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CHAPTER III. Tea-gatherers and their wages
Food of Chinese labourers
compared with the food of the same class in England Old city of
Tse-kee
Sheds and shops Market Mode of skinning frogs Temple on hill and
fine
scenery Lake near north gate Temples and priests My servant's
mode of
answering questions Chesnut-trees discovered Introduced to India
Chinese
tombs and ceremonies A widow comes to worship Beggars and coffins
Different
customs in different countries Reflections.
I MADE Ayuka's temple my head-quarters for
several
days after the events took place which I have related in the previous
chapter.
My time was now fully occupied in visiting all the tea-farms in the
neighbourhood,
and in getting information concerning the cultivation and manufacture
of tea.
It was the harvest-time for the principal crop of the season, and the
natives
were observed on every hill-side busily engaged in gathering the
leaves. These
tea-gatherers were generally seen in small groups consisting of from
eight to
twelve persons. One old man was usually at the head of each group, the
others
being women and children. Each had a small stool formed like the letter
T, but
broad of course at the top, for sitting on while gathering the leaves
on the
lower sides of the bushes. The foot of the stool being pointed, it was
easily
forced into the ground in order to render it steady, and as easily
drawn out
and carried to a different spot. When these tea-gatherers are hired
they are
not paid by the day, but by the quantity of leaves they bring in to
their
employers. In making inquiries on the point I found they were paid at
the rate
of four and five cash a catty, and that they were able to gather from
thirty to
forty catty a-day.1 In other words, each was able to gather
from
forty to fifty-three pounds of raw leaves per day, for which was
received from
6d. to 9d., or thereabouts. But it is only very expert
and
well-trained hands that can make such a sum as this; children and very
old
people make, of course, something considerably less. Wages of labourers
in the
tea districts of China range from 2d. to 3d. per day with
their
food, which is almost always furnished by the farmers, and which may
cost about
3d. or 4d. more, making the whole day's labour amount to 6d.
or 7d. The food of these people is of the simplest kind
namely, rice,
vegetables, and a small portion of animal food, such as fish or pork.
But the
poorest classes in China seem to understand the art of preparing their
food
much better than the same classes at home. With the simple substances I
have
named the Chinese labourer contrives to make a number of very savoury
dishes,
upon which he breakfasts or dines most sumptuously. In Scotland, in
former days
and I suppose it is much the same now the harvest labourer's
breakfast
consisted of porridge and milk, his dinner of bread and beer, and
porridge and
milk again for supper. A Chinaman would starve upon such food. Again,
if one
looks at our sailors making their dinner upon dry salt beef and
biscuit, the
contrast is equally marked. The dinner of the Chinese sailor is not a
whit more
expensive, but much more agreeable, healthy, and civilised. Chinese
tea-manufacturers whom I have been in the habit of taking to India
always
asserted they got sick when obliged to live on such food as is given to
our
sailors, and generally laid in a private stock of various little
articles with
which they were able to make up a dinner of a very different kind. Having completed my investigations in this
part of
the country for the present, I bade adieu to my kind friends in Ayuka's
temple,
and returned to Ningpo on my way to the old city of Tse-kee. This is a
very
ancient place, about ten or twelve miles north-west from Ningpo, and
near one
of the branches of the river which flows past that town. Leaving Ningpo
with
the first of the flood-tide in the evening, and going on all night, I
found
myself close by the walls of Tse-kee at daylight next morning. As it
was
necessary for me to remain in this neighbourhood for some time, I
looked out
for a pleasant spot for head-quarters. Taking my boat into the canal or
moat
which has been made round a portion of the city, I found such a place
as I
wanted near the north gate; and as my boat was comfortable enough,
though
small, I determined to live in it, instead of going to a temple or an
inn.
Leaving my servants to prepare my breakfast and to get their own, I
sauntered
into the city. I found it a very ancient place, and famous as being the
residence
of many of the wealthiest persons in this part of China. Its walls
seemed to be
about three miles in circumference, but they enclosed numerous fields
and
gardens as well as houses. The dwellings of the rich were mostly
surrounded
with high walls, and were not visible from the streets. This is a
common mode
of building, as it secures the privacy of the female members of the
family in a
country like China, where it is the custom to keep them much secluded. I had entered the city by the north gate,
and in a
few minutes had a crowd of people at my heels. "Where had I come
from?" "where was I going to?" and "what was I wanting to
buy?" were questions which were put on all sides. The crowd appeared to
be
perfectly good-humoured, and treated me with the greatest deference and
respect. Some ran on before me, and seemed to take a great deal of
pleasure in
spreading the information of my arrival. The consequence was, that
every door
and window was full of people anxious to get a look at the foreigner.
It was
perfectly useless to remonstrate or to get angry, so I was all smiles
and took
everything in good part. Near the centre of the city, and in one of the
principal streets, I found a most excellent market. For fully half a
mile this
street was literally crowded with articles of food. Fish, pork, fowls,
ducks,
vegetables of many kinds, and the fruits of the season, lined its
sides.
Mushrooms were abundant, and excellent, as I afterwards proved by
having some
cooked. Frogs seemed much in demand. They are brought to market in tubs
and
baskets, and the vender employs himself in skinning them as he sits
making
sales. He is extremely expert at this part of his business. He takes up
the
frog in his left hand, and with a knife which he holds in his right
chops off the
fore part of its head. The skin is then drawn back over the body and
down to
the feet, which are chopped off and thrown away. The poor frog, still
alive,
but headless, skinless, and without feet, is then thrown into another
tub, and
the operation is repeated on the rest in the same way. Every now and
then the
artist lays down his knife, and takes up his scales to weigh these
animals for
his customers and make his sales. Everything in this civilised country,
whether
it be gold or silver, geese or frogs, is sold by weight.
Raw tea-leaves that is, just as they had
been
plucked from the bushes, and unmanufactured, were also exposed for sale
in this
market. They were sold at from three farthings to five farthings a
pound; and
as it takes about four pounds of raw leaves to make one pound of tea,
it
follows that the price paid was at the rate of threepence to fivepence
a pound,
but to this must be added the expense of manipulation. In this manner
the
inhabitants of large towns in China, who have no tea-farms of their
own, can
buy the raw leaves in the market, and manufacture the beverage for
themselves
and in their own way. The streets in the city of Tse-kee are
narrow, and
the shops for the most part have a mean appearance. The wealthy
inhabitants,
with whom the city abounds, appear to get their supplies of everything
except
food from the large cities, such as Ningpo and Hangchow. But food must
be
supplied on the spot, and hence the necessity for such a fine market as
I have
noticed. It is here as in western countries the market takes place in
the
morning. In the afternoon this busy street was almost deserted: the
fishmonger
had sold his fish, the butcher his pork; and all that band of
rosy-cheeked
countrymen who in the morning had been vending their loads of
vegetables and
fruits had returned to their homes with strings of cash, the proceeds
of their
sales, in their baskets or slung over their shoulders.
The scenery round the ancient city of
Tse-kee is of
the most romantic and beautiful description. The city stands on a flat
plain,
and is surrounded by hills varying in height from two or three hundred
to one
thousand feet above the level of the plain. Some are crowned with
temples
having a most imposing appearance in the distance, and from which the
most charming
views can be obtained. One of these, and the finest, is near the east
gate of
the city. It is approached by an avenue of pine-trees, and a broad
flight of
stone steps leads from the bottom of the hill to its summit, where the
temple
stands. From the higher rooms of this temple the visitor sees a wide
extent of
level country, exceedingly fertile and well watered. His eye follows
the
windings of the Ningpo river for many miles in a westerly direction,
until it
is lost amongst the distant hills. Canals, many of which are broad and
deep,
intersect the country in all directions, and afford not only a
plentiful supply
of water for the irrigation of the rice-crops, but bear on their
surface
thousands of boats of many different sizes, all hurrying to and fro and
carrying on the commerce of the country. It is a pretty sight to see
the
numerous white or brown sails over the land, bending to the breeze, or
flapping
about in a calm sunny morning. Looking south and eastward, the eye
rests upon
the wide plain of Ningpo, and in a clear day the high mountains which
bound its
furthest sides are distinctly visible. It is difficult, where all is so
beautiful, to fix
upon the prettiest spot, but that near the north gate, where my boat
lay,
appeared to me the most lovely of all. Between the north gate and the
hills
there is a pretty lake, which is crossed by a causeway with arches and
alcoves.
This causeway led from the city to a range of temples situated at the
base of
the bills. A side view of this causeway, with its round-arched bridge
and
alcove, the smooth water of the lake, the rich vegetation on its banks,
and the
temples at the foot of the bills, would form a lovely picture worthy of
the
pencil of our first European artists. I have looked on this scene in
early morning
when the mist was rising from the water, at noon on a summer's day when
the
water appeared to have been melted with the fierceness of the sun's
rays, and
again at "dewy eve" when all was still, and a more fairy-like spot
it would be most difficult to find. I found the temple beyond the lake a large
building,
or rather a series of buildings, in tolerably good repair. Here were a
number
of priests and their attendants, and no lack of idols of great size.
But these
I have already noticed in Ayuka's temple, and shall not say anything
further
concerning them here. The high-priest received me with great kindness,
and made
me sit down in the seat of honour by his side. A little boy, who was
destined
one day to become a priest himself, but who was now attending on his
superior,
was ordered to set tea before us, which he did in the usual style. Our
conversation turned, as it frequently did, upon the state of the
country and
the rebellion. The old man asked me very earnestly as to what I had
heard of
the Nanking rebels, and whether I thought they would come to Hang-chow
and
Ningpo. I told him he knew quite as much of their proceedings and
intentions as
I did, and that with my present knowledge it was impossible to form an
opinion
on the matter. He said, if they did come to either of the places named,
they
would not visit Tse-kee an opinion which I ventured to dispute. I
then asked
him if he had heard of the massacre of the Buddhist priests on Silver
Island,
near Ching-keang-foo, the news of which had reached me a short time
before.
This massacre was reported by some to be the results of intense
Christian
feeling and hatred of idolatry. The old man had heard of this, but
would not
allow of the interpretation which was generally put upon the matter. He
told me
and he was probably correct that the priests bad been trying to
save the
lives of some mandarins who had taken shelter in their temples, and
that for
this sin, and not for idolatry, they were put to death. The subject was
evidently one of deep interest to all the Buddhist priesthood, a
considerable
number of whom now surrounded us as this conversation was going on. While engaged in this manner with the
high-priest the
room had gradually become more and more crowded with the inferior
priests, with
worshippers who happened to be at the temple, and with the servants and
labourers who were attached to it. It is a curious fact that, although
the
Chinese as a nation have a high respect for their superiors, they do
not show
it in the same manner as we do. Hence it is not unusual for strangers
and
servants to crowd into a room where visitors are being received and
entertained, and even to take part in the conversation. My own servant
Tung-a
was amongst the crowd, and was quite a lion for the time. Hundreds of
questions
were put to him as to my country, the time I had resided in China, and
the
objects I had in view in visiting the "central flowery land." He did
not fail to answer the whole in a most satisfactory manner to himself
and his
audience, but whether his answers were to be depended upon or not was
quite
another matter, nor did he seem to care much so long as his
interrogators were
satisfied. Being engaged during my spare hours in making a collection
of the
insects of this part of China, Tung-a carried in his hand, in addition
to a
small cork-lined box and insect-net, a nice-looking bottle with a glass
stopper. This was an object of much interest to the priests and their
attendants, and was handed about from one to another all over the room.
Before
taking my leave I presented this bottle to the high-priest, who was
quite
charmed with my liberality, and almost went down on his knees to thank
me.
Oftentimes afterwards I renewed my visit to the old man, particularly
during
the heat of the day, when I was glad to seek shelter from the burning
rays of
the sun, and always found him kind and obliging. In the autumn of this
year I
received from him some valuable seeds which are now vegetating both in
England
and India. The lower sides of all the hills round
this old city
are covered with trees, and have a very pretty appearance. The Chinese
pine (Pinus
sinensis), which is grouped about in all directions, attains to a
great
size; several kinds of oak, both evergreen and deciduous, are also
common; but
perhaps the most striking of all is the camphor-tree, which with its
gnarled
and angular branches is quite the monarch of the woods. Amongst these
woods I
met with the chesnut for the first time in China. This discovery was of
great
importance, as I was most anxious to introduce this to the Himalayan
mountains
in India. Many attempts bad been made to introduce it from Europe, but
they had
not succeeded. The seeds of such trees as oaks, chesnuts, tea, &c.,
retain
their vitality for a very short time after they are gathered if they
are not
sown and allowed to vegetate. It is therefore useless to attempt to
send these
seeds in dry paper parcels or in hermetically sealed bottles from
Europe to the
north of India. The chesnuts which I had met with in the markets Of
China,
although excellent for the dessert, were generally too old for
vegetating; but
now, when I had discovered the locality where they grew, there was no
longer
any difficulty in procuring them quite fresh. There are two species
cultivated
on these hills. One is somewhat like the Spanish, and, although
probably a
different variety, it produces fruit quite equal in quality, if not
superior,
to the Spanish chesnut. The other is a delicious little kind, bearing
fruit
about the size and form of our common hazel-nut. Large quantities of
both kinds
were procured in the autumn of this year, sown in Ward's cases, and
sent on to
India. Part were sent to Government and part to the Agricultural and
Horticultural Society. They vegetated freely during the voyage, and
many
hundreds of nice healthy young plants reached India in the most perfect
condition. The Chesnut may now be considered naturalized on the hills
of India,
and in a few years will no doubt make its appearance in the markets
amongst
other fruits. The "Yang-mae," a species of Myrica,
was also met with on these hill-sides, and some grafted plants secured
for
India. These are now luxuriating in the north-west provinces. This fine
fruit
will no doubt succeed admirably in the Himalaya, for already there is a
variety
far inferior indeed to the Chinese kind, but yet a plant requiring
the same
soil and temperature common on these hills. It is the Kaiphul
of the
hill-tribes of India. The most beautiful spots on these
hill-sides are
chosen for the tombs of the dead, which are scattered about everywhere.
The
sombre pine, the juniper, the arbor-vitζ, and the cypress are generally
planted
round the graves. As common as these, and equally ornamental, is the Photinia
glabra, a noble evergreen which in the winter becomes covered with
bunches
of red berries. The weeping-willow is also sometimes used, and has a
very
pretty effect, particularly when one is planted on each side of the
tomb. These
trees are planted in a half-circle round the grave, leaving the front
open.
Within this half-circle is the tomb itself, the most common kind being
covered
with a large mound of earth faced with stone in front, on which the
name and
age of the deceased are cut and painted. In front of this again is a
stone
pavement with smooth stone seats, whether destined for the visitor or
for the
spirit of the departed I cannot tell. Sometimes I met with tombs of the
most
elaborate workmanship, and constructed in many different ways. Each
told its
tale of wealth or poverty; some must have cost very large sums, while
others
consisted of the coffin laid upon the surface of the ground, and
thatched with
a little straw. It is a pretty sight, and yet a painful one too, to see
the
relations of the dead visiting the tombs of their ancestors, which they
do at
stated periods, for the purpose of burning sycee paper and incense, and
chanting prayers to the gods or spirits of the departed. Sometimes a
mother may
be seen with her children, the youngest probably still an infant in her
arms,
assembled in front of the grave of the husband and father. The widow is
wailing
and lamenting her bereavement, and the poor little ones look on so
seriously,
while every now and then they prostrate themselves before the grave.
Or, it may
be, it is the aged who are paying the same respect to the last
resting-place of
those who had been taken away in early life, and to whom they had
looked
forward as the stay and prop of their declining years. Or again, a
solitary
individual might be seen performing the same rites young,
middle-aged, or
old, as the case might be which suggested the idea that he was poor
and
friendless, the last of his race. It has been asserted that there is
little
genuine feeling in all this, that it is a custom which must be
observed, and
that it would be just as well if such a custom did not exist. I
believe,
however, there is as much genuine sorrow amongst the Chinese for the
loss of
relatives as there is amongst ourselves; and if we consider the way
they dote
upon their children, and the reverence and love they have for aged
parents, we
can come to no other conclusion. That in many instances all is mere
show and
required by custom, I have no doubt. On one occasion, as I was
wandering
amongst these hills, a chair passed me containing a very beautiful lady
dressed
in the gayest satin. I caught a slight glimpse of her countenance as
she
passed, and was so much struck with her beauty that I instantly stood
still and
looked after the chair. It immediately turned off the little hill-road
in the
direction of a tomb that had been lately made, where it was set down by
the
bearers. Following this chair were two female servants and a coolie
with a box
of clothes, a basket of provisions, and some sycee paper and incense.
The lady,
on stepping out of the chair, commenced robing herself in deep mourning
by
putting on a gown of sackcloth over her gay dress, but on seeing I was
looking
on she stopped immediately and threw the gown to her attendants, with
whom she
was laughing and chatting away, as if grief and she were perfect
strangers to each
other. Anxious as I was to witness her proceedings, I felt it was wrong
and
indelicate in me to remain in my present position, so I walked onwards
until a
small hedge and clump of bamboos hid the party from my view. I then
turned into
the plantation, and selected a spot where through an opening in the
foliage I
could see all without being seen myself. The handsome widow, for such
she
apparently was, had again put on her sackcloth robe, her women were
standing by
her side, and the wailing commenced in the most business-like manner.
This
continued for nearly half an hour, while at the same time incense was
burned,
and various tawdry-looking strips of paper were hung about the grave.
At last
the ceremony was finished, the coarse sackcloth was consigned to the
coolie,
and the lady, all gay as before, and with but little traces of grief,
stepped
into her chair and was carried away. For many weeks after these visits to the
tombs
numerous long strips of gay-coloured paper are seen hanging about the
graves.
In my researches amongst these hills I was much struck with one thing,
which I
must mention here, and from which all may learn a useful lesson. Here
and
there, amongst those tombs which had been cleaned and repaired, and
which bore
all the marks of having been recently visited by relatives, were some
from
which no friendly hand had cleared away the weeds. Ages ago they had
been built
without regard to expense, and for many years they had been, no doubt,
visited
by loving friends, who had burned incense upon them, and strewed them.
with
wild flowers and paper streamers. But now they were going fast to
decay; they
were not visited or repaired at the usual and stated times; and their
tenants
had been long since forgotten. And as it had been with these, so it
would be
with the others which were now so carefully attended to. A few years
more, and
their tenants too would be forgotten, however rich or however much
loved. When a wealthy Chinese dies at a distance
from his
home, his body is brought back to his native place by his relations in
order
that he may sleep with his fathers. In front of an old temple near
Tse-kee I
observed a number of coffins lying under the verandah, and on inquiry
found
that they had all been brought from some distance, and had been laid
down there
until a lucky spot could be found out for their final resting-place.
Some had
apparently lain here for a long period of time. Under the same
verandah, and
amongst these coffins, a colony of gipsy beggars had taken up their
quarters,
which to me had a curious appearance. However, these people seemed to
have no
supernatural fears of any kind, and were on such friendly terms with
their dead
companions, that the tops of the huge coffins were used as supports for
their
mosquito curtains. "What a traveller's story! Beggars with mosquito
curtains, the living sleeping with the dead!" Even so, gentle reader;
we
are now in China. In a country like England we pride
ourselves upon our
civilization and good taste. But let us fancy a Chinese traveller
paying us a
visit and writing a description of our grave-yards. How different would
his
pictures be from those which I have now given, and how horrified would
he be
with our barbarism and want of taste! "The English," he would say,
"do not respect their dead; they crowd them into churchyards in densely
populated towns, and plant no pine-trees or wild flowers about their
graves. In
many instances they even dig them up before they are fully decomposed,
in order
to make room for others! Their children look upon such places with
dread, and
will not pass them willingly after nightfall." Such would be his
reflections, or at least would have been a few years ago. Let us hope
that in a
very short period the good sense of the people and the energy of
Government
will do away with such relics of barbarism. But what does it matter, says some
stern moralist,
where one is buried whether in the deep sea, the crowded city, or
amid the
beauties of nature on the hill-side? I do not argue the point, but my
taste
leads me to prefer the customs of the Chinese, where one can sleep in
peace
after being buried, where one's grave is looked upon with love and
affection,
and not with fear; nor would I object to the spot being visited by
loving
children, who come to shed a few heartfelt tears, and plant a few wild
flowers
on the tomb of him they loved so fondly. 1 100
cash are about 4½ d. of our money; a catty is equal to 1½ lb. |