Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- CHAPTER I UP TO NANKING
- CHAPTER II THE MING TOMBS
- CHAPTER III THE TAIPINGS AT THEIR CAPITAL
- CHAPTER IV A NAVAL SQUADRON INLAND
- CHAPTER V ADMIRAL HOPE'S EXPLORATION
- CHAPTER VI JUNK TRAVELLING IN HOO-PEH
- CHAPTER VII SHI-SHOW TO I-CHANG
- CHAPTER VIII GORGES AND RAPIDS
- CHAPTER IX EASTERN SZ'CHUAN
- CHAPTER X VISITS AND CEREMONIES
- CHAPTER XI THE GOLD-SAND RIVER
- CHAPTER XII CROSS RANGES
- CHAPTER XIII CHUNG-KING
- CHAPTER XIV THE FOUR VALLEYS
- CHAPTER XV SÜ-CHOW AND THE WESTERN REBELS
- CHAPTER XVI PING-SHAN — OUR FARTHEST
- CHAPTER XVII THE UPPER YANG-TSZE
- CHAPTER XVIII DOWN THE KIN-CHA KIANG
- CHAPTER XIX RETURN FROM THE INTERIOR
- APPENDIX
CHAPTER X - VISITS AND CEREMONIES
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 April 2011
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- CHAPTER I UP TO NANKING
- CHAPTER II THE MING TOMBS
- CHAPTER III THE TAIPINGS AT THEIR CAPITAL
- CHAPTER IV A NAVAL SQUADRON INLAND
- CHAPTER V ADMIRAL HOPE'S EXPLORATION
- CHAPTER VI JUNK TRAVELLING IN HOO-PEH
- CHAPTER VII SHI-SHOW TO I-CHANG
- CHAPTER VIII GORGES AND RAPIDS
- CHAPTER IX EASTERN SZ'CHUAN
- CHAPTER X VISITS AND CEREMONIES
- CHAPTER XI THE GOLD-SAND RIVER
- CHAPTER XII CROSS RANGES
- CHAPTER XIII CHUNG-KING
- CHAPTER XIV THE FOUR VALLEYS
- CHAPTER XV SÜ-CHOW AND THE WESTERN REBELS
- CHAPTER XVI PING-SHAN — OUR FARTHEST
- CHAPTER XVII THE UPPER YANG-TSZE
- CHAPTER XVIII DOWN THE KIN-CHA KIANG
- CHAPTER XIX RETURN FROM THE INTERIOR
- APPENDIX
Summary
The scene is Wan, the head-quarters of a prefecture of the second provincial grade—a hien—in the far interior of China, removed from its eastern seaboard some thirteen degrees of longitude, and at a distance of 1100 sea-miles up the Great Yang-tsze Kiang. Surrounded by a hilly and broken country, with a fine range of mountains standing as a barrier against the north-west breezes, Wan has many features of situation and scenery which differ much from our preconceived notions of China, as derived from geographies; where it is represented as one immense fertile plain, intersected in every direction by canals and rivers, wooded with mulberry and tea trees, in which golden-pheasants innumerable nestle, and under the shade of which fishing cormorants industriously pursue their avocations; where porcelain pagodas and high-arched bridges meet the eye at every turn, and waterwheels revolve through an old habit which they cannot shake off, though the river has long since been diverted from its course to aid in supplying some enormous canal at the other extremity of the empire; where the people are a nation of astronomers and star-gazers, living in such crowds that they require to construct floating islands and hanging gardens in order to supply the demands of the commissariat. These notions must certainly give way before China in 1861, as seen on the Yang-tsze; these phantoms of China must fade, if we would learn how this thoroughly utilitarian and not in the least degree star-gazing nation exists in a country the size of half of Europe, and holds sway over a region almost rivalling the southern continent of the New World.
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- Five Months on the Yang-TszeWith a Narrative of the Exploration of its Upper Waters and Notices of the Present Rebellions in China, pp. 162 - 180Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1862