No degradation is beyond the reach of its regenerating power. Witness the New Hebrides, Metlakatla, the Fiji, Georgia and Friendly Islands. Even England, Germany and America themselves are in evidence. Christianity lifted them out of a barbarism and superstition as dense as any prevailing among the heathen nations of this age. It can effect like changes in China if it is given the opportunity.
But it is said that the Chinese do not want to be converted. A distinguished General of the United States army declared, after his return from Peking in 1900:—``I must say that I did not meet a single intelligent Chinaman who expressed a desire to embrace the Christian religion. The masses are against Christianity.''[105] It is pleasant to know that it is so common for unconverted Americans to go to that army officer for spiritual guidance that the failure of the Chinese to do so disappointed him. Most men would hardly have expected a people who were smarting under defeat to open their hearts to a commander of the conquering army. But hundreds of other foreigners in China, myself included, can testify that they have heard intelligent Chinese express a desire to embrace the Christian religion, and the fact that there are in China to-day over a hundred thousand Chinese, to say nothing of myriads of enrolled catechumens, who have publicly confessed their faith in Christ and who have tenaciously adhered to it under sore persecution is tangible evidence that some Chinese at least are disposed to accept Christianity.
[105] The Christian Advocate, New York, June 11, 1903.
Do they want Him? ``It would please you,'' a missionary writes, ``to see these poor people feeling after God, and their eagerness to learn more and more.'' It is not uncommon for converts to travel ten, fifteen and even twenty miles to attend service. The Sunday I was in Ichou-fu, I met a fine-looking young man, named Yao Chao Feng, who had walked sixteen miles to receive Christian baptism, and several other Chinese were present who had journeyed on foot from seventeen to thirty-three miles. In Paoting-fu, I heard of a mother and daughter who had painfully hobbled on bound feet thirteen miles that they might learn more about the new faith. In another city, 800 opium-smokers kneeled in a church and asked God to help them break the chains of that frightful habit. Surely He who puts His fatherly arms around the prodigal and kissed him was in that humble church and answered the prayer of those poor, sin-cursed men. It would be easy to fill a book with such instances.
But suppose the Chinese do not want Christ. What of it? Did they want the distinguished General? On the contrary, he had to fight his way into Peking at the mouth of the cannon and the point of the bayonet, over the dead bodies of Chinese and through the ruins of Chinese towns. Do ``the masses'' desire Christ anywhere? Mr. Moody used to say that the people of the United States did not want Christ and would probably reject Him if He came to them as He came to the Jews of old.
The question is not at all whether the Chinese or anybody else desire Christ, but whether they need Him, and a man's answer to that question largely depends upon his own relations to Christ. If we need Him, the Chinese do. If He has done anything for us, if He has brought any dignity and power and peace into our lives, the probabilities are that He can do as much for the Chinese.
``Be assured that the Christ who cannot save a Chinaman in longitude 117'0 East is a Christ who cannot save you in longitude 3'0 west. The question about missions would not be so lightly put, nor the answer so lightly listened to, if men realized that what is at stake is not a mere scheme of us missionaries, but the validity of their own hope of eternal life. Yet I am bound to say that the questions put to me, on returning from the mission field, by professedly Christian people often shake my faith, not in missions, but in their Christian profession. What kind of grasp of the gospel have men got, who doubt whether it is to-day, under any skies, the power of God unto salvation?''[106]
[106] Gibson, pp. 11, 12.
It passes comprehension that any one who has even a superficial knowledge of the real China can doubt for a moment its vital need of the gospel. The wretchedness of its life appalls an American who goes back into the unmodified conditions of the interior or even into the old Chinese city of proud Shanghai. As I journeyed through those vast throngs, climbed many hilltops and looked out upon the innumerable villages, which thickly dotted the plain as far as the eye could reach, as I saw the unrelieved pain and the crushing poverty and the abject fear of evil spirits, I felt that in China is seen in literal truth ``The Man with the Hoe.''
``Bowed by the weight of centuries, he leansUpon his hoe and gazes on the ground,The emptiness of ages in his face,And on his back the burden of the world.
``What gulfs between him and the seraphim,Slave of the wheel of labour, what to himAre Plato and the swing of Pleiades?What the long reaches of the peaks of song,The rift of dawn, the reddening of the rose?Through this dread shape the suffering ages look;Time's tragedy is in that aching stoop.''
This is the need to which the churches of Europe and America are addressing themselves through the boards and societies of foreign missions. These boards are the channels through which the highest type of Christian civilization is communicated to pagan peoples, the agencies which gather up all that is best and truest in our modern life and concentrate it upon the conditions of China. From this view-point, foreign missions is not only a question of religion, but a problem of statesmanship, and one of overshadowing magnitude. As such, it merits the sympathy and cooperation of every intelligent and broad-minded man, irrespective of his religious affiliations. Its spiritual aims are supreme and sufficient for every true disciple of Christ, but apart from them its social and educational value and its relation to the welfare of the race justly claim the interest and support of all. In this work the Church is saving both individuals and nations, and for time as well as for eternity. It holds no pessimistic views of the future. It denies that the development of the race has ended. It frankly concedes the existence of vice and superstition. But it believes that the gospel of Jesus Christ is able to subdue that vice, and to dispel that superstition. So it founds schools and colleges for the education of the young; establishes hospitals and dispensaries for the care of the sick and suffering; operates printing-presses for the dissemination of the Bible and a Christian literature; maintains churches for the worship of the true God, and in and through all it preaches to lost men the transforming and uplifting gospel of Him who alone can ``speak peace to the heathen.''
But some are saying that the Boxer outbreak has destroyed their confidence in the practicability of the effort to evangelize the Chinese. They are asking: ``Why should we send any more missionaries to China?''
I reply: ``Why send any more merchants, any more consuls, any more oil, flour, cotton? Shall we continue our commercial and political relations with China and discontinue our religious relations; allow the lower influences to flow on unchecked, but withhold the spiritual forces which would purify trade and politics, which have made us what we are, and which alone can regenerate the millions of China?''
Is disaster a reason for withdrawal? When the American colonists found themselves involved in the horrors of the Revolution, did they say that it would have been better to remain the subjects of Great Britain? When, a generation ago, our land was drenched with the blood of the Civil War, did men think that they ought to have tolerated secession and slavery? When the Maine was blown up in Havana Harbour and Lawton was killed in Luzon, did we demand withdrawal from Cuba and the Philippines? When Liscum fell under the walls of Tien-tsin, did we insist that the attempt to relieve the Legations should be abandoned? Or did not the American people, in every one of these instances, find in the very agonies of struggle and bloodshed a decisive reason for advance? Did they not sternly resolve that there should be men, that there should be money, and that the war should be pressed to victory whatever the sacrifice that might be involved?
And shall the Church of God weakly, timidly yield because the very troubles have occurred which Christ Himself predicted? He frankly said that there should ``be wars and rumors of wars''; that His disciples should ``be hated of all men''; that He sent them ``forth as sheep in the midst of wolves,'' and that the brother should ``deliver up the brother to death and the father the child.'' But in that very discourse He also said: ``He that taketh not his cross and followeth after me is not worthy of me.'' ``Go, preach,'' He commanded. ``Woe is me if I preach not,'' cried Paul. Hostile rulers and priests and mobs and the bitter Cross did not swerve Him a hairbreadth from His purpose; nor did the rending of the early disciples in the arenas of Nero, the burning of a Huss and a Savonarola, the pyres of Smithfield, the dungeons of the Tolbooth and the thumb-screws of the Inquisition quench the zeal of His followers.
And in the like manner, the ashes of mission buildings and the blood of devoted missionaries and the tumult of furious men have led multitudes at home to form a high and holy resolve to send more missionaries, to give more money and to press the whole majestic enterprise with new faith and power until all China has been electrified by the vital spiritual force of a nobler faith. God summons Christendom to a forward movement in the land whose soil has been forever consecrated by the martyrdom of the beloved dead. Instead of retreating, ``we should,'' in the immortal words of Lincoln at Gettysburg, ``be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us; that from these honoured dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion; that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain.''
It may be said that this is a purely sentimental consideration. But so may love for country, for liberty, for wife and children, be called a sentiment. God forbid that the time should ever come when men will not be influenced by sentiment. The intuitions of the heart are as apt to be correct as the dictates of the head. I candidly admit that as I stood amid the ruins of the mission buildings in China, as I faced the surviving Christians and remembered what they had suffered, the property they had lost and the dear ones they had seen murdered,—as I stood with bared head on the spot where devoted missionaries had perished, I was conscious of a deeper consecration to the task of uplifting China. And I am not willing to admit that such a dedication of the living to the continuance of the work of the dead is a mere sentiment.
We are not wise above what is written when we declare that the eternal purpose of God comprehends China as well as Europe and America. He did not create those hundreds of millions of human beings simply to fertilize the soil in which their bodies will decay. He has not preserved China as a nation for nearly half a hundred centuries for nothing. Out of the apparent wreck, the new dispensation will come, is already coming. Frightened men thought that the fall of Rome meant the end of the world, but we can see that it only cleared the way for a better world. Pessimists feared that the violence and blood of the Crusades would ruin Europe, but instead they broke up the stagnation of the Middle Ages and made possible the rise of modern Europe. The faint-hearted said that the India mutiny of 1857 and the Syria massacres of 1860 ended all hope of regenerating those countries, but in both they ushered in the most successful era of missions.
So the barriers which have separated China from the rest of the world must, like the medieval wall of Tien-tsin, be cast down and over them a highway for all men be made. No one sup- posed that the process would be so sudden and violent. But in the Boxer uprising the hammer of God did in months what would otherwise have taken weary generations. Some were discouraged because the air was filled with the deafening tumult and the blinding dust and the flying debris. Many lost heart and wanted to sound a retreat because some of God's chosen ones were crushed in the awful rending. But the wiser and more far-seeing heard a new call to utilize the larger opportunity which resulted. Up to this time we have been playing with foreign missions. It is now time for Christendom to understand that its great work in the twentieth century is to plan this movement on a scale gigantic in comparison with anything it has yet done, and to grapple intelligently, generously and resolutely, with the stupendous task of Christianizing China.
But we are sometimes told that the churches should not be allowed to go on; that one of the conditions of good feeling will be the exclusion of missionaries from China. On this point, I venture three suggestions:—
First,—No administration that can ever be elected in the United States will thus interfere with the liberty of the churches. It will never say, in effect, that arms' manufacturing companies can send agents to Peking and distilleries send drummers to Shanghai, but that the Church of God cannot send devoted, intelligent men and women to found schools and hospitals and printing-presses and to preach the gospel of Jesus Christ. It will never say that American gamblers in Tien-tsin and American prostitutes in Hongkong shall be protected by all the might of the American army and navy, but that the pure, high-minded missionary, who represents the noblest motives and ideals of our American life, shall be expatriated, a man without a country.
This is, however, a problem for the nation, rather than for the boards. The American missionary went to Asia before his Government did, and until recently he saw very little of the American flag. European nations have protected their citizens, whether they were missionaries or traders. In the United States Senate Mr. Frye once reminded the nation that about twenty years ago England sent an army of 15,000 men down to the African coast, across 700 miles of burning sand, to batter down iron gates and stone walls, reach down into an Abyssinian dungeon and lift out of it one British subject who had been unlawfully imprisoned. It cost England $25,000,000 to do it, but it made a highway over this planet for every common son of Britain, and the words, ``I am an English citizen,'' more potent than the sceptre of a king. And because of that reputation American missionaries have more than once been saved by the intervention of British ministers and consuls who have not forgotten that ``blood is thicker than water.'' Shall we vociferously curse England one day and the next supinely depend upon her representatives to help us out when our citizens are endangered?
This is not a question of ``jingoism,'' whatever that may be. It is not a question of making unreasonable complaints to home governments. It is not a question of religion or of missions. It is a question of treaties, of citizenship, of national honour and of self-respect. Let the nation settle it from that viewpoint. The missionary asks no special privileges. He can stand it to go on as before, if the nation can stand it to have him.
Second,—If China should ever make such a demand in repudiation of the treaties which she herself has expressly acknowledged to be valid, and if all the Powers should support her in that demand, does anybody doubt what the missionary would say? We know at any rate what he has said in similar circumstances. When Peter and John were scourged and forbidden to preach any more in the name of Jesus, friendless and penniless though they were, they ringingly answered: ``Whether it be right in the sight of God to hearken unto you more than unto God, judge ye. For we cannot but speak the things which we have seen and heard.'' When Martin Luther was arraigned before the most powerful tribunal in Europe, he declared: ``Here I stand. God help me. I can do no other.'' When the Russian Minister in Constantinople haughtily said to Dr. Schauffler, ``My master, the Czar of all the Russias, will not let you put foot on that territory,''—the intrepid missionary replied: ``My Master, the Lord Jesus Christ, will never ask the Czar of all the Russias where He shall put His foot.'' Scores of missionaries have not hesitated to say to hostile authorities: ``I did not receive my commission from any earthly potentate but from the King of Kings, and I shall, I must go on.''
Some will say that this is madness. So of old men said of Christ, ``He hath a demon''; so they said of Paul, ``Thou art beside thyself.'' If magnificent moral courage and unyielding devotion to duty are ``madness,'' then the more the world has of it the better.
The effort to minimize the significance of the missionary force in China will be made only by those who, destitute of any vital religious faith themselves, of course see no reason for communicating it to others, or by those who are strangely blind and deaf to the real issues of the age. In the words of Benjamin Kidd, ``it is not improbable that, to a future observer, one of the most curious features of our time will appear to be the prevailing unconsciousness of the real nature of the issues in the midst of which we are living.''
``No more did the statesmen and the philosophers of Rome understand the character and issues of that greatest movement of all history, of which their literature takes so little notice. That the greatest religious change in the history of mankind should have taken place under the eyes of a brilliant galaxy of philosophers and historians who were profoundly conscious of decomposition around them; that all these writers should have utterly failed to predict the issue of the movement they were then observing; and that during the space of three centuries they should have treated as simply contemptible an agency which all men must now admit to have been, for good or evil, the most powerful moral lever that has ever been applied to the affairs of men, are facts well worthy of meditation in every period of religious transition.''[107]
[107] Lecky, ``History of European Morals,'' Vol. 1, p. 359.
Does any sane man imagine that the Church could cease to be missionary and remain a Church? It has been well said that the Christian nations might as well face the utter futility of any hypothesis based upon the supposition that they can remain away from the Orient. The occurrences of recent years have made changes in their relation to the world which they can no more recall than they can alter the course of a planet. It is idle for doctrinaires to tell us from the quiet comfort of home libraries, that we should ``keep hands off.'' We can no more keep hands off than our country could keep hands off slavery in the South, no more than New York could keep hands off a borough infected with smallpox. The world has passed the point where one-third of its population can be allowed to breed miasma which the other two-thirds must breathe. Both for China's sake and for our own, we must continue this work. If this is true in the political and commercial realms, much more is it true in the religious. Chalmer's notable sermon on the ``Expulsive Power of a New Affection'' enunciates a permanent principle. When a man's soul is once thrilled with the conviction that he has found God, he must declare that sublime truth,
``To doubt would be disloyalty,To falter would be sin.''
I confess to a feeling of impatience when I am told that all missionary plans for China must be contingent ``upon the settlement of political negotiations,'' ``the overthrow of the Empress Dowager and her reactionary advisers,'' ``the reestablishment of the Emperor on his rightful throne,'' ``the continuance in power of Viceroy Yuan Shih Kai,'' ``the mainte- nance of a strong foreign military and naval force in China,'' ``the thwarting of Russia's plans for supremacy,'' and several other events.
All these things have been said and more. Is the Church then despairingly to resign her commission from Jesus Christ and humbly ask a new one from Caesar? Not so did the apostolic missionaries, and not so, I am persuaded, will their modern successors do. They cannot, indeed, be indifferent to the course of political events or to their bearing upon the missionary problem. But, on the other hand, they cannot make their obedience to Christ and their duty to their fellow men dependent upon political considerations. For Christian men to wait until China is pacified by the Powers, or ``until she is enlightened by the dissemination of truer conceptions of the Western world,'' would be to abdicate their responsibility as the chief factor in bringing about a better state of affairs. Is the Church prepared to abandon the field to the diplomat, the soldier, the trader? How soon is China likely to be pacified by them, judging from their past acts? The gospel is the primary need of China to-day, not the tertiary. The period of unrest is not the time for the messenger of Christ to hold his peace, but to declare with new zeal and fidelity his ministry of reconciliation. To leave the field to the politician, the soldier and the trader would be to dishonour Christ, to fail to utilize an unprecedented opportunity, to abandon the Chinese Christians in their hour of special need and to prejudice missionary influence at home and abroad for a generation.
But the numbers at work are painfully inadequate. To say that there are 2,950 Protestant foreign missionaries in China is apt to give a distorted idea of the real situation unless one remembers the immensity of the population. A station is considered well-manned when it has four families and a couple of single women. But what are they among those swarming myriads? The proportion of Protestant missionaries to the population, which is commonly quoted, needs revision. There is one to about every 144,000 souls. But that, too, requires modification, for it counts the sick, the aged, recruits who are learning the language, wives whose time is absorbed by household cares, and those who are absent on furloughs, the last class alone being often about ten per cent. of the total enrollment. The actual working force, therefore, is far smaller than the statistics suggest.
Of China as a whole, it is said that ``some of the missionaries and some of the converts are to be found in every one of the provinces, both of China and Manchuria. But in the 1,900 odd counties into which the provinces are divided, each with one important town and a large part of them with more than one, there are but some 400 stations. That is to say, at least four-fifths of the counties of China are almost entirely unprovided with the means of hearing the gospel.''[108] Of all the walled cities in the Empire, less than 300 are occupied by missionaries. There are literally tens of thousands of communities that have not yet been touched by the gospel. Plainly, the missionary force must be largely augmented if the work is to be adequately done. The home churches have gone too far to stop without going farther. ``Those who undertake to carry on mission work among great peoples undertake great responsibilities. We have no right to penetrate these nations with a revolutionary gospel of enormous power, unless we are prepared to make every sacrifice and every effort for the proper care and the wise training of the organization of the Christian community itself which, while it must become increasingly a source of revolutionary thought and movement, is also the only body that can by the help and grace of God give these far-reaching movements a healthy direction and lead them to safe and happy issues.''[109]
[108] ``China's Call for a Three Years' Enterprise,'' 1903.
[109] Gibson, p. 277.
Grant that the work of evangelization must be chiefly done by Chinese preachers; there is still much for the missionary to do. Allowing for those who, on account of illness, furlough or other duties, are temporarily non-effective, 10,000 missionaries for China would not give a working average of one for every 50,000 of the population. In these circumstances, the union conference of missionaries at Kuling, August 7, 1903, was surely within reasonable bounds when, in urging the Protestant churches to celebrate in 1907 the one hundredth anniversary of the sending forth of Robert Morrison, it declared:—
``. . . In view of the vastness of the field that lies open before us, and of the immense opportunities for good which China offers the Christian Church—opportunities so many of which have been quite recently opened to us and which were won by the blood of the martyrs of 1900— we appeal to the boards and committees of our respective societies, and individually to all our brethren and sisters in the home churches, to say if we are unreasonable in asking that the last object of the Three Years' Enterprise be to double the number of missionaries now working in China.''
The time has come to ``attempt great things for God, expect great things from God.'' When in 1806, those five students in Williamstown, Massachusetts, held that immortal conference in the lee of a haystack, talked of the mighty task of world evangelization and wondered whether it could be accomplished, it was given to Samuel J. Mills to cry out: ``We can if we will!'' And the little company took up the cry and literally shouted it to the heavens: ``We can if we will!'' ``A growing church among a strong people burdened by a decadent Empire—the spirit of life working against the forces of death and decay in the one great Pagan Empire which the wrecks of millenniums have left on the earth—surely there is a call to service that might fire the spirit of the dullest of us.''[110] The obstacles are indeed formidable, but he who can look beneath the eddying flotsam and jetsam of the surface to the mighty undercurrents which are sweeping majestically onward can exclaim with Gladstone:—
``Time is on our side. The great social forces which move onward in their might and majesty, and which the tumults of these strifes do not for a moment impede or disturb—those forces are marshalled in our support. And the banner which we now carry in the fight, though perhaps at some moment of the struggle it may droop over our sinking hearts, yet will float again in the eye of heaven and will be borne, perhaps not to an easy, but to a certain and to a not distant victory.''[111]
[110] Gibson, p. 331.
[111] Speech on the Reform Bill.
In a famous art gallery, there is a famous painting called ``Anno Domini.'' It represents an Egyptian temple, from whose spacious courts a brilliant procession of soldiers, statesmen, philosophers, artists, musicians and priests is advancing in triumphal march, bearing a huge idol, the challenge and the boast of heathenism. Across the pathway of the procession is an ass, whose bridle is held by a reverent looking man and upon whose back is a fair young mother with her infant child. It is Jesus, entering Egypt in flight from the wrath of Herod, and thus crossing the path of aggressive heathenism. Then the clock strikes and the Christian era begins.
It is a noble parable. Its fulfillment has been long delayed till the Child has become a Man, crucified, risen, crowned. But now in majesty and power, He stands across the pathway of advancing heathenism in China. There may be confusion and tumult for a time. The heathen may rage, ``and the rulers take counsel together against the Lord.'' But the idol shall be broken ``with a rod of iron,'' and the King upon his holy hill shall have ``the heathen for `his' inheritance and the uttermost parts of the earth for `his' possession.''
For a consummation so majestic in its character and so vital to the welfare not only of China but of the whole human race we may well make our own the organ-voiced invocation of Milton:—
``Come, O Thou that hast the seven stars in Thy right hand, appoint Thy chosen priests according to their order and courses of old, to minister before Thee, and duly to dress and pour out the consecrated oil into Thy holy and ever burning lamps. Thou hast sent out the spirit of prayer upon Thy servants over all the earth to this effect, and stored up their voices as the sound of many waters about Thy throne. . . . O perfect and accomplish Thy glorious acts; for men may leave their works unfinished, but Thou art a God; Thy nature is perfection. . . . The times and seasons pass along under Thy feet, to go and come at Thy bidding; and as Thou didst dignify our fathers' days with many revelations, above all their foregoing ages since Thou tookest the flesh, so Thou canst vouchsafe to us, though unworthy, as large a portion of Thy Spirit as Thou pleasest; for who shall prejudice Thy all-governing will? Seeing the power of Thy grace is not passed away with the primitive times, as fond and faithless men imagine, but Thy kingdom is now at hand, and Thou standing at the door, come forth out of Thy royal chambers, O Prince of all the kings of the earth; put on the visible robes of Thy imperial majesty, take up that unlimited sceptre which Thy Almighty Father hath bequeathed Thee; for now the voice of Thy bride calls Thee, and all creatures sigh to be renewed.''[112]
[112] Milton, ``Prose Works.''
INDEX{Raw OCR from here to the end, needs proof-read and formatted}
ABRAHAM, 39Abyssinia, 363Academy, Military, 339Achievements of Chinese, 39sq.Africa, 16, 19, 102, 106, 107, 108,126, 128, 175, 314Agnew, Rev. Dr., B. L., 288Agnosticism, 73Agriculture, 136; implements of,129Alaric, 315Alaska, 17Alexander the Great, 16
Allied armies, 1900, 207sq., 273, 320 C~.
Altai Mountains, Little, 104America, 19, 20, 30, 355American-China Development Co.,134American Board, 201sq., 290, 292,293, 295, 296, 299, 300
American Christians, 281sq.
American manufacturers, lo5, 106,114, 133American mobs, 43American troops, 207, 327, 328,329Americans in China, 25, 26, 27,87, 88, 114, 115, 124-126, 131,134, 154sq., 182, 305, 348Amoy, 150, 221Amur, valley of, 153Anatolian railway, 105Ancestral worship, 72sq., 138, 340Andrews, Bishop, 41Angel1, Pres. James B., 264Anglo-Chinese railway syndicate,132Anglo-Italian syndicate, 132Anglo-Saxon, 35An-huei, 336Annam, 152
``Anno Domini,'' painting, 369Anti-foreign sentiment, 136sq.An-tung, 348Arabia, 16, 107Arch, 39Area of China, 17, 36Armies, Allied, 207sq., 273, 320ch.Army, Chinese, 92sq., 305, 306,316, 333, 338, 339, 345Arrow War, 151``As a Chinaman Saw Us,'' 25Asia, 15, 16, to5, 106, 107, 111;changes in, I l lsq.; religions of,119Assyria, 16Astronomical observatory, 325Astronomy, 39Attila, 315Attitude towards foreigners, 231,258-267, 270, 320ch., 328, 330,335Sq., 341, 3429 344, 35 1Australia, 106, 107, 108, 174Austria, 41, 172, 212, 316Awakening of China, 7
BABCOCK, REV. DR. MALTBIE, 276Baby house, 60Babylon, 16Bagnall, Mr. Benjamin, 201, 206Baillard, General, 208Ballard, Walter J., 106Bangkok, 42, los, 107Banks, 40Baptists, 62, 63, 296-299, 300Barrett, Hon. John, 237Batavia, 42Bayard, Hon. Thos. F., 159Beirut, losBelgians International Eastern Co.,133Belgium, 133, 171, 175~ 212Bells, 39l372 It
Benares, 32Benevolence, 72Beresford, Lord Charles, 306Bergen, Rev Dr. Paul D., 67,23lsq., 236Berlin Conference, 102, 175Bible translation, 220Bicycles, 114Bishop, Mrs. Isabella Bird, 27Black Sea, 16Blind asylum, 223Boards, mission, 243, 247, 249,281sq-, 290, 349, 358Boats, 23Bogue forts, 149, 154Boma, 107
Books on China, 195, 196, 224Boston, 20, 157Boughton, Miss Emma, 60Bougler, D. C., 7Boxers and Boxer Uprising, 52, 59,60, 62, 63, 98, 131, 187, 193 ch.202sq,, 240, 249 ch., 259, 261265, 273sq., 330, 331, 339, 341,345. 359, 362Brazil, 172Brewer, Hon. David J., 163Brice, Senator Calvin S., 134Brinkley, Capt. Frank, 125, 322British-Chinese corporation, 132British in China, 130, 131, 134,135, 140, 208British Government, 234British Museum, 40Brockman, Mr. F. S., 287, 289Brooke, Rev Dr. Stopford, 33Buddha, 15Buddhism, 29, 66, 74sq., 258, 259,271Bulgaria, 21Burial, 138Burlingame, Hon. Anson, 155, 160Burma, lo5, 107, 151Byron, 49CABLES, 108, logCalcutta, 103California, 22, 102, 157Cambodia, 152Canada, 19
Canals, 39, 68
Canton, 20, 22-24, 32, 41, 132, 134, 138, 146sq., 152, 220, 221, 337, 346
Canton-Hankow R. R., 134
Cape to Cairo R. R., 104, 106Cape Town, 104Carts, 53-55, 84Cash, Chinese, 61, 139
Cassini Convention, 153Cemeteries, 70, 74
Chairs. 53, 54Chaldea, 15, 16 .
Chalfant, Rev. Frank, 53, 59, 60Chalmers, Rev. Dr. James, 126Chang Chih-tung, 189, 195, 335Chang Pei-hsi, 335
Chao Chu, 43Charity, 33, 34Chedor-laomer, 16
Chefoo, 3, 13, 30, 48, 49, 138, 177s 186, 187, 225-227
Cheh-kiang, 21
Chester, Rev. Dr S. H., 75Chieng-mai, 107
Chih li, 21, 196, 293, 308, 342, 344, 348
Children, Chinese, 19, 23, 38, 72,
China, 107; achievements, 3gsq.; area, 17, 36; army, 316, 345; attitude towards foreigners, 35 sq ch., 69, 145, 147, 148, 231, 258, 267, 270, 320, 328, 330, 335Sq341-344, 351; awakening, 7, changes in, 112, character of people, 2Ssq. ch., 35sq. ch., 47; civilization, 23, 2Ssq. ch., 35sq. ch., llo, 112, 116, 119, 315; climate, 18; colonies, 42, 44 , 154 ch.; conservatism, 35, 19v; customs, 2Ssq., 73, 8Ssq.; defects, 27sq.; fertility, 136; foreign trade, 1215q.; future, 305sq., 331, 332, 333 ch.; Government, 28, 29, 41, 47, 48, 130-145, 333 338 ; history, 39; language, 8 25; learning, 40; life in, 358, opening, 102; partition, 307sq.; peculiarities, 25sq.; people of,
2sch., 38, 97, 98, 157, 228sq-, 314, 352, 353; population, 18-22, 36, 135, 315; prejudices, 317; religion, 31, 137, 138, 315; resources, 18, 315; scenery, 22, 80; scholarship, 40; society, 40, 41 soldiers, g2sq., 222; treaties with, 17Isq.; vices, 27sq., 46
China Inland Mission, 201, 239, 3oo
China and Japan, 309, 314China-Japan War, 179, 180, 189,Chinan-fu, 45, 53, 63, 132,296, 339~' China's Only Hope,'' 189, IgoChinese abroad, 42, 141
Chinese in the United States, 41, 44, 1545q., 331, 343
Ching-chou-fu, 30, 6Isq., 277, 296Ching-ting, 133Chining-chou, 47, 67, 68, 261, 343Chin-kiang, 132Chou-ping, 63Christendom, duty of, 351Christians, American and European,286sqChristians, Chinese, 63, 116, 117,167, 198, 220, 222sq., 228,268 ch., 280 ch., 294, 346, 347,risti 356, 361
167sq, 219Sq., 222sq. Part IV., 259, 264, 268 ch., 287, 292, 349, Christianity vs. civilization, 126sq. Chung Hui Wang, 43 Chung-wan-tao, 182 Church, Chinese, 268 ch., 280 ch 294, 368 Church, Greek, 311, 312 Cities of China, 20, 21, 47, 124, 292, 367 Civilization, Chinese, 23, 25ch 35ch., llo, 112, 116, 119, 315 Western, 26, 27, 31, 39, 40, 43, 88, 328, 351, 354
Civilization vs. Christianity, 126sqCivil power, 236 ch.
Civil War, American, 359Classics, Chinese, 25, 40
Classics, hall of, 71Climate of China, 18, 84Clocks, 113Coal, 18, 47, 130, 132, 136Cochin-China, 152Coffee, 146Coffins, 25, 38, 59, 138Colleges, 296, 339, 340
Colonies, European, 145 ch., 174 ch. Colonization, Chinese, 42, 44, 141, 154ch.
Colquhoun, A. R., 44Columbia University, 340Comity, 290
Commerce, 40, lol, log, 117, 121, 126, 136, 305
Commercial Pacific Cable, 108, logCompass, 39Conceit, 42Concessions, 348Concubinage, 72
Conferences, Kuling, 347; Shanghai, 295
Confucius and Confucianism, 15, 30-32, 382 47, 65 Ch., 328, 334, 34o
Conger, Hon. Edwin H., 207, 265, 329
Congo, 104,107; International Association of, 102; State, 173
Conservatism of Chinese, 35, 191Consuls, 154, 236, 245,262, 263,316Conveyances, 53Coolies, 23, 41, 50Cooper, Rev. Wm., 202, 206
Cooperation, mission, 290, 2g4sq.
Cowright laws, 348Corbett, Rev. Dr. Hunter, 225,226Corruption, official, 27, 28, 3zCorvino, John de, 219Cost of living, X l lsq., 280Cotton, 122Counties, 367Coup d'etat, 192, 338, 344, 345Courses, ten righteous, 72Courts, 28, 228, 234, 348Crickets, 23Cruelty, 29, 30Crusades, 194, 361Cuba, 312374 ICustoms, 2Ssq., 73, 8Ssq.; maritlme, 191, 317Czar of Russia, 18DALAI LAMA, 19Dalny, 131, 180sq.Damascus, lo5Danube, 16Darwin, Charles, 129Davis, Hon. J. C. B. 156, 238Deaf and Dumb Asyium, 223, 225
Decrees, imperial, 335-338Defects of Chlnese, 27sq.Degrees, 335sq.Denby, Hon. Charles, 264, 290Denmark, 171Dewey, Admiral, 306Dickens, Charles, 34Diedrich, Admiral, 176Diffusion Society, 189Diplomacy, 145, 16Ssq., 236ch.,
246, 262, 348Discoveries of Chinese, 39sq.Dishonesty, 28Donkeys, 53, 84Drunkenness, 46Dutch in China, 146, 147, 175Dye-shops, 23EAST INDIA COMPANY, 102, 147220Economic revolution, I I I sq.,
280 ch.Edicts, imperial, 335-338; reform,190, 191; Yuan Shih Kai's, 343Education, 190, 191, 335-338, 339Egypt, 16, 107Electricity, 103, 1075q.^ 114Elephants, 107Elgin, Lord, 166Eliot, George, 33Elterich, Rev. W. 0,, 48Embezzlers, 28Embroidery, 23-61Emperor, 72, 80, 113, 190, 197,198 317 3264, 325, 326, 338, 343,
Emperor, German, 318Empress, Dowager, 188, 193, 324,338, 344, 345, 365England and the English, 16, 17,21, 41, 117, 128, 1465q., 166171, t72, 173, 174, 175, 181, 182212, 239, 307, 308, 309,349,351355, 363; soldiers of, 321324Essays, examination, Igo, 335sq.Etiquette, Chinese, 37Euphrates, 16Europe, 17, 30, 39, 106, 107, 108,307, 308, 309, 318Europeans, 26, 87, 88, 124, 126,145 ch.'s Ever Victorious Army,'' 222Examinations, Igo, 212, 335sq.;Grounds, 325Exclusion laws, 158, 184Exposition, St. Louis, 160Extra-territoriality, 150, 184-186FACE, 37, 38Fan-tai, 48Fares, railway, 140, 141Faris, Rev. W. W., 81Farmers, 40; farms, 18, 21, 46Favier, Bishop, 199Fay Chi Ho, 161, 322FFeasts, 6r, 69, 81, 8Ssq., 95Fei-hsien, 96Fenn, Rev. Dr. C. H., 28, 31Field, Rev. Dr. Henry M., 247Firearms, 39Fitch, Rev. J. A., 60``Five Points,'' 355Five-story Pagoda, 23, 24Floods, 191, 192Flour, 122Foochow, 150, 182, 221Food, 8Ssq.Fong-king, 153Forbidden City, 197Foreigners in China, 23, 26, 27,
3Ssq., 69, 97, 124-126, 142, 145 ch., 151, 156, 162, 167sq. 175sq., 184 ch., 264, 320 ch.,
327, 328, 351 Formosa, 146, 312
Foster, Hon. John W., 102, 166, 265
Fowler, Consul John, 52, 91, 329, 342
France, 16, 21, 117, 171, 172, 173,
174, 175, 180, 181, 182, 186, 212, 236, 251, 350
Franco-Chinese Convention, 135Freight, railway, 141French in China, 44, 134, 135, 140,151, 152, 153, 208, 307, 308,309, 334; soldiers, 321, 323,324Fruit in China, 226Frye, Senator, 363Fuel, 47Fukien, 21, 336Funerals, 74Fnng-shuy, 75sq.Fusan, lo5
Future of China, 331, 332, 333 ch.GAMBLING, 28, 124Gardens, 46Gaselee, General, 208Gelatine, 39Genseric, 315Georgia, 21Gerard, M., 350Germans, 40, 44, 54, 58, 60, 82,
93, 97, 132, 139, 140, 321, 323, 331, 334, 339, 340
Germany, 16, 41, 117, 118, 172
173, 174, 175, 176, 179, 180 182, 208, 212, 307, 308, 309,
Germany, Emperor of, 318Gibson, Rev. Dr. J. Campbell, 28
71, 75, 269, 270
Gin, cotton, 103Gladstone, Wm. E., 369Gleaning, 46Glue, 39Goatskins, 123Golden Rule, 184Goodnow, Consul-General, 123,Gordon, Charles George, 222, 306Gorst, Harold E., 124Goths, 315
v,,Gould, Miss Annie A., 201, 206Government, 48, 236 ch.Government, Chinese, 28, 29, 41,130, 145, 231, 333, 334, 338;Church, 300; constitutional, 120Governments, foreign, 362sq.Governors, 48Governor of Canton, 147sq.Gracey, Rev. Dr. J. T., 20Grain, 46Grand Canal, 68Grant, General, 41Graves, Bishop, 31, 138, 139, 346Gray, Willls E., 134Great Bell Temple, 39Great Britain, see EnglandGreek Church, 169, 183, 311, 312Griffis, Rev. Dr. William Elliott,32Guatama, 15Gunpowder, 39HAMLIN, REV. DR. CYRUS, 364Hai-fong, 135Haight, Hon. H. H., 157IIainan, 22Hall of Classics, 71Hangchow, 132Hankow, 133, 134Harrison, Hon. Benjamin, 266Hart, Sir Robert, 193, 230, 243,316, 3179 332, 334, 354,Harte, Bret, 43, 44Harvest, 46Hawaiians, 127Hawes, Miss Chnrlotte, 60Hay, Hon. John, 183, 188, 238,33oHayes, Rev. Dr. W. M., 340, 353Haystack prayer-meeting, 368Health precautions, goHeard, Hon. Augustin, 309, 310Hedin, Sven, 18, 19, 40Hill, James J., 109History of China, 39Hodge, Dr. C. V. A., 201-211Holcombe, Hon. Chester, 43, 160,H 116129 187, 308, 314, 315Honant klt 133, 335376 In
Hongkong, 22, 122, 150, ISIsq.Hong merchants, 148, 149Horrors Temple of, 74Hospitaiity, 95, 96, 98Hospitals, 82, 223, 265Hostility to foreigners, 35sq. ch.House, Rev, Herbert E., 340House-boats, 23Houses, 31, 39, 47, 61, 62Hsiang-tan-hsien, 20Hsi-an-fu, 219Hsi-an-tai, 59Hsiens, 367Hunan, 22, 337Hungary, 21Hung-Wu, Emperor, 40Huns, 315Hunter, Rev. Dr. S. A., 261Ilupeh, 21, 337
ICIIOU-FU, 132, 229, 356Illinois, 21, 22
Immorality, 28, 29, 124Imperial Railway, 131
Indemnity, 59, 69, 155, 159, 211, 212, 330, 334
India, 28, 29, 102, 105, 107, 114,
117, 1 19, 307, 313, 314, 361; Churches in, 299
Indiana, 21, 22Indus, 16Inns, 69-88. 95Intemperance, 124, 126, 128
International Eastern Co., 133Inventions, 112
Inventions of Chinese, 39sq.Iron, 18, 136
Irrawaddy, 105
Italy, 172-174 175, 212; soldiers
ofw 325
JAPAN, 17, 36, 101, 105, log, 111, 114, 167, 172, 173, 179, 182, 194, 212, 307, 308,309, 314, 337, 350; Churches in, 299, 301
yapan WeekEy MviS, 125, 322
Japanese, 29, 44, 117, 118, 119,
305, 306, 312, 313, 317, 320, 321, 328, 329.
Jenghiz Khan, 318
Jerusalem, 105Jewelry, 23Jews, 4xsq., 217, 218Johnson, Dr. Chas. F., 68, 91~ 229Jones, Mr. A. G., 62Junks, 130KAI PING, 130Kameruns, 108Kansas 22Kan-su 22, 66Kao-liang, 46Kaomi, 57Kassai, 107Khartoum, 104Kai-feng-fu, 133, 217Kentucky, 21, 22Kerosene, sr3Kiang-si, 21, 336Kiang-su, 22, 336Kiao-chou, 53, 57, 97; Bay of, 176Kidd, Benjamin, 33, 364Kien Lung, Emperor, 80King of Siam, 114, 119Kitchener, Lord, 104Korea, 102, 105, 107, 108, x 16,117, 1 19, 132, 172, 284, 312,313, 338; Churches in, 299Kowloon, 134, 135, 151Kuang Hsii, 317Kuang Hsum, 338Ku-chou, 82Ku-fu, 6gsq.Kuling, 347, 368Kung Hsiang Hsi, 161Kwamouth, 107Kwang-si, 22Kwan-tung, 22, 41, 336Kwei-chou, 21Kwei Heng, 209LAMA, Dalai, 19Lama Temple, 29Lamps, 113Land-tax, 28Lane, Rev. Wm., 162, 261Language, Chinese, 8, 25Laos, 102-107, 108-117, 284Lao-tse, 15Lassa, x9
Laughlin, Rev. J. H., 53, 68, 261,343Laws, 336Lawsuits,228ch., 251,257, 3X2,349Learning, 40Lecky, W. E. H., 365, 366Legations, 212, 326, 327; Seige of,193sq.Legge, Dr., 71Letters of a Chinese Official,31sq, 327, 354Li, 57Llao-tung, 179Liberty, Religious 119Li Hung Chang, 41, 76, 338, 344Likin, 348Lincoln, President, 360Liquor, 128Litters, 54Liu Kan Ji, 41Liu-kung, 181Liu Kun vi 41, t95Living, Cost of, Illsq.Livingstone, David, 102Locomotives, 103, 104sq., 123, 133,136, 142Loess, 45London, 32London Missionary Society, 220,292, 296Looms, 103Looting, 324Louisiana, 22Louisiana Purchase Exposition,160, 161Lov e, Henry P., 104Low, Hon. Frederick F., 155, 185,Loweil, James Russell, 120, 128,Lowrie, Rev. Dr. John, 103Lowrie, Rev. J. Walter, 201, 203,208, 209, 352Lucas, Rev. Dr. J. J., 285Lu Han Railway, 133Lumber, 123Luther, Martin, 364Lyon, Dr. C. H., 53, 68, 343MACAO, 134, 146, 147, 220
les 377Mackay, Clarence H., logMackenzie, John Kenneth, 323McKinley, President, 108 330Magistrates, 27, 28, 47 76, 77,
95sq., 139, 185, 193, 194, 209,210, 228ch., 306, 331, 333, 334,342, 343, 344Mahdi, 119Malone, N. Y., 163Man, dignity of, 33, 34Manchuria, 8, 1S, 19, 153, 179sq.,3ø7, 314, 348Manchus, 38, 314Mandarins, 29Manila, 42Manning, Hon. Daniel, 160Markham, Edwin, 358Marriage, 72Martin, Rev. Dr. W. A. P., 168,169, 217, 218, 353Martyrs, 195, 198, 202-211, 272277s 341, 346, 361Mateer, Rev. Dr. Calvin, 104, 244Matting, 123Mecca, 105Mechanics 40Medical missions, 223, 296, 347Mediterranean, 16Mei, General, 321Meiji Gakuin, 296Mencius, 15, 47Merchants, Chinese, 29Mercy, Goddess of, 74Methodists, 296, 299; missionarysociety of, 290, 292Mexico 173, Churches in, 299Michie Alexander, 230, 249Michigan, 21Millet, 46, 136Mills, Samuel J., 368Milton, John, 16, 370Miner, Luella, 16xMines, 348Ministers, 236, 24ssq.Ministry, 288Minnesota, 22Mississippi River, 19; valley, 102,118Missionaries, 68, 97, 102, x16, 125,x26, 128, x56, 167, t94, 201sq,,378 In
217ch., 223sq., 228ch., 236ch.,249 ch-, 341, 343, 347, 349, 359368Mission work, 20lsq.,219sq.,2gosq.,298, 345-347, 349, 35ø, 354, 37øMissouri, 21Mobs, 43Mohammed, 15Mohammedans, 65, 66, 315; Mohammedanism,258, 259Mongolia, 18Monks, Lama, 29Moore, Bishop, 320Mormons, 27Morrill, Miss Mary S., 201, 206Morrison, Rev. Robert, 220, 368Moscow, 132Mountains, 45, 47, 61~ 6Ssq.Mourning, 342, 343Mukden, 8, 131, 132, 348Mulberry trees, 47Mules, 53, 55, 84
NAMES, Chinese, SNanking, 132, 221Nanning-fu, 139Napier, Lord, 147-149Naples, 23Na Tung, 314Navy, 305, 306, 316, 333Neal, Dr. James B., 63Nebraska, 21Negroes, 43Nestorians in China, 218, 219Netherlands, 212Nevius, Rev. Dr. John C., 226, 227New England, 21-45New Guinea, 126SVe7vs, 9fiorth-China Daiey, 76Newspapers, 334New York, 20, 22, 27Ngan-hwei, 22Nichols, Francis, 259Nieh-tai, 48Nile, 16Ningpo, 146, 150, 221North America, 106, 107Aorth-C'hisza Heraid, 27Norway, 212
OBI RIVER, 104Observatory, Astronomical, 325Oceanica, 19.Office, qualifications for, 40Official, letters of a Chinese, 327Officials, 27, 28, 139, 141,185, 193,194, 209, 210, 228 ch., 306, 331,333, 334, 342, 343, 344Ohm, 21, 22Oil, 113, 114, 1224~ Open Door,'' the, 188, 348Opium, 47, 128, 149, 1510 155~ 162}356, 357Opium War, 149, 150Oregon, 102, 123, 157Ornaments, 23Orthography, Chinese, 8Oxus, 16
PAGODAS, 22, 23Palestine, 107Panthay rebellion, 66Paoting-fu, 93, 133, 200-211, 275,293, 346, 356Paper, 40Parents, 72sq.Parker, E. H., 29, 41,152,164, 170Parker, Rev. Dr., 332Parkhurst, Rev. Dr. Charles H.,128Parsons, Wm. Barclay, 134Partition, of Africa, 175; of Asia,174sq; of China, 307sq., 314,354Passengers, railway, 140Pastors, Chinese, 280 ch.Patent office, 348Patriotism, 35Pawnshops, 63Pearl River, see West RiverPeculiarities of Chinese, 2Ssq.Peking, 8, 1o5, 133, 197sq., 290sq.Peking-llankow R. R., 200, 201Peking, seige of, 345, 346Penang, 42Pennsylvania, 22Pentecost, Rev. Dr. George F., 346People, of Asia, X x v; of China, 25sq.ch., 47, 97, 98, 228sq-, 314, 352,353
,…
Peril, yellow, 305 ch., 354Perry, Commodore, lolPersecution of Christians, 202sq.,272 279Persia, 16, 108, 114, 313Persian Gulf, 16Peru, 172Pescadores Islands 146Philadelphia, 32, 43; 157Philippine Islands, 107, 146Photography, 103Pien-kiao, 30, 96Pitkin, Rev. Horace T., 201, 205,206Pittsburg, 103Plows, 129, 263Politics, foreign, Part IIIPoor, the, 30pope, 37Poppy, 47Population of China, 18, 22, 36,315Port Arthur, 131, 179, 180Portland, Or., 122Ports, China's, 124, 125Portugal, 171, 173, 175, 212;
Portuguese in China, 145-147Post-office, 103, 334Potter, Bishop, 307Pottery, 39Powers, European, 330, 359, 363,366Prefects, 47, 81Prejudices, 317, 351Presbyterians, Board of, 239, 286,290, 292, 293, 295, 296, 298, 300;Church, 288, 297, 299; missions,48, 59, 60, 63, 81, 201, 198, 337,346, 352Press, mission, 28, 103, 223, 296,337; periodical, 334, 339Princeton Theological Seminary, 7Printing, 39Protestants in China, 20lsq., 220sq.,222, 223, 230sq., 236 ch., 253,257, 290sq., 366sq.Provinces, 19, 22, 23, 333, 334Prussia, 171Public service, 28Pulu Condore, 152
lex 379 Punishments, 29, 74, 185
RACE prejudice, 158; superiority, 33 Railways, 52, 104Sq., I l lsq,130ch., 196, 263
Recantation of Christians, 277, 278Reform Party, 189-191, 240
Reformss 335-338, 345Religions of Asia, 119; of China,31, 51, 65sq. ch., 315Resources of China, 18, 315
Revolutions, American, 359; Chinese,35, 333, 334, 351; economic,I l X ch.,132,136sq.,280ch.Ricci, Matteo, 219
Rice, 46, 1 l l
Richthofen, Baron von, 18, 44Rites, 27
Roads, Chinese, 25, 39, 45, 55, 116, 138
Rock Springs massacre, 159, 187
Roman Catholics, 58, 69, 176, 183, 193,195, 199, 200, 219, 230, 250
257, 260, 350 Roman Empire, 16
Romallization Chinese language, 9Romans, 351; Empire of, 361
Roosevelt, President, log lRuskin, John, 34
Russia, 41, 42, lol, 117, 131, 132, 153sq~ 169, 171, 172, 173, 174, 179, 183, 188, 189, 212, 236,
307, 308, 309, 311, 312, 313, 317, 334, 365; soldiers of, 325 Russia-Japan War, lol, 348, 349 Russo-Chinese Bank, 133
SACRIFICES, 78Saigon, 42, 152Salaries, 28
Salisbury, Lord, 262, 266Sampans, 48
San Francisco, 157, 159Sayre, James W., 106
Scenery, 22, 31, 80Scepticism, 128Scholars, 40Scholarship, 40, 305
Schools, 117, 190, 191, 223, 260, 265, 295, 335, 337, 339, 347, 353 380 I,
Scidmore, Elija, 25Science, British Association forAdvancement of, 104Scotland, 16; people of, 16Sectarianism, 295Sen Yat Sen, 311Self-support, 272, 284sq.Seoul, los, 107, 132Seward, Hon. George F., 263Sewing machines, 114Shakespeare, Wm., 34Shanghai, 42, 130, 132, x50, 221Shan-hal Kwan, 131Shan-si, 21, 132, 196, 341Shantung Province, 20, 21, 4ssq.ch., s2sq. ch., 97, 132, 176sq.,196, 296, 307, 336, 339, 341,
342Shantung Protestant University,Shefheld. R D D ZShendza, 53, 5ssq., 84Shen-si, 18, 21, 132, 133, 195,
219Sherman, Hon. John, 237Shimonoseki, 179Shops, 23Shunte-fu, 133Siam, 102, 105, 107, 113, 114, 116,117, 119, 313Siberia, 108Siberian Railway, xos, 106, 131,1530 179Sick, the, 30Siege of Peking, 193-200, 345,346Silk, 23, 39, 47, 123Silver currency, 1 l lSimcox, Rev. F. E., 201sq.~ 211Si-ngan-fu, 133Singapore, 42Si-sui, 80Smith, Rev. Dr. Arthur H., 38,229, 267, 321, 338Smith, Rev. Dr. George Adam,127Society, Chinese, 40, 41Soldiers, American, 306; Chinese,40, 76, glsq., 222, 30ssq., 316,339, 345; European, 306; for
eign, 127, 186, 198, 208, 273,320 ch., 328, 329Soudan, l 19Soil, 45South America, 106Soochow, 132Spain, 16, 146, 171, 172, 175, 212Spirit Road, 70Spirits, 30sq., 74sq.Stage coach, 103Stanley, Henry M., 102, 105Stanley Falls, 104Statistics, U. S. Bureau of logStaunton, Sir George, 14;Steam, 103, lloSteamers, 103, 104, Illsq., 130Stewart, Rev. Dr. James, 126, 175Stewart, Senator, 41Storrs, Rev. Dr. R. S., 23St. Petersburg, losStrong, Rev. Dr. Josiah, l loSu, Prince, 314Suffering, 29, 30Suicide, 26Summer Palace, 197, 198, 324, 325Superstition, 30, 51, 74sq., 137, 138Swatow 20Sweden 171, 212Syria, 117, 118, 361Sze-chuen, 22, 132
TACOMA, 159Tael, 1llTai-an-fu, 65Tai-ping Rebellion, 28, 221, 222Tai-shan, 6ssq.Tai-yuen-fu, 133Taku, 130, 196, 212Ta-lien-wan, 180Tamerlane, 318Tang Hsiao-chuan, 340Taoism, 15, 745q.Tao-tai, 48Taylor, Dr. George Y., 201-2145q.Taylor, Rev. J. Hudson, 240Taxes, 28, 333, 348, 349Tea, 39, 86, 123; shops, 23Telegraphs, 107sq.Telephones, lo3, 107, 114Temple, Great Confucian, 71
Temple of Heaven, 197, 198Temples, 39, 6ssq. ch., 325Tennessee, 21Thoburn, Bishop, 129Threshing, 46Tibet, 18Tieh Liang, 314Tien-tsin, 20, 131, 132, 154, 197,Til22., 313, 323, 344, 361Ting Jung, 209Tobacco factories, 23Toleration clauses, 167SqTong-king, 135, 307Tong ku, 131, 196, 344Torture, 185Tourane, 152Trade, 40, logsq., 117sq., 121 ch.,126sq., 142, 147, 159Trade-marks, 348Traders, 40, 42, 102, 124sq., 145,156Travelling in China, 84, 91, lol
ch.
Treaties, 150, 15l, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 166, 167sq.; list of, 171sq., 179, 212, 221, 237, 238, 247, 348~ 349 Trees, 45 7i iAune, New York, 41 Trolley cars, 107 Tsing-tau, 123, 132, 139, 176-179, 331 Tsung-li Yamen, 155, 212, 254 Tuan Fang, 195 Tung-chou, 4gsq., 177, 321, 322, 34o Turkestan, Chinese, 18 Turkey, 175 Type, 39 UGANDA, 104 United States, 17, 19, 21, 106, 117, 118, 154ch., 171, 172, 173, 175, 182, 188, 207, 208, 2 1 1, 212, 234, 235, 307, 308, 329-331, 348 350,362; trade of, 1225q., Is4sq., 159 Universities, vgo, 335, 353 Ussuri, 153 de:S 381
VANDALS, 315Van Schoick, Dr., 58Verne, Jules, 106Vices, 27sq., 124sq., 142Victoria Falls, 104Victoria Queen, 108Villages 20, 21Villagers, allied, 93Virginia, 21Vladivostok, 131, 179WADE, HON. FRANCIS, 239, 240,256Wade, Hon. Thomas F., 170Wai-wu Pu, 213, 315Walls, 210Wang, Captain, 340War with Japan, 179, 180, 189Ward, Frederick T., 222Watchman, goWei-hai Wei, 152, 181Wei-hsien, sgsq., 11 ~123, 132,
296, 345Weng Chan Kwei 209Wen Hsiang, 170 185, 239, 257Wen River, 67West River, 22, s3, 135, 152, 307West Virginia, 21Wheat, 46, 1 11, 136Wheelbarrows, 25, 53, 54Wherry, Rev. Dr. John, 39Whiskey, 46, 86Whitman, Marcus, 102Widows, 19Wiju, los, 132William IV, lo8Williams, Dr. S. Wells, 39, 75, 150,167, 168Williamstown Mass., 368Wilson, Gen. James H., 266Winnowing, 46Winter palace, 197, 198Wireless telegraphy, logWisconsin, 21Women, 26, 27, 46, 62Women missionaries, 262Wong Kai Kah, 159Wool, 123Working-man, 118Worship, ancestral, 72sq., 340
3E32 In
Wright, HOD. Carroll D., 282Wu Ting-fang, 43, 73, 130, 266,329, 330XAVIER, FRANCIS, 102, 219YALE UNIVERSITY, 43Yalu River, lo5, 348Yamen, 95, 96Yang-tze River, 133, 135, 307Yellow peril, 305 ch., 354Yellow River, 63, 76, 191Yen, 76Yen-chou-fu, 69
Yenisei River, 104Yo-chou, x82Yuan Shih Kai, glsq.,97, 195, 196,261, 267, 307, 314, 338-345,365Yueh-Kou, 82, 83Yuen Yen Tai, 340Yu Hsien, 341Yung-loh, Emperor, 40Yun-nan, 21, 66, 135, 152ZAGROS MOUNTAINS, 16Zoroaster, 15Zululand, 32