<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
<p class="smaller">The Founder of the Ch'ing dynasty—A broken-hearted
widower—The Louis XIV. of China—The Will of Kang-Hy—Young-t-Ching
appointed his successor—The character of
the new Emperor—Mission of Lord Macartney—He refuses
to perform the Ko-too, or nine prostrations;—Interview with
Young-t-Ching—Results of the Mission to England—Accession
of Kien-Long—He resolves to abdicate when he has
reigned sixty years—Accession of Taou-Kwang—The
beginning of the end—An adopted brother—War against
China declared by England—The Pekin Treaty—Prince
Hassan goes to visit Queen Victoria—The Regents and
Tung-Che—Foreign Ministers compel the young Emperor
to receive them.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have already, in telling the story of missionary
effort in China, referred to the various Emperors
of the reigning dynasty who occupied the throne
in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, but a
few further details will be interesting, throwing as
they do a light upon the present state of politics
in China, where the Empire is tottering to its fall;
menaced by invaders, who, though they come
preaching peace, will eventually change the country
far more completely than did the fire and sword
of the Tartar hordes.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The founder of the Ch'ing dynasty died at the
early age of twenty-four, of grief, it is said, for the
death of a favourite wife, whom he had fallen in
love with during her husband's life, and taken to
his palace in defiance of every law, human and
divine. Certain historians relate, that to pick a
quarrel with the rightful spouse of the object of
his passion, he gave him a box on the ears which
caused him to die of shame. However that may
be, the Empress died a few days later; and Shun
Che was so distraught with grief that he would
have committed suicide but for the restraint put
upon him by the eunuchs of his court. According
to the revolting custom then still in vogue, he had
thirty men strangled on the tomb of the dead
Empress to attend her in the other world. He
then shaved his head and made pilgrimages from
one pagoda to another, bewailing his many sins,
especially that of having loved his lost one with
too great a love, and pleading for forgiveness.
This penance over, he went back to his palace at
Pekin. But, says the chronicler, a little time afterwards
he called for his Imperial mantle, and
having named his son, Kang-Hy, then only eight
years old, his successor, he wrapt himself in it
and expired with the words, "I go to join my
ancestors."</p>
<div class="sidenote">A JUST RULER</div>
<p>Once more a boy-emperor was raised to the
Imperial throne; but that boy was no ordinary
child, and grew up to be one of the greatest
monarchs who ever ruled the Celestial Empire.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</SPAN></span>
During his minority he was under the care of
four wise ministers, who, except for their cruelty
to the Christians, performed their difficult task
with skill and moderation. One of the very first
acts of the young monarch, when he took the reins
of government with his own hands, was to rescind
the measures against the Christians, placing their
religion on exactly the same standing as Buddhism,
and consulting the Jesuit fathers at every turn.
Many are the touching stories told of the way in
which Kang-Hy won all hearts, and some of them
read as if they had been culled from the Old
Testament. Take, for instance, the tale of the old
man, whom the Emperor in one of his royal
progresses found weeping by the wayside. Approaching
him, Kang-Hy asked the cause of his
grief: "My lord," was the reply, "my only son,
who was the joy of my life, has been taken from
me to serve the governor of the province, and
I have no one to comfort me in my old age, or
to mourn over my tomb." The Emperor went
straight to the Governor's palace, accompanied by
the complainant; and when the oppressor could
not deny the charge, Kang-Hy ordered him to be
beheaded. Then turning to the suppliant the
royal avenger thus addressed him: "To make
amends to you for the injury you have sustained,
I appoint you Governor in the room of him who
has proved himself so unworthy of that office."</p>
<p>Missionaries to China were in the habit of calling
Kang-Hy the Louis XIV. of China. The
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</SPAN></span>
contemporary of the <i>grand monarque</i> of France,
there was really something in his long and
brilliant reign not unlike that of the king who
acquired an ascendency over his subjects resembling
that of an Asiatic autocrat. He knew, as
Louis did, how to turn everything to account for
the glory of his kingdom, and before his death
in 1792 he had so consolidated his power, that
but for the weakness of his successors China might
still rank as a leader of the Orient. In his will,
a quotation from which is given below, he proves
alike his literary ability, his care for the best
interests of his people, and the exalted view he
took of his own duties:</p>
<div class="sidenote">PROCLAMATION OF KANG-HY</div>
<p>"I, the Emperor," he says, "who honour Heaven,
and am charged with the government of the country,
I issue this edict, and I assert that amongst the
Emperors who have governed the Universe there
has not been one who has looked upon the doing
reverence to Heaven and imitating his ancestors as
essential duties. The true manner to venerate
Heaven is to treat those who are far away with
goodness, and to advance those who are near
according to their merit. This is to procure for
the people rest and abundance; it is to identify
one's own well-being with that of the Universe;
it is to preserve the State from dangers before
those dangers occur, and to foresee with wisdom
the disorders which might occur.</p>
<p>"The princes who work on this plan from early
morning till evening, and are even thinking (of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</SPAN></span>
their subjects) during their sleep, who are ceaselessly
forming designs, the effects of which will
be enduring and of wide influence for the public
good, these princes, I say, are not far from the
accomplishment of their duties.</p>
<p>"I, Emperor, who am now seventy years old,
and have reigned for sixty of them, I owe
all my blessings to the invisible aid of Heaven
and earth, to that of my ancestors, and to that of
the God who presides over the Empire ... not to
my own feeble reason. According to history, more
than four thousand three hundred and fifty years
have elapsed since the reign of Hwang-Ti, and
during that great number of centuries there have
been three hundred and one Emperors, a few of
whom only have reigned as long as they might
have done.</p>
<p>"After my elevation to the throne, when I
reached the twentieth year of my reign, I did not
dare to count on seeing the thirtieth, and arrived
at the thirtieth, I did not dare look forward to
the fortieth, yet now find myself in the sixtieth.
Happiness is said to consist in five things: long life,
wealth, tranquillity, love of virtue, and a peaceful
end. The last-named takes the highest rank
amongst these advantages, no doubt, because it
is so difficult to secure it. The age I now am
proves that I have lived a long time; as for my
wealth, I have owned all that is in the four seas.
I am a father, and have one hundred and fifty
sons and grandsons.... I have probably even
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</SPAN></span>
more daughters.... I leave the Empire in peace
... so that the happiness I enjoy may well be
called great.... If no accident befalls me, I shall
die content.</p>
<p>"I have one more reflection to make. Although
I cannot claim that since I have been on the
throne I have changed all evil customs and reformed
the manners of all my people; although
I have not succeeded in securing abundance for
every family and the necessaries of life to every
individual, so that I cannot in these respects be
compared to the wise emperors of the first three
dynasties, I can assert that during my long reign
I have had no other aim than to preserve peace
for the whole Empire, to make my people content,
each one in his own sphere and profession; it is
to this I have! devoted assiduous care with incredible
ardour and ceaseless toil, which toil has
done much to exhaust the strength alike of my
body and of my spirit. Amongst my predecessors
there were some who reigned but a short time, and
historians turn this to account to censure them,
attributing their premature death to inordinate
love of wine and women.... This is quite a
regular rule, and they make a merit of raking up
stories against accomplished princes who were
really the least reprehensible of men."</p>
<p>Kang-Hy then goes on to make an elaborate
justification of his predecessors, claiming that their
days were shortened by hard work and devotion
to duty; he singles out two or three of his own
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</SPAN></span>
ancestors for special praise, and wanders, as most
royal and imperial authors do, into numerous side-issues
before he returns to the subject of his own
life.</p>
<div class="sidenote">A NAÏVE EULOGY</div>
<p>"I, Emperor," he goes on to say, "applied
myself to the study of wisdom from infancy, and
have acquired a knowledge of ancient and modern
science." He adds that when in his full vigour,
he could shoot arrows some thirteen cubits long
from bows of huge span; that he knew all about
the handling of weapons, and had often appeared
at the head of his armies in person. He boasts,
moreover, that throughout his whole life he had
never put any one to death without cause; he had
also put down several revolts, and every enterprise
in which he had engaged had been conducted in
the most successful way by his genius alone.</p>
<p>After thus as it were pronouncing his own
funeral oration, he proceeds to appoint his successor
in the following terms:</p>
<p>"Young-t-Ching, my fourth son, is a man of rare
and valuable character. He greatly resembles me,
and I have no doubt he will be capable of bearing
the burden of his great inheritance. I ordain that
after my death he shall ascend the throne and take
possession of the Imperial dignity. In conformity
with custom, mourning shall be worn for me for
twenty-seven days only. Let this edict be published
at Court and in all the provinces, that no
one may be ignorant of its contents."</p>
<p>The author of this naïve eulogy of his own
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</SPAN></span>
virtues died in 1722, having caught a chill whilst
hunting a leopard beyond the Great Wall. As
he would himself have wished, his last illness was
short; he would have said that his end was peace,
and that he had achieved the most difficult of the
five things which make up human happiness.</p>
<div class="fig_center" style="width: 308px;"><SPAN name="Fig_54"></SPAN><br/>
<ANTIMG src="images/fig54.png" width-obs="308" height-obs="399" alt="" />
<div class="fig_caption">FIG. 54.—PORTRAIT OF ONE OF THE CHINESE EMPERORS OF THE
CH'ING DYNASTY, PROBABLY KIEN-LONG.</div>
</div>
<div class="sidenote">FIRST ENGLISH EMBASSY</div>
<p>The reign of Young-t-Ching, who was duly installed
Emperor with all possible pomp after his
father's death, was not marked by any special
events, and but for his persecution of the Christians,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</SPAN></span>
the new monarch seems to have justified the high
opinion his predecessor had of him. He died in
1735, and was succeeded by his eldest son, Kien-Long,
during whose reign the Chinese Court was
visited for the first time by Englishmen, Lord
Macartney having been sent in 1792 at the head
of a mission to lay the grievances of English
merchants before the Emperor and demand redress.
This mission was of so much importance to the
future relations between the English Government
and the Celestial Empire, that some details are
given here.</p>
<p>The Embassy was received at Tien-tsin with
courtesy, but with no special honour, for in those
days none of the officials had any idea that a
messenger from a foreign court would come to
their country, except to bring tribute and do
homage to the Son of Heaven. On the yachts
and junks which took the party up the Pei-ho
river were displayed flags bearing the legend,
"Ambassadors bearing tribute from the country
of England." In his account of the expedition,
Sir George Staunton, who edited Lord Macartney's
journals, says: "The approach of the embassy
was an event of which the report spread rapidly
... crowds of men assembled on the banks ...
while the females, as shy as they were cautious,
looked through gates or peeped over walls to enjoy
the sight. A few indeed of the ancient dames
almost dipped their feet into the river to get a
nearer peep."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>It was at Zhehol, about fifty miles north of the
Great Wall, where the Emperor had a summer
palace, that he consented to receive the ambassador,
who was lodged, whilst waiting for the final arrangements
to be made, at Yuen-min-Yuen, about seven
miles from the capital. A serious hitch occurred
in the absolute refusal of Lord Macartney to perform
what is known as the ko-too, an act of
homage always exacted from a vassal by his liege
lord, consisting of nine prostrations at his feet.
To have yielded would have been to recognize
Kien-Long as the superior of the King of Great
Britain, and to Lord Macartney's firmness on this
occasion is due all the later success of his fellow-countrymen
in the Celestial Empire. Finding him
resolute, the President of the Board of Rites and
the other great mandarins who had waited upon
him, finally consented to a compromise, and the
English party, escorted by a guard of Tartars,
made their way to Zhehol, where, to quote the
words of the ambassador, he saw "King Solomon
in all his glory," being received by him in the
presence of all the princes of the Imperial family,
the great officers of State, the Mongol chiefs, etc.,
with all courtesy. "The hall of audience," we are
told, "was a magnificent tent in the park, supported
by gilded pillars, at the upper end of which was
placed a throne under a canopy raised several steps
from the ground.... The Emperor was carried
in a palanquin by sixteen bearers, his approach
announced by the sound of gongs and trumpets
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</SPAN></span>
... he was plainly dressed in a robe of brown
silk, with no ornaments but one large pearl in the
front of his black velvet cap."</p>
<p>The ambassador, who merely bent one knee in
presenting his credentials, was very graciously
greeted by the venerable monarch, and when
presents had been exchanged, etc., a sumptuous
meal was served to the accompaniment of a band
of music. The visitors passed a week at Zhehol,
and witnessed the festivities in honour of their
host's birthday; they were then politely informed
that it was time for them to go, and that an answer
would be sent to them at Canton to the letter from
their King. They were escorted to that sea-port
by land and river through the five chief provinces
of China, the journey occupying ten weeks, and
were greatly struck with the high cultivation of the
country and with its teeming population. The
promised answer from the Emperor was duly
received, and though it did not accede to all the
requests made in that of George III., much was
gained by the mission, for the trade with England
was placed on a far better footing than before.</p>
<div class="sidenote">A REMARKABLE VOW</div>
<p>On his accession to the throne, Kien-Long made
the remarkable vow "that should he be permitted
... to complete the sixtieth year of his reign, he
would show his gratitude to Heaven by resigning
the crown to his heir as an acknowledgment that
he had been favoured to the full extent of his
wishes." The year after Lord Macartney's visit
the allotted period was reached, and the Emperor
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</SPAN></span>
abdicated in favour of his youngest son, who took
the name of Kea-King, and was duly accepted
by the Celestials. Kien-Long retained the title of
Supreme Emperor until his death at the age of
eighty-eight, but he meddled no more in affairs
of State, though he continued to aid those who
were in distress, winning the name of the Father
of his people. He was especially good to the
poorer literati, and himself produced several books
of high excellence.</p>
<p>Kea-King was, alas! a very different ruler from
his father, who had chosen him out of all his
children on account of his supposed talent. He
had none of the dignity which had characterized
the other monarchs of the Manchu dynasty, and
chose his friends from amongst the lowest and
most depraved of his subjects, taking them with
him, it is said, even into the sacred precincts of
the Temples when he went to offer sacrifices as the
Son of Heaven. It was during the reign of this
unworthy scion of a noble house that Lord
Amherst was sent to Pekin on a mission similar
to that of Lord Macartney. He was not, however,
able to see the Emperor, and he and his companions
were very rudely treated by the Tartar
nobles. The English, on their return home, gave
a very far from flattering account of the so-called
Celestial court, where they said the whip was
largely in use to keep even the great dignitaries in
order. The Chinese were then, as they still are,
ruled by the whip and the bamboo, for, says a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</SPAN></span>
writer who knew the country well, "The viceroy
bamboos the mandarins, the mandarins bamboo
their inferior officers, and these ... bamboo the
common people; the husband bamboos the wife, the
father the son, even when the latter is of mature
age."</p>
<p>Before his death Kea-King, who lived to the
age of sixty-one, in spite of his excesses, in his turn
issued a will in the form of an edict, which contains
several interesting passages throwing considerable
light on the physical difficulties the authorities have
to contend with in the Celestial Empire, as well as
on the manners and customs of the people. In it
the dying monarch mourns over the devastations
caused by "China's sorrow," the Yellow River,
and enumerates the measures he had taken to
check its ravages. He pronounced, as was usual,
an eulogy on his own conduct, and appointed his
second son Taou-Kwang his successor.</p>
<div class="sidenote">'THE GLORY OF REASON'</div>
<p>The name of the new ruler signified the Glory of
Reason, and he ascended the throne in 1820. He
justified his father's choice by doing all in his
power to atone for the mischief done by the
weakness and vices of his predecessor, but the
chiefs of the unruly Tartar tribes had so got the
upper hand that they were beyond his control;
one insurrection followed another, and when after
making concession after concession, peace was at
last restored to the distracted country, a far more
formidable enemy had to be contended with from
without. The long series of petty quarrels between
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</SPAN></span>
the English and Celestials on questions of trade
culminated in the war already more than once
referred to, which lasted for many years, and
resulted in the final breaking through of Chinese
isolation, and the throwing open of five ports to
European trade.</p>
<p>It was the beginning of the end; the first
step towards that partition of China which is now
being so rapidly effected. Heart-broken at the
destruction of all his hopes, Taou-Kwang never
held his head up again after the signing of the
Treaty of Nanking in 1842. The death of his
adopted mother soon afterwards, it is said, hastened
his end, and he died in 1851 after a reign of
thirty years, during which he had known no peace
or comfort.</p>
<div class="fig_right" style="width: 264px;"><SPAN name="Fig_55"></SPAN><br/>
<ANTIMG src="images/fig55.png" width-obs="264" height-obs="383" alt="" />
<div class="fig_caption">FIG. 55.—ONE OF THE REGENTS DURING THE MINORITY
OF TUNG-CHE.</div>
</div>
<p>His fourth son, Yih-Choo, was chosen as his
successor, and he took the name of Hien-Fung,
signifying universal plenty, but the title turned out
a terrible misnomer, for the new Emperor inherited
his father's feeble sensual character, and he had
not long been on the throne before the Tai-Ping
rebellion broke out. The leader, an able man who
had been converted to Christianity, all but succeeded
in turning out the Manchu dynasty and inaugurating
a new one, with himself as Emperor, under
the title of Teen-Wang, or the Heavenly King.
To add to the difficulties of Hien-Fung, the
English declared war against him in 1857, on
account of an outrage on British sailors. The
French took part in the campaign, as the allies of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</SPAN></span>
the British, and after a struggle lasting three years
Pekin itself was entered. Peace was eventually
made, on terms very greatly to the advantage of
the English, and yet another blow was struck at
Chinese prestige by the Treaty of Pekin, signed
in 1860. The Tai-Ping
rebellion was
crushed with the
aid of Major Gordon,
who afterwards
became so
celebrated as the
Hero of Khartoum,
but the Celestials
lost more
than they gained,
and since then the
occupant of the
throne of the once
powerful Empire
has been a mere
cipher.</p>
<div class="sidenote">THE REGENTS AND TUNG-CHE</div>
<p>Hien-Fung died
in 1861, leaving his
enfeebled throne to his infant son, Tung-Che, then
only five years old. The government was carried
on for him by the so-called Regents, two of the late
Emperor's wives, one the legitimate Empress, the
other the secondary consort, who did their best to
consolidate his power, and seem to have ruled
with considerable wisdom and moderation.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</SPAN></span>
Rebellion was still, however, rife in the important
province of Yunnan, a Mohammedan prince, named
Suleiman, still defying the Imperial authority.
This leader even sent his son Hassan to England
in 1872, to try and obtain the recognition of his
father by Queen Victoria. Needless to add, he
was not successful, the British Government having
already espoused the cause of the young Emperor.</p>
<p>In 1893, the Regents resigned their delegated
authority into the hands of Tung-Che, now seventeen
years old, but he only reigned two years before
he died of small-pox, leaving no children, although
he is said to have had two legitimate wives and
sixty-nine concubines. His brief term of office
was marked by one special event full of significance
for foreigners: the various ministers accredited
to Pekin, but hitherto not received at the Palace,
succeeded in forcing the young monarch to see
them in the very stronghold of conservatism.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />