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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The 'Fan Kwae' at Canton Before Treaty Days
-1825-1844, by William C. Hunter
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: The 'Fan Kwae' at Canton Before Treaty Days 1825-1844
-
-Author: William C. Hunter
-
-Release Date: May 10, 2013 [EBook #42685]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 'FAN KWAE' AT CANTON ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Moti Ben-Ari and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net. (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Cover
- THE
- 'FAN KWAE'
- AT CANTON
- BEFORE TREATY DAYS
- 1825-1844
- BY AN OLD RESIDENT
-]
-
-
-
-
-THE
-'FAN KWAE' AT CANTON
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: HOUQUA.]
-
-
-
-
- THE
- 'FAN KWAE' AT CANTON
- BEFORE TREATY DAYS
- 1825-1844
-
- _BY_
- _AN OLD RESIDENT_
-
- LONDON
- KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH, & CO., 1 PATERNOSTER SQUARE
- 1882
-
-
-
-
- (_The rights of translation and of reproduction are reserved_)
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-During the days of Old Canton, the Middle Kingdom deigned to suffer the
-presence of a small number of 'foreign barbarians' on the banks of the
-Choo, or Pearl River. Their residences consisted of Factories built
-expressly for them, and originally destined one for each nationality.
-They were contiguous, except where separated by three streets of narrow
-dimensions which led from the suburbs of the city to the river which ran
-in front of them.
-
-No other port than that of Canton was open, nor had there been one since
-1745, and no foreigner was permitted on any pretext to enter the country
-or even the city outside of which he lived. The actual relations of the
-Chinese Government with Western nations consequent upon the treaties
-have caused such an entire change from the old mode of transacting
-business, as well as in the life then led by the few foreign residents
-at Canton, that a narration of the peculiar conditions of both (as they
-were) is now, as a Chinese official would say, placed 'on record.'
-
- PARIS: _March 31, 1882_.
-
-
-
-
-OLD CANTON.
-
-
-Even the departure of a vessel from New York for Canton in 1824 was a
-rare occurrence. Neither had it yet become fashionable to place the
-accent on the _last_ syllable in the name of that distant port. It would
-have appeared pedantic. Years after, only, did it become _ton_! As the
-ship cast off, the neighbouring wharves were crowded with lookers-on,
-national and private flags were run up to the mastheads of sea-going
-craft lying near.
-
-Cheers were heard as she glided into the river, and the ship 'Citizen,'
-Captain E. L. Keen, passed Sandy Hook in the evening of October 9 of the
-above year, bound to the Central Flowery Land. Friends and relations who
-had accompanied us thus far now took leave, and returned to the city in
-the pilot boat, steam tugs not having yet come into existence.
-
-The 'Citizen,' of 498 tons was one of seven ships[1] owned by Mr. Thomas
-H. Smith, of New York, who had been for many years engaged in the China
-trade. She had already made two voyages to Canton, and before leaving on
-her present one, had been newly coppered and 'thoroughly' overhauled,
-the better to withstand the westerly gales she was likely to encounter
-on her return passage off the Cape of Good Hope in the winter season.
-The crew consisted of thirty-two men and boys, with two officers. One
-of the latter, the second officer, as well as Captain Keen and ten
-or twelve of the men, had served on board privateers in our last war
-with Great Britain, while eight sailors had just returned from a three
-years' cruise in the Pacific, on board the U.S. 74 'Franklin,' Commodore
-Stewart. As usual at this time with vessels bound on Eastern voyages,
-the 'Citizen' was well provided with arms and ammunition--not only for
-the risk of pirates in the Atlantic, to whom her valuable cargo offered
-great temptation, but from possible mishaps while passing through the
-Eastern Straits.
-
-The cargo consisted of 350,000 Spanish dollars in kegs (no letters of
-credit on London bankers then existing), furs, lead, bar and scrap
-iron, and quicksilver. Passengers were not taken except under peculiar
-circumstances. I should have been the only one, in virtue of being
-destined for Mr. Smith's Factory at Canton, but just before sailing
-a Scotch gentleman presented himself at the office, and sought for a
-passage on board. The letters he bore were of a high character, among
-them being one from the celebrated Mr. Hume. His name was Fullerton,
-and his vocation that of surgeon in the English East India Company's
-service. He was allowed to go in the ship, and proved to be a most
-intelligent and amiable person.
-
-He had made several voyages to India and China, was full of anecdote
-and pleasant conversation, thereby relieving the weariness of the
-journey. The medical advice he most cheerfully gave rendered him a
-valuable addition to us, particularly on the occasion of the ship
-taking fire just before making Sandalwood Island, when one of the men
-was so seriously injured that his life was despaired of for a time; but
-although he managed to get back in the ship to New York, he never did
-a day's work after the accident. My fellow-passenger was only known
-on board as Doctor Smyth. He had come to New York expressly to get to
-China in an 'out of season' vessel, which ours was. We had no idea of
-the object he had in view, and he volunteered no information. There was,
-however, a little mystery in the matter.
-
-On our arrival at 'Lintin' we had scarcely anchored when my
-fellow-passenger took fast[2] boat and went to Macao. Soon after, we
-heard that he had there engaged two young Chinese small-footed women
-to accompany him to Calcutta, from whence he took passage with them
-for England as a 'speculation.' Subsequently we learnt that he was
-associated in the enterprise with Captain C----, also of the Honourable
-East India Company's service, on board whose vessel he had filled the
-office of surgeon. While in England, these 'Golden Lilies'[3] had the
-honour of a presentation to H.M. George IV. The enterprise, however, was
-not successful. It met with great opposition in certain quarters, and
-finally it ended by those young daughters of 'Han'[4] being returned to
-their own country.
-
-Some years after, in the winter of 1832, I last had the pleasure of
-shaking hands with my old shipmate at Canton. He was then surgeon of the
-Honourable Company's ship 'Lady Melville.'
-
-We had the misfortune to lose the ship's cook about five o'clock on
-the morning of the twenty-fifth day out, when he sprung into the sea.
-We had rushed on deck at the cry of the 'cook overboard,' and heard him
-shout as he passed the ship's quarter, 'You are all going to--(a most
-uncomfortable place of one syllable, beginning with the letter H), I'm
-going to Guadaloupe.' The ship was instantly brought to the wind, a man
-sent aloft to keep the poor fellow in sight, and a boat lowered in a
-trice, but suddenly he disappeared. We resumed our course. The crew had
-often been amused while about the galley to find its 'monarch' with an
-open Bible in one hand, and reading aloud from it, while prodding the
-salt junk in the boiler with a 'tormentor' in the other! They thought
-him a 'queer fellow,' particularly as he would caution them as to their
-wickedness in blaspheming, and their utter disregard of the future! We
-had heard through the officers of those erratic ways and strange conduct
-for a 'ship's cook,' but no one imagined that his head was turned.
-
-The next morning the chief officer discovered on our starboard beam a
-three-masted felucca, under small sail, standing as ourselves. It was
-nearly calm; presently the 'little stranger' steered for us, manned a
-certain number of sweeps, and seemed to have a great number of men on
-board. She was about 140 or 150 tons burthen. While examining her with
-our glasses, a sail was set on her jigger mast. There seemed to be a
-general wish that she would 'come on,' in spite of what was unmistakably
-a heavy swivel gun amidships. We showed our colours, to which no reply
-was made. At last we seemed to have fallen in with the traditional
-'long, low, black schooner,' metamorphosed into a felucca for the
-nonce. Suddenly the man at the wheel directed the attention of the mate
-to another sail just appearing on our larboard beam; she was steering
-to the southward, with a light air and under a crowd of sail. As she
-approached, she proved to be a schooner of the size of our revenue
-cutters. A barque also hove in sight, bringing up a stiff squall, with
-heavy rain. The felucca was next observed standing on the same course as
-ourselves. We trimmed sail to the wind, and hauled up to the eastward;
-presently, the wind increasing, the schooner crossed our bows, almost
-within hailing distance--a beautiful object to look at. She set all
-studding sails as she went by us, with a fore skysail, and that other
-unusual sail, now, perhaps, never heard of, and then not common, called
-a 'ring tail.'
-
-We crossed the equator on the thirty-first day out, with a good easterly
-wind, which hauled to the south-east and blew stiffly. A few days after
-we discovered a good-sized barque standing in for the coast of South
-America. She hoisted Brazilian colours. Her decks, forward of the
-mainmast, were crowded with negroes, while abaft we observed several
-dark-brown gentlemen, the captain, officers, and supercargoes, perhaps.
-She was evidently a slaver returning from the West Coast of Africa, with
-a full cargo of ebony. She crossed our bows within a few hundred yards,
-and on gaining our starboard side, our dark-brown friends raised their
-panamas, and waving them, wished us 'Bon voyage.' This vessel proved to
-be the last 'living thing' we saw for a period of nearly fifty days,
-except albatross, whales, and Mother Carey's chickens.
-
-Passing within a short distance of Tristan d'Acuna to correct our time,
-we then began the long tedious running down 'easting.' The weather was
-generally fine, with a bright sun; it was in the summer season. Our
-course between 43 deg. and 45 deg. south latitude. The sea ran 'mountains high,'
-the crest of each wave breaking in masses of sparkling diamonds, then
-losing itself in this wilderness of waters, an indescribably magnificent
-sight. The ship rolled gunwale under, receiving on board vast quantities
-of water, which swashed fore and aft and from side to side, at times two
-or three feet deep. Gradually this frightful chaos of warring winds and
-furious seas became a matter of course, while Captain Keen gave way to
-his delight in exclaiming, 'How splendidly she behaves,' or, 'She rides
-the seas like a bird;' and thus we went on, with little change, until we
-made the island of Amsterdam.
-
-We then steered direct for Sandalwood Island, across a pleasant
-south-east trade, with nothing material occurring until two days before
-sighting it.
-
-After the cook had left us so abruptly for Guadaloupe, it was arranged
-that the chief steward should fill his place for the cabin, while some
-of the crew offered their services for the forecastle and steerage; thus
-everything went on well in this respect. Before we now made the land,
-taking advantage of the fine weather and smooth sea which prevailed, all
-hands were occupied in caulking the bends and the deck, while, as had
-before happened, the leak decreased. The 'officer of the kitchen' for
-the day referred to was a fine young sailor about twenty-five years of
-age. Being in the galley in the afternoon, about seven bells, watching
-a pot of pitch being boiled, it overflowed, and the contents fell among
-the burning coals. Instead of immediately clapping on the lid, he seems
-to have lost his head, and in attempting to unship the pot from the
-hook it capsized, and in a moment everything was in a blaze, burning
-the poor fellow so fearfully that he had to be carried to his bunk. His
-lower limbs were almost peeled, and had it not been for the presence of
-the 'doctor,' he would inevitably have died.
-
-We passed close to the harbour and town of 'Dilly,' which displayed the
-Portuguese flag.
-
-Two years before, the ship 'Ontario,' Captain Depeyster, belonging to
-the owner of the 'Citizen,' called in at Dilly for supplies on her way
-to Canton, and was totally lost in coming out of the harbour.
-
-The loss of the 'Ontario' gave rise to the longest passage ever made
-between Whampoa and New York. Captain Depeyster left Dilly, with the
-treasure saved from the wreck of his ship, for Batavia, and there
-chartered the American brig 'Pocahontas,' to carry it to Canton. Mr.
-Smith's agent there rechartered her to take as much of the proceeds of
-the treasure as she could carry in teas and silks to New York, where she
-safely arrived in charge of the first officer, Mr. Teel (Captain Snow
-having died on the passage), close upon ten months from Whampoa.
-
-'A good full,' cries out the second mate to the man at the wheel as
-a breeze springs up. A first-rate 'old salt,' and as odd a fish, our
-second mate, as need be. I have been time and again amused with the
-yarns he has spun during his first watches. Of the war of 1812 he is
-full of anecdotes. He is always on the dolphin-striker when porpoises
-are around us, and usually strikes successfully. Anything not done in
-a sailor-like fashion excites him, and we hear him cry out, 'You'll
-never be a sailor. You were not shaped for a sailor. You were cut out
-to handle a musket, not a marlin-spike.' 'Sailors,' said he to me one
-evening, 'have their prejudices like others; they have always a run
-upon soldiers, more perhaps in joke than in earnest. A sailor will say,
-"Give me a messmate before a watchmate, a watchmate before a shipmate, a
-shipmate before a dog, a dog before a marine, a marine before a soldier,
-a soldier before--the devil." If you ask why a _marine_ in preference to
-a soldier, the answer is, because he knows the difference between the
-best bower anchor and--a "chaw of baccy!"'
-
-We now steered for Dampier Straits. Having left Booro astern, we were
-struck with a sudden and violent squall, resembling more a tornado.
-The rain poured down like a deluge, the rattling of the thunder and
-the vividness of the lightning were frightful. Our maintopsail-yard
-was snapped asunder in the slings, the fore and mizen topsails flew
-into ribbons; the jib disappeared from the bolt ropes. Each flash of
-lightning was succeeded by the darkness of Erebus, while in the midst of
-all, the loud voices of the officers and the replies of the men created
-a turmoil such as I had never witnessed.
-
-The squall was luckily of short duration; it came upon us during the
-dog watch, but so intelligently did all hands do their duty, that by
-midnight another maintopsail-yard was crossed, the sail bent, the other
-topsails and the jib replaced, and we were making good way with all sail
-set, 'low and aloft,' including royals and flying jib. The stars shone
-out with increased brilliancy, all things had returned to a condition
-of perfect quiet, so had one watch to their hammocks, and no sound fell
-upon the ear save the ripple of the water under the bows. We had noticed
-before, and this night particularly after the squall, a strong spicy
-odour, the air seemed 'breathing an aromatic redolence.'
-
-As we neared Pigeon Island, the vast and imposing one of New Guinea
-being to our right, numerous canoes came alongside. The appearance of
-their inmates was singularly repulsive; the wool on the heads of these
-Papuans was of so fertile a growth, that it reached a diameter of over
-two feet, while from the application of chunam, it becomes a dirty,
-uncertain red, hideous to behold. By means of baskets attached to
-ropes, we carried on a trade, giving in exchange for shells, plantains,
-papayas, stuffed birds of paradise, and ingeniously made baskets,
-everything in the shape of cast-off garments that we could muster. It
-was thought a mockery when I offered an old straw hat for a bird of
-paradise, but everything seemed fish that came to their net, and to
-my surprise the bucket returned with the coveted prize. On the return
-of the ship to New York I sent it home, and it proved a rare and most
-acceptable gift. We anchored near Pigeon Island during the night, and
-the next day entered the Pacific Ocean.
-
-We hove to close to the Pelew Islands, to allow a crowd of canoes to
-come alongside, that we might obtain further supplies of fruit, shells,
-and yams, and thereby get rid of the remainder of our old clothes. The
-natives were considered as unoffensive, but this was not justified by
-an attack made by them, just before we passed, on a schooner from Java
-to Lintin. Her deck was crowded with natives, who had been permitted to
-come on board, and while bartering, suddenly the crew was fallen upon
-and several killed, all who could taking to the rigging. Plundering
-then commenced. The 'boarders' were having it their own way, but had
-overlooked the cook, who had shut himself in his galley. Bolting one
-door, he suddenly commenced a liberal distribution of hot water on the
-assailants, who, being entirely naked, plunged overboard with astounding
-shrieks and yells. The men aloft quickly descended. Seizing handspikes,
-they were in time to cut off the retreat of many who had been inspecting
-the cabin lockers, the bodies of these were thrown overboard, a few
-musket shots hastened the departure of the canoes, and the schooner
-continued on her journey.
-
-Our course was north-westerly, the crew employed in putting the ship
-in order. After passing through the Bashees, one of the men being over
-the side, to reeve the lower studding sail tack, he tumbled overboard.
-The second officer, to whose watch he belonged, threw him a rope, which
-he _just_ caught and was soon hauled up on deck. 'You must have been
-asleep,' said Mr. Hughes, who then asked him if the water felt warm or
-cold. When the officer came in the cabin later, he exclaimed, 'That
-fellow wouldn't have fallen had he not been fast asleep; but it is lucky
-for him he "awoke in time" to get hold of the rope, or he would have
-gone down.' This is a specimen of what 'Jack' calls 'sojer's comfort.'
-They had what they called 'sailor's comfort' every Saturday afternoon in
-the middle watch. It consisted in overhauling their chests and bags, or
-mending their clothes, on the system, as they said, of putting a patch
-next to a patch, as being neighbourly, but never a patch upon a patch,
-as that was beggarly. Many of the men remembered, as boys, the wearing
-of 'pig tails,' and their being mutually dressed, preceded by the
-calling out in the 'foksle' of 'Tie for tie,' or, 'Tie me, I'll tie you,
-and damn all favour.'
-
-No happier crew were ever 'rocked upon the cradle of the deep' than
-the one of which the 'Citizen' was composed. This was the result of
-uniformly taut but considerate treatment, the best of food, good grog,
-and no _needless botheration_, while the utmost harmony prevailed
-between Captain Keen and his officers. On the return of the ship to
-Canton, on her second voyage after, in 1827, Captain Keen related the
-homeward passage of 1825, which was an unusually hard one. The ship was
-forty days from point Natal to the Cape, knocked about in the teeth
-of westerly gales and frightful seas, and referring to his crew he
-remarked, 'No better men ever manned a ship.'
-
-We made the coast of China at 5 A.M. on February 11, 1825. A pilot came
-on board off the Lema Islands, took us through the channel of the same
-name, having to starboard the then 'terra incognita,' 'Hong Kong,' and
-anchored the ship under the island of 'Lintin,' at 2 o'clock P.M., 125
-days from New York.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The island of 'Ling Ting,' or the 'Solitary Nail,' commonly called
-'Lin Tin,' was at this time the anchorage of the 'opium store ships,'
-and temporarily of vessels whose destination was Whampoa (with some
-exceptions). On the arrival of an American ship, she communicated with
-her agent at Canton by means of a 'fast boat,' meanwhile despatching
-another one to Macao for a pilot to take her inside the river. The
-_exceptions_ were the ships of the English East India Company, and
-country ships from India having no opium on board (those which had
-anchoring at Lintin to deliver it); these then took pilots off Macao and
-sailed directly to the 'inner anchorage,' as Whampoa was called. The
-Lintin anchorage was not, however, only an opium station. All vessels
-bound to Whampoa were loaded with general cargo, or with rice only, and
-were subject to what were called Cumsha and Measurement charges. These
-were very heavy in the case of the former, but moderate in the latter.
-It was therefore an object for a vessel entering the river with only
-part of a general cargo to fill up with any freight that might offer,
-and thus reduce the heavy charges referred to, or to send up what she
-had on board, if of moderate quantity, in another ship, then load with
-rice and go on to Whampoa, if she was to load with tea for her return
-voyage. It almost always happened that these arrangements could be made,
-as arrivals were continually taking place with rice cargoes or general
-cargoes.
-
-After a week's detention at Lintin, the 'Citizen' was directed to
-receive any river freight that might offer, and proceed to Whampoa.
-In passing the Bogue[5] Forts, the main topsail was backed while the
-pilot went on shore to exhibit his pass to the Mandarin, with whom he
-returned to the ship, ostensibly to verify description with fact; but
-it is unnecessary to say this had become a mere matter of form. After
-a glass of wine, and presenting the old gentleman with a few sheets of
-writing paper, which, I found out afterwards, were considered a great
-treat, I offered him a box of a then recent invention, viz., friction
-matches; they astonished him mightily, and he left us with numerous
-'Chin-chin's' and best wishes for 'good wind and good water,' equivalent
-to a quick passage. We anchored abreast of French Island on the 20th.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was in the year 1745 that Yung Ching, the third Emperor of the
-present dynasty, ordered all foreign trade to be confined to the port
-of Canton, universally known as Whampoa. Separated by a branch of the
-river from French Island stands Dane's Island. These were so named from
-the privilege that those nationalities originally enjoyed of occupying
-bankshalls or storehouses upon them, wherein to shelter the crews while
-smoking ship and overhauling after the desperately long passages they
-must have made from Europe. All vestiges of those buildings have long
-since disappeared, but numerous decaying tombstones, half buried beneath
-earth and weeds, still tell the tale. The regular tea season being over,
-we found few vessels at Whampoa, and these, as with the 'Citizen,' were
-designated, 'out of season ships.' The northern side of the anchorage
-is formed by the important island of Wang-Po; the river is named the
-Wang-Po, and the same is applied to the anchorage. The words mean the
-'Yellow Anchorage.' On the island is a large town of many thousand
-inhabitants, almost all of whom are directly or indirectly connected
-with the foreign shipping, as compradores, stevedores, blacksmiths, &c.
-
-The Choo, or Pearl River, commonly called the Canton River, presented a
-vastly different appearance on the 21st February, 1825, from what it did
-twenty years later. It was then crowded with native vessels, including
-those immense coasting junks which have now almost entirely disappeared.
-They then made voyages to the northern and southern ports of China, to
-the Celebes, Borneo and Java, and to Singapore, as well as to Manila.
-Long tiers of salt junks lined the shore of the island of Honam; these
-brought cargoes from Teenpak and places on the coast south-westward of
-Macao. They were owned by a corporation of salt merchants, who enjoyed
-a monopoly of the trade, and, to prevent smuggling, a special fleet of
-cruisers was organised by the local government. The penalties against
-a clandestine introduction of salt were as severe and more rigorously
-carried out than even against opium. The merchants were an influential
-body, as much considered as the Hong merchants, whom they rivalled in
-wealth. The number of cargo boats from the interior, of passenger boats,
-floating residences and up-country craft, with Government cruisers
-and flower boats, was prodigious. To these must be added sampans,[6]
-ferry boats plying to and from Honam, and quantities of barbers' boats,
-vendors of every description of food, of clothes, of toys, and what
-would be called household requirements if in shops on shore; besides
-boats of fortune-tellers and of theatrical performers--in short, imagine
-a city afloat, and it conveys a very correct idea of the incessant
-movement, the subdued noises, the life and gaiety of the river.
-
-But now, an additional interest was added to this floating scene, from
-its being the first days of the Chinese new year. The noise of gongs,
-as a compliment to the meeting of mutual acquaintances or when one boat
-or junk arrived or set sail, was startling; and finally, the red and
-gilt patches of paper, on which words or sentences were written in large
-black characters, appropriate to the opening of the new year, formed
-another conspicuous feature on every kind of craft. Ships' boats were
-usually furnished with paddles, which were always brought into use from
-below the Dutch Folly to the landing place in front of the factories.
-The oars of our boat being therefore replaced by them, with skill and
-patience, after two hours from Whampoa, we landed at 'Jackass Point,'
-so memorable in the days of old Canton. Crossing the Square, under
-the guidance of Captain Keen, we entered the Suy-Hong, and met with
-the kindest reception from Mr. Jacob Covert and Oliver H. Gordon, the
-special agents of Mr. Smith, and from the two younger members of the
-office, John H. Grosvenor and Thomas Bloodgood.
-
-Having been sent by Mr. Smith to Canton expressly to study the Chinese
-language preparatory to entering his office there, as the difficulties
-to be overcome in providing a teacher for me proved insuperable, Mr.
-Covert decided to send me at once to Singapore, where a college had
-been commenced in which foreign students could be received, and which
-might be ready for the purpose. I went, therefore, to the Straits in
-the Bombay ship 'Good Success,' Captain Poynton, and arrived at my
-destination in the month of April, after seventeen days' passage.
-I took letters to the Resident, Mr. Crawford, and others, and was
-consigned to Messrs. A. L. Johnston and Co. The college, however, had
-not only not been finished, but there was no prospect of its being. My
-friends, therefore, after taking information from Malacca, where the
-Anglo-Chinese College was in full operation, sent me there in a small
-native brig. We arrived after four days' passage from Singapore. During
-the two months that I passed at Singapore I was the guest of Mr. and
-Mrs. Christopher Read in their bungalow on the ascent of Government
-Hill. I shall never forget the parental care of my host and hostess.
-They soon caused me to forget that I was the youngest of strangers
-in, to me, a most strange land. To this day I recall their quiet and
-unaffected efforts to make me at home, and the drives they took me in
-their palkee gharrie. The novelty of everything interested me; it was as
-if I had landed on another planet. At that time the site occupied by the
-present town of Singapore was being cleared of its primitive jungle.
-
-The Anglo-Chinese College was in every way adapted for instruction, and
-I continued in it as a student of Chinese until the end of December
-1826. I then left in the ship 'Bengal Merchant' for Canton. She was
-loaded with cotton and opium, and not a fast sailer. Captain Brown was a
-most pleasant and agreeable gentleman, full of jokes and amusing stories
-with which to while away the time. We anchored at Singapore, which gave
-me an opportunity to see my old friends the Reads, Mr. A. L. Johnston,
-and to run up to Government House to make my salaam to Governor and
-Mrs. Crawford and their nieces, being received everywhere with a kindly
-welcome and the exclamation, 'How you have grown!' Continuing on our
-voyage, we passed through the Caramatta Passage, the Java Sea, Straits
-of Salayer, and into the Pacific by Dampier's Straits again. Between the
-Pelews and the Bashees we fell in with a typhoon _au grand complet_. At
-night the sea was as white as snow and of portentous height, coming
-upon us with the full uninterrupted sweep of the Pacific. We anchored at
-Lintin after a passage of sixty days.
-
-Mr. D. W. C. Olyphant had arrived in 1826 as the successor of Mr.
-Covert; Mr. Gordon had entered the office of Messrs. Russell and Co.,
-No. 2 Suy-Hong. The American Factory had been entirely built anew
-since 1825, and to it I betook myself. In addition to Mr. Olyphant
-were Charles N. Talbot and Charles W. King. Mr. Talbot was filling the
-office of U.S. Consul, and the flag was daily hoisted in the Square in
-front of the house. No. 1 Suy-Hong was occupied by James P. Sturgis,
-No. 3 by John R. Latimer, and No. 4 by John P. Cushing, T. T. Forbes,
-and John Hart. With Mr. Olyphant I called on, and made the acquaintance
-of, the Rev. Dr. Morrison, who had recently returned from England. Soon
-after I underwent a searching examination by him of the progress I had
-made in my Chinese studies at the Malacca College, and he pronounced
-it to be 'good.' There was no intention, however, that they should be
-discontinued, and in a few days I was placed under the tutorship of Le
-Seen-Sang. The tea season was over; all but one or two 'out of season'
-ships had sailed, but of those remaining was my old home and 'first
-cradle of the deep,' the 'Citizen,' and it was not long before Captain
-Keen and I again on board at Whampoa 'fought over the battles' of our
-voyage out together.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The year 1827 was a dull one so far as business was concerned, and I
-read Chinese with my teacher 'Le.' At length the tea season commenced
-in October. When the ships began to arrive, unpleasant news came
-also. My brother, of the office of Thomas H. Smith and Son (as it
-had become), wrote me that 'difficulties' existed in the affairs of
-the house. Finally it stopped payment and went into liquidation, but
-from causes not attributable to its China business. The Canton agency
-had therefore to be closed. Consulting with Mr. Olyphant in regard to
-myself, he advised me to return to New York, where only my position
-could be arranged. As usual at the time of which I write, certain
-indentures between employers and _employes_ were usually drawn up. They
-existed between Mr. Smith and myself. In them, he engaged to send me to
-China for the purpose of acquiring the Chinese language, and then to
-be employed in his Factory at Canton, as clerk or Factor, and I was to
-render him service until I should have reached the age of twenty-one.
-It was a long time for me to look forward to in 1827. Several ships of
-the New York house were loading which had arrived in regular course
-before insurmountable difficulties had occurred. Amongst them was the
-'Mary Lord,' Captain Rosseter. I left in her and arrived in a good
-run of 120 days. My fellow-passenger was Mr. Daniel Stansbury, whose
-name has become identified with the American trade at Canton from his
-having been the inventor of a measuring rod, by which cargoes were ever
-after measured. It proved to be an instrument of wonderful accuracy and
-rapidity, simple in the extreme, as well as the most convenient that can
-be imagined. 'Stansbury's measuring rod,' now proverbial, dates from our
-last war with Great Britain, 1812, when the inventor, being at Canton,
-and business with the United States suspended for some time, in his days
-of forced idleness he conceived the actual mode of measuring cargoes,
-which up to that time had been measured with the foot rule!
-
-My interviews with Mr. George W. Bruen, the partner of Mr. Smith, led
-to no other result than the cancelling of the indentures, without
-indemnity. Not long after Mr. D. W. C. Olyphant himself returned to
-New York, leaving Messrs. Talbot and King at Canton, with the view of
-establishing a house there of his own. His first purchase was a very
-fine ship named the 'Roman,' Captain Lavender, of about 500 tons. He
-offered me a passage out in her, for the _chance_ of being employed
-in the new house, which afterwards occupied for a great many years
-so distinguished a position in the commercial community in China. I
-accepted the _chance_ and sailed in the 'Roman' in October. We were in
-all six passengers. The father and brother of Mr. Charles N. Talbot
-going out for the trip; Mr. Talbot, senior, had already been to Canton
-in 1802 or 1803. Two of the others were the Rev. E. C. Bridgman and
-the Rev. David Abeel. They were the first American missionaries to the
-Chinese. The former became one of the most accomplished Sinalogues of
-the day (which I _do not_ attribute to my having given to both these
-gentlemen daily lessons on the passage out!), while Mr. Abeel was the
-_first_ United States Consul appointed at _any_ port north of Canton,
-being commissioned to Amoy.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We sailed in October, and anchored at Lintin in February, _via_
-Dampier's Straits, in 134 days. I was received by Mr. Talbot, who, from
-the yet uncertain advices from New York as regarded future business,
-could hold out no encouragement for me of office work; but, failing
-any other house, I was always welcome to a return passage in the
-'Roman.' There were very few American houses then in Canton, and they
-were Agencies; moreover, they seemed provided with youngsters, and I
-accordingly prepared to leave again for New York. Meanwhile, however,
-Mr. Talbot busied himself on my behalf, but the stay of the 'Roman'
-was short and she was soon to be despatched. There appeared absolutely
-nothing to be done. A few days before the ship sailed, while in my room,
-occupied with my luggage, one of the Chinese servants came to me, and
-said, 'Mr. Talbot chin-chin you come down.' I went accordingly, and was
-introduced to Mr. Samuel Russell, the chief of the house of Russell &
-Co. He had heard, he said, from Mr. Talbot, of my probable return home
-in the 'Roman,' and had come to invite me to his office. I accepted
-the offer, and in the evening I was duly installed at No. 2 Suy-Hong.
-This was on March 24, 1829, and it became my uninterrupted home until
-December 31, 1842.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The word 'Factory' was an importation from India, where the commercial
-establishments of the 'East India Company' were so designated, and
-synonymous with 'agency.' It is well to explain this, as it is now being
-confounded with 'manufactory.'
-
-The space occupied by the foreign community at Canton was about 300 feet
-from the banks of the Pearl River, eighty miles from Macao, sixty miles
-from Lintin, forty miles from the Bogue Forts, and ten miles from the
-Whampoa anchorage. In breadth from east to west it was about 1,000 feet.
-On it stood the Factories, which comprised the dwellings and places of
-business of each nation originally under one roof. The line of frontage
-was uniform, all looking due south. The distinction of _new_ given to
-_one_ of the two buildings occupied by the 'Company' applied to that
-one which was rebuilt after the great fire of 1822, which destroyed all
-the others, with a few exceptions, as well as, according to official
-accounts, '12,000 Chinese houses, shops, and temples in the western
-suburb.' Each Factory consisted of a succession of buildings, behind
-one another, separated by narrow spaces or courts, and running north.
-The front ones were numbered 1, those back of them, nearly all of three
-stories, No. 2, 3, and so on. The least numerous Factories were then
-in the American Hong, the greatest number were in the Danish and Dutch
-Hongs, which contained seven and eight respectively.
-
-The Chinese word 'Hong' was applied to any place of business, but
-was more particularly used to designate the Hongs of the 'Security
-Merchants' whence Hong Merchants or any foreign Factory in its entirety.
-It signifies a row of buildings. By the Chinese, the places of business
-of foreigners were known as 'Foreign Hongs;' those of the Security
-Merchants as 'Foreign Hong Merchants.'
-
-Beginning at the west, stood the Danish Factory; adjoining it were
-Chinese shops in its whole length, forming New China Street, which here
-intervened, separating it from the Spanish. Next the French, and by its
-side in its whole length, that of the Hong Merchant Chungqua; Old China
-Street here came in, and against it was the American, then the Imperial,
-by its side the Paou-shun, next in order the Swedish, the old English,
-and then the Chow-Chow.[7] Now came a small narrow lane, the renowned
-Hog Lane, most appropriately named. The high walls of the new English
-Factory bordered the lane, having as next neighbour eastward the Dutch,
-and next to this stood the Creek Factory. The latter took its name from
-a small creek, which, running down along the walls of the city, here
-emptied into the river. Originally this creek formed the ditch of the
-west side of the city.
-
-The entire number of buildings, therefore, was thirteen. Immediately in
-their rear, and running east and west, was a long, narrow, but important
-street, named 'Thirteen Factory Street.'
-
-From the front of the new English a long broad terrace projected towards
-the river, its columns supporting an entablature, whose pediment bore
-the arms of England with the substitute of 'Pro Regis et Senatus Angliae'
-for 'Honi soit qui mal y pense.' The Dutch company ('Maatschappay')
-possessed a similar terrace, with the national arms and motto 'Je
-maintiendrai.' These two, the English and Dutch Companies, were the
-direct successors of those founded on December 31, 1600, and in 1602
-respectively. The English Jack, the Dutch, the United States, and the
-Spanish flags, were daily, in 1825, hoisted before those respective
-Factories, and were visible from a great distance. The Spanish flag
-represented the Philippine Company. The French flag was hoisted on
-December 13, 1832, after an interval of thirty years; it denoted simply
-the Canton residence of the Consul, as the trade of that country was
-insignificant, while the Swedish, Danish, and Imperial (Austrian) direct
-commerce had ceased, and no other Western nation traded directly with
-Canton. Portugal was confined in her commercial relations to her own
-colony of Macao; Russia to Kiachkta. From the port of Cha-po, on the
-east coast of China, two junks sailed annually to Nagasaki. Siamese
-vessels would occasionally be seen at Whampoa, when conveying tribute
-bearers on their way to Pekin, and not far from the Factories was the
-residence of the Ambassadors.
-
-At the northern extremity of Old China Street, and facing it, stood
-an extensive and handsomely built series of buildings, in the Chinese
-style, called the 'Consoo' House, or 'Council Hall of the Foreign
-Factories.' It contained numerous suites of rooms for receptions and
-business, with open courtyards, and was always kept in excellent order
-and cleanliness by the Chinese in charge. It was the property of the
-Hong merchants collectively, and was maintained by funds appropriated
-by them for the purpose. When any event bearing upon the foreign
-trade required it, such as new regulations, or confirming old ones,
-or a revision of duties, the 'Tai pans' or _Chiefs of Houses_ would
-be invited to meet the Hong merchants and discuss the subject. Any
-foreigner went if inclined, and would occasionally learn of many
-official acts, having a bearing upon business, and even upon his daily
-walks or boat-pulling on the river, which may have come under the notice
-of the authorities, who would have suggested shorter journeys or the
-exercise of care from collisions. It was also in the Consoo House that
-the Hong merchants met, or a committee of them, in the rare cases of
-bankruptcy or pecuniary difficulties of one of their number, and it
-was the depository of books of accounts relative thereto, as well as
-of records of meetings. The entrance to it was by a flight of broad
-granite steps, through large heavy folding doors of a highly polished
-and valuable wood.[8] Being a handsome specimen of this style of Chinese
-architecture, foreign visitors to Canton were taken to see it as one of
-the sights.
-
-The Factories were the individual property of the Hong merchants,
-and were hired of them. By law, no women were permitted to enter
-them, nor were guns, muskets, powder, or military weapons allowed to
-be brought within the gates. Entrance to the rear Factories was by
-arched passages running through those in front. The lower floors were
-occupied by counting-rooms, go-downs, and store-rooms, by the rooms of
-the Compradore, his assistants, servants and coolies, as well as by
-a massively built treasury of granite, with iron doors, an essential
-feature, there being no banks in existence. In front of each treasury
-was a well-paved open space, with table for scales and weights, the
-indispensable adjuncts of all money transactions, as receipts and
-payments were made by weight only, except in some peculiar case. The
-second floor was devoted to dining and sitting rooms, the third to
-bedrooms. As almost all were provided with broad verandahs and the
-buildings put up with care, they were quite comfortable, although
-in every respect devoid of ornamental work. In front of the middle
-Factories between Old China Street and Hog Lane ran a broad stone
-pavement, and this bordered an open space running down to the banks of
-the river, a distance of about three hundred feet. On the east side
-it was bounded by the wall of the East India Company's landing place
-and enclosure, and on the west by the wall in front of the landing and
-enclosure of Chungqua's Hong. The Chinese were prohibited from loitering
-about this 'Square,' as it was called. On the corner of Old China
-Street and the American Hong stood a guard-house with ten or a dozen
-Chinese soldiers, acting as police to prevent disturbance or annoyance
-to the 'foreign devils.' On the edge of the river, facing the 'Pow
-Shun' and the Creek Hongs were 'Chop' houses,[9] or branches of the
-Hoppo's department, whose _duty_ it was to prevent smuggling, but whose
-_interest_ it was to aid and facilitate the shipping off of silks (or
-the landing of cloths) at a considerable reduction from the Imperial
-tariff. A few pleasant words, accompanied by a fee, would secure a
-permit for the boat of the 'Wandering Eagle' to be allowed to pass all
-revenue cruisers 'without molestation' on her way to Whampoa.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- Island of Honam.
-
- _REFERENCE._
-
- A. _Pwanting Qua Street._
- B. _New China Street._
- C. _Old China Street._
- _X Guard House._
- D. _Hog Lane._
- E. _The Creek._
- F. _Jack Ass Point._
- L. _Old Clothes Street._
- N. _Old Tom Linguist._
- O. _Carpenters Square._
- P. _Bridge Over Creek._
- G.H.J. _Custom Houses._
- K. _King Qua's Hong._
- M. _Mau Qua's Hong._
- H. _Hou Qua's Hong._
- X. _Honam Joss House._
- Y. _Hou Qua's House._
- Z. _Pwanting Qua's House._
- _CH._ _Consoo House._
-]
-
-The words Factory and Hong were interchangeable, although not
-identical. The former, as will have been seen, consisted of dwellings
-and offices combined. The latter not only contained numerous offices
-for _employes_, cooks, messengers, weighmasters, &c., but were of vast
-extent, and capable of receiving an entire ship's cargo, as well as
-quantities of teas and silk. When speaking of their own residences,
-foreigners generally used the word 'Factories;' when of a Hong
-merchant's place of business, the word Hong. The Swedish Factory,
-however, seemed to enjoy the distinction of going by its Chinese
-appellation, viz. 'Suy-Hong.'[10]
-
-I have been thus specific in the description of these world-renowned
-Factories, as they were subsequently razed to the ground consequent
-upon Sir Michael Seymour's bombardment of the city of Canton. When I
-last visited the site, nearly thirty-five years after I first took up
-my residence in them, it was literally unrecognisable. It presented
-a scene, the desolation of desolation; there remained not one stone
-upon another! For more than one hundred years they had formed the sole
-residence of foreigners within the limits of the vast Chinese Empire.
-The business transacted within their walls was incalculable, and I think
-I am safe in saying that from the novelty of the life, the social good
-feeling and unbounded hospitality always mutually existing; from the
-facility of all dealings with the Chinese who were assigned to transact
-business with us, together with their proverbial honesty, combined with
-a sense of perfect security to person and property, scarcely a resident
-of any lengthened time, in short, any 'Old Canton,' but finally left
-them with regret.
-
-In no part of the world could the authorities have exercised a more
-vigilant care over the personal safety of strangers who of their own
-free will came to live in the midst of a population whose customs and
-prejudices were so opposed to everything foreign, and yet the Chinese
-Government was bound by no treaty obligations to _specially_ provide
-protection for them. They dwelt at Canton purely on sufferance. Neither
-Consul nor any other official representative from abroad was directly
-acknowledged as such, and yet the solicitude of the local government
-never flagged. In addition to the guards always posted at the corner of
-the American Hong and Old China Street, others were stationed in various
-directions in the suburbs frequented by foreigners, in order that any
-Chinese who might be troublesome could be driven off, or that they
-could escort back to the factories those who were uncertain of their
-whereabouts.
-
-During the north-east monsoon fires were quite frequent in the densely
-populated suburbs lying north of the factories. When they threatened the
-foreign quarter the Hong merchants, acting in consonance with the known
-wishes of the Mandarins, would send gangs of armed coolies to assist in
-the removal to boats provided by them of books, papers, treasure, and
-personal effects. All strange Chinese would be ruthlessly driven from
-the Square, and an unobstructed passage to the boats secured. I have
-witnessed this repeatedly. Should a foreigner get into a disturbance
-in the street, and it was generally safe to say it was through his
-own fault, the Chinamen went to the wall. When a mob of many thousand
-ruffians invaded the Factory Square, as in November 1838, shortly
-preceding the opium surrender, and with stones and missiles of all sorts
-drove the foreigners inside their gates, which they were forced to
-barricade, a not unnatural anxiety prevailed amongst us as to what might
-be the result. Yet this attack was _caused by foreigners, who interfered
-with the Mandarins_ while attempting to carry out Government orders.
-
-All foreigners who came to Canton, from the first arrivals, were
-considered as having no other object than that of commerce. The
-English and the Dutch made their appearance in the first half of the
-seventeenth century; successively arrived, the Danes, Swedes, and
-Austrians (Imperialists). The Spaniards invited the Chinese to their new
-settlement at Manila for a time, and afterwards they themselves came to
-the provincial city.
-
-Some amongst these different nationalities, tradition said the Dutch,
-had _red hair_, which led the Chinese facetiously to apply the term
-'Red-headed Devils' ever after to all foreigners alike. They themselves
-give to the whole of their own race the name of 'Black Hair'd.'
-
-The authorities framed eight regulations for the especial government
-and control of these divers people from afar. They date from the year
-1760, and are curious enough to recall. Never having been abrogated,
-they were assumed to be in force always. They were confirmed by an edict
-of the Emperor Kea-King in 1819, after a revision in 1810. Some of them
-came to be disregarded by the foreign community, particularly those
-referring to the Gardens, the Honam Temple, and pulling in their own
-boats on the river; but so far as regards women entering the Factories,
-an infringement of them in this essential particular took place in
-1830, as will be seen hereafter. The chief sufferers in the event of a
-disregard of any important item of the regulations would of course be
-the Hong merchants. The 'Eight Regulations' were now and then brought to
-the Factories by a Linguist, as an intimation that they were not to be
-considered a 'dead letter.' Translated into English they read thus----
-
- _Regulation 1._--All vessels of war are prohibited from
- entering the Bogue. Vessels of war acting as convoy to
- merchantmen must anchor outside at Sea till their merchant-ships
- are ready to depart, and then sail away with them.
-
- _Regulation 2._--Neither women, guns, spears, nor arms of
- any kind can be brought to the Factories.
-
- _Regulation 3._--All river-pilots and ships' Compradores
- must be registered at the office of the 'Tung-Che'[11] at Macao.
- That officer will also furnish each one of them with a licence,
- or badge, which must be worn around the waist. He must produce
- it whenever called for. All other boatmen and people must not
- have communication with foreigners, unless under the immediate
- control of the ships' Compradores; and should smuggling take
- place, the Compradore[12] of the ship engaged in it will be
- punished.
-
- _Regulation 4._--Each Factory is restricted for its service
- to 8 Chinese (irrespective of the number of its occupants), say
- 2 porters, 4 water-carriers, 1 person to take care of goods
- ('go-down coolie'), and 1 ma-chen (intended for the foreign word
- 'merchant'), who originally performed all the duties of the
- 'House Compradore,' as he is styled to-day.
-
- _Regulation 5_ prohibits foreigners from rowing about the
- river in their own boats for 'pleasure.' On the 8th, 18th, and
- 28th days of the moon 'they may take the air,' as fixed by the
- Government in the 21st year of Kea-King (1819). All ships'
- boats passing the Custom-houses on the river must be detained
- and examined, to guard against guns, swords, or firearms being
- furtively carried in them. On the 8th, 18th, and 28th days of
- the moon these foreign barbarians may visit the Flower Gardens
- and the Honam Joss-house,[13] but not in _droves_ of over ten
- at one time. When they have 'refreshed' they must return to the
- Factories, not be allowed to pass the night 'out,' or collect
- together to carouse. Should they do so, then, when the next
- 'holiday' comes, they shall not be permitted to go. If the ten
- should presume to enter villages, public places, or bazaars,
- punishment will be inflicted upon the _Linguist_ who accompanies
- them.
-
- _Regulation 6._--Foreigners are not allowed to present
- petitions. If they have anything to represent, it must be done
- through the Hong merchants.
-
- _Regulation 7._--Hong merchants are not to owe debts to
- foreigners. Smuggling goods to and from the city is prohibited.
-
- _Regulation 8._--Foreign ships arriving with merchandise
- must not loiter about outside the river; they must come direct
- to Whampoa. They must not rove about the bays at pleasure and
- sell to rascally natives goods subject to duty, that these
- may smuggle them, and thereby defraud His Celestial Majesty's
- revenue.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Originally there existed two English East India Companies, the oldest of
-which was incorporated in 1579. In the year 1600 they amalgamated, and
-received a charter from Queen Elizabeth. At the same time they assumed
-the title of the 'United East India Company,' and as a trade-mark, a
-heart with two transverse bars, bearing in the four divisions thus
-formed the letters V. E. I. C.
-
-[Illustration: V E I C]
-
-This trade-mark had acquired such a well-merited reputation at Canton,
-that it was considered unnecessary to examine any package of merchandise
-that bore it. A simple exhibition of musters was made, when transactions
-were concluded, and the original packages forwarded unopened to all
-parts of the Empire. The Company's vessels first arrived at Canton
-between 1650 and 1660, and tea was first used in England in 1666.
-
-By the Chinese the Company was known as Kung-Se, the characters
-signify 'United Affairs.' By the Canton community its representatives
-collectively were universally referred to as 'The Factory.' They were
-much more numerous than the members of any other establishment. In 1825,
-the 'Factory' consisted of Sir James Urmston, chief; Messrs. W. H. C.
-Plowden, Marjoribanks, and J. F. Davis, of whom two, with the chief,
-formed a select committee; of writers (as usually called) there were
-about twenty; an inspector of teas, Mr. Reeves; chaplain, the Rev. R. H.
-Vachell; surgeons, Pierson and Colledge; and an interpreter, the Rev.
-Dr. Robert Morrison.
-
-The 'Factory' entertained with unbounded hospitality and in a princely
-style. Their dining-room was of vast dimensions, opening upon the
-terrace overlooking the river. On the left was a library, amply stocked,
-the librarian of which was Dr. Pierson; on the right a billiard room.
-At one extremity of the dining-room was a life-size portrait of George
-IV. in royal robes, with crown and sceptre, the same that had been taken
-by the Embassy of Lord Amherst to Pekin, offered to and refused by the
-Emperor Keen-Lung, and brought to Canton overland. Opposite to it hung a
-smaller full-length portrait of Lord Amherst.
-
-From the ceiling depended a row of huge chandeliers, with wax lights,
-the table bore candelabra, reflecting a choice service amidst quantities
-of silver plate.
-
-I was glad to have witnessed this sight, unique in that distant quarter
-of the world, to reach which the old adage would apply, 'it was not
-every one who could get to Corinth.' Soon after I landed at Canton, I
-had the honour of a first invitation to dine with the 'Factory' and must
-confess that at my then age I accepted it with fear and trepidation. One
-of the _invite_ from the Suy-Hong, Mr. Oliver H. Gordon, accompanied me.
-Our way led through the great outer gate, past the 'chapel' whose spire
-bore conspicuously a large clock, the only one in Canton, and by which
-everyone regulated his watch; then up a broad flight of stone steps to a
-verandah, crossing which one entered the library and reception room as
-well. When the hosts and the guests had assembled, large folding doors
-were opened and we entered the noble dining-room, whose brilliancy and
-cheerfulness and gorgeously furnished table I see _now_. At the remote
-end of the room were grouped the Chinese servants of the Factory and of
-the guests, in caps and long robes, who immediately took up their places
-behind their respective masters as soon as seated.
-
-About thirty gentlemen were present, including Mr. Bletterman, chief
-of the 'Maatschappay;'[14] Mr. Hollingworth Magniac, of the 'licensed'
-house of Magniac & Co. (predecessors of the present firm of Jardine,
-Matheson, & Co.); Mr. Thomas Dent, of another 'licensed' firm, Thomas
-Dent & Co.; and several of my own countrymen, including Mr. Benjamin C.
-Wilcox and John R. Latimer.
-
-But the days of the Honourable East India Company were now unconsciously
-drawing to an end. It had existed for 250 years! It ceased as a
-'commercial' body in 1833. Many members of the 'Factory' were then
-removed to India and there took up civil appointments. Messrs. Astell
-and Clarke alone remained at Canton to close up outstanding affairs,
-and finally left in December 1839. Twenty-five more years were accorded
-to the Company after 1833 to transfer to the Crown the splendid empire
-those enterprising merchants had founded in India, and in 1858 its sun
-set--politically.
-
-Few now remain who witnessed the final breaking up and departure of
-'the Factory' from Canton; personally, there was much regret, as it had
-always been a marked feature in the community. The 'Outside' Merchants,
-unshackled from licenses, hailed it as an auspicious day, opening up to
-them visions of prosperity, which soon assumed the form and substance of
-reality. As an event to be placed 'on record' as the Chinese say, the
-first 'free ship' with 'free teas' was loaded at Whampoa and despatched
-for London on March 22, 1834, by the still existing house of Messrs.
-Jardine, Matheson, & Co. The vessel was named the 'Sarah,' Captain
-Whiteside.
-
-The principal teas shipped by the Company were Bohea and Congo. One may
-judge of their qualities by their selling in England from 'two shillings
-and sixpence up to sixty shillings per pound, while sound common Congo
-is selling to-day at sixpence farthing'! (Messrs. J. C. Sillar & Co's
-tea circular of February, 1881.) The Company imported English-made
-woollens and cottons and raw cotton from India. The most important of
-the licensed houses in 1825 were Magniac & Co., Thomas Dent & Co.,
-Ilberry, Fearon & Co., Whiteman & Co., and Robertson, Cullen, & Co.
-(Colonel Fearon, who commanded the detachment of troops on board the
-East India Company's ship 'Kent,' burnt in the Bay of Biscay, 1825, on
-her way to Calcutta, was a brother of the Mr. Fearon just named.) Their
-transactions were with India, and in the aggregate on a very extensive
-scale. They received raw cotton from the three Presidencies; opium
-from Bombay and Calcutta; rice, pepper, tin, &c., from the Straits of
-Malacca. The local name for their business was the 'Country Trade' the
-ships were 'Country Ships' and the masters of them 'Country Captains.'
-Some of my readers may recall a dish which was often placed before us,
-when dining on board these vessels at Whampoa, viz., 'Country Captain.'
-The ships were 'Country' built as well, and of teak; they were not fast
-sailers, but comfortable and substantial. They made one voyage annually,
-rolling up the China Sea before the south-west monsoon and rolling down
-again with the north-east. Some of them, as the 'Sulimany,' the 'Fort
-William,' the 'Futty Salaam,' were not far from their eightieth birthday.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Hong merchants (collectively, the Co-Hong) as a body corporate date
-from 1720. From that year, except for a short interval before 1725,
-they were the monopolists of the foreign trade. The principal ones, in
-1825, were Houqua, Mouqua, Pwankeiqua, Pwansuylan, Chungqua, Kingqua,
-and Gouqua. The affix _qua_, which is usually supposed to be a part of
-the name, is simply a term of civility or respect, and is equivalent to
-Mister or Sir. The word means literally to 'manage' or 'control.' The
-number of the 'Co-Hong' was limited to thirteen.
-
-Their establishments commenced on the creek already referred to, and
-extended eastward on the riverside, whereby the shipping off and landing
-of cargo were attended with great facilities. They were the 'warehouses'
-in which were received all the teas and silk from the interior, and
-in which these articles were repacked, if necessary, weighed, matted,
-and marked, before being sent to the ships at Whampoa. The boats in
-which they were conveyed were of a peculiar build, with circular decks
-and sides, and from their resemblance to a melon they were called
-'water-melons' by the Chinese, but by foreigners they were always
-referred to as 'chop-boats.' They were of the capacity of 500 chests
-of tea, or 500 piculs of weight. The orderly and intelligent despatch
-of business at the Hongs was characteristic of the Chinese, as were the
-neatness of all packages and the dexterity with which they were handled.
-
-The Hong merchants were the only ones officially recognised by the
-Government, and no goods bought of 'outside' Chinese could be shipped
-off except through one or the other of the 'Hongs,' which received
-thereon a tax, and in whose name they were reported to the Hoppo. The
-'outside' merchants had, however, become of great importance, their
-transactions were on an immense scale annually. As manufacturers of
-silks, of floor-matting, nankeens, crapes, grass-cloth, and a host of
-less important articles, many of them had amassed great wealth; at the
-same time, they were always assumed, officially, as confining themselves
-strictly to such things as were necessary for the 'personal use' of
-foreign residents. In fact, it was 'custom' from time to time for the
-authorities to remind them of this, and even to enumerate the things
-which they were only allowed to furnish. As a curiosity they may be
-recorded--clothing, umbrellas, straw hats, fans, shoes, and so on!
-
-The Hong merchants were responsible to the Hoppo for the duties on all
-exports and imports. They alone transacted business with that officer's
-department--viz., the 'Customs'--by which foreigners were spared trouble
-and inconvenience. It may be as well to mention here that the 'Hoppo'
-(as he was incorrectly styled) filled an office especially created
-for the foreign trade at Canton. He received his appointment from the
-Emperor himself, and took rank with the first officers of the province.
-The Board of Revenue is in Chinese 'Hoo-poo' and the office was locally
-misapplied to the officer in question.
-
-As controllers of the entire foreign commerce of the port of Canton,
-which amounted annually to many millions of dollars, if the benefits
-derived therefrom were of vast importance, the responsibilities were
-also great. For infractions of 'regulations' by a ship or by her agents
-they were liable. It was assumed that they could, or should, control
-foreigners residing in the Factories as well as the vessels anchored at
-Whampoa. In both cases they were required to 'secure' due 'obedience.'
-Every resident therefore had his 'sponsor' from the moment of landing,
-as every ship had hers, and hence the Hong merchants became 'security
-merchants.' My own was Houqua, who of course represented some others
-also, and in view of these mutual relationships we would jocularly call
-them 'our horse godfathers.'
-
-The purchases of the East India Company were divided amongst the Hong
-merchants proportionately, in shares, of which fourteen fell to the lot
-of Houqua.
-
-The position of Hong merchant was obtained through the payment of large
-sums of money at Pekin. I have heard of as much as 200,000 taels, say
-55,000_l._ sterling. If the 'license' thus acquired was costly, it
-secured to them uninterrupted and extraordinary pecuniary advantages;
-but, on the other hand, it subjected them to calls or 'squeezes' for
-contributions to public works or buildings, for the relief of districts
-suffering from a scarcity of rice, as well as for the often imaginary or
-over-estimated damage caused by the overflowing of the 'Yang-tsze-Keang'
-or the 'Yellow River.'
-
-'Well, Houqua,' you would say on some visit, 'hav got news to-day?' 'Hav
-got too muchee bad news,' he would reply; 'Hwang Ho hav spilum too
-muchee' That sounded ominously. 'Man-ta-le[15] hav come see you?' 'He
-no come see my, he sendee come one piece "chop." He come to-mollo. He
-wantchee my two-lac[16] dollar.' It was the old complaint, a 'squeeze'
-and this time a formidable one. 'You pay he how mutchee?' 'My pay he
-fitty, sikky tousand so.' 'But s'pose he no contentee?' 'S'pose he,
-N^{o.} 1, no contentee, my pay he one lac.' This actual incident will
-show the sort of demands upon the senior Hong merchant (each one being
-called upon in his turn) and their pecuniary importance. They knew at
-the same time that the object of the 'squeeze' was exaggerated, and,
-even if necessary, that only a modest portion would go to the repairs
-of the banks of the river, the mandarin thinking that his own personal
-wants were far more pressing. They might try to parry the question,
-they might succeed in getting the sum asked for diminished, but they
-could not escape. Payments would also be made by them to the Hoppo on
-the occasion of his return to Pekin, on the appointment of a successor,
-as well as to the chiefs of the Revenue Board in that capital; but such
-as these had a _raison d'etre_, they secured influence and protection,
-and besides, the sums paid were voluntary and comparatively moderate in
-amount.
-
-As it added to their dignity and privileges, the Hong merchants
-purchased nominal rank, the insignia of which was denoted by a button or
-coloured globe attached to the apex of the cap. Of this they might be
-deprived for offences against the law or for bankruptcy; then a wearer
-of it in local parlance would be 'unbuttoned,' or deprived of this
-significant emblem of his social and public status.
-
-The occupation of a 'merchant' in China is looked down upon by wealthy
-landed proprietors, by the _literati_, and by those who have risen to
-official rank through their own talents; but bankruptcy is considered
-degrading and even criminal.
-
-Bankrupts are first deprived of any nominal rank they may possess before
-being so adjudged by law. Previous to my arrival at Canton one case
-of a bankrupt Hong merchant had taken place. The penalty for a member
-of the Co-Hong was transportation to E-Lee. Only one other occurred
-during the remainder of the period of the existence of the Co-Hong. The
-last exiled bankrupt was Man-Ho. He had been a general favourite with
-the foreign community, was a person of courteous manners, and in every
-respect a well-bred and kindly man. He had borne on his cap the 'blue
-button' which denoted the third rank--principal--and it gave him the
-privilege of a certain title on his cards, &c. The books and affairs
-of his Hong passed into the charge of the Co-Hong for examination, the
-result proved most unsatisfactory, and when it was laid before the Hoppo
-he was declared bankrupt, and sentenced to transportation for life to
-E-Lee (the present Kuldja), on the north-west frontier. It is commonly
-spoken of by the Canton Chinese as the 'Colo'[17] country. Few know its
-geographical position. Preparations having been made for his departure,
-at a moment when some officials were leaving for that remote province,
-Man-Ho, with other condemned persons, was placed under their charge. The
-boats, having all these on board, anchored off the Factories. Many of
-his old Chinese and foreign friends went on board to say goodbye. One
-of the latter handed him a letter, in which was expressed sympathy for
-his misfortunes. And it added that a sum of money, subscribed by the
-Hong merchants and themselves for his personal comfort, had been placed
-with reliable servants of his own, who were accompanying him of their
-own accord. Neither the Government nor the Hoppo objects to such aid
-being rendered by relations and friends to one who by misfortune or bad
-management has incurred the penalty of the law, if not excessive. In the
-present case the amount was 10,000 dollars.
-
-In a few hours after, the convoy left on one of the most dreary journeys
-that can be imagined. It occupied several months, involving constant
-transhipment to other boats, now over execrable roads in the most
-comfortless of bamboo chairs, then on pony back, and frequently on foot.
-
-A very long time after his departure we heard, by the return of one of
-his servants, that Man-ho had been at first set to work as 'sweeper'
-in a temple, which he was able to compromise into a purely nominal
-'office.' Again, that he had managed to get about him sundry comforts,
-such as E-Lee possessed, which is saying very little. Years passed, when
-we at once heard of his death and of the arrival of the body at Canton
-(in charge of the servants who had remained with him) for interment in
-his native place.
-
-After Man-ho left Canton I saw, in the hands of one of the above foreign
-contributors, his promissory note for $60,000, bearing interest at 5
-per cent. per month. This was not exorbitant, under the circumstances
-in which it was given. The current rate of interest, with the best
-security, was 1 per cent. per month on running account, while 2 to 3 per
-cent. on temporary loans per month was common.
-
-As a body of merchants, we found them honourable and reliable in all
-their dealings, faithful to their contracts, and large-minded. Their
-private residences, of which we visited several, were on a vast scale,
-comprising curiously laid-out gardens, with grottoes and lakes, crossed
-by carved stone bridges, pathways neatly paved with small stones of
-various colours forming designs of birds, or fish, or flowers.
-
-One of the most beautiful was that of Pwankeiqua, on the banks of the
-river, three or four miles west of the Factories. The number of servants
-in these private 'palaces,' as they would be called elsewhere, was very
-great, comprising, with those ordinarily in attendance, doorkeepers,
-messengers, palankin bearers, and choice cooks. We had occasional
-opportunities of judging of the skill of the latter by an invitation to
-a 'chopstick' dinner, signifying that no foreign element would be found
-in it.
-
-We would be served with such delicacies as birds'-nest soup,[18] with
-plover's eggs and Beche-de-Mar, curiously prepared sharks' fins and
-roasted snails; these forming but a very small proportion of the number
-of courses, which ended with pastry of different sorts. The liquids were
-wines prepared from rice, called 'Samshoo,' also from green peas, from
-a fruit called Wang-pe, and others whose names we never knew. The wines
-were served in tiny silver or porcelain cups, each placed on handsomely
-worked silver stands.
-
-These feasts were very enjoyable, even when their novelty had worn off;
-the host, full of _bonhomie_ and politeness, never failing to escort us
-to the great outer gate on leaving, and place us under the charge of his
-coolies, who would there be waiting with large lanterns bearing his name
-to escort us back to the Factories.
-
-It is not true, as has been supposed, that on these convivial occasions
-the guests were served with roast or boiled 'puppy' as a _bonne bouche_,
-and I am sure that the author of the following lines gave way to his
-imagination after a 'chopstick' dinner with 'green pea' wine when he
-wrote them, or to fortify a current joke:--
-
- The feast spread out, the splendour round
- Allowed the eye no rest;
- The wealth of Kwang-Tung, of all Ind,
- Appeared to greet each guest.
-
- All tongues are still; no converse free
- The solemn silence broke;
- Because, alas! friend Se-Ta-Che
- No word of Chinese spoke.
-
- Now here, now there, he picked a bit
- Of what he could not name;
- And all he knew was that, in fact,
- They made him sick the same!
-
- Mingqua, his host, pressed on each dish
- With polished Chinese grace;
- And much, Ming thought, he relished them,
- At every ugly face!
-
- At last he swore he'd eat no more,
- 'Twas written in his looks;
- For, 'Zounds!' said he, 'the devil here
- Sends both the meats and cooks!'
-
- But, covers changed, he brightened up,
- And thought himself in luck
- When close before him, what he saw
- Looked something like a duck!
-
- Still cautious grown, but, to be sure,
- His brain he set to rack;
- At length he turned to one behind,
- And, pointing, cried: 'Quack, Quack.'
-
- The Chinese gravely shook his head,
- Next made a reverend bow;
- And then expressed what dish it was
- By uttering, 'Bow-wow-wow!'
-
-Numerous instances of munificence and generosity can be recorded on
-the part of the Hong merchants. I relate some of the _senior_ one as
-illustrations. He would accept the direct consignment of an American
-ship, if it was commanded by an old friend. Such a one came to Whampoa,
-commanded by Captain C----, having on board a cargo consisting in
-a great measure of quicksilver. The price of this article was much
-depressed at the time. It was landed at Houqua's Hong and stored,
-he offering to take it at its market value. Several months elapsed,
-when the close of the south-west monsoon foretold 'business,' and the
-Factories began to look out for return cargoes for their ships of new
-teas daily arriving. Quicksilver still remained without demand. At the
-price it bore, a considerable deficiency would exist in the capacity
-of the vessel and the quantity of teas which could be bought with the
-proceeds. At the same time news had arrived of an improvement in prices
-at New York which exhibited a large profit. Captain C----, therefore,
-judging it better to sell his quicksilver and load with all the despatch
-he could with as many teas as it would purchase, closed the sale, which
-was, in commercial phraseology, 'puttee book' (duly recorded). Tea
-purchases were then immediately made, in the course of which Houqua
-said to his consignor, 'Olo flen,[19] you shall have a full cargo to
-return with; I will furnish it, you can pay my next voyage--you no
-trub' (give yourself no anxiety). Everything being thus definitely
-arranged, the vessel commenced loading, and was half full, when Houqua
-came to Captain C---- and informed him that a sudden demand had arisen
-for 'quick'[20] on the part of northern merchants returning to their
-provinces, that it had advanced materially in value, and he had been
-credited with the parcel he brought out _at the price of the day_;
-moreover, that he had cancelled on his books the first purchase. This
-generous act on the part of his consignee enabled Captain C---- to leave
-with a full cargo, all paid for, and made a difference in the outturn of
-his voyage of nearly 30,000 dollars. This information I received some
-years after at Canton from Captain C---- himself.
-
-An American gentleman, who had resided many years at Canton, and had
-possessed a considerable fortune, met with serious losses. The hope
-of regaining it induced him to continue operations, in which he was
-materially assisted by Houqua. They had been, as was usually said, in
-the words of the place, 'olo flen.' Time passed, considerable sums were
-placed at the disposal of Mr. W----, no reference being made to them by
-the Hong merchant, until, at the end of a second or third year, Houqua's
-and his accounts were compared, and the balance in favour of Houqua was
-72,000 dollars. For this amount he took a promissory note and it was
-locked up in his strong box. From knowing Chinese, I was often behind
-the scenes on similar occasions, not that the holder had any doubt of
-irregularity on the part of the signers, but simply to translate them
-into his language for his own satisfaction. It may be stated here that
-not a single Chinese then existed at Canton who could read or write
-English. I found that these notes bore simply the endorsement of sum and
-date with the names of the drawers. Time still went on; Mr. W---- had
-frequently expressed a desire to return to the United States, but hoped
-that a 'good turn' would take place in his affairs and enable him to
-cancel his note. It was cancelled in a most unexpected manner!
-
-One day, when on a visit to his Chinese friend, the latter said, 'You
-have been so long away from your own country, why do you not return?'
-To which Mr. W---- replied that it was impossible--he could not cancel
-his note, and this alone would prevent him. Houqua enquired if the
-bond, only, kept him in Canton, and if he had not some means wherewith
-to provide for a residence at home? The answer was that no other debts
-existed, and he was not without resources--but the note!! Houqua
-summoned his purser, and ordered him to bring the envelope containing
-promissory notes from the treasury. Taking out that of Mr. W----, he
-said, 'You and I are No. 1, "olo flen;" you belong honest man, only no
-got chance.'[21] He then tore the note up, and throwing the fragments
-into the waste-paper basket, added, 'Just now hav settee counter, alla
-finishee; you go, you please.' That is to say, 'Our accounts are now all
-settled, you can leave when you like.'
-
-When the English troops, under Sir Hugh Gough, on May 21, 1841, had
-taken up a position on the heights north of the city walls, and were
-prepared to attack, they were prevented doing so by a despatch from
-Captain Elliot, the British Superintendent of Trade at Canton, then on
-board the cutter 'Louisa,' lying off the Factories. He informed Sir
-Hugh Gough that the city had consented to pay a ransom of six millions
-of dollars, and directed him to return to the ships in the river with
-the forces. This was a judicious and humane arrangement, brought about
-by Captain Elliot. Had the city been entered, the loss of life would
-have been dreadful, to say nothing of the destruction of houses and
-property. There would, moreover, have been but little glory to gain, as
-it was in a state of defence utterly inadequate to resist 2,200 English
-soldiers and sailors. The authorities of the city, having concluded
-the arrangement for the ransom, began at once to look about for money,
-and as usual _reminded_ the Hong merchants that something liberal was
-expected of them.
-
-They contributed 2,000,000 dollars, of which Pwankeiqua gave 260,000,
-Houqua 1,100,000, and the others 640,000. A belief exists amongst the
-Chinese that there is an invisible agency influencing man's career
-in life, which they call 'Fung Shuy,' literally 'wind and water.' A
-striking illustration of this belief was brought out on this occasion.
-Houqua availed himself of the _accident_ of contributing, to express his
-gratitude to 'wind and water' for notable incidents in his own life,
-and in this way, mentally, he apportioned his donation. For himself, in
-recognition of his 'prosperity,' 800,000 dollars; for his eldest son,
-200,000 dollars for unswerving filial piety; and 100,000 dollars for his
-youngest son, who happened to be born when he himself had just completed
-the full term of a 'cycle,' or sixty years. This is considered a very
-happy coincidence, or No. 1 'Fung Shuy.' For the total sum, Captain
-Elliot was handed three promissory notes, drawn by Messrs. Russell & Co.
-at thirty days' date in favour of Houqua, by whom they were endorsed to
-his order. Captain Elliot deposited them for collection with Messrs.
-Jardine, Matheson, & Co. and Dent & Co. These firms had removed their
-offices to Macao, as well as Messrs. Russell & Co. The notes were for
-400,000, 400,000, and 300,000 dollars respectively. At this time the
-last-named house held about two and a half millions of dollars belonging
-to their constituent, the endorser. As an instance of the just pride
-Houqua took in his remarkable position and of his commercial sagacity,
-a few days before the maturity of the three notes a letter was received
-from him in Chinese at Macao, which read thus:--
-
-'Benevolent Elder Brother,[22]--The notes endorsed by me to Elut,[23] as
-you know, will soon be due. Offer to pay them at once. You will see by
-calculating that if the money is now accepted there will be a gain of
-over nine hundred dollars by the discount. May all your days be as one.'
-
-Messrs. Jardine, Matheson, & Co. and Dent & Co. were immediately
-communicated with, the notes came in for payment, and were cashed, less
-the discount, which amounted to a little short of a thousand dollars!
-The next time I saw Houqua in Canton he talked merrily over the close
-of the transaction, and said, 'My all same, "Ba-Blo."'[24] The old
-gentleman liked to compare himself with that famous house with which,
-through Messrs. Russell & Co., he had had for years important business.
-
-Demands of money on the Co-Hong never ceased. One instance was a
-requirement by the Viceroy that they should pay off the indebtedness of
-three of their own number to 'outside barbarians.' They were Hingtai,
-Mouqua, and Kingqua. Houqua then paid $1,000,000, Pwankeiqua $130,000,
-Pwan Hoyqua $70,000, Samqua and Saoqua each $50,000, Footai $90,000.
-I mention this circumstance as a feature of 'Old Canton;' it being a
-measure taken to prevent complications with Governments beyond the sea.
-
-In contrast to the style of official language, private letters from the
-Hong merchants left nothing to be desired in civility. Here is one of
-many. In the year 1837, a few of us younger members of the community
-established the 'Canton Regatta Club,' for boat-pulling and sailing on
-the river, our chief amusements and mode of taking the air. Nothing like
-a club had yet existed. Presently the Hong merchants, in virtue of their
-office as 'guardians' of our persons, as well as our 'securities' in
-the eyes of the local government, on hearing of the club organisation,
-being apprehensive of accidents, they wrote this letter to one of the
-members:--
-
- 'Ham Tak, venerable old gentleman,--We beg respectfully to
- inform you that we have heard of the intention of our respected
- elder brother and other chin-te-le-mun[25] to race boats on
- the river. We know not if this is true, but heretofore it has
- not been custom. Should the authorities hear of this, we your
- younger brothers would be reproved, not mildly, for permitting
- you to act so indiscreetly. On the river, boats are mysteriously
- abundant; everywhere they congregate in vast numbers; like a
- stream they advance and retire unceasingly. Thus the chances of
- contact are many, so are accidents, even to the breaking of
- one another's boats, to the injury of men's bodies, while more
- serious consequences might ensue.
-
- 'We therefore beseech our worthy senior[26] to make known to
- the other chin-te-le-mun that they would do well to refrain from
- contesting the speed of their boats on the river, so that after
- troubles may not accumulate. Then all will be well. Daily may
- your prosperity increase, without difference.
-
- '(Signed)
- 'HOUQUA, MOUQUA, PWANKEIQUA'
- AND OTHERS.
-
-The amount of Houqua's fortune was frequently a subject of debate;
-but on one occasion, in referring to it in connection with his
-various investments in rice-fields, dwellings, shops, and the banking
-establishments known as shroffs, and including his American and English
-shipments, he estimated it, in 1834, at twenty-six millions of dollars.
-Assuming the purchasing power of money at that time as being but twice
-greater than at the present day, it would now represent a sum of
-$52,000,000. He was a person of remarkably frugal habits (as regards
-his style of living) from choice and from being of a feeble frame of
-body. His generosity was boundless, and in accounts he was singularly
-methodical and precise, never multiplying them beyond what was
-absolutely necessary. The two or three rooms which he occupied during
-hours of business in his vast, well-regulated Hong were furnished with
-simplicity itself.
-
-He withdrew from general business with the foreign community after
-the Honourable East India Company left Canton, and confined himself
-exclusively to the house of Messrs. Russell & Co. Through them his
-foreign business was entirely managed. His yearly shipments to London
-of those celebrated Chops of Congo, grown on his family estates in the
-Woo-E country, were well known and appreciated in the English market.
-His transactions were on a very important scale, and he entrusted them
-to his Canton agents, through whom they were carried out, with the
-well-merited confidence which they inspired. They embraced England,
-the United States, and India. As another illustration of his generous
-nature, I may refer to an affair that took place nearly fifty years ago,
-in which his orders were not complied with. We had shipped a cargo,
-principally of raw silk belonging to himself, which he had ordered
-from the silk country. It was sold at a large profit. His instructions
-were that the proceeds should be returned in East India Co. bills on
-Calcutta. To our surprise and his disappointment, the result of the
-sale was invested in a cargo of British goods. It was as injudicious
-an arrangement (free trade then beginning) to ship largely of English
-manufactures as his own shipment was sagacious, for but little silk was
-exported immediately after the opening of the trade. The result showed a
-difference of many thousand dollars to his detriment. On the deviation
-of orders becoming known Houqua was at once informed that he should not
-suffer for this breach of instructions, and for the loss we would credit
-his account.
-
-The old gentleman replied, 'My consider, my show you to-mollo'--that is
-to say, he would think it over and let us know his decision 'to-morrow.'
-The following day he was at the office, and this was his decision,
-which he emphasised by striking the floor with his cane--Write to Mr.
-C----[27] and tell him he must be more careful in future, 'must take
-care.' He accepted the woollens, and refused to accept any indemnity.
-
-This last chief of the world-renowned 'Co-Hong,' which ceased with the
-treaties after an existence of 130 years, died at Honam on September 4,
-1843, aged seventy-four, having been born in the same year with Napoleon
-and Wellington, 1769.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Next to the Hong merchants, other Chinese were closely allied to the
-foreign community as 'Linguists'--so called, as it used to be remarked,
-because they knew nothing of any language but their own. They were
-appointed by the Hoppo to act as interpreters, and were duly licensed.
-Besides, this was in accordance with the orders of the Pekin Government.
-As up to treaty days, neither Consul nor Vice-Consul of a foreign nation
-was 'officially' acknowledged, whenever either one of these officers
-made a communication to the Hoppo, it had to be done through the Hong
-merchants, to whom the despatch was taken by a Linguist. The reply would
-be addressed to these merchants, who were directed to make known the
-answer to the 'Chief' of the nation, that 'he might reverently inform
-himself of it and be duly obedient' (a matter of form).
-
-The principal Linguists were 'Old Tom,' 'Young Tom,'[28] and 'Alantsae.'
-They were at the head of numerous assistants employed in the ordinary
-business of foreigners, such as attending upon Mandarins from inside the
-city while examining merchandise being landed or shipped off, and making
-up reports of the duties for those officers to take to the Hoppo's
-office for registration and subsequent collecting. Their duties were by
-no means light. They were liable to be summoned at any moment, night or
-day, in connection with the multifarious matters in which their services
-were required. They were always ready and ever willing, and proved a
-wonderful convenience to the community at large. Through them we applied
-for permits when going on a trip to Macao, for the shipping off of an
-entire cargo of teas or for landing one of foreign goods. All details
-of whatever nature were regulated and attended to by them. By law and
-'old regulations,' on an excursion on the river, to the 'flower gardens'
-a few miles off, or to the Great Buddhist Temple at Honam, opposite
-the Factories, a Linguist _should_ personally attend. One was also at
-our disposal for a visit to any other place to which the 'regulations'
-or 'old custom' permitted us to go. It may be added at the same time
-that the 'regulations' which required his personal presence on such
-occasions were not strictly enforced, but they were never abolished.
-The object of the Mandarins in enjoining upon the Linguists that one of
-them should accompany foreigners in their walks or boating excursions
-was from the best of motives--that these should not lose their way or
-become involved in collisions with the people arising from ignorance
-of one another's language. It was the duty of a Linguist to distribute
-amongst the Factories any Government proclamations having reference to
-their affairs, relating to vessels at Whampoa or the 'receiving ships'
-at Lintin. In regard to these last the Linguist would 'translate it,'
-and point out that the 'Man-ta-lee' said, 'if they did not immediately
-get up their anchors and return to their own countries or come to
-Whampoa, cruisers would be sent down to drive them away, and no more
-patience manifested.' Then would come the time-honoured question of 'You
-savee?' or, 'Do you understand?' with the usual addition of, 'This time
-the Mandarin is _really_ in earnest.' The precious document would then
-be deposited in the leg of his stocking or in his boot (the customary
-receptacles), and with 'My chin-chin you'[29] he would pass on to our
-next-door neighbour.
-
-During the shipping season, from October to March, the Linguist of a
-ship in course of loading would be summoned in the evening to a foreign
-counting-room (if necessity required), and was frequently detained until
-long after midnight while lists of teas to be shipped off in the morning
-were being prepared. With these lists he would then be obliged to go to
-perhaps several Hongs, to see that the teas were in readiness and 'chop'
-boats ordered to convey them to Whampoa. These duties often involved a
-whole night's work, but no sign of impatience or inattention was shown.
-When a vessel was ready to be measured, the Linguist informed the Hoppo,
-who then ordered an officer to Whampoa to attend to this duty, and he
-was always attended by a member of the Linguists' establishment called
-the 'mandarin' or 'official' Linguist. Should she be under despatch, the
-Linguist furnished the agent with a memorandum of the 'Measurement and
-Cumsha' charges, and at her final departure he brought to his office
-the 'grand chop,' or port clearance, which was only delivered to him
-when he had furnished the Hoppo with receipts or certificates of the
-import and export duties having been paid, and satisfied him that all
-formalities had been fulfilled. When a fire broke out near the Factories
-they were immediately in attendance.
-
-They were, as a body, 'our all in all.' The senior Linguist, popularly
-known as 'Old Tom,' was a remarkable man, both physically and mentally,
-one whose calmness and self-possession never forsook him. Whether
-threatened by the authorities or scolded by foreigners, he never gave
-way to ill-humour. He was wonderfully adroit in making everything smooth
-with the mandarins and pleasant to the 'outside barbarians,' even in
-questions the most irreconcilable.
-
-Each vessel anchoring at Whampoa incurred a Linguist fee of $250. For
-every chop-boat landing her inward cargo, $15.22. Her outward cargo was
-taken to her by the sellers of it, at their own risk and expense.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The most important Chinese within the Factory was the _Compradore_.
-He was secured by a Hong merchant in all that related to good conduct
-generally, honesty and capability. All Chinese employed in any factory,
-whether as his own 'pursers,' or in the capacity of servants, cooks,
-or coolies, were the Compradore's 'own people;' they rendered to him
-every 'allegiance,' and he 'secured' them as regards good behaviour and
-honesty. This was another feature that contributed to the admirable
-order and safety which characterised life at Canton. The Compradore
-also exercised a general surveillance over everything that related
-to the internal economy of the 'house,' as well as over outside
-shopmen, mechanics, or tradespeople employed by it. With the aid of his
-assistants, the house and private accounts of the members were kept. He
-was the purveyor for the table, and generally of the personal wants of
-the 'Tai-pans' and pursers.[30]
-
-The treasury in which all the cash and valuables were kept was under
-his charge, which was no light matter, as with some houses the amount
-of cash was extremely large, frequently over a million of dollars and
-rarely under $150,000 to $200,000. During the dull season, from April to
-October, the principal books of accounts, all important correspondence
-and letter books were also deposited in it. For many years after
-1824, no such thing as a copying machine was known; all copying was
-done by hand, and this exacted greater care of business letters and
-papers, while as no Banks existed in the old days, each house was its
-own banker. The position of a Compradore was therefore one of great
-responsibility, and I never knew of but one betraying the trust reposed
-in him. Although his pay was comparatively small, say $250 or $300 per
-annum (the pay of our own was raised to $500), his perquisites, from
-sources which had long been in existence, and had become 'olo custom,'
-were very important. As the balance of the American trade was greatly
-in favour of China, large quantities of Spanish and Mexican dollars were
-yearly imported to make up the deficiency arising from comparatively
-little other import cargo. Teas and silks, and many minor articles
-coming under the general head of 'Chow-chow,' were bought for cash.
-Thus every ship from the United States brought largely of dollars at
-times--as in the case of the 'Citizen,' $350,000, while in 1831 three
-vessels alone brought $1,100,000. Added to these supplies, opium was
-invariably sold for cash, and so were bills on London when they came
-into use; consequently all this money passed primarily through the hands
-of the Compradore. He derived a profit from the process of _shroffing_
-which it underwent before being deposited in the treasury; but after
-the goodness of a parcel and its exact amount were ascertained, he was
-liable for any bad money that might afterwards be found amongst it. He
-paid the Shroff one-tenth of a dollar per one thousand for examining
-it, while the fixed charge by the Compradore was one-fifth. This formed
-an important sum. Another one of his perquisites was five copper cash
-(about a halfpenny) per dollar on all payments, no matter to whom or on
-what account, of odd sums less than one thousand dollars, which charge
-was borne by the payee. He also derived benefit from loans or advances
-made to 'Outside' Chinese merchants (and from them) on contracts for
-silks and other merchandise entered into with his employers, while on
-all Factory supplies he received also a percentage. In the year 1823
-occurred the first and only robbery by a Compradore that came under my
-knowledge. He was in the service of one of the two most important of
-the American houses, then occupying No. 3 of the Suy Hong. He had made
-use of a large sum belonging to the firm for his own speculations, and
-it was accidentally discovered. Mr. A----, the then chief of the house,
-went directly to Houqua, the Compradore's 'security,' and reported the
-loss. The man himself was sent for, and, greatly to the indignation
-of his patron, confessed to having used the money for speculation,
-intending to replace it, but the unexpected examination by Mr. A---- had
-not allowed him time to do so. Houqua sent the deficiency to the firm
-the same evening. It was over $50,000.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We have seen who and what were the Co-Hong, the Outside Chinese
-merchants, the Linguists and Compradores, and what their respective
-relations with foreigners were. There now remains the _Shroff_, or money
-dealer, whose services were indispensable, particularly in receipts.
-They were manifest daily and hourly in the broad arched passages passing
-through the Factories, along which, as was constantly said, one could
-never move without seeing heaps of silver being examined and hearing its
-metallic ring as successive quantities were poured in and out of copper
-scales. Scarcely a day or even an hour passed without this glittering
-accompaniment of old Canton life.
-
-Pieces of silver as well as dollars were shroffed and weighed before
-being deposited in the treasury. When that was done, dollars had
-no longer a distinct existence, for in commerce the Chinese treat
-silver and gold as they do lead, iron, or copper. In this they show a
-characteristic good sense, and are rewarded by it in the facility with
-which all money transactions are carried on. As the result of long
-experience, the imported dollar was found to be worth 717/1000 taels
-in weight, and this became the standard in all current book accounts.
-No coined money exists in the Empire except copper cash, with which
-every one is familiar. The use of it is confined to the daily wants of
-the people, and it never enters into transactions of importance, except
-when money-changers replenish their stocks. The convenience of such a
-circulating medium gives facility to every one, no matter how humble his
-requirements, and was a wise piece of legislation. The obverse of the
-coin bears the name of the Emperor during whose reign it was made, in
-Chinese characters, with two others which mean 'circulating value.'[31]
-Commerce, on the other hand, stood in need of a larger representative
-of value, and this was supplied by gold and silver bars or lumps in
-portable sizes. Bar gold bears a small proportion to bar silver in
-quantity, and is in oblong pieces usually of ten taels in weight, and
-silver[32] in oval lumps called 'shoes' of various sizes and values.
-There is no Government interference in the manufacture of these bars and
-shoes for purposes of trade, no more than there is of any other metal,
-while the guarantee of their purity and value is simply the stamp of the
-Shroff or money house by which they are issued.
-
-As a natural consequence of the non-existence of gold or silver coin,
-imported dollars, from being continually weighed and stamped when
-passing from hand to hand, became 'chopped dollars' or 'cut money'
-in Canton phraseology, the first from being stamped by the Shroff on
-examining them, with any character which he may select, and which
-is his guarantee of goodness. In the shapeless form which they thus
-acquire, payments are made by weight in taels, and its component parts
-of mace, candareens, and cash.[33] This custom of weighing metals
-has existed in China since 903 A.D. If any money stamped by a Shroff
-on examination proved bad, it was exchanged by him, but such cases
-were extremely rare. A small pair of scales for money transactions is
-generally carried by Chinese attached to a waistbelt.
-
-Shroffs examined all amounts brought to them by any one, but went
-to the foreign Factories, to the Hong merchants or other customers,
-when required. The charge was small, and the amount of silver passing
-yearly through their hands was enormous, as amongst the Chinese all
-transactions were for money or its representative.[34] Shroffs were also
-'changers'--providing when required either Sycee, chopped dollars, or
-gold--as well as bankers, making loans or receiving deposits. The floors
-of their shops are covered with brown tiles, and at the end of the year
-they can sell the privilege of removing the floor for the chance of
-finding scraps of silver which may have escaped through the interstices
-of the tiles, the buyer of the privilege replacing the floor at his own
-cost. I have heard of as much as fifty taels (about $70) being paid to
-an important Shroff-shop for such a transaction.
-
-Several descriptions of dollars were imported from 1825, previous
-to which time the most numerous were those of Carolus IV. of Spain.
-These kept the preference above all others, and were currently known
-as 'Old Heads.' So accustomed were the Chinese to this dollar, that
-when Carolus III. or Ferdinand VII. were offered, they were taken with
-reluctance, while the 'Old Head' commanded a premium, and it thus became
-an exception to the general rule of 'breaking up.' For a long time they
-had been taken by dealers in raw silk from the middle provinces, in
-whole dollars, and finally so much prejudice existed in their favour
-that they would take no others except as cut money. This caused them
-to advance in value to 10 and even 15 per cent.; finally, during one
-season, we sold to the senior Hong merchant $60,000 at a premium of 30
-per cent.,1/2 receiving in exchange $78,000 in cut money. Ferdinand VII.'s
-dollars became 'New Heads,' and next came into favour, there being a
-diminishing supply of the 'Old,' but they were never at more than 1 to 2
-per cent. premium. Of other kinds there were Chilian, Peruvian, Mexican,
-and United States, which were submitted to the process of breaking up,
-and were never in greater favour with the Chinese than cut money. They
-were not 'old custom,' and they could not reconcile themselves to the
-new effigies or legends which they bore. Now and then, if wanted for a
-special occasion, Mexican dollars could be passed at a small premium,
-say 1 or 11/2 per cent. It is very probable, as often supposed, that the
-Shroffs had much to do with these varied transactions; they were behind
-the scene and perhaps they had, as many of the establishments belonged
-to wealthy proprietors, who used them for purposes of speculation in
-money.
-
-Book accounts, as has been said, were kept in dollars and cents by
-foreign houses, at the conventional rate of 717/1000 of a tael per
-dollar. There was but one exception, that of the English East India
-Company, which adopted the more rational system of Chinese currency.
-Payments for raw silk were made at 750/1000, for teas 720/1000, musk
-750/1000, as well as for some kinds of opium. As all Chinese produce
-went by weight, even raw and manufactured silk, and as all computations
-were in decimals, this system contributed to the ease with which
-business was carried on.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Pigeon-English_ is the well-known name given to that unique language
-through the medium of which business was transacted and all intercourse
-exclusively carried on between the 'Western Ocean' foreigners and Canton
-Chinese. For years after my arrival but three foreign residents were
-Chinese scholars--namely, Doctor Morrison; the present Sir John Francis
-Davis, the last Chief of the English East India Company's establishment;
-and one American, myself--while 'Pigeon-English' had grown up with the
-early days of foreign intercourse with the port of Canton. It is not
-difficult to arrive at the creation of this particular and strange
-language. Foreigners came to Canton for a limited period, and would not
-or could not apply themselves to the study of so difficult a language as
-the Chinese, of which even a sufficiency for commonplace purposes was
-not easy to acquire, and if acquired would be useless anywhere else. The
-local government also placed serious obstacles in the way of learning
-it, to the length of beheading a Chinese teacher for giving lessons.
-This is on the authority of Dr. Morrison, who related to me an instance
-that took place before I arrived, and he further informed me that for
-years after his own arrival in 1807 he was obliged, as a protection
-to his own teacher, to study at night in a room with lights carefully
-screened.
-
-On the other hand, the shrewd Chinaman succeeded in supplying this
-absence of the knowledge of his own language by cleverly making himself
-familiar with _sounds_ of foreign words, and conforming them to his own
-monosyllabic mode of expression, at the same time using simple Chinese
-words to express their meaning. He thus created a language, as it may
-be called, deprived of syntax, without the logic of speech, and reduced
-to its most simple elements. It took firm root, became the conventional
-medium of intercourse in respect to transactions of enormous value and
-magnitude, and exists in all its vigour and quaintness to this day.
-
-It was undoubtedly an invention of the Chinese, and long anterior to the
-appearance of the English at Canton in its origin, as may be proved by
-the admixture of Portuguese and Indian words still to be found in it,
-the latter having probably been originally made known by those primary
-visitors from the western world _via_ India. The English came more than
-a hundred years after; words from their language were then gradually
-incorporated, and increased with the disappearance of the Portuguese,
-who confined themselves to their own growing colony of Macao, until,
-finally, the former became the principal traders, and thus this language
-became known as Pigeon-English.
-
-The word 'pigeon' is simply a corruption of 'business' and with its
-companion means _business_-English. Of Portuguese origin we have the
-most undoubted proof in such words as _mandarin_, from mandar, to order;
-_compradore_, from compra, to buy; _joss_, from Deoes; _pa-te-le_, from
-padre; _maskei_, from masque, never mind; _la-le-loon_, from ladrao,
-a thief; _grand_, from grande, the chief, as, for instance, 'grand
-chop;' _junk_, from the Portuguese sound of Chueng in the dialect
-of the East Coast, where they first traded. Of Indian words we have
-_bazaar_, a market; _Shroff_, money-dealer; _chunam_, lime; _tiffin_,
-luncheon; _go-down_, from ka-dang; _lac_, one hundred thousand; _cooly_,
-a labourer; _chit_, a note or letter; _bungalow_, a cottage; _kaarle_,
-curry, and others.
-
-Some peculiarities of expression and application of two words constantly
-used in Pigeon-English may be mentioned. The language was by no means
-confined to those of foreign, but it contained quite a vocabulary of
-words of Chinese origin; it was, in fact, a very mixed tongue. 'Chop,'
-for instance, is of perpetual occurrence. It is the same as 'cho,' which
-signifies literally any 'document.' A shopkeeper's bill is a 'chop,'
-so is an Imperial edict or a Mandarin's proclamation; a cargo-boat is
-a chop-boat; it does duty also for a promissory note, a receipt, a
-stamp or seal, a license for shipping off or to land cargo, a mark for
-goods, or a permit. 'First quality' is expressed by 'first chop,' and an
-inferior according to quality is No. 6, 8, or 10 'chop,' the worst of
-all. When a cooly is sent on an errand requiring haste, he is told to
-go 'chop-chop.' A 'first chop' man speaks for itself, so does 'bad chop
-man.'
-
-The variety of uses to which the compound word 'chow-chow' is put is
-almost endless, and in some cases have a directly opposite meaning.
-For instance, a 'No. 1 chow-chow' thing signifies 'utterly worthless'
-but when applied to a breakfast or dinner it means 'unexceptionally
-good.' A 'chow-chow' cargo is an assorted cargo; a general shop is a
-'chow-chow' shop; provisions of all kinds are classed under the general
-head of 'chow-chow;' and, as may have been remarked in the list of the
-Factories, one was called the 'Chow-chow' from its being inhabited by
-divers Parsees, Moormen, or other natives of India.
-
-Although by the Chinese all foreigners were called 'Fan Kwaes,'
-or 'Foreign Devils,' still a distinction of the drollest and most
-characteristic kind was made between them. The English became
-'Red-haired devils;' the Parsees, from the custom of shaving their
-heads, were 'White-head devils;' Moormen were simply 'molo devils.'
-The Dutch became 'Ho-lan,' the French 'Fat-lan-sy,' and the Americans
-'Flowery-flag devils.' The Swedes were 'Suy' and the Danes 'Yellow-flag
-devils.' The Portuguese have never ceased to be 'Se-yang kwae,' thus
-retaining the name first applied to them on their arrival from the
-'Western Ocean' (which the words signify), while their descendants,
-natives of Macao, are 'Omun kwae,' or 'Macao devils' from the Chinese
-name of the town.
-
-In the Canton book-shops near the Factories was sold a small pamphlet,
-called 'Devils' Talk.' On the cover was a drawing of a foreigner in
-the dress of the middle of the last century--three-cornered hat, coat
-with wide skirts, breeches, and long stockings, shoes with buckles,
-lace sleeves, and in his hand a cane. I have now one of these pamphlets
-before me. It commences thus, 'Yun,' and under it is its 'barbarian'
-definition, expressed in another Chinese word whose _sound_ is 'man.'
-After many examples of this kind come words of two syllables--thus,
-'kum-yat' with their foreign meaning expressed by two other Chinese
-characters pronounced 'to-teay' to-day--and so on to sentences, for
-which the construction of the language is peculiarly adapted. This
-pamphlet, costing a penny or two, was continually in the hands of
-servants, coolies, and shopkeepers. The author was a Chinaman, whose
-ingenuity should immortalise him. I have often wondered who the man was
-who first reduced the 'outlandish tongue' to a current language. Red
-candles should be burnt on altars erected to his memory, and oblations
-of tea poured out before his image, placed among the wooden gods which
-in temples surround the shrine of a deified man of letters.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Although during the south-west monsoon little general business went
-on, transactions in Opium were very active. It was the period when the
-new drug arrived. Sales were made to brokers for cash (only) against
-orders on the receiving ships. The orders would be sent down by 'smug
-boats,'[35] which carried the Opium to its several destinations. These
-boats, of a peculiar build, were of great length and beam, the latter
-increasing rather disproportionately abaft to give quarters to brokers'
-agents who always went with them. The crews numbered from sixty to
-seventy men, who, like all Chinese boatmen, were singularly good
-sailors, intelligent and very active. They plied the oars sitting on low
-benches ranged on both sides of the deck, while additional propelling
-power was provided in an enormous mainsail and a foresail made of mats,
-bamboos, and rattans. The armament was one large gun in the bows,
-swivels, spears, and flint-lock muskets purchased from foreign vessels.
-The 'smug boats' differed from Government cruisers in a less powerful
-armament, smaller crew, and in the hull being bright varnished instead
-of painted 'black and red,' which are the colours of the latter.
-
-On delivery of the opium, the receiving ships were paid five dollars
-per chest,[36] which was called 'cumsha' (literally 'gold sand'), and
-two dollars for 'demurrage' if the order was not presented within seven
-days. It was always repacked, before being taken from the ship, in mat
-bags, then marked with the owner's private sign and the weight. At times
-as many as one hundred chests, in bulk, would form a single cargo, whose
-market value was from $150,000 to $200,000. The Canton agent received
-five, afterwards reduced to three, per cent. commission on sales. The
-time occupied in unpacking, weighing, and repacking would occupy but a
-few hours. The crews of the receiving ships were mostly Manila men and
-some Lascars, while the shroffs, carpenters, and boats' crews, cooks and
-servants were Chinese.
-
-It is needless to say the opium trade was prohibited by Imperial edicts
-as well as by proclamations of the Canton authorities. The Chinese who
-dealt in 'foreign mud'[37] were threatened even with capital punishment,
-but so perfect a system of bribery existed (with which foreigners had
-nothing whatever to do) that the business was carried on with ease and
-regularity. Temporary interruptions occurred, as, for instance, on the
-installation of newly-arrived magistrates. Then the question of fees
-arose, but was soon settled unless the new-comer was exorbitant in his
-demands, or, as a broker would express it, 'too muchee foolo'--i.e.
-'the man is crazy.' In good time, however, all would be arranged
-satisfactorily, the brokers reappeared with beaming faces, and 'peace'
-and immunity reigned in the land.
-
-Opium was never found for sale in Chinese shops at Canton, nor were
-there any signs by which one could judge where it was prepared for sale
-or for smoking, it being used in no other form.
-
-The Canton officials rarely made any reference to the Lintin station;
-but sometimes, compelled by form to do so, would issue a proclamation
-ordering vessels 'loitering at the outer anchorage' either to come into
-port or sail away to their own countries, lest the 'dragons of war'
-should be opened, and with their fiery discharges annihilate all who
-opposed this, a 'special edict.'
-
-Another branch of the opium trade was on the East Coast, where vessels
-of moderate size, belonging to two foreign houses at Canton, were
-stationed, say, near Amoy, Chin-Chew, Cup-Chee, and the island of Namao.
-They received supplies by brigs and schooners (all in this business
-being known as 'coasters'), which, starting from Lintin, touched at the
-anchorages above on going up to deliver, and on their return collecting
-the proceeds of sales. As an opportunity offered to get a practical
-experience of this trade, which was carried on with all the secrecy
-possible by the few engaged in it, I availed myself of a suggestion
-from the house to take a run up to Namao. We owned at the time a
-Boston clipper schooner called the 'Rose,' which, in 1837, was about
-leaving for that anchorage with a quantity of opium sold at Canton for
-delivery there, and an additional number of chests to try the market.
-The whole cargo consisted of nearly 300 chests of the Canton value of
-about $300,000. I joined the vessel at Capshuymun from Macao with an
-English gentleman, my guest there, whom I invited to accompany me. The
-'Rose' was soon ready for sea; we made sail and started with a moderate
-south-west monsoon. She was a foretopsail schooner of about 150 tons
-register, with her scuppers within two feet of the water. The weather
-proved delightful, the wind steady, and the sea smooth. We kept an eye
-upon the barometer, it being the taiphoon season, and a sharp look-out
-upon the fleet of 'fishing boats' which covered the water, and the crews
-of which were peaceable fishermen or cut-throat pirates according to
-circumstances.
-
-We anchored on the inside of the island of Namao on the third day,
-close by two English brigs, the 'Omega'[38] and 'Governor Findlay.'[39]
-Inshore of us were riding at anchor two men-of-war junks, with much
-bunting displayed; one bore the flag of a 'Foo-Tseang' or Commodore.
-Knowing the 'formalities' to be gone through with the Mandarins, we
-expected a visit from one, and until it was made no Chinese boat would
-come alongside, nor would a junk, not even a bumboat. We had no sooner
-furled sails and made everything shipshape, when 'his Excellency'
-approached in his 'gig,' a sort of _scow_ as broad as she was long.
-Besides the oarsmen, there were official and personal attendants,
-in grass cloth with conical rattan hats and flowing red silk cord
-surrounding them to the brim. He himself sat majestically in an
-arm-chair smoking quietly. A large embroidered silk umbrella was held
-over his head, while servants with fans protected him from the attacks
-of flies and mosquitoes. He was received at the gangway by Captain
-Forster. His manner and bearing were easy and dignified. When cheroots
-and a glass of wine had been offered, the 'Commodore' enquired the
-cause of our anchoring at Namao. The Shroff[40] gave him to understand
-that the vessel, being on her way from Singapore to Canton, had been
-compelled, through contrary winds and currents, to run for Namao to
-replenish her wood and water. Having listened attentively, the great man
-said that 'any supplies might be obtained, but when they were on board,
-not a moment must be lost in sailing for Whampoa, as the Great Emperor
-did not permit vessels from afar to visit any other port.' He then
-gravely pulled from his boot a long red document and handed it to his
-secretary, that we might be informed of its purport.
-
-It was as follows:--
-
- AN IMPERIAL EDICT.
-
- As the port of Canton is the only one at which outside
- barbarians are allowed to trade, on no account can they be
- permitted to wander about to other places in the 'Middle
- Kingdom.' The 'Son of Heaven,' however, whose compassion is as
- boundless as the ocean, cannot deny to those who are in distress
- from want of food, through adverse seas and currents, the
- necessary means of continuing their voyage. When supplied they
- must no longer loiter, but depart at once. Respect this.
-
- Taou-Kwang, 17th year, 6th moon, 4th sun.[41]
-
-This 'Imperial Edict' having been replaced in its envelope and slipped
-inside of his boot (for service on the chance of another foreign vessel
-'in distress'), his Excellency arose from his seat, which was a signal
-for all his attendants to return to the boat except his secretary. The
-two were then invited to the cabin to refresh, which being done, we
-proceeded to business. The Mandarin opened by the direct questions,
-'How many chests have you on board? Are they all for Namao? Do you go
-further up the coast?' intimating at the same time that _there_ the
-officers were uncommonly strict, and were obliged to carry out the will
-of the 'Emperor of the Universe,' &c.; but our answers were equally as
-clear and prompt, that the vessel was not going north of Namao, that
-her cargo consisted of about 200 chests. Then came the question of
-'Cumsha,' and that was settled on the good old Chinese principle of 'all
-same custom.' Everything being thus comfortably arranged, wine drunk
-and cheroots smoked, his Excellency said, 'Kaou-tsze' ('I announce my
-departure').[42] We escorted him to the side, over which he clambered
-with the aid of his secretary; we saw him safely deposited under his
-brilliant silken canopy, and in a short time rejoin his junk.
-
-Chinese buyers came on board freely the moment they saw the 'official'
-visit had been made. A day or two after, several merchant junks
-stood out from the mainland for the anchorage. As they approached we
-distinguished a private signal at their mastheads, a copy of which
-had been furnished to us before leaving Capshuymun. We hoisted ours,
-the junks anchored close to us, and in a surprisingly short time
-received from the 'Rose' in their own boats the opium, which had been
-sold at Canton, and there paid for, deliverable at this anchorage.
-It was a good illustration of the entire confidence existing between
-the foreign seller in his Factory at Canton and the Chinese buyers,
-and of a transaction for a breach of any of the conditions of which
-there existed no legal redress on one side or the other. This parcel,
-whose value was $150,000, had been already packed in bags, marked and
-numbered, at Capshuymun. The Chinaman who held the order of the Canton
-house for its delivery, on coming on board unfolded it from a cotton
-handkerchief, smoked a pipe or two and drank a cup of tea with the
-Shroff while it was going over the side, then took leave of us with the
-usual 'Good wind and good water,' or, 'May your voyage be prosperous!'
-The junks had anchored, mainsail to the mast, and as the last bag was
-received on board the anchors were at the bow and they standing to the
-northward.
-
-Various attempts had been made to establish 'floating' depots further
-north, for which purpose even the coast of Corea had been visited,
-as well as the port of Ke-Lung on the north end of the island of
-Formosa. The clipper 'Sylph,' Captain Wallace, sailed up to the Gulf
-of Leaou-Tung, having on board the celebrated Prussian missionary
-Gutzlaff, who, for the privilege of distributing the Scriptures and
-tracts, acted as interpreter for the sale of opium. The Rev. M. Gutzlaff
-was an 'old coaster,' his first appearance in China being as passenger
-from Singapore in a Chinese junk. As he had also studied at Malacca,
-there was a fellow-feeling between us. The first foreign opium vessel
-stationed on the East Coast was the 'Colonel Young'[43] in 1831, her
-tender, running between the station and Lintin, being the 'Fairy.' M.
-Gutzlaff was for some time on board the former, and, from his knowledge
-of the Chinese coast dialects, could make himself very useful. He
-resembled a Chinese very much, while _they_ declared him to be a 'son
-of Han in disguise'! The accounts of his travels along the coast and
-in the interior which he gave me on his return were very curious and
-interesting. He would leave the brig and be absent many days together.
-On one occasion he nearly reached the frontier of the Canton province;
-on another he penetrated to the Bohea tea-country, in the province of
-Fuh-Keen. He described the people as hospitable and kind. Sedan-chairs
-of a rustic sort were furnished to him, with food without stint, and he
-never failed to find quarters for repose and refreshment in a temple.
-His object in travelling, besides the acquisition of knowledge, was
-the distribution of tracts. On visiting a town or village he would
-distribute translations of 'The Word of Life' and administer 'Lee's
-Antibilious.' Landing one day in the ship's boat, she was capsized, and
-he found himself rolling about in the surf with 'The poor man's friend,'
-a box full of 'Saints' Rest,' to which he clung, and packages of
-'Cockle's pills,' while in momentary alarm that he and the boat's crew
-(four Caffres) would be picked up by shovel-nosed sharks.
-
-At the end of a fortnight I decided to return to Capshuymun and Canton.
-My friend Mr. N---- was agreeable, but the question was, how and when?
-The 'Rose' had still a considerable quantity of opium to dispose of, and
-would not probably be ready for a month. In this dilemma two days went
-by, when the schooner 'Harriet'[44] came in from the northern stations.
-She was a small fore and aft craft of nominally 100 tons, built at Macao
-by Hamilton, an American ship carpenter, and was commanded by a friend,
-Captain Hall, who consented to take us back to Capshuymun. After she
-had received treasure from the three Namao vessels, her entire freight
-consisted of $430,000 in value of gold bars and Sycee-silver. We went on
-board with our traps and servants, and were soon under way. The cabin
-being, of course, of preposterously small dimensions, and overrun with
-ants, cockroaches, and centipedes, with which we should have interfered,
-we made ourselves comfortable on deck--dining, smoking, and joking _al
-fresco_. We anchored at Kow-Lung just in time to escape an unusually
-heavy taiphoon. We rode it out there; then sailed to Capshuymun, and
-from thence direct to Canton by fast boat.
-
-The 'Rose' subsequently foundered in a taiphoon,[45] on July 21, 1841,
-only one of her crew being saved, a Portuguese Sea-cunnie,[46] who
-was for three days on a plank. He was picked up by my old friend and
-shipmate, Captain Fraser, in the 'Good Success,' thirty miles from the
-Grand Ladrone.
-
-This tedious review of the opium traffic, as existing during the first
-fifteen years of my residence at Canton, will give the reader a correct
-idea of the mode in which it was carried on. The confiscation of 20,052
-chests by the Imperial Commissioner Lin, in 1839, checked the local
-trade for a time, but did not do away with it. Up to this period it had
-indeed been an easy and agreeable business for the foreign _exile_ who
-shared in it at Canton. His sales were pleasantness and his remittances
-were peace. Transactions seemed to partake of the nature of the drug;
-they imparted a soothing frame of mind with three per cent. commission
-on sales, one per cent. on returns, and no bad debts! To the agent each
-chest was worth 20_l._ sterling, one year with another.
-
-Consequent upon the seizure of the English-owned opium, the city of
-Canton, lying at the mercy of Sir Hugh Gough, was ransomed, as has been
-said, for $6,000,000, and this sum was afterwards appropriated by the
-British Government to indemnify its owners, who had delivered it up,
-either directly, or indirectly through their Canton agents, in obedience
-to the command of Captain Elliot, 'for surrender to the Imperial
-Commissioner on behalf of Her Majesty's Government.'
-
-The amount of the ransom was much below the ordinary market value, even
-of its cost; on the other hand, no one could foresee to what a low price
-it _might_ fall, through the measures which were being taken by the
-Pekin authorities to 'put an end for ever' to 'opium smoking' in their
-dominions, and the whole arrangement was, under the circumstances, a
-very reasonable one.
-
-The largest quantity surrendered by any one house was 7,000 chests; we
-came, I think, third on the list, with 1,500 chests; the remainder was
-principally in the hands of English, Parsee, and other native of India
-firms. The appointment and approaching arrival of the Imperial Envoy
-became known at Canton in the latter months of 1838. The local Mandarins
-therefore began a system of harshness towards dealers in order to appear
-vigilant and active in the carrying out of old decrees. This led to much
-cruel punishment, to the execution of one man in the Square in front
-of the Factories, in December 1838 (by way of casting obloquy upon the
-foreigners), and an attempt to strangle another one there in February
-1839. This latter caused an unprecedented riot, led to an attack upon
-all foreigners who happened to be out of their residences, several
-of them being injured, and to the Factories being besieged by many
-thousands of vagabonds, who kept up an incessant attack on windows and
-gates with stones and brickbats.
-
-They tore down and used as 'battering rams' the heavy posts of which
-the small enclosures in front of each Factory were constructed, yelling
-and shrieking like so many wild animals. We were rather anxious that
-some should force their way in, as we had distributed broken bottles
-in great quantities up and down the main entrance to our own Factory,
-No. 2 Suy-Hong, our enemy being a barefooted crowd, while against the
-other great casks of coal had been rolled; we were not gratified by
-seeing the efficacy of the first protection. The mandarins had brought
-an 'opium dealer' to the Square about noon, in order to strangle[47]
-him there. The Cross was already driven in the ground, and in a few
-minutes it would have been all over, when an unusual hubbub of something
-extraordinary being about to take place attracted the attention of some
-foreigners who were on the Square at the time. Instantly the news flew
-from Factory to Factory, when all we could muster, perhaps seventy to
-eighty, rushed out to stop the proceeding. I acted as spokesman on
-behalf of all present, and protested against the Square being turned
-into an execution ground. The Mandarin in charge said that the orders
-he had received must be carried out, that the Square was a portion of
-His Celestial Majesty's Empire. He was told that might be, but it was
-leased to us as a recreation ground, and that we _would not permit_ its
-desecration by a public execution! This was a bold thing to say. During
-this short interval the scene was a most extraordinary one. There was
-the cross, and close to it the victim with a chain about his neck, held
-by two gaolers, all looking on with a quiet curiosity. The servants
-of the mandarin were supplying him with constantly renewed pipes; his
-attendants, a few soldiers, and his chair-bearers, seemed more amused
-than anything else. There is no telling what might not have taken place
-had it not been for a boat's crew who happened to come from Whampoa that
-morning. They belonged to the old East India Company's ship 'Orwell,'
-Captain 'Tommy' Larkins, formerly of that Company's service, and a
-well-known and general favourite in the community. These sailors had
-been wandering about the Square, but gradually approached the spot and
-looked on. Seeing the drift things were taking, suddenly they seized the
-cross, smashed it in pieces, and began to lay them over the heads and
-shoulders of the executioners and any Chinamen within reach. The gaolers
-dragged the prisoner away. Jack tore down a tent that had been pitched
-for the mandarin, capsized the chairs, the table, with the teapot and
-cups, and would next have attacked the mandarin himself had we not
-interfered to protect him. We were much relieved when his Excellency
-and his aids were carried away and no harm done to them, and we found
-ourselves in possession of the ground. Then cried out one of the sailors
-to another, 'I say, Bill, we don't get such a lark as this every day!'
-
-The siege of the Factories by the mob was continued throughout the
-afternoon, the guards at the corner of the American Factory were obliged
-to retreat after ineffectual efforts to clear the ground of our
-assailants, and things looked very serious. In the 'Imperial' Factory,
-Captain St. Croix, of the 'Alexander Baring,' had collected all the
-inmates, armed with such weapons as they had amongst them, revolvers and
-fowling-pieces, and proposed a rush out, but happily no demonstration
-was made. There were without doubt eight or ten thousand of the vilest
-of the population seemingly bent on the destruction of the 'foreign
-devils.' Towards five o'clock some one suggested that it might be worth
-while to get notice of our situation to Houqua. It looked as if the
-Mandarins had left us at the mercy of the mob, while the streets were
-completely blocked, and no Chinaman probably thought of going on such
-a mission. Mr. G. Nye (an American gentleman) and myself undertook to
-go and see him. Getting on the roof of No. 4 'Suy-Hong' we managed to
-cross to that of a shop in Hong Lane, through which we descended, and
-after some exertion reached the street in the rear of the Factories,
-called the 'Thirteen Factory Street,' which led to Houqua's Hong. We
-found the old gentleman in some trepidation from the news that had been
-already brought to him, but he seemed quite ignorant of the Square and
-the Factories being at the mercy of the crowd. He at once despatched a
-messenger to the 'Kwang-Chow-Foo,' the chief magistrate of the city, and
-we returned the way we had come. About half-past six o'clock, to our
-great relief we heard the approaching sound of the gong, denoting the
-coming of the officers, and witnessed from our verandah the immediate
-dispersion with whips of the rabble. No one was spared, the sight of
-the numerous soldiers in attendance on the Mandarins caused a rush
-towards every outlet from the Square, and even to the river, where
-several were drowned, not a boatman offering them the least assistance.
-Wide open flew the Factory gates, and in an instant their imprisoned
-occupants appeared with looks of relief indescribable. The Mandarins
-passed the night on the ground, chairs were procured for them, official
-lanterns were lighted, and, conscious of the entire safety which we now
-enjoyed, and without being disturbed by the hourly beating on gongs
-of the different watches of the night, we all turned in. The next
-day everything reassumed its normal state of comfort and safety. The
-'victim' had been strangled at the public execution ground, to which he
-was taken from the Square. Approaching the Mandarins in the morning to
-thank them for their timely assistance (rather a 'cool' thing to do, as
-some one remarked, seeing we had taken the law in our own hands and had
-driven away the officer of justice the day before!), they received us
-very courteously, and assured us we had 'nothing to fear!'
-
-This was the most serious of many provocations inflicted by foreigners
-upon the authorities. We treated their 'chops,' their prohibitions,
-warnings, and threats, as a rule, very cavalierly. We often spoke of
-their forbearance and wondered at the aid and protection they extended
-to us; in fact, they considered us more as unruly children, people who
-had never had an opportunity of becoming acquainted with 'Taou-Le,' or
-'reason.'
-
-When the Imperial Government took the unlooked-for measure of seizing
-the English-owned opium and punishing the native dealers, the day seemed
-to have arrived when the trade in it would really cease. The Canton
-houses had been forcibly deprived of their stocks; the supply on the
-East Coast, under the control of very few of them, was diminishing,
-with no fresh supplies to look forward to. Quantities which were on
-their way from India were being landed at Singapore or sent over to
-Manila, while further shipments from the former country were entirely
-suspended. On all sides a complete darkness existed as to what would
-be the result. Holders were offering to sell at Singapore for next
-to nothing; the article was in reality a drug indeed. Even as low
-as $150 to $200 per chest became its nominal value in the Straits.
-This was the condition of the 'opium question' which quickly followed
-the confiscation. The foreign community, with the exception of the
-Americans, had all left Canton, and at first took up their quarters
-on board of ships at 'Kow-Lung;' but having been bombarded out of
-that anchorage by the mandarins, 'Toon-Koo,' at the mouth of the
-'Capshuymun,' became the general rendezvous. One day a clipper schooner
-got under way and stood seaward, and some time elapsed before she was
-heard from again. She had taken on board a few chests of opium that
-had arrived since the seizure. At the moment of sailing a letter was
-handed to the captain, directing him to open one of two others enclosed,
-after he should have got clear of the land. On doing so he found that
-he was ordered to make the best of his way to Singapore, to land the
-opium he had on board, and deliver the unopened letter to his consignee
-there, by whose instructions he would be subsequently governed. The
-schooner consequently proceeded on her voyage, the captain not having
-the slightest intimation of the object of it. Simply, he was directed
-to reply to any enquiries on arrival that he had brought down opium.
-The twenty chests were landed at a moment of the day when the Bund was
-crowded with Moormen, Jews, Parsees, and Chinese, all opium holders or
-brokers. No letters had of course been received by them, but at the
-unprecedented sight of twenty chests being landed they concluded that
-now indeed 'God was great and Mohammed was his prophet,' and that China
-had at last resolved to permit no more poisonous drug to be landed on
-its shores. Before twenty-four hours had passed, so adroitly had the
-agent made his plans, that, aided by clever brokers, he secured nearly
-700 chests, quietly, here a little and there a little, at prices 'dirt
-cheap.' Opium had been unsalable at Singapore, many of the holders
-were unable to hold, and some were under orders to sell for whatever
-they could get, and 'have done with it;' the average of the purchase
-in question was $250 per chest. The twenty chests were re-shipped to
-the schooner, the newly purchased were taken on board, and after a very
-short detention she sailed, whither no one knew. She was bounding up the
-China Sea. Her destination was the East Coast, and there her cargo was
-readily disposed of at an average of $2,500 per chest.
-
-Inside of the city of Canton, as we heard from Chinese, the price rose
-to $3,000, while the sale of it or the smoking of it was almost a matter
-of life and death--the latter was the penalty threatened and even
-carried out against those who were known to indulge in it. The Imperial
-Commissioner was on the spot; he was inexorable, consternation prevailed
-throughout the Chinese community, but we heard from good authority that
-the number of the beheaded was not large.
-
-While the opium trade was going on, discussions often occurred as to
-the morality of it, as well as to the effect of smoking on the Chinese.
-None of the Hong merchants ever had anything to do with it, and several
-of the foreign houses refrained from dealing in it on conscientious
-grounds. As to its influence on the inhabitants of the city and suburbs
-at large, they were a healthy, active, hard-working, and industrious
-people, withal cheerful and frugal. They were intelligent in business,
-skilful in manufactures and handicrafts. These traits are inconsistent
-with habitual smoking, while the costliness of the prepared drug was
-such as to render a dilution of it (to bring it within the means of
-the masses) utterly harmless. Amongst the wealthier classes, no doubt,
-it was more or less common, this we knew; but I myself, and I think I
-may safely say the entire foreign community, rarely, if ever, saw any
-one physically or mentally injured by it. No evidences of a general
-abuse, rarely of the use of the pipe, were apparent. I remember one man
-having been brought to a missionary hospital to be treated for excessive
-smoking of opium, but he was looked upon as a Lion and much was made of
-him. In fact, smoking was a habit, as the use of wine was with us, in
-moderation. As compared with the use of spirituous liquors in the United
-States and in England, and the evil consequences of it, that of opium
-was infinitesimal. This is my personal experience during a residence at
-Canton, Macao, and Hong Kong of forty years.
-
- * * * * *
-
-For many years after the first foreign merchants came to Canton, they
-were not permitted to remain after their vessels were despatched, but
-were obliged to leave in them. In the case of the great Companies
-such as the English East India and the Dutch, it gradually became a
-great inconvenience. These, therefore, retired to Macao, where in time
-residences were specially built for their accommodation. (The old Dutch
-factory there, which had stood for over a century, was destroyed by a
-taiphoon in 1875.) The removal from Canton to Macao took place at the
-close of the north-east monsoon, simultaneously with the commencement
-of the dead season, when the market would have been cleared of teas and
-few or no vessels at Whampoa. Macao possesses a delightful climate,
-completely within the sea breezes, and is beautifully situated; it
-moreover offers in its entirety perhaps a unique specimen of Western
-colonies in the Eastern world as they existed 250 years ago--in
-its forts, churches, and walls, its convent, senate-house, and the
-extensive, solidly built, private residences.
-
-The Bay of Macao, looking eastward, is strikingly like that of Naples.
-The fine houses which border it are protected by a broad esplanade,[48]
-supported by a sea-wall with a low parapet. The view from it is
-very fine across the outer harbour in a north-east direction to the
-islands of Lantoa and Lintin; to the north lie the 'Nine Islands,' and
-south-westerly is the anchorage called 'Taypa,' between the islands of
-Montanha to the west and Cabreta to the east. This anchorage is about
-three miles from Macao, and (as well as the two islands) is under the
-sovereignty of the Portuguese. West of Macao is the inner harbour, which
-separates it from the island called the 'Lappa.' On it in the early
-days the Portuguese built villas and laid out gardens, but they were
-subsequently abandoned from an inability to protect them effectually
-from Chinese marauders and pirates, and in 1825 a few vestiges of them
-only remained.
-
-The departure from Canton of the Factory was annually quite a
-circumstance. From fifteen to twenty 'chop-boats' were drawn up at
-the Company's landing, of which some were converted into sleeping
-apartments, for which their high decks and capacious holds, which were
-floored off, afforded ample space. On either side were large windows,
-with curtains and movable shutters, for protection against rain. Others
-were appropriated to several milch cows and their keepers, for supplies
-for the journey, as well as books and papers of value. The members of
-the Factory, rarely fewer than twenty to twenty-five, occupied the
-others with their personal servants; and, what with Compradore's men,
-cooks, and coolies, the entire number was not less than 250 to 300
-persons, including the boats' crews. On the arrival of the Linguist with
-the Government permit, the fleet set sail amidst the beating of gongs,
-burning fire-crackers and small squares of red paper, as a propitiation
-to the gods presiding over rivers and streams. The boats always took the
-Macao passage, as it was called, which is a broad stream branching off
-from the Pearl River, about a half-mile westward of the factories and
-running due south; consequently they passed the Factories, affording
-altogether a fine sight. The distance to Macao, taking the curves of
-the river, is about 120 miles, and the journey averages three or four
-days. As the return to Canton formed also an event in local life, being
-at Macao when the Company left in October 1831, I was glad to have the
-opportunity of availing myself of an invitation from Mr. Majoribanks,
-the then 'Chief,' to go up with them. A chop-boat was placed at the
-disposal of young John Robert Morrison and myself, and the following
-particulars of the trip to the provincial city are from a letter written
-by me at the time to a relation in the United States:--
-
- On board the 'Golden Galley,' Macao to Canton: October 4, 1831.
-
- It was the intention of the Factory to embark on the
- 1st, but the departure was postponed to the 2nd. A circular
- was then sent to the members, requesting them to be on board
- their respective boats by half-past ten the next morning, at
- which time they were to get under way. Accordingly, my chum
- and I joined our chop-boat, anchored in the inner harbour
- with thirteen others, which composed the fleet. Presently a
- signal was made by the boat of Mr. Davis, Chief of the Select
- Committee, hoisting its mainsail, and in a few minutes we were
- sailing in line through the harbour. We numbered, including
- invited guests, thirty-eight foreigners. Three of the boats
- (which in foreign measurement would be of, say, 120 tons) were
- full of Factory coolies, cows, and provisions, the latter in
- addition to each one having a supply on board sufficient for
- three days. Our chop is large and comfortable; we have a cabin,
- by means of partitions, 14 feet by 10 and 7 feet high, and
- forward of it is another for our servants, the cook, and stores.
- Two couches, one on either side, serve for beds, added to which
- are tables, toilette arrangements, and everything complete,
- with cleanliness the most perfect. We breakfast and dine as
- regularly and in as good style as on shore. Some boats have four
- gentlemen and others five, as arranged among themselves. They
- are chartered by the Factory twice a year, and each one receives
- one hundred Spanish dollars for the trip up or down. Provisions
- and furniture--in fact, all things needful--are also supplied by
- the Company. We have not with us all the members, some remaining
- awhile longer at Macao; but amongst those now on their way to
- Canton are Dr. Colledge and Padre Vachell, as well as that
- other important personage, the Steward Canning! The Company's
- Compradore also accompanies the fleet, with three or four fast
- boats under his control for carrying messages, making visits,
- or distributing fresh milk. So you see everything is as cosy as
- possible. The crews, numbering about fifteen men to each boat,
- manage them with surprising dexterity. These Chinese boat people
- are perhaps unequalled by any others in the world. They are not
- only active and intelligent, but good-natured and obliging, and
- seem anxious to get on as quickly as possible.
-
- Now that I have given you a sketch of our accommodation,
- I will go on with our passage from the inner harbour. While
- passing through it, volleys of fire-crackers were let off,
- and gongs were beaten by way of 'chin-chining Joss' for a
- safe and pleasant passage. A little later dinner was served,
- and a No. 1 dinner it was. Crab soup to begin with, an ample
- dessert, Hodgson's pale ale, superb La Rose and sherry, with
- custard-apples, plantains, and other fruits. We turned in at
- eleven, but slept little, as the wind was dead ahead after
- entering the 'Broadway,' so I was up early and on deck. The
- fleet was hard at it, tack and tack to windward. We found
- ourselves in the middle of it, those to windward about three
- miles off, and those to leeward about the same distance. At
- eight o'clock we passed the Mo-tow, or 'Knife-grinding,' Fort,
- which was once a stronghold of the celebrated pirate Apotsae,
- who pillaged all the country round about. Near to it were
- lying two of His Celestial Majesty's men-of-war junks. The
- day's supply of fresh milk was brought on board, and at eight
- breakfast, which was attended with difficulty, from the heeling
- over of the boat. We entered the 'Heang-Shan'[49] River, but
- at 11.30 were all obliged to anchor within five miles of the
- city, as it had begun to blow a violent gale, the rain coming
- down in torrents. On the morning of the 5th, cloudy and rainy,
- but the wind abating somewhat and the tide being favourable, we
- hove up, and at 8.30 passed Heang-Shan. We expected to anchor to
- receive the customary visit of the mandarin, but he may not have
- felt inclined to turn out in such weather. It happened that the
- Compradore, who had gone up in a fast boat the evening before,
- procured from him his seal to the Company's 'chop,' which
- allowed us to go on without anchoring; but through all this fuss
- and his absence we lost the milk for our after-dinner tea! On
- the morning of the 6th the Compradore was again alongside, and
- made it 'all right' with _us_ by threatening to come again with
- mutton for dinner; and, considering what we have 'undergone'
- since leaving Macao, it will be very acceptable.
-
- The scenery on both sides of the river is celebrated for
- its beauty, and we enjoyed it much. The banks are lined with
- orange and lemon trees, peaches and lychee. On the summit of a
- high hill stands a seven-story pagoda. If you ask a Chinaman
- its object or use, he replies that it is 'Joss pigeon,' and you
- are as wise as you were before. In reality, the Chinese believe
- that these buildings bring prosperity on the region and ward off
- evil influences. The river is crowded with boats crossing from
- one bank to the other, filled with all sorts of country produce
- or passengers, who stare their very eyes out in looking at us.
- Further on we pass another fort, with a curious name, the 'Old
- Duck,' and on the riverside opposite is another called 'Greatly
- Excellent.' In the afternoon a fine strong breeze sprang up, and
- we made rapid progress, passing still another fortification,
- called the 'Mouth of the Great Gate.' We were compelled to dine
- on a superb roasted capon, with _et ceteras_ as usual. We just
- touched at 'Che-nae' for the official formality, and soon after
- the Western Fort was passed, when we saw the innumerable lights
- and lanterns of the provincial city; and at 8 P.M. glad enough
- we were to find ourselves once more in 'Old Canton.'
-
-The Dutch East India Company followed the same programme to and from
-Macao. The members of this Company were never so numerous as that of the
-English. There were usually two gentlemen to manage all affairs, with
-three or four 'writers.'
-
-Under various pretexts, other foreign merchants managed to remain at
-Canton the year out. One was that their import cargo not having been
-sold, consequently the tea and other merchandise which they had shipped
-was unpaid for. This, if not considered reasonable, at all events had
-the effect of causing the authorities to overlook their presence, and
-gradually that article of the 'old regulations' became a dead letter.
-
-Having seen the manner in which the great Companies went between Canton
-and Macao, it will be curious to follow the 'private' individual and
-the formalities that had to be gone through (which, however, applied to
-those Companies as well). A linguist was sent for, to whom was given
-the name and nationality of the person requiring a permit for Macao,
-and he would take them to the Hong merchants. Three or four of these
-would then petition the Hoppo that the request might be granted. Amongst
-these merchants must be included the one who 'secured' the foreigner
-in question. On the third day after, the linguist would reappear at
-the Factory and give notice that the luggage, &c. must be examined by
-an officer from the Hoppo's office, which having been done, the permit
-would be given to the head boatman, and on the fourth day the boat
-could proceed on her journey. It must not be supposed that these old
-'government regulations' were never infringed, for in my own case,
-in 1830, being ill, I asked Houqua to use his influence that I might
-leave at once, and in twenty-four hours my papers were ready and I was
-off. The boats in which foreigners travelled to and from Macao (except
-occasionally if a large party, when they took chop-boats) acquired the
-name of 'inside fast boats.' They were large and commodious, with cabins
-in which one could stand up, broad raised seats on two sides, covered
-with clean matting, on which one slept. They were furnished with green
-Venetian blinds. In the centre of the cabin stood the dining-table,
-and over it a lamp was suspended. The accommodation was ample for four
-persons. Abaft the main cabin was a smaller one, for the servants and
-cook; then came the stern-sheets, occupied by the helmsman and two
-or three men to work the main-sheet. On one quarter was the kitchen;
-forward of the principal cabin was a flush deck to the bows; there
-stood the foremast, and ten to twelve oars could be used. The crew
-consisted of twelve or fifteen men, always alert, hard-working, and
-good-natured. The trip down the river or up was particularly enjoyable;
-the respite from office duties imparted a new sensation; and, if made
-in the south-west monsoon, nothing so exhilarating after the close hot
-Factories as this breeze fresh from the sea. The entire cost of the trip
-was for the boat eighty dollars, and the invariable 'cumsha,'[50] ten or
-fifteen more, according to one's humour after a quick or tedious passage.
-
-The official papers were four in number, to which on the particular
-occasion now referred to a fifth was added.
-
-No. 1. The petition from the Hong merchants applying for the pass to
-Macao, which read thus:--
-
- Whereas it is our duty to petition for permits for Macao, it
- now appears that the barbarian merchant, H----, having clearly
- set forth that on a former year he came to Canton to trade, now
- wishes to visit Macao. Not daring to resort to illegal ways,
- he has begged us to entreat the favour of an official passport
- being granted to him, that he may submit it for inspection at
- the several stations on the route. Such being the barbarian's
- wishes, we petition that he may be officially permitted to
- proceed.
-
- _Memorandum._--The barbarian merchant H---- is provided with
- one sword and one gun for the protection of his person, as well
- as with clothing and cooking utensils.
-
- (Signed) HOUQUA MOUQUA
- PWANKEIQUA PWANHOYQUA.
-
- Taou-Kwang: 19th year, 4th moon, 15th sun.
-
-No. 2. The Hoppo's answer:--
-
- The request is granted. He may go to Macao. This must be
- shown at the several custom-houses on the route, and on arrival
- at Macao it is to be surrendered to the collector there.
-
- (Seal of the Hoppo.)
-
- _Note._--To be countersigned at the West Fort and at Che-Nae.
-
-No. 3.
-
- This pass is to be countersigned along the whole route
- to Macao. Yu, by Imperial decree Acting Hoppo for the Port
- of Canton. Raised two degrees! Whereas it is evident that,
- to ensure safety and uninterrupted travelling between Canton
- and Macao, barbarians should be furnished with passports for
- exhibition at the custom-houses on the way, that they may be
- allowed to proceed, and the time of arrival and departure at
- each is to be noted on them. All difficulty thus removed, and
- no excuse for loitering or wandering, how can disturbances
- arise? On arrival at Macao the pass must be delivered to the
- custom-house there, to be returned to this office and cancelled.
- It is highly important that they (to whose hands it shall come)
- attend to this injunction.
-
- _Memorandum._--One boat, containing one barbarian named
- H----, who in the 4th moon, 16th sun, starts from the capital.
-
- (Seal and date.)
-
- Countersigned at the
-
- West Fort 16th, arrived evening, left evening.
- Che-Nae 17th, " daylight, " daylight.
- Hiang-Shan 18th, " midnight, " "
- Macao 18th, " evening.
-
-(I fill in the dates with arrivals and departures as they took place.)
-
-No. 4.
-
- Yu [as above].
-
- Whereas, by the will of the Great Emperor, he controls
- all matters relating to the trade of the Outer Ocean, now
- grants the merchant H----, by means of the boat belonging to
- Yip-Paou-Chang, liberty to proceed with fine teas, &c., to Macao
- for sale. Herein are registered the articles he takes with him
- on which the duties have been collected, viz.:--
-
- 63 catties[51] of tea, in five boxes.
- 4 large silver spoons.
- 8 small silver spoons.
- 45 catties of oil, in two jars.
- 10 " pictures.
- 36 " preserves, in one box.
- 27 " salt fish, in one package.
- 612 " wooden ware, in eight boxes.
- 30 pairs of shoes, in one box.
- 270 catties of iron ware, in three boxes.
- 18 " hams, in one package.
- 1 wooden table.
- 27 catties of white sugar, in one package.
- 3 small oil paintings.
-
- The barbarian merchant H---- also takes the following
- personal stores:--
-
- 524 bottles of foreign wine.
- 30 foreign knives, with 30 forks.
- 30 " glass cups and bottles (decanters).
- 1 trunk of woollen clothing.
- 2 boxes of shaving-head implements (razors).
- 250 catties of foreign clothing.
- 30 " fragrant water.
- 200 " lead.
- 70 " divers eatables.
- 1 glass mirror.
- 1 large glass lamp.
- 20 catties of foreign crockery.
- 10 " copper ware.
- 30 " candles.
- 10 pieces of foreign fragrant soap.
- 1 foreign gun and 1 sword.
- 1 hat and 1 spyglass.
- 270 catties of foreign white paper.
- 5 pictures with glass fronts.
- 40 catties of rolled tobacco-leaves (cheroots).
- 1 foreign white woollen blanket.
-
-As my departure for Macao on this occasion took place a month or two
-after the surrender of the opium, unusual strictness was observed
-for fear that some of the nine foreign merchants selected by the
-'Kinchae'[52] as hostages might escape. The following extra document was
-therefore issued:--
-
-No. 5.
-
- An extra permit granted by the officer appointed by
- the Imperial Commissioner, occasioned by the opium affair,
- and stationed in front of the foreign Factories, to take
- cognisance of all foreigners arriving at and leaving Canton.
- Le, waiting preferment, specially appointed, now reports to the
- Kwang-Chow-Hee.[53] It having been brought to my knowledge that
- the boat owned by Chang, having on board the barbarian H----,
- leaves this 16th sun of the 4th moon for Macao, no delay must
- take place. Moreover, as neither of 'the nine' forbidden to
- leave are on board, custom-houses will permit her to pass.
-
- No. 196. (Signature of the Kwang-Chow-Hee),
- and endorsed, 'To be returned and cancelled.'
-
-The House Compradores were always glad to avail themselves of such an
-opportunity to send to Macao a lot of 'Chow-chow' cargo on their own
-account, a privilege we never refused. This accounts for the sentence in
-No. 4--'proceeding to Macao with fine tea for sale.' Whence came the 200
-catties (266 pounds) of lead was a mystery to me, but the 270 catties
-of 'iron ware' were iron chests, and 270 catties of foreign white paper
-certain office books of accounts and stationery, removed from the
-Canton offices in consequence of the unsettled state of affairs, with a
-quantity of house stores, &c. The details of everything is peculiarly a
-Chinese idea, and as similar documents are now no longer issued, and the
-_inside_ passage to Macao never taken under former circumstances, they
-are curious in their way. The _outside_ passage, by the way of the Bogue
-and in splendid steamers, is now the order of the day.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The word _tea_ is of Chinese origin, being a corruption of _tay_ in
-the Fuh-Keen dialect, the province from whence it was first exported
-to Europe. The leaf has always retained its name of tea in the West,
-notwithstanding that in Canton, from which port it has been shipped for
-nearly 250 years, it is called _cha_. This word means the _infusion_,
-while _cha-yip_, analogous to 'leaves for infusion,' is the tea of
-commerce. The varieties are very numerous, and are classed under the
-heads of _black_ and _green_. It is only within fifty-five years that
-_Oolongs_ and _Ankoys_ have been shipped, and chiefly to the United
-States. These are of a light brown colour. _Blacks_ consisted of
-_Bohea_, _Congo_, _Souchong_, and _Powchong_. The first derives its name
-from the celebrated _Woo-E_ Hills of Fuh-Keen; the second signifies
-_Workmen's_ tea; the third 'small seeds;' and the fourth 'seeds in
-bundles,' it having been always done up in paper packages. _Greens_
-were, 1, 'Young Hyson,' 2, 'Hyson,' 3, 'Hyson Skin,' 4, 'Gunpowder,'
-and 5, 'Imperial.' The first means in Chinese 'before the rains' (when
-it was gathered), the second the 'opening of spring,' and the third the
-'refuse or end of the crop.' The Chinese name of the fourth signifies
-'small pearls' and of the fifth 'large pearls.'
-
-In addition to these were formerly shipped Campoi, Hung-Muy, Sung-Lo,
-Caper, and Woping; but they have now lost their distinctive names, and
-if shipped at the present day are merged into other kinds more popularly
-known.
-
-The choicest of all teas, and which we saw only on special occasions,
-when it came with the annual New Year presents from the Hong merchants,
-was 'Padre Souchong,' so called from its having been grown by the
-priests of a famous monastery. The whole quantity was small; it was
-put up in canisters of two or three ounces, and was currently supposed
-to be sent to the Emperor. His Celestial Majesty deigned as a rare
-favour to present some of it to the most favoured of the high officers
-of Government at Pekin, and they in their turn, as a great compliment,
-forwarded a portion to the Hong merchants. This was in return for
-valuable watches set with pearls, for clocks, musical snuff-boxes, or
-'smellum water' (as the Chinese call lavender-water and eau de cologne),
-which foreign objects it was customary to send to influential mandarins
-for favours in the past and those in prospective.
-
-The following tradition exists as to this peculiar tea. In spite of the
-assertion that the entire annual crop is 'offered up to the reigning
-Emperor,' it is brought to Canton, but in a very limited quantity.
-
- In a deep recess of the Woo-E (Bohea) Hills, surrounded
- by shrubbery and trees, almost impenetrable to the human eye,
- stands the Temple of the 'Silver Moon.' Its antiquity is so
- great that all traces of its origin are lost. The temple has
- been inhabited from time immemorial by a family of the 'Tea
- Sect,' which, at the period of the year coinciding with the
- maturity of the leaves, makes offerings to its patron saint of
- fine tea. Close by the temple stand three small tea trees, which
- are tended by the family. They produce but _one_ catty each.
- These trees were originally planted thousands of years ago by
- divine hands, and they have never been known to yield more nor
- less than three catties (4-1/3 pounds).
-
-The original paper of which this is a translation was given to me by
-Pwan-Suy-Lan, with a small canister of this famous tea; but on asking
-him if he considered it to have been originally planted by 'Joss,' he
-answered, he thought not, but that 'he own come'--that is to say, 'it
-sprang from the ground spontaneously.' It was known that the senior Hong
-merchant received the greatest quantity of it. As with Pwan-Suy-Lan and
-Pwankeiqua, Houqua's family had long been tea planters in the Bohea
-Hills, and were so when they first came to Canton, soon after foreign
-trade was confined to that port (as he frequently observed to me), about
-the year 1750.
-
-Well-to-do Chinese drink black tea, but not usually _new_ tea. They keep
-it in closely-shut earthen jars for a couple of years before using it.
-This moderates the acrid or pungent quality which new tea possesses more
-or less, and renders it softer and more acceptable to the taste.
-
- * * * * *
-
-As if to make all things work comfortably, the setting in of the
-south-west monsoon brought foreign ships to Whampoa to receive cargoes
-of teas, which were meanwhile arriving from the interior, from August to
-November; and the north-east monsoon, as the ships loaded and left the
-port in succession, blew them down again. The only exceptions were known
-as 'out-of-season ships,' of which there were rarely over two yearly.
-These came east about _via_ Gilolo or Dampier's Straits, and they took
-away the last teas of a season. An occasional ship, trusting to good
-weatherly qualities, would take the Palawan passage _late_ in the year,
-beat up under the coast of Luconia to Cape Boleno, and then stretch
-across the China Sea; but it was dangerous from its numerous shoals, and
-a vessel would be dreadfully knocked about, even if successful. About
-1830 or 1831 a bold and successful attempt to set the north-east monsoon
-at defiance was made by the _first_ opium clipper. She was called the
-'Red Rover,' and was commanded by Captain Clifton, owned at, and from
-Calcutta. It was considered a most extraordinary performance.
-
-The earliest shipments of a season were made from Whampoa by the East
-India Company, in November usually. They consisted of contracts made at
-the end of the previous year. They could be seen in large quantities
-stored in the Hongs, waiting the first ships to come in. These teas
-were currently known as 'winter teas,' and went to keep up the quantity
-of one year's supply which the Company was bound by its Charter to
-keep on hand in London at all times. Continuous shipments followed, so
-that by the end of the year or a little later their vessels were all
-away. To the United States green teas were exported almost solely until
-about 1828, when the first blacks were shipped; after that date they
-became a feature in the trade. Contracts were made for the new season's
-teas, either at fixed prices, or, if it was an object to get a ship off
-quickly, then the prices were governed by those of the opening of the
-market. The 'opening' of the tea season was eagerly looked forward to;
-and such was the contrast between the busy and the dull season that
-during the former we were repeatedly in the offices until two o'clock in
-the morning. The seasons of 1830 to 1838 were particularly active ones,
-and besides business with India, England, and the West Coast of America,
-our own house had frequently at Whampoa at one time ten to fifteen ships
-(in the year 1833 twenty-two), every one loading teas and silks for the
-United States, and, after 1833, vessels loading for England as well.
-It was during one of these years--I think 1834--that we despatched the
-_first_ English vessel from Whampoa that had yet carried a full cargo of
-free teas to New South Wales; she was named the 'Royal Saxon,' and was
-commanded by Captain Robert Towns.
-
-The final loading of a ship consisted of all sorts of odds and ends
-reserved for the last moment, and shipped off by what was called the
-'chow-chow chop.' More valuable cargo, not ready in time for the regular
-cargo boats, could also be sent to Whampoa by this conveyance. It was
-a great convenience, while all other shipping off was conducted on the
-strictness of the laws of the Medes and Persians, with documents without
-flaw.
-
-When the market had been cleared of teas, the vessels despatched and the
-business of the season over, contracts were made with the Hong merchants
-for the next season. These contracts were often of great pecuniary
-value. They consisted of teas of certain qualities and kinds, in
-packages of chests and half-chests, sometimes at fixed prices, at others
-at the opening prices after they should have arrived, and deliverable
-at the customary time. No other record of these contracts was ever
-made than by each party booking them. No written agreements were drawn
-up and signed, nothing was sealed or attested. A wilful breach of
-contract never took place, and as regards quantity and quality, the Hong
-merchants fulfilled their part with scrupulous honesty and care. I am
-speaking of the first twenty years of my own personal experience.
-
-Entire cargoes of teas were purchased and shipped from a few small
-canister musters, and were weighed by taking the average of a few chests
-from each 'chop.' A 'chop' of tea was always an uncertain quantity,
-blacks numbering 400 to 600 chests, sometimes more or less, and greens
-from 120 to 200 chests. The chest contained originally 100 catties,
-or 133-1/3 pounds, the halves and quarters in the same proportion,
-while boxes were locally packed with canisters of various sizes. The
-inconvenience of these larger packages, both in size and weight, caused
-a reduction to be made in them gradually until the chest averaged
-about eighty catties. Some of the packages shipped at this time have
-completely disappeared, and we hear no longer of five and ten-catty
-boxes, nor of one, two, or three-pound canisters.
-
-Valuable invoices of silk piece goods were bought and shipped from an
-examination of only a piece or two taken at random from any box we might
-choose to have opened. They consisted of satins, crapes, sinshews,
-levantines, black handkerchiefs, sarsnetts, lutstrings, and pongees,
-besides great quantities of yellow nankins, almost all of which articles
-have now ceased to be exported.
-
-As a natural consequence of the integrity of the Chinese merchants, we
-had neither receipt nor check-book. Payments were made by the Compradore
-of large amounts on simple scraps of paper signed with the initials of a
-firm. No promissory notes existed, and consequently there was no 'bill
-book.' There was no post office, there were no postages, and no copying
-machines.
-
-We had no custom-house business to attend to; our inward cargoes were
-landed and stored, and our outward ones shipped off, by the Linguists,
-to whom we had but to intimate in which Hong the former should be landed
-or the ship to which the latter were to be sent. All merchandise was
-purchased at long price, and all sold at short price; this was the rule,
-and saved us an infinity of trouble. We were under no apprehension as
-to the outturn of the quality or weight of the teas and silks which we
-shipped. The ingenious process of augmenting the brilliancy of tea by a
-clever facing of 'Prussian blue' or 'Chinese yellow,' of adding to the
-bulk by an admixture of chopped willow or elm leaves, of increasing its
-weight by iron filings, was not yet practised by those 'heathen Chinee.'
-Possibly the absence of these 'industries' formed a very primitive mode
-of carrying on business!
-
-On the other hand, we were obliged to make our own ink (out of powders
-from England), in which we resembled the Jews, who arrived in China and
-settled at Kae-Fung-Foo any time between B.C. 1122 and 249! Historians
-have not settled this point, but they have ascertained that, whenever
-it might have been, 'those people used split bamboos for pens, and at
-the Feast of Tabernacles made sufficient ink for the ensuing year'! Our
-letters and shipping documents were despatched under wafer or seal, as
-no such thing as envelopes yet existed (they had been in use in China
-for centuries!), nor did we enjoy the luxury of postage-stamps. Moreover
-every consignee of a ship was his own 'post office' for all letters
-brought out by her, and he delivered them to suit his own convenience. I
-have known cases in which outward letters were delivered when the vessel
-that brought them was outside the Bogue, homeward bound. This custom of
-not always delivering letters on the arrival of a ship from the United
-States was mutually understood, and considered as the privilege of any
-house. It can easily be imagined that a New York firm, in sending the
-'Huntress' to a market 12,000 miles away for a valuable cargo, might
-suffer greatly in its interests if she carried letters from a rival
-house deliverable on arrival, informing its correspondent that it should
-despatch the 'Levant' shortly, give him particulars of her outward cargo
-and orders for a return one. Thus very reasonably, letters were detained
-until the agent of a ship had concluded his purchases--at least he had
-the privilege of detaining them. There was, of course, the chance of the
-passage out, and the difference that might result to the quickest ship.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When a ship had anchored at Whampoa, the pilot reported her arrival to
-the Hoppo through a branch Hoppo station at that place. This would be
-done, not by giving the name of the ship, but that of the captain. Two
-boats were then made fast to her, to see that no smuggling was carried
-on; they were attached one on each quarter. Meanwhile the agent would
-select a Hong merchant to become 'security' for her and a Linguist to
-transact her business with the Hoppo's office, to send boats to bring
-her cargo to Canton, and to take to Whampoa her outward cargo, and these
-were all the 'official' duties that the agent had to attend to.
-
-Before she could open hatches, the formality of 'Cumsha and Measurement'
-had to be gone through. The first word signifies 'present,' and was
-a payment made by the earliest foreign vessels for the privilege of
-entering the port; and the second is equivalent to tonnage duties. On
-a day of which notice was given to the agent, a specially appointed
-mandarin from the Hoppo's office was sent on board, attended by pursers
-and numerous servants. He was always received with some ceremony, and
-regaled with wine and biscuit. As with all the officials, they were men
-of a good deal of dignity and ease of manner. The captain would receive
-him at the gangway, while all hands were rigged out in their 'Sunday
-suits.' After the ordinary salutations, enquiries as to the passage out,
-&c., the measurement would be made by one of the attendants attaching
-the end of a measured tape to the forward part of the rudder head and
-running it to the after part of the foremast, then calling out the
-length, which others would note in writing; the breadth was then taken
-amidships close abaft the mainmast, between the plankshears, which
-being booked, a calculation was made of the dimensions for duty. As the
-details were peculiar I give those of the ship 'Maria' (Captain Evans),
-of New York, whose tonnage was about 420 (Canton, June 1830).
-
-
- Length, 67 covids; breadth 22; total
- 147-4/10 covids. Deducting one-fifth
- according to the regulations for
- second-class ships. Equal to taels[54] 842.2.8.5
- Loss in converting into Sycee-silver 75.8.0.6
- For work of converting, 1/5 per cent. 15.1.6.1
- Cumsha 810.6.9.1
- -----------
- 1,743.9.4.3
-
- The Hoppo's 'opening barrier fee' 480.42.0
- -----------
- 2,224.3.6.3
- Transport to Pekin and weighing in
- Government scales 150.1.4.5
- To the Superintendent of the Treasury 116.42.4
- Add 1-1/10 per cent. converting into
- Sycee 1.2.8.0
- -----------
- 2,492.2.1.2
-
- Difference in weights between Canton and
- Pekin, 7 per cent. 174.4.5.5
- -----------
- At 72 per dollar, are $5,092-59/100 Taels 3,666.6.6.7
- ===========
-
-Vessels coming to Whampoa with rice only were subject to the modified
-port charges of $1,150 up to the year 1833, but in that year, owing to
-a great famine that existed, they were done away with. The Viceroy Loo
-then issued a lengthy proclamation, in which the Hong merchants were
-ordered to make known the cessation of those charges to 'all the foreign
-barbarians,' 'who would leap for joy, and go backward and forward in
-search of rice cargoes.'
-
-The 'Cumsha and Measurement' having been duly disposed of, a permit
-was granted for 'opening hatches,' and the unloading went on
-uninterruptedly. The outward cargo was then shipped off, and the
-vessel ready for sea. Tea ships exclusively met with no great delay at
-Whampoa--on the average about three months--but if silks constituted her
-homeward lading, frequently six months passed before they were ready.
-It then happened that not a solitary foreign vessel remained at the
-anchorage; I have seen this to occur on several occasions.
-
-When finally loaded, application was made through the Linguist to the
-Hoppo for the 'Grand Chop.' This was at once delivered on ascertaining
-that all formalities had been fulfilled and duties collected. It was a
-large sheet having a broad border, on two sides of which was the figure
-of a Dragon (the symbol of the Celestial Empire). They were always the
-same in form, and printed from wooden blocks, with blank spaces to be
-filled in with the name of the captain, number of the crew, list of
-armament, and date of issue. The following is a translation of the grand
-chop of the ship 'Maria,' Captain Evans:--
-
- Chung, filling the office of Hoppo by Imperial appointment,
- issues this in obedience to his will. When Western Ocean ships
- have been measured, paid their duties, and departed, should bad
- winds and water drive them to the shores of another province
- (not being within the accorded limits of trading), if it is
- found that they possess this sealed discharge they must be
- allowed to continue their voyage without delay or opposition.
- Which is on record.
-
- Now the foreign merchant ship 'Ewan' having loaded with
- merchandise, goes to the Hwa-Ke[55] country, there to manage
- her business. She has been measured, and duties incurred by her
- have all been settled, as customary. As she is now departing,
- this is given as a clearance into the hands of the said merchant
- to grasp and hold fast, so that, should he meet with any other
- custom-house, he must not be detained. Military stations to
- which it may be shown must also let the said vessel pass without
- interruption, and not induce her to remain and trade that they
- may be benefited by any charges or duties. Should they act
- otherwise, it will give rise to trouble and confusion.
-
- According to old regulations, the guns and ammunition and
- other arms she carries for her defence are herein enumerated.
- An unnecessary quantity is not allowed, nor has she dared to
- receive on board contraband articles. Should it have been
- discovered that these rules were broken by her, this permission
- to sail would assuredly not have been granted.
-
- Respectfully examine this _and depart_.
- (Hoppo's seal.)
-
- Sailors 26
- Great guns 4
- Shot 100
- Swords 10
- Muskets 10
- Fire-physic (powder) 200 catties
-
- Taou-Kwang: 11th year, 10th moon, 12th sun.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The _Whampoa Compradores_ who attended upon American and other foreign
-ships received their licenses from the Hoppo's office. They were,
-like their Canton brethren, a notable class, and fulfilled for the
-ships the same offices as the latter did for the Factories. It was
-another illustration of the perfect system that existed, whereby all
-having business at the port were aided in every manner for their own
-convenience and security. The Whampoa Compradore for American vessels in
-eight cases out of ten was 'Boston Jack'. He was much considered by his
-countrymen on the island, and ever civil and obliging. He had once made
-a passage to Boston as steward, and returned to Whampoa, _via_ Cape Horn
-and the north-west coast of America, in a small schooner of about 200
-tons called the 'Cossack,' on board of which was Mr. Oliver H. Gordon as
-supercargo. 'Boston Jack' was very fond of relating his experiences on
-board of the 'Cossack,' particularly off the Horn, where, as he would
-say, 'too muchee strong gale; sea all same high masthead--no can see
-sky, no can see water,' meaning that in the turmoil of the elements one
-could see nothing. By his countrymen he was looked upon as a very 'great
-gun;' he was a favourite with the Americans, and finally died at a good
-old age, 'universally regretted' and much missed!
-
-The grand chop having been received from the Hoppo, the pilot was
-obtained at Whampoa. As the ship got under way, the Compradore's
-'cumshas,'[56] according to 'olo custom,' were brought on board. They
-consisted of dried lychee, Nankin dates (the 'latest dates,' as they
-were christened), baskets of oranges, and preserved ginger; then, amidst
-a firing off of crackers attached to the end of a long pole from the
-Compradore's boat--'to awaken the gods to the vessel's departure,' that
-they might vouchsafe to her 'good wind and good water'--she departed. As
-in entering the river, she hove to off Anonghoy Fort at the Bogue, that
-the pilot could exhibit his pass. Sailing by Macao, this individual was
-cast off, and soon outside, she was rolling down the China Sea--homeward
-bound!
-
-The English East India Company's ships were divided into two fleets,
-which came in alternate years. Each fleet consisted of about twenty
-vessels, a certain number of which were appointed for China _via_
-Bombay, Madras, and Calcutta, while the remainder were direct ships.
-
-They were splendid vessels of 1,800 to 2,000 tons. Some belonged to the
-Company, others were chartered usually for a certain number of voyages.
-Many of them were built in India of teak. In time of war they sailed
-under convoy; the gun-deck then carried a suitable armament, of which
-good use was made in several encounters--notably in the southern part
-of the China Sea, when, under Admiral Duckworth, a French squadron was
-beaten off, and on other occasions in the Bay of Bengal. They sailed
-under the flag of the Company, which resembled that of the United
-States in its alternate red and white stripes, having for its field the
-English Jack. The discipline on board was that of a man-of-war, and they
-differed in no respect from one except that they did not fly the pennant
-or carry a special body of marines. Besides the commander, the officers
-were six in number, several midshipmen, surgeons, and purser, together
-with the usual complement of warrant officers. Those of the fleet told
-off for India conveyed troops and munitions of war, for service in the
-Company's possessions there.
-
-No finer sight of the kind could be seen in any part of the world than
-the Company's fleet collected at Whampoa, with their inward cargoes
-discharged, and every ship in beautiful order, waiting for teas.
-Those formidable vessels were not of the modern clipper model, but
-broad-backed, with swelling sides and full bows. On board everything was
-neat, everything indicated system, discipline, and force. The oldest
-captain (in date) daily hoisted his pennant as Commodore. Daily one of
-the ship's boats came to Canton in rotation, independently of others
-on individual service. The hospitality of the captains and officers
-was generous, and, as some of them had bands on board, it was a treat
-indeed to be included amongst the guests. The 'Vansittart's' band even
-came to Canton to play in the Factory on one occasion, and regaled the
-entire community by playing in the Square. The music attracted many
-Chinese also, it being to them a wonderful novelty. The bandsmen wore
-a uniform of red coats. We were all looking on and listening, when
-suddenly a Chinaman exclaimed, 'What for he makee so muchee noisee?'
-'Noise!' said one of the barbarians; 'may Fo[57] run away with you--that
-no belong noise, belong music. You no likee?' 'Hae-yah![58] my how can
-likee, all make mixee--_my_ China music No. 1; _he_ too muchee foolo!'
-What he would have added we couldn't tell, but suddenly he darted off,
-crying out, 'What for you kick my?' and made the best of his way up Old
-China Street. Soon afterwards the crowd became so numerous and so noisy
-that to avoid further 'complications' the band was withdrawn inside the
-Company's Factory and the Square cleared, and not very quietly, as the
-Chinamen's bare heads resounded with the thwacks which were laid on
-them, but it took place with great celerity. That was the first and only
-time a foreign band of music was heard to play in the Square.
-
-Exports by 'country ships' to India consisted of tea, coarse porcelain,
-paper umbrellas, silks, and a multitude of 'chow-chow' articles,
-together with enormous quantities of silver and bar gold. For the
-latter a special chop, called 'money chop,' had to be obtained from
-the Hoppo. It was these repeated shipments of treasure that attracted
-the attention of the local authorities, and through whose reports in
-connection with the foreign commerce of the port they were made known to
-the Government at Pekin. As a natural result, Imperial edicts were sent
-down forbidding shipments of such quantities of money, as being for the
-purchase of 'foreign mud,' to be introduced by stealth into the 'Middle
-Kingdom,' against prohibitions successively issued, warning all engaged
-in the trade 'to desist and not to incur the Imperial displeasure,'
-while any Chinese co-operating in it were to be severely punished. But
-the immunity so long enjoyed, with the inherent weakness of the Chinese
-Government, caused foreigners to believe that any serious attempt to put
-a stop to the trade was simply impracticable. The Imperial edicts were
-considered as so much waste paper. Opium was imported and sold, while
-'the oozing out of fine silver' went on as usual.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Of the 'Outside' Chinese Merchants several were of much consideration,
-and of an integrity and intelligence in business unsurpassed by the
-mercantile classes of any other country. Such men were Washing, Cumwa,
-Linchong, Wo-Yun, Yeeshing, Keet-Chong, and others. An incident in
-relation to Yeeshing, serving as an illustration both of his honesty and
-unselfishness, may be related.
-
-On the occasion of the great fire in 1822, enormous quantities of
-private property and of merchandise were destroyed, and opportunities
-offered when, without the possibility of discovery, the latter,
-particularly, could have been concealed and reported as having been
-consumed by the flames. Mr. John P. Cushing, of the house of Perkins &
-Co., had placed with Yeeshing 5,000 pieces of crapes to be dyed, whose
-value was about $50,000. There was, of course, no insurance upon them,
-nothing of the kind existing at Canton. A day or two after the fire
-Yeeshing entered Mr. Cushing's office, exclaiming,'Hae-yah! Hae-yah!'
-'Well, Yeeshing,' enquired Mr. C., 'how fashion?' To which he replied,
-'My have loosum my house, my shop--alla finishy, too muchee trub.' Mr.
-C. began to express his sympathy, with the conviction that he too was
-involved in the loss, when Yeeshing continued, 'My alla finishy, only
-when my take out you crape (to save it) hav loosum 84 peecee, how can
-my, no too muchee trub?' He had saved Mr. Cushing's crapes, but had lost
-his own dwelling and its contents, with an important quantity of his own
-goods and chattels, in doing so.
-
-Keet-Chong, named above, possessed an estate on French Island, on which
-his family had resided for more than 800 years. It was of moderate
-extent, the dwelling spacious, and, as he used to say, 'all thing no
-have changee.' He showed me on one occasion his genealogical tree
-(which Chinese families keep with scrupulous care), and which ascended,
-according to it, to the Sung Dynasty (967 to 1281 A.D.). This dynasty
-immediately preceded the Yuen, or Mongol Tartar, family, the first
-emperor of which was Kublai Khan, grandson of 'Jengis Khan.'
-
-The custom exists among Chinese of not using their family names
-in business, either for firms or individuals. They assume certain
-designations by which they are known, are responsible, and recognised by
-the authorities. As examples, Houqua, whose family name was Woo (from
-which _How_), was known commercially as 'Ewo.' Pwantingqua, whose
-family name was Pwan, was known as 'Tung Foo,' and the family name of
-'Washing' was Moo. The choice of these names is singularly diversified
-and sometimes very droll. In passing through any business street you
-see on a small sign attached to a pillar at the side of a door such
-firms as 'Peace and Quiet,' 'Current Gains,' 'Collective Justice,'
-'Perfect Concord,' 'United Concord.' I have seen 'Tan-E' (which means
-literally 'Solitary Idea'), 'Perfect Record,' 'Three Unities.' Where
-something of a more imposing nature is chosen--as, for instance, 'George
-and Thomas Sandbank, Sons and Nephews'--a double name, such as 'The
-Record of Perpetual Harmony,' would be adopted. One is struck with the
-use of short inscriptions on narrow sheets of red paper over doorways,
-at the foot of stairs, over weights and measures, everywhere and on
-everything almost. On entering an outer door you observe above it, 'May
-the Five Happinesses enter the abode' (longevity, riches, posterity,
-love of virtue, and a natural death), while within may be seen, 'May
-wealth flow in abundantly;' and not a bad one, 'For idle persons there
-is no admittance.' 'As wheels revolve, so may supplies and sales
-continue;' 'Customers come in numbers, like the gathering of clouds;'
-'Here are sold superior goods, in whose prices there is no change;'
-'Rich customers are perpetually welcome;' 'Daily may there be weighed
-10,000 taels' (May the transactions amount to that sum); 'From a single
-cash, may 10,000 be derived' (these last two may be seen over scales
-and weights); and so each object has its peculiar, if not appropriate,
-device. You read on each one of a pile of water-tubs, 'The bucket of
-superlative peace;' on chests, 'The box of great tranquillity;' over
-inner doors, 'May happiness attend the opening of the door;' and over
-shelves and drawers, 'When opened, may prosperity follow;' at the top
-of a stairway, 'May the going up or down be calm and peaceful.' On the
-sterns and bows of boats and junks you may read, 'Prosperous gales
-and smooth seas' (which in Canton jargon is simplified to the usual
-expression 'Good wind, good water'); 'Grant favourable breezes;' 'A fair
-wind is riches;' 'The moon's rays shine upon and enliven the waters;'
-'The dragon's head produces horns of gold' (an allusion to the bows of
-a junk, which are supposed to represent the head with the large eyes of
-the dragon), signifying, 'May the voyage be successful.'
-
- * * * * *
-
-The first foreign newspaper published at Canton was in 1827; it was
-called the 'Canton Register,' and was printed on a small hand-press
-lent for the purpose by Mr. Alexander Matheson, of the then house of
-Magniac & Co.[59] Its size was but a little more than that of a large
-sheet of foolscap. The editor, who himself was the first compositor, was
-a young American gentleman named Wood, of Philadelphia, and son of the
-celebrated tragedian. He was a person of great versatility, mentally and
-materially; he abounded in wit, was well read, and of no fixed purpose.
-Having ceased to be connected with the 'Register,' he entered the
-office of Messrs. Russell & Co. about the same time with young Irving,
-a nephew of Washington Irving. One day, one of our Parsee friends,
-Nanabhoy Framjee, came in for bills on London 'in small pamphlets'
-(moderate amounts each), and it was Wood's business to fill them up.
-Our office, one of three, was the general rendezvous of Russell & Co.'s
-captains, and on the day in question five or six of them were present,
-talking over purchases in carpenter's square of camphor-wood trunks,
-lacquered ware boxes, writing desks, &c. The bills having been made out
-were left on Mr. Low's desk for signature. Suddenly from the 'Tai-Pan's'
-office we heard a great shout of laughter, and that gentleman appeared.
-'Wood,' said he, handing him one of the bills, 'I doubt if Baring's will
-accept this, or even Nanabhoy take it; read it over.' Wood did so, and
-to his confusion saw that B. B. & Co. were requested to pay to the order
-of Nanabhoy Framjee, Esq., 'one hundred lacquered ware boxes,' which in
-his absence of mind he had caught up from the skippers. Not very long
-after, Wood took up his quarters in the French Factory, and established
-a second newspaper, called the 'Chinese Courier,' which had but a short
-existence. Amongst his other accomplishments was that of sketching,
-for which he had a remarkable talent, and he was, moreover, a maker of
-verses! One evening at dinner at his house, several being at table, the
-conversation ran upon poetry, and some impromptu verses having been
-made, something led to a challenge to Wood to parody Byron's 'Know'st
-thou the land,' confining the words entirely to local matters and
-things. He accepted the challenge, and when we again met he read after
-dinner the following, on which we congratulated him, as being _good_
-for Canton!
-
- Know'st thou the land where the nankin and tea-chest,
- With cassia and rhubarb and camphor, abound?
- Where oft in the Hongs, by the coolies' foul feet pressed,
- They pack their Boheas in a way to astound?
-
- Know'st thou the land where in vain you endeavour
- To sell your fair longcloths or barter your yarn?
- Where you fidget and fret, be you never so clever,
- And find all your profits are going 'astarn'?
-
- Know'st thou the land where the drug in its glory,
- With cotton and betel-nut, govern the day?
- Where Patna or Malwa's the theme of each story,
- The life of each anecdote, solemn or gay?
-
- Know'st thou the land where the fair, unprotected
- By the lords of their destinies, wither alone?
- Where woman's a slave, by her tyrants neglected,
- And the only bright jewel they sigh not to own?
-
- Where lips which were formed to breathe of devotion
- To affectionate spouses or lovers provoke;
- Instead of confessing their tender emotion,
- Give forth all their sensitive feelings in _smoke_?
-
- 'Tis the land we now live in--the land that would shame
- The world by its valour, invention, and worth;
- Where the page of her history glows with the name
- Of her sage,[60] and her warrior,[61] the pride of the earth;
-
- Where tea is the potion great deeds to inspire,
- And emperors deign (and if _they_, who will not?)
- To watch the decoction, themselves, on the fire,
- And write prosy odes to the 'pride of the pot.'
-
- Tho' fairest Hwa-Te[62] are thy gardens of flowers,
- And sweet every blossom that flings to the breeze
- Its perfume, decks with its tints thy gay bowers,
- Or clings on its vine to thy moss-covered trees;
-
- Yet fairer the lands we have all left behind us,
- And gayer the flowers and purer the air.
- Do we need in our exile this rhyme to remind us
- Of the hearts that are glowing with love for us there?
-
- Farewell then to tea-chests; the loosened sail flying
- Expands to the breeze and chides our delay;
- Now past is the parting, the 'chin-chin,' the sighing
- Of all the poor 'devils'[63] who _can't_ get away!
-
-Wood and a brother resident, an Irishman named Keating, had at one time
-a 'little difficulty.' Mr. Augustine Heard acted for him, and Mr. James
-Innes, an 'old school' and eccentric Scotchman, for the latter. Much
-correspondence took place between them as to where the question should
-be washed out in 'blood.' One side chose French Island, at Whampoa;
-the other Lintin, as being beyond the interference of the Chinese
-authorities in case of 'accident;' but through the good sense of the
-'_best_ men,' and to the gratification of common friends, the dispute
-was arranged--because, as Wood said, 'There was no abbey in which to lay
-a body.' After a residence of nearly ten years at Canton, Wood removed
-to Manila, and established himself on a coffee and sugar plantation
-at Jala-Jala. His letters from this new abode were full of wit and
-mirthful to a degree, even in describing bad crops caused by visits from
-Messrs. Taiphoon, Drought, & Co., or the destruction of his fences by
-wild buffaloes, while he never could get a night's sleep from the many
-snakes of preposterous dimensions which made themselves 'at home' in his
-bungalow, and pursued the most 'harmless' of rats across the ceiling, up
-and down posts, and across the floors 'under his very eyes.' At length
-he quitted Jala-Jala and joined the office of Messrs. Russell & Sturgis,
-at Manila. Under their generous auspices and considerate kindness he
-ever after found there a home.
-
-He was the first person to introduce the art of photography in Manila,
-and through his teaching many Mestizos[64] became proficients, and
-practise it now as a profession. He made one short visit to Europe, from
-which he returned delighted, and one to myself at Macao (thirty years
-after we first met at Canton). At length for poor Wood the 'tolling of
-the bell' was heard; he died, full of years, after an extraordinary life
-of great personal worth, great unsteadiness of purpose, and, as far as
-worldly success went, a great unsuccess.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Under certain circumstances foreign residents could 'offer up' petitions
-at the city gates! It was a privilege that had its origin a long
-while ago. At the same time it was discouraged by the authorities,
-while strict orders were given to the guards at the gates to keep a
-sharp look-out and close them if any number of barbarians were known
-to be approaching. This old custom originated in some question, such
-as praying for a diminution of duties (all duties being more or less
-arbitrary), or for permission to ship off an extra weight of silks,
-which was fixed at a certain number of piculs per vessel,[65] and called
-the 'silk privilege,' or on some matter affecting their personal
-comfort. The Co-Hong frequently co-operated with us, recommended our
-petitioning, and even themselves made a draft paper. Answers to these
-petitions were invariably received, when the Hong merchants would
-prepare for us a rejoinder, if necessary.
-
-Great precautions were taken to keep the intention as quiet as possible,
-consequently all who were disposed to join a party in presenting a
-petition were advised in time. None were more anxious to accompany it
-than the younger members of the community, who considered it great
-fun! To refer to a particular case, directly in front of the American
-Factory, at the river side, there existed a huge mound of earth and
-rubbish that had its origin with the great fire of 1822. While the new
-Factories were going up and the damaged ones being repaired the workmen
-and coolies threw all sorts of rubbish on the spot. Subsequently it
-became a depository of refuse of all sorts, and finally a resort of
-loathsome beggars, of whom many died on it; but beyond obtaining the
-carrying away of the dead bodies, all efforts by the foreigners to get
-the whole thing removed had proved ineffectual.
-
-The Hong merchants now and then sent a number of coolies, but they made
-small impression upon it; and at length, mostly at their suggestion that
-it was 'Mandarin pigeon,' it was resolved to present a petition at the
-city gates, which they themselves prepared and we copied.
-
-On the day agreed upon, therefore, the party going were quietly advised
-and informed at which gate to meet. Taking different streets in small
-numbers of three or four, all drew towards the 'petition gate,' as we
-called it, and suddenly with a rush entered it. The surprise of the
-guards was complete. They hastily closed the ponderous outer gate to
-prevent the Chinese entering and possibly creating a row. Seeing the
-petition on red paper held up above our heads, they knew from experience
-the object of our visit, and forthwith despatched a messenger to the
-Hoppo's 'Ya-Mun.'[66] Any annoyance caused us by Chinese lookers-on
-or by any who tried to crowd about us called for prompt 'whipping' by
-the soldiers, as was always the case, letting foreigners have their
-own way, and laying it well over the shoulders of their own countrymen
-who attempted any interference or who did not 'move on' fast enough.
-It happened that on a previous occasion of petitioning an unpleasant
-incident occurred, which arose from a fancied insult; blows had been
-exchanged, and certain words used by an excited member of the foreign
-party in reference to the soldiers became a tradition, 'Knock them down,
-friend Olyphant, they are only tea and rice,' and the best of the joke
-was that the speaker was a Quaker and Mr. Olyphant one of the quietest
-men in the world, and the last person to strike any one.
-
-Such exhibitions were much to be deplored as encouraging the belief that
-foreigners were indeed 'unruly devils'--a pugnacious, wild, boisterous
-people. Presently we heard the sound of the gong and the loud cries
-of lictors preceding the Mandarin calling out his rank and office as
-well as keeping the street clear. The space between the large outer
-and inner gate is the thickness of the wall, about thirty feet, and
-twelve to eighteen feet broad, the quarters of the guard, about twenty
-or twenty-five in number, being in recesses on either side, and in this
-space petitions are received. The Ta-Yin[67] (great man) having entered
-with other Mandarins and attendants, after salutations and surprise at
-seeing so many foreigners, they seated themselves on chairs brought
-by their followers. He then commenced by telling us of the extreme
-impropriety of entering the gates in opposition to the will of the 'Son
-of Heaven,' cautioned us to be wary how we did the like again, lest we
-might check the flow of Imperial benevolence towards all coming from a
-distance, &c. &c., which was the usual opening formula, when a Linguist
-being found cut and dried on the spot (sent privately by the Hong
-merchants), stepped forward, knelt on both knees, and 'handed up' the
-petition. In the meantime it was a strange sight to see the houses, shop
-doors, and windows inside the city full to overflow of Chinese, intently
-looking on in profound stillness and curiosity.
-
-His Excellency, having read the paper, said in placing it in the hands
-of an officer that a communication would be sent to the Hong merchants,
-'that we must return to our Factories, be henceforth reverently
-obedient, when all would be well, otherwise His Sacred Majesty, Ruler
-of all under the Sun, notwithstanding that he was the incarnation of
-consideration for all beyond the Western Ocean, might be provoked to
-withdraw his beneficent,' &c. &c. 'That the laws of the Celestial Empire
-must be obeyed,' and this was the closing formula.
-
-Business being thus ended, a disposition was shown for a little
-conversation. Acting as interpreter, I was invited to speak of the
-distance of our countries from the 'Celestial Flowery Land,' how many
-moons it took to come and to return; all which was done in laying great
-stress upon the clear light of day into which we emerged as we left
-our own gloomy shores and approached the 'Middle Kingdom'! Questions
-were asked as to our respective nationalities, our names also; and
-in their attempts to repeat such as Zacharia, Krieroffski, Burr,
-and Brown, they turned to one another and laughed heartily at their
-unsuccessful efforts. The teapot and servants to prepare the infusion
-being indispensable in the suite of Mandarins (as well as pipe-bearers),
-tea was presently offered to us; we in exchange 'offered up' Manila
-cheroots. No one exhibited the slightest impatience, no matter how many
-hundreds of Chinese were obliged, outside or inside, to make great
-detours to reach other gates.
-
-The Mandarins being provided with two watches each, next began a
-comparison of time; they asked our ages, how long we had lived within
-the benign sway of that 'Almighty Ruler' under whose protecting wings we
-found ourselves; and being assured, in reply to other enquiries, that
-in our distant countries now and then a sun, very occasionally two or
-three moons, with a rare glimmer of a star, might be seen, they rose
-from their seats, took leave, and were soon out of sight. The great
-gate was then opened after a violent effort, with a loud grating of its
-enormous hinges, and the 'foreign devils' returned to the Factories,
-after an hour or two agreeably passed. The petition in question resulted
-in the Hong merchants receiving orders for the immediate removal of
-the unsightly mound, of course at their expense. They were effectually
-carried out and the ground was levelled off. It then became the
-favourite resort of the Indian servants of Parsee and Moormen residents.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Until the summer of 1829 the most important of the American houses was
-that of Perkins & Co. It was the oldest one existing, without change
-of name, of all the foreign firms, having been established soon after
-a visit made by Mr. Thomas H. Perkins with two vessels to Canton in
-1798. The house was represented until 1807 by Mr. Bumstead, who was then
-succeeded by Mr. Cushing. For comparison with the size of merchant ships
-at the present day, it may be noted that this gentleman came out in
-the ship 'Levant' (Captain Proctor), of 264 tons! Mr. Cushing became a
-partner in the Boston firm of J. and T. H. Perkins, and managed that of
-Perkins & Co., of which he was also a partner continuously until 1828,
-without leaving Canton, when he returned to Boston in the ship 'Milo,'
-arriving there on September 17.
-
-To Mr. Cushing succeeded Mr. Thomas T. Forbes, who, on returning from
-a visit to Macao in his yacht, was unfortunately drowned in a taiphoon
-on August 9, 1829, together with Mr. S. H. Monson, the book-keeper of
-Russell & Co. On this sad event taking place, amongst his papers was
-found a sealed letter addressed to Russell & Co. It requested them, in
-case of accident to himself, to take charge of the local business of
-his own firm, as well as that of J. and T. H. Perkins. They did so,
-and naturally came with it that of Houqua, who had been the intimate
-personal friend of Mr. Cushing during his unbroken residence of over
-twenty years in Canton.
-
-When the news of Mr. Forbes's death reached him, Mr. Cushing was in
-England, where the 'Bashaw' (Captain Pearson), one of the ships of his
-Boston firm, was loading for Whampoa. He returned to Canton in her,
-arriving in the month of August 1830. Arrangements were then definitely
-concluded by which Russell & Co. were officially appointed sole agents
-for the Boston house, that of Perkins & Co. being wound up, while the
-important foreign business of Houqua was then also definitely secured to
-them.
-
-Towards the close of 'ante-treaty' days, the house met with a serious
-loss in the violent death of another book-keeper, Mr. George C. Perkins,
-of Boston. He entered the office as assistant book-keeper,[68] and
-subsequently took charge of that important branch of the business.
-He was about thirty years of age, very systematic and methodical, a
-well-read man, and of most agreeable manners. He left Macao on a visit
-to the United States, and was returning by the way of San Francisco to
-resume the duties of his office. Having arrived near Hong Kong, he left
-the ship in which he had crossed the Pacific, for Macao in a fast boat
-with all his baggage. Supposing it to contain gold, coming from the
-'Gold Hills' (by which name California is known to the Chinese), the
-cupidity of the boatmen was excited. They threw Perkins overboard in the
-Lantao Channel, and he was drowned. On the event being made known to
-the Canton authorities, their search for the boatmen was so energetic
-that they were soon discovered in the midst of a number of fast boats
-anchored in Anson's Bay, and beheaded.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The year 1830 was an unprecedented one in the annals of foreign life at
-Canton, by reason of the coming to the Factories of several English and
-American ladies from Macao, in 'direct opposition to old regulations.'
-The Mandarins were thoroughly at their wits' ends by so extraordinary an
-occurrence. 'Chops' began to circulate freely. The ladies were ordered
-to leave forthwith, and without one moment's delay, otherwise the 'Son
-of Heaven,' 'so considerate for all beyond the sea,' would withdraw his
-compassion, and, and--in fact, had the world been coming to an end, the
-authorities could not have been more thoroughly alarmed. In a letter
-written at the time, I find the following, dated April 8, 1830:--
-
- Went in the morning to the 'Company's' chapel with several
- Americans to hear the Rev. Mr. Vachell preach, and to see the
- 'foreign devil females,' as the Chinamen call them. They were
- Mrs. Baynes, wife of the Chief of the Factory, Mrs. Robinson,
- and Mrs. Fearon, but _she_ is the beauty of the party! Mrs. B.
- was dressed in true London style, which, much admired by us, is
- considered 'frightful' by the Chinese. It was quite a strange
- thing to see foreign ladies in the 'Celestial Empire,' an
- occurrence which had never before taken place! After a few days
- they left, but not until the mandarins threatened to stop all
- trade!
-
-On November 12 of the same year I find the following:--
-
- What will Canton turn into, and where will bachelors find
- rest? Nowhere. Mrs. and Miss Low and other ladies are at this
- moment here! The second day after they arrived several old
- codgers were seen in immense coats, which had been stowed away
- in camphor trunks for ten or fifteen years, and with huge
- cravats on, and with what once were gloves, on their way to make
- visits!
-
- _13th._--Called on the Tai-Pan's wife and niece, and
- entertained them with descriptions of local worthies such as
- 'Houqua,' 'Mouqua,' and 'Gowqua,' 'Man-Hop,' 'Wa-Hop,' and
- 'Tung-Hop'--a jumble they had never heard of, and names that
- amused them immensely.
-
- _22nd._--Evening Church service at Talbot's, the Consul,
- at No. 1 American Hong. The ladies and a good number of
- gentlemen present. At half-past nine we accompanied the former
- to show our fashionable street, Old China Street, its shops
- shut at that hour; but some Chinamen passing began to cry out,
- 'Foreign devil women!' when instantly every door was opened and
- lanterns appeared. In less than ten minutes we were completely
- surrounded, and had to beat a hasty retreat. We were not at all
- molested; it was simply surprise and curiosity; and on arriving
- at the gate of the Hong everyone quietly dispersed.
-
- _24th._--The Chinese are not so far out in calling us
- barbarians. Two or three from No. 2 Suy-Hong called on the
- ladies. Coats, gloves, and cravats--such cravats! I heard one
- say when he returned, 'Thank God that is over!' and then call
- for jacket and black neck-ribbon! He next lighted a cheroot, and
- looked as if a great burthen were off his mind. In the evening
- dined at Charles N. Talbot's; all bachelors, of course! A fine
- little party; but I dissipated too much, and the sooner bedtime
- comes the better. Bad habit of dining out in this country; I
- think I shall swear off, no getting home without being observed!
- I hope the ladies in No. 1 did not see me come in!
-
- _30th._--The ladies took their departure this evening. They
- went on board the boat that was to convey them, escorted by all
- the American gentlemen. While returning from Jackass Point an
- inveterate bachelor said, 'I hope we shall never be _bothered_
- with ladies in Canton again!' but he was a notoriously crusty
- old fellow.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Having lost a fine retriever named Rover, and an English friend a small
-pug named Bop, I caused a 'reward-card' to be posted on the walls of
-Chungqua's Hong. As these 'cards' have a peculiar phraseology, I give a
-translation of the one in question:--
-
- On the 10th day of the 1st moon of the present year two
- foreign dogs strayed, one from the Suy-Hong and one from the
- Dutch Hong, and have not been seen to return. Long ears and
- a long tail adorned the one, which had also a brown star on
- its breast, the body being of the colour of 'fragrant ink.'
- The other was a small dog, with cropped ears and a tail of no
- length. His body was spotted in variegated colours of brown and
- white. The larger dog was named 'Lo-Wa,' and the smaller 'Po-Pa.'
-
- This is to give notice that should any 'superior man'
- know where they are, or if they have been 'misled,' and will
- inform, he shall be rewarded with _flowered red money--two great
- rounds_[69] for the big one, and one great round for the little
- one. Even should they have been _stolen_ (_an inconceivable
- thing!_), if the person who took them will bring them to
- Suy-Hong No. 2 he Shall still be rewarded, and clemency used
- towards him. This placard is real; its words will not be eaten.
-
- Taou-Kwang: 14th year, 15th day, 1st moon.
-
-The poor dogs were never found, and the Compradore insisted upon it that
-'some man hav chow-chow he,'[70] and we supposed so too.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On February 27, 1831, Mr. Russell and Mr. Cushing took their final leave
-of Canton in the 'Bashaw' (Captain Pearson), for Boston, the former
-with the satisfaction of having founded a house in that distant port
-which, under his sagacious management, had secured the confidence and
-consideration of the entire foreign and Chinese mercantile community, as
-well as of its numerous foreign correspondents in all quarters of the
-world. Its present world-wide reputation renders it needless to say that
-it still exists, and has become one of the oldest, if not _the_ oldest
-firm whose style has undergone no change eastward of the Cape of Good
-Hope. Mr. Russell was a native of Middletown, Connecticut, a person of
-singularly gentle and benevolent disposition. There was about him a
-suavity and charm of manner which under no circumstances ever deserted
-him. Throughout a long life he enlisted the esteem and respect of all
-who knew him. Of his considerate forbearance under great provocation I
-can vouch from personal experience. From my first entrance in the office
-he was desirous that I should make myself acquainted with book-keeping.
-Its mysteries he first taught me. However incorrectly the tyro
-appreciated the relative bearing of successive transactions or bungled
-in recording them, he was corrected with a patience and kindliness of
-manner that knew no bounds, and the encouragement he thus received at
-length led him to a clear idea of the respective value of debit and
-credit, as well as to the knowledge that they were 'the two factors
-which formed the base of all mercantile transactions.'
-
-The younger members of the office, as a slight testimony to the paternal
-kindness which they had received from their worthy 'Tae-pan,' invited
-him to dine with them, to consider himself as their guest, at a 'parting
-dinner.' He graciously accepted, and seemed pleased at the idea. We
-invited Mr. Cushing and his old friend Houqua. The latter could not be
-present, but sent us a very choice bird's-nest soup for the occasion.
-We sent to Manila for a _fine_ turkey, and on its arrival put it out to
-board on Honam, with injunctions that it should be well fed. The turkey
-was a very rare bird at Canton and supplies came from Manila. Ours
-looked rather haggard on arrival, and the Compradore attributed it to
-its being 'very tired,' but added that it would be No. 1 when killed,
-fat and presentable. The day came, and with it the dinner. At the proper
-moment a great dish was placed upon the table and the cover removed in a
-triumphant way, only to exhibit, to our horror, a lot of legs and wings
-of the turkey, but as to body next to nothing!
-
-Not the least remarkable feature of Old Canton life was the 'Factory,'
-as the common dwelling and common place of business of all the
-members, old and young, of a commercial house. The system begat mutual
-confidence. All affairs, past, present, and future, were discussed at
-the table, and became as familiar to the clerks as they were to the
-partners. While the latter imparted their own views and experiences,
-the former benefited by them. The knowledge thus acquired was applied,
-each in his special department, to a more intelligent co-operation,
-which contributed to a general harmony in current affairs or special
-enterprises. And so also in regard to other subjects. The younger
-members had the advantage through this daily 'family' intercourse of
-acquiring much useful information on a diversity of subjects. There were
-few if any Principals, who had not had in different parts of the world
-experience of men and things, who had not adventures to relate--how
-unexpected difficulties were overcome or chance advantages availed of.
-In daily exercises or pastimes all associated together; whether for
-walking, for boating, or sight-seeing, 'Tae-Pans' and 'pursers' shared
-them together. Should one of the former take the helm to-day, and one of
-the latter an oar, to-morrow saw the order reversed.
-
-At length, as the elders retired, leaving, as was always the case, vast
-and important affairs in course of execution, they did so with the
-conviction that their successors possessed the qualifications to carry
-them on to a logical termination, as well as to initiate new ones.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Before leaving us Mr. Russell had placed me in charge of the books and
-accounts. We were excessively busy during the year, as, in addition
-to orders for teas, those for manufactured silks were unprecedentedly
-large. In May I was on the sick list; Doctor Bradford[71] sent me to
-Macao in July for change of air, whence I returned in October. A serious
-relapse took place in December, and, as a 'last chance,' passage was
-taken for me in a small ship called the 'Howard,' of about 400 tons,
-for New York. It was supposed the 'sea air' might have a good effect.
-I was carried to the ship in such a state as to leave small hope of
-reaching New York alive. We sailed from Whampoa early in February 1832.
-(To replace me in the office, George R. Sampson was engaged, afterwards
-Sampson & Tappan, Boston.) Down the China Sea the weather and progress
-were good; we passed out into the Indian Ocean between Pulo Crockatoa
-and Prince's Island, which took us ten days. We had a light 'trade' to
-the Cape; there we were met by a succession of north-westerly gales,
-which detained us twenty-two days. We were becalmed on the Equator a
-long time; but at length arrived at New York, on the 162nd day, my
-health perfectly restored.
-
-I was delighted to meet again Mr. Samuel Russell, then at the 'Clinton
-Hotel,' as genial and kindly as always. He asked me to breakfast, to
-meet Mr. Joseph Coolidge, Junior, about to leave for the office at
-Canton, and afterwards I was invited to make him a visit at Middletown,
-where I had the pleasure to make the acquaintance of Mrs. Russell, a
-charming, quiet lady, whose reception of me was of the kindest.
-
-The 'Roman' was now again fitting out for Canton, under my old shipmate,
-Captain Lavender. He had made several voyages in the 'America,'
-belonging to Mr. Thomas H. Smith. Mr. Olyphant consented to my going in
-the ship, and there was no other passenger on board. It was not yet the
-usage for China ships to take passengers, nor would they take general
-letters. We sailed on October 25, 1832, after a very short stay at home.
-This time we took the Gilolo passage into the Pacific. At five A.M. of
-March 5, 1833, we made Fo-Ki Point, on the coast of 'teas, silks, and
-cassia,' and at 5.30 P.M. anchored under the peak of Lantao, in the
-Lantao Channel, in 131 days' passage. Lavender despatched a fast boat to
-his agents at Canton, Messrs Olyphant & Co., advising his arrival, while
-I took another and arrived at the Factories in the evening of the 9th.
-
-Thus ended a second 'run home' (as those trips were euphemistically
-called) of a year each. These 'runs,' however, were in reality nine
-months of listening to 'what the wild waves were saying,' 'and wandering
-about at home,' unknowing and almost unknown, for three months; to being
-subjected, while there, to sleep on mattresses and pillows filled with
-feathers in the summer months, with the thermometer at any height you
-please, instead of on the clean, cool, hard rattan mat or mattress of
-bamboo shavings, as in Canton, where it was rarely over 96 deg. at midnight.
-
-It was not until eleven more years had passed that I took another
-'run.' This was from Macao in 1844 in the 'Prince of Wales,' of Bombay
-(Captain Jones), to Galle, then in the steamer 'Seaforth,' from Colombo,
-_via_ Cannanore and Mangalore, to Bombay, with a trip to Mahableshwar
-and Poonah for 'sight-seeing;' then to Aden and back to Bombay in
-the East India Company's steamer 'Atalanta;' thence to Macao, _via_
-Singapore, in the splendid new clipper 'Mohr' of about 280 tons,
-belonging to Messrs. Jardine, Matheson, & Co., and commanded by 'my old
-friend,' Fraser, who was second officer of the 'Good Success' in 1825,
-to Singapore.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At the end of 1833 we had the misfortune to lose our estimable chief Mr.
-W. H. Low, whose health failed from incessant application to the duties
-of his responsible position. He took passage in the Company's ship
-'Waterloo,' for England, with his family, and some months after we heard
-of his death at the Cape.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The same year was notable for the hitherto unprecedented event of the
-marriage at Macao of a young American lady, Miss Shillaber, of Boston,
-to Doctor Thomas R. Colledge, of the Company's 'Factory.' It was a
-brilliant affair, and celebrated with more than usual eclat from its
-novelty.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The quitting of Canton by the Honourable East India Company in 1833
-was succeeded by the arrival of Lord Napier on July 25, 1834, as
-'Chief Superintendent of the English Trade.' His lordship landed in a
-boat belonging to the country ship 'Fort William.' This vessel being
-secured by the Hong merchant 'Sun-Shing,' he was held responsible,
-conducted into the city and imprisoned. As Her Majesty's representative
-declined to correspond with the Viceroy through the Hong merchants,
-the latter issued a proclamation on September 5, in which he spoke of
-this 'contumacy' as a breach of the existing laws and regulations of
-the Empire--of his Lordship having come to Canton officially, without
-the permission of His Imperial Majesty, and requested him to return
-to Macao pending a reference to Pekin; adding that, if he refused to
-leave for Macao, no Chinese should serve him in any capacity. The
-proclamation being pasted on a thin board, was suspended at the gate
-of his Lordship's (the East India Co.) Factory and guarded by about
-twenty soldiers. No sooner was this done, than the Chinese within the
-building, half frightened to death, and fearing that the soldiers would
-enter, rushed upstairs and reported what had taken place. Lord Napier,
-who was at dinner with Sir George Best Robinson and others, instantly
-left the table and came down to the gate. The proclamation was at once
-removed, and, apprehensive of something serious, Lord Napier despatched
-a messenger to Captain Blackwood, of H.M.S. 'Imogene,' then outside the
-Bogue, to send him a guard of a dozen marines, and to come with his own
-vessel and her consort, the 'Andromache,' to Whampoa with all despatch.
-This being done, his lordship retired inside the Factory with his suite,
-and the gate was bolted. At midnight Sir George left Canton in a small
-cutter to join the two frigates. Very soon the marines arrived at the
-Factory, the Square was filled with Chinese soldiers, and war junks and
-boats were gathered on the river. All communication with the Whampoa
-shipping was cut off, and orders were issued that no English boats
-should come to the city. The Viceroy had also requested the American
-merchants not to allow boats from their vessels to come up except on
-urgent business. It is needless to add that the whole foreign trade of
-the port was entirely stopped. At the time the disturbance took place,
-one of our captains, Hepburn, of the ship 'Nile,' was in the Factory,
-and having been assured by the Linguist that he should be provided with
-a Chinese boat to take him to Whampoa, had sent his own back to the
-ship. On the 6th, when ready to start, we found that the Linguist could
-not procure one. I therefore ordered my own, a small schooner yacht,
-the 'Ferret,' to be made ready, and together we left Canton at four
-in the afternoon. We passed through a fleet of about fifty war boats,
-filled with men and armed to the teeth. Presently, to our surprise, we
-met a small English cutter, having on board Captain St. Croix, of the
-'Alexander Baring,' just arrived from London, on his way up with our
-despatches. I told him it was useless to attempt to get through, and
-brought him with us to the 'Nile.'
-
-The next day, September 7, Mr. Coolidge, Mr. A. A. Low, and Mr. Cabot
-made their appearance; they had pulled down for the 'Baring's' letters,
-having heard of her arrival soon after I left. The 'Union' schooner next
-hove in sight, coming from Macao, with Mr. George R. Sampson and a Dutch
-gentleman, Mr. Vandermulen, on board. I took them out and brought them
-to the 'Nile.'
-
-Later in the day, Coolidge, Low, and Cabot started with the 'Baring's'
-letters, in the hope of being able to get to the Factories; but on
-arriving at 'Houqua's' Fort, about half-way, first one and then another
-ball flew over their heads, which brought them to. A war boat came
-alongside, with a Linguist on board; he told them it was useless to
-attempt going on, as, owing to these troubles with the English, the
-Viceroy had issued an additional order, that to prevent 'the innocent
-from suffering with the guilty,' no foreign boat could come to Canton.
-They pulled back to the 'Nile.' We found ourselves, therefore, all
-prisoners at Whampoa, including another American, named Gorham. We
-styled ourselves 'the Canton refugees,' and threw ourselves upon the
-hospitality of our friends the captains of the six American vessels
-then at the anchorage. And this rather eventful day closed with a
-dinner on board the 'Coliseum' (Captain Stoddard), with whist in the
-evening on board the 'Nile.' The next day we dined on board the 'India'
-(Captain Cook, of Salem), and quartered ourselves upon our friends as
-follows:--Coolidge, Vandermulen, and myself, on board the 'Nile;' Low on
-board the 'York;' Cabot, Sampson, and Gorham, on board the 'Coliseum.'
-
-_September 26._--At last we have safely arrived back at our old quarters
-in the Factories, after being 'refugees' at Whampoa for just twenty
-days. The commotion is still great, and we are cautioned about going far
-from 'home.' The streets are full of rowdies and blackguards, who abuse
-us in words far from complimentary, and make signs as if beheading us!
-Nevertheless we are comfortable enough as far as 'Jackass Point' or Hog
-Lane, and can look up 'Old China Street' without bodily fear.
-
-The return to Canton immediately after 'hostilities' had ceased by the
-departure of Lord Napier was worth making, if only to see the enormous
-preparations that had been made against an attempt by the boats of the
-frigates. We took the Junk river passage, and met with no obstructions
-until we had passed Houqua's Fort and got abreast of the 'Lob Creek'
-Pagoda. Here we were brought to and ordered to pull alongside of a
-large mandarin boat, crowded with a ferocious looking lot of fellows,
-and half-starved as well, to judge from the avidity with which they
-seized upon some biscuit we threw among them. We were in two boats--one
-with Captain Tonks, of the Bombay ship 'Lord Castlereagh,' Mr. Low,
-and Sampson, and my own small gig, with myself alone. A petty officer,
-wearing an opaque white button, got in Tonks's boat and directed him to
-a junk, on board of which was a Linguist, and I followed. We reached the
-Factories four and a half hours from Whampoa.
-
-Correspondence between the Hong merchants (as intermediaries of the
-Viceroy) and Lord Napier, which his lordship would not comply with, was
-the only mode that could be expected under the existing foreign and
-Chinese relations. The Viceroy could not set aside that yet unrepealed
-system, nor enter into personal communication with any foreign
-representative. To do so, special authority from the Imperial Government
-was indispensable. The entire difficulty therefore was caused by Her
-Majesty's representative persisting in requiring of the Viceroy that
-which the latter could not grant. Naturally, the 'Napier War,' or, as
-locally called, the 'Napier fizzle,' was the result. It was coupled,
-too, with an entire stoppage of all foreign trade from September
-2 to September 24, which was a very serious thing, and entirely
-unjustifiable in the absence of a declaration of war. The mortifying
-result was that Lord Napier had to renounce his expressed determination
-to remain at Canton. The British Government should either have obtained
-official recognition from Pekin for their representative, or simply have
-appointed a Consul whose dignity could not have been infringed upon by
-his being placed on the same footing as Consuls of other foreign nations.
-
-On September 21 Lord Napier quitted Canton with his suite for Macao.
-As the frigates proceeded towards the Bogue and Lintin, so did the two
-chop-boats of Lord Napier, _pari passu_, towards his destination by the
-inner passage. He was convoyed by several Chinese men-of-war boats. At
-length his Lordship arrived on the 26th. The humiliating end of his
-ineffectual attempt to correspond directly with the local government
-aggravated an illness brought on by the vexation and excitement he had
-undergone from the day of his landing from the 'Fort William's' boat,
-and on October 11 his Lordship died at Macao.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The years 1835 and 1836 were unmarked by any event out of the regular
-course. The business of the house was taking a great extension
-(purely as agency); but in 1837 occurred the failures in London of
-three important banking houses having a large American connection.
-We had negotiated their 'credits' for some of our constituents to a
-considerable amount for the payment of teas and silks. Those houses were
-Thomas Wilson & Co., George Wildes & Co., and Timothy Wiggin, commonly
-known as the three W's. These failures were within a short time of each
-other. On reference to our register of bills drawn, we found the total
-amount of which we had not yet received advice of payment or acceptance
-to be close upon 200,000_l._ They were all drawn on 'clean credits,'
-without 'collaterals' (which were not yet in vogue), and at six months'
-sight. We had confidence in our American constituents, but as the
-shipments occupied, say, four months in getting to market, and could
-only be sold at the usual credit of six months, very little margin of
-time existed. Our own credit, however, was the first consideration. One
-of our partners, then in Boston, had in his charge a very large amount
-belonging to Houqua, who gave us an order on the former to hold at our
-disposal any sum required. Enclosing this, we directed remittances to be
-made to Messrs. Barings of a sufficiency to cover all such bills on the
-W's as could not be relied upon for payment by those for whose accounts
-they had been drawn, and simultaneously we informed Messrs. Barings that
-remittances would be made to them to provide for such bills, so that our
-signature could be promptly honoured.
-
-Communication with the Western world was long in those days; there were
-even no 'clipper' ships yet. Accustomed, however, to such delays, we
-waited patiently the result. Our first advices were from London. They
-informed us that the writers, Messrs. B. B. & Co., would honour all
-bills bearing our name on the three bankrupt houses in question. This
-was a gratifying thing, as they had not yet received our communication
-above referred to. Everything worked with regularity. Some of the firms
-for whose accounts the bills had been drawn were ready to meet them,
-others furnished securities, and the ultimate loss was inconsiderable
-on the whole account. So rapid had been remittances from our Boston
-partner that, when the final account current was received at Macao
-from London, 1840-41, the balance of interest was in our favour, while
-Houqua was recouped in full as payments were made to our home partner by
-American constituents.
-
-If I am not very much mistaken, 1837 was the first of those years ending
-with '7' which have become proverbial as attended with great commercial
-troubles in the Western world.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the year 1838 (November) Mr. William Jardine took his departure from
-Canton. He founded in 1832 the house of Jardine, Matheson, & Co., on the
-closing up of that of Magniac & Co., which until then had been under the
-management of Mr. Hollingworth Magniac. Mr. Jardine had been a surgeon
-in the marine service of the Honourable East India Company, and had made
-several voyages to Bombay and China. He had made the acquaintance of the
-celebrated 'Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy,' that prince of Eastern merchants,
-that philanthropist--the building of the hospital which now bears his
-name, and the construction of the Bund from the island of Bombay to
-Basseen, being amongst the numerous works which were carried out at
-his own expense for the comfort and welfare of his countrymen. He was,
-moreover, the first native inhabitant of the Presidency, and I think
-of India, on whom was conferred the dignity of Baronet by the British
-Government. The business transactions of Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy with
-Jardine, Matheson, & Co. became of a colossal scale.
-
-The vast commercial operations of Mr. Jardine Seemed to be conducted
-with sagacity and judgment. He was a gentleman of great strength of
-character and of unbounded generosity. To him belongs the shipping of
-the first cargo of 'free teas' to London, at the end of the two hundred
-years of close monopoly of the East India Company. As a peculiarity of
-his character, it may be mentioned that, in his own private office in
-the Creek Factory, a _chair_ was never seen--a hint to any who may be
-bothered with gossips or idlers during business hours!
-
-A few days before Mr. Jardine's departure from Canton, the entire
-foreign community entertained him at a dinner in the dining-room of the
-East India Company's Factory. About eighty persons of all nationalities,
-including India, were present, and they did not separate until several
-hours after midnight. It was an event frequently referred to afterwards
-amongst the residents, and to this day there are a few of us who still
-speak of it.
-
-Mr. Jardine was succeeded in the management of the house by Mr. (the
-late Sir James) Matheson, who finally left China on March 10, 1842,
-after a residence of about fifteen years. He was a gentleman of great
-suavity of manner and the impersonation of benevolence. As the 'Chinese
-Repository,' in noting his departure from Macao, said: 'On his leaving
-the foreign community lost one of its most enterprising, able, and
-liberal members.'
-
- * * * * *
-
-On February 26, 1839, execution of a Chinese, said to be an
-opium-dealer, took place in front of the American Factory. The officers
-had chosen the hours of the afternoon when nearly all the foreigners
-were away in their daily walks or on the river. The man was tied up and
-strangled in a twinkling, and all had rapidly returned up Old China
-Street with the body. On landing from our boats we found the few who
-had not been away collected in the Square, and heard from them what had
-happened. The only public notice that could be taken of this affair
-was to discontinue the daily hoisting of the national flags before our
-doors; nor were they re-hoisted until March 22, 1842.
-
-The appointment of a 'Kin-Chae', or Imperial Envoy, to Canton, for
-the express purpose of putting a stop to the opium trade, had now
-become known. This appointment--only made on an occasion calling for
-extreme measures--was conferred upon Lin-Tsih-Soo, and involved control
-not only over all the Canton authorities, but those of the southern
-and south-eastern provinces. His Excellency 'Lin' was the son of an
-independent gentleman of Tseuen-Chow in the province of Fuh-Keen who
-lived on the revenues of a porcelain manufactory, in which he himself
-had worked as a day labourer it was said.
-
-The 'Kin-Chae' at length arrived at Canton on Sunday morning, at
-half-past eight o'clock of March 10. Two gentlemen and myself went
-on board of a small schooner lying off the Factories to witness his
-arrival. He was seated on board of a large official boat, with a few
-red- and blue-button Mandarins standing a little to the rear, so that we
-had an excellent view of him personally. He had a dignified air, rather
-a harsh or firm expression, was a large, corpulent man, with heavy
-black moustache and long beard, and appeared to be about sixty years of
-age. His own boat was followed by a great many others, on the sides
-of which, on a black ground, were painted in gold letters the rank of
-the principal occupants, while flags of various colours were displayed
-abaft. The crews were neatly dressed in new uniforms of red trimmed
-with white, and conical rattan hats of the same colours. These boats
-contained the principal officers of the city, civil and military, from
-the Viceroy to the Superintendent of the Salt Department. The walls of
-the 'Red Fort,' nearly opposite the Factories on the Honam shore, were
-lined with soldiers, as were those of the 'Dutch Folly,'[72] arrayed in
-bright new uniforms. Both shores of the river, every door and window,
-and every spot of standing ground, were thick with people. Everyone was
-observing the novel scene quietly and as curiously as ourselves. No
-other boat of any description was moving about; all were lying close to
-the shores, and a universal silence prevailed. Besides my companions and
-myself, not a 'foreign barbarian' was to be seen in the vast gathering.
-
-On the 17th the Hong merchants, the Linguists, and the Compradores
-(except our own) were summoned to an audience of the 'Kin-Chae.' They
-obeyed it with fear and trembling. The object was to ascertain who,
-amongst the foreigners duly registered as occupying the Factories, and
-whose names had been forwarded to Pekin eighteen months before, were
-still present and in the opium 'business.' Russell & Co. not having
-been included, our Compradore was not 'invited,' at which he appeared
-particularly delighted.
-
-On the 18th the Kin-Chae sent for the Hong merchants. They were charged
-with having connived at the opium trade, and his Excellency threatened
-to strangle some of them if it was not _instantly_ put a stop to! They
-were also accused of allowing foreign dealers in 'smoke' to reside in
-their Factories, and were very much frightened, as one of them said,
-'No hav see so fashion before.' Forthwith they met in 'Consoo' to
-deliberate, and remained until late in the night.
-
-On the same day the first edict from the 'Kin-Chae' to foreigners was
-issued. It ordered all Opium held by them to be surrendered, and that
-they should sign bonds to discontinue the trade, 'under penalty of
-death.' It became very clear that his Excellency was not to be trifled
-with.
-
-On the 19th, Messrs. Matheson, Dent, Green, Wetmore, Dadabhoy Rustomjee,
-and Daniell met the Hong merchants at the Consoo House, and were
-informed by them verbally of the commands of the 'Kin-Chae,' which were
-a repetition of the foregoing, with the addition that the opium was to
-be destroyed. Moreover, if his Excellency's orders were not complied
-with, the consequences would be serious. There were at this time 15,000
-chests on board of the 'receiving ships' at Lintin, and 5,000 chests at
-the coast stations, and the cost of all over $12,000,000.
-
-The foreign community thought to propitiate the 'Kin-Chae,' after the
-receipt by them of his '_unalterable_' commands, by offering to give up
-a _certain_ quantity. This had been suggested by the Hong merchants,
-who, no more than ourselves, supposed the 'Kin-Chae' to be serious in
-insisting upon _all_ that was held. A meeting was therefore convened in
-the Danish Hong, on the night of March 21, at which nearly everyone was
-present, as were also the Hong merchants, who assembled in an adjoining
-room. They were as anxious as we were to avert the threatened troubles,
-should the 'Kin-Chae' not listen to 'reason,' as they expressed it. In
-fact, throughout, while we were prisoners in the Factories, as will be
-seen, for six weeks, under threat of death and constant, unheard-of
-pressure, they did what they could to alleviate our condition through
-appeals to the 'authorities of the City.' All this was done with very
-great risk to themselves. Their presence at the meeting was from a
-desire to know the decision to which it might come, that they could
-report it to the 'Kin-Chae' as quickly as possible, and, in fact, we saw
-by his reply that it had been made known to him between five and seven
-on the morning of the 22nd.
-
-An hour or two before the meeting, Houqua made his appearance at our
-office, and requested Mr. Green, the then chief, to add 150 chests of
-opium to the quantity he intended to offer on behalf of Russell & Co.
-to the general subscription, for which he himself would pay. The cost
-of these chests would have been $105,000! The gentlemen present at
-the meeting, on behalf of their firms subscribed 1,034 chests in all,
-of the value of $725,000. These were offered to the 'Kin-Chae,' but
-disdainfully refused. All communication with the shipping at Whampoa was
-then cut off; quantities of soldiers collected near the Factories, as
-well as on the river, while several days before, all the gates opening
-to the rear of the Factories had been bricked up.
-
-Before the promulgation of the 'Kin-Chae's' proclamation to foreigners,
-I was invited by the senior Hong merchant to translate from English
-into Chinese a communication that had been prepared by his Excellency,
-conjointly with the Viceroy[73] and Lieutenant-Governor of Canton,
-addressed to Her Majesty the Queen of England. This arose from the
-original having been translated into English, and the Imperial Envoy
-was desirous to judge for himself if the latter version conveyed the
-sense of the Chinese. Having consented, I passed four hours of a very
-cold day at the Consoo House in accomplishing the task. There were
-present a delegate from the Commissioner, a Mandarin of the fourth rank
-(light blue button), an inferior officer, Houqua's grandson, Mouqua
-and Kingqua, and two Linguists. The document was a most extraordinary
-one. Prominent is the bombastic style, the outcome of ages of dominion,
-ignorance of Western official forms through an absence of diplomatic
-intercourse. It said: 'In dealing in opium, regardless of the injury it
-inflicts upon the Chinese people, an inordinate thirst for gain controls
-the actions of these foreign merchants.' With an idea that the use of
-it was prohibited in England: 'We have heard that England forbids the
-smoking of opium (within its dominions) with the utmost rigour; hence
-it is clear that it is deleterious. Since, then, the injury it causes
-has been averted from England, is it not wrong to send it to another
-nation, and especially to China?' Then there is an appeal to personal
-feeling: 'How can these opium-sellers bear to bring to our people
-an article which does them so much harm, for an ever-grasping gain?
-Suppose those of another nation should go to England and induce its
-people to buy and smoke the drug--it would be right that You, Honoured
-Sovereign, should hate and abhor them. Hitherto we have heard that You,
-Honoured Sovereign, whose heart is full of benevolence, would not do
-to others that which you would not others should do to yourself.' The
-grandiloquent then appears: 'Our great Emperor maintains Celestial lands
-and foreign nations in equal favour; he rewards merit and punishes vice;
-and, as is the heart of heaven and earth pure and incorruptible, so is
-his own. The Celestial Dynasty rules over ten thousand[74] nations,
-and in the highest degree sheds forth its benign influence with equal
-majesty.' This is in the sense of grandeur or stateliness. It ended
-thus: 'By manifesting sincere and reverential obedience[75] mutually
-will be enjoyed the blessings of great peace! Heaven will protect your
-Majesty; the Gods bless you, lengthen your years, and grant you a happy
-and an honourable posterity.' I never heard if this document reached its
-destination.
-
-On March 23, every Chinaman in the Factories, from the Compradore to
-the cook, left by order of the 'Kin-Chae,' and were threatened with
-decapitation if they dared to return. The day before, Mr. Lancelot Dent,
-chief of Messrs. Dent & Co., had been _invited_ to enter the city and
-meet his Excellency, which he declined to do. Other but ineffectual
-attempts by the authorities to induce him to go were also made, when, on
-the 24th, Captain Charles Elliot, Her Majesty's Superintendent of Trade,
-arrived from Macao, and immediately assumed charge, on behalf of the
-English residents, of the perplexing question of the 'total surrender
-of the opium.' The street in rear of the Factories was now filled with
-soldiers, a strong guard was also placed in the 'Square,' and a triple
-cordon of boats drawn up from the Creek to the Danish Factory. The whole
-community were thus prisoners in the hands of the Chinese. Provisions
-were not allowed to be brought in, no one was permitted to go beyond the
-'Square,' and matters assumed a decidedly serious aspect. We overcame
-the difficulty of provisions in this way. The Chinese soldiers being
-entirely unaccustomed to foreigners, there was a danger that 'trouble
-would arise;' the Hong merchants therefore represented this to the City
-authorities, and offered to send their _own coolies_ to keep watch at
-the different gates of the Factories.[76] This was agreed to, and the
-double object was gained in supplies of firewood and provisions, which
-were at night stealthily brought to us by them.
-
-On March 27, on the 'Kin-Chae's' demand to Her Majesty's Superintendent
-'that all the opium under the control of the English merchants should be
-given up,' 20,283 chests were tendered and accepted, and 'Chunpee' fixed
-upon as the place of delivery. To control the delivery, Mr. Alexander
-Johnston, Deputy Superintendent, was furnished with a conveyance, and
-left Canton on April 3. The 'receiving ships' moved up to the Bogue,
-where the entire quantity was handed over to officers (appointed by the
-'Kin-Chae'), who caused it to be destroyed in deep trenches on Chunpee
-heights. Thus 'reverent obedience' was shown. Captain Elliot remarked,
-in his despatch to her Majesty's Government, dated March 30, 1839:
-'This is the _first time, in our_ _intercourse with this Empire_, that
-its Government has taken the _unprovoked_ (?) initiative in aggressive
-measures against British _life_, _liberty_, and _property_, and against
-the dignity of the British Crown.' No words could more strongly confirm
-everything herein said in relation to the safety of property and life
-which we had enjoyed at Canton. But the despatch contained not a word of
-the provocation given by foreigners in continuing the condemned traffic
-under constantly repeated injunctions against doing so, and persistent
-warnings to discontinue it. I, of course, do not blame my brother
-merchants at Canton, no matter to what nation they belonged, as we were
-all equally implicated. We disregarded local orders, as well as those
-from Pekin, and really became confident that we should enjoy perpetual
-impunity so far as the 'opium trade' was concerned.
-
-The night of March 24 was one of unusual brilliancy in its cloudless
-sky and full moon. The Factories, forcibly abandoned by several hundred
-Chinese (estimated at eight hundred) at a moment's notice, resembled
-somewhat places of the dead! Their foreign occupants were thus left
-literally in a complete state of destitution as regards service of any
-kind, not even a scullion being allowed to remain. The consequence was
-that they were compelled, in order to _live_, to try their own skill in
-cooking, to make up their own rooms, sweep the floors, lay the table,
-wash plates and dishes! It may be supposed that it produced discontent,
-complaints, and impatience. Not at all; we in the Suy-Hong--and it was
-the same with our fellow-prisoners in the other Factories, with few
-exceptions--made light of it, and laughed rather than groaned over the
-efforts to roast a capon, to boil an egg or a potato. We could all
-clean knives, sweep the floors, and even manage to fill the lamps. But
-there were mysteries which we could not divine; our chief, Mr. Green,
-after a vain attempt to boil rice--which, when prepared, resembled a
-tough mass of glue--proved a most wretched cook, and took to polishing
-the silver, but abandoned that and finally swept the floor! Mr. Low
-conscientiously did all he could, but after toasting the bread to death,
-and boiling the eggs till they acquired the consistency of grape-shot,
-he abandoned that department, and took to one not exacting so much
-exercise of mind, and 'laid the cloth' dexterously and well. The rest
-of us, from modesty or a feeling of sheer incapacity, did no more than
-was absolutely necessary. It would have been unfair to rob the others
-of their laurels! Some one had to fill the pitchers; anyone could draw
-a cork, or even boil water. Thus, by hook or by crook, we managed
-to sustain life--of which the 'bread' was nightly supplied to us by
-Houqua's coolies. They also brought (made up in bags, as if 'personal
-effects' or 'blankets to keep off the dew,' thus passing the guards)
-edibles of all sorts.
-
-During the day we met in the Square, which became 'High 'Change' of
-experiences in desperate efforts to roast, boil, or stew. Some went the
-length of considering it great fun; others heaped unheard-of blessings
-upon the heads of His Celestial Majesty, Taou-Kwang, and his envoy 'Lin.'
-
-No two men were so unctuously abused; _as if_ the vilifiers themselves
-had always followed strictly the 'Eight Regulations' under which they
-lived! What amusement all this created.
-
-By May 2, 15,501 chests had been given up, when the servants were
-allowed gradually to return, and the whole quantity, 20,283 chests,[77]
-completed on the 21st. On the 27th Captain Elliot returned to Macao,
-and on the 30th the opium clipper 'Ariel' left for Suez direct with
-despatches for the British Government. She returned on April 2, 1840.
-
-Between May 6 and 21 many foreigners were permitted to leave the city,
-and went to Macao or Whampoa. Captain Elliot, before going himself, on
-the 22nd issued a notice to British subjects that they also were to
-leave, and by the end of the month they had left; and there remained
-no foreigners but Americans, about twenty-five in number. On the 29th
-I left with all books, papers, &c., not actually required at Canton,
-in company with six other boats for Macao, containing Parsees and
-several English, including Doctors Cox and Dickson. On the way down
-we were joined by four large chop-boats with Messrs. Lindsay & Co.'s
-establishment, and John Shillaber and others from Messrs. Jardine,
-Matheson, & Co.'s. The trip was most enjoyable; we dined or passed the
-day with one another, and arrived nearly at the same time at Macao on
-the night of June 1. The Mandarins who came on board at Che-Nae and at
-Heang-Shan were civil as usual, and seemed perfectly indifferent to what
-had passed at Canton.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The surrender of the 'British-owned opium' was followed by events to
-which the foreign trade had from its foundation at Canton been a
-stranger. Now were initiated political relations between the vast
-and unknown Empire of China and European nations--the first that had
-existed. No treaty had yet been entered into, except with Russia for
-regulating its trade and arranging boundaries. Russian and Chinese
-commercial relations had existed between two frontier towns (separated
-but by the boundary line) well known as Kiachta and 'Mae-Mae-Ching.'[78]
-
-No Western officer was yet officially recognised, even of the rank of
-Consul or Vice-Consul, and all communications between one or the other
-and the Canton Government were through the intermediary of the Co-Hong.
-The consequences, therefore, that might grow out of the delivery of the
-opium filled the foreign community with anxiety. The Americans had not
-delivered any American-owned opium, of which we held at the time of
-surrender about fifty cases of Turkey, but they determined to remain
-in the Factories and continue their business. The English on leaving
-placed theirs in charge of the American houses. A large share of it fell
-under the control of Russell & Co., and, to facilitate negotiations with
-its new constituents outside, one of the partners opened an office on
-board the English ship 'Heroine,' at 'Kow-Lung,' and subsequently, when
-all foreign vessels were driven away from that anchorage, at Toon-Koo.
-Several ships of the firm, including the 'Lintin,' were kept running
-between these places and Whampoa with British goods at thirty to forty
-dollars per ton, and Indian cotton at seven dollars per bale, and
-receiving on board no freight unless consigned to the house. A very
-active business was carried on under the American flag, greatly to the
-convenience of English friends, as well as to their profit. Teas were
-the returns for these inward cargoes, which were brought down to the
-anchorage and shipped from Toon-Koo for England.
-
-While the shipments were going on an English vessel of about 900 tons
-arrived from Singapore, named the 'Cambridge' under the command of
-Captain Douglas. Being offered for sale, she was purchased by Russell
-& Co., and her name changed to 'Chesapeake' of eventful memory. Loaded
-with British goods, valued at 150,000_l._, with her deck full to the
-top of the rail, she was despatched for Whampoa, in charge of Captain
-Gilman. She had of course been put under the American flag. There was
-very little time to spare, as a blockade was to commence in a few days.
-On June 22, 1840, H.M.S. 'Volage,' and subsequently the 'Hyacinth,'
-took up their positions off Chunpee[79] at the moment the 'Chesapeake'
-sailed by. She was the last vessel that entered the port. She arrived at
-her destination and delivered her cargo, which was landed at Canton in
-regular course.
-
-The Chinese had thrown a great raft across the river just above the
-second bar, in anticipation of hostilities with the English. They then
-thought the best thing to do was to purchase a large foreign ship, arm
-and man her, and anchor her above the raft, as an additional protection
-against the barbarian war ships. Application being made to Mr. Delano,
-the then chief of Russell & Co., who had never left Canton, a bargain
-was concluded for the 'Chesapeake.' The American flag and papers
-were removed, and she was made over to the Mandarins. Her 'Cumsha and
-Measurement' charges, amounting to about _$_8,000, were abandoned. The
-Mandarins took charge and began to fit her out as an 'auxiliary defence'
-to the raft, and thus stop 'English men-of-war' which 'from vainglory
-or conceit might dare to attempt the inner waters.' Two great eyes were
-painted on her bows. Great streamers hung from every mast to the deck, a
-multitude of flags of all colours and shapes--bearing such words painted
-thereon as 'Courage,' the 'Yang-Yin,' and the 'Pa-Kwa,'[80] together
-with the rank of the officer in command--were arranged around the
-taffrail. In short, she became the Chinese emblem of everything 'mighty
-and victorious!' She would strike would-be assailants with consternation
-and despair!
-
-Meanwhile her armament was sent on board. Cannon of every available size
-were ranged on her two decks; round shot, stones, and other missiles
-were accumulated in quantities; nor were bows and arrows forgotten,
-nor quantities of muskets, flint-lock and percussion, and the more
-familiar matchlock. Her crew consisted of Whampoa Chinese (amongst many
-others)--these were accustomed to foreign vessels, and no better sailors
-than they--Manila men, Seedies,[81] and Lascars, runaways from country
-ships. There were probably four or five hundred men on board.
-
-Thus equipped she was towed down to her appointed station amidst an
-inconceivable beating of gongs, the explosion of fire crackers, flying
-serpents, and fiery dragons--thanks to which and her two bow 'eyes' she
-arrived in safety and anchored.
-
-This was a few days before February 26, 1841, when the Bogue Forts
-were captured by Sir Gordon Bremer. The 'Unconquerable' was then
-taking powder on board in large quantities, packed in jars, which were
-promiscuously stowed on deck and between decks, as usual. She was so
-engaged also on the 27th, having a great number of chop-boats and
-other small craft alongside. Suddenly appeared the smoke of a steamer
-approaching from the Bogue! It turned out to be H.M.'s ship 'Nemesis,'
-Captain Hall. She had the 'singular audacity to approach the barrier,'
-and when within an easy distance, the 'unheard-of temerity' to try
-the effect of a Congreve rocket on the emblem of 'victory and might.'
-The aim was true, and like a flash--or in a 'flash'--ship, crew, and
-contents, boats, all disappeared from the face of the waters! The
-explosion was terrific, and was distinctly heard at Canton, a distance
-of thirty miles. Not a human creature was reported to have survived!
-For years after there was to be seen on the left bank of the river the
-bottom of the ship. It had been separated from the hull as if sawn off
-in all its length; and it gradually disappeared through the combined
-efforts of Chinese boatmen, who broke up and carried it piecemeal away.
-
-The English forces having moved up to Canton, a suspension of
-hostilities was agreed upon on March 20, 1841, and the port was again
-free. Local disturbances, however, broke out, and, on May 22 following,
-a mob of Chinese plundered and burnt down the East India Company's new
-Factory, the Dutch, and the Creek. On the 25th, Sir Hugh Gough landed
-near Pwantingqua's country house and took possession of the heights
-overlooking the city. The authorities then ransomed it for six millions
-of dollars, of which five millions were paid on the 31st, when the
-forces left Canton and foreign vessels again entered the port.
-
-The carrying trade on the river now ceased. Lying in the outer waters we
-had the 'Lintin,' the 'Lantao' the 'Lema,' and the 'Ladrone.' The former
-commenced her career in China as Russell & Co.'s 'receiving ship' in
-1830. She was well constructed to carry a large cargo, and her sailing
-qualities were fair. Her career and ultimate fate were singular. With
-the exception of shifting stations during the taiphoon seasons, her
-anchors were never raised for nine years, when in 1839, as related, she
-resumed her original vocation of a sailing ship up and down the 'Pearl'
-River.
-
-During this state of idleness for our ships, I received information from
-Mr. Delano that Houqua was disposed to send orders to India for cotton.
-Prices had naturally fallen there during the blockade and troubles at
-Canton, while the non-importation for several months had caused a great
-rise. Three of the ships were despatched and 100,000_l._ remitted to
-Calcutta, Bombay, and Madras. The funds were in East India Company's
-bills on Calcutta. The 'Lintin' sailed for Madras, the 'Lantao' for
-Calcutta, and the 'Lema' for Bombay, thus securing so much tonnage for
-the cotton, while other vessels were to be chartered at those ports. The
-first vessel, however, that arrived with a portion of the purchases was
-the Swedish ship 'Calcutta,' and she had anchored in the Taypa only a
-few days when she was driven on shore in a taiphoon. In due time our
-own ships arrived. The 'Lintin' was then despatched a second time, but
-got no further than Singapore, when her captain, Townsend, in direct
-breach of orders, and under various pretexts, took in a cargo of rattans
-and returned to Macao! His 'accounts' being refused, he brought an
-action against us in the Macao court.
-
-It was still going on when I left Macao in 1844. The legal papers had so
-accumulated that they seemed sufficient to 'dunnage' the ship. Asking
-the clerk of the court one day if he thought it would _ever_ be settled,
-he made the same reply that he had repeated for years: 'Se senhor, ma,
-hum poco tiempo!' ('Certainly, sir, but it requires a little time').
-
-The 'Lintin,' however, was sent to Whampoa. The first English treaty
-with the Chinese having been broken, further preparations were made
-for defence, and the authorities, not discouraged, sought for another
-foreign ship--this time for service nearer the city. They took a fancy
-to the 'Lintin;' she was sold to them, and towed up the river by a
-great fleet of small boats. An eye[82] was painted on each bow; she was
-completely unrigged to her lower masts, and, amidst a confused noise
-of gongs and fireworks, she was anchored just below the Dutch Folly,
-opposite the city.
-
-On the day appointed for 'making her over' various high Mandarins with
-many followers came on board. Captain Endicott, who was in charge, had
-caused certain refreshments to be laid out on the cabin table with which
-to regale these officers. They consisted of several junk bottles of gin
-and brandy, a jug or two of water, hard biscuits and cheroots! Before
-accompanying them over the ship, he invited them to the cabin.
-
-As he said when relating the circumstance to us, 'after drinks all
-round and a weed' we returned on deck to look about the vessel; next
-we visited the between-decks, and the Mandarins pronounced everything
-highly satisfactory. Seeing a Scuttle-Butt[83] pump, it attracted the
-attention of one of them, who took it to be an 'engine of war,' and
-asked to be informed as to the manner of its use! They soon after took
-leave and returned to the city. 'Thank heaven,' said Captain Endicott
-to a gentleman whom he had asked on board to see the Chinese officials,
-'that's over; now that they are off, let us go down and take a drink
-and a smoke.' On getting to the cabin they found that _everything_--the
-gin and brandy, cigars, biscuits, even the water-jug, pitcher, and
-tumblers--had all been walked off with by the followers of the high
-dignitaries! A Chinese crew and naval Mandarin took possession, as
-Captain Endicott pulled away from his 'old home' for so many years. She
-was then duly turned into a Chinese man-of-war. There were the usual
-insignia of invincibility, triangular flags, on which were figures of
-dragons swallowing the moon, the 'Yin and Yang,' circles and zigzag
-lines, emblematical of thunder and lightning.
-
-The commanding officer of all this destructive paraphernalia, with the
-peacock's feather in his cap, a large silk umbrella held over his head,
-seated himself comfortably in a bamboo chair, smoking his pipe.
-
-Other formidable preparations for war were duly made in a provision of
-worm-eaten guns, matchlocks, spears, and shields. She would soon have
-been ready for an encounter with any of the English sloops, whether the
-'Modeste' or the 'Algerine,' perhaps even the 'Herald;' but one night
-a great freshet took place. The violence of the tide was such that she
-swerved at her anchor from right to left, struck on the rocks close to
-the 'Folly,' slid off, and went down in deep water! The Chinese then set
-to work and unshipped her masts, leaving a stump of the foremast about
-seven feet above the deck, and placed upon it a diminutive lantern. This
-served thenceforth as a 'lighthouse' to guide boats up and down the
-river! It was the _first_ lighthouse in Canton waters 'on record.' When
-I last saw the stump of the mast, twenty-eight years after, a great bank
-of mud had formed around the hull, and a faint glimmer from a penny dip
-in a small paper lantern marked the last resting-place of the 'Lintin.'
-
- * * * * *
-
-The seizure of the opium in its consequences was _the_ feature in the
-breaking up of the exclusive conditions of foreign trade at Canton, as
-it had existed since 1720. The peculiar conditions also of social life
-were doomed, as was that perfect and wonderful organisation, the Co-Hong.
-
-On August 10, 1841, Sir Henry Pottinger arrived at Macao as Her
-Majesty's sole plenipotentiary and Minister Extraordinary. Negotiations
-with the Mandarins were carried on simultaneously with the capture of
-cities on the coast. The material losses and destruction of life to
-the Chinese were incalculable, particularly through suicide by those
-helpless people. An English officer who was present at the taking
-of Cha-Po in May 1842 wrote to a friend at Macao that on landing,
-about 3,500 strong, under cover of the men-of-war, the most terrible
-enormities were committed. He then goes on to say: 'After the city had
-been captured, I entered more than a hundred houses, and in each there
-were not less than two, and in many eight, persons found dead. They were
-the bodies of mothers and daughters who had committed suicide from a
-dread of becoming prisoners; 1,600 dead were buried after the battle,
-of which more than one-half were Tartar soldiers, who in despair of
-repelling the enemy, and preferring death to defeat, had _nearly all_
-destroyed themselves. Is not this a splendid exhibition of patriotism?'
-
-The losses of the English on this occasion by the official accounts were
-one colonel, one sergeant, and seven men killed, seven officers and
-forty-seven men wounded; and so on to the end, the pigmy against the
-giant!
-
-At length the treaty of Nanking, in which the Chinese consented to
-pay an indemnity of _$_21,000,000, was signed off that city, on board
-of H.M.S. 'Cornwallis,' on August 29, 1842, by his Excellency Sir
-Henry Pottinger, the Imperial Commissioners Ke-Ying and E-Leepoo, and
-New-Keen, the Viceroy of Keang-Nan and Keang-Se. And thus concluded the
-first European war with China, one of the most unjust ever waged by one
-nation against another.
-
-The next treaty was that of the United States, which was signed at the
-village of Mong-Ha (Macao) on July 3, 1844, by Mr. Caleb Cushing and
-Ke-Ying. Together they were the 'knell, the shroud, the mattock, and the
-grave' of Old Canton.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Chinese had not looked with satisfaction upon the concessions
-they had been obliged to make to an overwhelming military and naval
-force, which had caused them the loss of myriads of lives, often under
-circumstances of great atrocity, of unheard-of suffering, as well
-as of many millions of dollars independently of the war indemnity.
-The ordeal was a terrible one; but they gained by it the, to them,
-unenvied _privilege_ of falling in with Western ideas. Encouraged by the
-confidence inspired by so _great_ a _privilege_, they now contract for
-loans of money, they build vessels of war on European models, and drill
-their soldiers in foreign tactics; they provide themselves with Western
-arms of precision--in short, they are putting on their armour. They are
-in full career of a diplomacy in which Ambassadors or Ministers--that
-is to say, 'spies upon one another'--watch over the interests of their
-respective countries. With the sword at their throat they have become
-members of what is facetiously called the 'Brotherhood' of Nations!
-
-
-
-
-MESSRS. RUSSELL & CO., CANTON.
-1823 TO 1844.
-
-
-The house of Russell & Co. was constituted on January 1, 1824, in
-succession to that of Samuel Russell & Co., which had existed from
-December 26, 1818, to December 26, 1823. It is known amongst the Chinese
-as 'Kee-Chang-Hong.' It confined itself strictly to agency business.
-From January 1, 1824, until the middle of 1830 the sole partners were
-Mr. Russell and Philip Ammidon. In September 1829 Mr. Wm. H. Low arrived
-from Salem in the ship 'Sumatra' (Captain Roundy); and in November 1830
-Mr. Augustine Heard, Senior, arrived from Boston in the bark 'Lintin'
-(Captain R. B. Forbes). These two gentlemen (Mr. Low and Mr. Heard)
-became partners in the house, the first until the end of the year 1833,
-when, having been obliged to leave Canton from ill health, he was landed
-and died at the Cape of Good Hope.
-
-During the term of 1834-5-6, consequent upon the death of Mr. Low, were
-admitted Mr. John C. Green (special agent at Canton of Messrs. N. L.
-and G. Griswold, of New York), Mr. John M. Forbes, who had arrived in
-the 'Lintin' to join the office in 1830, and Mr. Joseph Coolidge, who
-arrived in 1832; and Mr. Heard retired.
-
-The term of 1837-8-9 saw the withdrawal of Messrs. Forbes and Coolidge,
-the first on December 31, 1838, and the latter on December 31, 1839.
-Were admitted on January 1, 1837, Mr. A. A. Low (nephew of Mr. W. H.
-Low), who had come out to join the office in 1833), and Mr. W. C.
-Hunter. Mr. Edward King (who came out in the 'Silas Richards,' Captain
-Rosseter, 1834), was taken in the office on arrival, and became a
-partner on July 1, 1837; Mr. Robert B. Forbes (who arrived in the
-'Bashaw' in October 1838) was admitted January 1, 1839, and became the
-chief of the house.
-
-The term of 1840-41-42, Mr. A. A. Low having retired, began with the
-admission of Mr. Warren Delano (formerly of the house of Russell,
-Sturgis, & Co., of Canton and Manila). He succeeded Mr. Forbes as chief
-of the house when the latter left for New York in the 'Niantic' on July
-7, 1840. Mr. Russell Sturgis, also a former partner of Russell, Sturgis,
-& Co., became a partner on January 1, 1842. Mr. King and Mr. Hunter
-retired on December 31, 1842, left Macao in February 1844 for New York,
-_via_ the Cape (in the ship 'Akbar,' Captain Hallet), and the retirement
-of Mr. Sturgis took place on December 31, 1843.
-
-This is but a rapid _resume_ of an interval of twenty years. A history
-of the house from its foundation to the present time--a period of sixty
-years--has been compiled by a former partner. The work, which would
-prove of interest to its many friends, its old associates, and their
-successors, may be published.
-
-
-
-
-EPILOGUE.
-
-
-Just a Cycle ago, a gentleman came on board the ship 'Citizen,' as she
-anchored at Lintin, China, from New York, to hear the _latest_ news she
-may have brought--125 days old!--the interval was a short one at that
-time.
-
-Such as Canton _then_ was in its commercial, social, and domestic life
-it has been for two generations a sealed book; nor will the world ever
-see its like again! May those who _now_ seek China Opened be as well
-received, as little molested, as much protected, as were those over whom
-the aegis of treaties never existed, and as bountifully rewarded as those
-whose enterprise led them to what was _then_ a 'mysterious land.'
-
-It is _now_, through the untiring encouragement and assistance of the
-gentleman above referred to (and who will, I trust, excuse my naming
-him)--Robert B. Forbes, Esq., of Boston, U.S.A.--that I have reproduced
-in the foregoing pages the days of Old Canton, with which we became
-familiar; regretting that to restore those scenes--all of which we saw,
-and part of which we were--it fell not to a more able pen.
-
- W. C. H.
-
-
-
-
- LONDON: PRINTED BY
- SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., NEW-STREET SQUARE
- AND PARLIAMENT STREET
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] Viz., 'The Huntress,' 'Beaver,' 'Europa,' 'America,' 'Maria,' and
-'Mary Lord.'
-
-[2] A fast pulling and sailing boat.
-
-[3] A poetical term for small-footed women.
-
-[4] One of the most famous Chinese dynasties, 2nd and 3rd centuries
-A.D., from which the name 'children of Han.'
-
-[5] _Bogue_ is a corruption of the Portuguese word _bocca_ (mouth). When
-the Portuguese first approached it, about 1525, the strong resemblance
-of the red sandstone eminence to the left of the narrow mouth of
-the Pearl River to a tiger's mouth, caused the exclamation, still
-perpetuated in its name, 'Bocca Tigre!' The Chinese name for it is 'the
-Lion's Gate.'
-
-[6] _Sampan_, a small skiff or boat.
-
-[7] 'Chow-Chow,' mixed.
-
-[8] Siamese teak.
-
-[9] Any Mandarin or official station was locally known as 'Chop-house.'
-
-[10] The Chinese name for Sweden is Suy-Kwo.
-
-[11] An assistant-magistrate. Up to 1848 Macao was under the joint
-government of the Portuguese and Chinese.
-
-[12] At this time the ships' Compradores were engaged at Macao, and not
-at Whampoa.
-
-[13] Buddhist Temple.
-
-[14] The Dutch East India Company.
-
-[15] 'Man-ta-le'--Pigeon-English for 'Mandarin'
-
-[16] A lac is 100,000.
-
-[17] Pigeon-English for 'cold.'
-
-[18] The best quality of birds' nests was brought from Java. This
-'whimsical luxury' was worth 4,000 Spanish dollars per picul of 133-1/3
-pounds.
-
-[19] Pigeon-English for 'old friend.'
-
-[20] Pigeon-English for 'quicksilver.'
-
-[21] 'Unfortunate.'
-
-[22] A complimentary term.
-
-[23] Captain Elliot.
-
-[24] Baring Brothers & Co.
-
-[25] Pigeon-English for 'gentlemen.'
-
-[26] A complimentary term.
-
-[27] One of our partners whom we had sent to London. Lord Byron once
-wrote of him to Murray as full of 'Entusymusy;' so we called him
-'Tusymusy.'
-
-[28] Their Chinese names were Tan and Tung, but these words not being
-readily distinctive to the foreign ear, they both became Tom, while
-'Old' and 'Young' were added to suit their respective ages.
-
-[29] 'My compliments to you.'
-
-[30] The chief of a foreign house was known as 'Tai-pan.' The word
-signifies 'head manager.' The assistants or clerks were called
-'pursers.' This word was undoubtedly taken from the office of 'purser,'
-whom the Chinese had only known as transacting business for the
-commanders of the East India Company's ships. The latter enjoyed the
-privilege of forty tons of space (English measurement) in each vessel
-homeward, which involved the presence at Canton of the 'pursers' to act
-for them in selling their outward and buying their homeward investments.
-The 'pursers' frequently hired a portion of a Factory (when to be had),
-and resided in it more or less while their ships were at Whampoa.
-
-[31] Since the Conquest the reverse bears the name of the Emperor in
-Manchoo Tartar letters.
-
-[32] Known as 'Sycee,' which means literally 'fine silk.'
-
-[33] 10 cash = 1 candareen, 10 candareen = 1 mace, 10 mace = 1 tael.
-
-[34] Bar gold, Sycee silver, chopped dollars.
-
-[35] The Chinese called these boats 'scrambling dragons' and 'fast
-crabs.'
-
-[36] A chest contained 1 picul = 133-1/3 pounds.
-
-[37] Often so called in official language.
-
-[38] The 'Omega' belonged to Dent & Co.
-
-[39] The 'Governor Findlay' to Jardine, Matheson, & Co.
-
-[40] All opium vessels carried Shroffs.
-
-[41] The Chinese character which represents 'day' is literally 'sun.'
-
-[42] When a Chinese takes leave, he says, 'Kaou-tsze' ('I inform you of
-taking leave').
-
-[43] The 'Colonel Young' belonged to Jardine, Matheson, & Co., as well
-as the 'Fairy.'
-
-[44] The 'Harriet' belonged to Jardine, Matheson, & Co.
-
-[45] Literally 'great wind,' not those destructive storms which occur
-but once in three or four years, unroof houses and tear ships to pieces;
-they are called Teet-kuy, 'iron whirlwinds.'
-
-[46] Country ships and coasters carried Manila men--Portuguese of
-Bombay or Macao--as helmsmen; they hove the lead, &c., and were called
-'Sea-cunnies.'
-
-[47] Strangling is by means of a wooden cross driven into the ground
-to which the prisoner's neck and outstretched arms are secured. A more
-ghastly and ignominious death than beheading.
-
-[48] Called the Praya Grande, temporarily destroyed by the taiphoon of
-1875.
-
-[49] The Fragrant Hill.
-
-[50] 'Cumsha' means 'a present.'
-
-[51] A catty is 1-1/3 pounds English.
-
-[52] The Imperial Commissioner.
-
-[53] A subordinate officer of the chief magistrate's department.
-
-[54] The currency being taels, mace, candareens, and cash.
-
-[55] 'Flowery flag,' the United States.
-
-[56] Presents to the captains and officers.
-
-[57] Buddha.
-
-[58] A very common exclamation on any occasion.
-
-[59] The late Sir James Matheson was the reputed founder of the foreign
-press in China (_The Canton Register_); but it was an open question
-whether it was he or Mr. Wood. I contributed to that paper (translations
-from Chinese) when started; but in the consequent daily intercourse with
-Wood, he never hinted that he was not its sole founder. If my memory
-serves me Sir James was at the time on a trip up the coast. Nevertheless
-there is but one 'old Canton' who can decide the point, the present Sir
-Alexander Matheson.
-
-[60] Confucius.
-
-[61] Kung-Ming, a celebrated warrior of the third century A.D.
-
-[62] Celebrated gardens, near Canton, visited by foreigners.
-
-[63] 'Fan-Kwae,' foreign devils.
-
-[64] The offspring of European Spaniards and natives.
-
-[65] The privilege was 140 piculs weight.
-
-[66] Public office.
-
-[67] Equivalent to Excellency.
-
-[68] At Macao, 1841.
-
-[69] Whole dollars were so called put up in red paper--a neat way of
-paying small sums.
-
-[70] 'Eaten them.'
-
-[71] The resident physician of the foreign community, apart from the
-Honourable East India Co. He was from Philadelphia.
-
-[72] An old Chinese fort so called, east of the Factories.
-
-[73] The capital of Canton province is Show-King-Foo, and was the
-residence of the Governor-General of Canton and Kwang-Se. Consequent
-upon the former becoming the seat of foreign trade, the Governor-General
-removed there, and second to him is the Lieutenant-Governor. He is now
-styled Viceroy.
-
-[74] Figurative for 'a great many.'
-
-[75] These and similar expressions in Chinese official documents,
-over which Western people make such an absurd fuss, are no more to be
-taken literally than the vulgarised form of 'your obedient servant.'
-In the present case 'reverential obedience' is to be taken as 'serious
-co-operation,' so the Blue Button pointed out to me.
-
-[76] That no one might escape.
-
-[77] The Canton agents talked over the question of half-commissions on
-consignments thus withdrawn. It was argued that their Indian principals
-would recover from the British Government, a charge sanctioned by
-commercial usage. The half-commissions were assumed to be about 300,000
-dollars. No unanimous decision was arrived at, but on the quantity
-delivered up by Russell & Co.--nearly 15,000 dollars--the charge was
-foregone.
-
-[78] Buying and selling town.
-
-[79] At the mouth of the Bogue.
-
-[80] Yang-Yin, one of the chief features of which, in some mysterious
-way, gives notice of impending change of fortune deduced from the
-Pa-Kwa, a complicated system, of very remote antiquity, of divination.
-
-[81] Natives of Africa, sweepers, &c.
-
-[82] The 'eyes' on the bows of Chinese junks gave rise to the
-expression, 'No got eye, no can see,' under the erroneous foreign belief
-that the Chinese attributed to them the power of seeing and avoiding
-danger. This is very far from the fact. The bows of sea-going junks
-represent the head of a _dragon_, with expanded jaws and full round
-eyes, and being the symbol of the Chinese Empire, it is used as a carved
-eagle may be on an American vessel, without occult power attaching
-thereto.
-
-[83] A 'Scuttle-Butt' is a cask with a square hole in its bilge, kept on
-deck to hold water for daily use, which is drawn by means of a hand-pump.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Notes
-
-
-The author's name is William C. Hunter.
-
-Obvious punctuation errors repaired.
-
-Hyphen added: hard-working (p. 87).
-
-Hyphen removed: mastheads (p. 1).
-
-P. 3: added "a" (my fellow-passenger took a fast boat).
-
-P. 3: "Sandal Wood Island" changed to "Sandalwood Island".
-
-P. 32: "Mr. Holingworth" changed to "Mr. Hollingworth".
-
-P. 94: "the first ships tome co in" changed to " the first ships to come
-in".
-
-P. 130: "We styled oursveles" changed to "We styled ourselves".
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Back cover: KPT & Co.]
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The 'Fan Kwae' at Canton Before Treaty
-Days 1825-1844, by William C. Hunter
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