<h2> <SPAN name="chinaman" id="chinaman"></SPAN>JOHN CHINAMAN IN NEW YORK </h2>
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<p>As I passed along by one of those monster American tea stores in New York,
I found a Chinaman sitting before it acting in the capacity of a sign.
Everybody that passed by gave him a steady stare as long as their heads
would twist over their shoulders without dislocating their necks, and a
group had stopped to stare deliberately.</p>
<p>Is it not a shame that we, who prate so much about civilization and
humanity, are content to degrade a fellow-being to such an office as this?
Is it not time for reflection when we find ourselves willing to see in
such a being matter for frivolous curiosity instead of regret and grave
reflection? Here was a poor creature whom hard fortune had exiled from his
natural home beyond the seas, and whose troubles ought to have touched
these idle strangers that thronged about him; but did it? Apparently not.
Men calling themselves the superior race, the race of culture and of
gentle blood, scanned his quaint Chinese hat, with peaked roof and ball on
top, and his long queue dangling down his back; his short silken blouse,
curiously frogged and figured (and, like the rest of his raiment, rusty,
dilapidated, and awkwardly put on); his blue cotton, tight-legged pants,
tied close around the ankles; and his clumsy blunt-toed shoes with thick
cork soles; and having so scanned him from head to foot, cracked some
unseemly joke about his outlandish attire or his melancholy face, and
passed on. In my heart I pitied the friendless Mongol. I wondered what was
passing behind his sad face, and what distant scene his vacant eye was
dreaming of. Were his thoughts with his heart, ten thousand miles away,
beyond the billowy wastes of the Pacific? among the ricefields and the
plumy palms of China? under the shadows of remembered mountain peaks, or
in groves of bloomy shrubs and strange forest trees unknown to climes like
ours? And now and then, rippling among his visions and his dreams, did he
hear familiar laughter and half-forgotten voices, and did he catch fitful
glimpses of the friendly faces of a bygone time? A cruel fate it is, I
said, that is befallen this bronzed wanderer. In order that the group of
idlers might be touched at least by the words of the poor fellow, since
the appeal of his pauper dress and his dreary exile was lost upon them, I
touched him on the shoulder and said:</p>
<p>"Cheer up—don't be downhearted. It is not America that treats you in
this way, it is merely one citizen, whose greed of gain has eaten the
humanity out of his heart. America has a broader hospitality for the
exiled and oppressed. America and Americans are always ready to help the
unfortunate. Money shall be raised—you shall go back to China—you
shall see your friends again. What wages do they pay you here?"</p>
<p>"Divil a cint but four dollars a week and find meself; but it's aisy,
barrin' the troublesome furrin clothes that's so expinsive."</p>
<p>The exile remains at his post. The New York tea merchants who need
picturesque signs are not likely to run out of Chinamen.</p>
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