Book contents
- Frontmatter
- FOREWORD
- EDITORIAL NOTE
- Contents
- PART I TRADE AND POLITICS
- PART II TRAVEL
- THE ROMANCE OF CHINESE TRAVEL
- A NEW ROAD
- A CHINESE SULPHUR BATH
- THE NEW RAPID AND THE ARRIVAL OF THE FIRST STEAMER IN CHUNGKING
- THE DANGERS OF THE UPPER YANGTSE
- SZECHUAN REVISITED
- YACHTING IN THE CHUSAN ARCHIPELAGO
- RETROSPECT OF EVENTS IN CHINA
- PART III DRAMA AND LEGEND
- PART IV RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY
- INDEX
- Plate section
A CHINESE SULPHUR BATH
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 November 2010
- Frontmatter
- FOREWORD
- EDITORIAL NOTE
- Contents
- PART I TRADE AND POLITICS
- PART II TRAVEL
- THE ROMANCE OF CHINESE TRAVEL
- A NEW ROAD
- A CHINESE SULPHUR BATH
- THE NEW RAPID AND THE ARRIVAL OF THE FIRST STEAMER IN CHUNGKING
- THE DANGERS OF THE UPPER YANGTSE
- SZECHUAN REVISITED
- YACHTING IN THE CHUSAN ARCHIPELAGO
- RETROSPECT OF EVENTS IN CHINA
- PART III DRAMA AND LEGEND
- PART IV RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
Twenty miles south of Chungking the range of mountains, that shields the eastern face of Szechuan's commercial centre, harbours a sequestered valley, in the floor of which bubble up the hot springs called by the Chinese Wen-tang. Having never visited a Chinese inland watering-place, we thought that a Christmas visit to the Wen-tang would form a pleasant outing for the holidays, and accordingly, packing up our beds and a change of clothing, we set out one Christmas Eve to make the journey. Crossing the great river by the ferry to Hai-tan-chi, a long straggling village composed of a narrow, winding street of steep stone steps, the terminus of the Great Kwei-chow Road, we ascended a thousand feet to the pass of “Hoang-ko-Ya” (Banian Gap), so called from a group of magnificent Ficus infectoria shading the last few hundred yards of the winding stone staircase, that leads to the summit of the gap, a thousand feet above the river. And leaving on our left the beautifully-wooded peak of Lao-chun-tung, with its groups of halls and temples, rising in terraces one behind the other (commemorating some say the retreat in this spot of the philosopher Lao-tze, 600 B.C), we traversed the Straszendorf, the narrow, covered-in street of which forms the first halting-place for travellers bound from Chungking to the south.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Gleanings from Fifty Years in China , pp. 128 - 133Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1910