The Boy Travellers in the Far East [Part First] / Adventures of Two Youths in a Journey to Japan and China
AUTHOR OF CAMP-FIRE AND COTTON-FIELD OVERLAND THROUGH ASIA UNDERGROUND JOHN ETC.
Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1879, by
HARPER & BROTHERS,
In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.
To my Young Friends:
Not many years ago, China and Japan were regarded as among the barbarous nations. The rest of the world knew comparatively little about their peoples, and, on the other hand, the inhabitants of those countries had only a slight knowledge of Europe and America. To-day the situation is greatly changed; China and Japan are holding intimate relations with us and with Europe, and there is every prospect that the acquaintance between the East and the West will increase as the years roll on. There is a general desire for information concerning the people of the Far East, and it is especially strong among the youths of America.
The characters in The Boy Travellers are fictitious; but the scenes that passed before their eyes, the people they met, and the incidents and accidents that befell them are real. The routes they travelled, the cities they visited, the excursions they made, the observations they recorded—in fact, nearly all that goes to make up this volume—were the actual experiences of the author at a very recent date. In a few instances I have used information obtained from others, but only after careful investigation has convinced me of its entire correctness. I have aimed to give a faithful picture of Japan and China as they appear to-day, and to make such comparisons with the past that the reader can easily comprehend the changes that have occurred in the last twenty years. And I have also endeavored to convey the information in such a way that the story shall not be considered tedious. Miss Effie and The Mystery may seem superfluous to some readers, but I am of opinion that the majority of those who peruse the book will not consider them unnecessary to the narrative.
In preparing illustrations for this volume the publishers have kindly allowed me to make use of some engravings that have already appeared in their publications relative to China and Japan. I have made selections from the volumes of Sir Rutherford Alcock and the Rev. Justus Doolittle, and also from the excellent work of Professor Griffis, The Mikado's Empire. In the episode of a whaling voyage I have been under obligations to the graphic narrative of Mr. Davis entitled Nimrod of the Sea, not only for illustrations, but for incidents of the chase of the monsters of the deep.
Thomas Wallace Knox
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The Boy Travellers in the Far East
ADVENTURES OF
TWO YOUTHS IN A JOURNEY
TO
JAPAN AND CHINA
THOMAS W. KNOX
Illustrated
CONTENTS.
ILLUSTRATIONS.
THE DEPARTURE.
OVERLAND TO CALIFORNIA.
ON THE PACIFIC OCEAN.
INCIDENTS OF A WHALING VOYAGE.
ARRIVAL IN JAPAN.
FIRST DAY IN JAPAN.
FROM YOKOHAMA TO TOKIO.
SIGHTS IN THE EASTERN CAPITAL OF JAPAN.
ASAKUSA AND YUYENO.—FIRST NATIONAL FAIR AT TOKIO.
WALKS AND TALKS IN TOKIO.
AN EXCURSION TO DAI-BOOTS AND ENOSHIMA.
SIGHTS AT ENOSHIMA.
ON THE ROAD TO FUSIYAMA.
THE ASCENT OF FUSIYAMA.
EXECUTIONS AND HARI-KARI.
AMUSEMENTS.—WRESTLERS AND THEATRICAL ENTERTAINMENTS.
A STUDY OF JAPANESE ART.
SOMETHING ABOUT JAPANESE WOMEN.
FROM YOKOHAMA TO KOBE AND OSAKA.
THE MINT AT OSAKA.—FROM OSAKA TO NARA AND KIOTO.
KIOTO AND LAKE BIWA.
THE INLAND SEA AND NAGASAKI.—CAUGHT IN A TYPHOON.
FIRST DAY IN CHINA.
A VOYAGE UP THE YANG-TSE KIANG.
THE TAE-PING REBELLION.—SCENES ON THE GREAT RIVER.
FROM SHANGHAI TO PEKIN.
SIGHTS IN PEKIN.
A JOURNEY TO THE GREAT WALL OF CHINA.
FROM SHANGHAI TO HONG-KONG.—A STORY OF THE COOLIE TRADE.
HONG-KONG AND CANTON.—CHINESE PIRATES.
SIGHTS AND SCENES IN CANTON.
INTERESTING BOOKS FOR BOYS.