Society in ChinaA.D. Innes, 1894 - 415 strán (strany) |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 29.
Strana iv
... crimes , superstitions , and follies of the people , are described in its pages with unfaltering directness . In the novels and dramas we have , further , placed before us truthful representations of the lives and ideas of the people ...
... crimes , superstitions , and follies of the people , are described in its pages with unfaltering directness . In the novels and dramas we have , further , placed before us truthful representations of the lives and ideas of the people ...
Strana 33
... crimes of provincial underlings . This man is extortionate ; that man is an inveterate opium smoker ; a third spends his time in drinking wine and playing chess , while the people in vain demand his intervention in their affairs ; a ...
... crimes of provincial underlings . This man is extortionate ; that man is an inveterate opium smoker ; a third spends his time in drinking wine and playing chess , while the people in vain demand his intervention in their affairs ; a ...
Strana 35
... crimes are daily committed which remain for ever un- punished . But there is an aggravation even to these ills . Innocent people are constantly arrested , im- prisoned , and tortured to shield others who are guilty of the offences of ...
... crimes are daily committed which remain for ever un- punished . But there is an aggravation even to these ills . Innocent people are constantly arrested , im- prisoned , and tortured to shield others who are guilty of the offences of ...
Strana 43
... crimes of individuals . Its pages thus reflect the national mind on all matters great and small ; and hold up to us a picture , true to life , of the manners and modes of thought of the people . In so vast an empire as China it is ...
... crimes of individuals . Its pages thus reflect the national mind on all matters great and small ; and hold up to us a picture , true to life , of the manners and modes of thought of the people . In so vast an empire as China it is ...
Strana 61
... crimes which cry to Heaven for redress , it cannot be denied that they sometimes use the weapon placed in their hands with energy and effect . When it does not clash with their interests they expose the injustice , cruelty , and vice of ...
... crimes which cry to Heaven for redress , it cannot be denied that they sometimes use the weapon placed in their hands with energy and effect . When it does not clash with their interests they expose the injustice , cruelty , and vice of ...
Iné vydania - Zobraziť všetky
Časté výrazy a frázy
appearance appointed arrival audience authorities bamboo barbarians Board bride bridegroom British Buddha Canton capital carried censor centuries ceremony China Chinamen Chinese Government coffin commonly Confucian Confucius court crime custom death deceased district duty dynasty emperor empire empress European evil examination existence father favour foreign ministers governor hall hands Heaven held honour household hundred husband imperial ladies land late lingchi lives Lord Lord Elgin Lord Macartney magistrate Mahāyāna Manchu mandarins marriage matter Mencius ment merchants mother murder nation native nature Ning-po occasion offence official opium palace parents Peking Gazette persons piculs ports practice present priest prisoners province punishment received regard rites rule silk Sir Thomas Wade Son of Heaven sovereign suffer supply Szech'uan taels Taoist temple throne Tibet Tientsin tion torture trade treaty treaty ports Tsungli Yamun viceroy village virtue wife women Yun-nan
Populárne pasáže
Strana 198 - Babylon, making its course to the south, the palaces lie the one on the east, and the other on the west side of the river; both built at exceeding costs and expense.
Strana 398 - The great mountain must crumble ; The strong beam must break ; And the wise man wither away like a plant.
Strana 400 - Were our Master in the position of the ruler of a State or the chief of a Family, we should find verified the description which has been given of a sage's rule: — he would plant the people, and forthwith they would be established; he would lead them on, and forthwith they would follow him; he would make them happy, and forthwith multitudes would resort to his dominions; he would stimulate them, and forthwith they would be harmonious. While he lived, he would be glorious. When he died, he would...
Strana 401 - Self-adjustment and purification, with careful regulation of his dress, and the not making a movement contrary to the rules of propriety : — this is the way for the ruler to cultivate his person.
Strana 231 - Now here is this shrike-tongued barbarian of the south, whose doctrines are not those of the ancient kings. You turn away from your master and become his disciple. Your conduct is different indeed from that of the philosopher Tsang.
Strana 278 - Thibet provided for in the Separate Article of the Chefoo Agreement, England consents to countermand the Mission forthwith. With regard to the desire of the British Government to consider arrangements for frontier trade between India and Thibet, it will be the duty of the Chinese Government, after careful inquiry into the circumstances, to adopt measures to exhort and encourage the people with a view to the promotion and development of trade. Should it be practicable, the Chinese Government shall...
Strana 262 - The Christian religion, as professed by Protestants or Roman Catholics, inculcates the practice of virtue, and teaches man to do as he would be done by. Persons teaching or professing it, therefore, shall alike be entitled to the protection of the Chinese authorities, nor shall any such, peaceably pursuing their calling, and not offending against the law, be persecuted or interfered with.
Strana 202 - I saw a man bearing away upon his back something enveloped in an ample covering of scarlet cloth ; he was surrounded by twenty or thirty young fellows, and by them protected from the desperate attacks made upon him by a party of young women.
Strana 4 - He thus seems to himself and his court to be in the centre of the universe, and turning to the north, assuming the attitude of a subject, he acknowledges in prayer and by his position that he is inferior to heaven, and to heaven alone. Round him on the pavement are the nine circles of as many heavens, consisting of nine stones, then eighteen, then twenty-seven, and so on in successive multiples of nine till the square of nine, the favourite number of Chinese philosophy, is reached in the outermost...
Strana 298 - As soon as the address was delivered we laid our letters of credence upon the table. The Emperor made a slight bow of acknowledgement, and the Prince of Kung falling upon both knees at the foot of the throne, His Majesty appeared to speak to him — I say appeared, because no sound reached my ears. We had been told, however, that the Emperor would speak in Manchu, and that the Prince would interpret. Accordingly as...