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Ten Great Religions, An Essay in Comparative Theology
Chapter II.
Confucius and the Chinese, or the Prose of Asia.
Sec. 1. Peculiarities of Chinese Civilization. Sec. 2. Chinese
Government based on Education. Civil-Service Examinations. Sec. 3.
Life and Character of Confucius. Sec. 4. Philosophy and subsequent
Development of Confucianism. Sec. 5. Lao-tse and Tao-ism. Sec. 6.
Religious Character of the "Kings." Sec. 7. Confucius and
Christianity. Character of the Chinese. Sec. 8. The Tae-ping
Insurrection. NOTE. The Nestorian Inscription in China of the Eighth
Century.
Sec. 1. Peculiarities of Chinese Civilization.
In qualifying the Chinese mind as prosaic, and in calling the writings
of Confucius and his successors _prose_, we intend no disrespect to
either. Prose is as good as poetry. But we mean to indicate the point
of view from which the study of the Chinese teachers should be
approached. Accustomed to regard the East as the land of imagination;
reading in our childhood the wild romances of Arabia; passing, in the
poetry of Persia, into an atmosphere of tender and entrancing song;
then, as we go farther East into India, encountering the vast epics of
the Maha-Bharata and the Ramayana;--we might naturally expect to find
in far Cathay a still wilder flight of the Asiatic Muse. Not at all.
We drop at once from unbridled romance into the most colorless prose.
Another race comes to us, which seems to have no affinity with Asia,
as we have been accustomed to think of Asia. No more aspiration, no
flights of fancy, but the worship of order, decency, propriety, and
peaceful commonplaces. As the people, so the priests. The works of
Confucius and his commentators are as level as the valley of their
great river, the Yang-tse-kiang, which the tide ascends for four
hundred miles. All in these writings is calm, serious, and moral They
assume that all men desire to be made better, and will take the
trouble to find out how they can be made so. It is not thought
necessary to entice them into goodness by the attractions of
eloquence, the charm of imagery, or the fascinations of a brilliant
wit. These philosophers have a Quaker style, a dress of plain drab,
used only for clothing the thought, not at all for its ornament.
And surely we ought not to ask for any other attraction than the
subject itself, in order to find interest in China and its teachers.
The Chinese Empire, which contains more than five millions of square
miles, or twice the area of the United States, has a population of
five hundred millions, or half the number of the human beings
inhabiting the globe. China proper, inhabited by the Chinese, is half
as large as Europe, and contains about three hundred and sixty
millions of inhabitants. There are eighteen provinces in China, many
of which contain, singly, more inhabitants than some of the great
states of Europe. But on many other accounts this nation is deeply
interesting.
China is the type of permanence in the world. To say that it is older
than any other _existing_ nation is saying very little. Herodotus, who
has been called the Father of History, travelled in Egypt about 450
B.C. He studied its monuments, bearing the names of kings who were as
distant from his time as he is from ours,--monuments which even then
belonged to a gray antiquity. But the kings who erected those
monuments were possibly posterior to the founders of the Chinese
Empire. Porcelain vessels, with Chinese mottoes on them, have been
found in those ancient tombs, in shape, material, and appearance
precisely like those which are made in China to-day; and Rosellini
believes them to have been imported from China by kings contemporary
with Moses, or before him. This nation and its institutions have
outlasted everything. The ancient Bactrian and Assyrian kingdoms, the
Persian monarchy, Greece and Rome, have all risen, flourished, and
fallen,--and China continues still the same. The dynasty has been
occasionally changed; but the laws, customs, institutions, all that
makes national life, have continued. The authentic history of China
commences some two thousand years before Christ, and a thousand years
in this history is like a century in that of any other people. The
oral language of China has continued the same that it is now for
thirty centuries. The great wall bounding the empire on the north,
which is twelve hundred and forty miles long and twenty feet high,
with towers every few hundred yards,--which crosses mountain ridges,
descends into valleys, and is carried over rivers on arches,--was
built two hundred years before Christ, probably to repel those fierce
tribes who, after ineffectual attempts to conquer China, travelled
westward till they appeared on the borders of Europe five hundred
years later, and, under the name of Huns, assisted in the downfall of
the Roman Empire. All China was intersected with canals at a period
when none existed in Europe. The great canal, like the great wall, is
unrivalled by any similar existing work. It is twice the length of the
Erie Canal, is from two hundred to a thousand feet wide, and has
enormous banks built of solid granite along a great part of its
course. One of the important mechanical inventions of modern Europe is
the Artesian well. That sunk at Grenelle, in France, was long supposed
to be the deepest in the world, going down eighteen hundred feet. One
at St. Louis, in the United States, has since been drilled to a depth,
as has recently been stated, of about four thousand.[9] But in China
these wells are found by tens of thousands, sunk at very remote
periods to obtain salt water. The method used by the Chinese from
immemorial time has recently been adopted instead of our own as being
the most simple and economical. The Chinese have been long acquainted
with the circulation of the blood; they inoculated for the small-pox
in the ninth century; and about the same time they invented printing.
Their bronze money was made as early as 1100 B.C., and its form has
not been changed since the beginning of the Christian era. The
mariner's compass, gunpowder, and the art of printing were made known
to Europe through stories told by missionaries returning from Asia.
These missionaries, coasting the shores of the Celestial Empire in
Chinese junks, saw a little box containing a magnetized needle, called
Ting-nan-Tchen, or "needle which points to the south." They also
noticed terrible machines used by the armies in China called Ho-pao or
fire-guns, into which was put an inflammable powder, which produced a
noise like thunder and projected stones and pieces of iron with
irresistible force.
Father Hue, in his "Christianity in China," says that "the Europeans
who penetrated into China were no less struck with the libraries of
the Chinese than with their artillery. They were astonished at the
sight of the elegant books printed rapidly upon a pliant, silky paper
by means of wooden blocks. The first edition of the classical works
printed in China appeared in 958, five hundred years before the
invention of Gutenberg. The missionaries had, doubtless, often been
busied in their convents with the laborious work of copying manuscript
books, and the simple Chinese method of printing must have
particularly attracted their attention. Many other marvellous
productions were noticed, such as silk, porcelain, playing-cards,
spectacles, and other products of art and industry unknown in Europe.
They brought back these new ideas to Europe; 'and from that time,'
says Abel Remusat, 'the West began to hold in due esteem the most
beautiful, the most populous, and the most anciently civilized of all
the four quarters of the world. The arts, the religious faith, and the
languages of its people were studied, and it was even proposed to
establish a professorship for the Tartar language in the University of
Paris. The world seemed to open towards the East; geography made
immense strides, and ardor for discovery opened a new vent for the
adventurous spirit of the Europeans. As our own hemisphere became
better known, the idea of another ceased to appear a wholly improbable
paradox; and in seeking the Zipangon of Marco Polo, Christopher
Columbus discovered the New World.'"
The first aspect of China produces that impression on the mind which
we call the grotesque. This is merely because the customs of this
singular nation are so opposite to our own. They seem morally, no less
than physically, our antipodes. Their habits are as opposite to ours
as the direction of their bodies. We stand feet to feet in everything.
In boxing the compass they say "westnorth" instead of northwest,
"eastsouth" instead of southeast, and their compass-needle points
south instead of north. Their soldiers wear quilted petticoats, satin
boots, and bead necklaces, carry umbrellas and fans, and go to a night
attack with lanterns in their hands, being more afraid of the dark
than of exposing themselves to the enemy. The people are very fond of
fireworks, but prefer to have them in the daytime. Ladies' ride in
wheelbarrows, and cows are driven in carriages. While in Europe the
feet are put in the stocks, in China the stocks are hung round the
neck. In China the family name comes first, and the personal name
afterward. Instead of saying Benjamin Franklin or Walter Scott they
would say Franklin Benjamin, Scott Walter. Thus the Chinese name of
Confucius, Kung-fu-tsee, means the Holy Master Kung;--Kung is the
family name. In the recent wars with the English the mandarins or
soldiers would sometimes run away, and then commit suicide to avoid
punishment. In getting on a horse, the Chinese mount on the right
side. Their old men fly kites, while the little boys look on. The left
hand is the seat of honor, and to keep on your hat is a sign of
respect. Visiting cards are painted red, and are four feet long. In
the opinion of the Chinese, the seat of the understanding is the
stomach. They have villages which contain a million of inhabitants.
Their boats are drawn by men, but their carriages are moved by sails.
A married woman while young and pretty is a slave, but when she
becomes old and withered is the most powerful, respected, and beloved
person in the family. The emperor is regarded with the most profound
reverence, but the empress mother is a greater person than he. When a
man furnishes his house, instead of laying stress, as we do, on
rosewood pianos and carved mahogany, his first ambition is for a
handsome camphor-wood coffin, which he keeps in the best place in his
room. The interest of money is thirty-six per cent, which, to be sure,
we also give in hard times to stave off a stoppage, while with them it
is the legal rate. We once heard a bad dinner described thus: "The
meat was cold, the wine was hot, and everything was sour but the
vinegar." This would not so much displease the Chinese, who carefully
warm their wine, while we ice ours. They understand good living,
however, very well, are great epicures, and somewhat gourmands, for,
after dining on thirty dishes, they will sometimes eat a duck by way
of a finish. They toss their meat into their mouths to a tune, every
man keeping time with his chop-sticks, while we, on the contrary, make
anything but harmony with the clatter of our knives and forks. A
Chinaman will not drink a drop of milk, but he will devour
birds'-nests, snails, and the fins of sharks with a great relish. Our
mourning color is black and theirs is white; they mourn for their
parents three years, we a much shorter time. The principal room in
their houses is called "the hall of ancestors," the pictures or
tablets of whom, set up against the wall, are worshipped by them; we,
on the other hand, are only too apt to send our grandfather's portrait
to the garret.[10]
Sec. 2. Chinese Government based on Education. Civil-Service
Examinations.
Such are a few of the external differences between the Chinese customs
and ours. But the most essential peculiarity of this nation is the
high value which they attribute to knowledge, and the distinctions and
rewards which they bestow on scholarship. All the civil offices in the
Empire are given as rewards of literary merit. The government, indeed,
is called a complete despotism, and the emperor is said to have
absolute authority. He is not bound by any written constitution,
indeed; but the public opinion of the land holds him, nevertheless, to
a strict responsibility. He, no less than his people, is bound by a
law higher than that of any private will,--the authority of custom.
For, in China, more than anywhere else, "what is gray with age becomes
religion." The authority of the emperor is simply authority to govern
according to the ancient usages of the country, and whenever these are
persistently violated, a revolution takes place and the dynasty is
changed. But a revolution in China changes nothing but the person of
the monarch; the unwritten constitution of old usages remains in full
force. "A principle as old as the monarchy," says Du Halde, "is this,
that the state is a large family, and the emperor is in the place of
both father and mother. He must govern his people with affection and
goodness; he must attend to the smallest matters which concern their
happiness. When he is not supposed to have this sentiment, he soon
loses his hold on the reverence of the people, and his throne becomes
insecure." The emperor, therefore, is always studying how to preserve
this reputation. When a province is afflicted by famine, inundation,
or any other calamity, he shuts himself in his palace, fasts, and
publishes decrees to relieve it of taxes and afford it aid.
The true power of the government is in the literary class. The
government, though nominally a monarchy, is really an aristocracy. But
it is not an aristocracy of birth, like that of England, for the
humblest man's son can obtain a place in it; neither is it an
aristocracy of wealth, like ours in the United States, nor a military
aristocracy, like that of Russia, nor an aristocracy of priests, like
that of ancient Egypt, and of some modern countries,--as, for
instance, that of Paraguay under the Jesuits, or that of the Sandwich
Islands under the Protestant missionaries; but it is a literary
aristocracy.
The civil officers in China are called mandarins. They are chosen from
the three degrees of learned men, who may be called the bachelors,
licentiates, and doctors. All persons may be candidates for the first
degree, except three excluded classes,--boatmen, barbers, and actors.
The candidates are examined by the governors of their own towns. Of
those approved, a few are selected after another examination. These
again are examined by an officer who makes a circuit once in three
years for that purpose. They are placed alone in little rooms or
closets, with pencils, ink, and paper, and a subject is given them to
write upon. Out of some four hundred candidates fifteen may be
selected, who receive the lowest degree. There is another triennial
examination for the second degree, at which a small number of the
bachelors are promoted. The examination for the highest degree, that
of doctor, is held at Pekin only, when some three hundred are taken
out of five thousand. These are capable of receiving the highest
offices. Whenever a vacancy occurs, one of those who have received a
degree is taken by lot from the few senior names. But a few years
since, there were five thousand of the highest rank, and twenty-seven
thousand of the second rank, who had not received employment.
The subjects upon which the candidates are examined, and the methods
of these examinations, are thus described in the Shanghae Almanac
(1852).[11]
The examinations for the degree of Keujin (or licentiate) takes place
at the principal city of each province once in three years. The
average number of bachelors in the large province of Keang-Nan (which
contains seventy millions of inhabitants) is twenty thousand, out of
whom only about two hundred succeed. Sixty-five mandarins are deputed
for this examination, besides subordinate officials. The two chief
examiners are sent from Pekin. When the candidates enter the
examination hall they are searched for books or manuscripts, which
might assist them in writing their essays. This precaution is not
superfluous, for many plans have been invented to enable mediocre
people to pass. Sometimes a thin book, printed on very small type from
copperplates, is slipped into a hole in the sole of the shoe. But
persons detected in such practices are ruined for life. In a list of
one hundred and forty-four successful candidates, in 1851, thirteen
were over forty years of age, and one under fourteen years; seven were
under twenty; and all, to succeed, must have known by heart the whole
of the Sacred Books, besides being well read in history.
Three sets of themes are given, each occupying two days and a night,
and until that time is expired no one is allowed to leave his
apartment, which is scarcely large enough to sleep in. The essays must
not contain more than seven hundred characters, and no erasure or
correction is allowed. On the first days the themes are taken from the
Four Books; on the next, from the older classics; on the last,
miscellaneous questions are given. The themes are such as these:
"Choo-tsze, in commenting on the Shoo-King, made use of four authors,
who sometimes say too much, at other times too little; sometimes their
explanations are forced, at other times too ornamental. What have you
to observe on them?" "Chinshow had great abilities for historic
writing. In his Three Kingdoms he has depreciated Choo-ko-leang, and
made very light of E and E, two other celebrated characters. What is
it that he says of them?"
These public-service examinations are conducted with the greatest
impartiality. They were established about a thousand years ago, and
have been gradually improved during the intervening time. They form
the basis of the whole system of Chinese government. They make a good
education universally desirable, as the poorest man may see his son
thus advanced to the highest position. All of the hundreds of
thousands who prepare to compete are obliged to know the whole system
of Confucius, to commit to memory all his moral doctrines, and to
become familiar with all the traditional wisdom of the land. Thus a
public opinion in favor of existing institutions and the fundamental
ideas of Chinese government is continually created anew.
What an immense advantage it would be to our own country if we should
adopt this institution of China! Instead of making offices the prize
of impudence, political management, and party services, let them be
competed for by all who consider themselves qualified. Let all offices
now given by appointment be hereafter bestowed on those who show
themselves best qualified to perform the duties. Each class of offices
would of course require a different kind of examination. For some,
physical culture as well as mental might be required. Persons who
wished diplomatic situations should be prepared in a knowledge of
foreign languages as well as of international law. All should be
examined on the Constitution and history of the United States.
Candidates for the Post-Office Department should be good copyists,
quick at arithmetic, and acquainted with book-keeping. It is true that
we cannot by an examination obtain a certain knowledge of moral
qualities; but industry, accuracy, fidelity in work would certainly
show themselves. A change from the present corrupt and corrupting
system of appointments to that of competitive examinations would do
more just now for our country than any other measure of reconstruction
which can be proposed. The permanence of Chinese institutions is
believed, by those who know best, to result from the influence of the
literary class. Literature is naturally conservative; the tone of the
literature studied is eminently conservative; and the most intelligent
men in the empire are personally interested in the continuance of the
institutions under which they hope to attain position and fortune.
The highest civil offices are seats at the great tribunals or boards,
and the positions of viceroys, or governors, of the eighteen
provinces.
The boards are:--
Ly Pou, Board of Appointment of Mandarins. Hou Pou, Board of Finance.
Lee Pou, Board of Ceremonies. Ping Pou, Board of War. Hing Pou, Board
of Criminal Justice. Kong Pou, Board of Works,--canals, bridges, &c.
The members of these boards, with their councillors and subordinates,
amount to twelve hundred officers. Then there is the Board of Doctors
of the Han Lin College, who have charge of the archives, history of
the empire, &c.; and the Board of Censors, who are the highest
mandarins, and have a peculiar office. Their duty is to stand between
the people and the mandarins, and between the people and the emperor,
and even rebuke the latter if they find him doing wrong. This is
rather a perilous duty, but it is often faithfully performed. A
censor, who went to tell the emperor of some faults, took his coffin
with him, and left it at the door of the palace. Two censors
remonstrated with a late emperor on the expenses of his palace,
specifying the sums uselessly lavished for perfumes and flowers for
his concubines, and stating that a million of taels of silver might be
saved for the poor by reducing these expenses. Sung, the commissioner
who attended Lord Macartney, remonstrated with the Emperor Kiaking on
his attachment to play-actors and strong drink, which degraded him in
the eyes of the people. The emperor, highly irritated, asked him what
punishment he deserved for his insolence. "Quartering," said Sung.
"Choose another," said the emperor. "Let me be beheaded." "Choose
again," said the emperor; and Sung asked to be strangled. The next day
the emperor appointed him governor of a distant province,--afraid to
punish him for the faithful discharge of his duty, but glad to have
him at a distance. Many such anecdotes are related, showing that there
is some moral courage in China.
The governor of a province, or viceroy, has great power. He also is
chosen from among the mandarins in the way described. The only
limitations of his power are these: he is bound to make a full report
every three years of the affairs of the province, _and give in it an
account of his own faults,_ and if he omits any, and they are
discovered in other ways, he is punished by degradation, bambooing, or
death. It is the right of any subject, however humble, to complain to
the emperor himself against any officer, however high; and for this
purpose a large drum is placed at one of the palace gates. Whoever
strikes it has his case examined under the emperor's eye, and if he
has been wronged, his wrongs are redressed, but if he has complained
unnecessarily, he is severely punished. Imperial visitors, sent by the
Board of Censors, may suddenly arrive at any time to examine the
concerns of a province; and a governor or other public officer who is
caught tripping is immediately reported and punished.
Thus the political institutions of China are built on literature.
Knowledge is the road to power and wealth. All the talent and
knowledge of the nation are interested in the support of institutions
which give to them either power or the hope of it. And these
institutions work well. The machinery is simple, but it produces a
vast amount of happiness and domestic virtue. While in most parts of
Asia the people are oppressed by petty tyrants, and ground down by
taxes,--while they have no motive to improve their condition, since
every advance will only expose them to greater extortion,--the people
of China are industrious and happy. In no part of the world has
agriculture been carried to such perfection. Every piece of ground in
the cultivated parts of the empire, except those portions devoted to
ancestral monuments, is made to yield two or three crops annually, by
the careful tillage bestowed on it. The ceremony of opening the soil
at the beginning of the year, at which the emperor officiates,
originated two thousand years ago. Farms are small,--of one or two
acres,--and each family raises on its farm all that it consumes. Silk
and cotton are cultivated and manufactured in families, each man
spinning, weaving, and dyeing his own web. In the manufacture of
porcelain, on the contrary, the division of labor is carried very far.
The best is made at the village of Kiangsee, which contains a million
of inhabitants. Seventy hands are sometimes employed on a single cup.
The Chinese are very skilful in working horn and ivory. Large lanterns
are made of horn, transparent and without a flaw. At Birmingham men
have tried with machines to cut ivory in the same manner as the
Chinese, and have failed.
Sec. 3. Life and Character of Confucius.
Of this nation the great teacher for twenty-three centuries has been
Confucius. He was born 551 B.C., and was contemporary with the
Tarquins, Pythagoras, and Cyrus. About his time occurred the return of
the Jews from Babylon and the invasion of Greece by Xerxes. His
descendants have always enjoyed high privileges, and there are now
some forty thousand of them in China, seventy generations and more
removed from their great ancestor. His is the oldest family in the
world, unless we consider the Jews as a single family descended from
Abraham. His influence, through his writings, on the minds of so many
millions of human beings is greater than that of any man who ever
lived, excepting the writers of the Bible; and in saying this we do
not forget the names of Mohammed, Aristotle, St. Augustine, and
Luther. So far as we can see, it is the influence of Confucius which
has maintained, though probably not originated, in China, that
profound reverence for parents, that strong family affection, that
love of order, that regard for knowledge and deference for literary
men, which are fundamental principles underlying all the Chinese
institutions. His minute and practical system of morals, studied as it
is by all the learned, and constituting the sum of knowledge and the
principle of government in China, has exerted and exerts an influence
on that innumerable people which it is impossible to estimate, but
which makes us admire the power which can emanate from a single soul.
To exert such an influence requires greatness. If the tree is to be
known by its fruits, Confucius must have been one of the master minds
of our race. The supposition that a man of low morals or small
intellect, an impostor or an enthusiast, could influence the world, is
a theory which is an insult to human nature. The time for such
theories has happily gone by. We now know that nothing can come of
nothing,--that a fire of straw may make a bright blaze, but must
necessarily soon go out. A light which illuminates centuries must be
more than an ignis fatuus. Accordingly we should approach Confucius
with respect, and expect to find something good and wise in his
writings. It is only a loving spirit which will enable us to penetrate
the difficulties which surround the study, and to apprehend something
of the true genius of the man and his teachings. As there is no
immediate danger of becoming his followers, we can see no objections
to such a course, which also appears to be a species of mental
hospitality, eminently in accordance with the spirit of our own
Master.
Confucius belongs to that small company of select ones whose lives
have been devoted to the moral elevation of their fellow-men. Among
them he stands high, for he sought to implant the purest principles of
religion and morals in the character of the whole people, and
succeeded in doing it. To show that this was his purpose it will be
necessary to give a brief sketch of his life.
His ancestors were eminent statesmen and soldiers in the small country
of Loo, then an independent kingdom, now a Chinese province. The year
of his birth was that in which Cyrus became king of Persia. His
father, one of the highest officers of the kingdom, and a brave
soldier, died when Confucius was three years old. He was a studious
boy, and when fifteen years old had studied the five sacred books
called Kings. He was married at the age of nineteen, and had only one
son by his only wife. This son died before Confucius, leaving as his
posterity a single grandchild, from whom the great multitudes of his
descendants now in China were derived. This grandson was second only
to Confucius in wisdom, and was the teacher of the illustrious
Mencius.
The first part of the life of Confucius was spent in attempting to
reform the abuses of society by means of the official stations which
he held, by his influence with princes, and by travelling and
intercourse with men. The second period was that in which he was
recalled from his travels to become a minister in his native country,
the kingdom of Loo. Here he applied his theories of government, and
tested their practicability. He was then fifty years old. His success
was soon apparent in the growing prosperity of the whole people.
Instead of the tyranny which before prevailed, they were now ruled
according to his idea of good government,--that of the father of a
family. Confidence was restored to the public mind, and all good
influences followed. But the tree was not yet deeply enough rooted to
resist accidents, and all his wise arrangements were suddenly
overthrown by the caprice of the monarch, who, tired of the austere
virtue of Confucius, suddenly plunged into a career of dissipation.
Confucius resigned his office, and again became a wanderer, but now
with a new motive. He had before travelled to learn, now he travelled
to teach. He collected disciples around him, and, no longer seeking to
gain the ear of princes, he diffused his ideas among the common people
by means of his disciples, whom he sent out everywhere to communicate
his doctrines. So, amid many vicissitudes of outward fortune, he lived
till he was seventy-three years old. In the last years of his life he
occupied himself in publishing his works, and in editing the Sacred
Books. His disciples had become very numerous, historians estimating
them at three thousand, of whom five hundred had attained to official
station, seventy-two had penetrated deeply into his system, and ten,
of the highest class of mind and character, were continually near his
person. Of these Hwuy was especially valued by him, as having early
attained superior virtue. He frequently referred to him in his
conversations. "I saw him continually advance," said he, "but I never
saw him stop in the path of knowledge." Again he says: "The wisest of
my disciples, having one idea, understands two. Hwuy, having one
understands ten." One of the select ten disciples, Tszee-loo, was rash
and impetuous like the Apostle Peter. Another, Tszee-Kung, was loving
and tender like the Apostle John; he built a house near the grave of
Confucius, wherein to mourn for him after his death.
The last years of the life of Confucius were devoted to editing the
Sacred Books, or Kings. As we now have them they come from him.
Authentic records of Chinese history extend back to 2357 B.C., while
the Chinese philosophy originated with Fuh-he, who lived about 3327
B.C. He it was who substituted writing for the knotted strings which
before formed the only means of record. He was also the author of the
Eight Diagrams,--each consisting of three lines, half of which are
whole and half broken in two,--which by their various combinations are
supposed to represent the active and passive principles of the
universe in all their essential forms. Confucius edited the Yih-King,
the Shoo-King, the She-King, and the Le-Ke, which constitute the whole
of the ancient literature of China which has come down to
posterity.[1] The Four Books, which contain the doctrines of
Confucius, and of his school, were not written by himself, but
composed by others after his death.
One of these is called the "Immutable Mean," and its object is to show
that virtue consists in avoiding extremes. Another--the Lun-Yu, or
Analects--contains the conversation or table-talk of Confucius, and
somewhat resembles the Memorabilia of Xenophon and Boswell's Life of
Johnson.[12]
The life of Confucius was thus devoted to communicating to the Chinese
nation a few great moral and religious principles, which he believed
would insure the happiness of the people. His devotion to this aim
appears in his writings. Thus he says:--
"At fifteen years I longed for wisdom. At thirty my mind was fixed in
the pursuit of it. At forty I saw clearly certain principles. At fifty
I understood the rule given by heaven. At sixty everything I heard I
easily understood. At seventy the desires of my heart no longer
transgressed the law."
"If in the morning I hear about the right way, and in the evening I
die, I can be happy."
He says of himself: "He is a man who through his earnestness in
seeking knowledge forgets his food, and in his joy for having found it
loses all sense of his toil, and thus occupied is unconscious that he
has almost reached old age."
Again: "Coarse rice for food, water to drink, the bended arm for a
pillow,--happiness may be enjoyed even with these; but without virtue
both riches and honor seem to me like the passing cloud."
"Grieve not that men know not you; grieve that you know not men."
"To rule with equity is like the North Star, which is fixed, and all
the rest go round it."
"The essence of knowledge is, having it, to apply it; not having it,
to confess your ignorance."
"Worship as though the Deity were present."
"If my mind is not engaged in my worship, it is as though I worshipped
not."
"Formerly, in hearing men, I heard their words, and gave them credit
for their conduct; now I hear their words, and observe their conduct."
"A man's life depends on virtue; if a bad man lives, it is only by
good fortune."
"Some proceed blindly to action, without knowledge; I hear much, and
select the best course."
He was once found fault with, when in office, for not opposing the
marriage of a ruler with a distant relation, which was an offence
against Chinese propriety. He said: "I am a happy man; if I have a
fault, men observe it."
Confucius was humble. He said: "I cannot bear to hear myself called
equal to the sages and the good. All that can be said of me is, that I
study with delight the conduct of the sages, and instruct men without
weariness therein."
"The good man is serene," said he, "the bad always in fear."
"A good man regards the ROOT; he fixes the root, and all else flows
out of it. The root is filial piety; the fruit brotherly love."
"There may be fair words and an humble countenance when there is
little real virtue."
"I daily examine myself in a threefold manner: in my transactions with
men, if I am upright; in my intercourse with friends, if I am
faithful; and whether I illustrate the teachings of my master in my
conduct."
"Faithfulness and sincerity are the highest things."
"When you transgress, do not fear to return."
"Learn the past and you will know the future."
The great principles which he taught were chiefly based on family
affection and duty. He taught kings that they were to treat their
subjects as children, subjects to respect the kings as parents; and
these ideas so penetrated the national mind, that emperors are obliged
to seem to govern thus, even if they do not desire it. Confucius was a
teacher of reverence,--reverence for God, respect for parents, respect
and reverence for the past and its legacies, for the great men and
great ideas of former times. He taught men also to regard each other
as brethren, and even the golden rule, in its negative if not its
positive form, is to be found in his writings.
Curiously enough, this teacher of reverence was distinguished by a
remarkable lump on the top of his head, where the phrenologists have
placed the organ of veneration.[13] Rooted in his organization, and
strengthened by all his convictions, this element of adoration seemed
to him the crown of the whole moral nature of man. But, while full of
veneration, he seems to have been deficient in the sense of spiritual
things. A personal God was unknown to him; so that his worship was
directed, not to God, but to antiquity, to ancestors, to propriety and
usage, to the state as father and mother of its subjects, to the ruler
as in the place of authority. Perfectly sincere, deeply and absolutely
assured of all that he knew, he said nothing he did not believe. His
power came not only from the depth and clearness of his convictions,
but from the absolute honesty of his soul.
Lao-tse, for twenty-eight years his contemporary, founder of one of
the three existing religions of China,--Tao-ism,--was a man of perhaps
equal intelligence. But he was chiefly a thinker; he made no attempt
to elevate the people; his purpose was to repress the passions, and to
preserve the soul in a perfect equanimity. He was the Zeno of the
East, founder of a Chinese stoicism. With him virtue is sure of its
reward; everything is arranged by a fixed law. His disciples
afterwards added to his system a thaumaturgic element and an
invocation of departed spirits, so that now it resembles our modern
Spiritism; but the original doctrine of Lao-tse was rationalism in
philosophy and stoicism in morals. Confucius is said, in a Chinese
work, to have visited him, and to have frankly confessed his inability
to understand him. "I know how birds fly, how fishes swim, how animals
run. The bird may be shot, the fish hooked, and the beast snared. But
there is the dragon. I cannot tell how he mounts in the air, and soars
to heaven. To-day I have seen the dragon."
But the modest man, who lived for others, has far surpassed in his
influence this dragon of intelligence. It certainly increases our hope
for man, when we see how these qualities of perfect honesty, good
sense, generous devotion to the public good, and fidelity to the last
in adherence to his work, have made Confucius during twenty-three
centuries the daily teacher and guide of a third of the human race.
Confucius was eminently distinguished by energy and persistency. He
did not stop working till he died. His life was of one piece,
beautiful, noble. "The general of a large army," said he, "may be
defeated, but you cannot defeat the determined mind of a peasant." He
acted conformably to this thought, and to another of his sayings. "If
I am building a mountain, and stop before the last basketful of earth
is placed on the summit, I have failed of my work. But if I have
placed but one basketful on the plain, and go on, I am really building
a mountain."
Many beautiful and noble things are related concerning the character
of Confucius,--of his courage in the midst of danger, of his humility
in the highest position of honor. His writings and life have given the
law to Chinese thought. He is the patron saint of that great empire.
His doctrine is the state religion of the nation, sustained by the
whole power of the emperor and the literary body. His books are
published every year by societies formed for that purpose, who
distribute them gratuitously. His descendants enjoy the highest
consideration. The number of temples erected to his memory is sixteen
hundred and sixty. One of them occupies ten acres of land. On the two
festivals in the year sacred to his memory there are sacrificed some
seventy thousand animals of different kinds, and twenty-seven thousand
pieces of silk are burned on his altars. Yet his is a religion without
priests, liturgy, or public worship, except on these two occasions.
Sec. 4. Philosophy and subsequent Development of Confucianism.
According to Mr. Meadows, the philosophy of China, in its origin and
present aspect, may be thus briefly described.[14] Setting aside the
Buddhist system and that of Tao-ism, which supply to the Chinese the
element of religious worship and the doctrine of a supernatural world,
wanting in the system of Confucius, we find the latter as the
established religion of the state, merely tolerating the others as
suited to persons of weak minds. The Confucian system, constantly
taught by the competitive examinations, rules the thought of China.
Its first development was from the birth of Confucius to the death of
Mencias (or from 551 B.C. to 313 B.C.). Its second period was from the
time of Chow-tsze (A.D. 1034) to that of Choo-tsze (A.D. 1200). The
last of these is the real fashioner of Chinese philosophy, and one of
the truly great men of the human race. His works are chiefly
Commentaries on the Kings and the Four Books. They are committed to
memory by millions of Chinese who aspire to pass the public-service
examinations. The Chinese philosophy, thus established by Choo-tsze,
is as follows.[15]
There is one highest, ultimate principle of all existence,--the
Tae-keih, or Grand Extreme. This is absolutely immaterial, and the
basis of the order of the universe. From this ultimate principle,
operating from all eternity, come all animate and inanimate nature. It
operates in a twofold way, by expansion and contraction, or by
ceaseless active and passive pulsations. The active expansive
pulsation is called Yang, the passive intensive pulsation is Yin, and
the two may be called the Positive and Negative Essences of all
things. When the active expansive phase of the process has reached its
extreme limit, the operation becomes passive and intensive; and from
these vibrations originate all material and mortal existences.
Creation is therefore a perpetual process,--matter and spirit are
opposite results of the same force. The one tends to variety, the
other to unity; and variety in unity is a permanent and universal law
of being. Man results from the utmost development of this pulsatory
action and passion; and man's nature, as the highest result, is
perfectly good, consisting of five elements, namely, charity,
righteousness, propriety, wisdom, and sincerity. These constitute the
inmost, essential nature of man; but as man comes in contact with the
outward world evil arises by the conflict. When man follows the
dictates of his nature his actions are good, and harmony results. When
he is unduly influenced by the outward world his actions are evil, and
discord intervenes. The holy man is one who has an instinctive, inward
sight of the ultimate principle in its twofold operation (or what we
should call the sight of God, the beatific vision), and who therefore
spontaneously and easily obeys his nature. Hence all his thoughts are
perfectly wise, his actions perfectly good, and his words perfectly
true. Confucius was the last of these holy men. The infallible
authority of the Sacred Books results from the fact that their
writers, being holy men, had an instinctive perception of the working
of the ultimate principle.
All Confucian philosophy is pervaded by these principles: first, that
example is omnipotent; secondly, that to secure the safety of the
empire, you must secure the happiness of the people; thirdly, that by
solitary persistent thought one may penetrate at last to a knowledge
of the essence of things; fourthly, that the object of all government
is to make the people virtuous and contented.
Sec. 5. Lao-tse and Tao-ism.
One of the three religious systems of China is that of the Tao, the
other two being that of Confucius, and that of Buddhism in its Chinese
form. The difficulty in understanding Tao-ism comes from its appearing
under three entirely distinct forms: (1) as a philosophy of the
absolute or unconditioned, in the great work of the Tse-Lao, or old
teacher;[16] (2) as a system of morality of the utilitarian
school,[17] which resolves duty into prudence; and (3) as a system of
magic, connected with the belief in spirits. In the Tao-te-king we
have the ideas of Lao himself, which we will endeavor to state;
premising that they are considered very obscure and difficult even by
the Chinese commentators.
The TAO (Sec. 1) is the unnamable, and is the origin of heaven and
earth. As that which can be named, it is the mother of all things.
These two are essentially one. Being and not-being are born from each
other (Sec. 2). The Tao is empty but inexhaustible (Sec. 4), is pure,
is profound, and was before the Gods. It is invisible, not the object
of perception, it returns into not-being (Sec.Sec. 14, 40). It is
vague, confused, and obscure (Sec. 25, 21). It is little and strong,
universally present, and all beings return into it (Sec. 32). It is
without desires, great (Sec. 34). All things are born of being, being
is born of not-being (Sec. 40).
From these and similar statements it would appear that the philosophy
of the Tao-te-king is that of absolute being, or the identity of being
and not-being. In this point it anticipated Hegel by twenty-three
centuries.[18] It teaches that the absolute is the source of being and
of not-being. Being is essence, not-being is existence. The first is
the noumenal, the last the phenomenal.'
As being is the source of not-being (Sec. 40), by identifying one's
self with being one attains to all that is not-being, i.e. to all that
exists. Instead, therefore, of aiming at acquiring knowledge, the wise
man avoids it: instead of acting, he refuses to act. He "feeds his
mind with a wise passiveness." (Sec. 16.) "_Not to act_ is the source
of all power," is a thesis continually present to the mind of Lao
(Sec.Sec. 3, 23, 38,43,48, 63). The wise man is like water (Sec.Sec.
8, 78), which seems weak and is strong; which yields, seeks the lowest
place, which seems the softest thing and breaks the hardest thing. To
be wise one must renounce wisdom, to be good one must renounce justice
and humanity, to be learned one must renounce knowledge (Sec.Sec. 19,
20, 45), and must have no desires (Sec.Sec. 8, 22), must detach one's
self from all things (Sec. 20) and be like a new-born babe. From
everything proceeds its opposite, the easy from the difficult, the
difficult from the easy, the long from the short, the high from the
low, ignorance from knowledge, knowledge from ignorance, the first
from the last, the last from the first. These antagonisms are mutually
related by the hidden principle of the Tao (Sec.Sec. 2, 27). Nothing
is independent or capable of existing save through its opposite. The
good man and bad man are equally necessary to each other (Sec. 27). To
desire aright is not to desire (Sec. 64). The saint can do great
things because he does not attempt to do them (Sec. 63). The unwarlike
man conquers.[19] He who submits to others controls them. By this
negation of all things we come into possession of all things (Sec.
68). _Not to act_ is, therefore, the secret of all power (Sec.Sec. 3,
23, 38, 43, 48, 63).
We find here the same doctrine of opposites which appears in the
Phaedo, and which has come up again and again in philosophy. We shall
find something like it in the Sankhya-karika of the Hindoos. The Duad,
with the Monad brooding behind it, is the fundamental principle of the
Avesta.
The result, thus far, is to an active passivity. Lao teaches that not
to act involves the highest energy of being, and leads to the greatest
results. By not acting one identifies himself with the Tao, and
receives all its power. And here we cannot doubt that the Chinese
philosopher was pursuing the same course with Sakya-Muni. The Tao of
the one is the Nirvana of the other. The different motive in each mind
constitutes the difference of their career. Sakya-Muni sought Nirvana,
or the absolute, the pure knowledge, in order to escape from evil and
to conquer it. Lao sought it, as his book shows, to attain power. At
this point the two systems diverge. Buddhism is generous, benevolent,
humane; it seeks to help others. Tao-ism seeks its own. Hence the
selfish morality which pervades the Book of Rewards and Punishments.
Every good action has its reward attached to it. Hence also the
degradation of the system into pure magic and spiritism. Buddhism,
though its course runs so nearly parallel, always retains in its
scheme of merits a touch of generosity.
We find thus, in the Tao-te-king, the element afterwards expanded into
the system of utilitarian and eudaemonic ethics in the Book of Rewards
and Punishments. We also can trace in it the source of the magical
tendency in Tao-ism. The principle, that by putting one's self into an
entirely passive condition one can enter into communion with the
unnamed Tao, and so acquire power over nature, naturally tends to
magic. Precisely the same course of thought led to similar results in
the case of Neo-Platonism. The ecstatic union with the divine element
in all nature, which Plotinus attained four times in his life,
resulted from an immediate sight of God. In this sight is all truth
given to the soul. The unity, says Plotinus, which produces all
things, is an essence behind both substance and form. Through this
essential being all souls commune and interact, and magic is this
interaction of soul upon soul through the soul of souls, with which
one becomes identified in the ecstatic union. A man therefore can act
on demons and control spirits by theurgic rites. Julian, that ardent
Neo-Platonician, was surrounded by diviners, hierophants, and
aruspices.[20]
In the Tao-te-king (Sec.Sec. 50, 55, 56, etc.) it is said that he who
knows the Tao need not fear the bite of serpents nor the jaws of wild
beasts, nor the claws of birds of prey. He is inaccessible to good and
to evil. He need fear neither rhinoceros nor tiger. In battle he needs
neither cuirass nor sword. The tiger cannot tear him, the soldier
cannot wound him. He is invulnerable and safe from death.[21]
If Neo-Platonism had not had for its antagonist the vital force of
Christianity, it might have established itself as a permanent form of
religion in the Roman Empire, as Tao-ism has in China. I have tried to
show how the later form of this Chinese system has come naturally from
its principles, and how a philosophy of the absolute may have
degenerated into a system of necromancy.
Sec. 6. Religious Character of the "Kings."
We have seen that, in the philosophy of the Confucians, the ultimate
principle is not necessarily identical with a living, intelligent, and
personal God. Nor did Confucius, when he speaks of Teen, or Heaven,
express any faith in such a being. He neither asserted nor denied a
Supreme God. His worship and prayer did not necessarily imply such a
faith. It was the prayer of reverence addressed to some sacred,
mysterious, unknown power, above and behind all visible things. What
that power was, he, with his supreme candor, did not venture to
intimate. But in the She-King a personal God is addressed. The oldest
books recognize a Divine person. They teach that there is one Supreme
Being, who is omnipresent, who sees all things, and has an
intelligence which nothing can escape,--that he wishes men to live
together in peace and brotherhood. He commands not only right actions,
but pure desires and thoughts, that we should watch all our behavior,
and maintain a grave and majestic demeanor, "which is like a palace in
which virtue resides"; but especially that we should guard the tongue.
"For a blemish may be taken out of a diamond by carefully polishing
it; but, if your words have the least blemish, there is no way to
efface that." "Humility is the solid foundation of all the virtues."
"To acknowledge one's incapacity is the way to be soon prepared to
teach others; for from the moment that a man is no longer full of
himself, nor puffed up with empty pride, whatever good he learns in
the morning he practices before night." "Heaven penetrates to the
bottom of our hearts, like light into a dark chamber. We must conform
ourselves to it, till we are like two instruments of music tamed to
the same pitch. We must join ourselves with it, like two tablets which
appear but one. We must receive its gifts the very moment its hand is
open to bestow. Our irregular passions shut up the door of our souls
against God."
Such are the teachings of these Kings, which are unquestionably among
the oldest existing productions of the human mind. In the days of
Confucius they seem to have been nearly forgotten, and their precepts
wholly neglected. Confucius revised them, added his own explanations
and comments, and, as one of the last acts of his life, called his
disciples around him and made a solemn dedication of these books to
Heaven. He erected an altar on which he placed them, adored God, and
returned thanks upon his knees in a humble manner for having had life
and health granted him to finish this undertaking.
Sec. 7. Confucius and Christianity. Character of the Chinese.
It were easy to find defects in the doctrine of Confucius. It has
little to teach of God or immortality. But if the law of Moses, which
taught nothing of a future life, was a preparation for Christianity;
if, as the early Christian Fathers asserted, Greek philosophy was also
schoolmaster to bring men to Christ; who can doubt that the truth and
purity in the teachings of Confucius were providentially intended to
lead this great nation in the right direction? Confucius is a Star in
the East, to lead his people to Christ. One of the most authentic of
his sayings is this, that "in the West the true Saint must be looked
for and found." He has a perception, such as truly great men have
often had, of some one higher than himself, who was to come after him.
We cannot doubt, therefore, that God, who forgets none of his
children, has given this teacher to the swarming millions of China to
lead them on till they are ready for a higher light. And certainly the
temporal prosperity and external virtues of this nation, and their
long-continued stability amid the universal changes of the world, are
owing in no small decree to the lessons of reverence for the past, of
respect for knowledge, of peace and order, and especially of filial
piety, which he inculcated. In their case, if in no other, has been
fulfilled the promise of the divine commandment, "Honor thy father and
thy mother, that thy days may be long in the land which the Lord thy
God giveth thee."
In comparing the system of Confucius with Christianity, it appears at
once that Christianity differs from this system, as from most others,
in its greater completeness. Jesus says to the Chinese philosopher, as
he said to the Jewish law, "I have not come to destroy, but to
fulfil." He fulfils the Confucian reverence for the past by adding
hope for the future; he fulfils its stability by progress, its faith
in man with faith in God, its interest in this world with the
expectation of another, its sense of time with that of eternity.
Confucius aims at peace, order, outward prosperity, virtue, and good
morals. All this belongs also to Christianity, but Christianity adds a
moral enthusiasm, a faith in the spiritual world, a hope of immortal
life, a sense of the Fatherly presence of God. So that here, as
before, we find that Christianity does not exclude other religions,
but includes them, and is distinguished by being deeper, higher,
broader, and more far-reaching than they.
A people with such institutions and such a social life as we have
described cannot be despised, and to call them uncivilized is as
absurd in us as it is in them to call Europeans barbarians. They are a
good, intelligent, and happy people. Lieutenant Forbes, who spent five
years in China,--from 1842 to 1847,--says: "I found myself in the
midst of as amiable, kind, and hospitable a population as any on the
face of the earth, as far ahead of us in some things as behind us in
others." As to the charge of dishonesty brought against them by those
who judge the whole nation by the degraded population of the suburbs
of Canton, Forbes says, "My own property suffered more in landing in
England and passing the British frontier than in my whole sojourn in
China."
"There is no nation," says the Jesuit Du Halde, "more laborious and
temperate than this. They are inured to hardships from their infancy,
which greatly contributes to preserve the innocence of their
manners.... They are of a mild, tractable, and humane disposition." He
thinks them exceedingly modest, and regards the love of gain as their
chief vice. "Interest," says he, "is the spring of all their actions;
for, when the least profit offers, they despise all difficulties and
undertake the most painful journeys to procure it" This may be true;
but if a Chinese traveller in America should give the same account of
us, would it not be quite as true? One of the latest writers--the
author of "The Middle Kingdom"--accuses the Chinese of gross
sensuality, mendacity, and dishonesty. No doubt these are besetting
sins with them, as with all nations who are educated under a system
which makes submission to authority the chief virtue. But then this
writer lived only at Canton and Macao, and saw personally only the
refuse of the people. He admits that "they have attained, by the
observance of peace and good order, to a high security of life and
property; that the various classes are linked together in a remarkably
homogeneous manner by the diffusion of education; and that property
and industry receive their just reward of food, raiment, and shelter."
He also reminds us that the religion of China differs from all Pagan
religions in this, that it encourages neither cruelty nor sensuality.
No human victims have ever been offered on its altars, and those
licentious rites which have appeared in so many religions have never
disgraced its pure worship.
The Chinese citizen enjoys a degree of order, peace, and comfort
unknown elsewhere in Asia. "He can hold and sell landed property with
a facility, certainty, and security which is absolute perfection
compared with the nature of English dealings of the same kind."[22] He
can traverse the country for two thousand miles unquestioned by any
official. He can follow what occupation he pleases. He can quit his
country and re-enter it without a passport. The law of primogeniture
does not exist. The emperor appoints his heir, but a younger son quite
as often as an elder one. The principle that no man is entitled by
birth to rule over them is better known to the three hundred and sixty
millions of China than to the twenty-seven millions of Great Britain
that they have a right to a trial by their peers.[23] The principle of
Chinese government is to persuade rather than to compel, to use moral
means rather than physical. This rests on the fundamental belief in
human goodness. For, as Mr. Meadows justly observes: "The theory that
man's nature is radically vicious is the true psychical basis of
despotic or physical-force government; while the theory that man's
nature is radically good is the basis of free or moral-force
government." The Chinese government endeavors to be paternal. It has
refused to lay a tax on opium, because that would countenance the sale
of it, though it might derive a large income from such a tax. The
sacred literature of the Chinese is perfectly free from everything
impure or offensive. There is not a line but might be read aloud in
any family circle in England. All immoral ceremonies in idol worship
are forbidden. M. Hue says that the birth of a daughter is counted a
disaster in China; but well-informed travellers tell us that fathers
go about with little daughters on their arms, as proud and pleased as
a European father could be. Slavery and concubinage exist in China,
and the husband has absolute power over his wife, even of life and
death. These customs tend to demoralize the Chinese, and are a source
of great evil. Woman is the slave of man. The exception to this is in
the case of a mother. She is absolute in her household, and mothers,
in China, command universal reverence. If an officer asks leave of
absence to visit his mother it must be granted him. A mother may order
an official to take her son to prison, and she must be obeyed. As a
wife without children woman is a slave, but as a mother with grownup
sons she is a monarch.
Sec. 8. The Tae-ping Insurrection.
Two extraordinary events have occurred in our day in China, the
results of which may be of the utmost importance to the nation and to
mankind. The one is the Tae-ping insurrection, the other the
diplomatic mission of Mr. Burlingame to the Western world. Whatever
may be the immediate issue of the great insurrection of our day
against the Tartar dynasty, it will remain a phenomenon of the utmost
significance. There is no doubt, notwithstanding the general opinion
to the contrary, that it has been a religious movement, proceeding
from a single mind deeply moved by the reading of the Bible. The
hostility of the Chinese to the present Mantchoo Tartar monarchs no
doubt aided it; but there has been in it an element of power from the
beginning, derived, like that of the Puritans, from its religious
enthusiasm. Its leader, the Heavenly Prince, Hung-sew-tseuen, son of a
poor peasant living thirty miles northeast of Canton, received a
tract, containing extracts from the Chinese Bible of Dr. Morison, from
a Chinese tract distributor in the streets of Canton. This was in
1833, when he was about twenty years of age. He took the book home,
looked over it carelessly, and threw it aside. Disappointed of his
degree at two competitive examinations, he fell sick, and saw a vision
of an old man, saying: "I am the Creator of all things. Go and do my
work." After this vision six years passed by, when the English war
broke out, and the English fleet took the Chinese forts in the river
of Canton. Such a great national calamity indicated, according to
Chinese ideas, something rotten in the government; and such success on
the part of the English showed that, in some way, they were fulfilling
the will of Heaven. This led Hung-sew-tseuen to peruse again his
Christian books; and alone, with no guide, he became a sincere
believer in Christ, after a fashion of his own. God was the Creator of
all things, and the Supreme Father. Jesus was the Elder Brother and
heavenly Teacher of mankind. Idolatry was to be overthrown, virtue to
be practised. Hung-sew-tseuen believed that the Bible confirmed his
former visions. He accepted his mission and began to make converts All
his converts renounced idolatry, and gave up the worship of Confucius.
They travelled to and fro teaching, and formed a society of
"God-worshippers." The first convert, Fung-yun-san, became its most
ardent missionary and its disinterested preacher. Hung-sew-tseuen
returned home, went to Canton, and there met Mr. Roberts, an American
missionary, who was induced by false charges to refuse him Christian
baptism. But he, without being offended with Mr. Roberts, went home
and taught his converts how to baptize themselves. The society of
"God-worshippers" increased in number. Some of them were arrested for
destroying idols, and among them Fung-yun-san, who, however, on his
way to prison, converted the policemen by his side. These new converts
set him at liberty and went away with him as his disciples. Various
striking phenomena occurred in this society. Men fell into a state of
ecstasy and delivered exhortations. Sick persons were cured by the
power of prayer. The teachings of these ecstatics were tested by
Scripture; if found to agree therewith, they were accepted; if not,
rejected.
It was in October, 1850, that this religious movement assumed a
political form. A large body of persons, in a state of chronic
rebellion against the Chinese authorities, had fled into the district,
and joined the "God-worshippers." Pursued by the imperial soldiers,
they were protected against them. Hence war began. The leaders of the
religious movement found themselves compelled to choose between
submission and resistance. They resisted, and the great insurrection
began. But in China an insurrection against the dynasty is in the
natural order of things. Indeed, it may be said to be a part of the
constitution. By the Sacred Books, taught in all the schools and made
a part of the examination papers, it is the duty of the people to
overthrow any bad government. The Chinese have no power to legislate,
do not tax themselves, and the government is a pure autocracy. But it
is not a despotism; for old usages make a constitution, which the
government must respect or be overthrown. "The right to rebel," says
Mr. Meadows, "is in China a chief element of national stability." The
Tae-ping (or Universal-Peace) Insurrection has shown its religious
character throughout. It has not been cruel, except in retaliation. At
the taking of Nan-king orders were given to put all the women together
and protect them, and any one doing them an injury was punished with
death. Before the attack on Nan-king a large body of the insurgents
knelt down and prayed, and then rose and fought, like the soldiers of
Cromwell. The aid of a large body of rebels was refused, because they
did not renounce idolatry, and continued to allow the use of opium.
Hymns of praise to the Heavenly Father and Elder Brother were chanted
in the camp. And the head of the insurrection distinctly announced
that, in case it succeeded, the Bible would be substituted in all
public examinations for office in the place of Confucius. This would
cause the Bible to be at once studied by all candidates for office
among three hundred and sixty millions of people. It would constitute
the greatest event in the history of Christianity since the days of
Constantino, or at least since the conversion of the Teutonic races.
The rebellion has probably failed; but great results must follow this
immense interest in Christianity in the heart of China,--an interest
awakened by no Christian mission, whether Catholic or Protestant, but
coming down into this great nation like the rain from heaven.
In the "History of the Ti-Ping Revolution" (published in London in
1866), written by an Englishman who held a command among the Ti-Piugs,
there is given a full, interesting, and apparently candid account of
the religious and moral character of this great movement, from which I
take the following particulars:--
"I have probably," says this writer,[24] "had a much greater
experience of the Ti-Ping religious practices than any other European,
and as a Protestant Christian I have never yet found occasion to
condemn their form of worship. The most important part of their faith
is the Holy Bible,--Old and New Testaments, entire. These have been
printed and circulated gratuitously by the government through the
whole population of the Ti-Ping jurisdiction." Abstracts of the Bible,
put into verse, were circulated and committed to memory. Their form of
worship was assimilated to Protestantism. The Sabbath was kept
religiously on the seventh day. Three cups of tea were put on the
altar on that day as an offering to the Trinity. They celebrated the
communion once a month by partaking of a cup of grape wine. Every one
admitted to their fellowship was baptized, after an examination and
confession of sins. The following was the form prescribed in the "Book
of Religious Precepts of the Ti-Ping Dynasty":--[25]
_Forms to be observed when Men wish to forsake their Sins_--"They must
kneel down in God's presence, and ask him to forgive their sins. They
may then take either a basin of water and wash themselves, or go to
the river and bathe themselves; after which they must continue daily
to supplicate Divine favor, and the Holy Spirit's assistance to renew
their hearts, saying grace at every meal, keeping holy the Sabbath
day, and obeying all God's commandments, especially avoiding idolatry.
They may then be accounted the children of God, and their souls will
go to Heaven when they die."
The prayer offered by the recipient of Baptism was as follows:--
"I (A. B.), kneeling down with a true heart, repent of my sins, and
pray the Heavenly Father, the great God, of his abundant mercy, to
forgive my former sins of ignorance in repeatedly breaking the Divine
commands, earnestly beseeching him also to grant me repentance and
newness of life, that my soul may go to Heaven, while I henceforth
truly forsake my former ways, abandoning idolatry and all corrupt
practices, in obedience to God's commands. I also pray that God would
give me his Holy Spirit to change my wicked heart, deliver me from all
temptation, and grant me his favor and protection, bestowing on me
food and raiment, and exemption from calamity, peace in this world and
glory in the next, through the mercies of our Saviour and Elder
Brother, Jesus, who redeemed us from sin."
In every household throughout the Ti-Ping territory the following
translation of the Lord's Prayer was hung up for the use of the
children, printed in large black characters on a white board:--
"Supreme Lord, our Heavenly Father, forgive all our sins that we have
committed in ignorance, rebelling against thee. Bless us, brethren and
sisters, thy little children. Give us our daily food and raiment; keep
from us all calamities and afflictions; that in this world we may have
peace and finally ascend to heaven to enjoy everlasting happiness. We
pray thee to bless our brethren and sisters of all nations. We ask
these things for the redeeming merits of our Lord and Saviour, our
heavenly brother, Jesus. We also pray, Heavenly Father, that thy will
may be done on earth as in heaven: for thine are all the kingdoms,
glory, and power. Amen."
The writer says he has frequently watched the Ti-Ping women teaching
the children this prayer; "and often, on entering a house, the
children ran up to me, and pulling me toward the board, began to read
the prayer."
The seventh day was kept very strictly. As soon as midnight sounded on
Friday, all the people throughout; Ti-Pingdom were summoned to
worship. Two other services were held during the day. Each opened with
a doxology to God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit. Then was sung this
hymn:--
"The true doctrine is different from the doctrine of this world; It
saves men's souls and gives eternal bliss. The wise receive it
instantly with joy; The foolish, wakened by it, find the way to
Heaven. Our Heavenly Father, of his great mercy, Did not spare his own
Son, but sent him down To give his life to redeem sinners. When men
know this, and repent, they may go to Heaven."
The rest of the services consisted in a chapter of the Bible read by
the minister; a creed, repeated by the congregation standing; a
prayer, read by the minister and repeated by the whole congregation
kneeling. Then the prayer was burned, the minister read a sermon, an
anthem was chanted to the long life of the king; then followed the Ten
Commandments, music, and the burning of incense and fire-crackers. No
business was allowed on the Sabbath, and the shops were closed. There
was a clergy, chosen by competitive examination, subject to the
approval of the Tien-Wong, or supreme religious head of the movement.
There was a minister placed over every twenty-five families, and a
church, or Heavenly Hall, assigned to him in some public building.
Over every twenty, five parishes there was a superior, who visited
them in turn every Sabbath. Once every month the whole people were
addressed by the chief Wong.
The writer of this work describes his attendance on morning prayers at
Nan-king, in the Heavenly Hall of the Chung-Wang's household. This
took place at sunrise every morning, the men and women sitting on
opposite sides of the hall. "Oftentimes," says he, "while kneeling in
the midst of an apparently devout congregation, and gazing on the
upturned countenances lightened by the early morning sun, have I
wondered why no British missionary occupied my place, and why
Europeans generally preferred slaughtering the Ti-Pings to accepting
them as brothers in Christ. When I look back," he adds, "on the
unchangeable and universal kindness I always met with among the
Ti-Pings, even when their dearest relatives were being slaughtered by
my countrymen, or delivered over to the Manchoos to be tortured to
death, their magnanimous forbearance seems like a dream. Their kind
and friendly feelings were often annoying. To those who have
experienced the ordinary dislike of foreigners by the Chinese, the
surprising friendliness of the Ti-Pings was most remarkable." They
welcomed Europeans as "brethren from across the sea," and claimed them
as fellow-worshippers of "Yesu."
Though the Ti-Pings did not at once lay aside all heathen customs, and
could not be expected to do so, they took some remarkable steps in the
right direction. Their women were in a much higher position than among
the other Chinese; they abolished the custom of cramping their feet; a
married woman had rights, and could not be divorced at will, or sold,
as under the Manchoos. Large institutions were established for
unmarried women. Slavery was totally abolished, and to sell a human
being was made a capital offence. They utterly prohibited the use of
opium; and this was probably their chief offence in the eyes of the
English. Prostitution was punished by death, and was unknown in their
cities. Idolatry was also utterly abolished. Their treatment of the
people under them was merciful; they protected their prisoners, whom
the Imperialists always massacred. The British troops, instead of
preserving neutrality, aided the Imperialists in putting down the
insurrection in such ways as this. The British cruisers _assumed_ that
the Ti-Ping junks were pirates, because they captured Chinese vessels.
The British ship Bittern and another steamer sank every vessel but two
in a rebel fleet, and gave up the crew of one which they captured to
be put to death. This is the description of another transaction of the
same kind, in the harbor of Shi-poo: "The junks were destroyed, and
their crews shot, drowned, and hunted down, until about a thousand
were killed; the Bittern's men aiding the Chinese on shore to complete
the wholesale massacre."[26]
It is the deliberate opinion of this well-informed English writer that
the Ti-Ping insurrection would have succeeded but for British
intervention; that the Tartar dynasty would have been expelled, the
Chinese regained their autonomy, and Christianity have been
established throughout the Empire. At the end of his book he gives a
table of _forty-three_ battles and massacres in which the British
soldiers and navy took part, in which about four hundred thousand of
the Ti-Pings were killed, and he estimates that more than two millions
more died of starvation in 1863 and 1864, in the famine occasioned by
the operations of the allied English, French, and Chinese troop's,
when the Ti-Pings were driven from their territories. In view of such
facts, well may an English writer say: "It is not once or twice that
the policy of the British government has been ruinous to the best
interests of the world. Disregard of international law and of treaty
law in Europe, deeds of piracy and spoliation in Asia, one vast system
of wrong and violence, have everywhere for years marked the dealings
of the British government with the weaker races of the globe."[27]
Other Englishmen, beside "Lin-Le" and Mr. Meadows, give the same
testimony to the Christian character of this great movement in China.
Captain Fishbourne, describing his visit in H.M.S. Hermes to Nan-king,
says: "It was obvious to the commonest observer that they were
practically a different race." They had the Scriptures, many seemed to
him to be practical Christians, serious and religious, believing in a
special Providence, thinking that their trials were sent to purify
them. "They accuse us of magic," said one. "The only magic we employ
is prayer to God." The man who said this, says Captain Fishbourne,
"was a little shrivelled-up person, but he uttered words of courageous
confidence in God, and could utter the words of a hero. He and others
like him have impressed the minds of their followers with their own
courage and morality."
The English Bishop of Victoria has constantly given the same
testimony. Of one of the Ti-Ping books Dr. Medhurst says: "There is
not a word in it which a Christian missionary might not adopt and
circulate as a tract for the benefit of the Chinese."
Dr. Medhurst also describes a scene which took place in Shanghae,
where he was preaching in the chapel of the London Missionary Society,
on the folly of idolatry and the duty of worshipping the one true God.
A man arose in the middle of the congregation and said: "That is true!
that is true! the idols must perish. I am a Ti-Ping; we all worship
one God and believe in Jesus, and we everywhere destroy the idols. Two
years ago when we began we were only three thousand; now we have
marched across the Empire, because God was on our side." He then
exhorted the people to abandon idolatry and to believe in Jesus, and
said: "We are happy in our religion, and look on the day of our death
as the happiest moment of life. When any of our number dies, we do not
weep, but congratulate each other because he has gone to the joy of
the heavenly world."
The mission of Mr. Burlingame indicated a sincere desire on the part
of the sagacious men who then governed China, especially of Prince
Kung, to enter into relations with modern civilization and modern
thought. From the official papers of this mission,[28] it appears that
Mr. Burlingame was authorized "to transact all business with the
Treaty Powers in which those countries and China had a common
interest," (communication of Prince Kung, December 31, 1867). The
Chinese government expressly states that this step is intended as
adopting the customs of diplomatic intercourse peculiar to the West,
and that in so doing the Chinese Empire means to conform to the law of
nations, as understood among the European states. It therefore adopted
"Wheaton's International Law" as the text-book and authority to be
used in its Foreign Office, and had it carefully translated into
Chinese for the use of its mandarins. This movement was the result,
says Mr. Burlingame, of the "co-operative policy" adopted by the
representatives in China of the Treaty Powers, in which they agreed to
act together on all important questions, to take no cession of
territory, and never to menace the autonomy of the Empire. They agreed
"to leave her perfectly free to develop herself according to her own
form of civilization, not to interfere with her interior affairs, to
make her waters neutral, and her land safe" (Burlingame's speech at
San Francisco). There is no doubt that if the states known as the
"Treaty Powers," namely, the United States, Belgium, Denmark, France,
Great Britain, Holland, Italy, North Germany, Russia, Spain, and
Sweden, will loyally abstain from aggression and interference in China
and respect her independence, that this great Empire will step forth
from her seclusion of fifty centuries, and enter the commonwealth of
nations.
The treaty between the United States and China of July 28, 1868,
includes provisions for the neutrality of the Chinese waters; for
freedom of worship for United States citizens in China, and for the
Chinese in the United States; for allowing voluntary emigration, and
prohibiting the compulsory coolie trade; for freedom to travel in
China and the United States by the citizens of either country; and for
freedom to establish and attend schools in both countries.
We add to this chapter a Note, containing an interesting account, from
Hue's "Christianity in China," of an inscribed stone, proving that
Christian churches existed in China in the seventh century. These
churches were the result of the efforts of Nestorian missionaries, who
were the Protestant Christians of their age. Their success in China is
another proof that the Christianity which is to be welcomed there must
be presented in an intelligible and rational form.
* * * * *
NOTE.
The Nestorian Inscription in China.[29]
In 1625 some Chinese workmen, engaged in digging a foundation for a
house, outside the walls of the city of Si-ngau-Fou, the capital of
the province of Chen-si, found buried in the earth a large monumental
stone resembling those which the Chinese are in the habit of raising
to preserve to posterity the remembrance of remarkable events and
illustrious men. It was a dark-colored marble tablet, ten feet high
and five broad, and bearing on one side an inscription in ancient
Chinese, and also some other characters quite unknown in China.
* * * * *
Several exact tracings from the stone were sent to Europe by the
Jesuits who saw it. The library of their house at Rome had one of the
first, and it attracted numerous visitors; subsequently, another
authentic copy of the dimensions of the tablet was sent to Paris, and
deposited at the library in the Rue Richelieu, where it may still be
seen in the gallery of manuscripts.
This monument, discovered by chance amidst rubbish in the environs of
an ancient capital of the Chinese Empire, excited a great sensation;
for on examining the stone, and endeavoring to interpret the
inscription, it was with surprise discovered that the Christian
religion had had numerous apostles in China at the beginning of the
seventh century, and that it had for a long time flourished there. The
strange characters proved to be those called _estrangelhos_, which
were in use among the ancient inhabitants of Syria, and will be found
in some Syriac manuscripts of earlier date than the eighth century.
* * * * *
_Monument of the great Propagation of the Luminous Doctrine in the
Central Empire, composed by Khing-Tsing, a devout Man of the Temple of
Ta-Thsin._
1. There has always been only one true Cause, essentially the first,
and without beginning, supremely intelligent and immaterial;
essentially the last, and uniting all perfections. He placed the poles
of the heavens and created all beings; marvellously holy, he is the
source of all perfection. This admirable being, is he not the
_Triune_, the true Lord without beginning, _Oloho_?
He divided the world by a cross into four parts. After having
decomposed the primordial air, he gave birth to the two elements.
Chaos was transformed, and then the sun and the moon appeared. He made
the sun and the moon move to produce day and night. He elaborated and
perfected the ten thousand things; but in creating the first man, he
endowed him with perfect interior harmony. He enjoined him to watch
over the sea of his desires. His nature was without vice and without
error; his heart, pure and simple, was originally without disorderly
appetites.
2. But Sa-Thang propagated lies, and stained by his malice that which
had been pure and holy. He proclaimed, as a truth, the equality of
greatness, and upset all ideas. This is why three hundred and
sixty-five sects, lending each other a mutual support, formed a long
chain, and wove, so to speak, a net of law. Some put the creature in
the place of the Eternal, others denied the existence of beings, and
destroyed the two principles. Others instituted prayers and sacrifices
to obtain good fortune; others proclaimed their own sanctity to
deceive mankind. The minds of men labored, and were filled with
anxiety; aspirations after the supreme good were trampled down; thus
perpetually floating about they attained to nothing, and all went from
bad to worse. The darkness thickened, men lost their sight, and for a
long time they wandered without being able to find it again.
3. Then our Triune God communicated his substance to the very
venerable Mi-chi-ho (Messiah), who, veiling his true majesty, appeared
in the world in the likeness of a man. The celestial spirits
manifested their joy, and a virgin brought forth the saint in
Ta-Thsin. The most splendid constellations announced this happy event;
the Persians saw the splendor, and ran to pay tribute. He fulfilled
what was said of old by the twenty-four saints; he organized, by his
precepts, both families and kingdoms; he instituted the new religion
according to the true notion of the Trinity in Unity; he regulated
conscience by the true faith; he signified to the world the eight
commandments, and purged humanity from its pollutions by opening the
door to the three virtues. He diffused life and extinguished death; he
suspended the luminous sun to destroy the dwelling of darkness, and
then the lies of demons passed away. He directed the bark of mercy
towards the palace of light, and all creatures endowed with
intelligence have been succored. After having consummated this act of
power, he rose at midday towards the Truth. Twenty-seven books have
been left. He has enlarged the springs of mercy, that men might be
converted. The baptism by water and by the Spirit is a law that
purifies the soul and beautifies the exterior. The sign of the cross
unites the four quarters of the world, and restores the harmony that
had been destroyed. By striking upon a piece of wood, we make the
voice of charity and mercy resound; by sacrificing towards the east we
indicate the way of life and glory.
Our ministers allow their beards to grow, to show that they are
devoted to their neighbors. The tonsure that they wear at the top of
their heads indicates that they have renounced worldly desires. In
giving liberty to slaves we become a link between the powerful and
weak. We do not accumulate riches, and we share with the poor that
which we possess. Fasting strengthens the intellectual powers,
abstinence and moderation preserve health. We worship seven times a
day, and by our prayers we aid the living and the dead. On the seventh
day we offer sacrifice, after having purified our hearts and received
absolution for our sins. This religion, so perfect and so excellent,
is difficult to name, but it enlightens darkness by its brilliant
precepts. It is called the Luminous Religion.
5. Learning alone without sanctity has no grandeur, sanctity without
learning makes no progress. When learning and sanctity proceed
harmoniously, the universe is adorned and resplendent.
The Emperor Tai-Tsoung illustrated the Empire. He opened the
revolution, and governed men in holiness. In his time there was a man
of high virtue named Olopen, who came from the kingdom of Ta-Thsin.
Directed by the blue clouds, he bore the Scriptures of the true
doctrine; he observed the rules of the winds, and traversed difficult
and perilous countries
In the ninth year of Tching-Kouan (636) he arrived at Tehang-ngan. The
Emperor ordered Fang-hi-wen-Ling, first minister of the Empire, to go
with a great train of attendants to the western suburb, to meet the
stranger and bring him to the palace. He had the Holy Scriptures
translated in the Imperial library. The court listened to the
doctrine, meditated on it profoundly, and understood the great unity
of truth. A special edict was promulgated for its publication and
diffusion.
In the twelfth year of Tching-Kouan, in the seventh moon, during the
autumn, the new edict was promulgated in these terms:--
The doctrine has no fixed name, the holy has no determinate substance;
it institutes religions suitable to various countries, and carries men
in crowds in its tracks. Olopen, a man of Ta-Thsin, and of a lofty
virtue, bearing Scriptures and images, has come to offer them in the
Supreme Court. After a minute examination of the spirit of this
religion, it has been found to be excellent, mysterious, and pacific.
The contemplation of its radical principle gives birth to perfection
and fixes the will. It is exempt from verbosity; it considers only
good results. It is useful to men, and consequently ought to be
published under the whole extent of the heavens. I, therefore, command
the magistrates to have a Ta-Thsin temple constructed in the quarter
named T-ning of the Imperial city, and twenty-one religious men shall
be installed therein.
* * * * *
10. Sou-Tsoung, the illustrious and brilliant emperor, erected at
Ling-on and other towns, five in all, _luminous_ temples. The
primitive good was thus strengthened, and felicity flourished. Joyous
solemnities were inaugurated, and the Empire entered on a wide course
of prosperity.
11. Tai-Tsoung (764), a lettered and a warlike emperor, propagated the
holy revolution. He sought for peace and tranquillity. Every year, at
the hour of the Nativity (Christmas), he burnt celestial perfumes in
remembrance of the divine benefit; he prepared imperial feasts, to
honor the _luminous_ (Christian) multitude.
* * * * *
21. This stone was raised in the second year of Kien-Tchoung of the
great dynasty of Thang (A.D. 781), on the seventh day of the moon of
the great increase. At this time the devout Ning-Chou, lord of the
doctrine, governed the luminous multitude in the Eastern country.
Such is the translation of the famous inscription found at
Si-ngau-Fou, in 1625. On the left of the monument are to be read the
following words in the Syriac language: "In the days of the Father of
Fathers, Anan-Yeschouah, Patriarch _Catholicos_." To the right can be
traced, "Adam, Priest, and Chor-Episcopus"; and at the base of the
inscription: "In the year of the Greeks one thousand nine hundred and
two (A.D. 781), Mar Yezd-bouzid, Priest and Chor-Episcopus of the
Imperial city of Komdam, son of Millesins, priest of happy memory, of
Balkh, a town of Tokharistan (Turkistan), raised this tablet of stone,
on which are described the benefits of our Saviour, and the preaching
of our fathers in the kingdom of the Chinese. Adam, Deacon, son of
Yezd-bouzid, Chor-Episcopus; Sabar-Jesu, Priest; Gabriel, Priest,
Archdeacon, and Ecclesiarch of Komdam and Sarage."
* * * * *
The abridgment of Christian doctrine given in the Syro-Chinese
inscription of Si-ngau-Fou shows us, also, that the propagators of the
faith in Upper Asia in the seventh century professed the Nestorian
errors.
Through the vague and obscure verbiage which characterizes the Chinese
style, we recognize the mode in which that heresiarch admitted the
union of the Word with man, by indwelling plenitude of grace superior
to that of all the saints. One of the persons of the Trinity
communicated himself to the very illustrious and venerable Messiah,
"veiling his majesty." That is certainly the doctrine of Nestorius;
upon that point the authority of the critics is unanimous.
History, as we have elsewhere remarked, records the rapid progress of
the Nestorian sects in the interior of Asia, and their being able to
hold their ground, even under the sway of the Mussulmans, by means of
compromises and concessions of every kind.
Setting out from the banks of the Tigris or the Euphrates, these
ardent and courageous propagators of the Gospel probably proceeded to
Khorassan, and then crossing the Oxus, directed their course toward
the Lake of Lop, and entered the Chinese Empire by the province of
Chen-si. Olopen, and his successors in the Christian mission, whether
Syrians or Persians by birth, certainly belonged to the Nestorian
church.
Voltaire, who did not like to trouble himself with scientific
arguments, and who was much stronger in sarcasm than in erudition,
roundly accuses the missionaries of having fabricated the inscription
on the monument of Si-ngau-Fou, from motives of "pious fraud." "As
if," says Remusat, "such a fabrication could have been practicable in
the midst of a distrustful and suspicious nation, in a country in
which magistrates and private people are equally ill-disposed towards
foreigners, and especially missionaries, where all eyes are open to
their most trivial proceedings, and where the authorities watch with
the most jealous care over everything relating to the historical
traditions and monuments of antiquity. It would be very difficult to
explain how the missionaries could have been bold enough to have
printed and published in China, and in Chinese, an inscription that
had never existed, and how they could have imitated the Chinese style,
counterfeited the manner of the writers of the dynasty of Thang,
alluded to customs little known, to local circumstances, to dates
calculated from the mysterious figures of Chinese astrology, and the
whole without betraying themselves for a moment; and with such
perfection as to impose on the most skilful men of letters, induced,
of course, by the singularity of the discovery to dispute its
authenticity. It could only have been done by one of the most erudite
of Chinese scholars, joining with the missionaries to impose on his
own countrymen."
"Even that would not be all, for the borders of the inscription are
covered with Syrian names in fine _estranghelo_ characters. The
forgers must, then, have been not only acquainted with these
characters, but have been able to get engraved with perfect exactness
ninety lines of them, and in the ancient writing, known at present to
very few."
"This argument of Remusat's," says another learned Orientalist, M.
Felix Neve, "is of irresistible force, and we have formerly heard a
similar one maintained with the greatest confidence by M. Quatremere,
of the Academy of Inscriptions and Belles-Lettres, and we allow
ourselves to quote the opinion of so highly qualified a judge upon
this point. Before the last century it would have been absolutely
impossible to forge in Europe a series of names and titles belonging
to a Christian nation of Western Asia; it is only since the fruits of
Assemam's labors have been made public by his family at Rome, that
there existed a sufficient knowledge of the Syriac for such a purpose;
and it is only by the publication of the manuscripts of the Vatican,
that the extent to which Nestorianism spread in the centre of Asia,
and the influence of its hierarchy in the Persian provinces could have
been estimated. There is no reason to suppose that missionaries who
left Europe in the very beginning of the seventeenth century could
have acquired a knowledge which could only be obtained from reading
the originals and not vague accounts of them."
The sagacity of M. Saint Martin, who was for a long time the colleague
of M. Quatremere, has pointed out in a note worthy of his erudition,
another special proof, which is by no means to be neglected.
"Amongst the various arguments," he says, "that might be urged in
favor of the legitimacy of the monument, but of which, as yet, no use
has been made, must not be forgotten the name of the priest by whom it
is said to have been erected. The name _Yezd-bouzid_ is Persian, and
at the epoch when the monument was discovered it would have been
impossible to invent it, as there existed no work where it could have
been found. Indeed, I do not think that, even since then, there has
ever been any one published in which it could have been met with.
"It is a very celebrated name among the Armenians, and comes to them
from a martyr, a Persian by birth, and of the royal race, who perished
towards the middle of the seventh century, and rendered his name
illustrious amongst the Christian nations of the East." Saint Martin
adds in the same place, that the famous monument of Si-ngau-Fou, whose
authenticity has for a long time been called in question from the
hatred entertained against the Jesuit missionaries who discovered it,
rather than from a candid examination of its contents, is now regarded
as above all suspicion.