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CHAPTER
IV THE CHIEN-CH'ANG The
second day after leaving Hui-li-chou we
entered the
valley of the Anning Ho, a grey, fast-flowing stream whose course runs
parallel
with the meridian like all the others of that interesting group of
rivers
between Assam and eastern Szechuan, the Irrawaddy, the Salween, the
Mekong, the
Yangtse, the Yalung. The Anning, the smallest of these, lies enclosed
in a
wilderness of tangled ranges, and its valley forms the shortest trade
route
between Szechuan and the Indo-Chinese peninsula. For about eight
marches, north
and south, it runs through a district known as Chien-ch'ang, celebrated
throughout China for its fertility and the variety of its products. At
the
lower end the valley is very narrow, and level ground is limited, but
the
gentle slopes on either side are beautifully cultivated in tiny
terraced
fields. Farther north, however, in the neighbourhood of Ning-yüan-fu,
the
valley widens out into a broad, open plain. Apparently in this favoured
region
tropics and temperate zone meet, for I never saw before such motley
vegetation.
Rice and cotton alternate with wheat and maize and beans, while saffron
and
indigo fit in anywhere. Fruits, too, of many kinds are abundant. A short time ago the poppy made
every turn brilliant, but
to-day imperial edicts, ruthlessly enforced, are saving the Chinese
unwillingly
from themselves, and the poppy has disappeared from sight. In spite of
complaints it would seem as though the Chien-ch'ang farmers, better
than many
in West China, could support the loss of that remunerative crop, for
their
resources, properly exploited, seem almost exhaustless. Mulberry trees
are
grown about every village and farmhouse, and the silk export is of
considerable
value to the community. But one of the most interesting
products of this
region has lost much of its importance in late years. All over China,
but
especially in this part of Szechuan, there grows a tree of the
large-leaved
privet species. On the bark of the branches and twigs are discovered
attached
little brown scales of the size and shape of a small pea. When opened
in the
spring they are found to contain a swarming mass of minute insects.
Toward the
end of April, the time when I passed through this region, these scales
were
being carefully gathered and packed in small parcels, and already the
journey
northward was beginning. Porters bearing loads of about sixty pounds
were
hurrying up the valley, often travelling only by night to save their
precious
burden from the burning sun's rays which would cause too rapid
development.
Their destination was Chia-ting, which lies on the Min
River at the eastern edge of a great plain, the home of the so-called
"pai-la shu," or "white wax tree," a species of ash. The
whole countryside is dotted over with this tree, so cut as to resemble
the
pollard willow. On arrival the scales are carefully made up into small
packets
of twenty or thirty scales each, wrapped in leaves and attached to the
branches
of the white wax tree. After a short interval the insects emerge from
the
scales and secrete a waxlike substance, covering the boughs and twigs
with a
white deposit about a quarter of an inch thick. This is carefully
gathered, and
after purification by boiling is made up into the small cakes of
commerce to be
put to various uses. It forms an important ingredient in sizing and
polish, and
also in giving a gloss to silk; but especially it is valued as
imparting a
greater consistency to tallow for candles, as it melts only at a
temperature of
160° Fahrenheit. But the Standard Oil activities have dealt a serious
blow to
the white wax industry. Kerosene is now in general use where there is
any
lighting at all, and whereas formerly ten thousand coolies annually
hurried up
the valley carrying scales to Chia-ting, we now saw only a few hundred. A generation ago Chien-ch'ang
was perhaps the least
known part of all China to the outside world. About the middle of the
thirteenth century the Mongol, Kublai Khan, acting as general of the
forces of his brother,
Genghis Khan, went through here to the
conquest of Tali, then an independent kingdom in the southwest, and the
untiring Venetian following in his train noted a few of the
characteristics of
Caindu, the name he gave both to the valley and the capital city. Six
centuries
elapsed before the next traveller from the West came this way. In the
late
seventies Colborne Baber, Chinese Secretary of the British Legation,
traversed
the valley from north to south, being the first European since the time
of
Marco Polo to enter Ning-yüan-fu, save for an unfortunate French priest
who
arrived a few months earlier, only to be driven out with stones. At
that time,
according to Baber, "two or three sentences in the book of Ser Marco to
the effect that after crossing high mountains he reached a fertile
country
containing many villages and towns, and inhabited by a very immoral
population," constituted the only existing description of the district. In spite of the importance of
this route it remained
until a few years ago very insecure. Overhung almost its entire length
by the
inaccessible fastnesses of Lololand, the passing caravans dared journey
only
with convoy, and even then were frequently overwhelmed by raiders from
the
hills, who carried off both trader and goods into the mountains, the
former to lifelong
servitude. The Ta Liang Shan, or "Great Cold Mountains," the country
of the independent Lolos,
is a mountainous region
extending north and south some three hundred miles, which constitutes
to this
day an almost impenetrable barrier between east and west, crossed
voluntarily
by no Chinese, unless in force, and from which but one European party
has
returned to tell the tale. On the outskirts of this territory a little
mission
work has been undertaken with some success, but as yet no real
impression has
been made upon the people. Chinese hold upon the country is limited to
an
occasional more or less ineffective punitive expedition organized after
some
unusual outrage, such as the murder, a few years back, of Lieutenant
Brooke,
the English explorer. Naturally the Government does not care to assume
any
responsibility for the foolhardy foreigner bent on risking his life.
Lieutenant
Brooke went without permission, and during my stay in Ning-yüan I
learned that
two French travellers had just sought in vain for leave to attempt the
crossing
of the mountains to Suifu. Within Lololand, of course, no
Chinese writ runs, no
Chinese magistrate holds sway, and the people, more or less divided
among
themselves, are under the government of their tribal chiefs. The little
that is
known of this interesting race has been learned from the so-called tame
Lolos
who have accepted Chinese rule, and are found scattered in small
villages in
the western part of Szechuan and Yunnan, being
perhaps
most numerous in the neighbourhood of the Anning and Yalung rivers,
where an
appreciable proportion of the population is of aboriginal or mixed
aboriginal
and Chinese stock. Accepting Chinese rule does not generally mean
accepting
Chinese customs. They hold to their own language and religion, one a
dialect
akin to Tibetan, and the other a form of animism. It is very easy to
distinguish conquerors and conquered, for the Lolos are darker as well
as
taller and better formed than the Chinese. Their features are good and
they
have a frank, direct expression which is very attractive. In dress also
they
have not conformed to the ways of their masters. Instead of a queue the
men
wear the hair in a horn above the forehead, while the women hold firmly
to the
feminine petticoats, surrounded though they are by the trousered
Chinese women.
Nor do they bind their feet, but stride bravely along on the feet
nature gave
them. What these people really are is
one of the unsettled
ethnological problems of the East, but probably they are of the same
stock as
the Shans and Burmese. Even their proper appellation is in doubt. The
Chinese
call them Lolos, which means simply "barbarians" or "wild
men." By the people themselves the term is regarded as insulting, and
one
should avoid using it before them; but they are not agreed among
themselves on
a common name, and use ordinarily local
tribal
names. Half a dozen years ago
travellers were warned against
the dangers of the road, but since then matters have been taken
vigorously in
hand by the Chinese authorities. Guard-houses have been erected at
short
intervals, the passes are strongly fortified, and a large force of
well-trained
men is stationed permanently in the valley. The journey can now be made
in
entire safety, but there are numerous signs of past dangers, and the
precautions
taken are very evident. Perhaps I was made especially conscious of
possible
danger because, as my interpreter said, though the officials were
careful to
secure the safety of every one of us, they were particularly anxious
that
nothing should happen to me; not, of course, from any personal concern
for the
foreigner, but because the foreigner's Government has such a way of
making
things unpleasant if anything happens to him. From Hui-li-chou northwards I
was escorted by real
soldiers, quite of the new service. They looked rather shipshape in
khaki suits
and puttees, and their guns were of a good model, but they handled them
in
careless fashion at first, belabouring laden ponies and even coolies
who were
slow in getting out of the way of my chair. I am told that they are
very ready
to lord it over their countrymen when escorting Europeans, taking
advantage of
the fearful respect in which the foreigner is held. I checked them
vigorously
at the time, and
before the next morning's start I
called them up, and with the aid of the interpreter harangued them to
the
effect that I was pleased to see that they knew how to use their guns,
and if
need came I hoped they would give a good account of themselves in
China's
defence, but in the mean time they should be very slow to use their
weapons on
men or beasts, and if I saw them do it while they were with me they
would get
no "wine money." The soldiers took my orders very meekly, and the
bystanders (there are always bystanders in China) grinned approvingly. The first two marches out from
Hui-li led over the
range into the Anning valley, a high, rocky trail without much
vegetation for
the most part, but after we struck the river, cultivation was almost
continuous, one hamlet following fast on another. This part of the
valley is
available for irrigation, and the skill and ingenuity shown in making
use of
the water supply is nothing short of marvellous. At one point we
ascended a
long, wide, gentle slope all laid out in tiny fields, and well watered
from two
large, fast-flowing streams. But where did they come from, for the
slope ended
abruptly in a sharp, high precipice overlooking a gorge through which
flowed
the Chin Ch'uan, a tributary of the Anning. But on turning a corner at
the head
of the slope we saw that from high up on the mountain-side an
artificial
channel had been constructed with infinite labour, bringing water from the upper course of the
stream to the thirsty fields
below. Late on this same day the trail
crossed a bare, rocky
hillside, at one point passing between masses of stone ruins; something
like a
tower to the right, and on the left a sort of walled enclosure. I had
lingered
behind to gather a nosegay of the small blue flowers that marked the
day's
march. As I approached I saw some twenty or thirty men clad in long
white or
black cloaks hanging about the ruins, and my big chair coolie, who had
constituted himself my special protector, coming to meet me, hurried me
by
without stopping. When I joined the interpreter, who was waiting for me
at a
discreet distance, I learned that the men were Lolos, "half-tame wild
men," employed by merchants and others to guard this rather dangerous
place where the trail approached somewhat closely the territory of the
independent Lolos. In spite of protests I went back, accompanied by the
big
coolie and a soldier, to take some pictures. A few of the men ran away,
but
most made no objection and good-humouredly grouped themselves at my
direction
while I photographed them as best I could in the waning light. Their
independent
bearing and bold, free look interested me, and I should have been glad
to talk
with them, but the interpreter was disinclined to come near, and it was
doubtful, too, if they could have spoken Chinese well enough to have been understood. The 25th of April was our last
day into Ning-yüan-fu,
and I was glad; it was getting very hot, and the coolies were tired
from their
long journey. Several were hiring substitutes from the village-folk,
paying
less than half what they received from me. To avoid the heat we were
off before
sunrise. Often on that part of the trip we started in the half-light of
the
early dawn, and there was something very delightful in our unnoticed
departure
through the empty, echoing streets of the sleeping town where, the
evening
before, the whole population had been at our heels. And outside the
stifling
walls the joy of another day's ride through a new world was awaiting me. For a time we followed up the
narrow, winding valley,
gradually opening out until we turned off to cross the low hills that
barred
the southern end of the Ning-yüan plain. Every inch of ground was under
cultivation, but as yet few crops were up. Mulberries, however, were
ripening
fast, forerunners of the abundant fruit of this region. Shortly before
tiffin
we crossed a stream over which the bridge of stone was actually being
repaired.
In China, as elsewhere in Asia, it is a work of merit to construct a
new
building or road, but waste of time to repair the old. I wondered if by
any
chance some high official was expected, for the East fulfils quite
literally
the Scriptural injunction, "Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make
straight
his path before him"; more than once I realized the advantage of
following
in the footsteps of the great. Toward the end of the day we
crossed a spur of the
hills, and descended abruptly into the Ning-yüan
plain; half concealed among the trees lay the town, while off to the
southeast
sparkled the water of the lake noted by Marco Polo. As we sat resting
for a few
moments at a tea-house, I saw galloping towards us two horsemen,
Europeans, the
first I had seen for nearly three weeks. They turned out to be Mr.
Wellwood and
Dr. Humphreys, of the American Baptist Mission, who had ridden out to
make me
welcome. An hour later we crossed the parade ground outside the city
gate, and
shortly, turning in by a building of unmistakable European
architecture, found
ourselves in the mission compound. It was most delightful to be again
among my
own kind, and the three days spent in Ning-yüan while I was
reorganizing my
little caravan for the next stage were very enjoyable, barring the
excessive
heat. Ning-yüan-fu is the largest town
in this part of
Szechuan, having a population of perhaps fifty thousand. It is
surrounded by a
well-built wall, high and broad and nearly three miles in length.
Within are
few buildings of interest, due perhaps to the fact that about fifty
years ago
it was almost demolished by an earthquake. According to tradition, the
same
thing happened in the
early part of the Ming period,
when the town, which, so it is said, then stood in the hollow where the
lake
now lies, was first shaken by an earthquake and then overwhelmed by a
rush of
water from underground. Later a new city was built on the present site.
If the
natives are to be believed, the ruins of the drowned city may still be
seen on
calm days lying at the bottom of the lake, while after a storm beds and
chairs
of strange patterns are sometimes found floating about on the water. Even this remote corner of China
shows the influence
of the new movement, and Western ideas are making their way. Something
had been
done to improve the city schools, and I can testify to the desire of
the
military force stationed at Ning-yüan to form itself on European
models, for
the morning's sleep was broken by the vigorous bugle practice of the
band, and
at every turn one met soldiers, marching along with a good deal of vim.
The
large parade ground was given over in the afternoon to the testing and
speeding
of ponies. We rode out there one day, and I was pleased to see that the
interest and wise ways of the missionaries in horseflesh were much
appreciated
by the owners of the ponies, men of a class not easily reached by the
ordinary
channels of mission work. As my contract with the Yunnan
hong was only to
Ning-yüan-fu, it was necessary to make new arrangements here.
My old men had expressed a wish to go on with me, but in the end only
one did
so, the others disliking the détour to Tachienlu which they knew I had
in mind.
Moreover, it would have been necessary for them to register in the
Ning-yüan
hong, which they were not anxious to do, nor was the hong anxious to
have them.
So I let them go, well contented with their "wine money," which was,
indeed, outrageously large. Soon after starting from Yunnan-fu I had
realized
that the men were inclined to ask for a day's halt more frequently than
I
liked, as I was anxious to push ahead, knowing that the spring rains
were
shortly due. I did not know then the custom of the road, which decrees
no
payment at all if it is the coolies who insist on stopping, although a
small
payment, usually five cents gold, is the rule for each day of halt for
your
convenience. So I felt that my only check upon the men was to hold out
a
reward. Accordingly I offered them a definite tip and a good one, if
they would
get me to Ning-yüan-fu at a certain day, which they did, making the
journey, as
I learned later, simply in the ordinary time. I was advised not to pay
them the
sum promised, as they were profiting by my ignorance, and it might make
me
trouble afterwards. But I reasoned that my ignorance was my own fault;
they had
not asked, I had offered the reward, and I was sure the evil of a
broken
promise was greater than any bad precedent. So the men got their tip, and I am certain I
gained by the reputation I thus
acquired of keeping my word. I never again gave such rewards, but I
always had
good service. I was sorry to see the Yunnan
men go; they were
sturdy, willing fellows, quick to learn my ways. In particular, one of
my chair
coolies, the big fellow called Liu, I should have been glad to keep on,
in
spite of unexpected revelations at Ning-yüan. He had made the trip from
Yunnan
with Mr. Wellwood a few weeks earlier, behaving well, but after
receiving his
pay he got gloriously drunk and was expelled from the inn, whereupon he
turned
up at the mission, still drunk. As he was not taken in, he proceeded to
tear up
the chapel palings and make himself a nuisance. So after repeated
warnings he
was turned over to the police, who shut him up for a night and then
gave him a
whipping. Probably he had learned a lesson, for he made me no bother.
This was
the only case within my own knowledge of a coolie's giving trouble
through
drinking. Out-of-the-way travel in the East is much simpler for being
among
non-drinking people. Years ago I made a canoeing trip in northern Maine
with
two friends. Almost we were forced to rob the traditional cradle and
grave to
secure guides warranted sober — the only sort safe for a party of
women; but in
the East that question is scarcely considered, and personally I have
never had
any difficulty. The men that I took on at
Ning-yüan were on the whole
younger and smaller than the Yunnan men, but they
too did their work well. The new fu t'ou was a Chengtu man of a type
quite
unlike the others, tall, slender, well made, and with decidedly good
features.
He seemed young for his post, but soon showed himself quite equal to
the task
of keeping the men up to the mark, and of meeting any difficulty that
arose. To my surprise I was able to buy
oil for our lanterns
on the street here. One does not think of the Standard Oil Company as a
missionary agency, but it has certainly done a great deal to light up
the dark
corners of China, morally as well as physically, by providing the
people with a
cheap way of lighting their houses. Formerly when darkness fell, there
was
nothing to do but gamble and smoke. Now the industrious Chinese can ply
his
trade as late as he chooses. I was sorry to say farewell to
my kind hosts, but it
was good to get away from the trying heat of Ning-yüan plain, all the
more
oppressive because of the confined limits of the mission quarters set
in the
heart of the city. The only escape for the missionaries during the hot
months
was to a temple on one of the surrounding hills. I was glad to learn
that land
had been secured at a little distance from the present compound for
more
spacious accommodations. People at home do not realize the difficulty
of
getting fresh air and exercise in a Chinese town. Walking inside the
walls is
almost impossible because of the dirt and
crowds,
while near the city all unoccupied land is usually given over to
graves. In
Ning-yüan really the only chance for exercise short of a half-day's
excursion,
perhaps, was on the city wall, where I had a delightful ride one
afternoon. It was the morning of April 29,
when we finally
started, my caravan being now increased to seventeen men, as I had
advanced the
interpreter to a three-bearer chair and given his old one to the cook,
who as a
Szechuan man should have been able to walk. But he seemed hardly up to
it, — in
fact he gave me the impression of an elderly man, although he owned to
forty-one years only. It needs a trained eye, I imagine, to judge of
the age of
men of an alien race. On passing out from the suburbs
of the town, charmingly
embowered in fruit orchards, we struck across the open, treeless plain.
There
was little land that could be cultivated that was not under
cultivation, but as
yet the fields lay bare and baked in the burning sun, waiting the
belated rain,
as this part of the valley cannot be irrigated, owing to the lie of the
land.
Rain fell the first night, and after that neither the soil nor I could
complain
of dryness. Our first stop was at Li-chou, a small, comfortable town at
the
head of the valley, with a bad inn. It, not Ning-yüan, which lies a
little off
the main trail, is the centre of the carrying business between Yunnan
and the
north, and from this time on, we found the village population
everywhere chiefly occupied as carrier coolies. Our first day from Li-chou was a
short stage, and we
had a long, leisurely tiffin at Sung-lin, where there was an
exceptionally good
inn. The proprietor was away, but his wife, who was in charge, seemed
very
competent and friendly, and took me into their private rooms, fairly
clean and
airy, and quite spacious. In one was a large, grave-shaped mound of
cement-like
substance. On inquiry I learned that it enclosed the coffin and body of
the
mother of the proprietor. She had been dead a year, but the body could
not
receive final burial until his return. The Chinese custom of keeping
unburied
their dead awaiting a propitious moment strikes one as most unpleasant
and
unwholesome, but the worst consequences are usually avoided by
hermetically
sealing the ponderous coffin. In Canton the House of the Dead is
visited by all
travellers. It is a great stretch of small buildings set in flower
gardens,
each room commanding a definite rent, and usually occupied by the
waiting dead,
whose fancied wants are meantime carefully supplied. The dead hand
rests heavy
on China. Not merely is much valuable land given over to graves, and
the hills
denuded of forest to make the five-inch coffin boards, but the daily
order of
life is often unduly sacrificed to the departed. On my way from Calcutta to Hong
Kong there joined us
at Singapore the Chinese Consul-General at that
place. He was returning with his family to Canton to attend the funeral
of his
mother. In talk with him I learned that he had been one of that famous
group of
students who came to America in the seventies, only to be suddenly
recalled by
the Chinese Government. He had since acted as Secretary to the Chinese
Legation
in Washington, and was quite at home in Western ways. In his dress he
combined
very effectively both Chinese and occidental symbols of mourning, his
white
coat-sleeve being adorned with a band of black crape, while in the long
black
queue he wore braided the white mourning thread of China. He expected
to be at
home for some months, and during that time, so he told me, it would be
unsuitable for him to engage in any sort of worldly business. We were now leaving behind the
close cultivation of
the Chien-ch'ang; the valley grew narrower, hemmed in by higher and
more barren
mountains, but the wild roses made beautiful every turn. One village
that we
passed was quite surrounded by a hedge of roses several feet high, and
all in
full bloom. My second night from Ning-yüan-fu was not much better than
the
first, for the inn at Lu-ku, a rather important little town, was most
uncomfortable; but a delightful hour's rest and quiet on the river bank
before
entering the town freshened me up so much that the night did not matter. One march to the north of
Lu-ku, up the valley of the
Anning, lay the district town of Mien-ning, reached by a rough trail
that
finally wandered off into the inextricable gorges of the Ta Tu Ho. It
was in
these wild defiles that the last contests of the Taiping rebellion were
fought.
I looked longingly up the valley, but my way turned off to the right,
following
the pack-road to the ferry at Fulin. At once on starting the next
morning we
passed out of the main valley into a narrow gorge with precipitous
sides
opening from the east. The trail wound upwards along the mountain-face,
often
hewn out of the rock and scarcely more than five feet wide, and at one
point it
was barred effectually by heavy gates. They opened to us, but not on
that day
half a century ago when the Taiping leader, Shih Ta-k'ai, failing to
force his
way through, turned back to meet defeat in the wilds above
Mien-ning-hsien. All along the road we met signs
of our nearness to
the country of the Lolos. There was much uncultivated land, and the
population
seemed scanty, but officials and soldiers were numerous, while
guard-houses
dominated the trail at short intervals. The village type was not always
pure
Chinese, and occasionally we met people unmistakably of another race.
At
Teng-hsiang-ying, or "Strong-walled Camp," where we stopped for the
night, both soldiers and Lolos were much in evidence. We were here about two thousand one hundred feet
below the summit of the
great pass through which the raiders in times not far past made their
way into
fertile Chien-ch'ang. After getting settled in the inn, I went for a
walk,
carefully guarded by two soldiers especially detailed for the purpose
by the
Yamen. In one alley I noticed Lolo women spinning in the doorways, and
with the
aid of the soldiers, who seemed to be on very friendly terms with them,
I
succeeded in getting a picture of two. In feature and colour they might
have
passed for Italians, and their dress was more European than Chinese in
cut. On
their heads they wore the Tam o' Shanter-like cap of black stuff,
common among
these people, bound on with their long braids, and their coats were of
the
usual felt. Their skirts, homespun, were made with what we used to call
a
Spanish flounce. According to Baber, the Lolo petticoat is of great
significance. No one may go among the independent Lolos safely save in
the
guardianship of a member of the tribe, and a woman is as good a
guardian as a
man. Before setting out she puts on an extra petticoat, and the
traveller thus
escorted is sacred. But if the guarantee is not respected she takes off
the
garment, spreading it on the ground, and there it remains, telling to
all the outrage
that has been committed, and appealing to Heaven for redress.
Altogether the
women that I saw had a rather attractive, feminine look, and their
manner,
though timid, was not
cringing. People who know them
best have a good word for the Lolos, but few Europeans have come much
in
contact with them. Those I saw looked miserably poor. Missionaries
declare that
the hand of the official is heavy upon them, and of course the
persistent,
hard-working Chinese are certain to have acquired the best land. The next day we crossed the
Hsiao Hsiang Ling, or
"Little Elephant Pass," fortunately in fine weather. The approach
from the south was very beautiful. For a number of li our road led
through a
deep, narrow gorge, following up a fine rocky stream. The flowers and
blossoming shrubs were wonderful; masses of white and of pink azaleas
clothed
the lower slopes, and there appeared now for the first time a bush
bearing
long, feather-like sprays of fragrant white blooms. From time to time
we passed
a guard-house, and soldiers were everywhere, some on guard, others
practising
exercises, others lounging. At one place a group had gathered about a
fellow
who was playing rather nicely an instrument resembling a mandolin. He
seemed
gratified at my interest, and readily repeated his music for me. As
seen in
passing, the guard-houses looked clean and substantial, vastly superior
to the
ordinary Chinese abode. But the country had a rather forbidding aspect
as we
marched farther up the valley, fit setting for deeds of outrage and
bloodshed;
its character seemed symbolized in the
head of a
Lolo robber set up by the wayside. The final climb to the pass was
over gentle, grassy
slopes. At the top, nearly ten thousand feet above sea level, the way
led
through a strongly fortified post where I stopped for a few moments to
enjoy
the wide view, northwest to the nearer mountains of the Tibetan range,
and east
to the dark peaks of the Ta Liang Shan. On the northern side of the
pass the
descent is long and tiring, a succession of steep zigzags and rocky
staircases.
At the time of day when I crossed, the lines of carriers and baggage
ponies
were almost continuous. There were guard-houses at intervals of three
li, and
at each a special detail of two soldiers came out, and, saluting me
properly, fell
into position, one in front and one behind, to be replaced at the next
post by
two others. As we descended to lower levels the valley widened out
slightly,
giving room for a few hard-wrung fields surrounded by broad stone walls
reminding one of New England, and now and then we passed a lonely
farmhouse
built of stones and enclosed in a rather ineffective defence of
wattles. But
villages were few, hardly more than hamlets that had grown up about the
military posts. All were walled, and where the highway passed through
the
village, dividing it in two, each half was enclosed in its own high
wall of mud
and stones. Moreover, many of the houses were of fortress-like
construction,
three stories high, and with only a few slits for windows. Once or
twice we
passed through an open bazaar strongly walled and with a fortified gate
at
either end, serving as a brief resting-place for the caravans hurrying
over
this dangerous stretch of road. A MEMORIAL ARCH. SZECHUAN FORTIFIED VILLAGE IN THE CHIEN-CH'ANG VALLEY As we travelled northward we saw
fewer of the fine stone
bridges of the south; the construction was now
generally of wood, not unlike in outline the disfiguring structures of
New
England, but improved by open sides and a picturesque curly roof of
tiles.
Usually they were approached by a flight of steps, showing
conclusively, if
proof were needed, that there were no wheeled vehicles to consider.
And,
indeed, traffic generally was of limited character after we left the
pass.
Occasionally we overtook coolies hurrying along with their precious
loads of
white wax insects, or bending under long, thick pine or cypress boards,
sometimes towering high above their heads or else strapped across their
shoulders, forcing them to move crab-fashion along the narrow trails.
On
inquiry I learned that deeply embedded in the soil of the hills are
found huge
trees, rows of sprouts marking their location. These are dug up with
much
effort and sawn into boards which are in great request for the
ponderous
Chinese coffins. It would seem as though the supply must be
inexhaustible, for
when Sir Alexander Hosie came this way, a generation ago, he noted the
same
traffic and received the same explanation. With
the
prohibition of the poppy, the region has for the moment little export
trade,
while the imports seem to consist mainly of military supplies for the
Chien-ch'ang garrisons. However, the road is in unusually good
condition, for
the whole way from Teng-hsiang-ying to Yüeh-hsi, our next stop, a
distance of
perhaps thirty-five miles, is well paved with broad flags. As we drew
near to the
town the valley opened a little, affording a glimpse of a snow peak to
the
north, while toward the southeast we look up a narrow gorge into
Lololand, the
border being but some fifteen miles away. This is almost the only break
in the
flanking hills that wall in the Forbidden Land. Yüeh-hsi itself lies in
the
centre of a rock-strewn plain broken by a few rice-and maize-fields,
and is
important as a military post guarding the trade route against this easy
way of
attack. The best room of the inn smelt to heaven, but on investigation
I found
an open loft which proved very possible after ejecting a few fowls. The following day our march led
us through a narrow
valley bare of people and cultivation. Following this was a welcome
change to
steep climbs over grass-covered slopes broken by picturesque ravines. I
tried
to get a picture of a coolie, bearing a huge nine-foot-long coffin
plank, whom
we overtook on the trail. A handful of cash and cigarettes won his
consent, but
in spite of my men's efforts to calm his fears, the poor fellow cringed
and
trembled so, as I got my camera
into position, that
I gave it up. I felt as I might feel if I kicked a dumb animal. Our night's stop was at
Pao-an-ying, — like so many
other hamlets of this region, little more than a camp-village, and
showing its
origin in the termination "ying" or "jin," meaning
regiment. My room at the inn looked out directly on the street, and
there was
neither quiet nor privacy to be had, so I went out for a walk, escorted
by a
soldier and a coolie. Discovering a secluded screened place in a
graveyard, I
fell asleep on the top of a tomb, and my men near by did the same; but
presently I was awakened by Jack's barking, to find myself the centre
of a
crowd of some fifty men silently watching me, and down the hillside I
saw
others coming, so I gave it up and took a stroll through the town,
inspecting
the provision shops. We were off the next morning in
the dark. At first
the road was wild and picturesque. The track was unusually good, and
steep,
well-constructed zigzags carried us up and down the hills. Later the
valley
opened, and we ascended gradually over beautiful slopes gay with
rhododendron
and iris. The clouds above the mountains were very fine, but presently
rain
came on, continuing off and on all day. Late in the afternoon we came in
sight of Haitang, a
walled town perched picturesquely on the side of a hill. A temple
outside the
wall looked attractive, and I
should have visited it
had it not been for the rain which now set in in good earnest. So,
instead, I
inspected the inn, which seemed unusually interesting. There was the
ordinary
entrance court roofed over, and behind that an inner court open to the
sky and
surrounded by galleried buildings. Off from this led a long, high
passage into
which opened a number of superior rooms. Mine was quite elaborately
furnished
with carved bedstead and chairs and tables, and best of all, it had a
door
opening directly on to the city wall, where I could step out and get a
breath
of fresh air free from observation. Here I had my first experience
of the
"squeeze." On directing the interpreter to give the fu t'ou the
coolies' pork money, I learned that on the previous occasion the man
had kept
an undue proportion of it. Apparently a certain squeeze was regarded as
legitimate,
but he had transgressed the accepted bounds. I hardly knew how to meet
the
difficulty. Of course I could have paid the coolies directly, but it
was most
desirable to maintain the fu t'ou's authority over them. Finally, in
true
Chinese fashion, the interpreter worked out a scheme by which the fu
t'ou's
"face" might be saved, and yet the coolies not be defrauded. Going
out into the court where the men were lounging, he called loudly to the
fu t'ou
to come for the coolies' money, naming the sum I intended to give,
about one
hundred cash to a man. In the
face of this there was
nothing for the fu t'ou to do but give to each his rightful share,
which he did
with a very sulky air. Afterwards I had a talk with the man, telling
him that
my idea of a good fu t'ou was one who kept the men up to their work,
and at the
same time did not bully or mulct them of their hard-earned money. Such
a man
would get a good reward at the end. My reputation for lavishness stood
me here
in great stead, for henceforth there was no difficulty on this score. I
might
be "squeezed," but at least my coolies were not. The fu t'ou,
however, tried to get even with the man who told, by discharging him.
Fortunately I learned of this, again through the interpreter, and put a
stop to
it. The idea of the squeeze seems to be ingrained in the Chinese. How
difficult
it is to eradicate was shown by the delight of a missionary at
Chung-king over
the low price for which his trusty Christian clerk had secured a boat
for me.
For once he felt sure no commission could have been taken. During all this part of my trip
I carried no coined
silver, only rough lumps of bullion of varying size, converting them
into cash
as I needed. The rate of exchange varied from place to place, and I was
sometimes warned to put off visiting the money-changers until the next
town. Of
course the visitor stands to lose anyway, and I am sure that in the
course of a
long journey through China you would see your
money
vanish in the mere process of change, quite aside from the money you
spent. Rain fell all the next day, but
it could not take
from the charm of the road, which led much of the time along the bottom
of a
deep, narrow gorge, the steep sides clothed to the very top with
tropical green
flecked with splendid splashes of pink and white azaleas, while by the
side of
the path were masses of blue iris, and of small yellow and red flowers.
We
reached our night's resting-place, P'ing-i-p'u, early in the afternoon,
and in
spite of the rain I went for a walk. By dint of peremptory commands,
reënforced
by the rain, I shook off my military escort, who for the last few
marches had
dogged my steps at every turn, moving when I moved, stopping when I
stopped. To
be sure, they had been very thoughtful of my comfort, helping me in and
out of
my chair, gathering the new flowers which appeared each day, keeping up
a
brazier fire in my room when it was damp, but I was tired of being
treated as
either a suspect or a royal personage, and as we were now well beyond
the limit
of Lolo raids I demanded the freedom of being alone. I found quiet in
an
overgrown graveyard, with charming views down stream and up the near
hillsides
cultivated in tiny scallops to the very top, although the slopes were
so steep
that each plot was shored up with a strong stone wall to keep the crop
of maize
and buckwheat from slipping down into
the river. As we passed out of the village
the next morning at
six o'clock we heard the hum of the boys in the government school
already at
work. Apparently Young China was wasting no time. For perhaps twenty li
we
followed down a fine stream, the way rather dangerous from the rocks
which now
and then detached themselves from the steep overhanging hillsides.
After a time
an ascent of one thousand feet brought us in sight of the Ta Tu, which
we
reached some time after noon by a gradual descent of two thousand feet,
through
a narrow valley to Ta-shu-p'u. Fine clumps of bamboo and groups of palm
now
cheered our sight, and fruit of several sorts — cherries, pears,
loquats — was
becoming abundant. It was very refreshing, although scarcely of a fine
quality,
and usually gathered before it was ripe. The place looked quiet and
attractive,
but half a century ago the last scenes of the Taiping rebellion were
enacted
here, when the remnants of Shih Ta-k'ai's force were surrounded and
slaughtered. Later in the day I went for a
stroll to inspect the
shops, accompanied by my interpreter, and it was on this occasion that
I met
with the only instance of unfriendliness (that I recognized) in all my
journeying in West China. At one shop I noticed an interesting bronze
dragon.
The interpreter, who had a rather objectionable habit of fingering the
wares,
began examining it.
Thereupon the merchant came
forward and snatched it from his hands, and when we passed that way
again on
our return, he came out before his shop and waved us off vigorously
with his
flapping sleeves. The interpreter said that the man disliked
foreigners, but
admitted that he did not wish to have his things handled. |