
proaches from the other side. It
is ii fraud! AtCanmorewe rest
an hour. As we get out of
the cars, the intense stillness
of the valley strikes us. Wc
look up to, and are covered
by the shadows of the three
Kaiiiinaskis I'alls,
Acll-defmcd slanting peaks of the Three Sisters
and the Wind mountain. When we start again
the mountains continue to increase in grandeur,
74
/Vf K\fou n dla nd to Cm li in L h in . i .
though I think that Baroness Macdonald's rhai)-
sodies quoted in the Annotated Time Table,
exaggerate the beauty of this part of the Rockies.
It is curious to notice the remarkable difference
between the two ranges we are passing throu;4h.
Those to the left arc
fantastically broken
into varied shapes
and forms penetrated
by crevasses, full
of deep blue and
purple -red shadows.
Whilst the range to
the right is formed of
grey and white lioary-
headed peaks, and look
brilliantly cold and
white, in the strong
sunlight.
We approach the
Cascade Mountain.
*' This enormous mass
seems to advance to-
wards us and meet us
(.ascade Mountain.
It entirely blocks our
further progress, and the truin seems to be going
t^ travel up it. We api)car to touch it, but in
reality it is many miles awa\-. This Cascade
Mountain gives }ou more idea than anything else
of the colossal proportion of the mountains, whicli
The Canadian Rockies and the Sclkirks, 75
ycu lose by proximity, and by their uniformly
large scale. It also shows you the deception
caused by the clearness of the atmosphere. For
the silver cascade which we sec falling down its
side is ten feet across, and yet it looks lilsc a
thread of cotton. The mountain we could well-
. * j^jgj^ touch is five
I A miles or more away.
It is a striknifj sen-
sation.
Another half-hour
and we reach Banff.
As a whole, I think
this part of the
scenery disappoint-
ing, but people talk
so much about it, because it
is their first experience of
the mountains, coming as it does
' * too after a thousand miles of
Cascade Moun- . .
tuin, IJanff. prau'ic.
\Vc are hot and tired after our
journey, and have long to wait for " the rig," which
is repeatedly telephoned for. When it does appear
it is drawn by a vicious roan, fresh from a ranch c,
which shies and bolts in a terrifying way. There
arc two miles of a badish road, which wc do not
sec for the clouds of dust that accompany us. This
tlust is the drawback to Banff. The mountains
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76 Newfound land to Cochin China.
have not come up to our expectations. Will it
be so also with Banff? To-morrow will show.
Wednesday, Scptevibcr 2nd. — A day to be re-
membered. A day of complete satisfaction.
Cradled in the stillness of the mountains, closed
in by them in solemnity and darkness, the babble
of the Bow River joinin<^ its waters with the Spray,
we fell asleep. This mornini,^, the sun of a most
perfect day awakes us, and the sound of the rushing
waters is the first to greet our cars. My windows
form two sides of the room, and I dress with the
sun streaming in at the one and the breeze at the
other, and a panorama of mountains seen from
them both. The air is exhilarating to intoxication ;
the atmosphere intensely clear. We do nothing
all day, we live in the companionship of the moun-
tains.
We have been with them in the early morning,
when the pale-rose tints, the opalescent blue, the
delicate pearl-grey, lay lightly on their rugged
summits, and made them seem so near and tender.
We have seen them in the heat of noon, looking
strong and hard, with black shadows in the cre-
vasses and their great stony veins and muscles
standing out in relief in the sunshine. They seem
full of manhood, defiant, and self-sufficient. We
have watched these same mountains in the gla-
mour of declining days, soften again as the shadows
steal up the pine woods, leaving patches of sun-
i|iiii
TJic Canadian Rockies and the Selki7'ks. 77
light. One side of the valley is in gloom, whilst
the other is bathed in golden light. Their grey
peaks stand out as if cut with a sharp-edged knife
against the even paleness of the sky. A few fir
trees at their summit look like green needle-points,
and the trail of pines climbing up the mountain,
like soldiers marching in single file trying to scale
the fortress heights.
'/ ,\.
In the centre of the valley there are two great
mountains, and as I write they are becoming
wrapped in purple-blue gloom, with sable .shadows
in their granite sides, and whilst the valley is in
darknes?:, the peaks are still bright with the last
gleams of fading daylight. Behind this mountain
again, there are three acute peaks, which stand
fiom behind its dark shoulder, and they are rosy-
red with an Alpine after-glow.
78 Neivfimndland to Cochin Chinn.
As we sit out after dinner in the gloaming', the
mountains are still dimly visible. They have lost
their individuality, and their soft full outlines arc
limned against the luminous sky. Stars rise from
behind them; there is one of intense brightness,
and several shooting ones make a bright pathway
across the mountains.
There are mountains of every description at
Banff, It is this variety that gives such charm
to the place. Some are entirely clothed with
pines, others partly so, with barren summits.
Others again are nothing but rock and granite from
base to summit, from earth almost to heaven, and
down their sides there are marked deep slides,
where the rock and limestone has crumbled into an
avalanche of stone and dust. The changes on
their unchanging surfaces arc the most beautiful.
Like human nature, hard on the surface, they have
hidden soft and susceptible moods. The pine-
clad mountains are sunnier and more pleasing, but
it is those of adamantine rock that fascinate you.
They say that no view is perfect without water.
The Bow River here gives the poetry of motion,
and makes music to echo against the hills. It has
the most perfect miniature falls I ever saw. They
are pretty, yet not tame ; they are noisy, yet not
thundering ; they murmur and quarrel without pro-
ducing soul-agonizing sounds. They charm, but
do not exercise the dangerous fascination of
TJic Canadian Rockies and the Selkirks, 79
Xiaeara. Their water is creamy blue in the sun-
light, and cerulean in the shadow of the ravine,
down which in bars and trails of foam it rushes,
until it throws itself over the fall, in a snow-white
cloud, flecking the rocks on the banks with
froth.
/
All the mountains have names — such as the
Twin Brothers, the Sentinel, the Devil's head ; but
these names are meaningless. You know and
^\T,\\ to love each by its own individual character-
istic. The hotel in their midst scarcely mars the
scene, for it is a picturesque structure perched on
a natural platform, built of yellow wood, and with
HCH
■fm
So Ncwfottndland to Cochin China.
a roof of warm red shingles, and green trellises to
cover the foundations. Its situation is so perfect
that }'ou scarcely improve your view, or want to
drive about the valleys. Vou may, perhaps, come
a little nearer to the mountains, or see their
reverse sides. There is one, however, the Twin
Brethren, which gains by coming near to it,
because you can stand absolutely under a mam-
moth rampart of granite, shot straight into mid
air, horizontally upward. It strikes fear into yoii
as you gaze up to it, and as with these mountains
comparison is the only thing which gives you
even the remotest idea of their superb size, a
great rock, as big as a small hill in itself, broke
off some years ago and lies on the ground, amid
smaller stones, as wc ought to call them, but
which are really large rocks. Wc can trace the
exact place where it cracked away from the
symmetry of rock, leaving an unseemly cavit}-
and a long moraine of debris. The air is so dry
that everything is like tinder. Forest fires are
frequent, and wc mark their track up the mountain
sides and see the smoke of one or two. A ^^w
mutilated trees are all that are left of the mag-
nificent primeval forest, and the pines we see are
a second and third growth.
Though the mountains stand around so silent
and stately, there is a great unrest beneath them.
A volcano burns below, which may break forth
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The Canadian Rockies and the Selkirks. 8 i
at any time, for Banff has several liot mineral
pools and springs, sure indication that the earth
here is only an upper crust, with hell-fire beneath.
The temperature of these springs is 127 degrees
Fahrenheit, and there are baths for the outer man,
and taps of water for the inner.
Thursday, September ^rd. — A day of blankest
disappointment. A cruel change from yesterday.
From early morning
the mountains have
been blurred and blot-
ted out by an im-
penetrable haze of
smoke. The sun,
though ready to give
us all it did yester-
day, has not shone,
and has been only a
fiery ball suspended
in the air. It is
caused by a forest fire raging destruction, it may
be, many miles from here, but the smoke, from
the smouldering, spreads and hangs like a curtain,
lasting often for many days. We canoed up the
Bow River to the pretty Vermilion Lakes.
Friday, September ^th. — I could not resist a
peep out of my window at four o'clock. The
outlook was more promising I thought, and went
back to bed cheered. We left the hotel at six.
(;
'ool. ] lot Spriiv^s,
r.anir.
8,2 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
Colddespair settled on us all, for the mountains
loomed gloomily through a colourless haze. Ex-
ceedingly cold and depressed, we huddled into
the sheltered corner of the Observation Car, a car
for the view, open on all sides. I had heard so
much of the magnificent scenery that 1 had
looked forward keenly to this crossing of the
Rockies, and it seemed I was to be disappointed.
After all, it is only like the disappointments you
meet with in life, as, nine times out of ten, the
thing most wished for, is a disillusionment when it
comes.
Range after range of mountains is unfolding
before us. They approach : we pass immediately
under them, and they recede, only to give place to
others as grand and massive. All are of solid
rock, colossal masonry piled up to magnificent
proportions, their zeniths crowned with pinnacles
and spires, with square and round and pointed
towers. In one place you distinctly see the steps
leading up to a broken column. The most im-
pressive one is Castle Mountain, though the isolated
helmet-shaped peak of Lefroy, 11,200 feet, is tlie
loftiest. This mountain stands in solitary majesty
by itself in the valley. There is no ascending or
descending range near it. You can see the battle-
ments, with their loop-holes regularly jagged out at
the summit of the bastions, and a tower at either
end. They are faintly yet clearly discernible. It
The Canadian Rockies and the Scl kirks. "^2^
is truly a Giant's Keep, and I think the finest
mountain in the range, though they are all so
sublime and grand in this wonderful valley that it
is scarcely fair to discriminate. Running con-
currently with the track is our dear old friend, the
Bow. We have lived continuously with it for three
days, and feel quite friendly towards it.
Soon we see the beginning of the glacier range,
and feel the awe inspired by those eternal ice-
bound regions where winter reigns for ever, and
none can live, and where even nature cannot
vegetate. The glaciers lie frozen on to their
surface, finding foothold in a crevasse or basin,
hollowed out probably by their own action.
Under one of these glaciers lie the Trinity of
Lakes, called the Lonely Lakes of the Rocky
Mountains, one beneath the other, with Lake
Agnes touched by the glacier. At Laggan we
have a heavier engine attached, and extra bolts
and brakes screwed on.
We begin the ascent of the Rockies ; the cross-
ing of the Great Divide. It is gradual and not
nearly such a dramatic incident as the crossing of
the Great Divide of the Americans. In fact, the
gradients are so gently engineered that, though
the engine makes a great noise about it, you
scarcely believe you have reached the top, and
are looking for something more exciting when you
see the wooden arch at the summit, on which is
G 2
84 NewfoHiuiland to Cochin China.
inscribed " The Great Divide." In this case it
alludes mockingly to the tiny stream which here
divides and flows towards the Atlantic on one side,
and the Pacific on the other. There is here a deep
green lake, called Summit Lake.
We begin the descent by a succession of per-
fectly equal curves that incline first to the right
and then to the left, bearing us downwards all the
time. And now comes what is by far the most
memorable scene in the Rockies. It is deeply
impressive, and is only too swiftly passed. It is
called the Kicking Horse Pass. We must turn
for a moment from the sublime to the ridiculous
for the origin of this name. When the party of
surveyors reached the summit of the pass a white
pony kicked off its pack. This gave it the name,
which will now always cling to it. We cross the
Wapta river on to its left side, and plunge wildly,
recklessly, into a deep gorge. Deeper and deeper
we rush down into the canyon, darker and more
impressive the situation becomes as we cling to
the mountain side, whilst the river tears down yet
deeper than us, until it appears a caldron of foaming
silver in the gloom at the bottom of the gorge.
And, look, up on one side is a perpendicular
mountain of which, so far down are we, we cannot
see the summit ; on the other, there are those
supremely graceful spires of Cathedral Mount,
pointing with silent finger to the sky. If you look
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MUUNT STEIHEN, THK KINC OF IHK CANADIAN KOCK)E>.
Page S;.
The Canadian Rockies and t lie Selkirks, Sq
down into that immensity of depth, and then up
as far as the eye can reach, this is wliat vou see.
First, the silver river gleaming in its black channel ;
on a level and opposite to you a bank of bright
green moss and ferns and tangled growth ; then
tiers and tiers of pine trees wending skywards,
until thev reach the base of the rock, whence
spring those airy towers. The great Duomo
head of Mount Stephen beyond forms a superb
dome to these sentinel spires that are so light and
gracefully poised in such close proximity to
heaven. Straight, in front, and shutting in this
marvellous gorge, is the angular peak of ISIount
iM'eld. Just past the summit there are a number
of graves of men who died of mountain fever,
which broke out whilst they were making the line.
Mount Stephen, called after the first President
of the Railway, Lord Mount-Stephen, absorbs our
attention next. It is certainly the most superb
mountain of the Rockies. On its "swelling
shoulder" is seen a shining green glacier, " which
is slowly pressing forward and over a vertical cliff
of great height." The cyclopean masses of rock
are richly veined in red and purple. As the train
humbly creeps round the base, the summit is
entirely lost to us. Opposite are the swelling
mountains of the Van Home range ; they touch
the muddy, shingly bed of a river.
We breakfast at the pretty hotel at Field, and
86 Ncwfouudlaiid to Cochin China.
feci disgusted that the claims of nature must be
satisfied, whilst Mount Stephen in its glorious
might and strength, and its limitless surface of
adamantine rock, raises its hoary zenith immedi-
ately above us. We made the greatest mistake
in not staying a day here, and, by ascending
a neighbouring mountain, being still more im-
pressed with its colossal proportions.
On leaving Field, we travel between the " orderly
array of peaks of the two ranges of Otter-Tail and
the Beaver Foots."
At Falliser, the driver allows us to ride on the
engine through the Second Kicking Horse Pass.
It runs madly down into growing darkness, closer
and higher the mountains draw. The boiling
river disputes the narrow chasm with us, and it is
a hand-to-hand struggle in which the line has
frequently to give up to the river, and to cross
over from side to side to gain a footing. The
engine tears wildly down hill, reeling round the
sharp curves at an angle of 20^, with the train
doubling itself. You cannot hear yourself speak
for the noise of the foaming river and the panting
of the engine. As we plunge into the dread dark-
ness of a tunnel, the engine whistles, and the echo
is dying, dying, dead, to us — as we arc lost in
blackness. It is wonderful to see the driver
control this huge, puffing, black monster by a
gentle pressure on two valve handles, which it
The Canadian Rockies and the Se I kirks. 87
resents with an indi
of til
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seen
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The Canadian Rockies and the Scl kirks. 93
arc in lies so deep down, that it is still in shadow.
The pleasure of awakening in such glorious sur-
roundings makes us feel the pleasure of living.
We spend the morning in climbing a mountain
to Mirror Lake, winding up and up in the shade
of the red-stemmed cedars, and at each precipitous
curve, the snow-sheets on the line dwindle, and we
seem to get mi)re on a level with the surrounding
mountains. The Ross Peak and Range look
specially beautiful today. The crevasses are so
strongly marked with blue shadows, the peaks are
such a soft silver grey, and in the very bosom of
Mount Ross is the virgin snow of a pure glacier,
fit house for the Ice Maiden. I have never any
wish to explore mountains such as these. There is
a feeling that we desecrate them by trying to come
nearer to them, and that nature never meant us to
know them, except from below, and then only
with admiration akin to awe. I like to feel that
their summits are untrodden by human foot, that
they have been so for ages, and will continue so
until the end of time.
On descending, we were glad to find we had
two more hours at Glacier, the west-bound train
being late.
Directly the train leaves Glacier it begins to
drop down into the valley below, by leaps and
bounds, so quickly do we run from side to side of
the valley by " the Loops." These Loops describe
94 Newfoundland to Cochin Cliiiia.
circles across the valley, and first wc face and
touch the base of the Ross Peak, then return, bv
-n
ih^jbpp^
doubling back a mile or more, until we lie under
the Glacier House. We describe yet one more
loop, and then the train shoots head- foremost into
The Canadian Rockies and the Selkw/cs, 95
the valley. Looking back and marvcllinji^ how
the train can possibly mount up this deep pinc-
filled ravine, you see the p^reat gashes cut across it
by the railway embankment. We arc rushing
downwards at great speed, but not at greater
speed than the IlHcilliwaet River, which races us. It
foams and gushes as we steam and whistle, and so
we go down the gorge together, until wc arc deep
in the gloom of its cold shades. We thunder
through snow-sheds and over delicate trestle-
bridges until we are buried in the Albert Canyon.
Here wc get out to sec the IlHcilliwaet compressed
into a rocky defile of inky depth and blackness.
It foams with anger. Wc pass other and similar
canyons, and so on for another hour, with ever
varying and beautiful scenery.
Then a change creeps over the mountains, they
are all round on their summits and mostly covered
entirely with dense fir forests. There are no more
rock and ice-bound peaks. They are opening out
a little. Now, as we get lower down, we begin to
see some specimens of those splendid fir trees, for
which British Columbia is famous. Again, these
dreadful forest fires have ravaged them. The river
and railway have descended the valley together,
and continue side by side on the plain, until at
IcMigth the last curve is rounded, and we run into
Rcvelstoke. As we walk on the platform we feel
such a difference in the temperature. The Pacific
96 Ncivfouudlaiid lo Cochin C/iiiia.
air is so soft and warm after the keen dryness of
the mountain atmosphere. We meet the Columbia
River again after a day's absence. It has been
flowing round the northern extremity of the
Selkirks, whilst we have been crossing their sum-
mit, and has grown into a navigable river. The
observation car is taken off, sure sign that the
crossing of the Selkirks is a thing of the past.
Before finishing with this part of our travels, I
should recommend anyone to profit by our
experience, and to stay one day at Field, and to
allow of sufficient time for two days at Glacier, as
I think anyone would consider it quite worth while
to take a freight train back to Golden, returning a
second time over the Selkirks by the next day's
train. There is a great want (which is, I believe,
in process of being supplied) of a detailed guide-
book, and by next year doubtless the increased
traffic will warrant an additional train a day.
We think that we have seen the last of the
mountains, but a few minutes after leaving Revel-
stoke, and crossing the Columbia, we are entering
the Gold Range.
It is getting dusk, we are satiated with moun-
tains, and I am as weary of writing about thcni
as you, forbearing reader, of reading these de-
scriptions. Night comes to relieve us both. One
is glad, however, to think that this Gold Range
" seems to have been provided by nature for tlic
TJic Ciinadian Rockies and the Sc! kirks. 97
railway, in compensation perhaps for the enormous
difficulties that had to be overcome in the Rockies
and Selkirks." At Craigellachie the last spike
of the Canadian Pacific Line was driven on
November ;th, 1885.
With what rejoicings and
triumph the surveyors
and engineers must have
seen the finish of their
long and desperate strug-
gle. We pass through a
forest fire this night,
and see isolated trunks smouldering like fiery
cones, whilst others in falling send out a shower of
sparks, that kindle fresh flames in many places.
We awake the next morning in the Fraser
Canyon, and are going through magnificent scenery
n
9S Newfoundlaiid to Cochin China.
i ■• '*^^- v*^ % :• d'
\
for many hours. We hanij over
the side of the canyon, and
look down on the waters swirl-
in^t; and rushini^ at our feet,
whilst over and over
again the rocks seem
to bar our progress, and
we either rush into a
tunnel, or creep round
them on ledges of
rock with the help of
trestle-bridges. J3reak-
fast at North Eend, like everything that tlie
C.P.R. does, is excellent, for when they are not
able to run a dining car over the mountains,
they provide excellent meals at hotels, such as
this, and those at Field and Glacier, all of which
are run by the coin-
— — _— _^-^ pany.
We fly o\cr the
fertile plains of Co-
lumbia, and run on
to J^urrard's Inlet by
Tort Moody. This
is the beginning of
the sea, — so soon to
be our home for some
time. We see much
lumber lying about
The Canadian Rockies and ihc Selkirk's. 99
the low wooded banks opposite, and floating;
b)' the shore. W^e turn a corner, run quickly b)-
the railway workshops, and amidst clouds of dust
reach Vancouver. It is a great comfort to wash,
unpack, and to settle down for two quiet days.
" And what do you think of our city ? " is the
question addressed to all newcomers by the resi-
dents of Vancouver. This question is the invari-
able opening to a conversation, we have noticed, by
the residents of all new cities. In this case it is
very pardonable, as five years ago the site of
Vancouver was a smoking plain. A fire had swept
away the newly-risen city. As soon as it was
k-nown that the C.P.R. intended Vancouver to be
the terminus to their 3000 miles of railway, build-
ing recommenced with renewed vigour. Like
everyone else, we are astonished by the number of
streets and handsome stone buildings. The vacant
building sites that we see amongst them, are the
object of much booming and land speculation.
Cordova is now the principal street, but, as it is
low down on the wharf, at no distant date it will
jirobably be abandoned to offices and wholesale
warehouses, whilst Hastings Street, on the block
higher up, will be the fashionable avenue. Real
Estate offices abound in Vancouver, and everyone
appears to dabble more or less in land speculation.
Newcomers arc always bitten, and up to the moment
of sailing we hesitated (but finall)' rejected) about
II 2
lOD Nciofowidland to Cochin China,
bccominfj possessors of a corner block in Cordova
Street. There have been many successful specu-
lations and large sums made in an incredibly
short space of time. Ten per cent, is what every-
body expects on their investments. Opinions arc
still divided as to whether Vancouver really has
so great a future before it. Some say it is already
over-built.
The harbour of Vancouver is thought sufficiently
beautiful to be compared to that of Sydney. It
is a perfect site for a city, with the wooded ranges
of mountains rising on the further shore of the
harbour, though it was not until sunset of the
second day of our arrival, that the clouds rolled
away sufficiently for us to see them. The two
peaks, called the Lions, are wonderfully faithful
outlines of the lions in Trafalgar Square. The
Indian Mission village lying under the mountains,
looks clean and bright.
Vancouver has a beautiful park. We drove
eight* miles round one afternoon and were
delighted with it. It is the virgin forest preserved
in its natural forest glades, with magnificent
Douglas firs, spruce, white pine, cypress, aspen
poplar, mountain ash, and giant cedar, whilst
bracken ferns and mo.=s grow luxuriantly on the
decaying trunks. The road is traced by the side
of the sea and English Bay, and the smell of the
salt water mingles with the fragrance of the pines
The Canadian Rockies and the Selkirks. loi
and cedars. Some of these pines arc colossal in
girth and height, though not equal to the big trees
of the Yosemitc, The cedars arc great in circum-
ference, but not of such height, and the finest
specimens are sadly mutilated by lightning.
The seeds of eternal enmity were sown between
Vancouver and Victoria when the former became
the port of the railway. This animosity is carried
to great extremes. A Victoria man will not ensure
his life in a Vancouver office. Sarah Bernhardt
is coming here next week, but because she refused
the Victorians' offer of .1?looo more, Victoria has
determined to boycott the performance at Van-
couver, and make it a failure. Their childish
jealousy may be likened to that between Mel-
bourne and Sydney, and Toronto and Montreal.
We are sorry not to have time to go to Victoria. I
believe it is very pretty, for everybody out here
has said : " Oh ! you must see Victoria, it is so
pretty, and so very English." This, abroad, is not
precisely a recommendation in our eyes.
Our last afternoon in Vancouver, we went across
to Burrard's Inlet, to see the Moodyville Saw
Mills. The enormous trunks are raised, attached
to hooks, by a pulley out of the water on one side,
passed under a saw whose two wheels whirl through
and cut up the timber in a few minutes. It is sawn
into three planks by another machine, laid on
rollers, passed down on the other side of the mill
102 Ncivfoiuidland to Cochin China.
and shipped into the steamer loading at the wharf.
In three minutes a tree that has taken 300 years to
grow (you can reckon its age, if you have patience,
in the concentric rings on the trunk), will be sawn
upj in fifteen minutes it will be cut, planed and
shipped. The trees we saw operated on were
chiefly Oregon pines.
15cfore leaving Canadian soil, there arc several
things to mention, which we have observed in
travelling across the continent. Canada is in
many ways quite as much American as English.
They have the American system at hotels of making
a fixed and inclusive charge of from three to four
dollars per day. They also have the varied menu.
which I counted at one hotel to include fifty items.
True, Oolong, Ceylon, besides English breakfast,
tea, and fancy bread of all sorts, is put down to
swell the items. Still we have often wished that
the assortment of food was smaller, but better
served. The Canadians use as much ice water,
and consume as largely of fruit at all meals, as
the Americans. Carriages are as expensive as
in America, the reason being that tramways
and electric cars are universally used as means
of locomotion. Their railway system of drawing-
;'.' n cars, sleepers, and dining cars arc identical.
.lor 'Mn iheir mode of speech be wholl}- excepted,
lor ct 'r^'e born and bred Canadian often speaks
with an equally pronounced accent as any
The Canadian Rockies and the Se I kirks.
\o'\
American, and makes use of many of their ex-
pressions, such as " on such a street, a dry-goods
store," etc.
In the universal and domestic use of electric
light, Canada, like America, is twenty years ahead
of us. Each little city has it, but then this is a
new country and there are no great monopolies as
in England to be considered. It is the same
with the telephone. All public buildings, offices,
shops, and almost every private house in a city
has its telephone. A great amount of business is
transacted through it, and ladies use it for their
daily orders to tradesmen. The convenience is
great, but the incessant tinkling of the bell invades
the sanctity of home, viz. privacy. A lady re-
cently arrived from England rightly called it " the
scourge of the country.'^
As in America, domestic servants are scarcely
obtainable. I found most Canadian ladies thought
themselves lucky with one servant, and in luxury
with two. A nurse is an unknown necessity to
many mothers, who tend their children entirely.
This accounts for the number of children travelling
(we counted nineteen in two cars on one journey)
and in hotels. There is no one to leave them with
at home. If unavoidable, they arc none the less
a noisy nuisance.
Canada, if she is to be developed, requires
a better line of steamers than the Allan to
I04 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
compete in speed and luxury with the great New
York liners. She must be populated, and so long
as the White Star and other lines offer such far
superior accommodation for the same rates (four
pounds) so long will the emigrants select that route.
Every trip the looo emigrants landed at New
York, are lOOO able-bodied English, Scotch, or
Irish men lost to Canada. A strong government
should initiate a large immigration scheme, vote a
handsome subsidy and ask the Imperial Govern-
ment to contribute a similar one. As we have
travelled from the Atlantic to the Pacific, we have
passed through thousands of miles abounding in
natural resources, of mineral wealth and lumber,
lying in their primeval state, undeveloped and un-
populated, whilst her rivals across the border are
increasing rapidly the wealth and prosperity of
their country by a free immigration, only wisely
refusing to be made, like England, the " dumping "
ground for the paupers of other nations.
Canada languishes for the want of population
and capital. Give them to her, and she will
become the finest country in the world, and our
most prosperous as well as most loyal colony —
British to the heart.
i.|
i. i
CHAPTER V.
TO THE LAND OF THE RISING SUN.
On Wednesday, September gth, 1 891, we embarked
on board the Pacific s.s. Einpress of Japan. We
congratulate ourselves upon having a roomy cabin
exactly amidships on the main deck, and the un-
precedented luxury of two drawers and two cup-
boards. Otherwise our voyage does not promise
well. The C.P.R. thoroughly understands its
opportunities, and their putting on three new
steamships, the Empresses of Japan ^ India, and
Chinay is justified by the large number of saloon
passengers. Thirty passengers have been their
average up to the last voyage, when it was sixty,
and this time it is 130. We hope that the
resources of the ship will not break down under
this strain, but consider it doubtful. The stewards
are all Chinese, and excellent they appear, espe-
cially our table steward, who boasted the aristo-
cratic name of " Guy."
It was a miserable day, the rain coming down in
1 06 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
torrents, and under the wet awnings we dawdled
about until the mails, five hours late, arrived. At
six o'clock we left the wharf and went " forward" to
see this ship of 4000 tons pass through the confined
channel of" The Narrows." We could almost have
touched the overhanging branches of the trees in
the park, so closely did the ship hug the bank. At
midnight we stopped opposite to Victoria to take
on board some more passengers. They were in a
sorry plight, for they had been sitting on an open
barge in pitch darkness, and in pouring rain, for
six hours.
The next day was cold, gloomy, and rough.
Scarcely a soul but was sick and sorry. The
usual whale excited but a feeble interest along the
row of deck chairs, occupied by people in varying
stages of malaise. We must expect bad weather.
In truth we had a miserably cold cheerless voyage
across this Northern Pacific Ocean, and it was such
a contrast to our bright and sunny passage across
the South Pacific, from San Francisco to Auck-
and, six years ago. The ship takes a northerly
course until we get to the mouth of the Behring
Sea. Here we had a miserable Sunday. Such an
angry grey sea, crested with white horses, seething
and boiling around us. It was abominably rough.
Everybody was sea-sick again, and, to complete
the tale of woe, there was a dense sea-fog, the
decks dripping with this clammy moisture and
To the Land of the Rising Sun.
107
from the spray, as the Empresses nose was buried
in the ocean's waves and, quivering from stem to
stern, she rose and shook herself. The discordant
shriek of the fog-horn was hoard all day. Every-
body agrees that life on board ship is bearable
if you can be on deck, some even may go so far
as to enjoy it, though I cannot say that we be-
long to that number, but when, as on this occasion,
that refuge was denied to us, we were indeed
miserable. We had service in the saloon, the
little remnant able to appear, and all joined in those
familiar prayers, that seem to bind us together
on the stormy ocean as " one family in heaven
and earth." The Bishop of Exeter, who, with
his son, the Bishop of Japan, is on board, preached
the sermon. Weary of being knocked about at
the mercy of the waves, there was not a soul on
board but was thankful when night came, and
we sought such rest as wc could find in our berths.
We shall have a Wednesday missing all our
lives, that of Wednesday, September 17th, and
wc have lost a whole day, besides sundry and
many half-hours by the putting back of the ship's
clock. We are now just half-way round the
world from the Greenwich meridian.
The next day we saw one island of the Aleutian
group, and the " early birds " saw a snow-cone on
it. These islands extend for many miles at the
entrance to the Behring Sea, and we discover that
1 1
.
io8 Nciojoiiudlanci lo Cochin China.
in the event of a shipwreck our boats have orders to
steer for this island. There arc a number of mis-
sionaries, from thirty to forty, on board, who, with
their wives and numerous families are bound fur
(^hina. Some of them are very intolerant, as was
shown when the officers got up a dance, and there
was some question as to where the piano would
come from : " Oh ! " said one, " the devil will be
sure to provide that."
The last two days we experience a sudden
change from the intense cold. We awake one
morning to find a tropical downpour, accompanied
by a damp heat that enervates everybody, and
this is accompanied by the tail end of a typhoon,
and a grand sea. All ports are closed, the heat
below is terrific, and the ship labours and rolls
heavily. And thus ends a most disagreeable and
lonely voyage, for we have not seen a single sail
since leaving Vancouver.
There is no sensation in the world more
delightful than landing in a new country, and
especially when it is in such a different corner of
the world as Japan.
Our expectations arc vague and enthusiastic,
but, alas ! the approach to Yokohama through
the beautiful channel of islands is lost to us. Wo
are on deck at 5 a.m., only to see the lights of
the numerous light-houses on the coast extin-
guished, and then blotted out in blinding mists
,1 ery
August, from the 12th to the i6th^ lights are kept
burning there to entice the spirits to return during
their time of wandering, and not to journey by
mistake to hell. Another stone court with more
lanterns, and a pagoda-erection to a Minister of
War, whither, should a war occur, they hope his
spirit would return to watch over it and bring them
luck.
We approach the Temple, with its black roof of
crenellated copper, and the overhanging eaves, from
each up-curved point of which hangs a tinklini^
bronze bell, and wc can see that this sombre out-
side is only a wooden shell to preserve the gilding
and brilliant colours of the exterior.
Our feet are bound up in cotton shoes, and wc
enter by a side door into an exquisite little
sanctum, where the roof is all of lacquer, inlaid
with mother-of-pearl, and the panels on the walls
are carved in marvellous repousse work, with
flowers and animals. A softened lisrht comes
To the Land of the Rising- Sun. 1 19
ihi'oiiL^h the open door, and the j^old and red and
blue and i^recn, melt into a harmony of rich colour-
ing^, whilst the petal of each flower, the stalk of every
leaf, the plumage on the wings of the birds, stand
out in startling relief ; and these panels represent
storks, with their long red legs, doves with their
silver-grey plumage, parrots with red and green
tails, and peacocks with fan-spread tails. Or there
arc such flowers as the sacred lotus, the emblem of
Buddhism, the chrysanthemum and the pink peony.
One panel of exceptional beauty, is an exquisite
spray of tiger lilies, carved in high relief. Tradi-
tion says that this was so greatly esteemed by the
Shogun, and that the two nails we see were used to
hang a cover over it, that no one should see it but
himself. The priest throws open the golden
trelHs-work of a shrine, and shows us three
memorial tablets with the Shogun's names inscribed
on them. Around it there is a collection of china
vases, paper lanterns, and lacquer stands. Passing
behind the screen formed of bamboo bound with
silken cords, we come to a square room covered as
usual with matting, and with the same florid
decoration, where there is a row of lacquer boxes
each tied up with a cord. They contain the
Buddhist books, and are used for the daily
prayers.
Through a grove of glossy-leaved camellias we
pass, and mount up some flights of ancient steps
1 20 Ncix)fo7indland to Cochin China,
to another temple. This is the I'rayintj Room iti
front of the Shogun's Tomb, and is only entered
by the Mikado and iXrchbishop, when they come
to worship the great departed on the day of his
decease. We pass behind this, and ascend yet
more moss-grown steps, to the tomb of the
Great Shogun, which is surmounted by a bronze
urn, and enclosed within stone parapets and iron
railings. The tomb bears the three-leaved
asarum, which is the crest of the House, and
is seen on many buildings of the date of that
dynasty. Since the fall of the Shoguns — or
military usurpers of executive power — and the
re-establishment to the Imperial City of the
present dynasty of Mikados, it has been replaced
by the Imperial Chrysanthemum. All is so quiet
and solemn here, and the memorial above the
tomb is so simple, as compared with the magnifi-
cence that goes before, that as Mitford says, *' The
sermon may have been preached by design, or it
may have been by accident, but the lesson is
there.'' The 9th, 12th and 14th Shoguns arc
buried at Shiba, and their three temples, their
three praying rooms, and their three bronze urns,
stand in precisely similar lines with the one we arc
at present by.
In the evening we take jinrikishas and go into
the native quarters. If Tokio is charming in day-
light, it is simply a fairyland at night. There are
To the Land of the Rising Sun. 121
\V) lamps, save for a few electric beacons, that send
out their far-reaching flashes over all the city, but
the streets are lighted by innumerable pendulous
drops of light, that dance and quiver and dart
about, and cross and disappear quickly round
corners. They are the paper lanterns which hang
from the shafts of hundreds of jinriktshas, or are
carried by pedestrians, for everyone in Japan
carries his own lantern after dark ; and some are
pale pink and others red or blue. Now their soft
lie^ht is reflected on the waters of the moat,
or glides quickly and noiselessly round the
stone ramparts and reappears like glow-worms on
the other side. Now we pass the crimson light
streaming out of the little box-like police station,
or the barrow of the street vendor with the bulb of
light shining mysteriously from behind his hang-
ing curtains. Soft even light falls across the
street from the windows of opaque paper, and we
can trace the shadows crossing them. Then as we
stealthily fly past, we see the dark interior of a
shop lighted by a single lanip, under which squats
a Rembrandt-like figure, intently working, for in
those busy human hives late at night and early
morning sees them still at work, or again the leap-
ing flames of fire in the centre of the floor light up
a family group. Then there is the street vendor,
with his flaring torches, and his wares spread out
against a wall. There is a festival held in some
I 22
Ncivfouudlaud to Coc/iiii CJiina.
particular street, lij^hted with iKinj^in-,^ desii^ns of
crimson paper lanterns, sluni^ from bamboo poles,
to the jj^od of writinjj^. Then as we return home
through the dark quiet alleys, we hear the fre-
quent and melancholy sound of the bamboo flute
of the blind shampooer, as he feels his way, stick in
hand, along the street. I le sounds but two notes,
but they have the wail of a world of sorrow in them,
that goes to the heart.
Early the next morning we climbed up some
steps and passed into the lovely groves of Ueno
Park. The evergreen trees are still here, but the
avenue of cherry trees is bare and leafless, " which
presents a uniquely beautiful sight during the
blossom season, when the air seems to be filled with
pink clouds," and you can scarcely pass under the
trees for the showers of falling blossoms. A little
farther on there is a sheet of water covered with
flat green leaves, which three weeks ago was a mass
of pink and white lotus bloom. The blossoming of
the cherry, plum, lotus or chrysanthemum arc
looked upon by the Japanese as national festivals.
In fact they are their only holidays, for they have
no Sunday or day of rest. The Japanese may be
said to have little or no religion. The upper
classes never worship at all, and the lower orders
are either Buddhists or Shintoists (Shintoism beinj,'
thcworship of many gods), but they practically only
go to the temples to offer prayers, accompanied by
To I he Laud of tJic Risiuo- Sun. 12^;
iiU)noy to the L;()tls, ifthcy lia\c any special request
to make, sucli as for a pjood harvest, or recovery
from sickness.
Tl- arc many httle tea-houses at Ueno Park,
and iiicir waiting damsels smile in a friendly
manner and beckon us in, but we cross the road
and leave this pleasant
the simple peopl
easant corner
come
ol the park, where
ink tea and amuse
themselves, and pass under one of those solemn
archways hewn out of single blocks of stone, a
torii or bird's rest. They are such grand yet
simple monuments of a dead past, and are found
at the entrance to all the temples in Japan. We
wand*" p the stone-paved avenue, through the
solcn. illness of the great cryptomeria avenue,
towards the Buddhist Temple at the end. This
Temple, with its neighbouring pagoda, is more than
usually brilliant, being recently restored, but the
charm lies in its surroundings — in the quiet fir
groves, and the clumps of camellia trees, in the
pink blossoms of the monkey tree, and the solemn
cawing of the rooks, in the click-click of the
wooden sandals of the dear little waddling ladies
as they saunter along the pavement, with their
close-shaven children by their sides, so exactly like
the Japanese dolls we know at home. But in the
centre of this peaceful scene is a switchback railway,
whose noisy clatter profanes the stillness, but of
which the Japanese are truly proud. We pass a
124 Newfoundland to Cochin Chnia.
fortune stone. It is old and chipped, covered with
hierof^lyphics and bespattered with dirty pellets of
paper, which are chewed first into a pulp and then
thrown at it. If they adhere, it is considered a
lucky omen.
After quickly passing through the Museum, a
white Moorish building erected for the Exhibition,
and which is as dull as museums usually are, we
had one of those fascinating drives through the
streets to the shop of the most celebrated cloisonne
maker in Japan, and by special appointment to the
Mikado. There was nothing exposed in the shop
front, but leading us to the inmost recesses
at the back, one by one with reverent care, each
article was produced from its wooden case and
foldings of crepe and cotton wool, and placed with
justifiable pride before us, for this prince of de-
signers, Namikawa, is the greatest living artist in
Japan, and exists only for the production of the
masterpieces of his art. The exceeding tenderness
of the pale grey, darkening into lilac, forming the
background for a cock whose plumage, faithfully
delineated, is shown by the outline of every feather,
the rose pink, the translucent yellow — it is impos-
sible to convey the delicate tones of colour, or the
life-like drawing of his plaques and vases.
We subsequently saw the many processes through
which cloisonne passes, and it is not until you have
seen the skill and delicate workmanship required,
To the Land of the Rising Sun. 125
that you really begin to appreciate cloisonne.
And the same may be said about lacquer, which
requires knowing to be fully understood. First the
vase must be fashioned in copper, then the designer
must delineate from memory some intricate design
of flowers or birds or landscape. This again has
to be reproduced in tiny pieces of wire, pinched
and twisted deftly into shape and soldered on to
the copper. The interstices of the wire are filled
in with the brilliant colours that we see in the
saucers by the side of the workers, and the mixing
of these is the secret which ensures success. Five
times the colours are " filled," and five times burnt
in the kilns, and then the polisher with his different
coarsenesses of stones polishes it into a burnished
and chaste work of art.
Apart from temples, there is not much to see at
Tokio, but it is the streets which fascinate you so
completely, that waking and sleeping you dream
of these, and you want to be always out and
amongst the bright life that flows through them.
To get any idea of Japan you must always
remember that everything is so ridiculously
small. Life here is in miniature. Everything is
lilliputian ; beginning with the little houses, con-
tinuing with the little men and women and their
tiny children, and ending with the little ponies, for
there are no horses in Japan. And so to imagine
a Japanese street, you must picture to yourself
1 26 N CIV found land to Cochin China.
rows of little brown houses, many of only one
storey, with large overhanging eaves. The in-
terior is wide open and only raised one step
from the street, and you look across the brightly
burnished floor through the opening of the
paper sliding screens, which arc thrown back in
the daytime, and catch pretty glimpses of the
home life in the back yard. Many of the shops
are hung with funereal-looking purple and black
hangings, inscribed with white hieroglyphics giving
the names and nature of their wares. You recog-
nize the chemist's shop by the gold tablets setting
forth the details of the pharmacopoeia within.
There are barbers' shops, with a half-shaven cus-
tomer V ith upturned chin seated in the chair;
drapers' with samples of bright-coloured stuffs hung
round a revolving wheel outside ; toy-shops where
are sold those paper kites and tiniest of shuttlecocks,
or hobgoblin horses and animals of impossible
shape and size, with which the children play in
the street. There are others hung with nothing but
strings of straw sandals, or wooden clogs ; grain
shops where the clean white green and red seeds
are sorted into baskets of samples. Mere is one
for the sale of sake, the brandy of Japan, piled up
with huge barrels, and with those tapering blue and
white bottles which we are accustomed to use for
flower- vases, but which are really manufactured to
hold this popular beverage. And then the china
To the Laud of tJic Rising Sun. i 2 7
shops ; they are an incessant delight, with their
hundreds of dear little common blue and white rice
bowls, their artistic tea-pots of pale gjreen ware
with a spray of apple blossom, their hibachis, or
china flower-pots of deep blue, green or bronze
ware, which are used for the hot ashes to light
the pipe with, and are found on the floor of all tea-
houses. Again, we must look at this stationer's,
where that soft crinkled tissue paper is sold, and
the brushes with which the Japanese write so
swiftly and deftly, that the ink is absorbed
without blotting into the paper. In Japan they do
everything upside down. The horses stand with
their tails in their mancrers and their heads where
their tails should be. Locks revolve contrariwise,
and the carpenters plane towards, instead of away
from the person. So with writing ; they write from
the bottom of the page to the top, and from right to
left, and the number of their characters is appalling.
You must know from 3000 to 4000 characters to
write Japanese at all, and an educated man will
require some 6000 ; and the disappointing thing
is that when a foreigner has mastered this, the
Htcrature opened up to him offers no reward for
liis labour, as it practically does not as yet exist.
See this fruit shop, where bunches of pale grey-
green water-grapes, brown pears, and plentiful
supplies of green figs are spread temptingly out,
interspersed with bunches of those luscious orange
128 Neivfouiidland to Cochin China.
W'
persimmons that melt in the mouth, and taste like
a ripe apricot ; this umbrella emporium, where
paper umbrellas, oiled to make them waterproof,
are open inviting inspection ; a tea-shop, where the
tea is kept in gigantic jars striped purple and
green ; a greengrocer's, with oblong sweet potatoes
in their pink skins, and turnips of abnormal
length ; a basket shop, where bamboo baskets of
every shape and size are to be had ; or a fish-
monger's, where the delicate pink and rainbow
scaled fish, are exposed daintily for sale on bright
blue and green china dishes. Nor must I forget
the confectioners' shops, where from a tiny oven
heated by charcoal, we see the most attractive
little pink, green, chocolate and white sugared
cakes turned out and placed in alternate rows on
trays. It is most amusing to see the extreme
economy of the heating arrangements. Four tiny
pieces of charcoal, turned over and husbanded
together by a pair of iron tongs, suffice to cook a
meal. The Government do not allow shops to
sell European and Japanese goods together, so
that now and again you pass one full of Man-
chester atrocities, gaudy stuffs, ill-shaped English
umbrellas, cheap lamps, boots, hats, and under-
clothing, which you turn away from, to seek once
more the tasteful display of the native stores.
And what a medley of scenes there are, and
what a flow of life confined in these narrow streets
ke
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nd
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A Liril.K MO'lllKR.
Page I
To the Land of the Rising Sun. 1 29
with their one-storeyed houses. Coolies harnessed
by ropes to drays full of rice, answering^ one
another with their musical patient cry of Huydah-
Houdah ; itinerant vendors with bamboo poles
slung across the shoulder, and suspended trays
filled with every imaginable variety of article ;
Buddhist priests with their shaven heads, and
white dresses with flowing sleeves, covered with
black crepe.
Mingling with the crowd of dear little men and
women in their graceful flapping kimonos, are
the little girl " mothers," who at the age of ten
bend their backs and have a baby brother or
sister tied on. Happy babies they are, brown and
contented, as are their scantily-clothed kindred,
who obey an instinct of nature in making mud
pies and dust castles by the roadside. Here is a
closed van on wheels, painted black, being drawn
by policemen. It is a " Maria " with a prisoner
peering out between the bars.
Every now and again we meet a funeral. The
coffin is a square deal box, slung on bamboo
poles, for the deceased has been placed in it in a
sitting posture with the knees up to the chin. It
is only another form of the economy of material,
that forms such an especial feature in all things
Japanese. However, this people understood long
before we did, the use of lovely wreaths of coloured
flowers, to mitigate the gloom of mourning, and the
K
1 30 Newfoimdland to Cochin China,
cofifin is hung with them. Ancestor-worship takes
a prominent part in Japanese reh'gion, and now we
understand at last the use of those elaborate
gold and lacquer cabinets, with outer and inner
folding doors, that you so often see in England.
These cabinets are intended as the shrines where
the little golden memorial tablets, in the form of
small gravestones, and engraved with the name of
the deceased, are kept at home. The deceased is
always given a posthumous name, as, not believing
in the immortality of the soul, but rather in its
transmigration into an animal, they say that he
has ceased to exist altogether, and has changed
his state and lives under a new name. These
memorial cabinets are found in all the houses of
the upper classes.
The pictures that we know of these little
Japanese ladies are the most faithful reproductions.
Wrapped tightly round in their kimonos, with
the bunch of the obi formed by its folding over at
the back, their figures take the graceful bend and
curve we see pourtrayed. The loose flowing
sleeves, and the soft folds around the neck, and
open at the throat, are so pretty. Their under-
clothing consists of several loose garments of
crepe, which is the material exclusively used by the
upper classes, and their hips are so tightly bound
that no European woman could stand it. They
treat their hips as we do our waists, their object
To the Land of the Rising Sun.
131
being to be perfectly straight. When this was
explained to me, I understood how it was that an
extra breadth is put into the kimonos bought
by Europeans. It is curious that, though the
Japanese bathe so frequently, they are not par-
ticular as to changing their underclothing. The
women wear white stockings with a pocket
for the great toe, and " getas " formed of a sole
of wood, perched on two high clogs of the
same, and kept on by a leash. Thus, when
they enter a house, they leave their clogs at the
door, and go about on the spotless matting in
their stockings. As they sit and eat off the floors,
they cannot allow the dirt of outside boots to be
brought in, and all Japanese houses are scrupu-
lously clean.
The kimonos of ladies are made in delicate
quiet- toned stuffs of pale grey or fawn colour ; but
simple as some of them appear, the stuffs of which
they are made are so costly that, even unem-
broidered, they will cost as much as 300 dollars.
And then their obis, those broad sashes of the
richest brocades and satins — on them they lavish
all their pride and money, and they often descend
as heirlooms in a family. The dressing of their
hair is one long-continued source of admiration ;
it is such black glossy hair, and the coils are so
immaculately smooth. There are but two styles
of headdress for the whole country — one for the
K 2
I. '52
Newfoundland io Cochin China,
married ladies, and one for the single ; and so you
can always distinguish their state in life at a
glance. The married women have it dressed in a
single extended roll, with inlaid combs and coral-
headed pins placed round ; whilst the unmarried
ladies wear their hair divided by a silk or gauze
ribbon into two flat coils placed on either side of
the head, and have still more decoration in the
way of glass bead pins. And as to the little girls,
they are the counterpart of their mothers, and from
the earliest ages wear theirs in a similar manner.
It used to be the custom for married women to
have their teeth blackened, to prevent their receiving
admiration from men other than their husbands ;
but this is dying out, and you now only see old
married women in country districts following this
obsolete fashion. No Japanese woman ever walks.
She shuffles, she scuffles, she tippets along,
balancing on her high-heeled getas ; but step
out the necessary stride for a walk, no, they cannot
do that, for their kimonos are so narrow that they
cannot move otherwise than with their knees
knocking together. They are not pretty, these
meek, gentle-looking, brown-skinned creatures,
yet their sweet deprecating manners are very
attractive. They are excellent mothers ; more
excellent wives, in their complete subjection and
utter want of initiative. The sum total of their
education is implicit reverence and obedience, first
To the Land of the Rising Sun.
to parents, subsequently to husbands ; and at the
Peeress' school at Tokio, we are told that they
are so afraid that the modern education given
there to the daughters of the nobles will militate
against this ideal, that particular lectures are given
on the subject.
The men, so long as they wear the native dress,
are dark, pleasant-looking little men ; but when
you see them, as you frequently do now, with a
kimono surmounted by a brown or black pot-hat,
a solar topee, or even a tweed stalking-cap,
they are positively evil and unpleasant to look
at.
Viscount Okabc, so long Minister in London,
took us for a drive in the afternoon, and then we
had time, before a pleasant dinner with Mr. and
Mrs. Fraser at the British Legation, to go to the
Theatrcu
The corridor is covered with piles of sandles and
umbrella.s, whilst from the adjoining kitchens come
savoury and nauseous smells. The floor of the
Theatre slopes upwards from the stage, and is
divided into square compartments, neatly matted,
and intended for family boxes. The galleries are
divided in the same way. And here groups of ladies
and gentlemen arc encamped for the whole day,
for a Japanese theatre begins at 9 a.m. and lasts
for ten hours ; nor is this all, for the same piece
may be continued from day to day, and last for
1 34 Neivjoiiudland to Cochin China.
SIX weeks. It is now five in the afternoon, and
yet the audience maintain a deep interest and
breathless gaze on the stage.
This is the outh'ne of the story. The lank,
die-away lady we see trailing across the stage has
retired to a wood, with a rill of crystal water, to
live in a temple, there, to mourn the death of her
father in a war. The young man who was (un-
known to her) his murderer, passes casually along
and she falls in love with him. This love-making,
in the drawling nasal accents, and its tediously
slow movements, is most unreal, and as they drink
the loving cup of sake together, the father's dis-
approving spirit, in a rushing flame of fire, blazes
up from the temple. Darkness drowns the
applause, and warriors rush on the scene and
begin to fight the maiden, who mesmerizes them,
until one by one they fall at her feet.
The orchestra is represented by five musicians,
perched up on a rock. I may say at once that,
artistic as is the nature of the Japanese, their
idea of music is absolutely «//. It consists of
a series of grunts and groans, or of nasal notes
in a bass key, or of falsetto in a high one.
Bat the interest lies to us in the audience, who,
in the interval of twenty minutes, eat their evenirg
meal. Some have brought their food with them,
and nearly all their own china teapots, for a con-
stant supply of tea. Others buy theirs, and are
To the Laud of I he Ai'siu^ Sun. 135
provided with a succession of little wooden bowls
piled on each other, and for which they have to
pay the usual theatre price of ten cents, or double
the ordinary one. In each box there is a hibachi,
or china bowl full of hot ashes, where they light
their pipes, for men and women are continually
smoking, and their pipes have the smallest bowl,
the size of a thimble — two whiffs and it is empty
aji^ain ; but it is sufficient for their modest wants.
September 26th. — I am writing in the most
delightful real Japanese house, far away in the
midst of these beautiful mountains of Nikko.
The thin wooden frame of the house is covered
with luminous parchment paper, and these are
the walls that divide us from the outside world.
They are not permanent ones, for they slide back
one behind the other, a succession of paper screens,
until the house is open to the street and there is
only the shell of a habitation left in the roof, and
one paper wall behind. The second-floor storey
(if there is one) is marked by a long balcony
running completely round, and here in cupboards
fit cit^'^ 'M^ are kept the wooden shutters that
sh ooves and close in the balconies, in
u. mt X night, and give to all the houses the
(lull .ippearance of a blank wooden wall at sun-
(iov n. Inside, the roof and floors are of white
wood, and the la r is covered with spotless
matting ; but I glad to say that there are
13
6 Neiofotmdland to Cochin China.
European concessions here, in the shape of a
table, chair, and washstand and bed, on which is
laid a clean starched kimono to go to the bath in.
In a Japanese house we should find no furniture
at all. Their rooms are absolutely bare ; they
eat, sit and sleep on the floor, and from out of a
cupboard in a recess will come the "futons," or
thick wadded quilts, and the square piece of wood
with a hollow for the neck, where a soft wad of
paper is inserted, and which is used for a pillow
by the ladies to save their elaborate headdress
from getting deranged. As they cannot dress
their hair themselves, it is only done occa-
sionally, and must thus be considered even when
sleeping.
The construction of these houses is so delight-
fully simple, for, excepting the polished ladder
which leiids upstairs, there is no plan of the rooms.
They are made larger or smaller, more or less,
according to the want of the hour, by means of
those successions of sliding screens, and a little
pushing and sliding will make the large room you
are using, into five or six smaller ones in a second.
These tea-houses are charming in their compact
simplicity, their faultless cleanliness, and particular
neatness.
It was at four o'clock this afternoon that vvc
arrived at Nikko, and drove from the station
through the end of the great cryptomeria avenue,
To the Land of I he Rising Snu. i^j
past the village, until the jinrikisha was suddenly
shot round a corner, down a narrow passage, and
stopped at the courtyard step of the Suzuki Hotel.
Here quite a little crowd of bowing attendants
received us with many deep salaams, and sucking-
in of breath ; one relieved me of an umbrella,
another of a cloak, and another of a book, and
went before us, encouraging us with graceful ges-
ticulations and faces wreathed in smiles to enter
the house, impressing us in an indescribably
charming manner that we were showing them
but too much honour in doing so. Of course we
drank tea — it is the first ceremony on entering any
Japanese house ; and then came the second one —
the solemn ceremony of the bath.
Bathing is the passion and pastime of the
Japanese, and they bathe as often as two or three
times a day. In all towns there are public baths,
where, in the evening, the population meet to
gossip and take a bath for the modest price of two
cents. Not long ago men and women in a state
of nature bathed together, but Government has
forbidden this now. However, we visited one
where a wall separated the bath, but still left the
entrance to both open to the public view. In
villages there will be a tub or barrel cutsidc every
door, and one evening we saw a man preparing
his bath, with a fire kindling under the zinc bottom
of his tub. They take their baths as hot as no"''
138 Neivfoundland to Cochin China.
Fahrenheit, and for some unexplained reason
foreigners find that cold or lukewarm baths are
unsuited to the climate, and adopt the native
temperature. The rule at hotels is that the
first arrival is entitled to the first use of the bath.
To take up the thread of the story, we left Tokio
at eleven this morning, the Foreign Office sending
a carriage to take us to Ueno station.
Through groves of cryptomeria, maple, fir,
willow, wild cherry and Spanish chestnuts we
travel. Past great clumps of bamboo, which to
see only is to be able to picture the mighty
growth of their graceful, feathery foliage ; by
picturesque villages, with their angular brown
thatched roofs crowding low down over their
mud- wattled walls, nestling amongst ban yon groves
interspersed with persimmon trees, bare of leaves
but laden with bunches of golden fruit. Then we
emerge on to the open country, where the cultiva-
tion is so exquisitely neat that it resembles a succes-
sion of kitchen gardens. There are no hedges,
and no grass, but the whole land is taken up by
small patches of onions, turnips, maize, millet,
sweet potatoes, and the broad caladium-like leaf of
another species of potatoes, whose English equiva-
lent to the Japanese name I failed to discover.
These alternate with rice fields, where the bright
yellow tells of the ripening and bursting of the grain.
The soil is rich and Hack, and labour is done by
im
tiva-
;ces-
fges,
by
met,
if of
liva-
»vcr.
ht
he
ram.
by
!i
To the Land of the Rising Sun. 139
hand-spade, but the absence of pasture strikes us.
However, there are few cows or oxen, and no
sheep, numberless experiments failing to rear them ;
and the ponies live on chopped straw, beans and
the refuse of grain.
An hour before reaching Nikko we pass into the
mountains. It is such a picturesque, well-wooded
range, this Nikko chain of mountains, and they all
bear that peculiar Japanese characteristic of rising
straight out of the plain, ending with sharp three-
sided cones, and like all else in this country,
though lofty, they are on a small scale, toy moun-
tains that seem to fit in with the miniature
picture.
We had time after our arrival at Nikko, and
before dusk, to pass through the village, across
the wonderful red lacquer bridge, and follow-
ing a grass path to come to a Waterfall. On
the rock opposite is inscribed the word Ham-
nion, and the legend goes, that as no one could,
as we see, possibly cross the fall to write it, an
artist threw his pen at the rock and it inscribed
this Sanskrit word. And now in the growing twi-
light we pass along under the shadow of a row of
mutilated grey idols, each squatted on his pedestal
with crossed hands, looking over the stream. I
counted 120 figures, but no two people have ever
been known to make the same number. At the
head of this solemn avenue of gods there is a
•
140 Neivfotmdland to Cochin China.
larger one facing the others. They are supposed
to be the Judges before whom the spirits of the
departed pass, and are judged whether they shall
go to heaven or hell ; and hence they are covered
with many paper labels, the prayers of relatives for
the deceased, that grace may be granted them by
the gods. It is a solemn tribunal, with its presiding
judge, and each face is different in expression, and
yet they are such mobile, expressionless faces, as
if to represent a dispassionate and unbiassed
judgment.
After dinner we adjourned into an empty room,
when a man appeared with a card, and before we
could look round the whole room was full of
merchants producing out of their cotton bundles,
beautiful carved ivories, bronzes, silver, china, lac-
quer, and furs, for Nikko produces excellent ones.
They are so persuasive, and ingratiate their wares
all round into your hands, that it is with difficulty
we escape ; and making our airy chambers a little
less so by having the shutters run out of their
cupboard, we are soothed to sltep by the wailing
sounds of the samisen, that comes from the
brightly-lighted little tea-house on the opposite
hill.
It is amusing the next morning to dress with the
wall of the room thrown back, and to hear the con-
stant shuffle of sandals, or the clatter of the clogs
as these little men and women in their flapping
To the Land of the Risino^ Sun. 141
draperies cross the yard ; and this courtyard is so
characteristic. It is but a few square feet in
dimensions, yet there is a dragon -shaped fir-tree
in the centre, whose outstretched arms are sup-
ported by bamboo poles, which form a little
arbour with a seat in it ; then there is a stone
lantern and a bronze stork, a lamp-post and a
wandering paved pathway, that gives a great idea
of distance.
We go directly after breakfast to the Temples to
see the tombs of the Shoguns. They are three
hundred years old, and as beautiful as carving,
colour and design can make them. We ascend up
a winding flight of stone steps through the gloom
of a magnificent avenue of cryptomerias. They
are tremendously tall, impressive trees, with
their moss-grown trunks and stems, and these
steps wind through their midst, a fit leading up to
the great mausoleums. Passing the courts of a
monastery, we are first shown a Buddhist temple
where, hidden behind the silk-bound bamboo
blinds, there are three colossal gold Buddhas seated
cross-legged on lotus leaves. In the mysterious
gloom, they look solemnly and indifferently into
space. On the platform by this temple there is
suspended a big bronze bell, which is sounded by
a pole propelled against the side. As we stand
there it gives forth its sonorous musical toll, and at
every hour of the day its sweet and solemn note
142 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
echoes over the valley. Then, seated in a semi-
circle, the priests of Buddha bej^in to chant the
morning orisons, droninj^ in a nasal tone, and with
the accompanying tom-tom of a drum. We leave
them to pass on to the tomb of the great warrior
Shogun, Ycyasu.
The wide road, bordered by those walls of mor-
tarless blocks of stone, leads up to the flight
of steps and an elaborate Sammon or gateway,
the entrance to the first temple. There are a
number of wooden tablets outside, on which arc
inscribed the names of the subscribers to the
fabric of the temple. The inner court is full of
interest, for you must imagine that all the build-
ings it contains are covered with decorations and
paintings. One of the storehouses where pictures,
furniture, and other articles belonging to Yeyasu
are kept has carvings in relief of elephants, in
which the joints of the hind legs are turned in the
wrong direction. There is the tree which the
Shogun carried about in his palanquin with him
when it was still small enough to travel in a flower-
pot, and the stable for the sacred white pony, kept
for the use of the god ; over which is a very clever
group of three monkeys, representing the three
countries of India, China, and Japan. One monkey
shows he is blind by covering his eyes with his
hand, another deaf by stopping his ears, and a third
dumb by closing his mouth. The one signifies
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To the Land of the Rising Sun, 143
that you must see no evil ; the other that you must
hear no evil ; the last that you must speak no evil.
The water cistern, hung round as is usual in
these temples with coloured rags, is formed of a
single block of granite, so evenly cut that the
water flowing over it is a glassy, imperceptible
surface. Next to it is a library, where through the
grating we see a revolving book-case made of
lacquer with gilt columns, containing a complete
collection of the Buddhist scriptures.
And now we come to the exquisitely beautiful
gate of the Yomeimon, with its graceful arabesques
founded upon the peony pattern, its niches and
columns, its golden clawed dragons and groups of
Chinese sages, which leads into the inner court of
the temple. Surrounded by open trellis-work
screens, we pass up several flights of steps, and take
off our boots by the huge bronze money-box
waiting for offerings. The interior is filled with
a dim light, but you are in the midst of a place so
rich in subdued soft colour, so embroidered in
elaborate designs and harmonizing tones, that it is
some minutes before you can at all appreciate the
full beauty. The ceiling is formed of squares
divided by ribs of black lacquer and enamelled in
peacock blue and green ; there are gilt carved
screens, where perch birds of paradise, doves,
parrots, ducks, peacocks ; others where the asarum
or peony, the royal flower, the lily, and the lotus, are
144 Ncwfoitndland to CocJiiu C/iiim,
carved in high relief. And the ante-chambers on
cither side arc equally perfect; in one there is a
carved and [)ainted ceiling with an aw^cX surrounded
by a chrysanthemum, and some boldly executed
eagles ; in another, pictures of unicorns on a gold
ground, and some pha^nixes.
Mausoleum of Yeyasu.
In an adjoining temple a woman in scarlet and
white draperies performed a sacred dance. It is
a slow and graceful movement ; the bells in her
hand keep rhythmical time, while she amuses and
charms away the evil spirit from the dead Shogun.
We have now a long pilgrimage to perform, up to
To the Land of the Risiiiir. Siiii. 145
llic platform on high, where rests the body of
Ycyasu. The ancient stone stairs, the balustrade
and columns, arc clothed in the most vivid green
moss, whilst the cryptomerias form a dark archway
above. There is complete silence around. The
place is damp and deserted. We might, from
their moss-grown appearance, be the first to tread
these steps for a thousand years, and slowly
mounting them, we feel we are breaking the spell
that has hung over them, as we find ourselves on
the stone terrace at the top. Here there is a
praying temple, and we rass round to the tomb at
the back. It is a simple bronze urn, shaped
like a small pagoda, with a stone table in front, on
which is placed a bronze stork with a candle in its
mouth, an incense burner, and a vase of artificial
lotus flowers. Such is the end of all greatness.
Returning home, we took jinrikishas for the
mountain expedition to Lake Chfizenji. For some
miles we travel by the side of the river's bed and
between the mountains, meeting many pack-ponies
laden with merchandise, shod like the men with
straw sandals. It looks rainy, and the men have
donned their waterproof coats, and these consist of
a straw mantle formed like a thatch ; when you
sec a fisherman standing in the water with his legs
immersed, and only this thatch above, it produces
the most comical effect of a floating haystack. As
we begin climbing the mountain road, we see
L
ft
1 46 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
many strange and beautiful new shrubs, flowers,
and trailing creepers growing amongst the rocks.
Soon a tea-house comes in sight, with the front
entirely open, and pretty sliding screens of blue
paper. Cushions are placed on the floor and tea
brought by a welcome-smiling damsel. It is pale,
straw-coloured tea made from the young undricd
shoot of the tea-plant, and it is not allowed to
infuse, but is poured straight into the tiny handle-
less cups, with two or three leaves at the bottom,
and served on a lacquer tray with pink and white
sweetmeats. But how artistic is the design on the
common bronze kettle hanging over the open fire
in the centre of the room, and kept always boiling
for tea to be quickly made ; how delicate the pale
blue colour of the thin eggshell cups, with the
spray of cherry blossom. It is one of the many
charms of Japan, that art is brought irto use in all
the appurtenances of daily life.
The ascent to Chuzenji, right into the heart of
the mountains, is perfectly lovely. I have never
seen grander or more charming scenery. When we
rest for a minute at one of the many tea-houses,
there is such a splendid view of two cascades
flowing down a rocky precipice. It is the meeting-
place of several valleys, and the joining of several
mountain spurs, and there is an open park-like
space, which looks so green and smiling amid these
rugged fastnesses. There is a movement in those
To the Land of the Rising Sun. 147
bushes in the valley ! It is a troop of monkeys
jumping from branch to branch ; for Japan is a
strange mixture of tropical and hardy growths.
You find the flowers and plants of north latitudes
growing beside the palms and fruits of the tropics.
The ascent becomes more and more trying, though
this good, new road was hurried over, to be finished
for the visit of the Czarewitch last year, which
•over took place, owing to his attempted assassina-
tion by a fanatic near Kyoto.
Clouds came down as we reached the pretty fall
at the summit, so we only heard its roar, dulled
by the thick mist ; but they cleared away again, as
we came to the shores of the lake, 4375 feet above
the sea. The deserted houses in the village are
used by the pilgrims who come here in August.
VVc rested on the balcony of a tea-house over-
hanging the lake, and then the desct-iit was accom-
plished in one unbroken run, one coolie acting as a
drag behind, whilst the other in the shafts steadied
the jinrikisha round the sharp curves.
September 2Zth. — We spent a long morning
amongst the Tombs again, and we shall carry away
with us such a vision of picturesquely pointed
black roofs, outlined in gold and red, and graceful
bamboo groves, of moss-grown flights of steps under
the shadow of stately avenues of cryptomerias, of
ancient stone walls with a vista leading to massive
torii. We shall dream of the many solcm!
L 2
rows
148 Newfoundland to Cochin China,
of stone lanterns, of gateways bright with rainbow
hues and guarded by dragon monsters, of the
bronze urns hidden away up on those quiet nooks
in the mountains, and above all of the enchanted
atmosphere, the deep stillness, the solemn peace
that rests over these shrines of the dead.
We waited on the steps of the temple to hear
the big bronze bell slowly send out its voice once
more at midday across the valley, and then came
home.
On our return journey to Tokio in the afternoon
we took jinrikishas to Imaicho, the station beyond
Nikko, so as to drive five miles through the magni-
ficent cryptomcria grove that runs parallel with
the railway. The avenue extends for fifty miles,
and was used by the envoy of the Mikado when
he sent to offer presents at the tomb of Yeyasu.
These cryptomcrias are grand trees, with their
stately trunks shooting up in regular lines, whilst
their long branches only grow from their summits,
and intertwining make a dim twilight below.
On arriving at Tokio, we had a drive through
the fairyland of its glimmering streets.
CHAPTER VI.
NEW NIPPON.
We were up early to get a glimpse of the Mikado
as he passes to open some new barracks. His
route is lined with policemen, pigmy but efficient
guardians of the peace, with their white duck uni-
forms and large swords. The morning mists are
floating off the grey green moats, as we pass into
quite a new quarter of Tokio, where the noblemen
have their palaces, amid gardens green with willows
and acacias. We drive past the red brick build-
ings of the Peeress' School, the New Police Build-
ings, and the Dowager Empress' Palace, guarded
by sentries, until we come out on the exercising
ground before the barracks.
Scattered about, this plain arc companies of
infantry and cavalry, mounted on small black
ponies, whilst a band is being marched inside the
barrack square, where are anxic js-looking groups
of officers in gala dress, ablaze with decorations
of the Order of the Chrysanthemum and Rising
Sun, awaiting their sovereign's arrival. It is an
150 Neivfo7indland to Cochin China.
m : ''1
apathetic crowd, which shows no excitement as
the advance guard with an outrider in green and
gold livery appears, quickly followed by two
closed barouches, the first of which is surrounded
by a company of Lancers with flying pennons.
We just catch a passing glimpse of a dark man
with a beard, rather stout, and looking more than
his age of forty. The band plays the National
Anthem and the gates close on the procession.
And this is the 121st Sovereign of Japan, the
first commencing his reign in 660 B.C., as the
preamble to the Constitution runs : " Having by
virtue of the glories of our ancestor ascended
the throne of a lineal succession unbroken for
ages eternal." In connection with the ancestor-
worship, which is the only form of worship per-
formed hy the upper classes, the Emperor's oath
on his accession is interesting. " We, the successor
to the prosperous throne of our Predecessors, do
humbly a.id solemnly swear to the Imperial
I'ounder of our House, and to our other Imperial
Ancestors, that in pursuance of a great policy,
co-extensive with the Heaven and with the Earth,
we shall maintain, and secure from decline, the
ancient form of government.
" That we have been so fortunate in our reign
in keeping with the tendency of the times as to
accomplish this work, we >ve to the glorious
spirits of the Imperial Founder of our House and
Neiv Nippon.
151
our other Imperial Founders. We now reverently
make prayer to them and to our Illustrious
Father and implore help of their sacred spirits,
and make to them solemn oath, never at this
time, nor in the future, to fail to be an example
to our subjects in the observance of the Law."
At eleven o'clock, Mr. Nagasaki, Master of the
Ceremonies in the Imperial Household, calls for
us in a royal carriage to show us the country
Palace of Sheba, whose gardens lie by the sea-
shore. Side by side in the grounds, which are
approached by a very unpretentious drive and
entrance, stand the European Palace, furnished,
and the Japanese one of paper screens and matting
covered floor, though we are shown here into a
carpeted room, with heliotrope satin covered chairs
and sofa. It is the custom now in Japanese houses
of the upper ten, to have one European furnished
room, which is only used for the reception of
foreigners. As we take tea out of the little egg-
shell cups, we do not think the garden looks large,
but by the time we have followed the blue uni-
formed janitor, with the eternal chrysanthemum on
his cap, in his up and down wanderings, we feel
as if we had walked miles.
The Japanese ideal of landscape gardening is
to have a different view from every point, and
to this end they make a miniature park. These
knolls, mounted by wooden steps on one side
152 Ncivfoiindland to Cochin China,
and descended on the other, represent hills ;
the pond crossed by a stone brid^^e made out
of two stones, is a lake ; the island in its
midst is formed of a rock and one tree ; the
timber is represented by some dwarfed and dis-
torted fir trees, for the smaller and more spreading-,
the more valuable they become. The Japanese
take great pains with these deformed trees, pruning
them back, and picking out the fir needles one
by one. They give large sums of money for an
old tree, and we were shown a tiny fir in a pot
over eighty years old. And yet these Japanese
gardens, twisted and deformed as they are, with
no open green lawns or bright flower-beds, arc
very quaint and attractive in their own way.
Then we drove on to the Euryo-kvvan, another
Imperial Palace, where the Emperor and Empress
hold their anr il cherry blossom party in April,
and when the arched avenue we are standing
under, is a ma^s of pink and white bloom. The
chrysanthemum garden party at the Palace is in
November, and very beautiful, from all acc(nints
it must be, the plants trained into every shape
and device, of ships, pagodas, and umbrellas.
Mr. Nagasaki told us a great deal of the bitter-
ness of the struggle of old Japan against the
sudden inroad of European custom, a strugL^lc
that is apparent everywhere, but more especially
in the capital at Tokio, The next generation
)nl
ling
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New Nippon,
153
will be altogether European. The Court is
modelled on the etiquette of our Ijifjlish Court,
and the ICtnperor has the same court officials as
the Queen, whilst the Empress holds Drawin^',
Rooms, and has her ladies in waiting, everyone
wearing European and low evening dresses.
We found that all gentlemen wear European
clothes, whilst their wives yet cling to the far
more comfortable and graceful kimono. English
is taught in all the upper-clas.. schools, and
spoken very generally in shops, where the names
are also written up in English, though there are
only 3000 Europeans altogether resident in Japan.
The Mikado has a son of twelve, and two little
girls, and the former is soon to have an English
tutor.
We drove to Ueno Park, to a luncheon given
in our honour by the Minister for Foreign Affairs,
Viscount Enomotto. This restaurant is the
" Berkeley " of Tokio, and it was a most elabor-
ate repast, though we could have wished that it
had been in a Japanese house. However, Vis-
count Enomotto, Viscount Okabe, Mr. Nagasaki,
and M. Haryashi Tadasu, had brought their wives.
Viscountess Okabe being a charming bride who
spoke English. These ladies wore kimonos in
pale blue, fawn and grey, and their costly em-
broidered obis were clasped round with a single
jewel. They had diamond rings and brooches,
154 Newfoundland to Cochin China,
and their glossy hair arranged in wonderfully
glossy coques with tortoiseshell combs ; and
such sweet gracious ladies as they were, shyly
putting out their hands, and bowing so low and
gracefully, and speaking in such soft, caressing
tones. Even here, though, European influences
were at work, for I saw a pair of high-heeled French
shoes, and even a pair of carpet slippers peeping
out from under the kimonos.
The room had such beautiful vases of flowers,
arranged as only Japanese can, not put together,
but as if growing in natural sprays. After much
drinking of healths and ceremonious compliments,
we adjourned to the neighbouring Technical
School of Art, where we saw specimens of lacquer
work, and some of the thirty-five processes through
which it passes before completion. The natural
taste for art in the nation comes out in the work
of these iqo students, who pay ten yen a year for
their instruction, for their wood carvings and draw-
ings from life are of extraordinary excellence, and
executed too with the roughest tools.
The same evening we visited the Maple Leaf
Club, to see a performance of " geisha " or dancing
girls.
This fashionable club was founded by the Nobles,
for the preservation of Japanese customs, and as a
protest against the general use of European ones.
Thirty dancing girls are maintained, educated and
Nc7v Nippon,
155
kept in strict discipline from the age of fourteen, in
the premises of the club. Wc are ushered throu^tjh
numerous dimly-lighted corridors, on our stock-
\r\^cd feet, into a large matted room, bare of furni-
ture, where we squat on cushions on the floor. A
Japanese dinner is served, course after course being
brought in lacquer bowls. A row of maidens, with
their almond eyes dancing with laughter, squat
before us and smile gleefully as we vainly struggle
with our chop-sticks, and try with frantic efforts
to swallow the recherche dinner, for as Murray
truly says : " Europeans cannot eat Japanese
food," And this was the menu. Sweet cakes of
rice and sugar, served on plates with the mono-
gram of a maple leaf; soup, a brown jiquid with
floating lumps of fish ; an omelette (of ancient
eggs) with fish sauce ; a hot trout with upturned
tail, with grated cheese coloured pink, a stewed
fig, and a finger-like radish that tasted like ginger ;
more fish with a nasty sauce and stewed seaweed.
As will be seen, fish formed a large item of the
dinner, for the Japanese eat all that comes out of
the sea. Sakd is served from the long-necked blue
and white bottles into tiny cups. Despair was
gaining upon us at the ceaseless arrival of more
lacquer bowls, when the work of the evening com-
menced.
Three demure damsels, in quiet kimonos, with
their samisens or guitars, enter, and begin to play
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156 Newfoundland to Cochin Cliina.
and sing. From behind a screen, their faces hidden
by their fans, steal in three geishas, dressed in the
loveHest grey and pink kimonos, embroidered vvitli
the crimson leaf of the maple. Slowly they girate,
their clinging garments trailing around their
turned-in toes. Deliberate and graceful are their
slow motions, and the three figures act as one piece,
and not only do their arms move in unison, but
their faces do so too, and they elevate the eyebrows
and close the eyes with the rise and fall of the
body. In pretty imagery they tell the pathetic
little story of the maple leaf: its birth and
growth, its mature glory, and its death, the dance
ending by the fans being thrown upon the floor,
even as it falls to the ground and dies. A second
periormance is a clever mimicry, by the aid of
masks, of an old man, his wife and daughter ; and
the last dance, with the floating gauze streamers
that wave rhythmically with the music, is most
elegant. These geishas are the favourite
form of amusement, and in all villages you pass
houses with mysterious gratings, enclosing a
floor, where nightly the gentle wail of the samiscn
is heard and the graceful performance of the
geishas is seen.
October 1st. — We have had a terrible experience
of a typhoon. It began with a thunder-storm
last night, accompanied by violent showers of
tropical rain, the drops being as large as small
Ncii) Nippon.
157
marbles, whilst the thunder claps crackled and
boomed overhead, and the dazzling lightning
was blinding. The air was full of electricity,
and a feeling of restless foreboding took pos-
session of all. This morning the air was
so damp and close that you felt scarcely able to
breathe. Violent gusts of wind, increasing in suc-
cession, alternate with strange pauses of breathless
stillness. There is no twitter of bird or hum of
beautiful dragon fly, for they are forewarned by
these signals of danger, and have crept into safety.
The force of the wind increases, and it is blowing
a hurricane, as in our ignorance of these dreadful
phenomena of typhoons (a word formed from the
Japanese meaning '^ great wind,") we leave the
Imperial Hotel at Tokio, on our return journey to
Yokohama, just as it reaches its height.
Trying to walk to the station, I was blown away
at the first corner, and then two men with a
jinrikisha began a hand-to-hand struggle with the
wind, making scarcely any progress, and across the
open spaces being literally blown backwards, and
only able to steady the jinrikisha from going bodily
over. How we reached the Shimbashi station I
never understood, but I know that we arrived
breathless, blinded, and soaked through with the
rain, with dishevelled hair and battered hats,
thankful only for the shelter of the station ; and
just as we seated ourselves in the carriage, a lady
158 Neiofonndland to CocJiin China.
! '
i »•
was brought in very much bruised and hurt by the
overturning of her jinrikisha, which had been blown
away over an embankment into the canal. You
may read descriptions of typhoons, but until you
have seen one, I defy anyone to have the smallest
idea of its awful power.
The fury of the wind was terrible. The train
stood quite still at times, unable to steam, however
slowly, against the wind, whilst the carriages
trembled and rocked on the narrow gauge with
every blast of wind, and we thought more than
once that it must be blown over. The sea was
carried in long spindrifts or lashed into brown
whirlpools ; an awfully angry sea, boiling and
hungry, lashing up in mist and spray against the
breakwater we were on. And here are several
heartrending sights, for one sampan has been
washed up and completely broken on the break-
water, whilst others arc being wrecked against its
sides, and we can see the horror-stricken faces of
the men clinging in agony to it ; whilst other
sampans are fast drifting on to it, and we watch
with awful fear their frantic efforts to save them-
selves. Houses are unroofed or blown down, trees
bent double or uprooted as we look, hedges col-
lapse, crops are laid low, and we in this little
carriage are out in its midst, with nothing to break
the full fury of the elements. But even as we
begin to wonder what to do on our arrival at
Neio Nippon.
'59
Yokohama, we sec that the crisis is past and the
gale subsiding. At Yokohama the streets are
strewn with the debris of the typhoon, and all vessels
in the harbour still have their steam up, should
their anchors drasf. In two hours the most extra-
A Typhoon.
ordinary change had taken place. The waters of
the harbour had become blue, and tranquilly lapped
the shore, the sun shone out, the wind died to a
breeze. It was a perfect summer's afternoon.
The wind when we left Tokio was blowing at 76*8
i6o NcwfotLudland to Cochin China.
miles an hour ; four hours afterwards it had fallen
to 40, and soon after died away.
We spend a happy afternoon in the curio shops,
at Messrs. Kiihn and Messrs. Welsh, whom we
consider have the best things, and then visit, with
Mr. Hall, a nursery garden on the Bluff, for we
think of having one of those prim little Japanese
gardens at home.
The next morning we leave Yokohama, and
make an expedition to Kamakuraj a pretty seaside
village, to see the great Diabutsu. The approach
to the Buddha is through a gateway which bears
the following beautiful inscription, —
Kotoku Monastery : " Stranger, whosoever
thou art, and whatsoever be thy creed, when thou
enterest this sanctuary, remember thou treadest
upon ground hallowed by the worship of ages.
" This is the Temple of Buddha, and the gate of
the Eternal, and should therefore be entered with
reverence.-^ By order of the Prior."
And with this grand exhortation *n our ears we
pass into the quiet garden, with its avenue of
cherry and plum trees, lying under the hills in the
sunshine, a perfect stillness all around, and where
we see the half-opened eyes of the colossal BudJha
bent forward, as if in passive contemplation of this
quiet scene. There under the stars, amid storm
and wind, mist or tropical sun, he has sat for ages,
apathetic, but not unconscious. The hands lie on
Neiv Nippon.
i6i
his crossed knees, the thumbs meeting at the
finger-tips, and forming two complete circles.
The Diabutsu is cast in bronze. Time and
weather, the stress of the elements, have mellowed
the bronze to the most beautiful grey blue, streaked
with pale green. To appreciate his solemn
grandeur, you must visit him again and again, and
each time he is more impressive than the last. It
is quite impossible to grasp the colossal propor-
tions, but these are the exact measurements: —
Height, 49ft. 7in., length of face, 8ft. sin., width
from ear to ear, 17ft. gin. The round boss on the
forehead, which appears like a tiny white spot, is
really ift. 3in. The length of eye and the elevated
eyebrows about 4ft., of the lobe-distended ears 6ft.
6in., and of the nose, with its wide-opened nostrils,
3ft. 9in. The eyes are of pure gold, and the boss
is of silver weighing 30lbs. Inside, in the hollow
of the image, there is a shrine, and from the gloom
of the neck of the Diabutsu stands out in relief a
small golden image. The chanting of the priest
below, whose rhythmic tones ascend muffled to us
inside the image, mingling with the incense of the
burning joss sticks, impresses us with a religious
melancholy, when we reflect on the ideal religion
set before them by this great teacher, and the utter
indifference, even to outward forms of worship,
manifested by this people.
The Diabutsu " gives such an impression of
M
1 62 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
i '
1^
1, ■
^1
i
'!
mi
.1
■
B
majesty, so truly symbolizes the central idea o*"
Buddhism — the intellectual calm which comes
of perfected knowledge, and the subjugation of
all passion."
Then we took jinrikishas to drive to the pretty
little Island of Enoshima — a wooded hill rising
out of the ocean and connected with the mainland
by a spit of sand. The road winds amongst the
sand dunes, along the beach of the seashore, where
the great waves of the Pacific, still agitated by
yesterday's typhoon, are dashing on to the sands.
Lovely pale green and cerulean tints streak the
sea, whilst naked brown figures plunge and dive
under the surf, bringing in great bunches of brown
sea-weed, which they cast in shining heaps on the
sand. We pass by a fishing village, strewn with
nets hung up to dry, and large bamboo crails for
catching the fish, which we see laid out to cure in
the sun. They are bringing in the harvest too, and
women, scantily clothed, and naked children, whose
fat brown bodies look so sleek and comfortable, are
busy seated on the ground threshing out the
grain, either by pounding it with a wooden mallet,
or with a rough bamboo flail. The dull thud of
these primitive threshing machines is in all the
air, and the ground outside each hut is spread
with mats, on which piles of the clean yellow
grain are placed to dry.
Charming Enoshima is in sight ; its green
L 0'
mes
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Ill
Neiv Nippon.
'63
woods, with the temple roofs peeping out, standing
far out in the ocean, its coral reefs washed by the
ocean spray. An island for legend and romance,
tit home for an idyll of medieval ages.
VVc go across the sands amid piles of sea-
•wecd, picking up lovely trophies of the deep in
mother-of-pearl and pink shells, until we reach
the black wooden torii at the base of the island.
What a picturesque entry into the island it is, for
\vc walk through the quaintest and narrowest
village street, where the upper stories of the houses
nearly meet, and where below, there is that strange
medley of the every-day life of a people carried on
in full view of the public eye. Up we climb, pass
the shops full of shells, corals and marine curiosities,
until we reach many winding flights of rnossy steps.
\Vc make a veritable pilgrimage up these, until we
emerge on to the platform of one of the many tea-
houses. There is a glorious view over the sea at
our feet, divided by its causeway of golden sands,
overthis side of the Isle of Nippon with its ranges
of purple mountains, jagged-edged, that run in
slanting directions across the island. A walk
round Enoshima gives a succession of equally
pretty views, but we cannot get into the cave on
the further side because the bridge was blown
down by yesterday's furious gale. Returning to
Kamakura, we had tiffin at the Sanatorium on
the sea-shoie, amongst the pines, paid a last
M 2
164 Ncivfoitndlaud to Cochin Cliiua.
lingering visit to the Diabutsu, and took the train
to Kozu.
There was a tiresome wait at a junction for
the up-train, for as yet the railways in Japan have
but a single line, so that it was getting dusk as
we got into the tramway at Kozu. For ten miles-
we ran along a country road and through long
straggling villages, whose lights shine out into
the darkness, or show us picturesque interiors.
Past Odawara, celebrated for the manufacture of a
wondrous medicine, supposed to be a remedy for all
the ills flesh is heir too ; under the ruined walls of
the Castle, scene of many bloody conflicts, until
we reach Yumoto. It is now quite dark and
raining heavily. We take jinrikishas, with three
coolies to each one, to push us up the steep moun-
tain road to Miyanoshita. We present a pic-
turesque sight, akin to weirdness, as the trans-
parent lights of the coolies wave in the darkness,
and six willing men push and pant, shout and
encourage one another^ up the steep windings of
the mountain paths. Against the twilight of the
starry sky, I can just trace the outline of the moun-
tains we are winding round about and amongst,
and hear the frequent roar of falling cataracts some-
times far below, and at others dashing spray across
the road. We feel we miss much by the darkness.
After what seems a weary while, we at last reach
theFugiya Hotel, the prettiest of wooden structures,
Ncii) Nippon.
165
with a succession of outside glazed verandahs, and
the brilh'ant illumination of its electric lij^hts go
forth to greet us in the darkness, as tired, cold,
hungry and wet, our panting coolies land us at
the steps. As a smart London coachman whips
up his horses, and draws up with a dash, so do
these coolies, regardless of even such a severe pull
as this, come up to their destination with a brisk
flourish.
Miyanoshita is a fascinating place.
We awoke this morning to find ourselves in the
mountains, to look down over the heavy thatched
houses of the village, and the road so far, and yet
immediately below us, where some young mothers
with their babies on their backs are waddling
along. What a quaint little place it is, perched
up in the middle of ranges of mountains, with
their green slopes as a never-changing back-
c^round, a village scooped out of their sides. The
shops are full of the wood inlaid like mosaic, and
carved as only can a naturally gifted Japanese,
into every kind of article, from a napkin-ring to
an elaborate escritoire.
Any number of mountain climbs, more or less
difficult (so suited to all) can be made f>'om
Miyanoshita. W^e have just returned from a
lovely expedition to Lake Hakone and the hot
district of Ojigoku. Leaving the hotel at midday
in bamboo chairs attached to poles and each
•If
fmm
1 66 Newfotmdland to Cochin China,
carried by four coolios, we ascend the mountains.
The motion is smooth and easy, as they all keep
step together, to a melodious chorus of grunts, the
front coolies answering the hind ones.
These grass mountains that we are in the midst
of, are so beautiful. They have scarcely any trees,
but their gradual slopes are covered with the pale,
sickly green of rush or bamboo grass, that imparts
to them a peculiarly pleasing, even effect. Fre-
quently there is a column of smoke curling up
their sides, from some hot spring, for all this
district is intensely volcanic, and at the village of
Ashinoyu, where we rest and give tea to the men,
there are numerous hot springs and baths. It is
a desolate place, and is made more so by the
clouds coming down and completely damping us
and the view. It is rather dreary jogging along
with these human ponies in a dense mist, out of
which loom palely the foremost bearers, when, as
suddenly as we came into it, the fog lifted, leaving
us the most beautiful cloud effects of white filmy
vapours, trailing low down on the mountain side,
with a patch of blue sky just beginning to show,
and the sun shining up there behind those opaque
masses of cloud and mist, making them appear so
fleecy and transparent. It is now a love))'
summer's afternoon above and around us, and
immediately afterwards we have below, an en-
chanting view of Hakone and its deep blue lake,
New Nippon,
167
so deep that, though it has been fathomed for five
milei, the bottom has yet to bo found. We sec
the green wooded peninsula, jutting so boldly out
into the lake, that from this distance we think it is
an island, and on this ideal spot, hidden far away
from the burdensome etiquette of public life, the
Mikado is building himself a palace, that is
approached by the be-utiful cryptomeria avenue,
that also leads to Hakone. Whilst we are waiting
at the village below for our chairs and coolies to
be shipped on a boat, we " kodak " a charming
group of Japanese children ; one of our coolies
actively assisted in arranging them, and I noticed
took good care to include himself in the picture,
for this useful and companionable little instrument
has become familiar even to the Japanese, and
later on the men were so pleased when we did a
group of them in the prow of the boat, smoking
and eating their rice out of bamboo baskets, with
a division for a bonue boucJie of some morsels
of fish. These coolies are delightfully merry
fellows, always willing, always cheerful, whether
tired or hungry, never shirking work, and ready to
help each other, laughing and feeing the fun of
any little passing incident. Most of them speak
a few words of English, the object of every coolie
in Japan being to learn it, as they earn so much
more money from foreigners. You constantly find,
that whilst waiting, they study a blue Japanese-
: i
1 68 New found land to Cochin China.
English phrase book, exceptionally badly com-
piled.
We are rowing three miles across the lake in a
sampan, with an upturned prow, propelled by
some oarsmen, and which much resembles a
picture of an old Roman galley. Their wooden
oars, a long blade tied to a piece of wood, are
fixed to the gunwale, in rowlocks formed of a pin
of wood, and on this they roll over and back each
time, a clumsy but effectual movement. The
surrounding view is wondrously beautiful. The
green pointed mountains with their sharp edges
coming down directly into the lake on one side ;
the other covered with shrubs and some over-
hanging trees, under whose sweeping arms we
glide to the landing stage, in the lights and shadows
of a still glorious afternoon. It sounds but a tame
description, and yet in reality it is sublime, and,
for some reason hard to discover, it is absolutely
different, and because of that much more charm-
ing than any other lake L have ever seen.
We begin a long ascent, with a continued view,
looking backward, where translucent clouds float
down the mountain sides, which are mirrored
faithfully in the green waters, and as we plunge
into a dense wood of bamboos, we take our last
farewell look back at Lake Hakone. It is a
stony and steep path, cut in zig-zags through the
thick undergrowth where there is no room for the
Nciv Nippon.
169
long poles of the chair to turn, so we have to walk.
Suddenly we come aross a little square village,
built round a wooden bath house, where the whole
population of invalids are bathing together in the
warm mineral spring.
As we ascend, the scene grows wilder. Vegeta-
tion decreases, and masses of barren rock appear.
The earth is warm and steaming, nor must you
leave the path, as these treacherous brown curling
scales of earth are only a crumbling upper crust,
over the furnace below, and lives have more than
once been lost here. The air reeks of sulphurous
fumes, a strong overpowering stench. And this
curious volcanic scene continues, until we reach
the abomination of desolation. Here, standing
above, we look far away down into a vast
cauldron of steam, that rises up and envelops us
in suffocating fumes of sulphur, so strong that,
wheezing and coughing, we have to turn back-
wards to get fresh breath, so dense that we can
only dimly sec the great masses of rock around
us. More often they are not rocks, but clumps of
crumbling lava, loosely welded together in
fantastic shapes, and that take the most v/ondcr-
fully bright colours from the surrounditig mineral
substances, of orange, carmine, blue, madder and
brown. In one place there is a little stream, in
which the sulphur deposit is so thick that there is
a rich coating round of green, bright as malachite.
170 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
The boiling water of many streams swells the
vapour that rises from this fitly-named Ojigoku, or
Big Hell.
We scramble and grope our way down, ever
deeper into this apparently bottomless pit, into
this boiling smoking abyss, where the evil-smelling
fumes wrap us round so effectually that we can
scarcely trace our path, and choking and blinded,
we wonder vaguely, if we shall ever emerge into
light and air once more. But after wc have made
a long and devious descent, we branch off to the
left, and when we feel ourselves in comparative
safety, and in a clearer atmosphere, we turn round
to look back to see the wreathing masses of smoke
that eternally ascend from this hell. And there,
behind this blank desolation, rises at the head of
the valley the graceful acute peak of Kammuriga-
take, with the dense green forests covering it from
top to bottom, formed by a thick undergrowth of
small box and andromeda japonica. It reminds
us of the hot springs of New Zealand, of those
beautiful pinV white terraces, which, alas ! are
no more, where mingling as here with volcanic
rocks and steam, there is the additional charm of
a luxuriar t wealth of semi-tropical vegetation.
We have a very long descent to make, over the
roughest path of loose rock and stones, and across
several streams, where the obliging coolie makes a
bridge of his back, and when we have nearly
New Nippon.
171
reached the bottom and made the circuit of the
valley on the path cut out midway on the moun-
tain side, we pass round into another valley with
wide amphitheatre of mountains. It is through
tiie midst of these, at the end of a long vista
formed by their green slopes, that we see the
smooth waters of the Pacific, spread out like a
looking-glass in the closing afternoon light, and
beautiful as had been the views and scenery all
day, I think this glimpse of sea and mountains
exceeded all. A long winding descent to Miyano-
shita in the dusk, which we reach just as they were
sending out two messengers with lanterns, to light
us home.
Friday, October ird. — We went up Sengcuyama,
the wooded hill, 1000 feet above, and at the back
of the hotel, carried in a kagos or Chinese chair, a
most luxurious way of ascending a mountain. It
was a glorious morning, with not a cloud in the
sky ; one of those days when you feel that every-
thing is beautiful, and the views of the mountains
at every zig-zag changing and appearing more
and more splendid, as at each turn we rise more
on a level with them. And then those beautiful
thickets of bamboos, the trees of delicately-pointed
maple leaves, the laurels and evergreens, the
azaleas and hibiscus, the creepers and tendrils, the
great clumps of red spiky wild lotus, of purple
everlastings, of blue lupus, and yellow snapdragon
«if
172 Neivfoitndland to Cochin China.
all growing in wild confusion, fresh with the
morning's dew.
There is a little tea-house hung with flags on
the platform at the top^ and such a view over
Odiwara Bay, and of the panorama of mountains
with their smooth, pale-green slopes, and there,
between those two peaks, in the gap, we ought to
get a view of Fujiyama, only, as she so often does,
she is hiding herself to-day behind the clouds.
No sooner do we reach the bottom than we have
to leave Miyanoshita for Yumoto, with a parting
pang of regret that our stay is so short. The
Fujiya Hotel, though kept by a Japanese, is most
comfortable, with excellent mineral baths, which
never seem so pleasant as after a long day's
excursion, nor must I forget to mention the little
Japanese waiting damsels, who giggle and waddle
about in their tightly-drawn kimonos, struggling
with the details of the French menu.
We speed quickly down the magnificent moun-
tain road, which we came up before in the dark.
It is cut out from the cliff, and has those glorious
views, growing grander as we descend into the
valley of the mountain, views that make Miyano-
shita the most charming of mountain resorts.
Even when we get into the tramway at Yumoto,
and travel along the plain, there is such a pretty
picture of the sea-shore, where the sea looks as
green as a lagoon at Venice. We pass again
New Nippon.
173
through the long-continued street of villages,
where the high thatched roofs are crowned at the
top with a cage of poles, on which tufts of
grass are growing, and through the blinds of
bamboo canes catch glimpses of the washing, the
eating, the hairdressing, and the cooking, the
every-day busy life of the little people inside. We
take the train from Kozu to Nagoya.
A most lovely journey it is, for the line runs
through and crosses a pass in the midst of the
mountains, which look radiantly beautiful with
their immense variety of foliage — dark evergreens,
mingling with the yellower autumn tints. They
arc always the same, these mountains in Japan ;
conical in shape, with sharp-edged shoulders
perfectly formed in miniature, rising very straight
up from the level. There are numberless water-
falls, foaming torrents gushing down where the
valley parts a little. At Gotemba we have two
engines to the train, one behind to push, the other
in front to pull, for the pass here rises to 1 500 feet.
Then we come out into an open valley where there
are thousands of little yellow paddy fields^ with
many bamboo groves, whose light-green feathery
fingers wave above heavier groups of dead-green
cryptomerias ; where the villages, with their heavy
black roofs, nestle under the mountains, and tea-
houses with their flag poles are perched on many
a little eminence, and endless black torii lead to
*i.
1 74 Newfoundland to Cochin China,
J- ■ i
Mil^H^ilf
the temples, surrounded by groves of trees. I
had often heard of the exquisite scenery of Japan,
but this comes up to, and exceeds all expecta-
tion.
We journey on. Suddenly in the sky we see
suspended a great purple cone. The base is cut
off by a sky of clouds. It is the beautiful summit
of Fugiyama.
Fugi dominates the island, and you have so
many views of it from every side, that it seemed
to me that we were constantly spending our time
in looking for the cone amongst the clouds. It is
very rare to have a perfectly unclouded view of
the mountain, but this we now nearly succeeded
in doing. Perhaps it is because it is so often
veiled in clouds that the Japanese have surrounded
it with such a sacred mystery. It seems such a
familiar friend now, this cone of Fuji, for we
have seen it depicted upon numberless scrolls
and screens, on tea services and china plaques,
on cloisonne and lacquer, since we came to
Japan.
This view of Fuji is superb. The mountains
break away and leave a vast plain, out of which
it sweeps up solitary, colossal. The crater at
the top looks like the jagged edges of a tooth,
down which streams of lava have streaked their
course. And as we follow the sweeping lines of
the great pyramid up 13,000 feet of height, the
Nez^' Nippon.
175
clouds that lay half-way down, roll away. Only a
few fleecy ones float ethereally along the summit,
whilst the Sacred Mountain, deep purple pink,
stands revealed in all the glory of a sunset evening,
against a pale primrose sky, deepening into lilac
overhead. Then we realize whence the Japanese
acquire their idea of colour. Their artists are only
reproducing the realities of nature as constantly
present to them in the half tones of their island
sky and sea, and it is from such sunsets as these
that they faithfully copy the translucent shades of
rose-pink, grey-blue, lilac and apple-green, that
form the background of those beautiful cloisonne
plaques and china vases. The halo of romance
woven around this poetical mountain, the object
of reverence to thousands of pilgrims, who pain-
fully climb up the nine stages to enter the crater
at the top, is increased by this view of it, which
will, to me, at any moment recall the lovely
splendour of Fuji.
The plain is formed of the rich alluvial deposits
of lava from the many eruptions of Fuji, and is a
splendid agricultural district, where that neat
"carpet" cultivation is seen to perfection, and
where the harvest is now in full swing. Columns
of smoke, rising from the surrounding mountain
sides, show this district is volcanic, and shocks of
earthquake are frequent all over Japan, but par-
ticularly at Yokohama.
•HP;
176 Newfoimdland to Cochin China.
Soon the railway runs along the sea-shore,
where there is just room for it between the pebbly
beach and the deeply wooded mount-iins — a pretty
bit of travelling. We look across the pale green
bay to the little range of lilac hills opposite, and
listen to the idle lapping of the waves, and see the
sampans putting out to sea for the night's fishing,
as darkness, the quickly falling dusk of a tropical
climate, closes over all.
I must say that travelling in Japan presents an
uncomfortable feature in being obliged to carry
your provisions with you, as only Japanese eatables
can be obtained at the stations. Fortunately the
distances are not great, but when it happens, as on
this occasion, that two parties, one of Germans,
besides ourselves, all dined out of paper parcels,
the car presents a very unpleasant appearance.
We reached Nagoya at midnight. Two jinriki-
shas bore us swiftly through the deserted streets,
all dull and dark, because the paper lanterns of
the passers-by are gone home, and there is no
attempt at street-lighting. We are sent flying
round a dark corner to be deposited before a
barred and shuttered door. There is a great noise
within, much whispering and unbolting of doors,
rather a mysterious arrival, and then a stream of
light pours forth, and shows the usual crowd of
little bowing men and women, who escort us in a
body up the polished stair to our rooms a la
New Nippon.
^17
]aponaise, where we sleep with the light shining
through the paper walls.
We are awakened the next morning by the shuffle
of Stockinged feet over the polished boards, and
one of the waddling little waiting-maids, with the
most brilliant pink and white cheeks, flicking the
dust away with a wisp of papers tied on to a stick,
two of the same escorting C. to the bath, a
wooden tub of boiling water placed on an earthern
floor.
There is a delightful outlook from the glazed
screens, a European concession, which probably
will be general a few years hence, showing how
easily the Japanese assimilate all foreign improve-
ments, over the dark crinkled roofs across the wall
of the street, into a seed merchant's opposite,
where golden bunches of persimmons mingle with
the sample baskets of grain. A dozen pairs of in-
quisitive eyes from the open balcony opposite, watch
me brush my hair. Then we breakfast in a room,
or rather, I should say, in five rooms, for the
sliding screens are all thrown back, and, free and
open as a summer-house, there are vistas of rooms
on either side ; and these screens are decorated with
such artistic designs, a spray of bamboo with a
red-legged stork ; a branch of crimson maple
with hanging tendrils, or a purple iris and some
water-rushes. There is a bronze vase, too, filled
with fresh wild flowers on the table. Then come
N
1 78 Ncwfonudlaiid to Cochin China.
II «
the curio vendors, and, spreading their handker-
chiefs on the floor, produce their treasures one by
one.
Nagf/a is celebrated for its magnificent feudal
Castle. A police emissary, with silver-mounted
jinrikisiias, comes to conduct us over it, and it is
as well, as there appears to be much red tape
formality in admission to these royal domains.
Across the courtyard — a typical one, where the
three yards to the gate is made by the winding'
paving-stones to appear quite a long distance, we
sally forth into those kaleidoscopic streets, towards
the great white donjon-kecp, with its golden
dolphins dominating the town.
The Castle has three moats ; the outer one, with
its green slopes and single row of fir trees, is given
up to barracks and parade grounds, for there are
upwards of 3000 troops at Nagoya, and being a
holiday, the streets are full of their white uniforms
and yellow-banded caps. The white walls of the
Castle are raised from the moat on parapets formed
of gigantic stones, and roofed with crenellated
bronze tiles, whilst at the corners rise pagoda-
shaped towers. These walls are the mosL wonderful
part of the Castle, for many of the stones are six
and nine feet long, and proportionately broad, and
can be traced out, as lengthways, slantways, across,
they are piled up on a broad base, shelving back-
wards, without cement or earth, supported by their
e
New Nippon.
179
own weight. On many of the largest corner-stones
arc engraved marks and designs, to show that
they were the contribution of the Daimyos, for
tlic Castle was erected in i6lo, by twenty barons,
to serve as a residence for Yeyasu's son. Crossing
tiic moat, which is dry, and used for tame deer,
over a drawbridge, we enter the court)ard
through a massive gateway.
The decorations inside the palace are exquisite,
though the rooms are bare and uncared-for, and
many of the paintings are defaced. In the first
chamber, the fusumas, or sliding screens, are of
dull gold, and painted on them arc the most life-
like lions, panthers, and leopards, the spots of the
latter being specially well delineated ; with glaring
eyes, fierce whiskers, and lashing tails, they crouch
in life-like attitudes, ready to spring; or in another
group are mothers with their young ones gambol-
liny- around them. In another screen the bamboo
trees have the joints of their stems faithful to life,
and an adjoining one has a straggling fir-tree,
just like one of those on the moat wall outside,
with a blinking owl perched on the topmost
branch. There are others with weeping willows,
and red-leaved maples, and pink-and-white lotus ;
one in particular we noticed that had painted on it
a tiger-lily, with yellow spots, a crimson peony, a
blue convolvulus, and a white daisy, forming a
peculiarly beautiful panel. Next to this is a spray,
N 2
i8o NeivfoHudland to Cochin China.
II •
a mass of snow-white plum blossom, against a dull
gold ground.
Nor are the animals less faithfully depicted, for
there are pheasants with eyes on their tails,
v/ild ducks flying across a pale-blue ground, with
their flapping, outstretched wings, and webbed
feet ; a stork with red legs on which the sinuous
rings are so life-like. In one room, which was
especially reserved for the use of the Shogun wnen
he came to visit his kinsman, the decorations are
especially gorgeous, and here there are ideal
Chinese scenes, which exactly resemble the
familiar willow-pattern plate. There is the five-
storied pagoda, the willow trees, and the high
curve of the bamboo bridge. The roofs of these
rooms are of black lacquer, inlaid with gold,
whilst the windows are made of that p^eometri-
cally carved lattice work, covered with opaque
paper.
But perhaps the most beautiful thing of all is
the open wood carving on the ramma, or venti-
lating screens, between the rooms, for here, that
great Japanese artist, Hidara Jingoro, has carved
the most exquisitely faithful representations of
a white crane, a tortoise, a hen with her little
ones, parrots, and birds of paradise. There is one
that excites everybody's admiration. It is a
cock perched on a drum, its beak wide open in the
act of crowing, so natural, that you expect to hear
Neiv Nippon.
i8i
the " Cock-a-doodle-doo." The red, erect coxcomb,
and the brown and blue iridescence of the tail
are lifelike. And when we look round on this
mass of gorgeous paintings and carvings, we
marvel that their resplendent colours are un-
dimmed by the lapse of three hundred years,
that some are as bright to-day, as when they were
executed three decades ago.
We ascend the great, gloomy, five-storied Keep,
which is built up inside on massive beams of wood,
whole tree trunks being used as supports. From
the gallery at the top we have a charming view of
the brown roofs of Nagoya, lying around the castle,
of the military prison below, where the prisoners
are exercising in the yard, of the heavy square roof
of the temple rising up majestically above the
squat houses — of the wide-reaching plain, and
the circling mountains. The precious golden
dolphins, covered over with wire netting, are above
us, glittering resplendent in the sun. They
measure eight feet in height, and are valued at
i8o,oco dols. One of them was sent to the
Vienna Exhibition of 1873, and great was the
despair of the citizens when, on its return voyage,
it was wrecked in the Messageries steamer, the
iV//. However, it was recovered from the deep,
with great difficulty, and proudly restored to its
original position.
Then wc went for a drive, and I am not sure
1 82 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
that the great centre street of Nagoya was not the
most fascinating and absorbing one that we saw in
Japan, and the whole town was charming in its
bright cleanliness and bustling streets.
It is with a peculiar feeling of sadness that I
write this description of Nagoya and recall its
pleasant reminiscence, because the terrible news
has just reached us in far oft" China, that an earth-
quake has destroyed this thriving town. It makes
one's heart ache with pity to think of those smil-
ing streets, that happy swarm of industrious
people suddenly left homeless, the survivors sur-
rounded by their dead or dying relatives, whilst
the muffled booming, the precursor of the earth-
quake shocks, tell them that they might be the
next victims.
In this dreadful earthquake 8000 people were
killed, 10,000 injured, and 100,000 houses destroyed.
Nagoya experienced 6600 earth-spasms, or an
average of thirty shocks an hour. Fortunately
the ancient castle — monument of an extinct
dynasty — is unharmed, saved by its massive walls,
and the decreasing size of its pagoda storeys.
We left the hotel amid many "Sayonaras"
(farewells), reached the station by the drooping
avenue of willows, and, with five hours in the train,
arrived at Kioto, and settled ourselves into its
excellent new Hotel, with palatially proportioned
rooms.
CHAPTER VIT.
THE WESTERN CAPITAL AND INLAND SEA,
Kioto is the western metropolis of Japan, and was
the only capital from 793 until twenty years a^^o,
when the present Mikado re-established his supre-
macy over the Shoguns, and selected Tokio as
the metropolis of the Empire.
We began the next day by doing our duty by
the sights of Kioto, and commenced with lUi^
Majesty's palace, of Gosho, for which a special per-
mission had been sent us. This is now the third
Imperial palace that we have visited. I think we
were foolish to come, because by this time we
might have known that there is really nothing
worthy of interest to see.
The palace is enclosed by high walls and covers
an area of twenty-six acres. At the gate of" the
August Kitchen/' we went through an elaborate
ceremony of inscribing our names in the lacquer
and gold tasselled visiting book of the Mikado,
whilst two exceedingly unkempt officials, in
rusty black kimonos, superintended our move-
ments. Of course this palace, like the others,
«i»
?■■,>": \:
184 Newfotmdland to Cochin China.
is bare of furniture, carpets or hangings. The
fusumas, or screens are decorated with splashes
of blue paint and green mountains, or with funny
little pictures of Japanese life, drawn with a total
neglect of perspective. A lot of old women in
wicker hats were raking, with bamboo claws, His
Imperial Majesty's courtyards. The garden is
scarcely so good as the one at the Hotel, with its
pond on which floated an unpainted wooden
gondola. The whole produces an impression of
discomfort.
We pass first into the Seiryoden, or " Pure and
Cool Hall," where the square of cement in the
corner was every morning strewn with earth,
so that the Mikado could worship his ancestors
on the earth without leaving the palace. Then
into the Audience hall, in the centre of which is
the Imperial throne, hung with white silken
curtains and a pattern meant to represent the bark
of a pine tree. The stools on either side of the
throne were for the Imperial insignia, the sword
and the jewel. On the eighteen steps stood the
eighteen grades into which the Mikado's officials
were divided. Then we see the Imperial study,
where His Majesty's tutors delivered lectures.
The suite of rooms called the "August Three
Rooms," where No performances, a kind of lyric
drama, were performed, and lastly a suite of eleven
rooms, where the Mikados, when Kioto was the
The Western Capital and Inland Sea. 185
capital, lived and died. We see the Imperial
sitting-room with the bed-room behind, completely
surrounded by other apartments, so that no one
should approach His Majesty without the know-
ledge of his attendants. This sounds perhaps
interesting enough, and having read Murray\s
elaborate description we were eager to see Gosho,
but the reality is a succession of ordinary Japanese
rooms, dark and bare, without the redeeming
feature of well painted fusumas.
The obnoxious janitors, notwithstanding our
credentials, obstinately refused to show us the only
thing of interest, namely the present Imperial
living rooms, on the plea that they are being now
prepared for the reception of the Heir Apparent
who arrives in a few days, and we sec bales of
furniture covered with green and blue cloths, bear-
ing the royal insignia of the chrysanthemum, being
dragged across the inner courts.
The Nijo Palace is surrounded by a moat and
pagoda-guarded wall of Cyclopean masonry. It is
undergoing repair, and we can therefore only see
the handsome outer gateway formed of lacquer
and beaten gold, and the beautifully worked gilt
fastenings to the gates, but inside the descriptions
read like a dream of beauty, which we should be
most anxious to see, were it not for the experience
ue have just gone through at the other palace of
Gosho.
»i*
1 86 Newfotmdland to Cochin China.
&H
Kioto has its Diabutsu, its big bronze bell, its
pagodas, palaces, gardens and monasteries, but
above all it has its temples — temples large and
small, decorated and plain, dull and uninteresting.
You might easily spend a week at Kioto seeing
nothing save these, but of temples I confess we
are by this time thoroughly sick and tired. The
sight of a torii makes us turn wearily away, and
from a sammon (or gateway) we hastily flee.
Everyone who visits Japan ends by experiencing
this satiety of temples, a feeling induced by their
monotonous identity and entire want of originality.
Still we feel that we must visit some of the sights,
so somewhat half-heartedly we go forth towards
the Show Temple of Nishi Hongwanji, the head-
quarters of the western branch of the Hongwanji
Buddhist sect, a dark massive structure. In the
courtyard is the large tree which, " by discharg-
ing showers of water," protects the temple from fire
in the vicinity. We wander through the state
rooms, the minor shrines, and the big temple ;
and in truth the decorations are marvellously
beautiful, but I will not weary you with the detailed
descriptions of lacquer-ribbed ceilings, golden
pillars, of kakemonos (hanging scrolls) over 200
years old, of cornices wrought in coloured ara-
besques, and shrines painted and carved in floral
designs. Again there are those most exquisitely
painted scenes on the sliding screens, of peacocks
The Western Capital and Inland Sea, 187
and peahens seated on a peach tree with white
blossoms ; of wild geese on a dead-gold ground, of
scroll patterns carved in the design of the peony
or chrysanthemum leaf and flower, nor of the angels
in full relief that gaze down upon us from the ceil-
ing. But I must make especial mention of the
gilt trellised folding-doors, opening back to disclose
a wintry scene of life-sized bamboo and plum trees,
and of pine with dark-spreading branches covered
with snow.
We wander through the peaceful stillness of
the monastery garden, where the jostle and noise
of the thick crowding streets around comes over
the wall in a dull hum, ieed the gold fishes in a
pond from the cool cloister, and climb up to a little
tower — or pavilion of the flying clouds — where,
on kneeling on the ground, we can trace a few
pencil lines on a gold ground, supposed to be the
work of the great artist, Kana Molonobii.
Then, passing the Hijashi Hongwangi, which,
when finished, will be the largest Buddhist temple
of Japan, we go on through a narrow street, under
an archway, and pass into an enclosure, where
booths of gay trifles line the road running to the
Sanjusangendo, or the temple of 33,333 images
of Kwannon, the Goddess of Mercy, where a
thousand gilt images of five feet rise in tiers above
each other, the number being completed by the
smaller effigies engraved on the face and hands of
1 88 Neivfotindland to Cochin China.
V
the larger ones. Near by the great Buddha, twin
to the Kamakura one, is dwarfed into a building
where his head touches the ceiling, and you can
only gaze up from underneath at his colossal
sleepy features. To the right, hung under a
belfry, is one of the two largest bronze bells in the
Island, and immediately under it is a little open
temple, where five Buddhist priests, squatted in a
semicircle, monotone the evensong. We return
home with that comfortable feeling that comes of
duty performed, and proceed to enjoy ourselves by
a drive in the dusk through the fairy lighted streets.
Kioto is a fascinating place, but, as I have said,
it is not the sights that make it so. The attraction
partly lies, as it always does in Japan, in those
wonderful little brown streets, with their wide
eaved and diminutive two-storied dolls* houses,
hung with original sign posts of fans, monster
paper lanterns and gay flags, that stand out in
sharp relief down a long vista, from the purple
mountains. Kioto is on the plain surrounded by
a circle of mountains, and at the end of all the
streets, face which way you will, there is always
this effective background to the toy town. If
you mount a little way up them, you can look
back and have a panoramic view over thousands
of brown-roofed huts, presenting a perfectly level
surface, except when a temple roof, square and
dark, overshadows the others.
The Western Capital and Inland Sea. 189
Wc had thought Tokio the most fascinating
imaginable place, but, except for its grass-grown
moats, reflecting waters, and cawing rooks, Kioto
is even more enticing. The streets are narrower
My carriage at Kioto.
and more untouched by that dreaded European
taint, showing itself at Tokio in small drapers'
shops, and cheap lamp and umbrella stores. Life
is more primitive, the people are more unsophis-
ticated, as we know by the little crowd, polite and
*- '^-
1 90 Ncwfo7indiand to Cochin China.
interested, that attends us in our shoppings, and that
makes the dusk in the shops darker, by the black-
ness of their gathering round. The gay china
shops, the chemists, blacksmiths, booksellers, the
fish and fruit stores cease not to interest us ; the
walking picture, coming to meet us of a Japanese
lady with shapely, tightly-girt figure, with the baby
on her inclined back, sheltered under a paper
umbrella, charms us as much as ever. The wee
children in their blue and whitr: kimonos or
wadded jackets, their heads shaved, with a bald
circle on the crown, just like the Japanese doll
of a toy shop ; the little ten-year-old nurses
with their brown babies asleep, and heads
waddling from side to side as they shuffle along ;
the ladies, in handsome dress, taking an afternoon
airing with their husbands in a double jinrikisha ;
the sellers crying their goods and attracting
attention by the help of a bell, gong, drum, or
whistle : all these things, though we seem to have
been in their midst for so long, almost at times to
have lived all our lives with them, are a never-
ending source of interest. But a new charm has
been added to these, one that exceeds them all,
one that is all-absorbing. We throw temples,
palaces, gardens, sightseeing to the winds, and
resolve to devote the few remaining hours of our
stay in Japan, to shopping and the curio shops.
We drive through many winding streets and
TJie Western Capital and Inland Sea. 1 9 1
draw up in one not different to the others, and,
lifting up the black draperies, enter. There may,
j)crhaps, be a few bronze or lacquer articles spread
about, but nothing to indicate the priceless art-
treasures that we are presently going to see. With
hands on knees, sliding down with bows of
reverence, and the gasping produced by sucking
in of breath between the teeth, stands the pro-
prietor, surrounded by a background of assistants.
With deferential encouragement he leads you to
the backmost recesses of the shop, through wind-
in^j passages, across paved squares, until you come
to the prettiest little picture of a garden made out
of a courtyard of a few square feet, and here in
rooms opening out of this, surrounded by fire-
proof godowns, far away from the eyes of an in-
quisitive crowd of passers-by, he shows forth his
precious treasures. This courtyard is so artfully
arranged as to deserve description. There will be,
perhaps, a clump of bamboos in one corner, a stone
lantern on one side, a piece of water with gold fish
in it in the centre, and an azalea on bamboo
supports trained round it ; a bronze urn with
drinking water and a wooden scoop by it, and a
green metal stork. First of all tea is brought, and
the smoking boxes, which contain the hot ashes
in a bronze or china urn, and the bamboo trough
for the used ashes ; then the real work com-
mences. An art museum, the labour of hundreds
Mi
I
ii
192 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
of years ago, when a man devoted hfs lifetime to
the production of one or two works of art, arc laid
on the matting before you.
From behind cabinets, from underneath tables,
boxes are silently produced, and from out of folds
of soft crepe or flannel, and many paper wrappers
come lovely objects, lovingly, caressingly fingered
and stroked by their owner. There are vases of
rock crystal, jade, plaques, and trays of the most
exquisite cloisonne, when a mai,mifying glass is
gently pushed into your hands that you may
enter into the minutest details of the minute work.
Bronzes, and satsuma china, inro or lacquer
medicine boxes, with their succession of trays for
powders, and those lovely Netsuke or carved ivories
where each wrinkle and hair, each line and feature
are so faithfully graven in the quaint heads and
groups. The prices asked are fabulous, but I
often scarcely thought that the dealer wanted to
part with his curios, he seemed so proudly fond of
them.
I confess that our taste inclined often to the
baser kind of shops, where the goods were of
doubtful origin, but Japan has, in the last few
years, been so overrun with curio buyers and
Americans, that the few really antique things left
are scarce, and hard to find. The Japanese, like
the Chinese, always reserve their best things to
the last, and then somewhat reluctantly produce
The Western Capitixl and Inland Sea, 19
them. We haunted the old shops where great
golden Buddhas sat enthroned amidst a most
miscellaneous collection — men in armour, memo-
rial cabinets, huge bronze vases, inlaid swords
with quaint tsuba, or sword guards, mingling
with lovely china vases, which, if modern, are
nevertheless a joy for ever to possess — to
feast your eyes on their delicate shiny surfaces
of ruby sang-de-luvuf^ imperial yellow, lilac, blue,
apple-green, or rose pink, strewn with a spray
of snowy blossom or a spiky shaft of bamboo,
where little birds fly across the pale sea of colour,
or solemn storks perch beside some waving reeds.
Again and again we are made to wonder how
these small shops, so meagre and unpretentious
outside, find the capital and become possessed of
such wondrous treasures. Hours you can spend
there, and hours they will be pleased to show you
these, for in Japan no one is ever in a hurry. Life
is very leisurely.
The " curio fever " is upon us. To anyone who
has visited Japan the description of a Canadian
authoress is but " too intensely true."
"You don't 'shop 'in this country. Shopping
implies premeditation, and premeditation is in vain
in Japan. If you know what you want, your know-
ledge is set aside in a moment, in the twinkling of
an eye, and your purchases gratify anticipations
that you never had, to be paradoxical. And you
O
1 94 Nciufounciland to Cochin China.
^\,
never fully know the joy of buying until you buy
in Japan. Life condenses itself into one long
desire, keener and more intense than any want you
ever had before — the desire of paying and possess-
ing. The loftiest aims are swallowed up in this ;
the sternest scientist, or political economist, or
social theorist that was ever set ashore at Yoko-
hama straightway loses life's chief end among the
curios, and it is at least six weeks before he finds
it again. And as to the ordinary individual, with-
out the guidance of superior aims, time is no more
for him, nor things temporal ; he is lost in contem-
plation of the ancient and the beautiful in the art
of Nippon, and though he sell his boots and pawn
his grandfather's watch, he will carry it off with him
to the extent of his uttermost farthing. . . ."
And so we felt.
But of course it is the crepe and silk shops that
woman-like fascinate me most. Those lovely,
soft, crisp, textiles, in rose-pink, coral, lilac, blue,
and silver-grey, in sea-green, mignonette, and
chrysanthemum-yellow, shades that you can find
in no other country, because the secret of these
heavenly dyes is known only to the Japanese. Oh !
they are things to make your coveteousness strong,
your heart ache, unless your purse is full and deep.
Then there are the common washing crepes, with
their graceful running designs so artistically
disposed, their harmony of colouring, and of which
The Western Capital and Inland Sea. 195
I order kimonos for dressing-gowns for all the
children of the family. There is a lovely crepe
with rainbow stripes, not as you who have seen
the brilliant orange-green and purple rays of the
original would imagine, for it is a white filmy tex-
ture, with only a suspicion of pale melting zephyr
stripes, slanting across it.
Then there arc the silks and crepes embroidered
with blood-red autumn sprays, with butterflies,
pink dolphins and sea-shells, or panels of satin of
such exquisite workmanship, with ever recurring
views of Fugi, and hanging kakemonos and
screens and coverlets, all so beautiful, and of such
faithful artistic merit. We are shown specimens
of a newly-revived industry, handed down from
ancient dyers, where pictures rich and soft are
raised in velvet, against a pale silk or satin ground.
By an ingenious process of wires, running parallel
with the hard thread of the woof, bearing the out-
line of the picture in velvet, which are, after the
dyeing and steaming cut out, these quaint pictures,
which at first you think painted, are produced.
Everything you see in Japan is art. It is brought
into the manufacture of the commonest things of
daily life, and seen to perfection in these cut vel-
vets and rich embroideries. It is in the air they
breathe. For even as we pass out from this rich
inner sanctum, into the open street shop, where
the crowd of customers, each seated on cushions on
O 2
196 Neiofonndland to Cochin China.
the counter step, with a salesman squatted before
him, swiftly running the counters of his abaca up
and down, multiplying and dividing like light-
ning by this ingenious n'-^'^hine, we see piles of
coloured goods, of quite c :non quality only one
degree less delightful in colour and design, than
those we have chosen from. I must not forget to
mention in our shoppings the photographs, which
are extraordinarily good and very cheap. It might
also be of use to someone to know that we found at
Kioto, Daimaruicha and Co., and Takashimaya
Ilda and Co., the best shops for crepes, silk,
embroideries, and kimonos, made to order, and
Nishimura for the cut velvets, these shops having
but one price, and with the goods marked in plain
figures.
We get up early the next morning, for now that
we are so soon leaving Japan, we feel that every
hour is wasted that we are not out and about,
drinking in last scenes from these bewitching
streets. We direct our jinrikishas into a distant
quarter of far-reaching Kioto, into the meanest
and dirtiest of streets, where most of the shops are
full of old iron, and hung round with second-hand
goods like a pawnbroker's, but where wc are told
that the real old-fashioned curio-shops, not got up
collections of curio for the circumnavigator, still
exist. I must say that they seemed full of im-
possible rubbish.
The Western Capital and Inland Sea. 197
In the afternoon, somewhat satiated with buying,
we drove out to Shugaku — one of the Mikado's
summer villas. It was an intensely hot afternoon,
but the first disagreeably warm day that we have
had, as our weather has been perfect, with no
rain and sunny skies day after day. October
and Novembe;- are always delicious months in
Japan.
The villa cons sted of an absolutely bare, un-
decorated, matted, tea-house, of modest, you
might in the case of this, its royal owner, say
mean dimensions, but the garden is a gem.
From it there is a near view of purple hills, all in
little crinkled edges, running in lines one below the
other, made nearer to us by the warm still atmo-
sphere, whilst behind the garden rises a formal hill ;
truly Japanese in its conical structure, covered with
pine trees, whose pink and purple stems gleam out
from the dark fir needles. There is the usual
figurative mile upon mile of winding paths, the
steep hills to descend and climb up by stone steps,
the familiar bridges, one with pagoda-covered
roof, and the other of bamboo and turfed, crossing
the neatly devised harbours and bays of the arti-
ficial lake, whose banks are covered with palms,
but it is the hedges that are worth coming to see.
They are of azalea and camellia, and honeysuckle,
cut low, so that they spread out to an enormous
thickness, to a breadth of twenty feet, and it is over
198 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
■1 •
II
these green open ramparts, that you look out on
the lovely view.
We refused in coming home, though we had time
to spare, to visit any more temples, and we spent
the last evening in going to a fair, given in honour
of the God of Water. As at Tokio, where we saw
a similar festival for the God of Writing, it was held
in a special quarter. The dark, narrow streets are
outlined in coloured lamps, with arches, the light
glowing through the paper, and the varieties of
colour — red, green, blue, and pink, forming a soft
and effective illumination, not surpassed by many
more elaborate Jubilee ones. Many of the houses
are decorated with wonderful marine representa-
tions of blue waves, with fishes and dolphins, and
fir trees placed at intervals, with more lanterns and
red paper devices. The locality is en fete ^ and the
entire population is thronging the streets, which we
wander delightedly through. There are perform-
ances of monkeys and dogs proceeding, and a
crowd outside trying to look over the partitions ;
geishas, with the accompanying twang of the
Samisens, are going through their slow perform-
ances behind the open bars. Children are flatten-
ing their noses against the glass cases of the con-
fectioners', with their sweetmeats and temptingly
sugared cakes, or group round the vendors of paper
toys stuck on pieces of wood, whilst the women
gaze as longingly at the cheap combs, tawdry hair-
The Western Capital and Inland Sea. 199
pins, and gaudy flowers, laid out under the hawkers'
glaring oil lamps. There are booths for the sale
of cheap soap, cutlery, sandals, glass, jewellery,
and candles. The tea-houses are doing an enor-
mous trade, and the naturally contented people
look supremely happy.
We left Kioto to pay a flying visit to Osaka on
our way to Kobe. Each town seems prettier than
the last, and Osaka is no exception. Our chief
object in going there was to visit the Arsenal, and
according to the special instructions of the Minister
of War, we were most courteously received by the
chief, Colonel Ota, and given tea -^t his official
residence before being conducted over the arsenal.
We are much struck that instead of having
to teach Japan, there is something that we can
learn from her. Her civilization, coming, as it
has, so late in the decade, breaking in suddenly
upon centuries of dark ages, she has benefited by
the experience of other nations, and constructed
her civilization on the best sy.cems of other
countries. Here in this arsenal we see the newest
improvements of science in machines of every
nation. Some are from England, some from
Italy, France, or Germany. The Arsenal is in
beautiful order and keeps employed a large
number of workmen. They manufacture their
own cannon, and we passed through the large
workshops, the smelting furnaces, and saw mould-
• j
200 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
ings and castings, the making and filling of
cartridges. The arsenal is inside the outer moat
or glacis of the castle, and, with canals and rivers,
has through water communication to the sea and
to ;'. i'orts on the coast.
It is this rapid civilization, of which the
arsenal is only an example, that fills the traveller
with admiration. Japan was only opened to
foieij^nc?^ in 1868, and with the fall of the last
Shogim .1.1 the beginning of the present Mikado's
reign Europrn; customs rapidly spread. Some
say that j , p?r<, ;; -y. crone too fcist, and has absorbed
and not digested suliiiJently the forms of civilized
life. The Japanese went to Prussia for a constitu-
tion, and call their Parliament the Diet ; to
t^ngland for their railway system, which was built,
organized, and worked at first by English en-
gineers and firemen. They went to France and
Germany for an army organization, borrowing
their blue and scarlet infantry uniforms with
white leggings from the French, and their artillery
uniform of blue and yellow from Germany. To
France again for their culinary art ; for which these
Japanese have a latent talent, making excellent
cooks. To England again for her model of Court
etiquette and nobles' titles, and then again to
Germany for medicine. The great reaction that
followed naturally in the course of this rapid
innovation is not yet dead. The struggle is still
The Western Capital and Inland Sea. 201
going on, as one can easily see, but a few years
hence the revolution will be complete, and Japan
will cease to be so intensely fascinating to
foreigners. It presents, perhaps, the most wonder-
ful page in the history of the world : this deposi-
tion of the Shogun, the reinstatement of the old
dynasty, a great revolution in a remarkable in-
telligent country, perfectly bloodless, of short
duration, and changing the whole face and destinies
of the land.
But these Japanese civilize so fast, that now
there is scarcely a European employed in their
State departments. They are very proud of this,
and gradually European agents for their steam-
ships, companies, the managers of banks and
commercial houses are being dismissed, or super-
seded by Japanese, who take the management
into their own hands.
But to return to Osaka. If the castle at
Nagoya is so well worth seeing, this one of Osaka
is equally so, for it is the exact counterpart of the
other, only minus the keep and the dolphins.
There are the same outer and inner moats, the
same white plaster walls edged with crenellated
bronze tiles, resting on stone walls, guarded at the
four corners with those square towers, loopholed
in several storeys ; but I think that the perfectly
gigantic stones of the walls are even more colossal
than at Nagoya, for there are several opposite the
202 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
II ' •
li »
entrance by the gateway and the guard-room, that
measure at least twelve feet square. It will always
remain one of the wonders of Japan, how these
stones, with the primitive appliances of the earlier
Shoguns, were ever placed in position. The open
square of the inner moat is now a garden, and the
palace has been used to accommodate the General
and his staff. It is worth climbing up to the top of
the walls for the splendid view over the plain, always
bordered by those chains of mountains, that run as
a prickly backbone from north to south of Japan.
Osaka is a charming town. It is called the
Venice of Japan, and with its flowing rivers and
canals intersecting the streets, its high, arched
bridges thrown across on a single sweep, its grassy
banks and avenues of weeping willows, it is fitly
likened to that Queen City of the sea. The
houses are built on piles projecting over the water,
and narrow passages in between, lead down to the
stone steps, where there are multitudes of boats.
To stand on one of the bridges and watch the
ceaseless ebb and flow of the changing stream of
life, is a dream of delight, only to be compared to
standing on the Bridge of Galata at Constan-
tinople. Blue-coated coolies, with their bare brown
legs, roped to heavy carts, with their encouraging
grunts ; itinerant sellers slung with bamboo trays
of vegetables ; jinrikishas by the hundred, pedes-
trians jostled from side to side, closed sedan chairs,
The Western Cafiifal a7id Inland Sea. 20
from behind the curtains of which peer out priests,
whose way is cleared by runninjj attendants, for it
is a day of ceremony, with much coming and
going from the temples — all this kaleidoscopic
stream, accompanied by the warning cries, and the
dull thud of the echoing wood pavement, is what
we see. And then look up and down the river,
with a vista of bridges, and see the irregular mass
of brown houses, winding round the bend of the
stream, with poles on the roof, hung with waving
blue cottons, placed there to dry, and the over-
hanging balconies, from which men are fishing.
And then the scenes of river life — the brown shiny
figures bathing and plunging in a cool bath, the
hundreds of sampans moored by the banks, where
reside a large aquatic population, and the high-
peaked prows of others, which, propelled along by
six oarsmen, again remind one of the gondolas of
Venice. There are other sampans, which, with
one square brown sail set, come skimming down
the canals before the afternoon breeze. Yes,
Osaka is a charming place, and these river scenes
passed in crossing the bridges, add to the never-
ending joys of the dark, narrow streets, compressed
on to the restricted peninsulas of land.
Having done our duty by the arsenal, and to
our good conptituents at Sheffield, we sit out and
have tea on the balcony of the hotel, and then go
for a prowl in the dusk round the streets.
204 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
Then succeeded one of those lovely evenings.
I shall never forget those sunsets and twih'ght
evenings, with their pale, washed skies, that we
had in Japan. They only last for a short half
hour, but they are entrancing. If you watch care-
fully, you may see the shadows lengthening, but
after the brightest and hottest afternoon, suddenly
the colour of the sun seems to go out of every-
thing, and in its place steal up soft shadows, the
vista of streets grow dim, and darkness falls into
the little open shop fronts, whilst the sky is
suffused with the palest wash of lilac or saffron.
The jinrikisha bulbous lights come out, one by
one, like glowworms, and the single lamp lights a
dark interior. And then as we pass across some
street, which lies to the west, we see a blaze
of orange, lying low on the horizon, where the sun
has just dipped. It becomes cold and chilly for
an hour, and then begin the fairy scenes of night,
in a Japanese town.
It is an hour in the train from Osaka to Kobe,
where we arrived at eight o'clock.
Kobe is a pretty seaport, girt round, close
at hand, by great mountains, up into which
the streets run. It is too cosmopolitan and
European to be very interesting. But from the
handsome Oriental houses, with their pale buff
and grey tints, the deep balconies with green
blinds of the foreign consulates on the Bund—
The Western Capital and Inland Sea. 205
from the curio shops, Europeanizcd like Yoko-
hama, you can pass into the quaintest and
brightest native bazaar, where from feeling your-
self in Europe (especially if you are staying at the
French Oriental Hotel), you can suddenly plunge
back again into native Japan. We find the
steamer of the Nippon Company in quarantine,
by reason of a cholera death on board and coming
from Shanghai, an infected port ; so we have to
wait for two days.
On one afternoon we went up to the waterfall
in one of the green mountains, crowned with
straggling pine trees, to see sunset over the har-
bour. After having hovered round and inspected
half the gold Buddhas for sale in Japan, now that
we have reached the last place of departure, we have
at length bought one. Of course, directly we had
done so, we immediately saw a much better one in
an adjacent shop. J cannot help feeling that it is
a matter for thankfulness that we arc leaving this
seductive country, not ruined, it is true, but greatly
impoverished !
I was glad that to the end the enchantment
continued, and we shall carry away the memory of
that last evening in Japan on board the Japanese
Mail Company's steamer, the Saikio Maru. This
line is excellent and the ships the perfection of
comfort.
VVc saw the sunset from the deck, behind the
l! >
206 Nciv/oundland to Cochin China,
peaked mountains of Kobe, with their drat^on-
armed fir trees outlined atop, and against the
hundred masts of a fleet of sampans, the pale
grey-green sky so deliciously soft and milky.
There was a little white Japanese man-of-war
mysteriously covered over, and ships of all nations
coming from all parts of the world, in port ; and
from over the dark waters of the harbour, comes
the low crooning chant from the sampans, towing
in a huge junk.
As the darkness gathered the lights from Kobe,
came out against the sable background of lofty
mountains clustering thickly along the Bund, and
reflecting shining dots in the water, whilst arcs of
light march up the ascending roads. Black mon-
sters, marked by red and green eyes, are darting
about the harbour, whilst puffing steam launches,
black lighters,and oar-propelled sampans are dimly
seen. Over this bewitching scene rises a crescent
moon, with a trailing path of silver on the waters,
and in our last view of Japan, as is only right,
there are the jinrikisha lights on shore, drawn by
their patient human horses, their soft quivering
lights running swiftly, hither and thither, up and
down.
We have been for the last twenty hours on the
Inland Sea of Japan. I have spent the whole day
on the bridge or in the bows of the Saikio Mam,
and the sea in its incomparable beauty surpasses
The Western Capital and Inland Sea, 207
all ideas formed by written pictures. It is a suc-
cession of the most perfect inland lakes, varying in
breadth from forty miles to a few yards, and with
mountains rising around the shores. These moun-
tains have a peculiar look that I have seen nowhere
else so marked. They have great zig-zags of sands
running up and down their sides, indicated by a
sparse vegetation. It gives to them a mottled and
zebra appearance, and this feature is common to
them all. Many of their castle-like crags are
fringed with fir trees, whilst often their sides are
deeply terraced to the water's edge, and {' anted
with paddy and sweet potatoes. Little brown
thatched villages, with their big ru )rs crowding
down over the mud walls, lie hidden ud the many
inlets and winding channels, or nestle on the beach
of the seashore.
Time and again wc look back on the undulating
track of our course, and cannot see the winding
entrance now shut out by islands. We look
forward ; there is a rounded shore. It is a perfect
lake. Just as we enter the narrowest and therefore
most beautiful passage, the Captain points out a
barren cone, well ensconced behind several main-
lands of islands. Not so very long hence we
shall be passing underneath, but on the other side
of that mountainous peak, and so it goes on, one
intricate strait succeeding another.
The Inland Sea is a long procession of islands.
2o8 Neivfonndland to Cochin China.
The Japanese reckon several thousands, but it
would be an impossible task to count them, as one
by one they unfold themselves to us, as we steam
among their fantastic shapes. For there are islands
of every imaginable form and size, square and round
with sugar-loaf cones, or extinguisher tops with
castellated summits, or small and four-sided like a
floating haystack. Some are so large that they are
like the mainland, and others mere thimble points.
Here, there are three tiny islands formed of three
little rocks, with a tuft of palms, and joined by a
spit of sand ; there, a barren heap of sand with a
solitary fir tree on the top ; or, again, it is a moun-
tain island with deep evergreens.
Hundreds of junks come sailing by, with the
pleasant swish of the water against their keels,
whilst even here they have screens of paper, cover-
ing the wooden trellises of their sides. They are
a perpetual delight, these curious whimsically-
fashioned vessels, with their ancient prows standint^
high out of the water, recalling as they do the
old prints of the fleet of the Spanish Armada, of
which they are exact reproductions. Their one
square sail is attached to a single mast, and pulls
up and down like a curtain on running strings, and
the black patch sewn on it denotes the owner's
name.
What makes the Inland Sea so beautiful ? The
Japanese themselves have no name for it, nor have
The Western Capital and Inland Sea. 2oy
their poets ever sung its praises. I suppose we
must say it is the innumerable islands, though
many of these are the reverse of beautiful in them-
selves. Or is it the great ocean steamer threading
so swiftly the successive intricate windings and
snake -like passages } No. I think it is perhaps
the ceaseless variety. Every minute the scene
changes ; it is never the same for more than a few
seconds, and is often so beautiful that you want to
look on both sides at once. Certainly in the
course of our many wanderings, we have never been
more pleased than with this Inland Sea. All the
morning the sky was overcast, and a purple haze
rested lightly on the mountains, and the sea was
pale green. But in the afternoon, just as we
reached the most charming part by the northern
course, the sun broke through, and we had the
long afternoon shadows, with softened sunlight, on
this scene of rare beauty.
We have had, too, a wonderful conjunction of
pleasures in a superb sunrise, and a more exquisite
sunset in one day. Thi'=' morning at Kobe I saw
sunrise. At six o'clock the sky was heralded with
crimson glory. To-night the sun, as it always docs
in these Eastern latitudes, sinks suddenly — a golden
ball into an orange bed. It is going, going slowly,
until gone behind that purple range, and just as
it is dying the symmetry of the orb is cut into
and spoilt by a jutting rock on the mountains.
P
. 4
2 10 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
Then, whilst darkness falls over the land, the
golden bed begins to glow and palpitate with
colour, and spreads and spreads, until the exquisite
pink, and lilac and green, melt into the cobalt
vault above. The sea is extended in a tremulous
sheet of dazzling gold, and the black prows and
the figures on the junks are cut in Vandyck relief
out of this gilded background. The silver moon
rises over a lighthouse on the other side of the
ship. Soon little mackerel clouds separate them-
selveSj and float over the sky, and as we watch
a ruddy glow succeeds, growing blood-red, and
bathing sky and sea in a crimson flood, which dies,
oh ! so lingeringly and wistfully into purple dark-
ness.
Nor is this all, for by-and-by, as we are looking
over the bulwarks, perhaps still a little awe-bound
by this superb display of nature, a great, green,
electric wave rises up from the dark sea, thrown
aside by the ships' bows, and breaks away in
gleaming particles. It is the brilliant phosphores-
cence of the spawn of the sardine, which in daytime
is spread out like red dust upon the waves. Some-
times it is so bright that the whole sea is alight,
and in passing a channel ships have to stop, being
unable to see the coast.
At two o'clock in the morning we stop to coal
at Shimonoseki, in the straits between the main
island of Nippon and that of Kyushu. A party
The Western Capital and Inland Sea. 2 1 1
of geishas, or dancing girls, come on board and
go over the ship, and I get up in time to see a row
of little policemen with their coloured lanterns
going down the gangway.
The next day, at midday, we again come into
an even more beautiful inland channel. Islands
of emerald green are seen across a white-flecked
sapphire ocean on a glorious day — a line of
wliite creamy foam denting the black rock-bound
coast, above which rise volcanic strata of grey
and black cliff of the most wonderful formations,
deformed and twisted into spinular columns and
basaltic contortions, and the unwieldy mass of the
busje ship is made to double round sharp angles,
and avoid the conical islands sticking so irritat-
ingiy out in the mid-ocean passage. In one place
there is a lighthouse towering on a rock so
rugged and steep, that no path can be cut in
the cliffs, and we see the derrick and the basket
which are used for letting people up and down,
from the boats to the platform of the phare.
We are pointed out the place, where, in this
far-distant island of Japan, Fran9ois de Xavier,
in 1549, first landed to try and Christianize the
natives. We are in an inner channel. Far, far
away, beyond two grey islands on the sky line,
lies Corea. Whichever way we look there is a
dotted circuit of islands, always of those whimsi-
cal shapes. Occasionally, miles ahead, one little
» »
2 1 2 Neivfotindland to Cochin China,
island will stand all solitary amid the ocean, or
in another you can see the half that has fallen
away, leaving a clear cut scar, an abrupt termina-
tion to the island. But the most curious of all
is an enormous bell-shaped rock, standing erect
in the ocean with a perfect arch through it.
Captain Connor, the best and most genJal of
commanders, puts the ship about that we may
" kodak " it, and by degrees the slit of light opens
out into a perfect archway.
Over the archipelago of islands, under a green
mountain, lies Nagasaki, and we find an entrance—
a blind and mysterious one — into its harbour.
The harbour of Nagasaki is very beautiful. It
is "long and narrow, winding in among the
mountains like a Scotch firth." Every separate
mountain is terraced in green circles down to the
water's edge, and in each little conical hill the
circles get narrower at the top. In some, there are
wooded knolls crowned by a chapel, with winding
stone steps, that lead up from the black torii on
the banks, where prayers are offered for sailors
and the safe return of the fishing junks. Wc
pass at the entrance the round island of Pappen-
burg, where we can still see the flight of steps,
down which the Christians were thrown into the
sea 300 years ago. We get safely past the
quarantine station, pitying a British ship lying
bound, with the yellow flag hoisted on her mast.
The Western Capital and Inland Sea, 2 1
There are red lights, in the shape of a cross,
strung from the masts of a sunken vessel across
our passage, for last week the captain of this 400-
ton brig took out the ballast, and a few hours
afterwards she suddenly heeled over and sank,
drowning the captain's wife, who was in the cabin,
and the first officer.
As we breast this landed-locked harbour, under
the opal hues of a delicate sunset, we give to it
the palm (always excepting Sydney) over all
other harbours. At the head of the bay we see
the town and the handsome houses of the con-
sulates on the Bund, and above that again many
more pleasantly situated houses, equally handsome
and belonging to missionaries.
I do not wish to make any observations on the
missionary question, which, without special know-
ledge, it would be wrong to speak of, but I must
say that we have never heard any resident of any
foreign country speak a single word in favour of
the missionaries. On the contrary, we are struck
how they generally condemn them, I hope un-
justly, as mischievous, idle, and luxurious.
As we come to our buoy opposite the town,
thousands of lights, running out' in zig-zag lines
into the harbour, seem to come out with one
accord, creeping in scattered dots of fire up the
mountain sides, and there with these myriads of
twinkling lights, winking and blinking at us like
'^7r"F^
214 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
a thousand eyes, and with the dull splash of oars
in the water, we get such unrestful sleep as is
possible on a ship in port. Now we can well
imagine the scene described thus : —
"Every year, from the 13th to the isth of
August, the whole population of Nagasaki cele-
brate the Bon Matsuri, or the Feast of the Dead.
The first night all the tombs of those who died in
the past year are illuminated with bright-coloured
paper lanterns. On the second and third nights
all the graves without exception are so illuminated,
and the families of Nagasaki instal themselves in
the cemeteries, where they give themselves up, in
honour of their ancestors, to plentiful libations.
The bursts of uproarious gaiety resound from
terrace to terrace, and rockets fired at intervals
seem to blend with the giddy human noises the
echoes of the celestial vault. The European
residents repair to the ships in the bay to see
from the distance the fairy spectacle of the hills,
all resplendent with rose-coloured lights.
" But on the third night, suddenly, at about
two o'clock in the morning, long processions of
bright lanterns are seen to descend from the
heights, and group themselves on the .shore of
the bay, while the mountains gradually return to
obscurity and silence. It is fated that the dead
embark and disappear before twilight. The
living have plaited them thousands of little ships
ll
The Westcni Capital and Inland Sea. 215
of straw, each provisioned with some fruit and
a few pieces of money. The frail embarkations
are charged with all the coloured lanterns which
were used for the illumination of the cemeteries ;
the small sails of matting are spread to the wind,
and the morning breeze scatters them round the
bay, where they are not long in taking fire. It
is thus that the entire flotilla is consumed, trac-
ing in all directions large trails of fire. The
dead depart rapidly. Soon the last ship has
foundered, the last light is extinguished,and the last
soul has taken its departure again from this earth."
The next morning we were ashore before
breakfast to see the fish market, for Nagasaki is
one of the largest fishing ports in the world, and
it has been proved that there are 600 specimens
of fish brought into this market, by a gentleman
who has drawn them and written a book on the
subject.
Nagasaki has several canals, and is a quaint little
town developed from a fishing village, but with
nothing of much interest in it. We spend the day
as usual in the shops, plunging with a desperation
born of the feeling that it is really our last chance
of buying in Japan ; wc are in an agony of fear up
to the last minute lest our purchases should not
arrive before the steamer sails at 4 o'clock.
And it is in the dull light of a clouded afternoon
that we glide out of the beautiful harbour of
2i6 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
Nagasaki, and in a few hours even the coast hne
is lost to us, and fair Nippon, the Land of the
Rising Sun (such an appropriate name for the swiftly
progressing Island Empire) is a remembrance of
the past. Bright memories will linger with us in
a medley dream, of rosy sunsets, of clear skies in
those marvellous pale washes, of gaudy temples
with their moss-grown steps, hallowed by the
solemn hush around, mingling with the pictures
of those queer, dark little shops, of tiny gardens
comprised in tiny courtyards, of gentle little men
and women in flapping cotton garments, of golden
lacquer, red and black, of gorgeous kakemonos,
bronzes, cloisonne, of delicately tinted textures, and
above all of solemn gilt Buddhas, seated on lotus-
leaved pedestals, and gleaming at us from out
dark corners.
We pass out into the grey space of the Yellow
Sea.
CHAPTER VIII.
THE YELLOW LAND.
The turbid orange-coloured waters of the great
Yangtze are around us — "the river of the golden
sands," far too poetical a name for the muddy
waters, that with a strong current swish and eddy
against the ship's side.
The spirit of travel that rises strong within you
as you approach the landing to a new country, is
discouraged by that thin line of flat, ugly land,
which is all we see on that dull October morning,
through a mist of rain, of the coast of China.
The Yellow Land ! Rightly named, indeed.
The sea is yellow, the rivers are yellow, the land
is yellow, the people, too, are yellow — and the
Dragon Flag is yellow. Yellow, too, might China
be with gold if only her rulers, the mandarins,
would let her people give scope to their abilities,
develop the rich resources of an as yet barely
touched country, and strike ahead among the
nations of the world.
We had anchored at the Saddles, some little
i ■team. Alas ! we shall not sleep in Tientsin to-
night.
At 2 o'clock in the morning the commotion,
as we f t under weigh, begins afresh, and no sleep
is pos^ c after that, for there is the frantic whir-
ring the steering-gear just outside the cabin.
I'f '• .
2 22 Neivfoimdland to Cochin China.
as the sharp commands from the bridge, make the
wheel race from port to starboard. We stop op-
posite the Taku Custom House, and whistle ever
louder and more angrily for the sleeping officer,
who eventually comes reluctantly on board. And
then in the moonlight we glide by the crumbling
banks, past mud villages, silent as the grave, lying
in deep shadows, until morning glimmers in the
purple red of the sky, and we pay our morning
orisons to the rising sun, in its glory, over the well-
cultivated, intensely flat plains, and the cracked
mud banks of the great Peiho.
The navigation of this river is the most wonder-
ful series of nautical evolutions. The steamers
are especially built with flat bottoms for the
service, and must not draw more than ten feet of
water. It is without exception the most exas-
perating bit of navigation, calling forth the anathe-
mas alike of captain and passengers. There is
first of all the bar, where at high water there is
often only from ten to eleven feet. Here it is
possible to wait for several days before there is
enough water for a steamer to cross, and in most
cases the cargo has to be taken out to lighten
the ship on one side, and replaced on the other, or
again sometimes it may be too rough for the
lighters to come alongside. Then commence the
windings, so sharp that steam is shut off, whilst the
bows of the ship arc across the stream, and the
The Ye II Olio Land.
223
stern is all but on the bank, the dangers of going
aground being considerably increased by the shal-
lowness of the water. To give an idea of the ser-
pentine course of the river — a steamer which we
passed in a bend on the port side, two hundred
yards further on will be to starboard. The effect
produced by this is, that the large sails of the
sampans are a succession of ships sailing inland,
in contrary directions.
We pass the mud forts of Taku, where the great
battle of i860 took place, when the allied forces
were on their march to Peking. The Chinese idea
of fortifications, as a rule, consists largely of walls of
mud with a hard battened surface, and these forts
are intended for the protection of the Peiho, but
really their best one rests in the bar at its mouth.
There is the embankment yonder of China's only
railway. It runs from Taku to Tientsin. Fancy
acountry of four million square miles, with a popu-
lation of as many millions as there are days in the
year, with but one single railway of a {g."^ miles !
Yet such is the case ; China is still in the shadow
of the dark ages.
The morning mists gather into a thin vapour
and roll upwards, showing miles of fields, cultivated
like kitchen gardens, interspersed with mud villages,
where the houses are made of wattles plastered
over with the earth they stand on, with chimneys
formed of a cone of mud, and paper windows. In
^-
i
1
K
l—Ji
M
w
m
224 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
wet weather and floods these houses often partially
dissolve, or subside altogether. But then they are
so easily rebuilt. Here the urchins come out and
revel in the murky wash in our wake, whilst the
sampan propellers push hurriedly off from the
bank, lest we land them, as indeed we did one,
high and dry after our swell had subsided. Hun-
dreds of coolies are trudging along, with their
bamboo poles slung across their shoulders, whilst
others squatted on the ground occupied with that
B.C., or ancient Eastern method of irrigation, the
automatically worked water-wheel.
We now have the disagreeable excitement of
going aground, a gentle bump on a flat bank,
where we stick fast, and recall all the stories
which we have been hearing, of steamers staying
aground for a week or ten days. Meanwhile the
screw churns away at the liquid mud, and a crowd
collects on the causeway above, and yet we remain
fast. It is after half an hour's manceuvring that
we get off and proceed through the few more peril-
ous bends still left, with a few more hair-breadth
escapes. We see the tall chimneys, covering
a large area, of the Arsenal, and then the Pagoda,
with its white umbrellas, overlooking the fort and
military exercise ground for the troops, and then
we are nearing Tientsin. It is pleasant in the
first view of Tientsin to be greeted by a familiar
remembrance of England, in the towers of a
The Yellow Land.
225
miniature Windsor Castle, the Victoria Hall of
the English Settlement, that tower above the dust-
coloured hovels. It is in strange contrast to the
two cages on the banks, fixed on the top of tall
bamboo poles, where are seen the heads of two
criminals. Doubtless they were executed on the
spot where the crime was committed, as is the
Chinese custom.
We anchor in the river, and amid a deafening
roar, and the shoving, scraping and pushing of
hundreds of filthy sampans, we land on the Bund
of Tientsin, and are settling into the somewhat unin-
viting quarters of the Astor House, when Mr. Byron
Brennan, H. M.'s Consul, kindly sends for us, and
in an hour we are installed in luxury, and have
washed away the unpleasant reminiscences of our
journey across the Yellow Sea in a collier.
The English Consulate looks out over the
Bund, but it is such a different Bund to the usual
one of handsome houses and gardens touching
the water's edge. This one is piled up with
merchandise; great bales of goods, covered with
matting, are stacked under the trees or strewn
about the ground, and through the wide-opened
windows come all day the shouts and cries of the
strong-limbed coolies, as they lade and unlade the
ships. A strange silence falls over the busy
scene of the day, at night. But in another month
or two the Bund will be a model of neatness,
Q
226 Newfo7indland to Cochin China.
swept and clean, and all this bustling scene will
be hushed under the spell of winter, for the Peiho
freezes in the end of November or beginning of
December. Merchants are now hurrying to send
away the last of their merchandise, and residents
are receiving their last supplies before the river is
closed. During those winter months Tientsin is
entirely cut off from the outer world, save for the
mails which are brought overland. No one can
enter or leave the town to go south, and business
is at a standstill until spring breaks up the ice.
This isolation comes suddenly, for we heard of a
steamer that went aground below Tientsin, and in
one night was frozen in by a coat of ice a foot thick.
A British gunboat is anchored under the Consulate,
sent up since the late riots at Wuhu, and it is a
great comfort to the English residents to feel that
she is to spend the winter here.
We passed a quiet forenoon with a regular
feast of the limes and of home news. Then
in the evening Mrs. Brennan took me for a walk
round the European Concession, down Consulate
Road, where the consulates of the various nations
are situated, to the Gordon Hall and Victoria
Gardens. Five yeais ago this was a mud-dried
waste — strange contrast to these pretty zoological
gardens, with its tennis courts, and well laid out
paths, and Chinese band playing. The Hall
is the centre of social life, where dances and
llie Yellow Land.
22
public entertainments are held, and it has a
capital Library and Reading-room. At the
entrance are stands of guns, belonging to the
Volunteer corps of foreign gentlemen, who are
ready to come to arms should necessity arise.
Like so many other places of this kind, Tientsin
has but one drive out into the country, and along
this we go up on to the city wall. We stand on
the high elevation of the deeply arched bridge,
and look out on the fiat swamps of mudland, on
the surrounding marshy and unhealthy pools. It
is mud in some shape or form whichever way you
look, it is seen alike in houses, walls and roads,
an.'' it is certainly very like what I pictured China
from reading books of travel.
The Europeans on their small spotty Chinese
ponies, or driving in their cabriolet carriages, are
returning from their evening exercise. Tientsin
seems to be a pleasant place socially, particularly
in the cold though bright winter, when business is
slack on account of the frozen river, and the little
community join together to amuse themselves
with skating and sailing of ice-boats. And so
soon as the first dust storm spoils the river ice,
they enclose this pond we are passing, and make
a covered skating rink.
My husband has just returned from a visit to
the great Viceroy, Li Hung Chang, who sent soon
after our arrival to say that he would be glad to
<) 2
2 28 Newfouudland to Cochin China.
see him. So at five o'clock he and Mr. Brennan
started out in state-green palanquins, the official
colour being green in distinction to the ordinary
blue, with a numerous retinue and an outrider
on a white horse to clear the way, and present the
Chinese card, a single sheet of long pink paper.
On arrival at the Viceregal Yamen, the exterior and
surroundings of which were little in keeping with
the high offices of state held by His Excellency,
the chairs were carried into an inner courtyard,
flanked by wooden shields, bearing all the titles of
the Viceroy. The visitors were conducted to the
small foreign reception rooms, where His Ex-
cellency immediately joined them.
Li Hung Chang is a tall handsome man of
seventy, six feet four inches high, and was dressed
in a grey plush robe. He is frequently styled the
Bismarck of China, and is certainly the most
prominent and influential statesman of this vast
Chinese Empire. For many years Li, the
Viceroy, has held his present post of Governor-
General of the large Province of Chihli, and unites
with it that of Grand Secretary, Guardian of the
Heir Apparent, and what is most important of all
to us, Commissioner for Trade, in which capacity
all Foreign Affairs arc referred to him from Peking.
In the conversation, His Excellency placed great
stress upon his sincere desire to develop closer
trade relations with England, and took great
The Yelhnv La mi.
229
interest in the details of the trade of tlic British
Empire which C. gave him. The interview
lasted about an hour, the Viceroy conducting his
guests back to their chairs, and sending me his
photograph.
A Chinese Street.
There are two ways (^f reaching Peking. You
may ride or drive in those terrible country carts
the eighty miles, staying one or two nights in an
indescribably dirty Chinese inn, or go, as we
(.Iccided, in a house boat, 120 miles up the Peiho.
At two o'clock the next afternoon, we drove in
w
230 Newfoundland to Cochin China,
jinrikishas for an hour through the heart of the
native quarter. This is my first view of a real
Chinese city, and my early impressions are com-
prised in the all-pervading, all-powerful, smother-
ing filth and dirt, in the revolting smells and
disgusting sights ; my next, in the jostling of crowds
of coolies wheeling enormous iron-bound bales on
wheelbarrows, of carts drawn by teams of mules,
donkeys or oxen, of equestrians, pedestrians,
jinrikishas, and sedan chairs, crowded into a six-
foot wide street, curtained with bamboo mats
above, producing a bewildering pandemonium.
Passing the particularly squalid corner where is
situated the Yamen, we see the twin towers of the
Roman Catholic Cathedral. They stand there
as a solemn reminder of the dangers which yet
threaten the Settlement, and of the fanatical people
they are surrounded by, for it was here in 1870
that there was that awful massacre of Roman
Catholic nuns, followed by the pillage of the
Convent and Cathedral.
On arrival at the bridge of boats, we find our
house-boat, Chinese boy, provisions, luggage and
crew of coolies safely on board, and after many
objurations from the delayed passengers, a passage
by the removal of one of the boats is made for us,
and we begin our long journey up the Peiho.
This house-boat is very comprehensive on a
small scale, for we have a sitting-room and bed-
The Yelloiv Land.
2;i
room and kitchen. There is a tiny promenade
deck in the bows, then down two steps and you
are in a room with a bench, a table and two stools,
the door being formed of movable planks of wood.
Through an elegant arabesque of woodwork,
screened with paper, we can see the raised floor on
which are spread our mattresses with red quilts.
Behind a similar screen is the kitchen, a few square
inches,undertheshadow of the helm, where our clever
" Boy," who is cook, valet and interpreter in one,
turns out the most deliciously cooked and varied
dishes, with a batterie de cuisiney consisting of a
few tin saucepans and an iron brazier of charcoal.
As for the crew, they sleep on deck anywhere, and
keep their provisions in the hold. The flat-
bottomed boat has an arched roof of matting laid
on bamboo sticks. It is clean, for I only saw one
black-beetle, but is only moderately air and water-
tight. Our tiny domicile is dominated by an
enormous sail which is hoisted up and down on
running strings. We either tow or pole, or sail,
according to the wind and stream.
The vast and varied river life is before us. The
bajiks for some miles above Tientsin are lined
with these ugly sampans, their tattered sails hang-
ing in ribbons, their decks strewn with debris
where the naked children disport themselves, and
the women steer at the helm ; for in these
sampans generations are born, live, and die, and
Pi
■
232 Newfoundland to Cochin China,
they are coated too with the dirt of many
decades. There are fishermen on the bank
where, projecting out of the little hut which he in-
habits^ is a net stretched wide on bamboo poles,
baited with the white of egg spread on the meshes.
He lowers it slowly up and down, and at each dip
we see the little silver-scaled fish jumping about
in the net. There are children dabbling in the
mud, true mud-larks, and women washing their
clothes. We espy a bridge over a tributary, with
a single graceful arch, so curved as to be half an
oval, and with some houses, a willow tree and
pig-tailed Chinaman, calling to remembrance the
willow-patterned plate of our childhood. VVc pass
several covered Chinese gun-boats,— war-junks, —
with their blue and white striped awnings, and a
Maxim gun in the bows kept for the defence of the
Peiho, ind the patrolling of the river.
We get out into the country at length, between
high mud banks, and by a continuous succession
of villages, their brown dusty walls abutting on to
the hard-trodden towing path, whilst around is
that careful cultivation resembling a sucession of
kitchen gardens, with its plots of lettuces of enor-
mous size, of cabbages, turnips and onions ; and
the vertical pole of the water tank is always amongst
them. A place is hollowed out in the bank, where,
from a cross plank, the bucket attached to the
pole is pulled down to the water, v/hen the
The y'cl/o' Land.
o -^ ■^
-0^
weighted end bears the bucket up and the water
is emptied into the channels that surround each
plot. Morning and evening you sec hundreds
of these automatically-working figures, thus irri-
gating their fields. The population appear ill-
disposed towards foreigners, they collect in the
villages and on the sampans and point and jeer at
me, for the Chinese keep their women at home, and
arc shocked at the way " Barbarians,'^ as they call
us, travel with their wives.
After punting for a little while, three of the
coolies begin to tow, but it is tedious work, as#our
line has constantly to be undone or passed round
the masts of other sampans. Indeed, all the way
there are processions of these vessels crawling
up the river heavily laden with cargoes of rice, salt,
camels' hair, sheep's wool, and vegetables, with
their four or six towers, whose brown figures are
bent double against the line, patiently staggering
along for mile after mile against the current.
Our coolies are very willing and cheerful, spring-
ing ashore to begin that weary work of tacking
against stream, and subsisting on scanty meals of
rice, cabbage and maccaroni, which we watch them,
at mid-day and sunset, tucking rapidly into their
mouths with chop sticks. Sometimes they sing in
chorus to encourage themselves, with a soft croon-
ing chant.
As evening approaches, columns of smoke rise
234 Neiofouudland to Cochin China,
from the stern of the sampans, showing the pre-
paration of the evening meal, and the mists gather
low over the villages. We sec the great high
road to Peking, raised on a mud embankment,
that now and again keeps company with the river ;
it is bordered herewith an avenue of whisperin^^
willows, and against the orange sunset come such
picturesque figures along it. Now a little lady, with
her pantaloons reaching to her little feet, tippeting
along as if she must fall at every step, a horseman
on a shaggy white pony, running along without
rising in the .saddle, a big man overshadowing a
tiny donkey, a jinrikisha, a country cart with oxen,
or one of those ancient wooden cabriolets, all out-
lined in black relief against the yellow sky.
We go to sleep with the sound of the water
gently gurgling against the bottom of the boat, the
croaking of the frogs on the banks, whilst our
patient coolies plod automatically along. They
anchor for a few hours in the middle of the night
opposite a large village, whence the regular muffled
tom-tom of the watchman, a deep and solemn tone,
is wafted across to us. At three in the morning
there is a rushing sound as of wind and water, and
to our great joy we find that we arc sailing before
a brisk wind.
The scenery of the Peiho is repelling in its ugli-
ness, and wearisome from its extreme monotony.
The country is absolutely flat, and there is nothing.
The i 'cllow Land,
235
now that the harvest is carried in, but a parched
saline plain, of mud and yellow j^rass, extending
for hundreds of miles all around.
The only hills are those of the graves— these
11 1
-vv.
illl!!lilll!ll!llli!i; :iillliliiii.l
...^......."■'■'••••'■•••'» .V;
III - loiKM.;! <••>*
Our Home on the Teiho.
unwieldy mounds of battened earth, that stand in
rows along the bank, or arc collected in a field — a
family burial place, with mounds of varying sizes.
The greater the man, the larger is the tumulus
raised over him. Then there are other and more
disagreeable ones, where the coffin has been tem-
^^
236 Ncii'foundland to Cochin China.
porarily earthed above grountl, awaiting perhaps
a favourable moment for burial, or sufficient funds
to take the deceased back to the place of his birth ;
for this is the dearly cherished hope of every China-
man, and often, when old age approaches, he
returns to his native place to be ready to die there.
An even more objectionable custom I., that of
putting coffins down in open fields, or ale /'g the
roads. We saw one covered in red tandinc;
like this, just outside a village, and you find them
in the same way all over China. There is a su-
perstition that it is lucky to bury within sight of
water or in a place which commands a view, and
that is why we see such rows of graves for miles
and miles by the river bank. To tlie Chinese their
burial is the most important thing of life. They
prepare their coffins and keep them in their
houses for years beforehand, though their unwieldy
size and solidity take up much ill-spared space,
and the object of every woman of the poorest
class is to save enough for her grave-clothes. It
has been truly said that the whole face of China
is burrowed under by these graves.
The turpid yellow waters of the Peiho swirl
against our boat, particularly at the reaches, where
the current is strongest. The harvest is over, the
poppy fields are bare, and there are only a few
tall straggly castor-oil plants along the banks.
A few, very few coolies, in loose blue cotton gar-
The Yellow Land.
o -I »7
mcnts, are at work, ploughing with ancient and
rude ploughshares. The teams they use are
delightfully mixed. You may often see an ox and
horse, a donkey and a mule all pulling together.
And the same useful mixture is seen in the carts
that resemble old Roman chariots, crawling along
the towing path, where a bull with a tandem
donkey is a favourite team. These donkeys
arc beautiful animals ; small, but with sleek grey,
brown and black coats, with the well-marked
neck rings, and line down the centre of the back.
\Vc meet solitary pedestrians trudging along with
their heads down against the wind, and we wonder
whence they came and whither they are going, for
wc are now only passing isolated villages at great
distances. In some of the few we sail by, the mud
walls surrounding the villages have a graceful open-
work arabesque at the top, and in one, to the sound
of much tom-tomming, a festival was progressing,
at which all the inhabitants (as there were none to
be seen) are evidently assisting.
The windings described by the I'eiho are aggra-
vating. The actual distance traversed, after a series
of bends, being equal to about half a mile as the
crow flics. Again and again we sec the extra-
ordinary phenomenon of a row of sails walking
inland ; and how picturesque these brown-patched
sails look, as extended by the wind they glide in
single file against] the sky line. The wind is a
I ..-i
238 Neivfoundland to Cocliin China.
subject of great anxiety on the Peibo, because if it
is ahead one the crew make fast to the bank at
once, and await a favourable change; and even if it
is, as to-day, behind us, the river winds so mucli
that we box every point of the compass, and so it
is not always to our advantage. We watch our
progress with great interest ; and now we are scud-
ding gaily before a lovely fresh breeze, with the
pleasant sound of rushing water under the keel,
whilst the big sail overhead balloons out and
swells hopefully. To this succeeds a calm, when
a little punting with the long poles is neces-
sary, or a deep bend when the wind and stream
arc ahead of us, and which means a painful slow
bit of tacking, when the men strain the whole
weight of their bodies against the tow line, to pro-
gress at all. Again a pleasant rush;, the puff of
wind catching our ponderous sail, and we scud
merrily past the banks. And how our coolies enjoy
this ; stretching themselves out, and, sunning on the
deck, smoke their pipes. So it goes on all .ay.
We passed several gaily-decorated junks belong-
ing to a great mandarin with the peacock's feather
over the door, generally accompanied by another
with the household ; also the ex-French Charge
d' Affaires, Monsieur Ristelhueber, and his family,
returning to France from Peking,and with whom \vc
afterwards had the pleasure of travelling home-
wards for a month on the French mail.
The Yellow Land.
239
The approach to Peking, which signifies the
" Gate of Heaven," is indeed synonymous with the
biblical definition in one particular, for it is narrow.
This morning the Peiho has dwindled into a ditch
between extensive mud flats, and we are constantly
aground, our five brown coolies struggling and
sweating in the quagmire of soft mud under a
broiling sun. It is weary, weary work this slow
progress, and we chafe at all the delays of cross-
ing the tow line from one bank to another, to
avoid the now continuous succession of sampans,
many of which are in worse condition than our-
selves, for the men have to get out into the
water to push the boat along ; for should we
not arrive at Tungchau by noon, we must abandon
all hope of reaching Peking to-night, as the gates
close at sunset. There is a head wind, with a strong
current racing down the narrow channel against
us, and we sadly mark how crawling is our pro-
gress by the landmarks on the bank. And so the
long hours of morning pass, and, just as we are
losing hope, we see the blue tower of the pagoda
at Tungchau, rising up from the plain, and there are
only seven miles more with an hour to do it in, and
we shall be at our journey's end. We afterwards
found that, favoured by the wind, \vc had made
almost, if not quite, a record passage of forty-six
hours, and that many boats take from four to five
(lays in coming up from Tientsin.
240 Newfoundland to Cochiu China.
We find an anchorage at Tungchau among fleets
of sampans, and in half an hour our boy has pro-
cured three carts, packed in our luggage, and we
are ready to begin the fifteen miles journey to
Pekincf. Let me describe these carts. The body
is formed of a few planks of wood, with a hood
covered in blue or black stuff. The wheels arc of
circular pieces of wood, they are guiltless of springs,
and are drawn by mules. They resemble an old
mediaeval chariot, and indeed they date from and arc
exactly the same as were in use in the tenth cen-
tury. There is no seat inside, and instead of sitting
on the ^oor, it is easiest to ride on the shaft, with
your legs hanging over ; but I did not know this in
time. Before you have been half an hour in this
vehicle you cry out for mercy — for an instant's ces-
sation of this agonizing mode of progression, from
the unbearable bumping and concussion. And
when at length you become numbed by the pain
and discomfort, the intense weariness that succeeds,
makes you sure that another jolt will be unbear-
able, until at last you close your eyes, feclinc^
that nothing but the end of the journey is of the
remotest consequence. The roads are somewhat
softened by the loc^e dust. Still, when you tumble
into a ditch on one side, with a jar that is felt
to your most internal depths, and are then run up
on to a bank jn the other, you can have some idea
of what we suffered during that journey from
The YcUoi^' Land.
241
Tungchau to Peking. What must have been the
a^cjonies endured by Sir Harry Parkes, and our old
friend Sir Henry Loch, as they journeyed in these
same springless carts to Peking, but with their
How I went to I'ekiivj,
hands bound behind them and over tlic stone road
tliat takes a more circuitous route !
We passed through the outskirts of Tungchau,
through some blind lanes of mud walls, with doors
in thcni leading to the courts, round which the
R
'B
t
242 Neivfoundland to Cochin China.
houses arc built. Soon we are out on the road —
no, it is not a road, but a rough track with several
trails, and made of millions of tons of dust, 4hat
rise in impenetrable clouds by the passing of a
single donkey — dust that smells and tastes of the
garbage of China proper, that envelops everytl ing
in a white mist, that, easily raised, subsides as
lingeringly. The embankments are crumbling
into dust, as are the numerous walls of these
hideous earth villages which line the road, and are
perched on the top of them. The whole face of
the land is parched and burnt. The willows
are streamers of dust, and the other trees are
coated grey with the same. And the road : it is a
succession of deep gutters, of holes, of upheavals of
sandbanks, running in the middle or across the
oad, scarcely defined from the surrounding fields —
jind this is the great highway to the Great City of
the unknown Emoeror.
We pass cavalcades of carts, and the gaudily-
dressed and painted Chinese women inside peer out
curiously at us ; bullock carts laden with merchan-
dise, parties of horsemen, a caravan of camels, and
endless strings of donkeys, bearing away the last
of the students from the late annual examinations
at the capital. Many of these wear goggle spec-
tacles, the glasses of which are at least four inches in
diameter, and enclosed in broad tortoise-shell rims.
With their loose coats they tower over and bulge
The Yclloiv Land.
243
out above their tiny quadrupeds, but these sleek,
good-lookinij little donkeys go cheerfully jig-
jogging along, with their blue-coated owners urging
them from behind. In the oasis of a few trees,
the mules are occasionally watered from the tuL.:
that stand ready filled, for the traffic along this
highway is ceaseless.
The sun, as it got lower, scorched mercilessly
into the hood, and the dust in its parching
aridity became still more trying. The mule began
to tire, and the driver cruelly flogged it, while the
monotonous waste seems endless.
Absolute indifference, with a deadly weariness,
had long since taken possession of me. The
clammy chill of sunset was of no consequence,
though I tried to huddle something round me. I
was only roused by the sight, over some tree tops,
of a little bit of black crenellated wall. The
approach to Peking is thus an absolute disappoint-
ment, for, instead of seeing the grand walls from
afar standing up out of the yellow plain, here wc
were creeping round a corner to them. In a few
minutes we were under the gloom and darkness of
this vast mass of stones, piled up on high centuries
ago. But, alas ! that at such a moment imagination
and sentiment, increased by the difficulties and
tediousness of the journey, should succumb before
an increased ordeal of pain, as we now join the
stone road, and jar over the great crevasses of the
K 2
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t '.
244 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
\\
paved way. At last, turning the corner, we enter
under the massive arch or gateway, deep with
many feet of thickness, called by the poetical
name of Hatamen, or the '* Gate of Sublime
Learning." We are within the outer walls of The
Forbidden City.
Then we find ourselves in a sandy waste,
bordered by the wall of the Tartar City on one
side and the canal on the other. Little clouds of
dust rising in the distance tell of some cart or
donkey, and we ourselves continue enveloped in
the same as we choose any track we please, for
there is, of course, again no road for another weary
mile or so. Some flag-poles in the distance bring
a ray of comfort, for I shrewdly hope that they
mean the quarter of the Legations. Nor is my
hope ill-founded, for, passing through a dirty
passage, we emerge into the moving streets and are
soon in Legation Street, so called from the lion-
guarded entrances of the various legations, for the
French, the American, the German, and the
Russian Envoys are grouped here. We find ac-
commodation in one of the numerous courts of the
French hotel in this aristocratic street. The sense
of comfort of sitting still and not momentaril)-
expecting a concussion is simply delicious. We
are full of admiration for the physical bravery
and endurance of the many travellers, who for two
days or for eighty miles go in these carts from
The Yellow Laud.
245
Tinit^chan to I'ckiiii;, throui]fli such a proloni^cd
torture.
The British Legation is over the bridge with an
entrance off the Yu-ho canal. And here, the
next morning, Sir John and Lady Walsham sent
for us and received us most hospitably.
This beautiful Legation was formerly a Palace
belonging to a member of the Imperial Family,
as is shown by ils green roof. The approach to
the entrance is through an aisle and raised pave-
ment, formed by two magnificent open gateways
supported by pillars, and gorgeously decorated in
gold, scarlet, green, and blue. The palace wanders
round the spacious enclosure of a courtyard ;
and the reception-rooms, with their lofty ceilings
inlaid like a temple in green and gold squares, with
their hanging screens of that beautiful Chinese
black oak carving, are magnificent. The walls are
of open work filled in with dull gold papers, and
furnished, as these rooms are, with handsome
brocades, soft carpets, and rich hangings, chosen
to harmonize with the surroundings, the whole is
truly regal.
The compound is large, and contains the bun-
cjalows and houses of the Legation Staff, and the
separate apartments of the Student Interpreters, of
whom there are six. And a very happy little
community of twenty-two persons they appear to
be, led by Lady Walsham, who is most hospit-
1 '
P!n
246 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
ably inclined, and living their life within the four
walls of the compound, which they rarely leave,
except for social duties, to pass into the outside
filth and dust.
From the windows of our rooms, overshadowed
by the deep eaves supported on enormous red
wooden pillars, we look out on a succession of
peaked roofs, inlaid with green tiles and blue
decorations, with rows of pretty little green
dragons perched on the ridges, whilst crescent-
shaped ornaments depending from the roof, wave
with each breath of wind.
CHAPTKR IX.
THE CELESTIAL CITV.
A CURIOUS difficulty arises in The Celestial City.
It is that of locomotion. How arc we to get
about with no carriages, and only those abominable
agonizing carts to drive in } We end by taking
refuge on the humble donkey, and every time we
went out messengers had to be sent to the walls
to charter the best attainable animals.
Great mandarins and ministers-plenipotentiary
go in chairs, but smaller fry are not allowed to use
them, besides which they are prohibitorily expen-
sive. Even the late Marquis Tseng, when he re-
turned from his embassy to Europe, was at first
denied the privilege of a chair, that he might
understand that, although great in England, he
was small in China. For the Secretaries, ponies
are the chosen mode of locomotion by day, and
fifty ponies stand in the Legation stables. At night
all must walk, lantern in hand, or go in a cart.
So it is with the ladies. Carriages are unknown
and impossible, with the result that the majority
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make, as I have said, a sweet prison of the coni-
poiind, and lawn tennis has votaries amonq;- .ill
ages.
The sky is clear and blue, with a north wind
bringin*^ a deliciously crisp feeling into the air,
suitable to this October month. The climate of
PekiniT offers a redeeminn^ feature to the Euro-
peans who are isolated here. For the next six
months this cloudless sky is uninterrupted. Rain
is unknown for nine months together, from July to
April, and the worst season is the rainy one of
May and June, when the steamy heat is most
trying. The winter is perfect — cold, but with warm
sun in the middle of the day, and the snow that
falls, but occasionally, is soon dispersed by the
wind.
Moreover, Peking is fortunate in having a
summer resort close at hand in the Western Hills,
some fifteen miles distant. Here the Legation
lives for the hot months, in a privately-rented
group of Temples, The dust storms are the
scourge of the town ; from the crumbling " loess "
and alkaline nature of the soil, they sweep in
blinding clouds over the plain, and are most
irritating in their fortnightly recurrence. The air
is so intensely bracing and dry, as to unpleasantly
affect the skin.
The first thing to do is to grasp the topography
of the Celestial Metropolis, with its city within
The Cc/cs/ia/ City
249
city, and wall within wall. Wo return to the Gate
of Sublime Learning,-, and ascend by it on to the
great Tartar Wall.
Pekinc^ is spread out at our feet. We can trace
out the four Walls, each containing a separate
town. The outer and lower ramparts surround
the Chinese cit\'. The next exclude the abodes
of the conquered from those of the Conqueror.
Here upon the higher ground were assigned, two
hundred and fifty years ago, spacious residences
for the Tartar Bannermen. Within the Tartar
town again, and surrounded by its defenders, is tlie
Imperial city, and enclosed again, securely inside
this, with further moats and guard-houses, is the
Wall of the Forbidden City itself.
These Walls are from fifty feet high, to forty and
sixty feet wide. They are built on massive stone
foundations, brt the walls themselves are of brick,
filled in with mud. How have these common black
bricks survived the crumbling of ages ? But,
except where the base has been marauded for the
sake of the yellow clay of the mortar, they are as
solid as the day they were constructed. At
intervals of three hundred yards there are massive
flying buttresses, and a crenellated parapet crowns
the summit. They are pierced with many gate-
ways, for there are nine to the Tartar city, and
eight for the Chinese. Each gate is surmounted
by a square tower of many storeys, loopholed for
250 Newfoundland to CocJiin China.
archers and musketeers, and with quaint heavy
black roofs, decorated often in gay colours.
Poetical names mark these Gates, such as *' The
Eastern Straight Gate," *' The Gate of Peace and
Tranquillity," " Of Attained Victory," " The Gate
of Just Law," " The Western and Eastern Gate of
Expediency." These vast fortifications extend for
twenty miles, and enclose an area of twenty-five
square miles. They arc all that you see from
whichever side you approach the cily, for they are
loftier than the loftiest interior pagoda or tower.
They are the most impressive and venerable
sight, and alone would be worth coming to sec.
We are walking on the top of this Wall of the
Tartar city — over the ancient grass-grown pave-
ment — commanding a splendid view of the
Chinese capital, in the early morning light. The
pale grey haze over the Western Mountains points
the direction where lie the ruins of that beautiful
Summer Palace, magnificent even in its decaying
fragments, standing for ever as a reproach to the
allies, but fit judgment on the barbarous cruelty
of a civilized nation. From this bird's-eye view,
Peking appears so buried in trees, that it is hard
to believe that its teeming streets, with a popula-
tion variously estimated at from 400,000 to 800,000,
is immediately below. We are so far above it,
that even the street cries and calls come up in a
softened murmur.
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The Celestial City,
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We can distinguish the black roofs of several
temples,and the bright green-tiled ones that denote
the abode of a Prince of the Blood, called the First
or the Tenth Prince, in gradation of propinquity.
Over there now the sun is shining and gleaming
from the many yellow-tiled roofs of the Imperial
palaces of that Forbidden City, where shrouded in
mystery, unseen by his people, dwells the Emperor
who holds sway over a fourth of the human race.
For about two miles we walk upon the ramparts,
which would make a splendid promenade, turning
the corner of the square by the Eastern Straight
Gate, which is beautiful with its pagoda newly-
decorated for the recent passage of the Sovereign.
The roof is formed of dark crenellated tiles, with
deep outward curving lines, underneath which is
a lovely inlaid mosaic in vivid blue and green tiles,
whilst the green bronze dragons with twisted tails
are perched in single file along the curving sweep.
From point to point of the gracefully arched line,
suspend crescent-shaped eyes, that tremble in
the breeze. And each of the numerous gates have
equally fine pagodas, so that in our wanderings we
were always coming back to one of these familiar
features.
But a difficulty occurs. We wish to descend
from the wall. There is a ramp ; but at the bottom
a locked and spiked gate. We call for a ladder,
without result. Pulled by the guide, pushed from
).'"'
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1
w^
252 Newfoundland to Cochin Cliiiia,
below, \vc scramble up «ind over a nine-foot wall.
It was not dignified, and the crowd was amused at
our quandary.
We are making our way towards the Tower
which leans against the City Wall, belonging to
the observatory.
We pass into a shady courtyard to gaze upon
the very instruments whereat Marco Polo
wondered in his famous travels. There are two
planispheres, an Astrolabe of great size, cast in
bronze, and supported on twisted dragons of ex-
quisite workmanship, and which are probably the
best specimens of bronze work in Eastern Asia.
Ascending up some damp stone steps, we find our-
selves on the top of the Tower, and inside a finely
wrought iron railing, where there is a gigantic Globe
of the Heavens, with the planets yet marked in re-
lief on the surface. Also a quadrant, sextant,
and sundial ; while the large Azimuth instrument
in the corner was a present to the Emperor
Kanghai from Louis XIV.
And these instruments are as perfect as they
were when placed here 300 years ago. Indeed,
some of these are still used by the Astronomical
Board for their observations. It brings home to
us the fact that we must never ignore for a
moment, whilst living in China, that in the earliest
centuries she was far ahead in civilization of any
country in the world. But while the West has
The Celestial Cily,
1 - ■»
~5j
gone rapidly onward, overtaking and outstripping
the East, China, self-contained and shut off from
contact with all other nations, has remained
stationary, so that much we see around us dates
from that era. The Chinese are under the im-
pression that there is no nation equal to theirs.
They suppose themselves the centre of civilization
for the last 2000 years, and claim that China knew
the art of printing, invented gunpowder, and was
learned in astronomy, long before us. They con-
sider that China is the middle of the Universe, as is
shown by the name, which, in their language,
signifies " The Middle Kingdom." They look
upon themselves as superior to us, as we think
ourselves to them, calling us Barbarians, and con-
sidering all European nations as such. As a
nation they never travel, and are down-trodden
by the conservatism of the Mandarins, who, risen
from the people, wish to retain their superiority by
keeping the lower classes under.
The real interest of Peking lies in its intense age.
The city is 4000 years old. Conquered by the
Mongols, or the *' Golden Horde," who, in their
turn were overthrown by the Tartars, Peking of the
present day is built, like Rome, upon the ruins of
many cities. The description of the famous
Venetian traveller is as true to-day as it was when
written m the thirteenth century. It is in this
wondrously preserved life of the middle ages that
254 Newfoundland to Cochin China,
r
the curiosity remains ; it is because we sec the
streets under their primitive conditions of dirt,
before ideas of sanitation were dreamt of, because
we can look on the carts that were in use at a
period corresponding with our conquest by the
Norman — on the wheelbarrows with the single
wheel, which creaks as loudly now as it did then,
on the wells with their Eastern earthenware jars,
and the water drawn as in the pictures of Isaac and
Rebecca — on those great Walls, then necessary for
protection from the wild hordes that scoured the
plains, and where the gates are still closed, in ac-
cordance with the ancient custom, at sundown. It
is all the same. We might have fallen into a Rip
Van Winkle sleep at Tientsin, and awoke in the
streets of the Celestial Capital in the middle of the
dark ages.
There is one thing which impresses itself in-
delibly on the mind, and is called to remembrance
with the first mention of Peking. It is the dirt !
the dirt I the dirt!
It is impossible to conceive of such awful filth,
and, unless you have seen it, I defy anyone to have
the faintest idea of the sights and smells of this city
of the Flowery Land. The condition of the streets
is the same as it was B.C. If they were described
faithfully and in detail, common decencies, would
be violated, even as they are but too openly. Let
The Celestial City,
255
it suflfice to say that they reek with refuse, garbage,
and decaying matter of every description ; that
the houses throw out into dry pits, dug anywhere
in the road, their pig's wash and offal, and that tlie
putrefaction and decay fills the air with noisome
smells that overpower you at every turn. Filth and
refuse you soon grow hardened to in Peking, but
occasionally some particularly nauseous sight, such
as a dead dog in a far advanced stage of decompo-
sition, or a cat with the entrails protruding, un-
nerves you again.
Wherever there is water you may be sure that it
is a stagnant pool of liquid filth, covered with green
slime, and containing untold horrors if stirred up.
Also, if you pass down even the comparatively
clean Legation Street, in the wake of the watering-
cart, the stench from the stirred-up dust is unbear-
able. Men are seen going along with baskets on
their backs, carefully collecting with a bamboo
pronged fork every morsel of manure, for this is
the only kind that the Chinese use, chemical
fertilizers being unknown. Fortunately, too, there
are hundreds of pariah dogs, many evil-looking
beasts, who, with their sharp noses, are busy turn-
ing over the most unsavoury heaps, or lie asleep
gorged in the m'ddle of the narrow roads. Also
the pigs, great coarse-haired masses of fat (the
Chinese pig is a peculiarly revolting species)
itf
w
m
m
:»''
11!
1i;
256 Neiofonndland lo Cochin China.
wallowing in the foul slush. ICnough ! In every
place and corner are revolting sights, unfit for a
civilized community.
Then there is the dust. It adds to the iin
l)lcasantness of going about. Such dust as it is,
all-pervading, all-pcnetrating, leaving a pungent
smell in your clothes, so that I soon found out
that it is necessary to keep a special costume to
face it. Once outside the Compound, you find
yourself in the jostle and crowd, the shouts and
disorder of the streets, and as a curt or horseman
passes, a cloud is raised that obscures everything
for the moment ; and so it is that, for half the
time you are out you see nothing for the dust,
and for the other half only through a dim veil
of the same. At sundown the state of affairs is
made worse by the succession of mules, pur-
posely loosened to roll over and over.
Lastly there is the incredible state of the roads,
with their deep holes in the very middle of the
busiest thoroughfares, with huge stones lying
across, or a steep embankment, round which you
must diverge. There is this excuse, that the
soil, owing to its light and porous nature, aided
by the extreme dryness of many months of the
year, easily shifts with the wind. If the dust is
intolerable, what must it be in winter, when it
is turned into a quagmire of black mud or
sludge ? It is no uncommon thing for a mule to be
The Celestial City.
257
drowned in the streets. He falls into this soft
morass and, unable to get a footing, perishes within
sight of the bystanders.
There is yet another and a more unpleasant
dr.uvback to be met with, in going about the
streets of Peking. The Chinese, but particularly
the Tartar and Manchu part of the popula-
tion, dislike Europeans, and openly insult
us as we pass along, jeering and laughing in a
most offensive manner, and obviously making the
rudest observations. Even the little children
come out and call us foul names, of which Bar-
barian and Foreign or Red-Haired Devils are the
mildest terms— language which they must have
become familiar with by hearing it used by their
parents. There are several places where Euro-
peans are almost invariably stoned, and public
feeling has been intensified by these late unfor-
tunate riots on the Yangtze.
In the afternoon we go into the Chinese town,
passing through the great Chien-men or Front
Gate. Inside this there is a large blank square,
formed by the meeting walls of the Chinese and
Tartar cities, which are pierced by four arch-
ways. The centre entrance is only opened and
used by the Emperor on the occasion of his
yearly visit to the Temple of Heaven. But
through the others that connect the towns,
there is a constant moving, hurrying crush of
S
258 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
i?>
gin
people, the two streams meeting and blockin
the arch.
We lift up and pass under some black draperies
and find ourselves in the Chinese bazaar — in a
passage one yard wide and completely covered in.
The shops are a succession of rooms, raised on
a step from the earth passage and all open in
front, where you can buy fancy articles and arti-
ficial flowers. There are the pretty jade pins,
which form the centre for the shiny coil of hair
worn by the Chinese women, long earrings and
bracelets of the same, mandarin buttons in
coloured stones, clocks, porcelain, shoes, and silk
embroideries. It is the quaintest and prettiest of
Eastern arcades, with the afternoon sun pene-
trating the bamboo blinds in shafts of light,
lighting the picturesque groups of buyers and
sellers squatted on the floors. The three-foot
passage is blocked by a curious crowd, assisting
in our purchases. .
We penetrate yet further into the Chinese
city, across a stone bridge and through a dan-
gerous open square — a meeting of ways — where
cratos of merchandise, carts drawn by tandem
bullocks and mules, palanquins, wheelbarrows
with baskets of liquid manure running over,
horses and donkeys, are all mingled together,
going and coming in different directions. Yes !
Sir Edwin Arnold, you speak truly of
The Celestial City,
259
"The painted streets alive with hum of words,
The traders cross-legged, mid their spice and grain,
'ihe buyers with their money in the cloth.
The war of words to cheapen this or that,
The shout to clear the road, the huge stone wheels.
The strong slow oxen and their rustling loads,
The singing bearers with their palanquins.
The broad-necked hamals sweating in the sun."
Then we go up a narrow street, tortuous and
dirty, to another bazaar where there are nothing
but lantern, fan, and picture shops.
Half an hour in these streets gives you more
idea of Chinese life than all the books of travel
you may read in a life-time.
Peking beggars description, still let me try to
give some idea of what we see.
Here we are in a narrow lane. This is the
aristocratic quarter where the mandarins and
officials live. There are a succession of mud-
plastered walls, roofed at the top and presenting
an absolutely blind appearance to the road, which,
when combined with the always dilapidated con-
dition of the latter, gives the most deserted and
squalid impression. Opposite the entrance are
hung tablets, indicating the offices and titles of
the householder. They are on a blank wall, for
you must observe that the entrance into a Chinese
house is never straight. It always winds, and this
is supposed to be a defence against the incursion
of evil spirits, for the latter can happily only go
straight. For the same reason we see the little
s 2
26o Newfoundlarid to Cochin China.
children wearing their pig-tails plaited at the side of
the head, so that the evil spirit, not finding anything
to grip at the back, is unable to catch hold of them.
In the houses of poor people, who cannot afford
such elaborate precautions, there is always a mud
screen erected in front of the door. Let us go
inside. We find ourselves in a succession of
courts, surrounded by low buildings, where a
family and its branches reside, to the number some-
times of 200 persons. There are separate build-
ings for the cooking, eating, sleeping, and living,
but the family all live together. As our " boy "
said, when we inquired about these houses,
" Family man live there." Truly one, indeed.
Yet there is something to be admired about this
family life, this care of aged parents and luckless
relations.
The streets with shops, present the most wonder-
ful vista of untidy ends of tattered rags flying
from poles, of dingy decorations of strips of paper
or cloth hanging over the doorways. The houses
have a mean appearance, being only of one story,
and their walls, unless they are of mud, consist of
carved wood openwork, covered in wi 'i tattered
yellow paper. I think I may truly say that I never
saw one, where the paper was not torn and dis-
coloured. Occasionally you come upon a shop,
bright with the names of the goods written in gold
and scarlet or green. They were originally all
The Celestial City
261
like this, and this one is only recently finished,
yet in a few months will become as dull and dirty
as the rest. Everything is allowed to run to decay.
The Chinese never seem to think it necessary to
A street in Peking.
repair or re-decorate, and the climate powerfully
aids in this destruction.
In many of the streets, the road is raised on an
embankment of loose dust, and then bordered by
an empty space, where the garbage of the dwelling-
Hv,
262 Newfoimdland to Cochin China.
house is increased by the refuse from the various
trades pursued in it, and which is thrown out in-
discriminately to fester and decay in the hot sun,
or it is occupied by cheap-jacks who lay their
goods in the dust, hawking and crying their wares.
Here are rows of lanterns with a primitive wooden
receptacle for the lamp, filled in with opaque
paper, and frequent watch-houses, whence the
watchmen patrol the city at night with the muffled
beat of a gong.
The life in these streets, straggling, ill-compacted,
and grimy as they are, is yet full of vivid interest.
Not that these open shop fronts, or grimy pig-tailed
men, can compare with the fascinating life of a
dear little Japanese street. Here is a tea-house,
with the distinguishing sign of ornamental green
and gold wooden drums outside, and inside a
crowd sitting cross-legged on benches, each with
a bowl and chopsticks held within an inch of
his nose, shovelling his food rapidly into his
mouth. There a man with rows of little black
b"" spread out before his shop ; he is a coal
n.-.-nant, and these balls are made of clay mixed
with coal dust — a most economical method of
firing. That house in tl:e middle with glazed
windows is a bank, and \\ henever we see a parti-
cularly bright exterior, we may be sure that it
belongs to a pawnbroker, for he does a large busi^
ness, the Chinese being ever ready to pawn their all
The Celestial City,
263
for a good gamble or perhaps a whiff of ppium, as
some unfortunates at home will do for a last drink.
I'here is a man squatted on the ground, shaking
some sticks in a bamboo-holder. He is largely-
patronized, men coming and going and choosing
out a stick and putting it back with either a pleasing
or dissatisfied look. He is a fortune-teller. Or
there is a group intent on a game of hazard, when
the stakes in question arc a few cash. Yes ! these
Chinese are certainly inveterate gamblers, and
would gamble their food, their clothing, anything
away. Or it is a juggler with a simple apparatus
giving a street performance, and many of our best
trir' are, as we see, borrowed from the Chinese
- ..juror.
Then the coffin shops, piled high with those
ponderous sarcophagi hewn out of a single tree-
trunk, so thick, so substantial, warranted to last
for generations, and there is no sending for one in
a hurry, for generally the coffin has been waiting
in the house for years for its occupant. The
funeral furnishers also do a thriving business, for
wc see many of them, hung inside with the green
paraphernalia, the lanterns, carrying pagodas and
poles that make up such an imposing procession.
So do the wedding contractors, which we distinguish
from the undertakers by their red decorations.
Then there are the carpenters and ironmongers,
the blacksmiths and the book-shops, the laundries
%
hi-
m
264 Neivjomidland to Cochin China.
and the barbers, and those of other trades, all of
which are easily distinguished at a glance, in
the open shops, where the work is carried on
within view of the world, adding tenfold to the
interest of the streets. The travelling cobbler is
frequently seated at the corner of a thoroughfare,
repairing the soft felt soles of the Chinese shoes.
The itinerant musician is seen under an awning
with his book and drum, singing to an attentive
audience seated round a table. In all these shops,
there is a whirligig round which an incense-burning
tube is smouldering, and which marks the flight of
time. Watch this shopman give change. He
produces often from up his sleeve, or from round
his neck, heavy strings of copper " cash." Now as
1200 of these go to make up a dollar, the counting
of the change is a matter of patience. It is a
cumbrous monetary system, but well in keeping
with all that is Chinese.
We are in the midst of a moving scene of life.
Here the descendant of the Tartar soldiery carrying
a cage of performing birds, or a stick with a
chaffinch tied to it. It is the thing perhaps that
he values most of all his possessions, and you will
often see the Manchu kneeling on the grass,
collecting grasshoppers on which to feed his
favourite. Very cruel to them also they often are,
sewing up their eyes so that they cannot see to
escape. There is a soldier in uniform of bright
The Celestial City.
265
Imperial , yellow bordered with crimson, carrying
an antique matchlock with long stock, and a flint
in his belt. Soon after another passes on a pony
with arquebus and arrows slung across his back,
for all Chinese soldiers must, as in the days of
Agincourt, be expert archers.
Here is a caravan of camels bearing loads of tea
(and connoisseurs always prefer that which has
thus travelled overland, to the tea transported by
sea), with their slow, stealthy, deliberate walk,
and contemptuous turned-up noses, tied together
by the rope passed through the ring in the nose,
attached to the tail of the preceding one. The
last of the string has a bell which keeps slow
and solemn time with his dignified walk, and the
driver does not trouble about the end of the file,
unless the stopping of the bell tells him there is
something amiss. A flock of sheep are being
driven down that walled lane. They arc white
with black spots, and have the great lumps of fat
on their haunches peculiar to the breed of Eastern
sheep. If we follow to where they are going, to
the butcher's shop, we shall see the disgusting
scene presented by a slaughter-house open to the
street. The animals will be torn asunder, joint
by joint, whilst still warm, with the blood stream-
ing, and entrails laid bare.
A blue palanquin, with many bearers, is being
carried along. There is a great mandarin squatted
266 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
inside on the floor, and we can just sec the hand-
some magnate with his embroidered robes lined
with sable, his turned-iip velvet hat with the pea-
cock's feather stuck out straight behind, the red,
blue, or white button on which indicates his rank.
He wears the red, and is going to the Yamen or
Ministry. He is preceded by a retinue of
mounted servants, who summarily clear the way,
with the whip if necessary, and their number
announces to the world the rank and importance
of their master. Now there gallop past us a
party of wild-looking Tartars, veritable barbarians
they look, with their yellow faces, short lank hair
and fur caps. Comes along next, a wheelbarrow,
with the excruciating squeak of the single front
wheel, while the merchandise is neatly balanced
in baskets on either side. It is a perpetual wonder
how they maintain their equilibrium, especially
when, as at Shanghai, they are used for passengers,
and there is only one seated on the side.
Now we must make way for this long cart,
crowded with passengers, which corresponds to
our ominibus ; also for that uncouth-looking
waggon, with its piebald team of a single pony in
the shafts, with a troika of two donkeys and a
mule roped in front. Again and again these
curiously mixed teams excite our mirth, the
wheeler being often the smaller animal of the
whole. Then there is the never-ceasing stream of
The Celestial City.
267
those blue and black covered carts, of which we
retain such a lively horror since our journey from
Tungchau, and out of many, jeer the Chinese ladies,
looking with scorn at the " Barbarian's wife "
riding a donkey, whilst they arc boxed up safely
inside, with a curtain in front, and guarded by an
armah (or maid) seated on the shafts.
Add to all these sights, crowds of donkeys,
small and wiry, with their padded saddles on a
wooden frame, with a bulging Chinamin with
swinging pigtail seated far back, and with his
legs tucked up, trotting along — of horsemen on
rough Tartar ponies, generally white in colour, and
which run along at a great pace, so that there is
no rising in the saddle, and lastly the mules, a
beautiful breed, large and strong, with glossy
coats, cruelly bitted, with a double bit and wire
over the upper gums.
We have grown so accustomed to John China-
man, with his innocent yellow face, so smooth
and hairless, — except when as a grandfather he
wears a moustache, — his obliquely -slit eyes, and his
flowing pigtail, v/ith plaited ends of cord and
tassels, that we have ceased to observe him. We
are now quite familiar with his baggy pantaloons,
which sometimes he binds tightly to the ankle —
with his turned-up hat with velvet brim, or eight-
sided cap, always with coloured button atop — with
his looso blue coat fastened by two buttons on one
I ;
^T
. I
MHsS
i
268 Newfoundland to Cochin China,
shoulder, with the sleeves hanging long over the
hands, and that serve him as pockets. It is
beginning to get cold, so that the wadded coats
worn in winter are coming into general use.
"Whilst there is a level monotony of colour in the
lower classes, the upper have the most gorgeous
brocaded coats of crimson, blue, and purple, with
pantaloons of other colours, that combine in pleas-
ing effect. Some of the men have the long claw
nail, but only on the little finger, in token that
they do no manual labour, and a disgusting sight
it is to see this transparent substance of several
inches in length, bending backwards and forwards,
as they use their hands.
The pigtail ! What is it for } What is its origin ?
It is simple. The Tartars were few, the Chinese
many. Let not the latter see this and be tempted
to say : '* Arise, drive out the conqueror." Let
them shave three-fourths of the head ; let the back
hair grow long and braid it into a bridle as is the
Tartar custom. The pigtail was intended as a
mark of subjection to signify to the Chinese that,
even as it resembled a horse's tail, so might they be
driven like one, whilst the cuff of the official sleeve
to this day is cut into the shape of a horseshoe.
Such, says tradition, was the Manchu order, and
off came at a stroke the heads of the disobedient.
Two generations pass, and the Chinese love the
pigtail, as they do to-day, and dread the agents of
The Celestial City,
269
the Secret Society snipping it here and there, as
an insult to the Tartar.
The Chinese ladies are plain. They wear their
black hair plastered from a fiat parting on cither
side of the face, and with bunches of artificial
flowers and tinsel stuck in, behind the car, from
which depend long green jade earrings. Others
have their hair drawn up over a comb, to form a
top knot, rising about four inches above the head.
There is yet a still more curious fashion of dress-
ing the hair into a plait wired, so as to stand out
from the nape of the neck in a stiff curve, just like
the tail of a cat. It has a most peculiar appear-
ance. Has it ever struck you, when travelling, as
it has me, how very nearly all the nations of the
world have black hair, the English, Germans and
Swedes being nearly the only exceptions > The
Chinese women smear their faces with rouge,
beginning by placing one brilliant vermilion spot
under the lower lip. They wear the same dress
as the men, loose trousers and coats, and their
clothes are of the brightest colours — violent greens,
blues and purples, richly embroidered in gold or
silver tissue, and rainbow tints. They wear
many bangles and rings of jade or crystal, and a
silver circle round the neck. They too have the
long nails, but on all their fingers. We bought
some of the pretty silver claws of immense curving
length, which they use as shields.
m
270 Nc7vfoundland to Cochin China,
Oh ! to see these poor women totter alon^, Just
balancing, ready to fall at every step, with their
poor little crippled feet. The weight of a fair-
sized woman is supported on a pair of green or
blue pointed boots, mea-
suring not more than four
inches in length. Ifwc
could look inside, we
should rind the toes laid
flat under the sole of the
foot, the great toe meet-
ing the heel. From the
moment the bandages
are put on the children,
which is at the age of
three or four, they are
never removed, however
painful the swelling, but
drawn tighter and tighter
until the deformity is
complete. In the upper
classes many of the ladies
have to be carried or
supported on either side by an armah when
they walk. And yet they arc so proud of their
feet, they are such a marriageable commodity,
for big feet are sufficient ground, even to-day,
for a refusal to proceed with a contract of
matrimony, that many are solely deterred from
Her Ladyship's Foot.
The Celestial City.
271
adopting Christianity by the obligations, imposed
by the missionaries, of ordinary feet. A Chinese
mandarin who had studied " England : as she was,
and as she is," said to a friend : " You English
seem very fond of your Queen — but is it possible
that you allow yourselves to be governed by a
woman, however good, with big feet ? "
It is a comfort here, to meet with the larger
and handsomer Manchu women, who come from
Manchuria in Northern China, and are not thus
deformed. We always distinguish these latter by
tlieir wonderful head-dress, which consists of a
piece of jade, one foot long, and exactly resembling
a paper cutter placed across the head to project
from ear to ear, and
twisted.
round which the hair is
PTT
m
CHAPTER X.
THE FORBIDDEN CITY.
Now for some of the sights of Peking.
A long hour and a half s ride on donkeys from
the British Legation, brings us to the vicinity of
the great temple of Confucius.
We find ourselves on a straight, dusty road,
with a gateway at the end. It was through that
gateway, and down this same road, that the British
troops passed, when in i860 they marched into
Peking.
We are frequently seeing painted wooden arch-
ways, called Peilaus. These memorial arches are
found all over China. They are only erected by
express permission of the Emperor, to good and
public-spirited persons — to a great man who has
given a large sum of money (often solely for this
object), or to a widow who has been sufficiently
virtuous to remain faithful to her husband's
memory. Like everything else, they are generally
crumbling or falling crooked.
The approach to the Temple is through a road
The Forbidden City,
273
with a succession of blank walls, the temple itself
being equally well surrounded. Here we see a
man doing penance, shut up in a yellow box, and
striking a bell with a wooden lever at intervals.
His punishment will last a month, and if we could
see inside, very likely the box is lined with spikes
or nails, so arranf>"! that they prick the sinner if
he changes his position. Sometimes it is a means
resorted to to obtain money to build a temple.
"Give, oh! give. 1000/. I must collect before I
am released from this cell."
Foreigners are often refused entrance to the
Confucian Temple. We parley, too, through a
crack in the door, and are told " No, big man is
coming." But as usual, greed, in the shape of
the golden key that accomplishes most things,
conquers, and amid a rush of dirty on-lookers,
who find entrance with us as the gate is opened,
we pass inside the court of the temple of the
Great Teacher. This court is solemn and silent,
neglected and deserted, with its dusky groves of
cryptomerias and cooing grey doves. The paved
pathway leads up to some steps, that pass on
either side of a raised stone slab, covered with
ancient hieroglyphics, and embossed dragons with
wonderfully twisted tails. In the inner court is
the temple itself, with a roof of brilliant yellow
tiles, and surrounded by pagodas and smaller
halls similarly tiled.
T
i
: " ».
^^m
274 Newfoundland to Cochin Ckitia.
We ascend to a marble terrace with balustrades.
The door of the temple is thrown open, and forth
rushes a smell of damp air, and as the gloom
dissipates we cross some matting, raising clouds
of dust. By degrees the lofty proportions of the
massive hall, with its roof of blue and green, sup-
ported on colossal teak pillars of wood, painted a
dull red, begin to dawn upon us. We see in the
centre the shrine to Confucius, a humble red
wooden tablet, set on a table, bearing this inscrip-
tion : " The Tablet of the Soul of the Most Holy
Ancestral Teacher, Confucius." On either side
are tablets to the four most distinguished sages,
whilst the others, in a lower position, are for the
next best celebrated men of the Confucianist
school. And this is the Literary Temple in which
the Example and Teacher of all Ages, and ten of
his great disciples, worshipped. " All is simple,
quiet, and cheerless, fit place for contemplation,
and suitable for the Great Thought-giver."
The Emperor comes here twice a year to wor-
ship the venerated sage, and every sovereign, in
token of veneration, presents a " Tablet of Praise."
Each inscription is different, and presents some
aspect of his influence ; he is called, " Of all men
the Unrivalled," " Equal to Heaven and Earth," and
" Example and Teacher of all /\ges." In another
court are seen the celebrated stone drums. They
are ten in number, of grey granite or stone, and
The Forbidden City.
275
are believed to date from the eighth century I5.C.,
or to be about 2700 years old. The writing on
them is in the old Seal character, and consists of
stanzas relating to King Siien's hunting expedi-
tions. They are the oldest things in a country
where everything is of such antiquity.
On the opposite side of the court is the Hall of
the Triennial Examinations for the highest Literary
Degree, the Chinese Doctor of Literature. "In
commemoration of each examination, a stone is
erected with the names of all the doctors. The
oldest are three of the Mongol dynasty, and the
Peking University has therefore a complete list
for 500 years of its graduates."
Then we cross over to the Classic Hall, where
the Emperor meets the literati and graduates to
hear, and sometimes theoretically to pronounce a
literary address. In the centre of the court there
is a pagoda, crowned with a wonderful gold knob
(like a mandarin's button at the top of his hat),
and surrounded by an extremely gracefully-
wrought marble trellis-work, enclosing a moat of
sluggish green water. Opposite to it is a beautiful
yellow porcelain arch, in three divisions, inter-
woven with green tiles, forming a vivid contrast,
yet blending into a harmonious whole. There
are other pagodas, containing those curious
memorials, of a pyramidal stone resting on the
back of a tortoise. These are, of course,
T 2
\ i
276 N ewfoundland to Cochin China.
also to the memory of distinguished literati.
Open sheds surround the court, and inside
the black palings, are the benches where the
students sit, when the Emperor comes to hear the
address delivered, and behind, against the wall,
the 300 precious tablets, on which are engraved
the authorized texts of the classics, the oldest
remains of ancient Chinese literature. Plenty of
other temples for ordinary worshippers we see,
and always know them by the two poles outside,
with gold knobs on the top.
We return to the city down a road which leads
past the Drum and Bell towers, great pagoda-
like structures, pierced by solid archways on each
side, standing near together, both 100 feet high.
The drum is sounded at every hour through the
long night watches, and can be heard all over the
city. A clepsdra is still kept to mark the time, a
good instance of Chinese conservatism. Near
here is the temple where Sir Harry Parkes and Sir
Henry Loch were confined for the latter part of
the time they were prisoners in Peking. Until
recently their names could still be seen written on
the wall, which, however, has lately been white-
washed, perhaps purposely. Just before turning
into the Meishan we catch a glimpse, in the far
distance, of the beautiful Marble Bridge, spanning
a lake filled with lotus. " Standing on this bridge,
one overlooks a great part of the Imperial palace.
The Forbidden City,
277
The banks of the lake are studded with castles,
temples, and gardens," but this, alas ! like so much
else in Peking, is closed to foreigners.
We now pass into the Imperial City, which is
guarded within a wall seven miles in length, and
go down a straight road raised in the centre, the
sandy waste between it and the shops being in
possession of cheap-Jacks and old-clothes' men.
This road is in wonderful repair. The Emperor has
recently passed over it, and the lanterns are freshly
papered and water-butts are set ready at intervals.
Thus the sovereign remains ignorant of the usual
state of the roads, and knows nothing of the mis-
application of public funds. The governor of the
city or of the provinces is responsible for the con-
dition of the roads, but were His Majesty to elect
to make frequent journeys, the " squeezes " of the
mandarins would be ruinous.
The Chinese legal and moral code is of the
highest — on paper — but in practice there is a
system of " squeeze," which rules through the
length and breadth of the land ; which pervades
all business dealings, and every department of the
government, undermining the integrity of the
country. Everybody must have his " squeeze "
out of every transaction. The Viceroy " squeezes ";
the Governor "squeezes "; the judge, the taota'i,
the smaller mandarins " squeeze " ; for so they
live. The pay is little or nothing. The office is
278 Newfoundland to Cochin China,
ig" and
Having
5 incense
)ects the
elephant
:re he is
i^ine, nor
s before
I goes to
smounts
at altar,
2cted on
rrives at
sacrifice
ror then
', kneels
presents
es three
1 ofifers
s, music
\ kneels
1 officer
meeling
f happi-
ly' return
le party
ity wall,
: of the
The Forbidden City
205
whole procession : hundreds of officials in brilliant
robes of state and numberless followers on horse-
back, among them a company of the Imperial Life
Guards.
A similar sacrifice takes place at the spring
solstice, with the same ceremonies, at the northern
altar, but the motive is the special prayer for a
prosperous harvest, whilst the winter sacrifice is
offered for a blessing upon the whole empire.
We cannot see the ruins of the Summer Palace,
the Yuan-ming-yuan, or Round and Splendid
Garden, and which is distant about ten miles
from Peking. " It is a delightful park with a rich
variety of groves, temples, lakes, palaces and
pavilions," and must from the photographs be
very beautiful, li stands there for ever, as a
memorial left to embitter the Chinese against us,
yet who could say but that Lord Elgin, by destroy-
ing the Palace of their thrice sacred monarch,
brought home to them a fit and righl ^ous judg-
ment ?
But our greatest disappointment of all is that
we must give up a five days' expedition to the
Great Wall if we would take the French mail from
Shanghai. '' Fancy going to Peking and not
seeing tJie Wall ! " I can hear someone exclaim.
Well, we shall not be all unique in this, for three-
fourths of the hundred foreigners who live in
Peking have never been, nor ever intend to go.
i'^
296 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
An artificial interest, all out of proportion to the
reality, is created by its great antiquity. Finished
in 204 B.C. (for it took ten years in building) for
1 500 miles this great wall, which was intended to
keep out all the enemies of China, runs up and
down the northern face of the country, in one
place over a peak of 5225 feet high. It is con-
structed of earth and stones. It has been truly
said : " that looking over the surface of our globe,
it is the only artificial structure that would arrest
the gaze."
The grapes are sour. For after all, the visitors
who go do not see the real Great Wall, but only
a spur of more modern date. Also the walls of
Peking are considerably higher and more imposing.
As is only fit and proper, for they are the most
interesting feature of the cit}-, we make our fare-
well to Peking from those grand Walls.
^
CHAPTER XI.
SHANGHAI AND HONG-KONG.
We left Peking at dawn. Through the silent
streets of the Tartar City we drove, passing for
the last time through the Gate of Sublime Learn-
ing on to the sandy waste outside, jolting along
under the great Walls, with the sun rising to meet
us.
We are returning to Tungchau by the Canal, and
so saving the penalties of the road and the dust,
but owing to the numerous locks, we have to
transship no less than five times from one boat to
another. This water-way is in connection with the
great Imperial canal, another, like the Great Wall,
of those time-enduring monuments of the industry
of a gr«.at people — and serves to transport the
tribute of rice from the south to Peking. The
locks are very picturesque, being built of yellow
blocks of stone, over which the running water
forms a waterfall overshadowed by trees. It is a
quaint slow mode of travelling, gently rippling
along over the mirror surface of the water, past
1 r
298 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
great rustling beds of pampas grass twelve feet
high, opposite one of which some Chinese sports-
men, with their matchlocks and lighted fuses, are
crouched ready to fire at the wild ducks that
abound in these watery marshes. Amongst the
groves of trees, which look golden in their autumn
foliage against a clear blue sky, we see many
memorial peilaus, and those other monuments of
stone pyramids springing from the back of a
huge tortoise. The air is still and clear as early
autumn, and the sounds from the mud villages
we pass, are borne clearly to us. The walls of
Peking, with their crenellated gateways, are just
fading away into the blue haze.
Five hours of tedious progress makes our eyes
glad to see the beautiful carved bridge of Palikiao,
where the combat in i860 took place, and the
damage then done to the bridge has never been
repaired. In a few minutes more the pagoda
of Tungchau looms up, and the canal rapidly
narrows.
We reach Tungchau in a veritable dust-storm,
that blows the loose sand by the banks into spiral
columns and pillars, and embark once more on
the house-boat. It seems quite like coming home.
Then we begin the Peiho's weary succession of
winding reaches, with the endless continuation of
mud banks and yellow water.
The prospect next morning was disheartening.
Shanghai and I long- Kong. 299
The wind was strong and dead ahead, and though
our men had worked all night, certain landmarks
told us that our progress was far from satisfactory.
All through that long day we crawled along ;
weary work it was for our poor tired crew. As
bend after bend opened out before us and receded,
each one so exactly like the other, we registered
a hope that we might never more see the Peiho.
Evening closed in, night succeeded, and we yet
vainly looked for the lights of Tientsin. As so
often happens after a long watching, we seemed to
arrive suddenly. Our plank door was removed,
and we found ourselves at Tientsin and the Bridge
of Boats, and amid the grateful " kotows " of our
men for a gratuity well earned by such patient
toil, we sped in jinrikishas through the dimly-
lighted city, where everyone carries his own
swinging coloured lantern, to the Consulate once
more.
We found a China Merchant's steamer, the Shin
Sheng^ leaving Tientsin the next morning, and
embarked at once. Two unsuccessful attempts at
turning the steamer opposite the wharf we made ;
the third succeeded, but when she was broadside
across the stream, stem and stern touched the
banks. We passed safely through the perilous
bends of the river, only grounding occasionally,
but once the bows of the Sliin Sheng ran up on
to the bank, and cut clean away quite ten feet of
^
300 Newfoundland to Cochin China,
it. A little mud-house stood on the angle, and the
old village harpy to whom it belonged, came out
and shook her fist at the captain on the bridge,
showering imprecations on his head, and small
wonder, for some time previously the bows of his
ship had gone into her house and wrecked it !
We breathed more freely when the forts of Taku
passed, the Bar, or " Heaven-sent Barrier,"
crossed, and the pilot left behind, we emerged
without mishap into the Yellow Sea.
We had a fearful tossing in the Gulf of Pechcli.
At Chefoo we called for cargo. It is a pretty sea-
side place, with a splendid beach and bathing sands,
a boon to the residents of Shanghai, who either
come here or go to Japan for the summer months.
It was too rough for the lighters to come off, so
we anchored for the night. The next morning
a gale was blowing in the roadstead — the break-
ing of the north-east monsoon — and we had to
move round under the lea of the bluff. Our
hearts sink within us, and we despair of catch-
ing the French mail, which means waiting at
Shanghai a week for the P. and O. Returning
when the gale moderated, the agent sent off to
say that we were to start at once and not wait for
the cargo, so we have wasted eighteen hours
rolling and knocking about for nothing.
We had not gone more than two miles out,
when the engineer sent to say that a valve was leak-
Shaiigha i and Hong -Kong, 30 1
ing ; this necessitated putting back again, and a
further delay. At last we get really off. Cer-
tainly we have endured much to see Peking.
Two days afterwards we are in the mouth of the
Yangtze, anxiously looking for the black funnels
of the Messageries boat. We know she should have
left at noon to-day, and it is just that hour. Yes,
it is all right. She is still there, surrounded by
lighters, and we steam close to find out that she
sails in twenty hours. There has been a delay of
one day, luckily for us.
We proceed up the Woosung tributary of the
Yangtze. It is a glorious morning. The junks,
painted in gaudy colours, with the all-seeing,
staring white and black eye, glide past us. The
banks are lined with a fort, factories, dock and
shipbuilding yard, a gay scene of thriving com-
mercial activity. Before us now opens out the
bright green lawn of the Bund, of Shanghai, with
its blue-roofed pagoda for the band, backed by
a row of handsome oriental-looking houses and
"hongs," with green blinds and deep verandas.
There is the buff and grey of the German consu-
late, and the grey and red of the Japanese, whilst
the French tricolour flies over, and indicates the
French settlement, and in the far corner, to the
right, is the British flag over our own consulate and
garden. The numerous tributaries of the Yangtze
are bridged over, and join the quay together.
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302 Neivfoundland to Cochin China*
One of the prettiest sights in coming up to
Shanghai, or " upper Sea," is to see the men-of-
war and gunboats of all nations, lying side by side
in the river before the Bund. There are English,
American, French, German, Spanish, and Japanese
men-of-war and a Chinese gunboat, each floating
their star and stripes, tricolour. Union Jack, Black
Eagle, red ball on a white ground (Japanese) and
the Imperial Dragon.
Shanghai is a gay, bright clean place, where up-
wards of 4000 Europeans reside, the majority being
British. These claim for it the title of the Paris of
the East, and the shops and broad well-kept streets
make it worthy of the name. You have, too, the
picturesque element of Chinese life without the
accompanying dirt and squalor, for the typical
Chinese town with its filthy narrow streets is rele-
gated to the back of the settlement. All life
centres on the Bund, which we and everyone else
are always passing up and down ; and here
amongst the smart little broughams, that are like
Indian gharries, and the Victorias, dog-carts, and
phaetons, with their scarlet-clad mafoos and syces,
mingle the sedan-chairs of magnates, the Chinese
wheelbarrow, with the passengers balancing, on
either side, and the brightly lined green and red
jinricksha. There is the same cosmopolitan crowd
on the pavements overflowing into the road, for
the white ** ducks " and flannels of the Europeans,
Shanghai and Honff-Kong,
303
mingle with the bright blue, green, maroon, crim-
son, brown and yellow coats of the merchants and
compradores. For many of the hongs (as the places
of business are called) are on the Bund— whilst
the loose coats and shiny trousers of the Chinese
ladies, with their smooth coils of black hair inter-
laced with green jade hair-pins and long pendant
earrings, are seen side by side with the flowing
robes and turbaned heads of an Indian.
We called at the British consulate, which lies in
an enclosure of spacious green lawn with palms
and flower-beds. There stands here a superb
granite cross erected to the memory of the five
victims, and companions of Sir Harry Parkes, and
to avenge whose murder, the Summer Palace was
burnt and looted by the French. Further along,
on the Bund, is the statue to Sir Harry Parkes, a
little man with large whiskers, but a very able
diplomatist, whose death was universally mourned
by the Europeans in China. The English cathe-
dral and deanery lie at the back of the Bund. The
streets are so broad and clean, the roads so firm,
that it is a pleasure to be on them, particularly
after those of Peking. It is because they are under
the supervision of an English Municipal Council,
and they deserve for them the greatest credit.
At four o'clock we went to a meet of the Tandem
Club, the last of the season, held in front of the
bank. There are fifteen members, but ten only
'1^
304 Newfoimdland to Cochin China.
turned out, and were led off by the on^y tandem of
horses. The other teams were all of the short-
necked, thick-set, Chinese ponies driven in a modi-
fied dog-cart. Then we strolled along on the grass
under the trees to the gardens, to listen to the
Manila band. These gardens slope with green
lawns to the water's edge, and the wandering paths
lead by beds, bright with heliotrope, geraniums,
chrysanthemums, and tropical growths of banyan
trees, palms, magnolias, indiarubber and castor-
oil plants, amidst which pale-faced children arc
playing in charge of their Chinese amahs. In the
evening we dined with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Little.
He is the able editor of the North China Daily
Neivs.
On a lovely Sunday morning we embark on the
steam tug, and once more, for the third and last
time, go down to Woosung. In an hour we are on
board the Messageries Maritime's s.s. CalMonicn^
critically surveying our home for the next five
weeks.
The Messageries line has the advantage of the
P. and O. in that they are more generous in giving
separate cabins, the cuisine is said to be better,
and indeed they take trouble to make it so, send-
ing the cooks every two years back to a restaurant
in Paris. It is also an immense boon (which
everybody who has travelled much will appre-
ciate) to have fixed places for dinner only, and
Shanghai and Hovg-Koiig, 305
at the other meals a free choice of companions.
The saloon is spacious, and there is a splendid
promenade deck, which is, however, somewhat
spoilt by the influx of too numerous second-class
passengers, who share the privilege of using it.
The north-east monsoon is with us, and in two
days and a half from leaving Shanghai, and after
passing through the Straits of Formosa, between
Harbour of Hong-Kong.
the mainland of China and the island of that name,
past Foochow and Amoy, which are too far dis-
tant to be seen, we anchor at Hong Kong at mid-
night. Though dark, it is a starlight night. Hong
Kong, or " Good Harbour," presents itself to us in
bright electric arches of light, thrown far up on
the sides of the peak, whilst its beautiful harbour
is traced out for us by the twinkle of lights from
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306 Neivfouudlanci to Cochin China.
the sampans, moored in hundreds along the wharf,
by the swiftly moving jinricksha lights coursing
along the road of the sea-shore, and the dots of
lights on the rocking masts or the gleaming eyes
of steam-tugs in the harbour.
We have decided to give up Canton, see what
we can of Hong Kong in the time the steamer
stays, and not wait a week for the next mail.
I was once told that no one has ever done justice
to the beauties of Hong Kong, and as we landed
at sunrise on the quay I was inclined to agree to
this. The deep verandas of the Eastern -looking
houses, with their pale pink and drab tints, the
cool arcades, and above all the tropical wealth of
vegetation, makes Hong Kong the prettiest of
Eastern cities.
Leaving Queen's Road, we are carried up in chairs
under a lovely overhanging avenue of banyan
trees, whose huge knotted roots lie round the path,
whilst from the grateful shade of their thick leaves
above, depend the long thread-like tendrils, form-
ing a transparent crrtain. Past the grey, weather-
stained cathedral we go, hidden away in a little
recess under the hills, past the barracks, whence
sound the bagpipes of Princess Louise's High-
landers, to the station of the mountain railway up
the peak. " The Peak " — what would Hong Kong
be without this prominent feature ? True, by keep-
ing off the sea-breezes and by penning the town in
Shavs^hai and Hong-Kong, 307
the narrow strip between the harbour and the
mountain, it makes it steamy, unhealthy, fever-
stricken and well-nigh uninhabitable in summer,
but then it provides a sanatorium on the many
summits of its heights, where every available plat-
form is occupied by a house.
Unflinchingly straight up runs the line of the rail-
way, and as we ascend, wc look down on the roofs
of the houses, perched v/ithout any sequence, up
and down the side of the hills, into gardens and
tennis courts, and the green waters of a reservoir
below ; over the black and white speckled mass that
stands for the town, further out to the harbour,
a blue pond studded with black spots by the
steamers, whilst the sampans are brown dots. The
range of barren rocky mountains close round the
harbour, and there is Koolong, with its wharves and
godowns, on the Chinese mainland, whilst we are
on the Island of British soil. It is a beautiful view,
this bird's-eye panorama of the town and harbour,
from Victoria gap.
You must see the Peak to realize its real height,
its scarcelyslopingshoulders, covered with tropical
growth in the valley, growing scantier and scantier,
until you reach the summit, bare and rocky. Two
enormous hotels, and many houses, populate the
spacy crest. And the peep over the other side of
green rounded hills, running down to the sea, is
simply lovely, whilst the views from every point
X 2
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o8 NeiofoHudland to Cochin China,
i
arc far-reaching and exhaustive. We take chairs
and go to the point, but one degree lower than the
topmost one, where stands the signal station, to
the bungalow of Government House. Early as it
is, and late in the season, we find the heat terrific.
Everyone is obliged to come and live up here in
the summer, the nights in Hong Kong bringing no
relief, and the difference in the temperature is often
as much as 9°. As we return we meet all the
business men, in the coolest of white costumes,
being carried in chairs by coolies in smart uni-
forms of white with blue or scarlet sashes, to the
station, going down to town for the day's work.
In descending, we return to the main thorough-
fare of Queen's Road, and after some shopping, go
to the City Hall, and the marble palace of the
Shanghai and Hong Kong bank, where I wait out-
side to watch the ever-varying stream of passers-by.
Chinamen in their cool cotton jackets and glazed
pantaloons, coolies with their bamboo-slung bur-
dens, sedan-chairs, jinrickshas, wheel-barrows,
chairs, Sikh policemen with their scarlof- tu'-^nns,
Cinghalese, Parsees, mingling wf^h r rictrs
and soldiers, under the shad' eet
And then we drive out t» the \ .ppy v^alley,
and come suddenly upon that beaut' '"ul green lawn,
lying so naturally in the midst of luxuriantly
wooded hills. It is truly a felicitous little spot,
with its racecourse marked out by white railing
Shanghai and Hong-Kong. 309
and Its Grand Stand. But it is the cemetery which
fills us with admiration, and one would fain that
the Happy Valley were not desecrated by the race-
course, but rather con^jecrated to the peaceful
repose of the dead. They are separated only by
the breadth of the road.
Of all the God's acres in all parts of the world,
including the beautiful one of Mount Auburn, at
Boston, but perhaps excepting the English ceme-
tery on the heights of Scutari, at Constantinople, or
that at Cannes, this one of the Happy Valley is the
most perfect. Entering by a gate in the walls, you
find yo'irself in a tropical garden, skilfully laid out,
and growing around you in profuse luxuriance, —
palms with graceful waving arms, mighty clumps of
feathery bamboos, delicate spreading tree ferns,
crotons of orange and yellow and variegated green,
hibiscus with their single blood-red blossom, colias,
camellia and azaleas, bushes gf flowering wax-like
alamanders, trailing masses of purple buganvillea,
all the hot-house flowers we prize at home, and
that grow so unwillingly with us, when compared to
this almost oppressive wealth of nature. Amongst
the bright gravel paths and green lawns, rise mas-
sive pillars, granite crosses and cenotaphs, me-
morials erected by soldiers and sailors to their
comrades — to many who, alas ! have perished from
the deadly effects of a climate which yet produces
all this beauty that is around us.
■A : . t . •
310 Newfottndlaiid to Cochin China,
We return to luncheon at Government House, on
the kindly invitation of General and Mrs. Barker, the
acting-governor until Sir William Robinson arrives
next month. With a scramble, and the aid of the
Government steam-launch, we just catch the Cale-
donien as she weighs anchor. We passed out
through the southern passage of the Island, on our
way to Saigon, the capital of French Cochin
China.
I
.1
CHAPTER XII.
COCHIN CHINA.
For the last two days we have been in sight of the
coast of Annam.
When shall we be at Cape St. Jacques } Shall
we lose the tide ? This is the question which
one asks of the other on board. And by 6 a.m. we
find ourselves at rest, waiting outside the bar of the
river Dannai, for the tide to turn, to ascend inland
to Saigon. Saigon is the French capital of Cochin
China, or Indo-China, as it is called, and is the
chief city of the provinces of Annam, Tonquin,
and before long of Gambogia, when the present
King dies.
Cape St. Jacques is a pretty green foreland,
jutting out into the sea, fringed with cocoa-nut
palms, and has a large white hotel, built by the
Pilot. Surely by this roadstead upon the hills,
courting the breezes of the north-east monsoon,
with the ample anchorage in the rear, the French
might have fixed the capital of Cochin China. But
fff!",-:
.^12
Neiofoitiidland to Cochin China.
no. They placed it, as in olden time, far up a
tortuous river, with a narrow channel. The delay,
and the pilotage, frighten away the ocean grey-
hounds of commerce.
We weigh anchor. It is one o'clock. The sun
is blazing hot, and there is not a breath of air.
But it is cool, they say, compared to what Saigon
will be. We Khali see. Now we are in the wind-
ing channel. North, south, east, west, we steer.
Larboard ! Triboard ! Four hours we steam up
the river Dannai, with its flat banks of mangrove
swamps, and tangle of tropical vegetation, where
they say tigers come out to sun themselves on the
sands. We sight at length the cathedral towers
of Saigon. They are to the right of us. In
another instant they will be to the left. Then we
appear to have passed them, for we see the town
on the starboard quarter.
But at five we are at the quay, which is shaded
by avenues of trees, with the hibiscus, blossoming
garden of the agent's house opposite — an old
temple with rows of fierce-tailed dragons guarding
the roof On the wharf, the usual motley crowd
thickening every minute as the news of our arrival
spreads, whilst Victorias, drawn by those beautiful,
though rr.t-like, ponies that are bred in Tonquin,
are in waiting. These latter only come out at five
in the evening, and in the daytime we must be
content with the malabars, as the shuttered gharries
m\
Cochin China,
13
arc called, from the Annamite name of the coach-
man.
We take the fashionable drive of Saigon, the
tour d'i7ispection. Off we go, flying as the wind,
past some native houses, built on piles over a
green swamp, with waving palms above them.
Here flourish the Cochin China pig, the real pig of
original breed, with its pink, bow-shaped back, and
earth-touching stomach, and the bright-plumaged
Cochin China fowls. We should like to buy
specimens of the animals that have made Cochin
China celebrated at home, but doubt the warmth
of our reception on board-ship if we return with
them. We cross the bridge, and look over the
hundreds of sampans that swarm up this creek of
the river ; then drive along for a few yards by the
steam tramway which connects the China town of
Cholons with Saigon, out under the cool wide
avenues of the Quai du Commerce, with its arsenal
and Bureaux d'Afi'aires. The roads are as flat and
firm as a billiard table.
Beautiful boulevards, wide streets, great caf^s,
where pale-faced Frenchmen sip absinthe and
petits verres. It is Paris. Bravo, La France !
But it would be much better for these gay causeurs,
to play lawn-tennis, and football, cricket, rackets
and rounders, as do the English at Hong Kong,
Singapore, and Colombo, thus defying, in large
measure, or at least postponing, the action of the
14 Nciofoundland to Cochin China.
tropics. It is thirty years since the Frencli ac-
quired Saigon and Cochin China. At one time it
promised to be a prosperous colony. But that day
is past. Commercial depression reigns supreme,
and France wearies of the large subsidies swallowed
up without results by Tonquin. That, though, is
not our business. We rather admire the feats
of engineering, of laying out, and the horticultural
skill.
We see this in perfection in the Jardin d'Acclimi-
tasion, but with a wealth of natural vegetation,
how easy it is to make a garden such a paradise
as is this. In the deep bend of the river are the
green lawns and forest-trees of this botanical
garden. There are banyan trees with their trellisc
curtains of roots sweeping the ground, cacti in a
mighty spiky group, standing apa.t. Single aloes,
with their blooming crests, and the palms — they
form a palmcry of themselves, with the various
specimens of cocoa or tree palms, their straight
grey stems tufted at the top ; of sago palms, with
their graceful curving arms, shadowing the lawns ;
of travellers, with their hands of mighty fingers
outspread / 3m the single stem, all and every kind
luxuriantly magnificent, a single one of which
would assist in making the fortune of a London
florist, such as we who see them dwarfed and frozen
when exiled to our northern climes, are scarcely
able to realize that they are of the same species.
BOTANICAL GARDEN, SAK^ON.
Page 3(4.
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Cochtn China,
315
There are magnolias and camellias, growing to
the height of our forest trees, bamboo clumps,
whose single-jointed stems spring equally high,
and mimosa trees, with their tender sensitive leaf,
as spreading as our chestnuts. And all these trees
are banked up with and grow out of brilliant beds of
variegated green and yellow crotons, of caladiums,
with their enormous boat-shaped leaves of pink
oleanders, of crimson hibiscus, and purple bugan-
villea, and convolvolus, whilst orange and lemon
trees, indiarubber and mangoes, mingle with the
heavy green and yellow melon-like fruit of the
pommelo. In the midst of this is an aviary, and
cages of rare animals, natives of these tropical
regions. We particularly notice the white pigeon,
with the single blood-red spot on the bosom.
We wander about in the dusky growth of over-
powering luxuriance, which to us appears so
supremely beautiful, but which they say in its
monotonous green, palls upon you when you live
amongst it. We come upon a cool arbour,formed
of green lattices overgrown with creepers and
passion flower, containing an exquisite fernery,
damp and green, with a collection of orchids of the
rarest kinds — indeed, we saw several specimens of
the hardier ones in purple and yellow, growing on
the trees near the wharf The twilight of this
little open-air conservatory is made darker by the
enormous bananas outside, under whose pale green
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316 Nezu/oiinciland to Cochin China.
sword-like leaves, cluster such heavy bunches of
fruit, fifty or sixty on a single stalk.
Night though closes quickly in, and if we would
see the Annamite suburbs we must give rein to our
impatient little black steeds and bowl swiftly out
into the country, by some fields of brilliant pale
green rice, where the monster grey water buffaloes,
with branching horns laid backwards, strong and
patient, are being driven home from working in
them, by coolies, hidden under bamboo hats the
size of umbrellas. The marshes have been in a
measure drained, but the miasma rises thickly from
the rice fields, near which cluster the wretched
huts of thatched bamboo.
On we go, now through an avenue entirely com-
posed of the glossy leaved magnolia or another of
feathery mimosa, broken only by groves of tufted
cocoa palms. Then we reach the military boun-
dary, and returning homewards another way, pass
the cemetery where many a Frenchman lies low.
Along these shady avenues, deep and cool, we see
the walled compounds and overgrown gardens of
the bungalows of officers and merchants, of whom
about 1700 reside in Saigon. We meet many of
them out for their evening drive, flying along in
Victorias, to gain as much air as possible. There
are many smart-looking officers in white uniforms,
with their wives by their side — pale French ladies,
but in Parisian fashions. Poor things, they appear
Cochin China.
17
sickly and enervated, yet robust compared to
the shop-keepers, who look, if they do not say so,
as if it was trouble enough to rise on the entrance
of a customer, without serving them.
But it should be a great colony The Governor-
General's palace is magnificent — a Versailles, with
its long flights of steps and spacious balconies.
But his Excellency is always at Hanoi, vainly
endeavouring to get things straight in Tonquin.
The Cathedral, with its dim aisles and stained
glass ; the Grecian colonnades of the Palais de
Justice ; the post-offices ; the theatre, with its bi-
weekly performances ; the Officers' Club, where
the punkahs are lyslow waving to and fro in the
balconies, — all betoken the great intentions of its
founders.
And there arc statues of Francis Gamier, the
intrepid and disavowed explorer of the way to
south-western China, and in the centre of the
great boulevard, leading to the Governor's palace,
we distinguish a very large stout man on a great
pedestal, his stomach far protruding. When we
come near, we see whom it represents : Gambetta in
the fur coat worn in the balloon whence he escaped
from Paris during the siege, to instil life into
France, with his outstretched finger pointing in
the direction of Tonquin, as in the memorable
day when he came to the Chamber, and said,
* Messieurs, au Tonkin ! " A dying soldier, in the
I
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318 Neivfotmdlaud to Cochin China,
act of falling, is on one side, and a sailor, with a
bayonet peeping round as if in search of the enemy,
on the other. The reverse side of this fine monu-
ment bears the legend : " A Gambetta, le patriotc,
defenseur de la politique coloniale."
In the evening some went to the opera, Traviata,
played by the subsidized company, to distract the
garrison. The sight, however, of the house with
its myriad waving fans, was enough for us. We
could not face the heat.
What an awful night we passed on board ! Four
steam winches in charge of seventy shouting
French, with ports shut, tropical heat, and mosqui-
toes by the million. It was over at sunrise like a
bad dream. But a sorry sight, the languid heavy-
eyed passengers, with not a face but was severely
wounded, presented next morning ; for none had
slept, and all had come off worsted in the conflict
with those venomous brutes. Glad we were of
daylight to go on shore, and set off in a gharry at
seven o'clock to the open arcades where the
curio shops are. The black wood-work inlaid with
mother-of-pearl that comes from Tonquin is very
pretty, but otherwise we only see curiosities
common to other countries. We drive past
gardens, which, as in France, are unrailed and open
to the public, to the market square, with its deep
red-roofed market hall, where a busy scene of
buying and selling is progressing. We notice
Cochin China.
319
many French cafes, the familiar little marble-
topped tables, looking strange among the palm trees
of the gardens. There are many French officers,
in solar topees and cotton umbrellas, strolling in
the streets, but though the French element pre-
dominates, there is a wonderful mixture of races —
of Chinese, Annamites with their heads bound in
red cloths, Cinghalese with high tortoisehell comb,
and Indians in sarong ; and the languages are as
varied, for here the Chinese and natives have
learnt French, instead of pigeon English.
By nine o'clock the sun on the top of the gharry
is overpowering. We are quite overcome by the
heat, and abandoning all idea of going by the steam
tramway to Cholons, the neighbouring emporium
of the Rice of Annam, return on board. But
at eleven o'clock the thermometer in the shade
registered 95? Fahrenheit, and in the sun about
130*^, and we lay on the deck ready to succumb to
the awful breathless heat, just existing through
the long midday hours of the worst part of the
day.
The tropical vegetation of Saigon had entranced
us, but its charms faded before the experience of
this equatorial temperature by which alone it can
be produced. We were grateful when at five
o'clock the twenty-four hours' sojourn required by
the Government contract were over, and we left
Cochin China on our homeward voyage.
Hr'iH ' i.'f
320 Newfoundland to Cochin China.
\ !
It is a long, long journey home to England, this
one of 10,000 miles from Shanghai to London —
lasting for five weeks.
Day after day goes by with the same routine,
until we feel that we are automatons. Passengers
come and go at the various ports, but " we go on
for ever." Night and day there is heard the
ceaseless throbbing of the engines, like the beating
heart of some great monster. It lulls you to sleep,
keeps you company in the silence of the night, and
greets you in the morning, and when we are in
port, we unconsciously feel that something is want-
ing. It is a cheering noise, for every revolution of
the screw brings us nearer home ; 4368 times does
it revolve in one hour, and it takes 3,600,000 revolu-
tions to bring us to Marseilles. We consume 52
tons of coal a day, or 1800 tons for the whole
voyage, whilst 8000 kilos of oil are used for the
machinery.
The ship is like a floating city with a cosmo-
politan population, for we have over twenty dif-
ferent nationalities on board : French, English,
German, Spanish, Italian, Japanese, Russian,
Chinese, Dutch, Austrians, Arabians, Indians, etc.,
and yet all goes smoothly, save for the passing
incident of a passionate Frenchman, who came
to ask the captain's permission to fight a duel with
an officer from Tonquin, for usurping his place at
table.
I
Cochin China,
321
It is a monotonous thirty-six days of life at
sea, alternating with frantic rushes to land, when
in port, and sometimes sleeping on shore, where,
like at Singapore and Colombo, the ship is her-
metically sealed for coaling. Then there is dire
confusion on board, everyone loses his head, the
stewards are beside themselves, and the organiza-
tion becomes sadly out of gear. We arc thankful
to put out to sea once more, into the breeze and
calm, to sail away into that great trackless space
so well defined '* as a circle whose centre is every-
where, and whose circumference nowhere."
We touch at Singapore, and spend the night at
Government House, noting the growth of the
town, and the great improvements since wc were
there six years ago. Through the Straits of
Malacca, past Achecn Head, the extreme westerly
point of Sumatra to Colombo — Colombo with its
beautiful sea-shore, where amidst palm groves, the
blue breakers of the Indian Ocean arc ever rolling
in, and casting their surf and foam on the golden
sands. Through its tropical avenues we drive, past
the barracks, where the pipe of the bag-pipes is
heard, wailing in their far exile, and the handsome
Cingalese merchants, with their checked sarongs
and tortoiseshcll combs, tempt us with precious
stones. Mount Adam, with his pillar-like peak,
in the centre of Ceylon, does us honour by show-
ing himself (a rare occurrence) as we put out once
322 Newfoimdland to Cochin China,
more to sea, through the magnificent breakwater
of Colombo.
Six days' steaming, and we cast anchor under
rocky Aden, whose peaks so barren and sterile,
are yet picturesquely deformed, and glowing with
warm tints of cobalt and carmine. Then we enter
the Red Sea, through the Straits c*" Babelmandeb,
by England's key to the Eastern ^r^misphere, the
Island of Perim, and pass fragran' Mocha on the
sandy shore.
One hundred hours through this inland sea, and
we are at Suez waiting our turn to enter that great
highway of nations, that sandy ditch cut through
the desert, that connects the eastern with the
western globe. In the daytime we have that
strange fascination linked ' j the boundless plain
of sand — the mirage flickering on the horizon,
the clear pale blue and pink shades that steal
over the desert at sundown, with the golden glory
of the sunset sinking slowly into the waters
of the Bitter Lake, whilst at night the banks of the
canal are illuminated by the broad shafts of light,
that sweep from the electric lamp in the bows of
every ship.
We spend a dreary Sunday at Port Said, amid
its dirty streets, rubbishy oriental shops, thievish
donkey-boys, and a population which gathers in
the scum of the earth.
The Harbour of Alexandria is entered at sunrise
Cochin China.
323
next day, and we look in the dull chill of early
morning on its quays and forts, its mosqued domes
and windmills, but ere the day is really begun we
are on our way joyfully cleaving the waters of the
Mediterranean, near, so near home now. The
chill winds and the grey atmosphere would make
us know we are in Europe once more. The hard
even-coloured skies of the East, burning with
brazen sun, have been left on the other side of the
Canal, and now the skies are full of grey and purple
clouds, silver-edged, soft and rounded. The
Southern Cross has sunk below the horizon, the
brilliant starlight nights, with the purple vault of
heaven gemmed with diamond stars, have faded
into the past.
Now the snow-clad mountains of Candia or
Crete rise up from the ocea above low-lying
clouds. Then, the danger of avoiding Charybdit'
to be wrecked on Scylla safely passed, we thread
the green Straits of Messina between the toe of
Italy and the Island of Sicily. The smoking cone
of Etna is invisible, but the little island volcano of
Stromboli shoots forth its black column of lava.
The beacon lighthouses of the Straits of Boni-
facio mark out our course between the islands of
Sardinia and Corsica. And by the noxt afternoon
the vine-terraced mountains and sunny shores of
the Corniche arc near at hand, with the white
villas of Toulon shining in the sunlight.
Y 2
'i ■■'■ ■'
•
•
324 Newfoundland to Cochin China,
The last day on board, the last packing, the last
dinner, the last evening. What a pleasant bustle
of departure, what a feeling of bonne camaraderie
prevails ! With the contagious sympathy of joy,
passengers speak to each other who have held
aloof for the whole month's voyage. We are all
restless and excited, and only able to discuss the
hour of arrival — no, not the hour, it is the half-
hours and quarters that we dispute and wager about.
The sun goes down. The great white cliffs — for
they are very near to us now — loom up ghostly in
the dim twilight ; these are bathed in pink reflec-
tions from the rosy sky. We see the little chapel
perched on high, where the sailors implore the
protection of the sainted Mary ere commencing a
voyage — the gloomy dungeon fortress of Chateau
d'lf on its island, and with the last gleams of day-
light we sight the green Prado, the cathedral
towers of Notre Dame, and the large seaport of
Marseilles.
For two days we linger in the s^nny south, under
blue skies and warm sunshine, amid the palms,
cacti, and hedges of roses.
We reach Paris in time to sec the gorgeous
obsequies at the Madeleine of Dom Pedro, the ex-
Emperor of Brazil. Then ends our second journey
round the world with a fearful gale in the English
Channel, reaching Charing Cross in the raw cold
and fog of a December night.
APPENDIX.
BY
C. E. HOWARD VINCENT, C.B., M.P.
-J *yN/>-/>.^ »•» N*
^m
BRITISH AND AMERICAN TRADE
CANADA.
IN
MEMORANDUM
Addressed to the Chamber of Commerce and Munufactiire oj
Sheffield upon British and American Trade in the
Dominion of Canada and the McKintey Tariff in t lie
United States.
September f 1891.
Internal Trade.
I. — It is necessary in the first place Lo state that the in-
ternal trade of Canada has made vast progress during the
past decade. Not only is this evident from the numerous
Victories at the principal centres, but it is corroborated by
the rapid extension and development of Toronto, Hamilton,
Winnipeg and other towns. Manufacture has taken such
rapid strides that not only is a very large proportion of the
articles in daily use of home make, but the whole of the iron
bridges and much of the plant upon the gigantic railway
sy ,tem , and the greater part of the agricultural machinery
are of Canadian construction, but there is a surplusage for
export of certain manufactured goods, amounting in the
fiscal year ending June, 1890, to 54 million dollars — up-
wards of two-fifths of which were purchased by the British
flag.
.^26
Appe7idix,
Increase of External Trade.
2. — The external trade (imports and exports) has also
increased from 153 million dollars in 1879, when the
" National Policy "' was inaugurated by the late Right
Honourable Sir John Macdonald, to 218 million dollars in
the last statistical year.
Imports from the United Kingdom and the
Empire.
3. — The imports from the United Kingdom of British and
Irish produce have increased from 5,040,524/. in 1879, to
7,702,798/. in 1889.
In the twelve months, July ist, 1889, to June 30th, 1S90,
the purchases by Canada from the British Empire amounted
to 45f million dollars, or only 6^ million dollars less than
from the United States with their 60,000,000 of people and
conterminous frontier of over 3000 miles, running espe-
cially close to the more settled and affluent portions of the
Dominion.
This is the more satisfactory when it is considered that
less than one-fourth of the British imports were admitted
free of a duty averaging 25 per cent, ad valorem, while two-
fifths of the American imports were from their nature un-
taxed.
Competition Between British
Flags.
AND American
4. — The Union Jack upon the one hand, and the Stars
and Stripes upon the other, are practically the only two com-
petitors for the custom of Canada, and they absorb between
them 98 million dollars worth of the import trade out of a
total of 112 million dollars.
Superiority of England.
5. — In most of the grerit lines of manufactured goods,
such as in the manufactures of iron .and steel : of cutlery ;
of cotton and silk ; of wool and linen ; of lead, paper and
lur ; of hemp, twine and earthenware, as also in hats, gloves,
comhs, umbrellas, embroideries, ribbons, crapes, oilcloth,
iron lurniture, fancy articles, and in bottled ale, beer and
porter, England more than holds her own against the
American Republic,
Appendix.
,27
Foreign Intermixture.
6.— At the same time it is right to observe that a consider-
able and increasing proportion of the imports officially
attributed to British production were in reality of German,
French, or other foreign origin, and this to an amount ex-
ceeding last year six million dollars.
They were obtained, however, through English distribut-
ing houses instead of direct, partly by reason of transit
facilities, but mostly on account of the long credit readily
accorded.
Lead of the United States.
7. — The United States on the other hand take the lead with
manufactures of brass and copper; of gutta-percha and
India-rubber; of slate, stone, and wood ; of cork and glass ;
of leather and tin ware, as also in edge tools, Britannia metal,
bells, brushes, buttons, carriages, clocks and watches,
jewellery, musical and surgical instruments, and in agricul-
tural implements.
Sheffield Trade in Canada.
8. — In the staple trades of Sheffielil, with the exception of
edge-tools, the ascendency of England is fairly well main-
tained.
Cutlery.
9. — Especially is this the case with regard to cutlery.
Out of 311,897 dollars (say 62,500/.) worth of table knives,
jack knives, pocket knives, and other cutlery imported into
the Dominion during the past year, about two-thirds came
from the United Kingdom.
Of the remainder the United States supplied 27,900
dollars worth, and Germany 43,500 dollars worth.
Not a few importers of Sheffield cutlery speak anxiously,
however, of the growing competition of Newark (New
Jersey) and of Germany — especially in the production of
attractively got up and elegantly carded knives at low
prices.
In Canada itself only one attempt has, I believe, been
made to establish a cutlery factory, and this recently at
Halifax by a young Sheffield man, assisted by six or eight
Sheffield trained artisans. They speak hopefully of their
prospects and are meeting with much local encouragement.
p-
1lHr
328
Appendix,
Plated Cutlery.
It is right to add that although throughout the Dominion
the table cutlery bears the names of the leading Sheffield
houses, the more easily cleaned plated cutlery is coming
into some use. During the past year 919 dozen were im-
ported, to which the United States contributed 774 dozen
and (Ireat Britain only 140.
Files.
10. — In files and rasps the import from England amounted
tf> 34.358 dollars (say 6S00/.), and from the United States
to 45,724 dollars.
Saws.
II. — In saws the United States made even greater head-
way with a total consignment amounting to 14,000/., while
Great Britain sent scarcely 600/. worth.
Edge Tools.
12. — A like disproportion occurs with regard to edge tools,
of which the United States supplied 15,000 dollars worth
out of a total external purchase by the Dominion of 18,279
dollars.
This has been explained by the uwtiring efforts constantly
made by American manufacturers and their employes to
make all tools more and- more adapted for the purpose in
view, lij^dUiT and more facile to the hand, without the
slightest regard to former use, old ideas or customs.
Axes.
13. — It is frequently alleged that Sheffield lost the Canadian
axe trade by adherence to the opinion that it was a better
judge of the shape of the handle or the chopper than the
backwoodsmen whose livelihood depended upon the skilful
use of ihe axe.
This niust, however, be legendary, for I am told we never
had the Dominion axe trade.
In any case, at the i)resent time nearly all the axes used
in the vast lumber industry are of Canadian make, and out
of a total import of 6751 dollars worth last year, the whole
came from the United States, with the exception of a single
a.xe contributed by France.
Appendix.
329
Spades and Shovels.
14. — Of spades and shovels 40CX5 dollars worth were im-
ported from Great Britain against 6259 dollars worth from
the United States.
Scythes.
In scythes the two countries each supplied one half of a
total import of 6731 dollars worth.
Agricultural Implements.
15. — But in other agricultural implements— ploughs,
drills, harrows, .forks, rakes, mowing machines, harvesters,
etc., America supplied no less than 117,000 dollars worth,
against only 4000 dollars worth, from Great Britain.
The explanation given is similar to that I have often
heard in Australasia, that the high-priced, solid made, some-
what heavy and durable machines and implements which
find favour in England, are unsuitable for Colonists with
small capital, who want a cheap, handy and light
implement which can be replaced as soon as a year or
two brings easier means, and sees improvements per-
fected.
It is indeed stated in proof of the adoption of like ideas
in the mother country that more Ontario-made self-binding
reapers have been sold this year in Great Britain than any
of English manufacture.
Bar Iron, Pigs, Rails, etc.
16. — It is, however, in bar iron ; in boiler or other plate
iron ; in hoop, band, or scroll iron ; in iron, in slabs, blooms,
etc. ; in iron pigs ; in railway bars, rails and fish plates; in
rolled iron or steel angles, beams, girders, etc. ; in sheet
iron, and in wrought iron or steel tubing that the United
Kingdom asserts the greatest predominance with an import-
ation last year into Canada amounting to 2,356,523 dollars
against 642,129 dollars worth from the United States — that
is, nearly fourfold.
At Londonderry in Nova Scolia important rolling mills
have been established, and at Toronto and elsewhere in
Ontario there are prosperous foundries.
Machinery.
17. — England though falls back again seriously in
! ■
'J'.f ' i
330
Appendix.
(ircat Britain supplied Canada with only
worth, compared to 500,000/. froin the
machinery, composed wholly or in part of iron, in locomo-
tive, fire, or other engines, and in cast iron vessels, plates,
etc., as also in builders', cabinet makers', carriage and
harness makers' hardware, and in house furnishing hard-
ware.
In these lines
about 100,000/.
United States.
In connection with machinery it may not be amiss to
mention the almost invariable practice, throughout the
American continent, for all machinery under the control
either of the State or public bodies being kept spotlessly
clean and as attractive as possible, and, in the case of all
stationary engines, allowing the pulolic to see them in opera-
tion, from a gallery or other suitable place, so that humble
mechanical i^enius may feast its eyes, and think out problems
or improvements, which may advance their authors to wealth,
and place further names upon the roll of the world's
inventors.
Electro-Plate and Britannl\ Metal.
18. — In electro-plated ware and gilt ware of all kinds the
import from Great Britain amounted last year to 51,041
dollars, and to 98,669 dollars from the United States, while
in manufactures of Britannia metal (not plated) the import-
ation from America amounted to 40,000 dollars, or eight
times that from Great Britain.
Predominance of British Manufactures of Cotton
and Wool.
19. — It is not necessary to examine in like detail the
relative trade in the Dominion of Great Britain and the
United States in the manufactures which are not located in
Sheffield. But it may be mentioned that the purchases by
Canada of British cotton goods exceeded three million
dollars last year against one-fifth that amount from the
United States, in velveteens exceeded 82,000 dollars from
Britain against only 356 dollars from America : while the
sale to Canadians of British manufactures of wool were over
ten million dollars, or 100 times that of the States.
The Empire, Canada's uest Customer.
20.— While, as has been shown, Canada bought last year
1
Appendix.
1>1^
of Great Britain and Ireland, and British possessions, to an
amount exceeding forty-live millions of dollars, the Empire
was in return the best customer of the Dominion, purchas-
ing no less than 44.479,992 dollars worth of Canadian pro-
ducts, or 11,156.785 dollars worth more than the United
States, and admitting nearly the whole free of all duty.
Prei'krential Tradk within thf. Kmpirk.
21. — It is hardly to be expected that Canada, with her
scanty and hard-working population could, with the example
of every nation or colony (save one) before her, attempt to
raise by direct taxation the twenty-four million dollars of
public venue she now derives from customs duties.
But there can be little doubt that if a preference was ob-
tained for British over foreign goods in the tariff, it would
give just that pecuniary advantage calculated to stimulate
the undoubted partiality of most British colonists for British
made goods, if they themselves arc unable to produce them
in adequate quantity.
Such preferential trade, large public meetings I have
recently addressed in all the principal commercial centres,
on behalf of the United Empire Trade League, have declared
with practical unanimity and much support from both
political parties, that Canada is willing to exchange with
the mother country and the Empire, so soon as foreign treaty
hindrances (treaties with Belgium and Germany of 1862 and
1865) are removed — it being calculated that no policy would
more certainly advance the prosperity, peopling and capital-
ization of the whole country and the consequent augmentation
of customers.
Means of Commercial Negotiation.
22. — No more efifective means either could probably be
found to bring about that reduction of the United States
tariff wall, so much desired both by the Dominion of Canada
.and the mother country, for it would furnish her Majesty's
representatives with a weapon of commercial persuasio::
they now wholly lack in negotiating with foreign countries.
Effect of the McKinlev Tariff.
23. — It may be too early perhaps to judge definitely as to
the effect of the McKinley tariff upon British trade in the
United States, There can, however, be no doubt that in
I, I
'> n o
Appendix.
many industries, and especially among the receivers of wages
in the United Kingdom, it will be very serious, and tend still
further to extend the disproportion between the sales of
America to (ireat JJritain and the purchases by America of
IJritish goods, which have stood for some time m the adverse
ratio of three to one.
Much Chan(;k not to de kxpfcted.
24. — It is necessary, therefore, to say that while the organs
of the democratic party in the United States and the sanguine
views of American importers who are in personal or corre-
spondence relations with England, encourage a hope that
the McKinley tariff will be repealed or considerably modified
in the near future, I am convinced that, as matters stand,
such belief is to a great extent delusive.
In the first place the democratic majority in the House of
Representatives, as at present constituted, is practically
powerless in the face of a strong and hostile Senate, with
an equal mandate from the people, and in the face too of
an antagonistic President, to a great extent independent
of either, with all his Ministers and machinery of govern-
ment.
In the second place democratic leaders and advocates in
every locality are eager to protest that they do not now
desire free trade, do not dream of admitting duty free the
productions of competing foreign workmen, and that they
aim only at a reduction of the tariff.
Again, it is now well understood that the alleged rise in
prices at the time of the election last year for Congress was
artificial and impressed upon voters by skilful wire-pulling —
such as the hiring of itinerant pedlars to perambulate the
agricultural districts with household wares marked up at
double cost ; by urging democratic retail dealers to serve
their party (and their tills) by demanding greatly increased
sums for all goods during the campaign " in consequence of
the new tariff."
INDUSTRIAI. TJROSPERITV IN THE UNITED STATES.
25. — There appears to be little doubt that the Federal
Commission now sitting will find that, although in some dis-
tricts there may have been speculating failures, employment
was never upon the whole more plentiful or better remune-
rated than at the present time. As in Canada so in the
United States, it is work which is everyv/here seeking hands
Appendix.
llTi
— and not, as with us, men searching, too often vainly, for
employment.
On both sides of the border between Canada and the
United States the necessaries of life — wheat, flour, bread,
meat, are extraordinarily cheap and excellent, while artisan
clothing, so often reputed dear and pressing upon the family
purse, is readily obtainable, so old Shcftield men have
assured me, in very fair quality at from 8 dollars 50 cents,
to 12 or 14 dollars per suit, that is i/. i+v.to 2/. i6.v. Indeed,
before me is the advertisement of a New York house offering
"Jersey Cloth (silk finish, new), blue, black or brown, per
suit 14 dollars, quality XXX."
Beyond question the whole standard of industrial life is
higher than in Europe — higher too, I am sorry to have to
admit, than in Great Britain. Neither poverty nor dislrebs
are visible, while drunkenness, so far as it may exist, is kept
carefully out of sight.
American Reciprocity Treaties.
26. — It will be probably less, however, on the industrial
prosperity of American workers, on the success of the high
tariff in compelling competitors for the custom of the
American people, to employ their capital within the United
States, to pay wages to Americans, and use American
materials, that the Renublican party will appeal next year
for a new Presidential lease of power (with what chance of
success I do not pretend to prophecy), than upon the
unexpected triumph that has attended Section 111., or the
Reciprocity clause of the McKinley Tariff Act in the hands
of Mr. Secretary Blaine.
Already under its provisions free entry for American pro-
ductions and manufactures has been secured into Brazil a
market taking in 1889 6,232,316/. worth of Ihitish goods —
in e.\change for the free entry of the raw materials and other
commodities of that Republic so rich in natural wealth.
The same result has been achieved, and will shortly come
into force with regard to .Spanish possessions, taking to-
gether 8,000,000/. worth of British products every yeir.
To BREAK UP British Trade.
27. — This latter treaty is viewed with especial concern in
Canada, and the notice of terminating the Anglo-Spanish
treaty of commerce which has been given, gives rise to a fear
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re, by
three million taels, than that done by the entire Continent
of Europe and the United States of America. The trade
Appcndi.\
with the United Kinfjdom, indiuling that passing through
Hongkong, exceeded 2 ' 5,000,000
The Commissioners of Customs at Tientsin, Newcliwang,
Ningpo, and other treaty ports, all speak of" the increased
demand for British goods." in spite of much distress 1' st
year, owing to floods in many places ; and while Shanghai
reports that " German figures fall off decidedly,'' the Com-
missioner at Kinkiang states that '' the British and Chinese
had all the trade to themselves."
British Shipping in Chinese Waters.
20. — This fortunate state of affairs is strikingly illustrated
by the British shipping in Chinese waters. The red ensign
of England, which appeared on the first steamer in the
Yellow Sea, in 1830, floated in 1890 upon 16,897 of the
20,530 foreign vessels which entered and cleared at Chinese
ports, while the British tonnage amounted to {;ths of the
whole.
Our next competitors were the Germans, with whom we
have so much in common, and who are sparing no effort to
develop their China trade. They entered and cleared 2140
vessels last year, or 622 fewer than in 1888, with a diminu-
tion of 227.000 tons burthen.
A good proportion of the coast-carrying trade was also
done by British-built steamers, carrying the dragon flag,
and wholly owned by Chinese merchants. But, with very
few exceptions, insurance companies and underwriters insist
upon such vessels being commanded and officered by British
or Americans. Besides this, the majority of the pilots on
the Peiho and other rivers arc British, a state of affairs
pointing to the necessity of nothing being omitted by the
Board of Trade to afford every possible facility to the
merchant marine to acquire the technical knowledge
necessary to maintain this world-wide reputation of the
English for superior nautical skill.
Prepondp:raxce of British Interests.
21. — These facts show the enormous preponderance of
British interests in China, — a condition of things existing
also in Japan, — not only over those of the whole world, but
especially as regards those of France, Germany, Russia, or
any other European power.
They are corroborated by the establishment in China of
327 British firms, or double the number of the mercantile
.'^58
Appendix,
''' ' ■ %
bousos of every other nation, and by the residence at the
treaty ports of over 3300 IJritish subjects, out of a total
foreifjn population of about 8000
(jcrmany comes next with 80 firms and 640 residents ;
followinfT her, America, with 32 firms ; and then Franco,
with 19 firms and 590 persons.
Rei'RKsentai'ion' of the Uritish I'koplk.
22. — I'nder such circumstances the British public cannot
be otherwise than f;lad tliat Her Majesty the Queen is fitly
represented at I'ekinjf by what is not unfrequcntly described
in the vernacular as *• The Great English Legation."
The consular service of Britain in China is also manned by
some three-score officers, each one of whom is an accom-
plished Chinese scholar, a large majority having passed
through the arduous Student Interpreter Course, which
is ready to fill junior vacancies, as they occur, with young
men evidently as well selected as they are carefully trained.
Diplomatic and Consular Assisjance to Britl'^h
Trades.
23. — At the same time it would be idle to deny that, in
spite of recent improvements, British traders generally com-
plain in China, as elsewhere, of the lack of diplomatic and
consular assistance in the advancement of English trade,
and the apparently little official interest shown therein.
The French have a like grievance, and the work of
German representatives for their nationals is often cited
with envy. It is said, though probably with exaggerated
truth, that German Ministers and Consuls are unflagging
in their efforts to advance German commercial interests, to
show that German traders have government recognition and
approval, and that the employment of Germans, instead of
English or French, is much appreciated by the Emperor
William.
It is possible that the out-of-date view that diplomatic
and consular officers are purely political agents may be ex-
cessively retained in some instances, and that the assist-
ance rendered by Her Majesty's Consuls to British trade
might advantageously receive more encouragement and
departmental recognition.
There can be no doubt, however, of the difficulty which
would ensue by consular espousal of the interests of a par-
ticular firm to the inevitable prejudice of a rival house.
Appendix,
359
Nor is the presti^'e small or unimportant which Her
Majesty's service derives from tlie fact tliat any expressions
of opinion, or any advice tendered, are known to be wholly
free from any interested motives.
Iron ani) Stkim- Tkadk in China.
24. — In examining; the position in China of particular in-
dustries, attention must first be directed to the iron, stee',
and hardware trade.
The standard work (Williams' " Middle Kint^dom )
says : — " Handicraftsmen of c\ery name are content with
coarse-lookinj,' tools compared with those turned out at
Sheffield ; but the work produced by some of them is far
from contemptible. The bench of the carpenter is a low,
narrow, inclined frame, on which he sits to plane, groove,
and work his boards, using his feet and toes to steady them.
His augers, bits, and gimlets are worked with a bow ; but
most of the edge-tools employed by him and the blacksmith
are similar in shape, but less convenient than our own.
They are sharpened with bows, on grindstones, and also
with a cold steel like a spokesh.ive, with which the edge is
scraped thin.
" Steel is everywhere manufactured in a rude way, but
the foreign importation is gradually supplying a better
article."
Importation of Metai.s.
25.— This is illustrated by the importation, in 1890, of
242,000 taels (60,500/.) worth of steel, besides 800,000 taels
worth of iron sheets, plates, bars, hoops, nail rod, pig and
old iron, and 500,000 taels worth of copper bars, nails, wire,
&.C., — a purchase exceeding 400,000/., — the greater part of
which was from the United Kingdom.
The Statistical Secretary of the Imperial Maritime Cus-
toms states that "iron of all kinds maintained, in 1890, a
" steady consumption of 1,100,000 piculs (each picul equals
1332- lbs.), and steel rose from 39,000 to 56.000 piculs, — an
increase of 43 per cent., — although it is noticeable that the
import is very variable from year to year."
The Commissioner at Newchwang states that " importa-
tions of metals advanced to the enormous extent of 113 per
cent, over 1889 — the most conspicuous being nail rod;"
while his colleague at Tientsin speaks of " the increasing
demand for manufactured iron nails, which are cheaper and
36o
Appendix.
better than those made by native blacksmiths;" .ind Chin-
kiang states, from the Central Provinces — " For iron of all
kinds, 1890 totals have not been cciualled.''
S n i', 1' I- 1 F, ij J 1 ■: N I l', K i • R I s !•: .
26. — The enterprise of Sheffield has not been behindhand.
In 1843, after the Northern ports had been opened, a Times
correspondent reported " that an eminent Sheffield firm
sent out a large consignment of knives and forks, and
declared themselves prepared to supply all China with cut-
lery. The Chinamen, who knew not the use of knives and
forks (or, as they say, abandoned the use of them when they
became civilized), but toss the rice into their mouths with
chopsticks, would not look at these best balanced knives.
They were sold at prices which scarcely realized their
freigh , and shops were for years afterwards adorned with
them, formed into devices, like guns in an armoury.''
A somewhat similar fate has attended the efforts of another
prominent, but younger firm, whose dust covered sample
cards were shown me in Shanghai.
Although in 1S85 Germany sent a considerable quantity
of cutlery to Tientsin, Chefoo, and elsewhere, Sheffield
evidently meets the demand of foreign residents as regards
table articles, for some of our leading names are present at
every meal.
De.man]) for Razors.
11. — The demand for razors is, however, enormous. It is
staled that, having regard to the artificially caused excess of
the male population, some 180 or 200 millions of men have
their heads and faces "painfully" shaved once a week by a
razor of the rude specimen I am sending, with others, to the
Cutlers' Hall, and which cost about 5 cents, or 2\d. Three-
quarters of a Chinaman's head is always kept clo:ely shaved,
and custom prohibits either whiskers or beards, and even
moustaches, unless before then a grandfather !
At Canton, a well-known Hallamshire trade-mark is
reported as selling freely on razors at 20 cents. But in other
places, more removed from British example, I v/as assured
that it is quite hopeless to induce Chinese barbers to adopt
the Sheffield shapes, unless they wish to empty their crowded
shops. For the Sheffield-made C/ii?tesi: paticni, however, a
vast demand might possibly be brought about by careful
agents, if only it can be done at the low price the Chinese
are willing to pay.
Appendix,
;6i
Demand for Large Foroinc.s.
28. — 'I'herc is already a considerable request for large
forgings, and the arsenals under the control of Englishmen
are steadfast believers in the undoubted superiority of English
manufacture. But all agree that it is nothing compared to
what will come when China really begins to go ahead, and
to open up for her people the vast wealth of the Empire.
The representatives of Messrs. Krupp and of M. Creuzot
are very vigilant, active, and skilful.
Adoption of Metrical Measurement.
29. — In connection with this matter, it is important to men-
tion that a rcrommendation is about to go forward from a
high authority, to wnom attention is paid, that China should
adopt, as Japan has already done, the metrical system of
measurement of France and Germany. Unless this is
fully realized, there may be a loss of valuable business, for
dthough there are measures which render feet and inches
in metres and millimetres with the utmost nicety, foreigners
contend that there is sometimes an inevitable plus or minus,
which upsets calculations.
It is
(icess of
have
ek b}- a
to the
Three-
shaved,
even
Want of Uniform Monetary Standard.
30. — In the same direction, too, it may not be amiss to give
expression to the general mercantile complaint of the
absence of a uniform and international decimal monetary
system. Not only are many firms ruined by unexpected
and often unaccountable fluctuations of exchange between the
29 principal currencies of the world, but the clerical labour
involved, not to speak of constant misunderstandings, is
stated to be most prejudicial.
This can be appreciated when it is considered that trade
in the East is conducted in rupees, piastres, Mexican and
American dollars, Japanese yen, silver shoes, shapes, and
bars ; Haikwan, Shanghai, and Tientsin taels — the latter
unrepresented by coins or notes, and all varying in value
from day to day. The Shanghai tael, for instance, which
was worth 4,s-. 3^^/., on February 28th, 1890, rose to 5.9. 3^^/.,
by September 5th. — a difference of 23 per cent.. — and fell
back again 13 per cent, in the next two months The rupee,
too, worth 2s at par, was at a discount of eightpencein 1889,
but early in 1890 all but touched \s. 9^/., until, in November,
it fell to IS, 5^^.— each penny of fall occasioning not only
362
Appendix.
great loss to individuals, but it is calculated many thousand
lacs of rupees to the Indian Government.
It is difficult to say which decimal system has the most
advocates, — probably dollars and cents, — but all agree that
pounds, shillings and pence, and English coins on which
the value is not stated, entail more trouble than any standard.
" I
C(rrTON Goods.
31. — The vast present and the enormous future interest
Lancashire has in China, as also the British capitalist in
India, is shown by the Imperial customs report for 1890. It
runs thus : — " Cotton ^oods boimded upwards in value from
36 million taels in 1889, to 45 millions (say 11,000,000/.) in
1890 — an increase of 25 percent. Cotton goods of nearly
every texture were infected with the general contagion of
increase, and expanding in quantity and value, while cotton
yarn, and more particularly that from India, poured into
China in a higher ratio of increase than ever heretofore,
having risen from 108,000 piculs in 187S, to over a million
piculs in 1890, representing 19^ millions of taels (say nearly
5,000,000/.), or 50 per cent, more than in the previous
year."
It is not nccessiiry to add anything to this authoritative
statement, unless it be that the French efforts to force their
"cotonnade" upon the Annamites, by prohibitory duties
upon all foreign goods in Indo-China, are unavailing, and that
the prospect before Manchester is unlimited so soon as the
South-West of China is opened from Burmah. It is tem-
pered only by the establishment of mills to turn Chinese-
grown cotton into yarn.
Woollens.
32. — In woollen goods there was, in 1890, an importation
of 3^ million taels worth — a slight falling off compared with
the previous year, mainly in English camlets and lastings.
Export of Silk.
■Nothing, perhaps, more eloquently exhibits the im
portance of China as a commercial factor in the world, and
the necessity of foreign trade to her people, than the silk
industry, which employs many tens of thousands of persons.
Fifty years ago not a bale was exported, at least to England ;
but last year over 30^ million taels' worth were sent abroad.
Appendix.
36
Even that larf^e quantity showed a fallinij away, owing to
transient circumstances, of 16 per cent, over the previous
year.
The Tka Trade.
34 — The staple export of China, and the one with which
the Celestial Empire is most closely identified in the popular
mind, is, of course, her tea.
In 1670, eighty pounds of China tea were exported into
England, and, despite export duties, varying in China and in
the United Kingdom from 400 per cent on the productive
cost to 100 per cent, at the present time, the trade increased
to 108 million pounds in 1880.
Indian Tea.
35. — Since then there has, however, been a serious decline,
increasing so much, from year to year, as to jeopardize the
entire industry. This is declared to be mainly owing to the
fortuitous development of tea-planting in India and Ceylon,
and to the preference shown by the English consumer for
tea of British growth.
Twelve months after the Queen's accession, 400 lbs. of
Indian tea were sent to England as an experiment. In 1890
the consignment was over 100,000,000 lbs., and Ceylon sent
nearly half as much. The efifect has been that, while, in
1865, out of every 100 lbs. of tea sold in England 97 lbs.
were Chinese and only 3 lbs. Indian, in 1890 the Chinese
pro])ortion had fallen by about 50 per cent., and the cost to
the British tea drinker was also in like degree reduced.
One reason put forward by the experts, consulted by the
Maritime Customs, is that " a good stout tea, that will stand
several waterings, is what suits the mass of English con-
sumers, and this India provides much better than China."'
The English merchants at Shangai and Foochow affirm,
however, that this greater strength is purchased by the
retention of deleterious properties.
Apathy of the Chinese.
36. — It is in vain that the attention of Chinese cultivators
has been called to the condition of the tea industry by all
concerned. Moreover, four years ago, the Inspector-General
of Customs thus addressed the Imperial authorities: —
'* To a government, its people's industries must be of
higher importance than revenue. I would, therefore, advise
^
364
Appendix.
that taxes be remitted, in order that industries may be
preserved. Think for the people, and forego revenue.
Export duties ought to be Hght, in order that the surphis
production of a people may go for sale elsewhere. Import
duties, on the contrary, arc the duties which ought to be
retained ; but the use to be made of each commodity ought
to be well weighed. If it is something people cannot do
without, it ought to be exempt from duty ; but if it is a luxury,
it ought to be heavily taxed. On the right application of
these principles depend the nation's wealth, and the people's
too."
Nothing whatever has been done. From Foochow the
export has declined by one-half in ten years, and deprived
the revenue of a million taels a year, and the people of five
million taels in wages. The opinion is indeed general " that
the gradual extinction of the China tea trade is practically
assured, unless something retards Indian and Ceylon pro-
duction, or drastic measures are adopted."
The " Shanli,'' or hill tax ; the " Likin." or war tax, and
the export duty, are all maintained intact, and the unfortu-
nate Chmese growers have to compete with the untaxed tea
of India and Ceylon. What distress is likely soon to ensue
may be gathered from the fact that the production of one-
half only of the output of the Assam Company, with its few
hundred employes, affords the main sustenance of 4500
Chinese families, or, say, about 20,000 persons. They are
themselves, moreover, so apprehensive that the introduction
of the machinery in vogue in India and Ceylon will diminish
employment that the Government has not felt itself strong
enouj.;h to protect its use.
Foreign Opium Traffic.
37. — The opium question excites much interest in England.
Some philanthropists have feared that the revenue of over
5,000,000/. a year, derived by the Indian Government from
the licensed and carefully-restricted cultivation of the raw
material of the valuable drug, is in major degree responsible
for the reported influence upon the Chinese of opium smok-
ing. They may be somewhat reassured by the result of a
careful European inquiry, officially instituted throughout the
Empire. It shows that imported opium is only smoked by
the affluent, the luxurious, and well-to-do, or, at most, by
one-third of one per cent, of the population ; that is, by about
three per thousand.
The annual importation used to amount to an average of
Appendix.
65
100,000 chests, yielding, for smokinpf, about 4000 tons of
boiled opium. They cost the consumers upwards of
17,000,000/., of which 3,000,000/. went to the Chinese revenue.
But it is a rapidly declining clement in Chinese finances, and
the deficit may, before long, have to be made up by increas-
ing the duties upon other imports.
Native Oprm.
38. — Native opium was known, produced, and used in China
long before any Europeans began the sale of the foreign
drug. The records of the loth century prove this ; and
opium figures as an item in the tariff of 1589, and again in a
customs list of the r7th century. Hundreds of square miles
are devoted to the cultivation of the poppy, which, accord-
ing to the late Dr. Williams, " is now grown in every pro-
vince, without any real restraint being anywhere put on it."'
Native opium sells for half the price of the foreign article,
and its smokers are consequently more numerous among
the people and younger practitioners {i.e., those from 25 to 35
years of age). It is, in short, say the latest reports, '' forcing
foreign opium out of consumption with triple energy. "
Number of OpiuiM Smokers.
39.— The best authorities concur that the whole of the
smokers, of either foreign or native opium, do not exceed
two-thirds of one per cent, of the population, or adding a
margin, say, seven per thousand (Replies to Circular No.
64, Second Series, Inspectorate General of Customs) — a
state of affaiis which is corroborated from the great town of
Tientsin, with its million of inhabitants. The Commissioner
of Customs reports " that but little opium is consumed,
owing to the growing influence of Abstention Societies, the
40,000 members of which neither smoke the drug or tobacco,
nor drink liquors of any kind."
Effect of Oimum-smok.i\g.
40. — Theetiect of opium-smokmg, injurious and wasting of
vital power though it may be, is certainly not apparent to
the ordinary traveller ; and the American clergyman, whose
work on China, founded on the experience of a lifetime,
aided by keenest judgment, has been adopted by every
foreign legation as the Text Book for aspiring Consuls, thus
records his opinion : —
366
Appendix,
"A dose of opium does not produce the intoxication of
ardent spirits, and, so far as the peace of the community and
his fiimily are concerned, the smoker is less troublesome
than the drunkard. The former never throws the chairs
and tables about the room, or drives his wife out of doors
in his furious rage ; he never goes reeling through the
streets or takes lodgings in the gutter, but, contrariwise,
he is quiet and pleasant, and fretful only when the effects
of the pipe are gone."
MissioxARY Work in China.
4 1 .-The missionary work of endeavouring to reclaim China
from the faith which was first introduced 65 years before
Christ, and whereof the leading principles are stated as the
worship of ancestors and of sky and earth, has become,
during the last 30 years, of political as well as of religious
importance, for it constantly gives rise, and has done so
very lately, to serious international difficulties.
Although there are many who regard the missionaries as
doing valuable secular service in accustoming the nat'v\;
population in remote districts to the sight of European faces,
and in prompting inquiry as to the source of their evenly
balanced and steady lives, constituting them thus as pioneers
of trade, it is undoubted that the great majority of foreign
residents are openly sceptical as to the fertility of the
missionary field. They are especially apprehensive of the
effect when the ground is tilled by fragile mothers and young
ladies in the teeth of deep and apparently ineradicable
prejudice against the public work of women, and particularly
in conjunction with the opposite sex, for as an incendiary
proclamation, calling on Wuhu '• to chase out all the bar-
barian thieves," ran, "This breach of morality and custom is
in itself a violation of the fixed laws of the State."
Roman Catholic Missionaries.
42. — The first missionary labourers were the Italian Jesuits.
They came to China three centuries ago, and by toleration
of some of the least objectionable tenets of Buddhism, and a
jv licious employment of their European learning, obtained
such imperial favour as to be put at the head of the Astro-
nomical Board, and to be employed to build the celebrated
•nmer palace. There seemed, indeed, every possibility, at
one time, of the wholesale conversion of the Chinese to the
Roman Catholic Church, termed by the Emperor, K'anghi,
Appendix.
1^1
" the vSect of the Lord of the Sky." But then came Christian
dissension, and following it soon, as in Japan, their persecu-
tion, slaughter, and expulsion.
Now the Church of Rome is stated to have, in China, 60
Bishops or Vicars Apostolic, some 600 European Priests (of
whom 65 per cent, are French), and al)out 400 Chinese clergy.
It claims, also, close upon 700,000 adherents (in Japan the
proportion is one in every 905 persons) — a calculation which
should, however, be read probably in conjunction with the
officially published fact, that of 13,684 baptisms in the metro-
politan diocese between August r5th, 1891, and August 14th,
\S(j\, 1 1,583 were " baptisiiii pucronitn injidcliinn in nyticulo
niortisi^
X\. the same time recognition should be given to the general
respect entertained by foreigners of opposing Christian creeds
for the life-long devotion to their task, on the slenderest sti-
pend, of the Roman priesthood. Their success as to number.^
is also said to be much aided by their care of the mundane
interests of the converted, who, loath to continue subscribing
to family memorial halls for communication with ancestors,
and to extravagant funeral rites, if not also to that support
of aged parents which is obligatory on Chinese Buddhists,
are shunned by their kindred, and often find private employ-
ment, even in foreign families, as impossible to obtain as a
public office,
Protestant Missions.
43. — Nor have the Protestant Churches, although later in
the field, been backward in sending out representatives. A
considerable proportion of the thirteen hundred thousand
pounds, which is on an average annually subscribed in the
United Kingdom for the support of Foreign Missions, goes
from " Darkest England '' to Ciiina. The United States are
even more liberal, and school buildings have been erected by
Americans, on an extensive scale, in many places.
Forty-one Protestant Societies were represented in 1890,
by 589 men, 391 wives, and 316 single ladies, — a total of 1296
persons, of whom 724 were British, 513 American, and 59
Continental, — assisted by 1660 natives. These numbers
may now be slightly larger.
As regards persuasions, 7 per cent, of the Protestant
Missions belong to the Church of England, 20 per cent, are
Presbyterian, 14 per cent. Methodist, 12 per cent. Congrega-
tional, 9 per cent. Baptist, and the larger number, or 38 per
cent., unclassified.
5(yS
Appendix.
There are upwards of 550 Protestant Churches, distribut-
ing, in 1889, 7oo,cxx) Bibles and 1,200,000 tracts, and over
60 hospitals and 50 dispensaries.
The result of the work since 1 842, reported to the Protestant
Conference, held in 1890, was, in round numbers, 37,300
communicants (of whom over two-thirds are stated to be
Nonconformists), or about one in tf .< thousand of the popu-
lation ; 19,800 pupils ; while 348,oc -lersons were returned
as having,' received medical aid, or al least to have visited a
missionary dispensary — a work which is acknowledged by
all to be of the utmost value, to be of real national benefit,
and to be appreciated by the people. It is much en-
couraged by the Rev. Hudson Taylor, himself a surgeon
and native of Barnsley, who from Shanghai directs, with
great tact, the undenominational China Inland Mission, the
members of which adopt, like the Roman Catholics, the
Chinese costume, and, like them, are smally remunerated,
the expenses of the Mission, exceeding ^38,000 a year, being
met by unsolicited contributions.
The Recent Disturbances.
44 — The disturbances on the Yangtze in 1 891, like those at
Tientsin in 1870, had for ostensible cause the fixed popular
suspicion that the succour of foundlings by the Roman
Catholic sisterhoods is for nefarious medicinal purposes.
Many of the female children, purposely exposed to die,
are necessarily, as indeed in Europe, in a moribund condition
when brought in, and the mortality is very high. This is con-
firmed by the baptismal figures above quoted. The freedom
of access, anywhere and to anybody, which is inseparable
from Chinese life, and is tolerated, however disagreeable, by
the most experienced missionaries, has also sometimes been
attended, it is alleged, with difificulty, especially from native
converts, and irritation has resulted.
The facts disclosed in the British Parliamentary Paper
(C. 6431) appear to be that, on May 9th, 1891, two Chinese
nuns were visiting a sick family at Wuhsueh, on the river
Yangtze. As the disease of the parents was infectious, they
removed the children. On the way to the Mission they met
a relation, who demanded their restoration. This being
refused, the nuns were taken before a magistrate, who, how-
ever, on the requisition of the fathers, immediately released
them.
This excited much popular agitation, and three days
Appendix.
369
afterwards, a woman came to the Mission to claim a child
alleged to have died therein. As she was accompanied by a
small crowd, which assembles in the narrow teeming streets
of China on the slightest pretext, admission was apparently
refused. Then commenced the work of destruction, costing
two Englishmen, who gallantly went from some distance to
render help, their lives, and imperilling many others, not
only in the locality itself, but.later on, elsewhere on the river.
Much foreign property was destroyed, and a very serious
state of affairs seemed likely to supervene, for, as The Times
recently wrote, and experience has often shown, " Native
feelings of hostility, once roused against the white man and
whetted by the intoxication of success, cannot be expected to
take account of an imaginary dividing line between two
spheres."
ANTT-FoRKif;\ Feei.ixg.
45. — In attributing the outbreak to Chinese hatred of the
foreigner, two observations appear in this instance to claim
consideration. The first is by Mr. Consul Gardner, in his
despatch of June g : —
" The mob was composed of many hostile from mere
ignorance, many from the force of contagion, some from fear
of others, a few really friendly, who, like the soldiers, led a
lady to a place of safety under pretence of robbing her of a
ring, and others who sheltered them from blows, while very
few deliberately meant mischief."'
The other is by the Rev. David Hill, a Wesleyan mis-
sionary of much experience, who v.as officially employed to
inquire into the facts. I'nder date June 12th. 1891, he
writes : —
"One thing which the sight of the house impressed on me
was the evidence which it gave of the hold on the people's
mind which the rumours as to the destruction of infant life
have gained. On the upper story, the ceiling had been
inspected by means of a ladder, which evidently had been
brought up for the purpose. On the ground floor the boards
of one of the rooms had been fired, and a large aperture
made. Below the ground floor the ventilators outside had
been torn open, as though search had been made for
inissing infants, and, of course, the lath and plaster
walls in all the rooms where they might be found were
pierced."
This latter view is confirmed by the Rev. Father de
Ouellec, who, writing in the Missions Catholiqiies, describes
?> b
370
Appeud-i.w
iU',./
how, at another place, on the night of iMay 23rd, a dead
child, from whom the eyes had been removed, was placed on
vacant land near the Mission. A crowd assembling next
morning, cried out, "It is the European devil who has torn
out the eyes and heart of this child ! " The house was
stormed, but fortunately a magislr.ate arrived with troops
more under command than is usual in China, and the mob
was dispersed. " Hut," adds the Father, " eight out of ten
believe that we take out the eyes and store them in the
cellars of the Mission."
It is contended that, under such antagonistic circum-
stances, rescue work should be guided by the greatest care,
for otherwise its use, to the prejudice of both missionary
efforts and European trade, by reactionaries, is inci'itablc.
Their sinister influence, once asserted, may at any moment
call into fatally destructive play, as indeed recently, the
anti-foreign feeling entertained by a largo proportion of the
Chinese.
That this anti-foreign feeling exists ail agree. It is urged
that it must never be forgotten — for what renders it
especially serious in China, is the frequent evidence of its
being fanned from above — and that the authorities have no
efficient machinery of civil order on which reliance can be
placed. Nor is the Central Government always able to en-
force its will on distant provincial authorities, or even to
prevent their varying the orders of the Throne.
At the bame time, say others, the hostility may be ex-
aggerated. The employment of over 100,000 Chinese by
foreign residents, many in highly confidential capacities,
both in the office and the household, and as many more on
board foreign ships, tends to confirm the general verdict that
the people, in an individual sense, are civil, obliging, and
even hospitable towards the foreigner, and well-disposed
especially towards the English trader, who treats them fairly
good-humouredly, and without offending their national
prejudices. This is supported, even from Wuhu itself, for
the last Trade Report says : " The trade in goods classed
under Foreign Sundries has increased rapidly during the
past two years, and shows a gain of 70 per cent."'
Summary of British Position in China.
46. — It remains but to summarize the position of affairs as
regards British interests in China, so far as I have been able
to grasp it.
Appendix,
37^
{a) That three-fourths of the foreign trade is in British
hands, and a still larger proportion of the shipping
in Chinese waters.
{h) That British commercial firms and residents are in a
large majority among the foreign population.
{c) That the contiguity to China of British India. Bunnali.
and Hongkong, and the large numbers of Chinese
residents in Ihitish territories, give England an
especial interest in the welfare of the Empire, and
in the gradual opening of the vast markets in the
VVest, South-West, and Centre.
{d) That while British interests outweigh, in their magni-
tude, variety, and extent, not only those of every
other (ireat Power, but those also of the whole
world, Russia upon the North and North-West, and
from her adjacent port of Vladi vostock ; France, her
ally, upon the South from Tonquin ; and (Jermany
upon the coast, are anxious and watchful competitors.
Policy of liRiiAix.
47' — The course of policy best calculated, under such a
condition of things, to maintain and extend British commerce
is a matter for the P^Iectorate to decide. Those who share
the feeling of the majority in Shcftield, that the undeviating
conduct of the foreign affairs of the Empire is essential to
the expansion of foreign trade and its wealth of home em-
ployment, will probably consider —
{a) That the liritish Industrial interests at stake in China,
and also in Japan, are too great to be necessarily
linked to the comparatively trivial concerns of any
other nation.
(/;) That as they are mainly dependent upon the safety
of the resident standard iDcarers of British trade,
Her Majesty's ships in Eastern waters ' should
always be sufficiently numerous and ready at any
moment to protect them, unaided, in their persons
and properly.
((•) That the trade route from Europe to Asia, and its
line of defence — Gibraltar, Malta, Cyprus. Egypt,
' Her Majesty's fleet rountl Cliiiia and japan consists, exclusive
of torpedo boats, of 22 ships, aggregating 45,100 tons, with 137
large guns. The next naval power is Russia, with 8 ships and
18,100 tons, and 61 guns. The Japanese have 29 vessels; the
Chinese 20, but all with native officers.
B b 2
372
Appendix.
Aden, Ceylon, Singapore, and Hongkong— should
always be kept in British hands, and secure against
any possible attack.
{d) That at the same time, no accession ol friendly territory
being desired, and only mutuality of commerce on
equitable terms, the I'mperor of China and the
Imperial (iovernment should be enabled, by the
(Queen's representatives, to feel that the support of
England will always be forthcoming in any step
for the advancement of the Chmese nation, the
development of amicable relations, and the security
of the Empire against any unwarranted maritime
aggression.
MEMORANDUM UPON THE BRITISH TRADE
ROAD TO THE FAR EAST.
I. — The nearest trade road from Europe to the Far East
lies through the Suez Canal, down the Red Sea, past
I'erini, to Aden ; thence to Ceylon ; from there to
Singapore, and to Hongkong in the China Sea.
2. — As three-quarters of the external trade of both China
and Japan is in British hands ; as the IJritish residents
are nearly equal, numerically, to those of all foreign
nations combined ; and as British ocean steamers are
more numerous than those of the whole world, and
eightfold those of Germany, the second on the list, it
is only fitting, independently of the possession of India,,
that this trade route should always be retained, as at
the present time, in the hands of England, whose
position is greatly strengthened by the possession of
Gibraltar, Malta, and Cyprus in the Mediterranean.
3. — So long as this sea road is held intact and properly de-
fended, CJreat Britain remains the dominant commer-
cial and naval power in the China Sea.
4. — To pass Perim or Aden in the Red Sea, and so gain
access to the Indian Ocean, would be almost impossi-
ble for any European power at war with England.
5 — Singapore likewise commands, to a great extent, the
entrance to, and exit from, the China Sea.
6. — Apart, though, altogether from the active power of
Appendix.
ii:^
fortifications ;iiul artillery, torpedoes ami submarine
mines, there is the e(|iially ctVectivc one of want ot
coal.
/• — Even supposing that (ierniany, Russia, Austria, or Italy
were able to coal at Port .Said, — a stale of afl.ius
whieh, while we occupy Ilj^ypl, would not be jxts^ible
in a state of belli^a-rency,— their steamers could not
traverse the 7(xx:) miles to the coast of China withovu
fresh fuel ; and, against the will of England, lhi->
would not be attainable.
S. — Erance alone, by coaling at ihock, opposite Aden, ard
I'ondicherry, might take the outer channel of Singa-
pore, and so reach Saigon, a distance of 2300 miles ;
or even Haiphong, in Tom|uin, an additional 600
miles ; but the vessels could only steam very slowly.
9. — The defensive value to the l^mpire of the Colonies
guarding this great trade road is therefore clear.
10. — But these prosperous Colonies are also commercially
valuable to the Empire in themselves, and particularly
Ceylon, the Straits Settlements, and Hongkong.
II. — Ceylon does a trade of 6,000,000/. a year with the
Empire, whereof half is with the United Kingdom,
which she is now supplying with 50.000,000 lbs. of
tea annually.
12. — The Straits Settlements ha\e a population of 5(^7,000;
and of the external trade of 178 million dollars, 78
millions are with the Empire. There is no public
debt, and the Colony contributes (as also Ceylon and
Hongkong) 100,000/. a year for its defence, which is
now, for the first time, ujjon a proper footing.
I J. — Hongkong, ceded to the British 50 years ago, has
become a jjort of lirst-class importance. Although,
not barring the approach to the Upper China Sea,
the Yellow Sea, and the waters of Japan, it does so to
a large extent, in a practical sense, owing to the coal-
ing difficulty.
14. — The shipping trade of Hongkong has doubled in the
past 20 years. Of 130 million tons of shippmg, pass-
ing in and out of the harbour in 1890, 7 million tons
were British, 4 million Chinese, and 2a million foreign.
British ships numbered 5500 (an increase of 136,
and 400,000 tons in three years) ; foreign ships num-
bered 2600 (an increase of 307, and 225,000 tons),
and Chinese junks 55,600 — a total of 64.000 vessels.
15. — The population of Hongkong is about 200,000, of which
374
Appenaix.
10,000 are European, and the remainder Chinese.
Emigrants from China, to the number of 42,000, passed
through the port, and of these. 36,000 were bound for
places under the IJritish tlag, while 850,000 Chinese
visited the island in the course of the year.
16. — The general impression of Hongkong, in a commercial,
maritime, defensive, and picturesque sense, has been
fittingly summed up by the late Governor: " It may
be doubted whether the evidence of material and
moral achievement make, anywhere, a more forcible
appeal to eye and imagination, and whether any
other spot on the earth is thus more likely to excite,
or more fully justifies, pride in the name of English-
man."
17. — Provided, therefore, the British hold firmly by this
trade route, and, in friendly alliance with China, do all
that is possible to develop mutual trade between
Burmah and the Yunnan district, there is nothing to
fear from the rivalry of any other power, for so long
as South Africa remains loyal to the Empire, the long
sea road by the Cape is absolutely impossible to any
other nation. If, however, the short route be cut off
at its base, by the British abandonment of the magnifi-
cent mercantile position established in Egypt, not only
will the labour of ten years be thrown away, but the
whole of the gigantic trade with the East be im-
perilled.
iS. — The only foreign powers capable of injuring us, in a
naval sense, in Chinese waters are Russia and the
United States. The former has a formidable fleet,
based upon the splendid fortified harbour of Vladivo-
stock, and could move land forces upon Corea. The
reinforcement of the squadron from Europe should,
however, be impracticable. As regards the United
States, hostility is happily not a likely contingency ;
but, in any case, the 4500 miles across the stormy
Pacific Ocean, devoid of any coaling station, unless it
be Honolulu, is a formidable barrier.
21, 12, 1891.
C. E. HOWARD VINCENT.
OOO Mil
OVER LAND ^
ANT)
WATER.
By Mrs. HOWARD VINCENT.
T/ie Journal of a Tour tJiroiigJi the British Empire
and America.
Third and Cheaper Edition 3s. 6d., post free.
•* OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. Js-
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interest." — The Queen.
"There are few English ladies who have travelled as far as Mrs. Howard
Vincent, and fewer still who coiUd render their experiences in such a
natural and interesting manner." — Fii^aiv.
"An extremely fascinating book." — Sheffield Telegraph.
London: SAMPSON LOW, MARSTOX & CO., Limited,
St. Duiistan's House, Fetter Lane, Fleet Street, E.G.
*. r
WORKS
ItY
Colonel HOWARD VINCENT, c.B., M.P.
A POLICE CODE AND MANUAL OF THE CRIMINAL
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Prpcedc.l 1)V an ADDRESS TO CONST ,.KS by the Hon. Sir
IIENR\' HAWKINS, ami adopted a Text-Book by nearly
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Ej\ii/ith and Abridged J'.dition. Twentieth Thousand.
Price 2s. ; or 2s. 2d. Post Free.
CASSELL k COMPANY, Limited, Ludgate Hill, London ;
Or of any Bookseller.
THE "HOWARD VINCENT" MAP OF THE
BRITISH EMPIRE.
Showing the Possessions of the British People throughout
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For Pitblic Insti tut ions and Sc/ioo/s. Price £1 Is. 72 in. by 63 in.
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EFFINGHAM \VIES(~)N.
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ELEMENTARY MILITARY GEOGRAPHY,
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Two Shilling's and Sixpence.
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UMINAL
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IBEL.
PHY,
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Select List of Books
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A bout in the World. See Gentle
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ADMIS, Charles K., lliatori-
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ALBERT, Trixce. See IJay.ml
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ALCOTT, L. M. Jo's Boys,
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BEHNKE, E., Child's Voice,
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DUrer. See Great Artists.
DYKES, J. Oswald. See
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Echoes from the Hearty 3«. Gr/.
EDEN, C. II. See Foreign
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EDMONDS, C, Poetry of th^
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Educational Catalogue. Sue
Classified Catalogue.
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See Low's Standard Novels.
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gernaut, Gs.
Egypt. See Foreign Countries.
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II., Ead
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kxjraplqh
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ites, 12t)s.
a TiJrtZ
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ICOOKE,
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eaoh.
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Low's Standard Books.
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T T
lO
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IJEllTINELLI, and ANDREA
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Emilifs Choice, n. eJ. bs.
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Hall's Vinei/ai'd, 4j.
Itdo the Liyht, is.
Johii's Wife, As.
Little Mercy ; fur letter ,
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Marian, a Tale, u. etl. 5.s'.
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—— No lo7i(jer a Child, As.
' Silken Cords and Iron
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— — Vermont Vale, 5s.
A plainer editiun is ]^nihlislied at
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3s. (J(i.
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French Revolution, Ldhrs frurii
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Frcun-
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Years in tiw. Souihiti, \H.<.
OHIBKKTr«fc DONATELLO.
Seo Grenfc Artists.
GII.ES, E., Australia Twice
Trnvcrsi'd, 1872-70, 2 vols. SOv.
OILTj, ,). 8('c Low'vS Readers.
(IJLLKSPIIO, W. ^r., Snrrf'i/.
inrj, n. od. 21k.
Gio/lo, by Harry Qniltor, ilhist.
15s.
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GlTiDLE STONE, C, Pr irate
Di'V(>ii')n<, 2s.
GLADSTONE. See Piimo
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GLiJCK. See Great Musicians.
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by irnth, 5s.
From, l)y C. A. TJncliheiin
(Low's German Series), 3s. He?.
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to Conquer, by Austin Dobson,
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GOODMAN, E. J., The Best
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N. Si A., Fen Skatinrj, 5#{.
GOODYEAR, W. IL, Grampiar
of the Jiotv,^, Ornament and Sun
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n)id IlnJlnntt, 5.t.
Northhrnok (iallcnj, (ills',
and 10')s.
J^ort raits at Castlrllmrard.
2 vols. 12(;s.
• • S(M! al.so Great Artisl.-<.
GRAKSSI, TfaJian Dic/inaori/,
3,s. (!>/ . ; r( an, 5*1.
GRAY, T. See Choice Eds.
Great Arti.ff'<, Bioijrdphi'';^
illustrMtod, ( iil)lonmticiil liind-
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the jirico is f^'ivon.
Hiu'hi/nii School, 2 vola.
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(Jcorgo L'l'nik.^hiuik.
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Alhrecht Diiror.
Figure Paint iiigfi of Holland.
Fra Angclico, Masaccio, G Treasure
7»ii5hy>\
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— — Struggle for Fame.
Eiissell (W. Clark) Betwixt the
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Frozen Pirate.
Jack's Courtship.
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Anne.
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— - Trumpet- Major,
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Three Recruits.
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Out of Court.
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Sarah de Berenger.
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aiue.
r.
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eep.
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igel.
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;er.
athcai't.
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In all Departments of Literature,
19
Low^» Stand. Books for Boys —
continued.
Adventures in New Guinea : the
Narrative of Louis Trcgance.
Biart (Lucien) Adventures of a
Young Naturalist.
My Rambles in the New World.
Boussenard, Crnsoes of Guiana.
— — Gold Seekers, a sequel to the
above.
Butler (Col. Sir Wm., K.C.B.) Red
Cloud, the Solitary Sioux : a Tale
of the Great Prairie.
Cahun (Loon) Adventures of Cap-
tain Mago.
Blue Banner.
Celicre, Startling Exploits of the
Doctor.
Chaillu (Paul du) Wild Life under
the Equator.
Collingwood (Harry) Under the
Meteor Flag.
Voyage of the Aurora,
CoEzens (S. W.) Marvellous Country.
Dodge (Mrs.) Uans Brinker ; or,
The Silver Skates.
Du Chaillu (Paul) Stories of the
Gorilla foiintry.
Erckmanu - Cbatrian, Brothers
Rantzau.
Fenn(G.Manville) Offtothe Wilds.
Silver Canon.
Groves (Percy) Charmouth Grange;
a Tale of the 17th Century.
Heldmann (B.) Mutiny on Board
the Ship Leander.
Henty (G. A.) Cornet of Horse : a
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. ■■- Jack Archer: a Tale of the
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— — Winning his Spurs : a Tale of
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Dick Cheveloy.
Heir of Kilfinnan.
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New York to Brest in Seven
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Miles in the Rob Rny Canoo on
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Reed (Talbot Bainos) Sir Ludar : a
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Stanley, My Kalulu — Prince, King
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Alcott (L. M.) A Rose in Bloom.
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Little Men.
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Shawl Straps.
Silver Pitchers.
Spinning-Wheel Stories.
Under the Lilacs, illust.
Work and Beginning Again, ill.
20
A Select List of Books
o
Low's Stand. Serijs — continued,
Alden(W. L.) Jimmy Brown, illust.
Trying to Find Europe.
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De Witt (Madame) An Only Sister.
Francis (Francis) Eric and Ethel,
illust.
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Ghost in the Mill, &c.
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Warner (C. Dudley) In the Wilder-
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■ Hitherto.
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24
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In all Dcparlments of Literature,
«5
(3 — continued.
U. Spnrgeou.
oan Lefroy, <ȣ
L Moulo, M.A.
n quick 8UCCI.S-
;now» men,
a sories df
lies, edited Ly
, G(Z. each,
iuld, by J. A ti-
me, by Uenry
d").
b1, by JuBtiu
rston, by tlio
Stnart J. Rei'l.
. Gladstone, by
I, by Sir Artbur
bury, by H. D.
George Saints*
led to 2C}0 copies,
id-made paper,
in half vellum,
, Frice for the
See Low's
[/ Playmates,
\ountry Trout
reat Artists,
it MusiriauB,
\Criotto
lory of h... ma,
rreat Artists.
^pture. See
)oka.
\gl. Painten,
KKEI ), Sir E. J., Modem Ships
of War, \0i, C(Z.
T. B., Iio(jer Ingleton,
Minor, Us.
»*>'//• Ludar. See Low's
Standard Books.
KKIJ), iSlAYNi:, Capt., Stories
of Stnuhje Adventures, illust. 5s.
Stuaut J. See rrimo
Ministers.
T. Wkmyss, Land of the
Tiey, 10s. Gd.
Jirniar/i-aMe Bindings in British
Museum, 168.s. j O-is. Gd.; 73s. 67.
1 Pit
K lai BRANDT. Seo G ro.it Art-
ists.
Romlnii'-ncncpsof a Boyhood, 6x.
liE>[USAT, Memoirs, Vols. I.
and II. new ed. IGs. each.
Select Letters, 1 G.'.
KKYNOL! )S. See Or. Artists.
LIknky R., LJght ^' Peace,
Si'c. ScDimns, 3s. Gd.
niUUAKDH, J. W., Alumi-
ninm, new edit. 21s.
RICHARDSON, Choice of
/ioc/i-v, 3*. Gd.
R LCI ITER, J. P., Italian Art,
42s.
See also Great Artists.
RIDDKLL. See Low's Stand-
ard Novels.
R IDEAL, Women of the Time,
."AULT, Colours for
I'ntinri, 31s. Cid.
i S, iloio the Other Half
.tiCS, lOs. Gd.
VA PON, Bp. of. See Preachers.
ROBERTS, Miss, Fra7ice. See
Foreisrn Co'iatries.
W., J dish Bookselling,
earlier his- v. 7s. Gd.
RO BIDi^ , Toilette, coloured,
la. Gd,
ROBINSON, '' Borneo " Coatcs,
7«. Gd.
Noah's Ark, n. ed. ?ts. Gd.
Sinners Sf Saints, \0s. (id.
Seo also Low's Standard
Series.
Wealth and its Sources,
Bs.
W. C, Laio of Patents,
3 vols. lOos.
ROCHEFOUCAULD. Soo
Bayard Series.
R0CK8TR0, History ofMusir^
now od. H.v.
RODRIC.UES, Panama Canal,
5.».
ROE, E. P. Seo Low's Stand-
ard Series.
ROGERS, S. Soo Choice
Editions.
ROLFE, Pompeii, 7s. Gd.
Romantic Stories of the Legal
Profession, 7s. G(/.
ROMN EY. Seo Great Artists.
ROOSEVELT, Blanche R.
Uowe Life of Longfellow, 7s. Gd.
ROSE, J., Mechanical Drawing,
IGs.
Practical Machinist, new
ed. 12s. Gd.
— - Key to Engines, 8. Gd.
Modern Steam Engines^
31*. Gel.
Steam Boilers, \'2s. Gd.
Rose Lihrary. Pojjular Litera-
ture of all countries, per vol. Is.,
unless the price is given.
Alcott (L. M.) Eight Cousins, 2s. ;
cloth, 3s. Gd.
Jack and Jill, 2s. ; cloth, 5s.
Jimmy's cruise in the Pt/m-
fore, 2s. ; cloth, 3s. Gd.
Little Women.
Little Women Wedded ; Nog.
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Little Men, 2s. ; cloth gilt,
3s. 6(2.
I 'I
26
/I Select List of Books
Roi^e Library — eo7itinnc(l.
Alcott (L. ^r.) Old-fashioned Girls,
2s.; cloth, 3s. 6(/.
Rose ia Uloom, 2s. ; cl. 3s. Gd.
Silver Pitchers.
— ■ — Under the Lilacs, 2s. ; cloth,
3s. ()i.
Woik, A Story of Expoiiencc,
2 voIb. iu 1, cloth, 3s. 6ii.
Btowo (Mrs.) Pearl of Orr's Island.
Minister's Wooinj?.
We and Our Neighbours, 2s.
■ My Wife and I, 2s.
Dodge (Mrs.) Hans Brinker, or,
The Silver Skates, Is. ; cloth, 5s. ;
3s. 6(1. ; 2s. 6 L
Lowell (J. R.) My Study Windows.
Holmes (Oliver Wendell) Guardian
Angel, cloth, 2s.
Warner (C. D.) My Summer in a
Garden, cloth, 2s.
Stowe (Mrs.) Dred, 2s. ; clo'.h gilt,
3s. 6rf.
Carlcton (W.") City Ballads, 2 vols.
iu 1, cloth gilt, 2s. G7.
Legends, 2 vols, in 1, cloth
gilt, 2s. fid.
Farm Ballads, 6fi. and OiL ; 3
vols, in 1, cloth gilt, 3.s. G(Z.
Farm Festivals, 3 vols, in 1,
c'oth gilt, 3s. Qd.
Farm Legends, 3 vols, in 1,
cloth gilt, 3s. 6d.
Clients of Dr. Bernagius, 2 vols.
Howolls (W. D.) Undiscovered
Country.
Clay (C. M.) Baby Rue.
Story of Helen Troy.
Whitney (Mrs.) Hitherto, 2 vols.
cloth, 3s. (j(?.
Fawoett (E.) Gentleman of Leisure.
Butler, Nothing to Wear.
KOSS, Mars, Caniahna, 21.9.
ROSSINI, &c., Seo Gioat
Musicians.
liotfu^childs, by J. Reeves, 7.s'. Gd.
Roughing it after Gold, by Rux,
new edit. 1«.
ROUSSELET. See Low's
Standard Books.
RO WROTH A^r, F. J., rrairi.
Land, 5s.
Royal Naval ExJiihifion, a smi-
venir, illus. Is.
RU B ENS. See Great Artist ■^^.
RUGGLKS, H. J.,Shake.
Jewels, 2s. fid.
NeJfion^s Words and Deri-,
3s. ficZ.
Sailor's Langua'ie, illn;.
3s. M.
• See also Low's Standaid
Novels and Sea Stories.
VV. Howard, Prince <>/
Wales' Tour, illust. 52s. fi'V. ami
84s.
Rutisla. Soo Foreign Countri' s.
Saints and their Symbols, 'Ss. Cyf.
SAINTSBURY, 'G., Earl nj
Dcrhy. See Primo Ministers.
SAINTINE, Picciola, is. CvJ.
and 2s. See Low's Stand;ir4
Series.
SALISBURY, Lord. See Prim-
Ministers.
SAMUELS. See Low's Stan-
dard Series.
S ANDAR8,(Te?'mrt;? Primer, \s.
SANDEAU, Seagull Rock, 2 •.
and 2s. fid. Low's Standard Series.
SANDLANDS, Hoio to Develop
Vocal Power, Is.
S AU ER, Eu ro'pean Commerce , 5 ■.
Italian Grammar (Kev,
2s.), Ps.
Spa^iish Dialogues, 2s. G'L
Spanish Grammar (Key,
2s.), 5s.
Spanish Reader, new edit.
3s. 6d.
SAUNDERS, J., Jaspar Deane,
10s. fid.
F. J., Prairi''
lihitiony a K<'n-
Great Artist >.
.,Shal:e.'. CvK
, G., Earl »/
mo Ministers.
cciola, '2s. ()'/.
ow's Standai'l
ouD. SeePriiii"
e Low's Stan-
nan Primer, I.-".
ujull Rock, 2 '.
Standard Series.
HoiD to Develop
nCommerce,^)-'.
"arnnar (Key,
%logues, Is. G'/.
ammar (Kt'V,
ider, new edit.
Jaspar Deanc,
In all Departments of Literature,
27
SCHAACK, M. J., Anarchy,
SCHAUERMANN, Ornament
for technical Bchoulg, lOs. 6(Z.
SCHEREK, Essays in Enylish
TAterature, by G. Saintsbury, Gs.
SlJHERR, Enylish Liierature,
history, 8s. 6d.
SCHILLER'S Prosa, selections
by Buchheim. Low's Series 2.'>\ Gd.
SUHUBERT. See Great Musi-
cians.
SCHUMANN. See Great
.Musicians.
SCHWEINFURTH. See Low's
Standard Library.
Scientip'c Education of Dogs, 'os.
SCOTT, Leader, Renaissance
of Art in Italy, 31s. 6d.
See also Illiist. Text-boolcs.
Sir Giluebt, Autohio-
liography, 18s.
W, B. See Great Artists.
SKLMA, Robert, Poems, 5s.
SERGEANT, L. See Foreigti
Countries.
Shadow of tlie Rock, 2s. 6d.
SHAFTESBURY. See English
Philosophers.
SHAKESPEARE, ed. by R. G.
White, 3 vols. 36s. ; 4dit. de luxe,
63s.
Annals ; Life ^ Work, Is.
Hamlet, 1603, also 1G04.
7«. 6c/.
Hamlet, by Kail Elze,
12s. M.
— — Heroines, by living paint-
ers, 105s. ; artists' proofs, 630*.
Macbeth, with etchings,
See
105s. and 52s. GJ.
Songs and Soniitts,
Choice Editions.
Taming oj the Shiew,
atlapted for drawing-room, paper
wrapper, Is,
See Gentle Life
See Gentle Life
SHEPHERD, British School of
Painting, 2ad edit. 5^; 3rd edit,
eewed, Is.
SHERIDAN,/^im/.s col. platos,
52s. 6(i. nott; art. pr. 105s. nett.
SHIELIJS, G. 0., Big Game
of North America, 21s.
Cruisings in the Cascades^
10s. 6(i.
SHOCK, W. H., Steam BoiU'n:,
73.>\ Gd.
SIDNEY.
Series.
Silent Hour.
Series.
SIMKIN, Our Armies, plates in
imitation of water-colour (5 parts
at Is), Gs.
SIMSON, Ecuador ami the
Piittimayor, 8s. 6d.
SKOTTOVVE, Hanoverian
Kings, new edit. 3*. 6d.
SLOANE, T. 0., Home Expert.
vients, 6s.
SMITH, HAMILTON, and
LEGROS' Freiwh Dictionary, 2
vols. 16s., 21s., and 22s.
SMITH, Edward, Cohbett, 2
vols. 24s.
— — G., Assyria, 18».
Chaldean Account of
Genesis, new edit, by Sayce, 18».
Gerard. See Illustrated
Text Books.
T. Roger. See Illustrated
Text Books.
Socrates. See Bayard Series.
SOMERSET, Our Village Life,
5s.
Spain. See Foreign Countries.
SPAYTH, Draught Player,
new edit. 12s. Gd.
SPIERS, Erench Dictionary,
2 vols. 18s., half bound, 2 vula.,
21s.
SPRY. See Low's Stand. Library.
28
A Select List of Books
SPURQEON, C. H. See
Preaohors.
STANLEY, 11. M., Congo, 2
vols. 42s-. and 21s.
In Darkest Afnca, 2 vols.,
42s.
— - EmirCs Rescue^ \s.
See also Low's Standard
Library and Low' a Standard
Books.
STAllT, Exercises in Mensura-
tion, 8d.
STEPHENS, F. G., Celebrated
Flemish and French Pictures,
with notes, 28s.
■ See also Great Artists.
STKRNE. See Bayard Series.
bTERRY, J. AsHBY, Cucumber
Chronicles, 5s.
STEUART, J. A., Letters to
Living Authors, new edit. 2s. 6cZ. ;
edit, de luxe, 10s. 6d.
See also Low's Standard
Novels.
STEVENS, J. W., Practical
Worliings of the Leather Manu-
facture, illust. 18s.
T., Around (he World on
a Bicycle, over 100 illnet. 16s. ;
part 1 r. 16.?.
STEWART, DcGALD, Outlines
of Moral Philosophy, 3.v. Gd.
STOCKTON, F. R., Casting
Away of Mrs. Leeks, Is.
T/ie Dumntes, a sequel, !.•?.
Merry Chanter, 2s. Qd.
Personally Conducted,
illust. by Joseph Pennell, 7.s'. 6/.
Rudder Granuers Abroad,
2s. 6(i.
— — — Squirrel Inn, illust. Gs.
• Story of Viteau, illust. 6s.
now edit. 3s. 6d.
Three Burglars, \s. & Is,
— — See also Low's Standard
Novels.
STORER, F. IL, Agriculture,
2 vols., 25s.
STOWE, Edwin. See Great
Artists.
'- Mrs., Flowers and Fruit
from Her Writings, 3s. 6d.
■ Life . . . her oion Words
. . . Letters and Original Composi-
tion, 15s.
■ Life, told for boys ami
girls, by S. A. Tooley, 5s., nev?
edit. 2s. 6d. and 2s.
Little Foxes, cheap edit.
Is. J 4s. 6(1.
Minister's Wooing, \s.
Pearl of Orr's Island,
8s. 6(Z. and 1.?.
Uncle Tom's Cabin, witli
126 new illust. 2 vols. 18s.
See also Low's Standanl
Novels anrl Low's Standard Series.
STRACIL^N, J., New Guinea,
12s.
STRANAIIAN, French Paint-
ing, 21.".
STRICKLAND, F, Engadine,
new edit. 5.n\
STUTFIELD, El Maghreb,
ride through Morocco, 8.*. 6ii.
SUMNER, C, Memoir, new
edit. 2 vols. 36s.
Sweden and Noricag. Sen
Foreign Countries.
Stjlranus Redivivus, \0s. Gt?.
SZCZEPANSKT, Technical
Li'erature, a directory, 2s
TAINE, II. A., Originc.:,
I. Ancient Regime, French devo-
lution, 3 vols. ; Modern Beginie,
vol. I. 16s.
TAYLOR, H., E7iglish Consti-
tution, 18s.
R. L., An alt/ sis Tables, \s,
Chemistry, Is. Gd.
Techno-Chemical Becei^ft Book,
lOa. Gd.
In all Departments of Literature,
29
., Agriculture^
r. See Great
era and Fruit
IS, 3s. 6d,
her oitm Words
)riginal Compoxi-
for boys ami
'ooley, 5«., nev?
2s.
es, cheap edit.
Wooing, Is.
Orr's Islan-1,
's Cahin, with
vols. 18s.
iOw's Standard
Standard Series.
., New Guinea,
French Paint-
F., Engadinc,
El Maghreh,
occo, S». 6ti.
Memoir, new
Tortcay. See
B.
^•?, 108. 66?.
Technical
tory, 2s
., Origiiic:-,
*, Frencli Hevo-
[odern Beyinio,
\nglish Const i-
\ns Tables, 1«.
leceii>t Bookf
TENNYSON. See Choice
Editions.
Ten Tear* 0/ a Sailor^* Life,
7s. firf.
THAUSING, Malt and Beer,
TH K AKST0N,5n7tij/i Angling
Flies, 5s.
Thomas a Kempis Birthday -
Book, 3s. Gd.
' Daily Text- Book, 'Is. Gd.
See also Gentle Life Scries.
THOMAS, Bertha, House on
the Srar, Tale of South Devon, Os.
THOMSON, Joseph. SeeLow's
Standard Library and Low's
Standard Novels.
W., Algebra, hs. ; without
Answers, 4,«. fid. ; Key, Is. Gd.
THORNTON, W. Pugin,
H':ailg, ami what then tell us. Is.
THOKODSEN, J. P., Lad and
TICKNOR, G., Memoir, new
edit., 2 V(.la, 2 Is.
TILESTON, Mauy W., Daily
Strevrjth. 4s. '.
TINTORETTO. See Great
TITIAN. See Great Artiste.
TODD, Life, by J. E. Todd, Us.
TOURGEE. See Low's Stand-
ard Novels.
TOY, C. H., Judai.sm, lis.
Tracks in Noni'a>i, '2s., n. ed. \s.
TIiAILIi. See Prime ^Finisters.
Transactions of the Hong Kong
^Jedicnl Suriety, vol. L 12.v. Gd.
TROMHOLT,"^Mrom Borealis,
2 vols., 30s.
TUCKER, Eastern Europe, 15.«?.
TUCKERMAN, B., English
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-^— Lafayette, 2 vols. 12s.
TURNER, J. M. W. See Gr.
Axtisti,
TYSON, Arctic Adventures, 25s.
TYTLER, Saiiah. See Low's
Standard Novels.
■ M. C., American Litera-
ture, vols. I. and II. 24s.
UPTON, H., Dairy Farming,
2s.
Valley Council, by P. Clarke, Qs.
VANDYCK and HALS. See
Great Artists.
VANE, Denzil, Lynn's Court
Mystery, Is.
—— See also Low's Standard
Novels.
Vane, Young Sir Harry ^ 18j?.
VELAZQUEZ. See Gr. Artists.
and MURILLO, by C. B.
Curtis, with etchings, 31s. 6d. and
63s.
\KRE, Siu F., Figlding Veres,
IBs-.
VERNE, J., Works by. See
page 31.
Ternet and DelarocJie. See
Great ArtintB.
VERSCHUUR, G., At the An-
tipodes, 7s. Gd.
VIGNY, Cinq Mars, with
etchinpTs, 2 vols. 30s.
VINCENT, F., Through ami
through the Tropics, 10s. Gd.
Mrs. II., 40,000 Miles
over Land and Water, 2 vols. 21*. ;
also 3s. Gtl,
VIOLLET-LE-DUC, Architcc
ture, 2 vols. 31.». G''. cacli.
WAGNER. SeeGr. Musicians.
WALERY, Our Celebrities,
vol. II. part i., 30s.
WALFORD, Mrs. L. B. See
Low's Stundard Novels.
WALL, Tombs of the Kings
nf Enqland, 21s.
WALLACE, L., Ben Hur, 2s. Gd,
Boyhood of Christ, 15».
— See also Low's Stand. Nova,
30
A Select List of Books,
WALLACE, R. , Rural Economy
cf Auatralia and New Zealani,
illuBt, 21«. nett.
WALLER, C. H., Namei on
the Gates of Pearl, 3s. 6d.
- Silver Sockets, Gs.
WALTON, A7i[fler, Lea and
Dove edit, by 11. H. Marstuu,
with photos., 210s. tind 105s.
Wallet-hook, 2U. & 42.«.
T. H., Coal-mining, 255.
AVARNER, C. D., Their Pil-
grimage, illust, by C. S. Reiuhard,
7s. 6d.
• See also Low's Standard
Novels and Low's Standard Series.
WARREN, W. F., Paradise
Found, Cradle of the Human Kace,
illust. 12s. 6(1.
AVASHBURNE, Recollections
(Siege of Paris, ^^c.), 2 vols. 36s.
W ATTE AU. See Great Artists.
WEBER. See Great Musicians.
WEBSTER, A^i^atw. See Foreign
Countries and British Colonies.
WELLINGTON. See Bayard
WELLS, H. P., Salmon Fisher-
man, 68.
Fly-rods and Tackle,
10.». 6d.
J. W., Brazil, 2 vols.
32s.
WENZEL, Chemical Products
of the Oerman Empire, 25s.
West Indies. See Foreign
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WESTGARTH, Australasian
Progress, 12s.
WESTOBY, Postage Stamps ;
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V/HITE, Rhoda E., From In-
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- R. Grant, England with-
out and within, new ed. 10s. 6(1.
— — Every-dai/ English, 10*. Gd.
WHITE, R. Grant, Studies in
Shakeapeare, \Qa, 6(2.
— — Wonts ami their Uset^,
new edit. 5s.
W., Our English Homer,
Shakespeare and las Plays, 6s.
WHITNEY, Mus. See Low's
Standard Sorioa.
VVHITTIKR, St. Gregory's
Quest, 5s.
Tej;t and Verse for Every
Bail in the Year, selections, Is. (uZ.
WHYTE, Asia to Eurojm, \2s.
WIKOFF.Fowr Civilizations, Gs.
WILKKS, G., Shakespeare, \Gs.
WILKIE. See Great Artists.
WILLS, Persia as it is, 8s. Gd.
WILSON, Health for the People,
7s. 6d.
WINDER, Lost in Africa. See
Low's Standard Books.
WINSOR, J., Columbus, 2U.
History of America, 8 vols.
per vol. 30s. and 63s.
WITTHAUS, Cliemistry, I6s.
WOOD, Sweden and Norway.
See Foreign Countries.
WOLLYS, Vegetable Kingdom,
5s.
WOOLSEY, Communism and
Socialism, 7s. Gd.
International Law, 6tli ed.
18«.
Political Science, 2 vols.
30s.
WOOLSON, C. Fenimore.
""ee Low's Standard Novels.
WORDSWORTH. See Choice
Editions.
Wreck of the " Grosvenor," Gd.
WRIGHT, H., Friendship of
Qod, Gs.
T., Toim ofCotcper, 68.
WUIGLEY, Algiers Illust. 45rf
Written to Order, Gs,
BOOKS BY JULES VERNE.
; Studies in
Iheir Useii,
lisli Homer,
Plays, 6s.
See Low's
Oregorifs
f!e for Ever II
sctions, Is. Pd.
Europe, 12^■.
cespeare, 1 Gs.
•eat Artists.
it is, Ss. Qd.
or the People,
Africa. See
)oks.
imbus, 21«.
\ieriea, 8 vols.
imistry, IQs.
md Norway.
ries.
\le Kingdom,
munism and
Law, 6th ed.
ence, 2 vols.
Fenimore.
d Novels,
See Choice
*8venor," 6d.
nendaliip of
'otcper, 68.
'slllust, 45^
Lakqk Crowit Sto.
( Contftiiiing350t<)6i)Opp.
■] and frdin 50 to IW
WORKS.
20,000 Leagues under the Sea.
Parts I. and II
Hector Servadac
The Fur Country
The Earth to the Moon and a
Trip round it
Michael Strogoff
Dick Sands, the Boy Captain .
Five Weeks in a Balloon . . .
Adventures of Three English-
men and Three Russians . .
Round the World in Eighty Days
A Floating City
The Blockade Runners. . . .
Dr. Ox's Experiment ....
A Winter amid the Ice . . .
Survivors of the "Chancellor".
Mari.in Paz
The Mysterious Island, 3 vols. :—
I. Dropped from the Clouds
II. Abanu«ined
III. Secret of the Island . .
The Child of the Cavern . . .
The Begum's Fortune ....
The Tribulations of a Chinaman
The Steam House, 2 vols.: —
I. Demon of Cawnpore . .
II. Tigers and Traitors . . .
The Giant Raft, 2 vols.:—
I. 800 Leagues on the Amazon
II. The Cryptogram ....
The Green Ray
Godfrey Morgan
Keraban the Inflexible :--
I. Captain of the "Guidara"
II. Scarpante the Spy
The Archipelago on Fire
The Vanished Diamond
Mathias Sandorf . . .
Lottery Ticket. . . .
The Clipper of the Clouds
North against South
Adrift in the Pacific
The Flight to France .
The Purchase of the North Pole
A, Family without a Name
Cesar Cascabel
Handsome
cloth bind-
ing, gilt
edges.
.,'C8.
('onfainitifr the whole of the
te.\t with some iiluatratious.
.«. d.
5
5
5
5
5
5
3
G
3 6
3 G
3 G
3 G
10 G
3 6
3
3
3
3
3
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G
6
G
G
3 G
3 G
3 fi
3 G
3 G
3 G
3 6
3 G
3 G
3 G
5
3 G
3
3
3
3
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6
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("loth
bindiiijr, gill
cdgi's.
sniiiUcr
t,vi>e.
s.
d.
3
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2
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2voU., \
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2
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