"Take a quantity of insects of all kinds and throw them into avessel of any kind; cover them up and let a year pass away beforeyou look at them again. The insects will have killed and eateneach other until there is only one survivor, and this one isKu."
In the next chapter we are informed that spinach eaten with tortoise is poison, as also is shell-fish eaten with venison; that death frequently results from drinking pond-water which has been poisoned by snakes, from drinking water which has been used for flowers, or tea which has stood uncovered through the night, from eating the flesh of a fowl which has swallowed a centipede, and wearing clothes which have been soaked with perspiration and dried in the sun. Finally,
"A case is recorded of a man who tied his victim's hands and feet,and forced into his mouth the head of a snake, applying fire atthe same time to its tail. The snake jumped down the man's throatand passed into his stomach, but at the inquest held over the bodyno traces of wounds were found to which death could be attributed.Such a crime, however, may be detected by examination of the boneswhich, from the head downwards, will be found entirely of a brightred colour, caused by the dispersion of the blood; and moreover,the more the bones are scraped away, the brighter in colour dothey become."
It is difficult to speak of such a book as "Instructions to Coroners" with anything like becoming gravity, and yet it is one of the most widely-read and highly-esteemed works in China; so much so, that native scholars frequently throw it in the teeth of foreigners as one of their many repertories of real wonder-working science, equal to anything that comes from the West, if only foreigners would take the trouble to consult it. To satisfy our own curiosity on the subject we bought a copy and translated it from beginning to end; but our readers will perhaps be able to determine its scientific value from the few quotations given above, and agree with us that it would hardly be worth while to learn Chinese for the pleasure or profit to be derived from reading "Instructions to Coroners" in the original character.
The extraordinary feeling of hatred and contempt evinced by the Chinese nation for missionaries of every denomination who settle in their country, naturally suggests the question whether Christianity is likely to prove a boon to China, if, indeed, it ever succeeds in taking root at all. That under the form of Roman Catholicism, it once had a chance of becoming the religion of the Empire, and that that chance was recklessly sacrificed to bigotry and intolerance, is too well known to be repeated; but that such an opportunity will ever occur again is quite beyond the bounds, if not of possibility, at any rate of probability. Missionary prospects are anything but bright in China just now, in spite of rosily worded "reports," and annual statistics of persons baptized. A respectable Chinaman will tell you that only thieves and bad characters who have nothing to lose avail themselves of baptism, as a means of securing "long nights of indolence and ease" in the household of some enthusiastic missionary at from four to ten dollars a month. Educated men will not tolerate missionaries in their houses, as many have found to their cost; and the fact cannot be concealed that the foreign community in China suffers no small inconvenience and incurs considerable danger for a cause with which a large majority of its members has no sympathy whatever. It would, however, be invidious to dwell upon the class of natives who allow themselves to be baptized and pretend to accept dogmas they most certainly do not understand, or on the mental and social calibre of numbers of those gentlemen who are sent out to convert them; we will confine ourselves merely to considering what practical benefits Christianity would be likely to confer upon the Chinese at large. And this we may fairly do, not being of those who hold that all will be damned but the sect of that particular church to which they themselves happen to belong; but believing that the Chinese have as good a chance as anybody else of whatever happiness may be in store for the virtuous, whether they become Christians or whether they do not.
In the course of eight years' residence in China, we have never met a drunken man in the streets. Opium-smokers we have seen in all stages of intoxication; but no drunken brawls, no bruised and bleeding wives. Would Christianity raise the Chinese to the standard of European sobriety? Would it bring them to renounce opium, only to replace it with gin? Would it cause them to become more frugal, to live more economically than they do now on their bowl of rice and cabbage, moistened with a drink of tea, and perhaps supplemented with a few whiffs of the mildest possible tobacco? Would it cause them to be more industrious than—e.g., the wood-carvers of Ningpo who work daily from sunrise to dusk, with two short intervals for meals? Would it make them more filial?—justly renowned as they are for unremitting care of aged and infirm parents. More fraternal?—where every family is a small society, each member toiling for the common good, and being sure of food and shelter if thrown out of work or enfeebled by disease. More law-abiding?—we appeal to any one who has lived in China, and mixed with the people. Would it make them more honest?—when many Europeans confess that for straightforward business they would sooner deal with Chinamen than with merchants of certain Christian nationalities we shall not take upon ourselves to name. Should we not run the risk of sowing seed for future and bloody religious wars on soil where none now rage? To teach them justice in the administration of law would be a glorious task indeed, but even that would have its dark side. Litigation would become the order of the day, and a rapacious class would spring into existence where lawyers and barristers are now totally unknown. The striking phenomenon of extreme wealth side by side with extreme poverty, might be produced in a country where absolute destitution is at present remarkably rare, and no one need actually starve; and thus would be developed a fine field for the practice of that Christian charity which by demoralisation of the poorer classes so skilfully defeats its own end. We should rejoice if anything could make Chinamen less cruel to dumb animals, desist from carrying ducks, geese, and pigs, hanging by their legs to a pole, feed their hungry dogs, and spare their worn-out beasts of burden. But pigeon-shooting is unknown, and gag-bearing reins have yet to be introduced into China; neither have we heard of a poor heathen Chinaman "skinning a sheep alive." (Vide Daily Papers of July12, 1875.)
Last of all, it must not be forgotten that China has already four great religions flourishing in her midst. There isConfucianism, which, strictly speaking, is not a religion, but a system of self-culture with a view to the proper government of (1) one's own family and of (2) the State. It teaches man to be good, and to love virtue for its own sake, with no fear of punishment for failure, no hope of reward for success. Is it below Christianity in this?
Buddhism,Taoism, andMahomedanism, share the patronage of the illiterate, and serve to satisfy the natural craving in uneducated man for something supernatural in which to believe and on which to rely. Theliteratiare sheer materialists: they laugh at the absurdities of Buddhism, though they sometimes condescend to practise its rites. They strongly object to the introduction of a new religion, and successfully oppose it by every means in their power. They urge, and with justice, that Confucius has laid down an admirable rule of life in harmony with their own customs, and that the conduct of those who approximate to this standard would compare not unfavourably with the practice, as distinguished from the profession, of any religion in the world.
The following inflammatory placard, which was posted up last year at a place called Lung-p'ing, near the great tea mart of Hankow, will give a faint idea of native prejudice against the propagation of Christianity in China. The original was in verse, and evidently the work of a highly-educated man:—
Strange doctrines are speedily to be eradicated:The holy teaching of Confucius is now in the ascendant.There is but one most sacred religion:There can be but one Mean.By their great virtue Yao and Shun led the way,Alone able to expound the "fickle" and the "slight;"[*]Confucius' teachings have not passed away,Yet working wonders in secret[+] has long been in vogue.Be earnest in practising the ordinary virtues:To extend filial piety, brotherly love, loyalty, andconsiderateness, is to benefit one's-self.Be careful in your speech,And marvels, feats of strength, sedition, and spirits,[:] willdisappear from conversation.I pray you do not listen to unsubstantiated words:Then who will dare to deceive the age with soft-sounding phrases.Our religion is for all who choose to seek it;But we build no chapels to beguile the foolish.Our true religion has existed from of old, up to the present day,undergoing no change.Its true principles include in their application those of the middleand outside nations alike.Great is the advantage to us!Great is the good influence on this generation!Of all religions the only true one,What false doctrine can compare with it?Thestillnessandcleanlinessof Buddhism,Theabstrusenessandhollow mockeryof Taoism—These are but side-doors compared with ours;Fit to be quitted, but not to be entered.These are but by-paths compared with ours;Fit to be blocked up, but not to be used.How then about this one, stranger than Buddhist or Taoist creed?With its secret confusion of sexes, unutterable!More hurtful than all the dogmas of the other two;Spreading far and wide the unfathomable poison of its mysteries.Herein you must carefully discriminate,And not receive it with belief and veneration.Those who now embrace ChristCall him Lord of heaven and earth,Worshipping him with prayer,Deceiving and exciting the foolish,Dishonouring the holy teaching of Confucius.I laugh at your hero of the cross,Who, though sacrificing his life, did not preserve his virtuecomplete.Missions build chapels,But the desire to do good works is not natural to them.The method of influencing the natures of womenIs but a trick to further base ends.They injure boys by magical arts,And commit many atrocious crimes.They say their religion is the only true one,But their answers are full of prevarication.They say their book is the Holy Book,But the Old and New Testaments are like the songs of Wei andCheng.[!]As to the people who are gradually being misled,I compassionate their ignorance;As to the educated who are thus deceived,I am wroth at their want of reflection.For these men are not of us;We are like the horse and the cow;[@]If you associate with them,Who will expel these crocodiles and snakes?This is a secret grievance of the State,A manifest injury to the people!Truly it is the eye-sore of the age.You quietly look on unconcerned!I, musing over the present state of men's hearts,Desire to rectify them.Alas! the ways of devils are full of guile!But man's disposition is naturally pure.How then can men willingly walk with devils?You, like trees and plants, without understanding,Allow the Barbarians to throw into confusion the Flowery Land.Is it that no holy and wise men have appeared?Under the Chow dynasty, when the barbarians were at the height oftheir arrogance,The hand of Confucius and Mencius was laid upon them!Under the T'ang when Buddhism was poisoning the age,Han and Hsi exterminated them.Now these devils are working evil,Troubling the villages and market-places where they live.Surely many heroes must come forwardTo crush them with the pen of Confucius.Turn then and considerThat were it not for my class[#]None would uphold the true religion.I say unto you,And you should give heed unto me,Believe not the nonsense of Redemption,Believe not the trickery of the Resurrection.Set yourselves to find out the true path,And learn to distinguish between man and devil.Pass not with loitering step the unknown ford,Nor bow the knee before the vicious and the depraved.Wait not for Heaven to exterminate themTo find out that earth has a day for their destruction.The shapeless, voiceless imp—Why worship him?His supernatural, unprincipled nonsenseShould surely be discarded.Ye who think not so,When the devils are in your housesThey will covet your homes,And they will take the fingers and arms of your strong onesTo make claws and teeth for imps.They excite people at first by specious talk,Not one jot of which is intelligible;Then they destroy your reason,Making you wander far from the truth.You throw over ancestral worship to enjoy none yourselves;Your wives and children suffer pollution,And you are pointed at with the finger.Thus heedlessly you injure eternal principles,Embracing filth and treasuring corruption,To your endless shameAnd to your everlasting misfortune.Finally, if in life your heads escape the axe,There will await you the excessive injury of the shroud.[$]Judging by the crimes of your lives,Your corpses will be cast to scorpions and snakes.The devils introduce this doctrine,Which grows like plants from seeds;Some one must arise to punish them,And destroy their religion root and branch.Hasten, all of you, to repent,And walk in the way of righteousness;We truly pity you.A warning notice to discard false doctrines![*] The fickle nature of men's minds, and slight regard for the truedoctrine.[+] Forbidden by Confucius.[:] Avoided by Confucius as topics.[!] Licentious.[@] The Chinese say horses prefer going against, cows with, the wind.[#] Theliterati.[$] Missionaries are said to keep the corpses of converts concealedfrom public view between death and interment, that the absence ofthe dead man's eyes may not be detected.
"Surely it is manifest enough that by selecting the evidence, any society may be relatively blackened, and any other society relatively whitened."[*] We hope that no such principle of selection can be traced in the preceding pages. Irritation against traducers of China and her morality[+] may have occasionally tinged our views with a somewhat rosy hue; but we have all along felt the danger of this bias, and have endeavoured to guard against it. We have no wish to exalt China at the expense of European civilisation, but we cannot blind ourselves to the fact that her vices have been exaggerated, and her virtues overlooked. Only the bigoted or ignorant could condemn with sweeping assertions of immorality a nation of many millions absolutely free, as the Chinese are, from one such vice as drunkenness; in whose cities may be seen—what all our legislative and executive skill cannot secure—streets quiet and deserted after nine or ten o'clock at night. Add to this industry, frugality, patriotism,[:] and a boundless respect for the majesty of office: it then only remains for us to acknowledge that China is after all "a nation of much talent, and, in some respects, even wisdom."[!]
[*] Spencer's Sociology: The Bias of Patriotism.[+] "The miseries and horrors (?) which are now destroying (?) theChinese Empire are the direct and organic result of the moralprofligacy of its inhabitants."—Froude's Short Studies on GreatSubjects.[:] "Every patriotic Chinese—and there are millions of such."—DrLegge to London and China Telegraph, July 5, 1875.[!] Mill's Essay on Liberty.