Court Life in China: The Capital, Its Officials and People. Isaac Taylor Headland. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Isaac Taylor Headland
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Языкознание
Год издания: 0
isbn: 4057664606174
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       XIV

       THE PRINCESSES—THEIR SCHOOLS[1]

       XV

       The Chinese Ladies of Rank

       XV

       THE CHINESE LADIES OF RANK[2]

       XVI

       The Social Life of the Chinese Woman

       XVI

       THE SOCIAL LIFE OF THE CHINESE WOMAN

       XVII

       The Chinese Ladies—Their Ills

       XVII

       THE CHINESE LADIES—THEIR ILLS[4]

       XVIII

       The Funeral Ceremonies of a Dowager Princess

       XVIII

       THE FUNERAL CEREMONIES OF A DOWAGER PRINCESS[5]

       XIX

       Chinese Princes and Officials

       XIX

       CHINESE PRINCES AND OFFICIALS

       XX

       Peking—The City of the Court

       XX

       PEKING—THE CITY OF THE COURT

       XXI

       The Death of Kuang Hsu and the Empress Dowager

       XXI

       THE DEATH OF KUANG HSU AND THE EMPRESS DOWAGER

       XXII

       The Court and the New Education

       XXII

       THE COURT AND THE NEW EDUCATION

       Table of Contents

      Until within the past ten years a study of Chinese court life would have been an impossibility. The Emperor, the Empress Dowager, and the court ladies were shut up within the Forbidden City, away from a world they were anxious to see, and which was equally anxious to see them. Then the Emperor instituted reform, the Empress Dowager came out from behind the screen, and the court entered into social relations with Europeans.

      For twenty years and more Mrs. Headland has been physician to the family of the Empress Dowager's mother, the Empress' sister, and many of the princesses and high official ladies in Peking. She has visited them in a social as well as a professional way, has taken with her her friends, to whom the princesses have shown many favours, and they have themselves been constant callers at our home. It is to my wife, therefore, that I am indebted for much of the information contained in this book.

      There are many who have thought that the Empress Dowager has been misrepresented. The world has based its judgment of her character upon her greatest mistake, her participation in the Boxer movement, which seems unjust, and has closed its eyes to the tremendous reforms which only her mind could conceive and her hand carry out. The great Chinese officials to a man recognized in her a mistress of every situation; the foreigners who have come into most intimate contact with her, voice her praise; while her hostile critics are confined for the most part to those who have never known her. It was for this reason that a more thorough study of her life was undertaken.

      It has also been thought that the Emperor has been misunderstood, being overestimated by some, and underestimated by others, and this because of his peculiar type of mind and character. That he was unusual, no one will deny; that he was the originator of many of China's greatest reform measures, is equally true; but that he lacked the power to execute what he conceived, and the ability to select great statesmen to assist him, seems to have been his chief shortcoming.

      To my wife for her help in the preparation of this volume, and to my father-in-law, Mr. William Sinclair, M. A., for his suggestions, I am under many obligations.

      I. T. H.

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      All the period since 1861 should be rightly recorded as the reign of Tze Hsi An, a more eventful period than all the two hundred and forty-four reigns that had preceded her three usurpations. It began after a conquering army had made terms of peace in her capital, and with the Tai-ping rebellion in full swing of success. …

      Those few who have looked upon the countenance of the Dowager describe her as a tall, erect, fine-looking woman of distinguished and imperious bearing, with pronounced Tartar features, the eye of an eagle, and the voice of determined authority and absolute command.—Eliza Ruhamah Scidmore in "China, The Long-Lived Empire."