Through China with a Camera
By JOHN THOMSON, F.R.G.S.
With about 100 Illustrations. Foolscap 4to. One Guinea net. This work contains probably the finest series of pictures of China ever published.
CONTENTS.
- Chapter I. A Brief Sketch of the Condition of China, Past and Present.
- " II. The Chinaman Abroad and at Home.
- Chinese Guilds—Hong-kong—Native Boats—Shopkeepers—Artists—Music Halls.
- " III. The Chinaman Abroad and at Home (continued).
- Gambling—Typhoons—The floating population of Hong-kong—North branch of the Pearl River.
- " IV. Canton and Kwang-tung Province.
- Tea—Foreign Hongs and Houses—Schroffing.
- " V. Canton (continued).
- Its general appearance—Its population—Streets—Mode of transacting business—Signboards—Work and Wages—The willow-pattern bridge—Juilin, Governor-General of the two Kwang—Clan fights—Hak-kas—The mystic pills—Dwellings of the poor—The Lohang-tang—Buddhist monastic life—On board a junk.
- " VI. Canton (continued). Macao. Swatow. Chao-chow-fu—Amoy.
- The charitable institutions of China—Macao—Description of the town—Its inhabitants—Swatow—Foreign settlement—Chao-chow-fu—Swatow fan-painters—Modellers—Chinese art—Village warfare—Amoy—The native quarter—Abodes of the poor—Infanticide—Manure-pits—Human remains in jars—Lekin—Romantic scenery—Ku-lang-su—The foreign settlement.
- " VII. Formosa.
- Takow harbour, Formosa—La-mah-kai—Difficulties of navigation—Tai-wan-fu—The Taotai—His yamen—How to cancel a state debt—The Dutch in 1661—Sylvan lanes—Medical Missions—A journey to the interior—Old watercourses—Broken land—Hak-ka settlers—Poahbe—Pepohoan village—Baksa valley—The name "Isla Formosa"—A long march—The central mountains—Bamboo Bridges—"Pau-ah-liau" village—The physician at work—Ka-san-po village—A wine-feast—Interior of a hut—Pepohoan dwellings—A savage dance—Savage hunting-grounds—La-lung village—Return journey.
- " VIII. Foochow and the River Min.
- The Japanese in Formosa—Cause of the invasion—The River Min—Foochow Arsenal—Chinese gunboats—Foochow city and great bridge—A City of the dead—Its inhabitants—Beggars—Thieves—Lepers—Ku-shan Monastery—The hermit—Tea plantation on Paeling hills—Voyage up the Min—Shui-kow—An up-country farm—Captain Sheng and his spouse—Yen-ping city—Sacrificing to the dead—Shooting the Yen-ping rapids A Native passenger-boat.
- " IX. Shanghai. Ningpo. Hankow. The Yangtsze.
- Steam traffic in the China Sea—In the wake of a typhoon—Shanghai—Notes of its early history—Japanese raids—Shanghai foreign settlement—Paul Sii, or "Su-kwang-ki"—Shanghai city—Ningpo—Native soldiers—Snowy valley—The Mountains—Azaleas—The monastery of the Snowy Crevice—The thousand-fathom precipice—Buddhist Monks—The Yangtsze, Kiang—Hankow—The Upper Yangtsze, Ichang—The Gorges—The great Tsing-tan rapid—Mystic fountain lights—A dangerous disaster—Kwei-fu—Our return—Kiukiang—Nanking; its arsenal—The death of Tsing-kwo-fan—Chinese superstition.
- " X. Chefoo. Pekin. Tientsin. The Great Wall.
- The foreign settlement—The Yellow River—Silk—Its production—Taku forts—The Peiho River—Chinese progress—Floods in Pei-chil-li—Their effects—Tientsin—The Sisters' chapel—Condition of the people—A midnight storm—Tung-Chow—Peking—The Tartar and Chinese divisions of the metropolis—Its roads, shops and people—The foreign hotel—Temple and domestic architecture—The Tsungli Yamen—Prince Kung and the high officers of the empire—Literary championship—The Confucian Temple—The Observatory—Ancient Chinese instruments—Yang's house—Habits of the ladies—Peking enamelling—Yuen-Ming-Yuen—Remarkable cenotaph—A Chinese army—Li-Hung-Chang—The inn of "Patriotic Perfection"—The Great Wall—The Ming tombs.
Problems of the Far East
JAPAN—COREA—CHINA
By the Rt. Hon. GEORGE N. CURZON, M.P.
With numerous Illustrations and Maps. Extra crown 8vo, 7s. 6d.