PRINCETON, N.J. ' Purchased by the Hammill Missior.ary Fund. DS 507 .M2 1892 Mabie, Henry Clay, 1847- 1918. In brightest Asia COPYRIGHTED I85 W. G. CORTHELI, BOSTON. Jo tl?e Qeptral Baptist Ql^urel?, MINNEAPOLIS, Which called me to its pastorate in the avowed hope that it might be further incited To World-Wide Relationships, which loyally supported me in Manifold Aggressive Missionary Undertakings, and which at length unselfishly released me to make this tour of mission-fields and to enter upon an undivided service in the cause of Evangelizing the Whole Earth, these sketches, many of which were written for its comfort, are affectionately inscribed. Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2015 https://archive.org/details/inbrightestasiaOOnnabi_0 PREFACE. N May, 1890, the writer of these sketches was chosen Home Secretary of the American Baptist Missionary Union. Immediately thereafter, it was provided tliat, before entering upon official service at home, he should be permitted to make a tour of the mission-fields, especially in Asia. This was to be in no sense a deputation for official examination or the exercise of authority in the missions; but simply an errand of friendly visitation, for the purpose of first-hand observation, inquiry and study respecting the nature, difficulties and promise of the work, the claims of which the writer was expected widely to advocate. This tour was begun in August, 1890, and completed in April, 1891. The countries traversed in order were, Japan, China, Malaysia, Burma, Assam and India, briefly touching Egypt, Palestine, Italy, France and England. About 200 of our own missionaries were visited. The stay in each country was necessarily short. Only certain representative stations in any of the countries could be reached. Some of the more important, including our old mission in Siam, were regretfully passed by altogether. These sketches were written mainly in the form of letters to the various home denominational papers, to family friends, and to the church of my late charge. These sketches were not intended to express judicial estimates on the relative importance of the various missions nor the quality of work done therein. They did not attempt to discuss theories of missions or mission policies. Their aim was rather to depict, in as graphic a way as possible, some of the characteristic phenomena attending mission life and work in the various countries, with the hope that readers at home would thus be quickened to think of missions more as a reality. The fact that many of our most devoted and skilful workers are not so much as named in these pages, while others are prominently spoken of, is by no means to be construed as indifference to the work of any ; much less as unfriendly discrimination against, or disparagement of such work. The writer simply depicts fragments of the work as he saw them. As to other portions, he is silent simply because he did not see them, or had not time, in the haste of travel, to write of them. Others in the past have spoken, and in the future will speak, of these works and the workers as they so well deserve. 6 In Brightest Asia. \\'hat has been written was thrown otl" amid the hurry of travel, and in the heat of interest awakened on the spots. For the most part, the sketches here appear substantially as they were originally written. They claim to be only glimpses of parts of the work. Nevertheless, they are glimpses of fairly and widely repre- sentative parts. The writer has chosen to entitle these sketches " In Brightest Asia," not because there is not much in Asia yet to be seen of exceeding darkness, but because the traveller among the missions of the Orient, if indeed he has eyes to see, will find that the track along which gospel missionaries have passed and wrought, is an illuminated track. The lights on the otherwise dark scenes of heathenism are all the brighter from the contrast. IMoreover, this side of Asiatic life is conscientiously emphasized for the reason that, in the belief of the writer, there is usually but little profit to be drawn from dwelling long upon the dark side of anything. Tiie chief incitements to evangelical work are derived from the positive hope of begetting the "new man." rather than from suppressing the "old," — from brooding over men, in expectation of the second Adam to be formed in them, rather than from brooding about the ruined product of the first Adam. vSo it is believed that with all we are hearing in our day, in mission literature and appeal, about "Darkest Africa," "Darkest England " and "Darkest India," — and they are not painted darker than they are, — it is time that the lights, also, on the deeply shadowed pictures should be newly pointed out. " Whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good rejjort ; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things." In Japan, China and India the times are at hand of which the prophet wrote : " The people which sat in darkness saw great light, and to them which sat in the egion and shadow of death, light is sprung up." Boston, Jan. io, 1892. | CHAPTER f.\CB I. — To THE Field. — Severinc; Ties. — Denver. — Over Marshall Pass. — The Great American Desert. — The Sierras. — A San Francisco Welcome ... 9 II. — From OccinExx to Orient. — Through the "Golden Gate." — Mid Pacific. — Nearing Japan 14 III. — In the Sunrise Kingdom. — Yokohama. — Tokio. — Treaty Revision. — Nikko. — Sendai. — OtT for Kobe. — Kioto. — Lights and Shadows. — Shimonoseki and Chofu. — Nagasaki .......... 19 IV. — A Buddhist Doctrine of Justification bv Faith 40 V. — In the Chinese Empire. — Arrival at Shanghai. — Shanghai as a Base of Operations ............. 43 VI. — The Eastern Chin.a. Mission. — A Foot-Boat Trip. — A Ningpo Household. — Shaohing. — A Noted Tomb ......... 52 VII. — Up the Yang-tse-Kiaxg. — Visit to Nanking. — Among Raw Celestials. — A Gifted Missionary. — River Scenery. — Hankow and Griffith John . . 59 VIII. — Can the Chinese be Christianized? — An Aged Believer. — A Young Mandarin. — A Blind Christian Boy ........ 67 IX. — The Western China Mission. — The Country and Modes of Travel. — Sz-Chuen and the Mission. — Messrs. Upcraft and Warner . ... 70 X. — The Southern China ^Iission.- — Hongkong. — Arrival at Swatow. — Inland on the Swatow Field. — Chao-chow-t'u. — A Quaint Bridge. — The Hakkas, 75 s /// Brightest Asia. CHAPTER PAGE XL— Canton and Macao. — Life in Boats. — Mission of the .Southern Baptist Con- vention. — Macao. — The Tomlo of Morrison ...... 87 XII. — Medical Mission Work in China. — The Claim Made for it. — How it Works. — Tlie Present Status. — Results ........ cji XIII. — Equatorial Asia. — French China. — Singapore. — American Methodist Mission. — Mohammedanism. — Penang. — Under the Southern Cross. — Rangoon Sighted g(5 XIV. — On Burman Soil. — Visit to Maulmein. — Amherst and Mrs. Judson's Grave. — The Bassein Mission. — Tlie Burman State Railway. — Mandalay. — Ava the Golden. — Judson Memorial Chapel. — Oung-pen-la. — A Karen Asso- ciation. — Our Shan Mission. — Pegu ........ 107 XV. — Three Veterans. — Rev. D. L. Brayton. — Mrs. Cephas Bennett. — Mrs. E. A. Stevens 134 XVI. — India. — Calcutta. — Europeanized India. — Serampore ..... 138 XVII. — Our Assam Mission. — The Garos. — The Plains People. — The Nagas. — A Meeting with the Brahmo .Somaj. — From Calcutta to Bombay. — liombay, 142 XVIII. — On the Telugu Field. — The Deccan. — Work for Eurasians. — Conference at Nellore. — Ramapatam. — Ongole. — Interview with Brahmins. — Off to Camp at Chendalur. — Baptizing Experiences. — The Cumbum Pentecost. — An Impending Crisis 152 XIX. — In Bible Lands. — Arabian Sea. — Red Sea and Mount Sinai. — Alexandria Cairo. — Off for Jaffa. — The Ride to Jerusalem. — In the Holy City. — View from Olivet. — Bethany. — ISethlehem. — Ramleh. — The True To the Field. cnAiTf:R I. Jo tt?(? pi(?ld! ARITUATED for twenty-one years to the pastoral relation, it was no easy tiling to sever tlie l)oncI. However, many lines of provi- dential circumstance, wide concurrence of the judgments of the brethren, many promptings of the Spirit within, and strong fellowships with the missionaries on the field united to indicate duty; so that at the last there could be no good ground for hesitation to surrender the charge of even such a church as the Central of Minneapolis for the new relation into which the writer had been called. As for the church, for years it had been growing into Christ-like magnanimity. Why, then, should it not lend its pastor to the Lord, and to the cause it loved? Both work and worker are still theirs in a larger sense. The church has simply more heavily invested in the supreme undertaking — the evangelization of the whole earth. In pursuance, then, of the suggestion and provision made by certain large-minded friends, the writer of these sketches was despatched to the fields. CENTRAL C liriail, .Ml.WK.UM JLlS. On a midsummer evening in August, 1890, in the new Social Rooms of the church above mentioned in Minneapolis, was held a farewell meeting with the departing pastor and a member of the church who was to accompany him as far as Japan. A large assemblage of friends was gathered. Graceful tributes in verse, song and address indicated the tender affection and mutual interest which had characterized past relations. On the morning following, the farewells in the family circle were said, and the world-round tour was begun. Wednesday, August 13, found us en route for the Pacific coast, booked to sail by the " City lO In Brightest Asia. of Peking,"' August 23, for Yokoliania, Japan. The puqjose is, if the Lord will, to \'isit in turn our stations in Japan, China, Burma, Assam and India; thence homeward via Bombay, Suez, Jerusalem, Beirut, Italy, France and England, in time for the next May anniversaries. Two gifted and earnest missionaries under appointment to Japan, viz., Miss Mead of Minne- sota and Miss Blunt of Kansas City, journey with us. They have been missionaries of the first water in the home-land. They are proving themselves such all along the way, — on train, in hotel and steamer, — ever reaching out in tender offices in behalf of their Lord; harbinger this of good and eftective work in Sendai and Shimonoseki, Japan. Rev. H. B. Waterman volunteers his companionship, at individual expense. Besides tliese. Brother Ernest Gordon, son of Dr. A. J. Gordon of Boston, is to join us at San Francisco. On our arrival at Denver, we found that by kind arrangement of Dr. Tupper and others, the whole Sabbath at the First Church had been set apart to us. The ladies held a large meeting in the afternoon, at which our two missionaries tenderly rehearsed their mission call and conviction. Dr. H. A. Tupper, secretary of the Foreign Board of the Southern Convention, providentially present, pathetically and eloquently responded on behalf of the meeting. The writer preached in the morning, and in the evening addressed a large mass meeting on "Missions," speaking of their spirit, their fellowships, their fascinations and their extension. A generous share was taken by the Denver brethren in the expense account of the secre- tary's tour. Oui^r /T\arsl?all pajj. August 19. This has been a day of experi- ences altogether siii generis. Start- ing from Salida at 7 a.m., the first stretch of the journey was the ascent of the mountains — the real Rockies. Our train is divided into two sections, each section drawn by two engines, and we start on the ascent over Marshall Pass. In going about twenty miles, we rise 3,000 feet. At first we are under the clouds ; then we are in the midst of them ; To the Fichi. II at lenfjth \vc rise above them, and see them lolhiit;- away aloni; tlie sides of the rani^es opi^ositc us. Our \va\- is tortuous and serpentine, round and round the lesser heights, up grades so steejj tiiat it reminds us of a toboggan shde. We dash through repeated snow sheds, and then enierg» ing from the smoke and cinders, we rise into the purest and thinnest atmosphere. We gro\( giddy at the sensations of the vast altitude ; and from our perch on lofty ledges, the eye scans the vast stretches of the Rocky ranges, rolling, tumbling and Alp-like, soaring still above and beyond into the illimitable ether. We are favored all day with a glorious sunshine which Hoods everything with its own radiance, and softens antl makes tender what other- wise would be an endless and tumultuous array of awfulness. Marshall Pass is fairly Alpine, though to our surprise there is on none of the peaks at this time of the year much snow, though they rise to up- wards of 14,000 feet in height. At noon we reach the summit ; and midway be- tween two lofty horns or peaks, — Mt. Ouray and Mt. Sniffel, — our train comes to a halt; and we all rush out to take in the view Pacificward, which stretches away for 100 miles or so westward. MT. OUKAV. JJje Ci'"e\ ond that are other slopes rising gradually and in broken undulations, traversed by ravines for miles away. On these slopes are small farms and gardens, cultivated to the high- est pitch conceivable. To the right and the left are the other European residences, each on its beautiful terrace, bewitching with vistas and copses and shaded nooks. Then such varieties of foliage, shrub and jilant one who has not been here or in the trojjics cannot imagine. It is all like enchanted ground. A number of missionaries are here, including Dr. and Mrs. Ashmore, so we are by no means lonesome. All are in good health and spirits. There is some cholera, especially in the western parts, but wholly among the lower-class natives. It has not touched Europeans, and what there is, is under good control. J.A.P.\.\Ei>E G.\KIJE.\. /;/ the Sitiirisc Kingdom. 19 CIIAI'TKR III. YoKol7ama. THIS is our oldest station. Ileix- it was that Dr. Drown. Mr. Poate and others first began Baptist work. On the fomous " BIutT." a bold spur of rock siretching for a mile or two along the southwest side of the city, and completely embowered in the foliage of a hun- dred varieties of trees, in the foreign concession, reside our missionaries amidst some hundreds of other foreigners. Mrs. .Vshmore, formerly Brown, has a home here ; so also have Mr. Bennett and Mr. C. K. Harrington ; and here we found Mr. J. L. Dearing, our latest accession to the force in Yoko- hama. Four sisters are also here en- gaged in school work — Misses Con- verse, Rolman, Wil- son and Church. Our Theological Seminary is here, under the charge of Rev. A. A. Bennett, one of our oldest missionaries. He was in some sense the successor to Dr. Nathan Brown, es- pecially in educa- tional lines. He is just now absent in America, and much missed, especially by the writer, of whom he was a classmate in the seminary, and who would have been glad to meet Brother Bennett at home. Here, also, lives Kaukatza san, our senior GIlvL,^ UIJUI-. \uK()IlA.MA. 20 In £ riff /it est Asia. ordained native pastor, wlio assisted Dr. Hrown through eleven years in translating the Scriptures. He has rendered help in the seminary, and is to-day our most valuable native preacher and interpreter. He was my companion for an entire week in my trip to the North, and won my heart completely. The second day after arrival, I was invited over to the Ashmores', where I have been staying until to-day. Dr. Ashmore has poured out a flood of information and wisdom com- bined on all the mission problems, and we have had long and profitable talks. There is a vast amount of rainy, steamy weather, which keeps one in a constant vapor bath ; but a change for cooler is expected at any time. The\' say it never fails to come about the middle of September. Last Sunday I attended my first service in a native church, and heard a sermon from one of the native pastors. It was very touching to see the little congregation of about sixty persons engaging in the various parts of the service. Every head bowed during prayer, all saying the "Amen "at the close. All sang with much earnestness, giving absolute attention to the end; no looking about ; and as the minister concluded, the whole congregation bowed as if to say, " Thank you." At 4 o'clock came the Sunday school, and in the evening I went with Mr. Dearing to attend an evangelistic service just started at the house of his teacher. A Japanese house is peculiar. The whole front opens, by means of sliding doors, to the street. As you go in, there is a space of say three feet wide stretching across the front on the ground. Here you are expected to remove your shoes before climbing up on the floor, two and one-half feet higher. This floor is not of boards, but is entirely overlaid with mats of rice straw, softly padded underneath, and each mat about three by six feet in size, which at night con- stitutes the mattress on which the family sleep. They are so clean that they must not be soiled, and so delicately made that the nails and heels of our boots would cut them out ; so we either sit in our stocking feet, or put on little straw sandals which they furnish us. The people all bend their lower limbs and feet back under them, and sit on them. They never have chairs, except in occasional instances for guests. When you are seated, first, the woman of the house and then all the children crawl up to you and bow down to the very floor before you in a salutation. Of course on this occasion, I rose and bowed my lowest, and smiled my blandest. When the service began with singing, the house being open, a crowd gathered at once before the door, some of the people sitting on the side of the elevated floor within. Thus for half an hour a large number stood and listened to the gospel. The text was written on a long white scroll, in Chinese and Japanese characters, and hung on the wall beside and behind the preacher, which of itself was an impressive thing. SoKio. San Ju NI Bahn, Tsukiji, September 20. Here at the great capital numbering over i ,000,000 souls, we have three male missionaries and their wives ; viz. Brethren F. G. Harrington, G. W. Taft and J. C. Brand. Brother Fisher is about returning from America. These are all diligently working at the language, and. In I lie Sunrise Kingdoin. 2t tliii)uu;h native assistants, coming into such evanL;elistic relation to the people at the several preaching-stations as they are able. Here also Miss Kidder and Miss Clagett are at work in the girls' school, one of the very brightest spots to be seen in our Japan work. Christian training is telling here; and indirectly, men, as well as women, are being constantly reached and renewed by the gospel's power, as brought to them through the tact and indefatigable zeal of the.se con- secrated women. They reminded us of Paul's frequent allusions to " those other women, help- ers in the Lord." In the njar neigliborhood of this school, we s.iw the chief activities among the native churches. Here we partook with some of them of the Lord's Supper. Here we .saw three generations of believers, including sever.il preachers and Bible-women, in a single family. But Tokio is just now seething with political e-xcitem^nt. Here congregate the thou- sands of student youths of Japan, often but a synonym for conceited rowdies who, under the name of Sos/iii, seek to browbeat the government and intimidate the populace. The prejudice against foreigners runs very high. There is frequent violence used against them. Mission movements just now have to proceed on very cautious lines, and it is not to be wondered at that many of our workers feel depressed. We have had the cheering experience, together with Brother and .Sister Brand, of examining four candidates, whom we received and baptized on the following Sunday evening. Their convictions proved surprisingly clear and their testimony emphatic. Our Baptist workers are among the youngest really to begin operations on this field. They are diligently acquiring the language, familiarizing themselves with the habits of the people, providing mission-houses in which they can safely and suitably dwell, and opening preaching and teaching stations, where converts may hz gathered and trained. We have attended several of the native services on the Sabbath and week nights, and been touched by the close attention and reverence of the hearers, by the heartiness of the singing, and by the earnestness with which the native preachers have pressed home the claims of Christ. The frequent gatherings with the missionaries for special prayer and Scripture incitement to a more aggressive evangel- ism in which the Spirit's power may be expected and evinced have proved refreshing and inspiring to us all. It strikes us that generally in Japan, there has been far too much of reliance upon the outward visible tendencies of the Japanese to adopt Western civilization in the husk. The time of testing is at hand, and the church of God in Japan will be brought to its knees ; much of misdirection in method will be confessed, the Holy Spirit will be more mightily invoked, and divine influence will show its old-time reality and power. If any have adopted Japan as a sort of easy-going mission-field, they will be disabused of the delusion, clarified by the discipline imminent, and rise to truer mission work. The talk about / "The immediate Christianization of Japan" has about ceased. The carnal heart maybe illu- sively polite among these Frenchmen of the East ; but for its subduing and renewal, it will require the same almighty grace that has always been required to operate eftectually upon the citadel of Mansoul an_\ where. Alighty prayer only can bring it. I have done a deal of sight-seeing in and about Tokio, staying at the Brands', most earnest, spiritual and aggressive evangelistic people. Mrs. Brand was formerly Miss Sands, and, having been long in the country and skilled in the language, is wonderfully well informed. Mr. Brand, 22 In lirigiitcst Asia. while studying hard oi\ the language, has gathered about him sev'eral native workers, and is plunging right into evangelizing through interpreters. This is so different a world from anything we have known ! Think of 3,000 Buddhist and Shinto temples in Tokio alone! The craze for education, secular and European, as yet is almost wholly inimical, in the judgment of some, to mission work. Tlie Japanese who are partly educated have grown correspondingly conceited and arrogant, and are fairly crowding their former teachers out of their positions. To look at the great public buildings, banks, railway stations, government institutions, etc.. r,i;A\I) AM) ASSISTANTS. you might think yourself in Europe ; but then again, when you go through the streets swarming with half-naked, hatless natives, upon whom elements of Western civilization have been thrust uninvited by them, you have a mongrel combination. They are heathen still, and in gross darkness. BELL TOWER. 24 III Jiri oldest Asia. Sreaty I^euisior^. The air, politically speaking, is full of liv.Uy rc\isiou. It is the irrepressible conflict, and well it may he. The first treaties, made, not as is commonly said by Commodore Perry, but by our first United States minister, Townsend Harris, five years after Perry opened the port at Yokohama, were in important particulars in their inception a blunder; and upon that blunder as a basis, Lord Elgin and representatives of the other powers followed in a species of crafty diplomacy which ever since has proved — and more and more as time has elapsed — that we really closed Japan in the very act of opening it. Undoubtedly Minister Harris designed to deal fairly with Japan ; but by grave oversight, which till his death he never ceased to deplore, there were points in his treaty which unwitting]}- did Japan serious wrong, and which he sought too late to remedy. Thus our treaty, the first PLACE OF COMMODORE PERRY'S LANDING. made with Japan, with all its wrongs to Japan expanded, so as to aff'ord to outside nations com- mercial advantages of untold value, giving nothing whatever in return, was promptly seized upon by Western powers. By what is known as " the most favored nation clause," these treaties were rendered practically interminable — made so by the item introduced by Lord Elgin and copied by all the powers, that " any concession granted to any government by Japan for any privileges, however valuable, may be claimed at once by all the powers, without any concession in return to Japan whatever." This has always stood, since 1858. a complete bar against Japan making or revising her own treaties. The chief incidental evil in this grew out of the fact that England secured from /// the Sitiirisc J\ i iigdout . 25 Japan a concession that a (lut\' ot" only 5 per cent slionld he collected on imported j^oods fium any nation wliate\'er. Mr. Harris luid oroposcd a daity oi" 20 ])cr cvrii. 'I'iiis England's muusici foiled, and the t\venty-ei.<;ht powers now in commercial relations witli Japan took advanta<;e of it, and still retain it. japan is in ^reat financial straits in consecjuence. The commerce anil inchistries of Japan beinasaivI. without a Baptist missionary. We have here, however, an earnest brother. Professor L. E. Martin, a graduate of Kalamazoo College, who in March next will leave his government school work, and, with his three years' experience in the country and gciod start in the language, will enter our mission ser- vice, and open a station at some inland point in this island, probably at Kurume.* We arrived last night, and are spending the Sabbath here. Several missionary brethren met us this morning, and took us ashore. We saw several missions of the Presbyterians, Methodists and others in flourishing activity. The harbor is fine, and the scenery very picturesque. Just at the entrance to the harbor, we passed the historic little island of Pappenberg, from the clirt; of which so many thousands of Catholic martyrs were flung to their death about three centuries ago, when the Japanese rose up and exterminated the disciples of the early Jesuitical influence which followed upon Xavier's conquests. * Since the above was penned, Brother Martin has married Dr. CIough"s daughter, and gone to Ongole, India. In Brightest Asia. CHAPTER IV. P Bdddl^ist Doetrii7^ of J/J5tifi(;atio9 by paitl;. A .Ml the objects of most striking interest which tlie traveller sees in the ancient city of Kioto, Jajjan, are the "Temples of Hon-g\van-ji " — " Eastern and " Western,"' so called. One of these temples is quite new; in fact, it is yet building. To those sanguine souls who are inclined to think that the force of idolatry in Japan is spent, that idolatrous shrines generally are in the last stages of decay, and that no more will be built, we commend a few facts concerning the present building of this new Hon-gwan-ji structure. It is built entirely from the free-will olferings of the people of the Buddhist sect which it represents, from all parts of the empire. These contributions are of costly jewels, metals, woods for the building, lumian hair, and money without stint. On one of the platforms of the temple are twenty-four coils of rope from three to four inches in diameter, made of this human hair. Attached to one of the coils is a placard with this inscription : — " Since the thirteenth year of Meji (iii'e. 43 CIIArTKR \. I9 Qt?i935(? Empir(^. /^rriual at Sf^aQc^h^ai. Shanghai, Ojtobsr 22. RISING at daybreak on the morning of the third day out from Nagasaki, Japan's most westerly seaport, we find that we are passing tlie " Saddle Islands."' Daring the night the sea has turned from its usual deep green to a dull yellow, and by noontide it is a huge swash of ochre-colored waves. We are told that we have entered into the mouth of the great Yang Tse River, which, in its mighty flow, carries forevermore the yellow sands of the vast lands through which it flows, a full 100 miles out into the sea. This river is the fourth largest in the world ; and its delta, of o\ er seventy-five miles long and in places over forty miles wide, is year by year extending. That long, low-lying dark line which lies on the water yonder on our port side, which one could easily mistake for a shadow, is the first land which salutes us as we head on towards Shanghai. An hour or two later, we discern the outlines of the old walled town of Woosung, with a cjuaint adobe or mud-colored old fort on our right. We anchor a half-hour for the tide to so rise that we can cross the liar. At tliis point we leave the arm of the Vang Tse up which we have been sailing, and enter the Woosung River, sailing up the stream on a graceful curve for twelve miles to Shanghai. We move on between the low, flat, uninteresting shores, in such melancholy contrast to the ever picturesque lofty shores of Japan ; having become accustomed to those for some six weeks past, we confess to being spoiled for most coast scenery. " Look," says a companion at my right, " at those three full-rigged, graceful brigs," following each other like a naval column, making their way under escort of tugs out to sea. "And sec! they each float the stars and stripes of America ! " and a few moments later, as they meet and glide past us, graceful, silent and cjueenly as swans, gilded by the western sunset, our hearts glow afresh towards the far-off home which our country's flag brings near to us. On we go ; and now the great black forms of sea-going steamers — German, English, French, Chinese and Japanese — begin to fill the stream. Among them, on our left, are two men-of-war, evidently new, flashing with the jet black of their hulls, rigged to perfection, brilliant signals flying from the top-gallants. Half-way up the main and mizzen masts is a sort of turret or round tower of iron, from which, in the event of being captured and boarded, a few daring men might fight with desperation, and virtually clear the decks of a capturing force. We are told that these glistening new war ships, equipped with the best of cannon, as complete as they can be made, are only specimens of a numerous and constantly growing war fleet, which some near day will compel to a reckoning those western nations, including our own, which with impunity are smiting China in the face. In t/ic Chinese Iliiipirc. 45 What arc tluise numerous siiuill lia\ ri(.k-lo()kin^ jjilcs which vvc sec yonder over the shore line, filling square miles of low flat laiuls, as if they were i huge harvest-field of haymakers on the flat lands of Northern Indiana? •' Ah," says an old China missionary at my left, " that is indeed a harvest-field, but not of the sweet new-mown hay of America. The reaper's name who holds carnival there is Death ; and those huge mounds, without a slab, are graves ; and they are piled so large and high in a kind of rivalry, which the people exercise to emphasize the degree of honor which they bestow on their dead ancestors." The names of the dead arc inscribed on tablets, kept on the god-shelf at the people's homes; and these, in ever-increasing numbers, are the gods they chiefly worship. The vestibule to China through which we are passing is, then, a vestibule of death ; loathsome, made revolting in the extreme, because all about and among those mounds, and on the river banks as we move on, we see, not merely well-shaped mounds, but numerous bare, unburied coffins, cov- ered over only with a matting of reeds, because the friends of the dead are, in numerous cases, too poor to bury them at all : and so the cofiins lie there as if dropped on the way to burial, to fester in the sun and breed a malaria which, no wonder, often amounts to wide-spread pestilence. If this be one of the forecourts of China, what must the interior be? If romance be the constraining motive of a new mis- sionary to China, it will begin to perish here. If, however, he knows in his own soul the power of Christ's resur- rection, and is on fire with a divine fuel to impart Christ's vitality to a people lying more putrid than was Lazarus in his rock chamber, this corridor of death through which the missionary passes up the VVoosung River will nerve him to declare "Jesus and the resurrection," as many heroes have done before him, through the great cities of this sepulchre empire till the whole land shall know their power, and the shadow of death shall be turned into the morning. The " Empire Brewery," in its solid stone buildings on the right bank, looks as if it did not NLW .SlIAXGIIAI. Jii the Cliincsc linipirc. 47 doubt its call to China. It evidently has come to stay. Those two great yellow opium hulks, tloatin.t; there like C()l)ras with deadly fangs, basking in the sunset glow, have no thought of retreat- ing. They seem to have no impa- tience, waiting there for registry. They can wait for any length of time, and seem to say, " We'll get in our work yet, and never you mind. Don't you see a kind of first-fruit of our harvest down the river yonder? We are the mound-builders of the present age ; not the age of stone, but of stony hearts. Some of those great temples of commerce yonder, in the English concession, beauti- ful and sumptuous as the palaces of Venice, sitting enthroned like hers, on thronged canals, behind the park, on the Ikind, vibrant with the strains of an English band, are the product and the apparatus of our game of death. That makes our game re- spectable, and we count that an offset to the ghastly mound-building down the river." Aye ! and along all the rivers, and over all the hillsides of poor opium-demented, mammon-cursed China. Our vessel — the " Yokohama Maru " — sidles up to her moorings. John Chinaman has come out by the thousand to see us land, and to pick up a few " cash " from the newly arrived " foreign saints." A dozen of our countrymen, bronzed, and some gray in the service, are seen among the throng to welcome the meagre reinforcement to their mission stations, which, thank God, the autumn steamers do usually bring. No representative of the American Baptist Missionary Union, alas ! is there. A Presbyterian sister, who stands at my side, and whose home is here, asks : " Do you see that tall, serene-faced, calm man, who stands with arms folded (while the whole throng is a-howl with Chinese voices), in native costume and cue? That is Mr. Herring, of the Southern Baptist Board. We call him ' Our Mr. Herring.' We all claim him. He's so nice ! " A few moments more, and he comes on board, commissioned by Mr. Goddard of Ningpo to meet me ; a " rikisha " is called, and, bag and baggage, I am taken as a brother to his own home, near the " Old North Gate" of the wall of the native city. Here stands the mission-house built and occupied for nearly forty years by the lamented Dr. Yates. Alongside of it now is another, occupied by the Coiiipaiiion missionary, Brother Tatum ; while just near the corner, opposite, is the substantial stone chapel, long used by the devoted missionaries at this post. The evening tea over, the chapel bell began its call to worshippers. Brother Herring was to have a service, " not of the church at all," he said, " ljut for outsiders — the heathen — for whom- soever may come — a service we have three times weekly." Tired as I was from the voyage and OLD NORTH GATE, SI 1 AXf ,HAI. 48 In BrigJttest Asia. the excitement of six busy weeks in Japan, I resolved, on tliat first night on the sliores of China, to see what kind of a service this would be. We went to the chapel. A simple hymn was sung, a few people at a time coming in as we sang, until forty-five persons, men and women — some smoking pipes — came in, crowding to the front seats; and then our dear brother, taking the great commission for a text, proceeded to talk to those poor souls with fluency and warmth, in a winning, smiling, tender way, that even though, as in my case, not a word was understood, would have convinced a sphinx that he had the greatest and divinest message on earth to tell. It is an inspiration to hear a man, after being only five years in a country, stand up and preach to a people in their own tongue, like a native, and for a half-hour to observe him winning on his congregation at every stroke. To me, I confess also, that it was no drawback that he spoke with the Chinese cap on, with the long braid down his back, especially as I considered that his hearers saw in him a representative of Christ ; a man at one with themselves, both in inward sym- pathy and outward form. I heard of a young woman in Minnesota, a sister of one of our missionaries in China, who, when she saw a photograph of her brother in his Chinese costume, almost fainted. Some said, "Cruel!" Knowing the spirit of men like these, I have been led to think otherwise. How think ye God the Father's heart must have fainted — aye, broke ! when He saw His only begotten Son in garb of our human race? There certainly is no merit or value in any outward dress for its own sake ; but if for Christ's sake and love of the heathen, and increased ability to get near them, it be worn, what then? Is not " Wisdom justified of her children?" Following Brother Herring's talk, a big square-rigged Chinese brother — pastor of the mission at Soo Chow, one of seven choice men trained by Dr. Yates — rose, and gave us twenty minutes more in a similar vein. I cannot say which used the better Chinese. I an^ sure they were each en rapport with the other and with their Iiearers. Thus ended my first evening in China, and I am ready for more of the same sort. yr)'zv)<^\)3.\ as a Ba8<^ of Operations. Pending my trip up the Vang Tse, I found opportunity to look into the many-sided work of other societies than our own. Aly first introduction, as I have intimated, was to the work of our Southern brethren. Stations have been established at Hangchow, .Soo Chow and Ching Kiang, as well as at Shanghai. Dr. Yates was the pioneer of this mission, a Xorth Carolina man ; and five of the families out of the six now working in the mission were recruited from North Carolina. Dr. Yates labored here for forty years, and left behind him a stable church of some seventy members, several well- trained native preachers, and the beginnings of work in the out-stations named. His contribu- tions to the literature of Chinese missions were considerable, and of a high quality. One of the notable trophies of Dr. Yates' work is a character known as Deacon Wang. This man w^as an early convert, and by many years of consistent living he has proved his genuine devotion to Christ. At the time of his conversion, he was a rice dealer. He was at once met with the question whether he should observe the Sabbath. This is one of the crucial questions Jn tlic Chinese Jiiiipirc. 49 to a Chinaman, to whom all days of the week arc alike ceiuall)- profane. He came to the mission- ary for counsel. 11c, of cour.se, could give him but one direction: "Close up your shop on Saturday night. I'ut upon your door, ' Rest day ; come to-morrow." " Wang hesitated and struggled. He knew lie would lose trade, for a time at least. He how- ever decided rightly. For a time, of course, his customers fell oft". Some derided him, but he persevered, even though he lost much, and came into straits. Finally, however, the scales began to turn ; his strict honesty and consistency had gained him confidence with country dealers who came in along the canals, bringing boatloads of their rice for sale. In time these dealers, arriving Saturday niglit at market, were willing to wait over till Monday for the sake of dealing with Wang, because they knew his quotation of prices would be so fair and his honor was without challenge. This good name soon brought great prosperity, and Wang became rich. He at length retired froni business with a competence. He has contributed largely to missions. A few years since he bought in the old city of Shanghai some land, and built thereon a com- modious chapel, all at his own expense ; and for years he has himself preached there week-days and Sundays to multitudes of his countrymen. He is now an old man. His large and imp(>^ing presence in the church last Sunday impressed me deeply before I knew who he was. In the afternoon I went to hear hini in his own chapel. How his face beamed behind his great eye- glasses with tortoise-shell bows, as he both preached and sang the re- demption story ! The Chinaman can be Christianized, and become like- wise a chosen vessel to others. Wang is the demonstration. Next to the missions of our Southern brethren, I was desirous of seeing the headquarters of the China Inland Mission, also in Shang- hai. I had heard in America of the splendid new building, the gift of the friends, and in part of the mis- sionaries themselves, of this mis- sion. I was scarcely prepared to see so ample and fine accommodations, and such a beehive of varied activ- ities. The buildings stand on three sides of a large quadrangle. Along the front are several mission- houses, built in a row, some three stories in height. In the centre is a spacious hall for public meetings. Here, also, a prayer meeting is held weekly on Saturday nights. On one side of the quadrangle, facing inward, is a row of apartments, including parlors, dining-rooms, offices, mail- ing and shipping rooms, etc., with conveniences for the temporary living and lodgment of some forty missionaries in transit to and from their stations, or who may come in for periodic rest. On HEADQUARTERS CHINA INLAND MISSION. In Brightest Asia. a third side of the quach-anglc are rcionis for the temporary accommodation of nati\ e workers who may come in from time to time. Here they can board themselves, doing their own cooking, spreading their mats, etc. The whole establishment looks like business, I assure you. I received most cordial attention from Mr. Steven- son, the deputy superintend- ent in charge, and other mis- sionaries, and found I was there not wholly unknown, from my relations to Dr. Guinness, and from my arti- cles in Regions Beyond. When you add to the facilities here reared two training-schools for all new arrivals, — one for men at Gan King, and one for women at Yang Chow, — and also at Che- foo, in Northern China, a first- class boarding-school for their own children, also largely pat- ronized by English civil-service people, you will see that this is a most thorough-going institution. Those who suppose that this mission is ephemeral or lacks organization, are greatly misled. That God\s blessing is signally upon it also, especially as a pioneering agency in opening up the interior places, is beyond a doubt. For example, we Baptists have supposed we were doing a heroic thing in placing in Szchuen two missionaries ; the C. I. M. have in that same province forty-seven. True, some of their most excellent workers are inclining to come, after a season, into relation to our denominational ' boards. This, too, is well, both for ' them and us. Still other societies have strong agencies in Shanghai, such as the Lon- don Missionarv Societv, with its veteran STREET IN SHANCIIA! CHINESE CARRIAGE. /// the Chinese IZiiipire. 51 representative, Mr. IVFuirliead, pastor over a Iarjj;e llock, aiul, thougli having readied fourscore years, still evangelizing with ardor and power. Then there is the work of the American Congre- gationalists and the Presbyterians, with their great and influential press and their large schools and hospitals ; the college of the American Methodists, under Dr. Allen — the Jupiter Tonans as an advocate of high views of educational agencies to the higher classes if we are ever to convert China. The Church Missionary Society is here in force. A great cathedral adorns one of the finest squares in the Mnglish concession. The Seventh Day Adventists, with schools and a hos- pital, are scarcely behind any. The Bible societies, both British and American, are eminently aggressive and successful, selling through their numerous colporters hundreds of thousands of Bibles annually for hard Chinese cash. With all these varied agencies, Shanghai would seem verily a modern Antioch of strategic influence for the spread of the gospel through the " Middle Kingdom." May the Spirit of all power give the gospel wing ! JUNK, IXLAND .SEA. 52 In Brightest Asia. CHArTKR VI. 5l7ionary interest has been awakened in tliem, several of whom hope to enter the field when prepared. A systematic study and advocacy of the field has been instituted, and through their agency $1,500 is being annually raised in support of the pioneer missionaries. We gratefully record that within a few months, seven believers, first-fruits of the movement, have been bap- tized in connection with the labors of Messrs. Up- eraft and Warner, and the first Baptist Church of Sui- fu has been organized. May this 'handful of corn in the tops of the moun- tains yet shake like Leba- non."' A letter from Mr. Up- eraft, which came to hand just as I left Shanghai for this up-river trip to Han- kow, says : '• I grieve that being within 1,000 miles, I shall not be able to see you ; but prayer shall circle the globe for you, and desires that only God may know." -Sitting on the deck of this noble English steamer to-day, on this Nile of China, with pagoda- crowned rocks and promontories on the south bank, often glowing with the autumn tints of the maple and the tallow tree, or purple with the sparse herbage, and with the thickly peopled flat lowland on our north bank, despite all the thrill of novelty and pleasure which the experience affords, I, too, grieve that I can only send my yearning, prayer-laden glance up the gorges and over the mountains to where the dear brother in isolation courageously toils on for Christ at Sui-fu. Like one of old, I am only permitted to scan the borders of the land, but may not enter. I have at least knelt in prayer at the hither base of the great mountain range which sepr rates us in person, while by faith we have met. It is at least a satisfaction, beyond all power of words to express, to have traversed even thus far the course over which these past and future pilgrims for Central Asia's evangelization have devoutly come, and will come until He whose right it is shall reign universally and supreme. THE CITY OF bUI-rU, WESTERN CHINA. The So II til cm Cliina Mission. 75 CHAPTICR X. f^OI7<5^0^7(5. November i8. VE are entering Hongkong Harbor. The high hills are on every side, in a vast mountainous amphitheatre. Stately chalk-white liuropean buildings rise on all the slopes, some of them alabastrian in beauty. The smoke of numerous shops and manufiictories shadows some of the slopes, but for the most part there is a sort of a New Jerusalem-like whiteness and beauty about the whole place. Would it were so morally! Hongkong is an English colony. What there is of Chinatown is obscured or by no means prominent. A noble English cathedral rests on one shoulder of the mountain ; and on the very summits, reached by cable railways, are great hotels, villas and country seats, baronial in splendor and spaciousness. European merchants and army and customs officials do not come out here to live in huts or in native fashion. Great steamships are running in and out of the harbor as we enter. Twenty-seven of them are in sight, several of them going to Japan, some to Australia, some arriving from Singapore, England, etc. This is the tJiird kindest port of transit in t/ie ivorld I First London, then Liverpool, then Hong- kong. We now approach the landing, and sampans swarm around, eager to take us ashore. /^rriual at Su/atovu. November 20. The sail from Hong- kong to Swatow was of only a day and a night. The seas, however, ran high, and our tub of a steamer danced about like a cork, and we found the distance quite sufficient for our gastric powers. HOXGKdXG HARBOR. 76 In Brightest Asia. The city of Swatow itself has few attractions. It lies on a low, flat point of ground, but it is evidently a port of considerable commercial importance. A very rich agricultural country, inside a mountain range, lies north and west of it. On this great fertile Tie Chiu district, I should tiiink never atfiicted with famine, our mission lies. The English Presbyterians share the field with us. They have extensive com- pounds adjacent to the city proper ; and by means of schools, a great hospital and a very aggressive evangelism also, they are pressing things vigorously. We have a mis- sion chapel in the city, but our compound lies across the bay a mile or two distant, on high, rocky ter- races, most picturesquely situated. For beauty it exceeds any mission we have seen in Japan or China. For this, thanks to the diligence, pains- taking care and taste of Dr. Ash- more. When he purchased the tract many years ago for the Mis- sionary Union, at the nominal sum of $500, it was little more than a pile of verdureless, decomposing granite, and as unattractive as possible. But by dint of continuous planting of trees and shrubs, by cutting the way for paths and terrace plats for buildings of half a dozen sorts, this Judean-like wilderness has been transformed into a very garden of the Lord, fit emblem of the spiritual transformations also being carried on under the leadership of a gardener skilled in moral, as in natural, culture. It was our privilege to see many of these " trees of righteousness, the planting of the Lord's hand," coming on to maturity and beauty in and about that enclosure. We have here four good houses for missionary families, besides a hospital, boys' and girls' schools, a training-school for preachers, and a chapel. There is much to gladden one. Then better than all, there are thirty stations out in the great plains back from Swatow, up the rivers and canals, some of which we are to visit. More than 1,100 members have been enrolled. Brother Foster and Dr. Ashmore met us at the little landing on the compound as our sampan from the steamer touched, and we were shown up the hill to the mission-house, where a dozen or so of our workers soon met us. Brethren Campbell and Norvell had come in from the Hakka district to see us. The Scotts and Carlins are also tabernacled here. Misses Scott, Campbell and Dunwiddie, who left America since I did, we found here two weeks ahead of us. We made an interesting round of the compound to the various schools, — the evangelists' training-school, the Bible-women's school, the hospital and chapel. At all these places we were DR. ASHMORE'S house. TJie Soi/t/icrn Cliiiia Mission. 11 met with hearty and polite greetings from the native Christians, all indicating that they had Ijeen anticipating our arrival. On later occasions we were called out for addresses to them, and their responses were tender and touching. The following is a sample, spoken to us before Dr. Ash- more's sermon on Sunday morning by the pastor, Po-san: — "U'c thank you for coming so far to see us. Forty years ago, no such sight as you now see, SWATOW I'RE.^CHERS AND STUOEN'TS. in this full house of men, women and children, worshipping the true God, was possible. The people then had no Bible ; they were devil worshippers ; they despised women and children. We thank the Christians in America for sending us the missionaries of forty years ago and since, to give us the Bible and all attendant biessings. As you journey on in your course from land to land, please to bespeak for us the prayers of Christians in all countries." While this was spoken, the men rose and stood. Afterwards one of the Bible-women made a similar address of welcome, all the women saying their "Amen." 78 In Ji rigiitcst Asia. iQla^d OQ tf?^ 5u;atOu; Field. November 25. Much to our satisfaction, an expedition was planned for us into the country, mid dense heathenism itself. On Monday morning the two mission-boats were gotten ready, stocked with provisions and conveniences, and adequately manned. The mission-bjat is an institution worth noting. Often for weeks together it must serve the missionary, and some- times his family, for trans- portation, inn, retreat, and defense from the inquisi- tive gaze and obtrusive- ness of the curious and often rude multitudes. Without it, it is difficult to see how in China the most real mission work in the country could be done at all. One living in America can have no idea of how numerous, on the great plains of China, are the rivers and canals. They often run in a vast net- SWATOW BIBLE-WOMEN. work through and through thousands of square miles of level country. They are the main thoroughfares. All the cities and towns of consequence are built upon them. There are rarely any other public roads, as we count roads. This mission-boat, therefore, is a sine qua >wn in a missionary's equipment. A good one costs about $300 (no more than a good carriage at home). It is about thirty-five feet in length, and ten in width. In the centre is a house room, about eight by twelve feet in size, with room for two narrow beds at the sides, a table at the end, and shelves for a few books. A pantry and a closet adjoin at one end, while outside and in a sort of forecastle the boatmen and assistant evangelists live and sleep. The cooking is done on deck. The boat has a mast, and may be propelled either by a sail or by long oars worked by coolies. On our expedition we had two of these boats, one of them formerly used by Miss Field in her extensive tours among the Tie Chiu women. We had with us, besides Dr. Ashmore and Brother Foster, four evangelists, a cook and six boatmen. For the first half-day, taking advantage of the tide, we floated lazily up the wide stream which issues into the Swatow Bay. I'lic Soiillifrii C/ih/a Mission. 79 At length, about .sunset, a town is reached at a junction of two streams. Just iicfore we anchor, to prepare for an evangeii/ing service on the Ijanks, a Ijoat ai)])roaches us from one of the streams, having on board several men and boys. Two of the men are dressed in clean, new buff suits of cotton clothing. Their faces beam with intelligence and interest. Our two mi.ssion- boats are old acquaintances of theirs. They readily divine what missionaries are in them. By the peculiar telegraphy begotten of Christian fellowship, the news has someway reached them that the two American visitors are likewise coming, and so these two dear evangelists have come out as did the ancient brethren to Appii Forum and the Three Taverns, to Paul, to greet us. We all anchor, and they come on board, and most politely and formally present to us their salutations. These two men have been out for six weeks in a round of evangelizing. One of them brings a simple map of the district they have traversed, with their route traced in red ink. They have gone " two and two," apostle-like. They have enjoyed it much, have found respect- ful hearing, have sold many Scriptures and tracts. " Wouldn't they like to give it up, and return to idolatry?" I ventured to ask one of them. The reply came with electric vehemence, "No! it would fill my heart with misery." When this man was converted, his mother was a wizard; she used to climb knife-ladders and walk on live coals of fire, and practice many enchantments. When the son told her of his decision, she replied, " You are right, and I will join you." " That woman," said the son, " now has forty-two descendants who have ceased from idol worship." While we were thus conversing, Dr. Ashmore and an evangelist have begun preaching to the villagers who swarm about them on shore. A few minutes later, and my man is also at it with boldness and fervor. Paul's argument at Lystra or on Mars Hill, or some other apostolic prece- dent, is by these men, Ashmore-trained, as a rule followed everywhere ; and some with the same kinds of effect. Some believe; others look sceptical, and ^-^ many scoff. Frequently one comes again, or asks a question /• ' ' "* revealing anxiety to know the truth. The universal testimony ,,{ is, "The doctrine is good, but hard to put in practice." s-y^- Some have lieard before ; all confess to guilt. Evening. — Again we anchor alongside a fleet of General * Ah-Pung's gunboats. Dr. Ashmore is calling to me to come on, that we may hold a little meeting in the village. I act as the stool pigeon while Dr. Ashmore draws the gospel net. We sally out. Dr. Ashmore and his two students in training as evangelists, and cross the rice-fields for a half-mile, ferry- ing a canal by a boat, managed by a leper. We approach a town snugly ensconced under a lot of grand spreading banyan trees, which would appear to be one or two hundred years old. We thread our way through a narrow ^^^^'^'O'^E- street, followed by a crowd of inquisitives, inexpressibly filthy and vile in person and speech, and enter an open space. There taking our stand. Dr. Ashmore starts off one evangelist, and at a little distance another. A hundred people have surrounded us. First and nearest in the inner circle is a lot of small boys ; then larger boys ; then those taller still ; then stalwart men : and So In Brightest Asia. hovering on the outside of the circle a numl)er of women. To stand in the centre of a crowd like that, having every eye gazing into yours as if to bore you through with inquiry, to think that it is the only time you will ever thus face that crowd, and they destitute of hope for this life or the next, and be unable to speak — ah, my brother in America! complacent over the state of the heathen while you luxuriate in all Christian privileges, put yourself there, and you'll not be indifferent. I accepted the bench a man brought me, and in a moment more the youthful native evangelist began. At once he reminds them of the true God who reigns above, who gives the rains and BANYAN TREE. fruitful seasons from heaven, etc. A moment more, and a little bullet-eyed man, the least intelli- gent-looking one of the crowd, breaks out : " You say there is a heaven. Of course there is a heaven and a God in it ; else how should we get anything to eat ?" The heathen are not the ignorant creatures we take them to be. The first sermon was about three minutes long. Then Dr. Ashmore began, and for five minutes more he gave them an apostolic broadside. Eloquent always, he is peculiarly himself with a heathen audience before him. As he made point after point on God, sin, judgment, pardon through Christ, heaven and hell, there was riveted attention. It was a study to watch their faces. Several kept nodding assent, as point after point was made. It was perfectly evident that they recognized as true the great salient points made. The Sou t //cm C/iina Mis.sio?i. 8l It was also, alas ! just as evident that most of them took it just as sinners do at home. They said: " It is true, but tlie trouble is in my business, as opium-selling or idol-making. I can't afford to submit to the truth." " When they knew C'.od, they glori- fied him not as God." .Vs we departed, said the doctor to me: "A few years ago in a village like this, we would have been hooted out of town under showers of gravel stones ; but now, note the respectful attention." Coming back to the boat, many followed us. All were respectful ; and as we came along the bank to our boat, passing three or four rude gunboats of General Ah-Pung lying near, one of the soldiers asked Dr. Ashmore, " \'enerable teacher, have you had your rice ? " That is better than the epithet " foreign devil," with which in the past the mission- aries used to be saluted. Still, you must not imagine that there is much in such a locality as this but the rankest heathenism, squalor, ignorance, poverty and misery. Heathenism is something awful, especially in China. There is light in the gloom, however. While I am writing (it is 8 o'clock in the evening), out on the deck of our boat, our good cook, a deacon of the Swatow church, is holding forth in the moonlight to a few natives about him, preaching the gospel to them with the intensest feeling. Brother Foster tells me he is expatiating on "The Character of the True, the Highest, the Holiest God." " Our work is to call men to the way of righteousness, the way of peace, the way of heaven. This way is narrow. The way of the opium-eater is broad, so men don't like this," etc. Now he is straightening out the Fung Shway superstition in good style. Now he is urging the blessedness of the Sabbath. Now he gives a parable. The essentials of the way of salvation are now being urged. Now the verse of a hymn rises on the evening air. And so the dear good man goes on. He has just added : " The merits of Christ are beyond compare. It's no use to worship your ancestors," etc. May the .Spirit send the truth home to his little audience ! All day long the man has kept this up. OUR CARRIAGE. lack pig or two, which from village to village volunteered their escort. Our route was along a serpentine, narrow roadway or path ; the usual style of passageway in China running directly through the fields, there never being such a thing anywhere as a fence or a piece of land laid out at right angles. These roads are often made of concrete, smooth and well finished. All along as we came, there were patches of sugar cane, rice-fields, turnips and CHINESE TOMBS. cabbages. All sorts of small farming is here carried to a high pitch of economic cultivation. Every particle of sewage, such as in America is commonly wasted, is preserved in great earthen jars, and used upon the fields. The smells, to say the least, rival those of Cologne. Villages are huddled in at intervals of every half-mile or so, and the emblems of idolatry and ancestral worship are everywhere seen. Having arrived at the city of Chao-chow-fu, we found it like all others that I have seen in its general features — its buildings of stone or cement crowded closely together, in which the people herd like swine, with narrow streets indescribably filthy. Of course the entrance into the town of four foreigners was the signal for a sensation of the first order. Barnum's Circus was never The Southern China Mission. 83 eyed more intensely than was our procession ; for the four hours vvc were in the city, we were amid a lot of hangers-on. We visited our little native chapel, where we met a couple of evangelists. We called at the Presbyterian Hospital, and found 100 patients in waiting. Here we saw a poor victim of opium under treatment, cliained to his bed. He had been there twice before, but each time had run away to indulge his raging appetite, so fearfully diil he suffer. The third time he came of his own accord, and begged to be chained, that he might be compelled to remain the fifteen days necessary for treatment. His distressed father, a Christian preacher, sat by his bedside trying to comfort and encourage his poor boy. As we knelt to pray with the sorrowing yet courageous couple, never did I realize more vividly the awful curse that the opium traffic has thrust upon poor benighted China. We next visited a Confucian Temple, the Examination Halls, and especially Gold Hill, a high lookout on one side of the city, from which a superb view was had. From this hill we could take in a wide range of city, country, river, and especially mountain scenery. The most impressive feature was the vast area of mountain-sides, on the northwest side of the city, completely covered, from the lofty summits away down into the valley and plains, with graves. In this case the graves are marked with gray stones at the head of the small mounds. It seemed to me there was an extent of several hundred acres completely filled ; and Dr. Ash- more tells me that in many cases the graves are filled tJiree deep ! For ages and ages the dead have been carried there. It was to us melancholy in the extreme, radiant as was the sunshine that gilded the purpled hills. It was like a look into some illuminated Gehenna, symbolic of China's whole civilization — an ancient sepulchre, but a sepulchre still. But resurrection life has begun to stir in this valley of dry bones, and these bones shall yet live and stand upon their feet, an exceeding great army. May the Lord hasten it in His time ! f\ Quaipt Brid<^e. At Chao-chow-fu there is a quaint old bridge over the river, probably 1,500 feet in length, a curious combination of stone arch, wood and pontoon. About a third of the way across the stream, the stone-work ceases ; and descending some massive stone steps, you come upon the pontoon part, which crosses the main channel of the river. This pontoon can be opened to admit the passage of tall-masted boats. Passing this section, you ascend to the main bridge again. There are some fifteen or sixteen large stone piers in the bridge, between which stretch long stone slabs, about forty feet in length, which form the bridge floors. But what is especially remarkable, on each of these piers are clustered several buildings — shops, in which all sorts of trade are carried on. The buildings extend balcony-like over the outer edges of the piers, and are "shored" up by poles which extend down into the river-bed, to help support the buildings. To cap all, in several cases, a large banyan tree is growing directly out of the side of a pier, covering the huddle of shops with its grateful shade. These Chinese are original. For a bridge, this is the most unique thing I have seen. 84 Ju Ih-iglitcst Asia. At Cliao-chow-fu we saw many specimens of the H.ikka people and of tlieir numerous boats, anchored below the quaint old bridge which spans the river which issues from the Hakka country. It was no small disappointment to Brother Campbell that we were unable to go out into the Hakka district, where he has been pioneering for two or three years. Brother Campbell describes these people as being a distinct race among the various branches of the Chinese people. They claim to have originally come from the Fo- Kien Province, about 600 years ago. Dr. Eitel says respecting them: "If the Maotze or moun- tain tribes of West China may be described as the Britons, the Cantonese as the Saxons, and the Haklos as the Danes of Chinese civilization, the Hakkas must be characterized as the Normans." They are superior to other Chinese people in fondness for education, in refusing the foot- binding of their women, and in other important respects. Their dialect is the connecting link between the Cantonese and the Mandarin, resembling closely the latter. They occupy parts of five provinces. If we ever mean to permanently strike the roots of our work inland from the old and well-worked station of Swa- tow, it seems as if the work among the Hakkas should be reinforced and pressed. With this Dr. Ashmore strongly agrees. Brethren Campbell and Norvell have explored the district widely in several directions, and report the people as friendly, willing to purchase tracts and Scriptures, and tolerant of foreigners desiring to live in the region. The Lutherans have an extensive work among them, and the English Presbyterians are effecting entrance also. Last Sabbath I had a most delightful interview with Brother Campbell's Hakka teacher, who has lately been converted. He is an unusually handsome fellow, of fine features, light com- plexion and graceful figure. His hands impressed me as exceedingly graceful, with long, tapering fingers and the whitest of nails. He was clad in a long, clean sky-blue tunic, white stockings and satin shoes. His answers to my searching questions were touching. Brother Campbell interpreted. We prayed together. On departing, the dear fellow wished Mr. Campbell to say to -MK. CAMIT.ICLL. Tlic Southern (^liiiia Missi'ui. me that he "was ten times glad to have seen me, and tliat lie thought I was ten times good to take so much interest to come and see Chinaman, and talk kindly with him." There is special satisfaction to me in these face-to-face talks with such trophies of grace met with in these lands. I do not find it difficult to love the Chinese. The image of Christ in them, either real or prospective, fascinates one beyond mea.sure. This afternoon we are all aboard a Hakka boat which we engaged at Chao-chow-fu, and are having a delightful sail down the Han River. We are floating past banyan and banana groves, A HAKKA BOAT. by orange orchards loaded with the tempting golden fruit, along sand bars yellow in the sunshine, past pagodas old and shrub-grown, — all in decay, — meeting and passing all sorts of odd and primitive river crafts. To-morrow will be your Thanksgiving Day. November 27. We are just leaving for Hongkong again. Brother Foster came off with us to the steamer. Dr. Ashmore bidding us farewell from the pier, and tenderly turning back to his continued work. The dear old servant of Dr. Ashmore, Deacon Siau Thong, whose preaching on the boat I have mentioned, also came with us to the steamer. What a grip he gave us, and such a smile, and petition to pray for him, as he laid down our luggage on the deck and turned to descend the ladder. Now we are off. Again the little mission-boat turns back to the self-imposed exile 86 In Brightest Asia. for Jesus' sake. We move out through the straits into the broad sea, which laves all shores, and from its very vastness proclaims the unity of all lands and all human kind. The several white houses of the mission compound yonder, peering through the foliage and rising on the bold rocks, stand firm and glowing in the evening sunset. From the wide veranda of the house standing on the highest peak. Dr. Ashmore's house, we faintly see (for it is a mile away) a group of shadowy figures, and can just discern a waving handkerchief. It seems to say to us again : " Don't for- get us in the home-land! pray for us, and send us helpers." We return the salute. The heart sighs its sympathy and fellowship, and audil^ly we say, "God bless, keep and reward them!" We turn also a glance across to the other shore, to take in the row of a half-dozen houses of the Presbyterian Mission, and breathe a similar prayer. A few minutes later, as we rapidly move away, the shores vanish from our sight, while in memory, sympathetic and blessed, the scene remains indelible forever. DEACON SIAU T1I(J\(j. Canton and Macao. 87 CHAPTER XI. ($a9to9 ai^d (T\aeao. November 29. AGAIN we are aboard a great river boat, as large and fine as anything on tlie Hudson, and we are steaming up the river ninety miles to Canton. The glow of the tropical twilight reddens the whole western sky, and tints the far-spreading bay, and makes the mountains roseate, so that again we float as in a dreamland of beauty. A half-dozen passengers in the cabin and some hundreds of Chinese in the second cabin and steerage, fill the ship, and remind us where we are. A comfortable night is passed, and at 7 o'clock we arrive at the steamer's wharf in Canton, amid a sea of floating Chinese houses, including even floating hotels ; a peculiarity of Canton being that not less than 200,000 people live in boats on the river. These are the only homes these people ever know. There are 800,000 living in the city; but these live, rear their families, and ply their trades wholly in boats, — house-boats of all sizes and descriptions. Many of them are rowed by women and girls, often by a mother with a baby tied to her back. The woman stands up in the stern of the boat, and sculls with a long sweep, swaying to and fro — a motion which the baby seems to enjoy, often falling asleep under it. It is common to see a two-year- old child at the end of a cord by which it is tied for safety, straining over the edge of the boat to look into the water, or to watch the movements in the boat next door to it. As our steamer landed, Brother Simmons met us, and took us to the mission-house of our Southern Convention Board. Here we met Dr. R. H. Graves and wife and a pleasant circle of missionary sisters. Dr. Graves and Mr. Simmons are both veterans on the field, and thoroughly at home among the Chinese. Over 600 members have been gathered into the churches, planted in seven or eight stations. During the last year some seventy-five additions were won from among the heathen. Dr. Graves' method of training his converts and gathering from among them the more promising as evangelists and pastors, struck us as admirable. All new-made converts, as a rule, are brought in at intervals for several weeks of each year, and pass through a sort of testing process under Dr. Graves' hand. It is not strange that many a young David, one anointed of God, thus sought, is found among the sons of Jesse. The women's work is here also well handled under the skilled direction of Misses Whilden, Hartwell, McMinn and others. A fine lot of girls are being trained for all good things. Canton, Sunday, November 30. This morning we went to the native church here, a body of some 300 members. It was a refreshing sight to see the native pastor preaching with such earnestness and power. (Text i Thess. ii. 13.) A church meeting followed. A woman was received and baptized. This church ss Jn Brightest Asia. is self-supporting wlioUy ; in fact, supports two churches besides. The work of our Soutliern brethren here is flourishing. There are only three male missionaries. I have just been to their afternoon Sunday school, and given them a fifteen-minute talk, which Dr. Graves interpreted. Their eyes kindled as if it struck in. I am getting to like this speaking through an interpreter. I find the pauses between paragraphs give me time to pack in the tersest FLOATING HOUSES. things, and they some way go home. In a service of Mr. Herring's at Shanghai, I had spoken with considerable liberty on the power which Christ imparts to us when we welcome himself, and not a mere doctrine about him, into our hearts, and illustrated it pretty freely. Mr. Herring interpreted freely for me, and the eyes of my hearers were sparkling; but when Mr. Herring had finished, a coolie member of the church, in the back part of the room, not satisfied with the interpretation, arose, and, turning to his companion coolies, several of whom were about him, went all over the matter again, reinterpreting Mr. Herring's interpretation, and finally wound up sci:m-: near macao. 90 In Brightest Asia. by saying: " That's what he said, and it has warmed my heart and done me good, and I want it to do you good." Tiiis man was a member of the church, but for years has not been heard before to say a word in any of the meetings. He was a poor fellow, bare-footed, who earns his living by water-carrying at 7 cents a day. Thus one backslider was unearthed. It effected quite a sensation in the church. Yesterday we went to tiffin at the American consul's, by invitation. Hon. Charles Seymour of La Crosse, Wis., is the capable incumbent. He and his accomplished wife, who had heard me preach to the people of the foreign settlement the night before, gave us cordial welcome and genuine hospitalit}'. Dr. Happer of the Presbyterian Mission, a veteran in China, and Mr. Simmons were also invited. We were most agreeably entertained, and the consul gave us much light respecting treaty relations between our government and China. He has had good success in securing indemnities from the Chinese government in cases where mission properties have from time to time been destroyed by mobs. Jl7(? To/nti of /r\orrisoi7. Macao Harbor, 6 p.m. Well, we have put in a few hours in doing this quaint old Portuguese town (colonized by the Portuguese over 300 years ago), and are off by another steamer for Hongkong to-night. We here found the L's, just out from Minneapolis. Mrs. L. was in our late institute a pupil of mine. How little I anticipated such a meeting in China, on the day when this sister first called on me, desiring to enter my training class, to better prepare for her intended work. This is the third of my own pupils I am meeting on the mission-fields — one in Japan, one in China, and I trust one in Assam. They were delighted to see us, and they went with us to visit Morrison's grave, and the garden in memoriam of Camoens, the poet, who here wrote the " Lusiad." We also called on the McClovs, missionaries of the Southern Board. Dr. Morrison, his wife Mary, and his son J. R. all sleep in plain stone sarcophagi in one corner of a very prettily kept cemetery. It was an impressive thing to stand there for a few moments. What Carey was to India, Morrison was to China. It is eighty- two years since he landed in China. He translated the Scriptures and compiled a Chinese diction- ary, and for twenty-seven years pioneered everything good for China. He won perhaps a dozen converts, yet in the main he died without the sight for which his lofty spirit yearned. We trod rev- erently the ground about that tomb in the southeast corner of the walled cemetery. We plucked a leaf from the tree which droops over the square stone sarcophagus which contains the dust of one of the greatest of earth's victors, and breathed a deeper prayer for China's millions. The city is very picturesquely situated on hills, and many are the buildings which present a strik- ing semi-European appearance. There is a fine old ruin of a cathedral long since burned. The place is largely Catholic, of course, there being some 7,000 Portuguese living here. The blight on the place, however, is in the fact that it is the great gambling-place of the whole region, — the Baden-Baden of China, — people coming to it from Hongkong and elsewhere, both men and women, Europeans as well as natives, and spending Sundays gambling with desperation. Medical .Missioti IVor/c in i liina. 9^ CHAPTER XII. (T\edieal /ir\issioi7 uyorl^ (^l^ii^a. 5}?(? (?Iaim /T\ade for It. IS tlii.s a properly distinctive undertaking for Cliristian missions to engage in? Should \vc so highly regard the body and the treatment of its maladies? Can a mission force afford to become a hospital staft' ? Will it not be so cumbered and harassed by unfortunates of every description as to practically preclude the exercise of the higher spiritual functions? Is it not a confession of failure for Christianity to turn from humanity in its virility and vigor, and address itself so prominently to the invalided? Should we not aim to meet the heathen in their strength, and conquer them on the high places of the field ? Since coming to China, queries like these have forced themselves upon us. It is claimed by some that the real nature of Christianity renders works of mercy like these of fundamental importance for their own sake ; and, again, that it is an arrangement in the economy of grace that those who will attend to these primal wants and w-oes of men in Christ-like fashion, are sure to be honored by the Saviour of men in finding the way thus opened for a speedier and surer reception of the gospel. It must be confessed that our Lord thus wrought in His earthly ministry. He desired mercy rather than sacrifice, and He always won sacri- fice to His service in quarters where conviction was produced of the reality and depth of His mercy. When that chief of prophets, John the Baptist, amid his dire sorrows and persecutions, fell into a momentary fit of doubt, and sent to Jesus for reassurance of faith, Jesus replied : "Go your way, and tell John what things ye have seen and heard ; how that the blind see, the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, to the poor the gospel is preached." NESTORIAN TABLET. 92 In BrigJitcst Asia. Jesus indeed \vrouj;lU these merciful sii;ns l)y miracle ; but Chrislianit}' in the world is a standing miracle, and the healing art of modern science is one of the miracles of Christianity. The evangelical results already achieved in some successful missions have been reached through a large regard to the physical woes as well as to the spiritual needs of the people. These means have proved availing to awaken appreciation of the temper of missions, and to enable the natives to discriminate between their real friends and their enemies among foreigners. Mer- ciful healing ministries may then be regarded, and, in fact, are regarded, not of the nature of a lure, but of an authentication of something unselfish and divine. A prominent missionary put the whole thing in a nutshell when he said to us: " Hospital ministrations are a safe form of showing kindness to the Chinaman." The Chinaman in his native state is nothing if not avaricious. The novice, therefore, on coming as a missionary to China, needs to be put on his guard from the moment he reaches San Francisco to take the steamer, that any intended kindness to John in the way of moneyed gratuity is misdirected, and sure to awaken his self-interest rather than gratitude. Yet certainly he who would benefit people with the gospel must first establish a friendly relation, and especially among the heathen, where many well-war- ranted and deep-seated suspicions against foreigners have been planted. In the view of many who have tried it, the Christian hospital is one of the least objectionable methods that can be employed in China. j^ovu It U/orl^5. When a man has become an in-patient in a hospital (not a mere hanger-on of a dispensary), where probably he must lie in bed for several days or weeks, and while under treatment must observe unselfish, unpaid-for skilful attention from the Christian surgeon or nurse, he will begin to study about it. It is then his heart will melt and open. For the first time since he was born, he will realize what benevolence is. This sense is fundamental to any apprehension of the gospel. It is also index of a radical change in the man's estimate of the missionary as a representative of the gospel. The Christ-like has dawned on the heathen. Still further, when the patient shall have recovered and returned to his home, he will carry the report and spirit of the place where he has found healing. Again, as in Christ's time, the mercy shown becomes the authentication of a heavenly mission. Dr. Gillison of Hankow told us that he had often been thrilled with delight to observe the awakening of appreciation, and so of a man's moral sense, as if by miracle, as the result of some slight attention bestowed on a patient. It might be from only the tucking in of a man's foot exposed to a draught of air. He further testified that as the result of two operations for cataract on the eyes of two sisters from one household, a village was opened to the gospel, nearly a whole clan was converted, and a promising church organized. Connected with all the hospitals are gospel halls, in which services are daily held, which patients in waiting must attend before they have access to the consulting-rooms. Evangelists and Bible-women here render service in the wards for men and women respectively. On all the walls are hung handsome and striking texts of Scripture to greet the eye, and burn their way into the memories of the sufferers, who observe them for weeks together. Medical Mission Work in China. 93 Jt^i? pr(^ser7t Status. There are at present sixty-one hospitals and forty-four additional dispensaries in connection with our I'rotestant missions in China, and last year there were 350,000 patients. Of course none would claim that evangelical impressions were made upon so large a number. We have taken pains personally to inspect six of these institutions, located respectively at Shanghai, Nan- IIOSPITAL AT SWATOW. king, Hankow, Ningpo, Swatow, and Canton, and looked up the workings of as many more. We gleaned the following facts : — In the Margaret Williamson Hospital for women at Shanghai, there were 9,000 patients the first year it opened, and 27,000 prescriptions filled. At our own hospital at Ningpo, now in charge of Dr. Grant, founded by the untiring devotion of Dr. Barchet, who wore himself out in this service, it was a common thing to have 300 patients daily, and 10,000 in a single year. In the Presbyterian hospital at Swatow last year, in which there were 5,830 persons treated and 1,129 operations performed, the patients came from 1,780 towns and villages through four prefectures. 94 In Brightest As/a. For fifcv-six years the hospital in Canton has been i)ouring forth a stream of practical benevo- lence, the reflex benefit of which has been reaped by all denominations. Its Chinese name, translated, is " The Hospital of Broad and Free Beneficence," and the locality about it is known as "The Great Street of Benevolence and Rectitude." It was my privilege twice to preach there to English-speaking people. The present senior surgeon. Dr. J. G. Kerr, has been in service thirty- five years, in which time there have been over half a million patients and 25,000 operations. Besides all this. Dr. Kerr has found time to really lay the foundations of a medical college. For years he has had in training certain promising assistants, some thirty of whom have taken a full and systematic course and obtained certificates. One of these we saw lecturing to a class on anatomy, manipulating a manikin. Another, Dr. Soto-meng, stands unri- valled ill operations for cataract. Another is a spe- cialist in eutropium. Nor is this all. Dr. Kerr has prepared and published in Chinese a series of text books, embracing the subjects of physiology, hygi- ene, diagnosis, chemistry, materia medica and sur- gery, thus providing a basis for the development of medical science in the empire. The expense is relatively small. The necessary buildings are not costly. In most cases even these are the gifts of individual philanthropists. For ex- Li HUNG CHANG. ample, the fine large establishment of the Metho- dists, which I visited at Nanking, to my pleasant surprise, I found was the gift of former acquaintances at Oak Park, 111. This is known as " The Philander Smith Memorial Hospital." The family have established similar institutions in Japan, India and the United States. Could this family see what my eyes saw in and about that place in Nanking, — the thronged chapel, with out-patients in waiting; the earnest evangelist dispens- ing the Word ; the bright assistants and nurses, trophies of the work, now serving in the dis- pensary and wards, — and could they see the proofs I saw of the commanding influence which the beloved Dr. Robert Beebe, in charge, has gained over the city as a whole, they would rejoice deeply in their investment. We saw a dozen costly banners, the gifts of mandarins and wealthy Chinese citizens, which had been presented in token of their appreciation of so beneficent an institution. Similar tokens are to be seen in all Chinese hospitals. Several viceroys, includ- ing his excellency Li Hung Chang and his lady, are regular contributors to these institutions of mercy and good will. Patients usually provide their own beds and food ; the services of physicians, nurses and medicines being furnished gratuitously. At the most, the mission boards pay only the salary of Medical Mission Work in Cliina. 95 the medical missionary. The foreign residents in all the cities are accustomed to subscribe from $1,000 to $2,000 annually towards the expenses. They pay fees besides for personal services, as do the wealthy Chinese ; and, moreover, the Chinese people often subscribe to the support of the hospital, as in Svvatow last year, about $400 was given. I^esultrs. In many cases the soul-saving results are disappointing. In several hospitals, however, we heard mention of say twenty additions a year to the churches. It is a principle usually to receive none for baptism at the hospital itself. Patients are required first to go away to their homes, and prove, by a probation of consistent living, their real change. The testimony of missionaries is general, however, that in extended country tours of visitation of out-stations, it is a common thing to receive application for baptism from former hospital patients, or those influenced by them. Said Dr. John to the writer: " So highly do I value the mission hospital that, assuming that you have a thoroughly trained and truly consecrated man in charge of it, if I could have my way, I would have a hospital at every central station opened in China." From the beginning he has had a good hospital. His estimate may be too sanguine. The writer is concerned to know if some friend of the Missionary Union will not volunteer to put in a plant, costing say $10,000, at Sui-fu, Western China, our new station, where Upcraft and Warner are so heroically breaking ground. Such a provision would place Dr. Finch in a position, in a new district, to test the value of medical work as authenticating the gospel. 96 /// Brightest Asia. CHAPTER XIII. Equatorial flsia. Saigon, Cochin China, December 7. THIS is an important city of the French Col- ony in Cambodia. All steamers of the French line from Japan and China to Mar- seilles stop here for cargo and passengers. We arrived this morning, and are spending the day here ; not at all because it is Sunday, for evidently no such thing as a Christian Sunday is much recog- nized in these parts, even if sea-going vessels were able or disposed to observe the day. This place is not quite on the sea-coast, but up the Mekong River, perhaps thirty miles from the coast. The city, as to its buildings, has quite a European air, though very unlike the more English cities of Shanghai or Hongkong. The red tile roofs and the yellow stucco, which one sees so much in France, prevail here. The population is most mongrel. There are the French army and Custom House officials in white duck suits and white pith helmet hats ; there are numerous Chinese ; then there are the native Assamese, with occasional Siamese and Malays. Many wear the turban and a gay sort of skirt, with sometimes a bright brocaded wrap about the shoulders. The French officials and merchants use many of the blacker fellows for coachmen and servants generally. All day long they have been lolling about the shaded Bund along the steamer landing, or driv- ing up the pretty French carriages of their masters, who have come to call on the ships' officers, or join in the general interest attending the arrival of R(]Hatofial Asia. 97 one of their grand ships. Most of our passengers, 1 am sorry to say, have taken the cooler part of the day to take carriages and drive al)out to see the lions of the city ; mostly zoological gardens. We can hear of no kind of a Protestant .service anywhere. There is, however, a large Catholic cathedral here, and Catholic missions are pretty wide-spread in the province. However a miserable makeshift of a religion anywhere, it is e.specially abominable in heathendom, where it is not only tempted to compromise with heathenism and idolatry, but actually does it in the most open and monstrous manner. 5i9hake them off rather rudely at times to get rid of them. VICTORIA REGIA. Yesterday a half-dozen of them beset me from the street, push- ing their goods at me through the railing of the hotel veranda, where I sat drinking in the lovely tropical scenery and sniffing the sea breeze, which, though this is only a degree and a half from the equator, renders the climate here always the sarne and not very hot. The hotel clerk took pity on me, and rushed out of the office with a big squirt-gun filled with water, and gave the street venders a shower bath, much to my relief and their amusement. But it scattered them, and that sufficed. /1m<^ric;a9 /T\el:l?odist /T\issi09. I have found out some American Methodist Episcopal missionaries here, who have also a school of 400 Chinese boys (in English), and they have made me much at home, having me attend their semi-annual prize giving in the Town Hall, day before yesterday, at which the Governor presided, and also to dinner at the house of Mr. Munson, the principal, yesterday. There are several American teachers, and one from Prince Edward Island, a nephew of my friend Mr. D. of Charlottetown. There are many very wealthy Chinese here, and some of them liberally favor the missions, and place their sons in the school. They raised $6,000, half the price of the school grounds, and Jiijiialorial Asia. 99 presented it to the mission when they began, and they will do much more in the future. Many of them are millionnaires. Some of them have magnificent houses in European style, with spacious gardens and grounds, which all foreigners may inspect. 1 go to-morrow to .see one of them. Chinamen nowhere in the world are so prosperous or so liberal-minded as here. Much is due to the just and wisely administered colonial government, under which they like to live, and where they make so much money in trade. There are over 100,000 Chinese on this small island, and millions more of them in the whole Malaysian Archipelago. The hope of ultimately liberalizing and perhaps more rapidly Christianizing China proper is very large in this quarter, if Christian missions are worked as they ought to be hereabouts. /r\ol7arr\m<^dar7i5m. These Malays, a people much blacker than other Asiatics I liave seen, number in the whole archipelago 40,000,000, and they are (here, at least) all Mohammedans. Their mc'^ques begin to appear. Of course in China there are many Mohammedans, though not near the coast, where I have been. Arriving here, the traveller realizes that a transition begins. And now all across Asia, westward from Singapore to Morocco, the Arab Mussulman will everywhere be seen. They are the most difficult of all non-Christian people to reach. There is scarcely a Malay Christian in Singapore. The London Missionary Society, which began a work among them here many years ago, gave it up through discouragement. Every- body among Mohammedans, whether rich or poor, counts it the most important thing in the world to go to Mecca. There is one man here who is very rich. There are sixty acres in his grounds. He has his palace furnished in the costliest way imagi- nable. It is a museum of curios and rare treasures. He has plate of solid gold, many of the vessels being heavier than one could lift. moham.medax mosque. Being apolygamist (as they all are), he has also houses and families in half a dozen countries, including India, Arabia and Turkey. On the day after Christmas he is to start from here on another pilgrimage to Mecca. He is to ItX) Jii IhightiSt Asia. charter a German Lloyd steamer, and take 130 friends with him. What do you think of that lor church going? If a man will do such tilings lor a religion of superstition and sensuality, what should we not do for Christ's sake? Multitudes of these people have also heard much of the gospel, so that they cannot plead ignorance; but they hate the gospel, the Bible, the very Christian name, and everything that rebukes their follies and sins. I have tried to converse with several .Mohammedans, but their aversion to Christianity is something incred- ible to one who has not tested it. They say, " The Koran is a very good book, and Alohammed is the great prophet.'' The time will surely come when this power will be overthrown. Nothing but the spirit and power of God, however, is equal to it. At present the Chinese are much more easily reached than the Mohammedans. To-morrow I expect to be on my way by the British India steam- ship " Puteali " to Rangoon, a five days' sail. Mr. Munson is going with me, and on to Calcutta, taking along one of his Chinese boys. The boy's father is wealthy, and is sending him out to see a little of the world. One of these eleven-year-old lads in the school lately inherited ;J6o,ooo. For all that, he still wears a pig-tail and yellow breeches as big as flour sacks. When he marched up to make his speech in behalf of the school to the governor at the prize giving, the other day, I noiiced, however, that he had on a new unblacked pair of English shoes, which resounded through the hall like strokes of Thor's hammer, as he proudly walked. The speech, however, ■was in capital English, and showed decided talents. The Chinaman moves as well as other celestial bodies, especially in Singapore. This morning I have promised to go with Air. Kinsett, of the Methodist Episcopal Mission, SINEN, THE SU.M.\TR.\N TIGER KILLER. Equatorial Asia. loi to attend liis liible class of Cliinese yoiiii^r men and talk to them a little. There is a line young Siamese liaron, also a Christian, among them. I expect a good time. A I'LAXTATK )N'. How I wish I could toss you and R. a bunch of bananas or mangos, or a lot of pineapples! They grow everywhere here. Bananas are worth only a cent a dozen. Wouldn't you feast on 1(32 In SrigJitcst Asia. tliein if thcv were only that price at home? In a few days it will be Christmas. How different this tropical December weather from that in your frozen North I Well, I send you all wishes for the merriest sort of a time. S. S. " Puteali," Penanc. Harbor, December 17. This morning found us in the harbor at Penang, 396 miles up the Straits of Malacca, north of Singapore. The place is an English settlement on a mountainous island, the island being only about fifteen miles long by twelve wide. The city may number perhaps 60,000 people, a couple of thousand being European. The balance are native Malays, Klings or Madras immigrants- — who have come into the whole peninsula by thousands — and Chinese, the latter being, as usual, the most thrifty, pushing and wealthy of all. Many of these latter live like princes on fine estates. We went ashore for several hours, and took a drive five miles out to the waterfall, which also forms a small but lofty cascade running some hundreds of feet down the mountain-side. The drive was through the most thorough tropical scenery, embracing every variety of tree, shrub and foliage. The cocoanut palm espe- cially abounds. There are miles of these orchards cultivated by planters, and looking up you can see great clusters of the ripening fruit hanging among the fronds. The commissioner of the public garden told us there were 4,000,000 fruit-bearing palms on the island alone ; and across the strait in Wellesley Province, opposite, there are vast estates, producing not only cocoanuts, but sugar-cane, nutmegs, coffee, cloves, and other spices without limit. Pineapples, bananas, pomelos, mangos, mangosteens, etc., abound. Mr. Munson took me with him to call on the Bible Society colporter, Mr. Castells, a Spanish Methodist Episcopal brother ; and who again should I find but another of Dr. Guinness' students, a friend of Upcraffs, and his young wife, just out to become married to him only two months ago, also a student for three years in Doric Lodge, and knowing well many of our English friends. They seemed pleased to see me, having read of me in Regions Beyond. Castells spoke partic- ularly of his appreciation of my article on "Methods in Theological Education." He came out on the same steamer as far as Singapore with Miss Guinness. He then went for a while to the Philippine Islands. That being a Spanish colony and intensely Roman Catholic, he was arrested, imprisoned, and at last wholly driven out, and so was transferred to Penang. His companion, an old Spanish ex-priest, died in the islands, it is supposed from some foul play. Castells is a choice fellow, and doing a good work in Penang. A JAVAX BOY. H(]ualoric(l Asia. 103 Nearin'^ Burma. ' JJccembcr 19. To-Q«y we are lazily steaming along the Burman coast. We are not far from the latitude in which Jiiason was buried. We must now be about opposite Tavoy. The sea is like a mill pond for smoothness. All the morning we have been watching the flying fish, and more especially a vast shoal of some sort of larger fish, a mile away to our westward, which, from their antics, kept the sea in a boil along a stretch nearly ten miles in length. It was tremendous. (This is my biggest flsh story yet.) I contess to some impatience to get to Burma. I am much later than I hoped to be. Then the interest of the place is great, and the sentiment clustering about my thoughts of the historic spots is here at the maximum. We are aboard of a poor sort of a steamer of the British India Line. Tlie cooking is abominable, especially in the second class, which I am taking on this trip to Calcutta, as I save thereby ^30 to the Union. Besides, I think 1 ought to test the matter for myself, and sec whether mis- sionaries should really be encouraged to do this thing to save expense. My experi- ence thus far is not reassuring in that direction, for which Messrs. Carpenter, Hudson Taylor and others plead. But 1 am resolved to be fortified on the point ; at least, from actual experience of my own, when it is not too try- ing for health. When the seas are smooth, it is tolerable. The company is the most trying at times. At our table sit with us a German with a Burman ^ PAGODA.S AT MAULMEIX. Xn Brightest Asia. wife, a natives forward Kurasian, four Chinese, three .Vmericans, and a Scotchman. Our cooks and waiters are of India, exceedingly untidy, — Mohammedans, — and most of our passengers in the part of the ship, as well as all the crew, are likewise Mohammedans. Several of them have copies of the Koran in the Arabic, and frequently through the day they read aloud as orientals always read, in a monotonous and ear-distressing sing-song way. They are a dirty lot, and clad in old rags of garments, and meagre at that. Such are Asia, however, and the fruits of heathenism. Ur^di^r tl^e Soutl?err> r/o/itcst Asia. family, and I think as regards the Christian world at large. The thought that, God willing, in four short hours, I shall look upon Rangoon itself in the Sabbath light (for this is the Lord's day morning), and greet face to face on the spot some even of the veterans and associates of the Judsons, such as Mrs. Bennett, the Braytons and Mrs. Stevens, to say nothing of other heroes of a younger generation, fills me with awe and gratitude. I am to be permitted, if only for a little, to identify my person, my words, my prayers, my personal testimony, and my whole heart and life with the profound verities of this world-saving, heathen-dethroning movement of the ages. The moment when my feet shall press Burma's soil will be a lofty, thrilling and grateful moment to me. To engage this very day, as I hope to do, in the solemn services of God's house with native Karen and Burman believers in yonder city, beneath the very shadow of the departing memorials of heathenism, will not that be a feast to the soul of no common sort? My heart leaps in anticipa- tion of the high festival ! We are now ascending the Rangoon River. In the distance, six or eight miles away, we catch a glimpse of the highest and most prominent object in the flat landscape ; viz., the gilded pinnacle, with its h'tee, which crowns the Shwey Dagon Pagoda, emblem everywhere of heathen- ism, relic, doubtless, of the old Babel building, ever rearing itself in our sin-blighted world, and ever also, thank God, falling into ruins. On Ihtrnian Soil. CHArT]:R XIV. Ovj Bdjrmar^ Soil. 9 I'.M. VE landed at about 10.30 a..m. I was met by Mr. Miller of the Press, and driven to the home of Dr. Rose at Kemendine, a suburb of Rangoon, where I was most cordially received by the Roses and dear old Father Brayton, eighty-two years of age. Grandma Brayton, alas ! to my deep disappointment, entered into rest last week, and was buried on Wednesday. She was a rare and saintly missionary, and passed away triumphantly. Thus sleeps in Burma's soil the dust of another of the martyr throng devoted to Burma's redemption. After tiffin I went with Father Brayton, yet hale and vigorous after his fifty-three years of Bur- man toil, to the communion service for a group of Pwo Karen disciples in a chapel near by. It was touching to see and hear the ripe old patriarch, smiling and sunny through his tears, and despite his loneliness from his so recent bereavement, discoursing to the bright-faced company of natives, who sympathize with him so deeply, on "Jesus as the Resurrection and the Life." I partook of my first communion feast with these redeemed Karens. At the close, all gathered to shake hands with me. This afternoon Than Byah, a former student in America, came to call on me. He was so pleased to see me after twenty-three years. He and Brother S. spent a fortnight with me on the old Illinois farm during one of my college vacations. This evening I went to the Rangoon English church, to which Brother Whitman has just come to be pastor, and was thrust in to speak. 1 found a houseful. It seemed like America, with the fine large church, the nice looking people, — English, American and Eurasian, with occasional Karens, — the organ, chorus choir and all. I did not preach, but spoke familiarly of my errand, my observations in Japan and China, my pleasure at being in Burma, and the conditions of increased power all along the line. It is difficult to realize that I am really in this historic land. To-night I met young Professor Gilmore, at whose examination in Boston I was present in July. He comes from the West, and I from the East, having between us belted the globe. December 25. In Rangoon I am the guest chiefly of Dr. Rose, our capable and senior male missionary to the Burmans. His assiduous attentions, facilitating my various excursions through the country, lay me under much obligation. A most delightful reception, in behalf of all the missionaries, planned by the Roses, was given me at their house last evening. I was by no means a stranger there ; most of those present were old friends. To-day I proceeded to Maulmein. On Jiiirmaii Soil. l/isit to /T\aulmeir7. I counted myself favored on this trip in having as my companion one of the real veterans in Burma, viz., Father Brayton. The dear man had only the previous Wednesday laid away all that was mortal of his beloved wife and companion in labors among the heathen for fifty-three years. Trying had been the ordeal, but God's grace had not failed. Full of praises to the good- ness of the hand which so long had led him, out of a full and fresh memory of the beginnings of our work in this land, he vividly retraced for me the stages of its progress, and tenderly painted the personages which had prominently figured in it. We took passage in the day steamer from Rangoon, which makes the run in about ten hours. These sped all too quickly, occupied, as they were, with reminiscences of the arrival on these shores of the fathers in the cause. Our Glasgow-built steamer, coursing over the gulf of Martaban that day, seemed to live again with the presence of the devoted dead, as this one of the few contemporaries of Judson yet living in Burma, brought up before us the scenes which he had shared with Judson in village, zayat and jungle. About 2 P.M. the long, low shore line of the Amherst district began to appear away to the eastward on our right. On yonder shore, just hard by the pagoda dimly seen rising from the rocks, rest the ashes of Ann Hasseltine Judson. We are disappointed not to be able to land ; but the steamers do not now call here, so we must go on up the broad Salwen River twenty-five miles farther to Maulmein, and trust to some later opportunity to visit the hallowed spot. On we steam ; the mountains which rise loftily from behind and about Maulmein now begin to loom up to the north and westward ; now great rice and lumber mills appear, with huge elephants handling teak logs and piling lumber in the yards along the river banks. The majestic cocoa palms adorn the slopes. Mammoth pagodas — some gray or green with age, some flashing golden and regal in the westering sunlight — crown all the heights. On graceful undulating hillsides and terraces, amid gardens luxuriant with the tropical shrubs and foliage of this ever-green land, stand monasteries, mosques, government buildings, and houses — European and Burman, in endless variety. But amid and within the fascinating city, by no means large or populous, I discern what to me is of far more interest than them all ; viz., the old Judson compound — the cradle of American Baptist missions, the spot on which the Burman Bible was translated and printed, and whence were written those letters, recording trials, disci- plines and high ideals for the heathen, which have thrilled the church with a power scarcely less than that of the epistles of St. Paul. We are to visit that spot. Our blood leaps high with the enthusiasm of the hour. Maulmein is before us, beautiful, picturesque, historic and hallowed. Our vessel draws up to her moorings. The docks are crowded with such a motley group of living creatures, — red-skirted Burmans, white-turbaned Tamils, Telugus and Klings from India, the ever-pushing, migrating, pig-tailed Chinaman, ths shy, wild Shan, the Talign, the Arab and the Sikh. Pressing through the clamorous crowd, we now discern the figures of our two missiona- ries, Brethren Stevens and Armstrong, coming to take us off. I lO Jn Brightest Asia. We are no sooner seated in the gharry (or pony cab) wliich is to drive us to Hrotlier Stevens' house, than an old and wrinkled Burman woman draws near, and is introduced by Brother Stevens as one of the few living believers who were baptized by Dr. Judson. With an eagerness of interest for which we were unprepared, she thrust her withered hand through the gharry window ; her moistened eye-lashes told of the feeling that ran deeply in her heart. She could DR. JUDSOX'S CHAPEL. speak not a word of English, but we understood her. The chasm between foreign and home, between past and present, was that moment obliterated. We were face to f-ice, hand in hand, eye to eye, and heart to heart, America and Burma, Judson's time and ours, in hand-clasp, in heart-union before the Lord. The Missionary Union in its representative was greeting one of its most distantly won trophies to the praise of our Lord's wondrous grace, on shores consecrated forevermore by the life and death of its first missionary. Oh Jiiiniian Soil. 1 1 I We had not been a half-hour in Mauhnein wlien, with Brother Stevens for guide, we had been shown over the old Judson and the Bennett compounds, where stands what is left (now enlarged into a building for a Burman boys' school) of the old lirst mission press, the Stevens comijound, the Buardman place, and the premises of both the Burman and the English-speaking, semi- Eurasian church. Where the original Judson house once was, there is now only the green sward, with four fran<4ipanni trees standing one at each corner of the place. One at least of these trees was planted by Judson's own hand. The fragrant blossoms loaded the early evening air with P\V 1813, and there commenced those Missionary Toils, which she sustained with such Christian fortitude, decision and perseverance amid scenes of civil commotion and personal affliction, as won for her universal respect and affection. She died at Amherst Oct. 24, 1826. With no common interest did we here stand uncovered and read these words. In fellowship with the sufferings, both of the heroine who here sleeps and of the devoted husband who, return- ing from Ava, amid such disappointment, found his beloved wife, with her babe, buried from his sight forever, we lifted up voices of thanksgiving for such fortitude, and of prayer for the perpetu- ation of the sanctifying influence of such martyrs to world-wide evangelization. We plucked a few sprays from the shrubs which here ever spring green and fragrant, and turned away girded with fresh devotion to this holy cause.* The town of Amherst is a mere village of no commercial importance at all. We have here a little church. Among the members who gathered at the old Haswell house to greet us while we breakfasted, preparatory to our immediate return to Maulmein, was another old believer, Koo Lake by name, eighty-two years of age, baptized by Dr. Judson. Our kind hostess was Ma-Theh- Oo, who spent three years in America with Miss Haswell, now the wife of a worthy teacher in the old school at Amherst. Returning early to Maulmein, we made rapid survey of all features and departments of our work. We met in the evening the members of the Burman church, about 200 strong ; attended * Since my visit to Amherst, on account of the encroachment of the sea, the grave has been removed to a spot many yards distant from the shore, and by the generosity of the Woman's Foreign Mission Society of Boston a neat iron fence has been erected around the new grave. These arrangements were carried out under the superintendence of Rev. W. F. Armstrong of Maulmein. 114 Jn Brightest Asia. the English-speaking prayer meeting ; were welcomed at a large social gathering given by Mr. and Mrs. Stuart, and were delighted to greet, among others, our old friend and brother, Dr. Shaw Loo, whom we had met in America in his student-days. We hear accounts of his extended usefulness in the pursuit of his profession. He superintends also the large Burman Sunday school. Two days only could we devote to Maulmein, but they were high days of feasting along the line of some of the loftiest sentiments which from early childhood have grown strong within us. LANIJI.NG ON' THE IKKAWADIJV. Jl7<^ Basseir^ /T\issior7. What Maulmein and Rangoon have long been to work among the Burmans, that Bassein is to work among the Karens. Many early triumphs were won here. At all events, the fruits of those triumphs under the labors of Abbot, Beecher, Carpenter and others are clustered here. There are more than 8,000 Sgau Karen communicants connected with our churches in the Bassein On Bill man ^oil. "5 district. Besides these, there are some 4,000 I'vvo Karen communicants. Other important stations like Sandoway in Arracan and lieii/.ada exist, which for lack of time we were regretfully unable to visit. What is to be seen at lUsseiii will suffice for a sample of the maturer results of work for the Karens. Our trip was a twenty-four hours' sail by Irrawaddy steamer through various branches and creeks which compose the vast delta of the great river of Burma. The country is entirely flat, largely given 10 rice cultivation, although in some parts u is a densely wooded jungle. The banks of all the streams are of black mud, alon;^ which we see at intervals, sprawling in the sun, immense alligators, which at the blowing of our steam whistle or the report of a rifle, lumber- ingly wriggle off into the water. Two or three of our brother missionaries have joined us on the trip, to make the most of our time for a visit ; and the good-natured, easy-going Bishop Strahan of Rangoon is also of our company. I arrived at Bassein in the late afternoon, just before sunset. The prospect that lay before us was very winning. The tropical luxuriance of vegetation was something to remember ; the gilded pagodas were flashing splendid in the sunlight, and the throng of gaily decked natives On Jyurinan Soil. 117 about the wharves made a scene truly characteristic. As we disembarked and passed over the wharf to the long avenue which led u]) from the landing, our attention was directed to two com- panies of Karen young people grouped on each side of the avenue under the friendly palms. The one was a company of girls, and the other a company of young men from the schools, come out to meet us. A moment later, and lirother Nichols, with his black pony and American buggy, came driving down the avenue. He took us in, and we were driven up to the mission compound, a mile away, escorted by the smiling band of young people. On the way we pas.sed the Burman mission-house and the headquarters of the Pwo Karen interest, consisting of two fine com- pounds with boys' and girls' schools, under the general direction of Brother L. W. Cronkhite, assisted by several ladies of the Woman's Board. Here we greeted former acquaintances in the BASSEIN CHORAL SOCIKTV. West, Miss Higby and Miss Tschirch. We also passed the Burman chapel and compound, now, unhappily, without a missionary occupant, formerly occupied by the Jamesons. Grouped on the Sgau Karen compound, on high ground, are the mission-house built by the late Rev. J. S. Beecher (a brother-in-law of the writer), the Ko-Thah-Byu Memorial Hall, the girls' school, a hospital, and half a dozen boarding-cottages for students. It was an attractive prospect, and showed evidences of thrift and good management on every hand. There was a pleasant sense of being at home as we were ushered into the rooms in the mis- sion-house, for years occupied by those closely bound to us by family ties. We found the Beech- ers were warmly remembered by multitudes of the people, including teachers and preachers of two generations. Mr. Beecher came to this field in 1846, making his first voyage to Burma in company with Dr. Judson, who then made his last. Mr. Beecher labored here for nineteen years. iiS In Brightest Asia. He rests from his labors in Plymouth, England, our two days' DA BUH. His practical stamp is on miuy of the workers, and his works do follow him. There were three notable gatherings of all branches of the mission durin; sojurn. Two of these were in the Ko-Thah-Byu Memorial Hall, on which occasions we had the pleasure of addressing three or four hundred of the Karens, mostly pupils in the schools. The third occasion was at the dedication of the new Pwo girls' school building. It was a spectacle to see these assemblages of bright, intelligent youth, trophies of gospel influence. Their appearance was very picturesque, in their pink turbans, white jackets, and bright colored skirts, and how they did sing! A choir of about fifty of them treated us to a concert, rendering some of the finest choruses from classic composers as Abt, Mendelssohn, etc., with English words, which truly astonished us. That same choral society was practicing on the " Messiah" by Handel, expecting soon to give it before the Chief Com- missioner of Burma and the elite of Rangoon, as they had previously rendered other compositions in elaborate concerts. Besides this, the young men have a brass band, using a score or so of instruments. Dressed in their European uniforms, they presented a fine appearance, and discoursed sweet strains for us during part of one afternoon. Nothing moved me more than the dozen or more veteran preachers who had come in from various parts of the jungle to present their salutations. Among them was one old man of tall figure and large brain, Myat-Keh by name, ninety years of age. He was one of the early converts. I think he was a survivor of one of those companies of Karens who in the early days came in over the Arakan hills by midnight, for fear of their Burman oppressors by day, to hear the gospel at Abbot's elo- quent lips and to receive baptism. At the close of my address on the second evening, Myat-Keh was called out in response, and spoke most fervently, the address being interpreted for me into English. Other interesting characters PADDY BIX. On lim vian Soil. "9 were introduced to me, such as \ ah-ha and Myah-sa, doing valuable work in the schools. Then there was Da- Hull, the well-to-do and devoted deacon who is so eager an evangelist to the Karen people that he sends out, froni time to time, at his own expense, evangelizing expeditions to distant tribes, as in Northern Siam, with the gospel tidings. Another special feature of the work at Bassein which impressed us was the industrial enter- prise in the form of a large lumber mill, on the bank of the river, which the Karens have purchased and are successfully operating. There were gang saws at work cutting teak timber; " Diston girls' school. saws" from Philadelphia; " Rogers' planers " were in operation; sash and doors were making. All of this was entirely carried on by the Karens. There was a Karen superintendent, a Karen book-keeper, and a Karen in charge of the engine ; and down at the landing another Karen engineer and a pilot, to manage Brother Nichols' steam launch as he goes up and down the rivers touring among the jungle churches. The Karens have also an artificial ice-making establishment ; they have their own rice mills ; they have an extensive printing-establishment; they make their own hymn books, etc. Self- support has reached a high state of development in the Bassein Mission, as all the world knows 1 20 In Brightest Asia. through Mr. Carpenter's writings. Missions like this are anything but a failure. The Missionary Union, moreover, is most fortunate in the present able management of the Bassein work under Messrs. Nichols and Cronkhite. They have been thus fortunate on this field from the beginning. Here, surely, if anywhere on Asiatic mission-fields, is a miracle of missionary success. On the return to Rangoon, we had a bare glimpse of Maubin by lamplight and at midnight ; of the external features of the admirable work for Pwo Karens at Maubin, under the conduct of Mr. and Mrs. Bushell, assisted by Miss Putnam. The captain detained the steamer for an hour in the night watches, to allow us this brief call. At Waukema, also en route, the steamer lay to for an hour, while we visited the mission-house lately vacated by the devoted Jamesons. Here we saw the Sunday school in session, and met several capable native workers. When the children were asked if they would like to send greetings to the American children on the other side of the world, they were silent; but when asked if they " knew Teacher Jameson," and would like to send their love to him, they all promptly sprang to their feet. Alas ! that so often in stations like this, when the worn-out missionary is compelled to go home to recruit, there is no one prepared to take his place, and so for years the work languishes or devouring wolves come in and spoil the flock. Jl^e BurmaQ Jl^^te I^ailu;ay. When Judson visited Ava from Rangoon, in 1S24, he was six tedious weeks in making the up-river voyage of 350 miles by native boat. We made the trip, taking the liurman State Railway, in twenty-two hours. The Burma of to-day, as a well-regulated British province, is anything but the Burma of 1824. You board the train at Ran- goon, and roll out of a modern sta- tion having all the appearance and convenience of a western railway centre ; and from thence, on to Mandalay, you pass through numerous station towns attended with all the bustle and business that characterize a trunk line in the western states of On Ihirvian Soil. 121 America. Many new and flourishing towns, like Yemethen and I'unmana, arc springing up, wliich give promise of new enterprises, and involve the shifting of population from old centres, precisely as a railway line in Dakota or Kansas reconstructs the life of a piece of American territory. Modern enterprise is by no means confined to the Occident. The Orient is pulsating also with the world-thrill of human and divine action. ISurman plains, mountains and jungles, as really as American pampas, are being populated by restless peoples who, from China, India and other over- peopled regions, seek the virgin tracts which, in Burma, are being reclaimed from wild beasts and wilder jungle wastes. The Burman railway, for the whole 350 miles, runs through a compara- tively level region. In the southern part you pass through a vast stretch of rice-fields, that in appearance are much like the old-time stubble-fields of Illinois when it was a wheat-grow- ing state. In the northern part, the lands are less fertile, often alkaline, resembling Nebraska plains, except that occasional palms and groves of scrubby timber spring up through the dry and sunburned landscape. Away to the eastward, paralleling the line of railway, a lofty range of evergreen mountains stretches the whole distance. To the westward, may be seen lower undulating slopes and elevations, beyond which flows the turbid Irrawaddy. During the last seventy-five miles of the journey Hearing Mandalay, we approach close to the eastern hills. We meet with more abundant water supply and with increased beauty of hill scenery. We discern also, alas ! as in all heathen countries, the multiplied emblems of idolatry. Pagodas crown all the hilltops, frequently the very hillocks and even isolated rocks, sometimes a score in a group. In some cases a hundred or so are clustered picturesquely within a diameter of a mile. We are reminded by these thronging emblems that we are nearing the very seat of Buddhism in Burma for nearly 900 years, as well as the historic seat of Burma's idolatrous royalty, established successively by various proud monarchs at Amarapoora, then at Ava, LIFE OUT OF DEATH. 133 Jii Brightest Asia. :uicl lin;ill\- at Mandalay, where Thibaw recently surrendered almost without a show of resistance. These three cities (only the ruins of the two former remaining to be seen) are all situated within a diameter of about ten miles. As our train rolls on, we find ourselves moving through extensive ruins of the environs of Amarapoora. Now we dash through the remains of an ancient wall made of bricks, some thirty feet in thickness and twenty feet in height. Ruins of temples, monuments and monasteries are strewn on every hand. There stands a Buddha cleft clean down the back by the stroke of time : and the lofty zayat, which has long sheltered it, looks as if the next train that thundered past would topple it over. " O shade of Ah rah-han (the first Buddhist apostle of Burma) ! weep over thy falling fanes ! retire from the scenes of thy past greatness ! But thou smilest at my feeble voice. Linger there thy little remaining day. A voice mightier than mine, a still small voice, will ere long sweep away every vestige of thy dominion. The churches of Jesus will soon supplant these idolatrous monuments, and the chanting of the devotees of Buddha will die away before the Christian hymn of praise." Tlius exclaimed Judson, as in 1824 he sur- veyed the 999 pagodas of Pagan, not far from this same region. Thus we say to-day, with the multiplied tokens of God's breath of indignation scattering to the plains the dust of these crumb- ling piles. /T\a9dalay. Arrived at the station in Mandalay, Brethren Kelly and Sutherland met us, and we were soon resting on the broad veranda of Brother Kelly's mission-house. Dr. Packer of Meiktila had joined us on the way ; and some eight or ten other missionaries from the vicinity, including two ladies from Maulmein, on a visit, soon gathered, and in the evening we had a conference, clos- MANDALAY. ing with much fervent prayer for God's special blessing on this new, yet old, centre of work in Upper Burma. There are five bases of operation for work among Burmans in and near Man- dalay : Mr. Kelly's mission compound, including a girls' school ; the Judson Memorial Church compound, including the fine new brick church ; a teak school building and a new brick school building just rising; the new mission-house, within the walls of the city proper, occupied by Mrs. Hancock ; the day school building, in a thronged quarter of the city, and the fine compound occu- pied by Mr. and Mrs. Sutherland, at Sagaing, sixteen miles down the river. On JJurman Soil. 123 Mandalay, wilh its population of 200,000, is strategically the most important centre, if we seek Ikirman conversion in the whole empire. Judson know it from the bej^inning. An awful chasm had to be crossed to reach it, — broader than even he knew, — but we have reached it at last, thanks to God\s providence, painful and slow though it has been, and right ably is it being occupied, as respects the character of the devoted men and women now in possession. /^ua, tl?e CioldeQ. The morning of our second day in this region we devoted to a trip down the river by steamer to Sagaing and old Ava, "the golden." Sagaing is now the principal town, the resi- dence of a deputy commissioner, and an important railway station on a new line. It is beautiful for situation, occupying a dense grove of tamarind trees, and surrounded by lofty promontories, crowned with pagodas and kyoungs of myriad numbers and forms — the creations of past dynasties, which would fain pile up merit through these artistic accumulations of whitewashed bricks, with gilded h'tees tinkling with bells by the thousand. What was once Ava lies directly opposite Sagaing. The Irrawaddy is here three fourths of a mile wide. A dismantled wall skirts the bluff above the river-bed for miles. When Mandalay was built, the capital of the former monarch was destroyed ; and so the city which Judson saw formally occupied with so much pageantry and circumstance that he declared it " far surpassed anything he had ever seen or imagined," is now, and long has been, not only wholly a ruin, but the very grounds on which the city stood have become a jungle of tangled tropical shrubbery and vines. A few squatter villages are sprinkled through the place. There are ruins of a few monasteries and pagodas; while of the splendid new palace of Judson's time, only the tall, square-built bell tower remains, and that is leaning to a speedy fall. It is picturesquely covered with vines. The belfry, whence the Judsons heard strike the dismal hours of their long-drawn agony, is now the home of bats and lizards. The place is death-struck, and one cannot resist the impression that the woe of God overtook the place; while, as a sturdy old Burman said, at 1--} In Brightest Asia. our farewell meeting in Rangoon, " The region near where Judsou suftered, has been made an honorable ])lace to Judson"s renown, by the erection of the Memorial Chapel." A worthy ]5urman pastor, who knew the site of the old " Death Prison," was our guide to the BELL TOWER OF AVA. spot. It was nearly two miles from where the Judsons lived, about a quarter of a mile from the palace tower. There is only a heap of rubbish, amid which we found a little white marble elephant, symbol of departed royalty, to mark the spot. Two stately trees overshadow it. On Jhirman Soil. 125 Beneath their shade, our party gathered, sang "Jesus shall reign where'er the sun," and then Dr. Packer led us in prayer for a new baptism of power on all workers for Burma. The native pastor followed in a pathetic petition for the same blessing. We refreshed ourselves from our lunch baskets, chatted with the poor straggling natives, who curiously hung about us, climbed the cnmibling steps to a great shrine which once overlooked the prison, but which now is rotten with age and neglect, and came away in good mood for the reception given us by the native church, at the Memorial Chapel compound, in the afternoon and evening. SITE OF THE DEATH PRISON' Judjop /T\emorial C^l^apel. Delightful as all these meetings with the Karen and Burman Christians have been, none came nearer to our hearts than this one. First, we were served to tea ; then we were introduced to a score or so of veteran pastors and teachers, including one old, blind deacon, a disciple of Kincaid. 126 In Brightest Asia. Then came a detachment of eighty uniformed ivaren policemen, all Christians, in the employ of the government. There is a battalion of these, 400 strong. Then the hand-shaking began. We adjourned from the schoolroom to the chapel, and after Scripture, hymns and prayer, we addressed them. Brother Kelly interpreted. It must have been with rare skill and with a full heart ; it surely was magnetic upon both speaker and audience. The episode of the morning had brought to us almost the companionship and spiritual presences of the mighty sufferers of Ava and Oung-pen-la. We began with allusions to the high interest of the locality, then passed on JUDSON MEMORIAL CHURCH. to the power of the cross principle, and the need of it in all our work. The Spirit honored it. It was evident to all, as we sat there in the twilight, — to the Karens who sat tearful on the right, to the Burmans whose flashing eyes responded on the left, to the dear missionaries who yearned and sympathized in front, — that God was near. It was suggested that we close with a prayer and consecration meeting in front of the pulpit. Scores, both of Karens and Burmans, pressed for- ward. For a half-hour prayer flowed, all of us on bended knees, especially that new power might be poured on all for Burman evangelization. It was a melting time. It was good to be there. One Karen youth pressed forward at the close to say, with moistened eyes, that he "meant to be On liitrman Soil. 127 faithful unto dcatli." Several I'ui- man young women lestitied to marked blessing received. God give it permanence and power, that we may begin to see among Burmans what we have long seen among Karens ! OuQc^-peQ-la. DEDICATION DAY AT MEMORIAL CHURCH. The next morning, a party of a dozen of us, including several of the Burmans whose hearts had been so warmed the evening before, drove to Oung-pen-la, distant from Man- dalay four miles. The present place is a squalid Lttle village of perhaps thirty houses. The site of the old prison is a vacant lot, hard by a little kyoung and another decaying pagoda. The paddy bins, the quaint old ox carts with plank wheels and wooden axles, precisely like those Mrs. Judson describes as used by her in the rides to and from Amarapoora across the dry, hot plain, were there to be seen. We recalled the pathetic scenes and experiences which her graphic pen describes. We thanked God that those sufferings long ago were ended, and for their awakening effect on the American church, and for the pros- pect Brother Kelly says there is, that on this very mission ground a Baptist Christian chapel may soon be built. Again, under the shade of the neighboring trees, we gathered for a little prayer and praise meeting, some engaging in English and some in Burman, the groups of village children and others lingering near with wondering eyes. For them also we prayed, and for their descend- ants to latest time, that they might know Him for whose sake the early sufferers on , this spot lived and died. Jn Jh-irio/iicst Asia. we hear the " tunk-a-tunk " of an clepliant bell, and a few minutes later, issuing from the copse that overhangs a dry ravine, a great " Jumbo " appears, packed and girded, with a Karen on his neck, a group of half a dozen others following. This company proves to be one of our village pastors, with several other delegates, on their way, likewise to the association. There in the wilderness the introductions with the hand-shakings began, and for four days they went on with scarcely any cessation. The Karens we found to be great hand-shakers. This new company \m l^M^^^^^X^^I^ ""^^^ became our guides to the village, two hours farther on, \l i \v^\ ^^'l^ei'e we were to encamp for the night. On they led us, through tangled ways, around shoulders of the cliff's, down through ravines, across rice-fields, under overhanging bamboo groves, till at length, just at dusk, we arrived at the entrance to a village, situated in a most secluded retreat. If seems we had been expected. What preparations they had \ made for us ! By what system of telegraphy I know not, but j somehow, from the moment Dr. Bunker sent out the word that we were to come, the whole jungle, through a wide district, dotted by half a hundred villages, became Lware of it, and Karendom was at our service and on the watch towers for our humble coming. At this village of r ur right halt, apparently men had been at work for days preparing for our arrival and comfort. They had constructed booths and booths ; two large ones, with floors well elevated above ground, with roofs, and walls at the sides, and even steps, with a hand-rail for safe ascent. On the floors of ihese booths, all of split and woven bamboo, everything constructed without nails, we were to pitch our tents and spread our beds. A cooking-booth was also prepared, and a neat and ingenious woven bamboo table. Wood had been gath- ered for our fires, and water Drought in bamboo buckets for our- selves and our beasts. Without a match or a flint, the Karens lighted our fires ; all with that magical bamboo. They brought fowls for our meal, and, with a round of hand-shaking that betokened fellowship of the genuine sort, they bade us welcome to their best. A couple of hours afterwards they joined us around the campfire at our evening worship. It was solemn and touching, there in the moonlight, our fires brightly blazing, the elephants and ponies browsing among the herbage near by, to witness the kneeling company, listen to the voices of prayer, now in English and now in Karen, and to hear from all the Karens the " Amen" at the close. As our evening song floated above the trees, we thought of far-distant friends in America, whose loving prayers have followed us even to these wilds. WEAVER birds' NEST. ■' Though sundered far, by faith we meet Around one common mercy-seat." 0)i ]>i(riiian Soil. •3' At daybreak of the second day. wc had broken camp, and were again on the march, up and ever up the mountain slopes, with occasional crossings of the mountain streams, and with more numerous meetings with the highland villages. In each of these settlements there was a chajjcl, by far the best building in the place. There were the worn Karen Bible and hymn book on the bamboo desk. Each evening in all these Christian villages where there is a teacher, as is usu- ally the case, it is the custom for the teacher to gather the whole community for evening .Scripture reading, explanation, singing and worship. In one of these evening services which we attended on our return, we counted sixty-five present. They were poor, so poor in appearance ! not unlike the Indians of the American border; but they heard a clear exposition of precious divine truth. They knew and sang, " Thus far the Lord hath led me on," and in prayer all were on their faces before God. In communities like these, to be found by the score, is the place, by the way, to observe the fruits and value of the scJiool woxV, often narrowly criticised, which goes on in places like Maulmein and Bassein. Without teachers trained in just such schools, there could be no such influences kept perpetually working in numerous far-out jungle villages in Burma. The missionaries at the best can be only field marshals over the churches, direct- ing these native coun- try teachers trained by the school, and set to work out the details in behalf of native populations. About 5 o'clock in the afternoon of the second day, as we came around on a sort of high, curved water shed of the range of hills we had for hours been ascending, we entered a piece of cleared ground, amid which was a nati\e ceme- tery. There were monuments of bamboo and boards raised to a few of the believers who had passed away, with touching allusion in the inscriptions to their blessed exchange of worlds. We were on the con- fines of the settlement wherein the associational meeting was to be held. Casting our eyes now across the deep valley to the right, we saw, lying on a bold promontory a mile away, like an islet KAREN JUNGLE VILLAGE. In Brig]itcst Asia. amid ;i sea of valk-ys, with a lofty range tilling the deeii background twenty miles beyond, the village which was waiting to receive us. A moment more, and a company of brethren came to escort us in. iVrrived at the place, what interest we felt in each scene! There was Brother Crumb, over from another moun- tain district, in which he had been touring for two months among the Paku Karens, come to meet us. Three sisters had also come in from their jungle travels to join in the meeting; viz., IMiss Simons, Miss Ambrose and Miss Anderson, the latter from our own dear Minnesota. Here again we found the natives had fairly built a small town of booths and houses for all sorts of uses for our comfort. What a tabernacle they had prepared for the meetings! It reminded us of the old days of the mammoth Moody tabernacles, except — well, it didn't cost $30,000. It was only bamboo and thatch. There was a carpet of bamboo, on which the 1,058 delegates from fifty-six villages and churches sat. There was a high pulpit and an elevation for the digni- taries, a table for the scribes, and a place for the half-dozen or more choirs, from as many different districts, that so charmingly sang. Here again appear the fruits of your lower Burma schools. Rills of numberless good things permeate these wild and half-barbarous jungles like streams from Paradise, and are starting in this wide wilderness the beginnings of the new Eden. Through two evening sessions and a whole day we sat and drank in the proceedings. An able Karen presided. In his prayer, which concluded the associational gathering, he addressed the Lord as follow-s, respecting my visit : " And now, Lord, we have seen the great Secretary of the great Missionary Union ! and we see that he is neither a giant nor an animal nor a griffin, but otily a man like ourselves. So we shall have to continue trusting Thee for all our needs just as we have been doing heretofore." A pretty sensible disciple that, we all concluded. The giving was an astonishment to us, considering the universal poverty of these hill peoples. They have no industries as yet in these remote parts. There is a crying need for industrial teachers. It is surprising and startling to see, after all, how little has been accomplished when these peoples who, when they do accept the gospel, come in by whole villages, are simply evangelized. They have accepted Christ, the Bible, the hymn book, the missionary and the village teacher, but for a long time they remain still in ignorance, in filth, in much real social degradation. They need to be inducted into the elements of a Christian civilization as well. At the afternoon service the representative of the Missionary Union was received by the association. Their enthusiasm and gratitude were touching ; their appreciation of what was said to them, gratifying. It was especially interesting to see the influence over them of their mission- aries, whom they revere almost as gods. What bishoprics are here! The Missionary Union is especially fortunate in that for more than twenty years — years in which the whole mission, centering at Toungoo, was at one time threatened with wholesale disaster — there have been in charge such men as the now venerable Dr. Cross among the Pakus and Dr. Bunker among the B'ghais. Lost ground has been steadily recovered and rapid gains made, despite a form of ritual- istic proselytism which the missionaries have had to contend against, that is as cruel as it is shameless and unprincipled. On the morning of the third day we broke camp. Dr. Bunker, Brother Crumb and the lady missionaries, attended by several of the experienced school girls, pushing out into regions On JiiiriinDi Soil. 133 beyond, for tlieir annual visitation of the churches, while wc returned to 'roun;ioo. '• It takes phick to do tiiat," remarked a new missionary of our company just out froni home, as he saw Miss Simons mount her packed elephant next morning and leave us, accompanied by her Karen assistants and the coolies, for a plunge into deeper jungles for two months more of visitation among the churches before the rains begin. Such work as this all these brave young women are doing. O ye luxury-loving daughters in America, could ye endure a test like this to prove your love to Christ and immortal souls? And yet believe me, these devoted workers ask not for your commiseration. They prefer these toils, even with all their exposures, to any prizes which this world can offer. They simply ask for your prayers and co-operation. Among tlie red-letter days of a lifetime, we have entered high up on the calendar the days spent in the li'ghai Karen district contiguous to Toungoo. Our yo^v) /r\issioQ. In connection with our visit to Toungoo, we came into touch with our Shan Mission — first, through the companionship of Ur. J. N. Gushing, our senior missionary to the Shans, and the able translator of their Scriptures; secondly, through our visit to the old Shan mission-house at Toungoo, where we saw somewhat of the work as it is carried on among a limited number of these people who frequent such stations as Toungoo and Mandalay ; and thirdly, through the meeting with Drs. Kirkpatrick and Griggs, who had, by forced marches from Thibaw, managed to reach Toungoo for an interview before we left. Mr. W. W. Cochrane, also designated to work among the Shans at Bhamo, was temporarily located at Toungoo. Dr. Cushing has high hopes for these interesting people, and earnestly pleads for young men to occupy commanding points in their territory, such as Mone. We heard also from the lips of Dr. Kirkpatrick encourag- ing accounts of the favor he had found from the authorities and people at Thibaw, where new mission-houses are building. Dr. Kirkpatrick placed in our hands an interesting souvenir in the way of a fine wild peacock's tail, given him by a Shan, who, while on his way to present it to a Buddhist priest, fell in with a copy of the Gospel of John, distributed by our workers, and con- cluded that he would make no more gifts to the priests. He became convinced, after sitting up most of the night to read the new book, that it was true. He accordingly brought the peacock's tail to our missionary, instead of to the priest. At Pegu, on the arrival of the train, I was met at 3 o'clock a.m. by Miss Payne, taken in her pony phaeton, and driven away to the mission compound, a mile and a half distant. In the morn- ing I was shown her dove cote of a mission-house, the tidy Burman chapel, her enterprising reading-room, just at the end of the bridge, on the main thoroughfare of the city, and introduced to some of the most intelligent Christian Burmans I had the pleasure of meeting anywhere. Her thrifty school pleased me greatly. This sister is the sole missionarv in charge at this station. According to the testimony of the deputy commissioner of Pegu, whom 1 met later in the day " She is a captain of every good work in the town." In Brightest Asia. CHAFTKR XV. 5l7ree l/eterai^s. Rangoon, December 27. AMONG the peculiar satisfactions wliich came to me in my visit to Burma, were the meet- ings with veterans who have been upon the field over fifty years. These persons were Rev. D. L. Brayton, Mrs. Cephas Bennett and Mrs. Dr. E. A. Stevens. They were all contemporaries with Judson during the latter period of his life, were intimately associated with him, and partook deeply of his spirit. I^eu. D. l^. BraytOQ. My interview with Father Brayton on the trip to Maulmein, before referred to, during two full days, gave me the most favorable opportunity to gather some of his more striking reminis- cences. The Braytons sailed from Boston October 28, 1837, on the bark "Rosabella," a vessel of 300 tons. Five months afterwards they arrived at Amherst. The Stevenses and Stillsons sailed at the same time. Brother Haswell met them on arrival. Soon after, Osgood and Judson came to meet them. "Judson had piercing eyes, and was a man capable of severity. The ship on which we came brought the paper for the first edition of his Burman Bible." Referring to the frequent allusions made in letters from home to the trials of a missionary's life, Mr. Brayton .said : — "Tell them to talk not of trials; talk of privileges. Think of what it is to see the dark countenance of a heathen light up — a joy the world knows nothing about. Don't mention sacri- fices ; they are not worth talking about. . . . Judson never said a word about .sufferings unless drawn out, and then he would check and rebuke himself. ... I was associated with Judson for thirteen years." Dr. Brayton's account of his jungle tours, accompanied by his devoted wife, and the eager- ness with which the poor people would cluster about their boat or zayat to hear them explain the good news contained in the "White Book," was most touching. Sometimes a poor old woman would come and inquire "If there was anything in the White Book to cure the sorrows of the heart." He mentioned one man whose wife and family opposed his becoming a Christian. They had prepared a feast to cheer up the husband and father from the melancholy brought on by his con- viction. At length, because he would not eat of the feast, his family forsook him, saying, "You'll not see our faces again." " Very well," said he, "I must eat rice for myself." He was baptized, and proved true. Villages sent invitations to the missionaries to come and explain Three Veterans. '35 to them tlic book, and prepared lodgings for them. They went, and great salvation was wrought. " For thirty-five year.s," said the veteran, " our life was filled uj) with such experiences." Still, the eagerness for the work and joy in it are unabated. The fire of a war horse is in him still, rising daily at 4 o'clock in the morning to toil upon his revision of the Pwo Karen Bible. /T\r5. Beprjett. It was my pleasure to spend a forenoon in the home of Mrs. Bennett. Although in her eighty-third year, this sister is yet so vigorous that she daily performs much mission work. Her house is constantly frequented by the Barman women and girls, and by native preachers and mis- sionaries, consulting her on all sorts of matters. Her mental vigor is such that she is able to impart most valued counsel. Her native wards are numerous ; they look to " Mamma Bennett" as to no one else.* On Christmas Day she was able to go into the town and attend a Christmas- mks. dexnett. tree exercise for the children in a Eurasian school, enter- ing into it with the zest of a woman in middle life. In the course of our conversations, I noted down the following items from her fund of reminiscences : — "We were appointed missionaries of the Union in 1828. We left the capes of the Delaware in the brig 'Mary,' for Calcutta, the 8th of September, 1830. . . . My husband was the eldest son of Rev. Alfred Bennett of Homer, N. Y. He was a printer ; formerly publisher of the Baptist Register, since developed by Dr. Edward Bright into the Examiner. We first landed in Burma at Amherst. Judson had taken up his residence at Maulmein ; he was living with the Wades. The Boardmans had gone to Tavoy. In going from Amherst to Maulmein, we were rowed the whole distance of twenty-five miles in an open boat. We arrived at 8 o'clock in the evening. Judson was a rather dignified character, and did not come to the landing to meet us, but sent a Eurasian to conduct us to his house, who also carried the baby. Arriving at the compound, we found the missionary living in a bamboo house, with a bamboo floor, standing high up on bamboo posts. We were made quite welcome. We had brought out the presses with us for the printing of the Burman Bible. A month after our arrival, Dr. Judson, who was then in his first widowhood, came and boarded with us for three years. This, of course, brought us into very close contact with him. He was reserved, very methodical in his work, precise in his attire, and particular about his wardrobe. He was very fond of early morning walks, often rising unseasonably early and going over the hilltops, where he was exposed to the danger of being seized by tigers ; but he was perfectly fearless, and hard to change from his course. The native church now numbered about thirty members of * This mother in Israel has since passed away. 136 In BrigJitest Asia. Hurmans and Taligns, who had removed to Mauhiiein from Rangoon and Dalla, to get away from persecution. These disciples were gathered by Judson at the mission-house every evening for i^rayer and instruction. These were times of great rejoicing in those otherwise dark days. Some of the native Christians developed strongly. Such were Ko Shwey-ba and Ma Doke. Then we began to live. Judson was then at work upon his translation of the Bible. On one occasion he got me to count the verses from Isaiah to Malachi, that he might know how many verses to translate per day in order to finish his work by a given time. He was very domestic in his feelings, and particularly fond of children. He would sit on the floor and play with them, caress their dolls, and sing lullabies to them. Friends counselled him to remarry, but he would not hear a word to it, so long as his Bible was unfinished. This done, he went away to Tavoy without saying a word to any of the missionaries, and married Mrs. Boardman, making a confidant only of Mr. Blundell, the British commissioner ; brought his bride back to Maulmein, and for a time they both boarded with me." The time soon came when Mrs. Bennett's two children were to be sent home. The mother sat in her room weeping at the separation, when a letter from Dr. Judson, full of tenderness and sympathy, was put into her hand. This ripe worker, after sixty-two years of service on Burman soil, was alive with fresh suggestions as to present-day needs. She had much to say concerning the character of seminary training of our native preachers. She pleaded that our management should not continue to place so great responsibility upon single women at the head of the largest schools, but that we should place a man and his wife in such positions. She seemed to have clear apprehensions of the work going on, especially in the Burman department. She would not have less work done for the Karens, but far more for the Burmans. She spoke on all these themes with the force and fervor of a prophetess. /T\rs. Sti^uer^s. The last of the trio who have labored above fifty years on Burman soil is Mrs. Dr. Stevens. Her home is with her son-in-law, Rev. D. A. W. Smith, D.D., at Insein, the pretty suburb of Rangoon. At this place, eight miles north of Rangoon on the railway, where our seminary is located, on what Dr. Smith loves to call " our Newton Hill," I was privileged to spend two or three evenings with Mrs. -Stevens, and from her lips to hear many incidents of the primitive days in Burma, many of them spent as were Mrs. Bennett's, associated with the Judsons in Maulmein and Rangoon. It was this dear sister to whose maternal care Edward Judson, as an infant, was entrusted when he was left motherless, and to whose care and nursing, under God, the pres- ervation of his life was due. Very graphic were the touches given in description of the unique character of Dr. Judson — his fondness for children ; his domestic tastes ; his fine sense of pro- priety ; his dauntless courage and faith. The account given of the parting scenes between Mrs. Emily C. Judson and her prostrated husband, when he was obliged to leave her for his final voyage, was very tender. Like Mrs. Bennett, Mrs. Stevens also retains the most glowing interest in the present-day work in Burma, and pleaded for its expansion with a motherly eloquence. Her Three Veterans. '37 transparent and spiritucllc old af^c is sometliin^j truly beautiful to look upon. IIa])]:)y those who can look upon it while, like an after-glow of sunset, it lingers to warm and bless. Dr. Cross of Toungoo has made a record of service in Burma almost as long as fitty years, and still bears abundant fruit in age. He came to the field in 1845: but we have not yet met him. and cannot speak of personal interview. FACULTV OF THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY, INSEXN. To meet with these honored servants of God, — the few who remain of the first generation of our workers in Burma, — and to hear from their lips experiences shared with Judson, was as if the Burman apostle himself had come back to earth for a little to remind us of the realities of his time. I count it a blessing unspeakable that my visit to Burma was, in God's providence, so timed that I could, ere they depart, catch somewhat of the spirit of these living links between the founders of the work and the present generation. Ere long the last one will have departed. 111 Bn'oiitcst Asia. CHAPTER XVI. If^dia. (^alqutta. THE approach to Calcutta is a matter of dramatic interest. For many miles we pass up the Hooi^ly River, one of the many mouths of the Ganges. The channel is narrow, and rec|uires skilful piloting. Many a steamer has been lost on the quicksands, that are ever shifting, and which ever stand ready to engulf any vessel which is unfortunate enough to strike them. Once aground, a vessel is certain to be swallowed up. It is a common OF CALti rT.\. thing to see hulks and masts projecting from the surface of the water, in the process of being completely submerged. At intervals all along the banks, we see throngs of Hindus bathing in the sacred waters. They seem to have great camps, with multitudes of booths erected for the reception of the pil- India. 139 grims. Manv novel cxliihitions and aniuscnicnls arc l)cinL; carried on in connection with tlieir superstitious t'estivilies. Clad in pure while, they look like armies of <;liosts, especially in the twilight. Nearing the great metropolis of India, we begin to see the palaces of native princes, as well as of retired East Indian merchants, government officers, etc. Upon the picturesque palm-lined banks, as we steam up the river to our landing near old Fort William, we are impressed with the vast amount of shi])ping. The steamers lying at the wharves four or five abreast, with all sorts of craft for miles filling the stream, — as we have seen them at other great Eastern ports, as Yokohama, Shanghai, Hongkong, Singapore and Rangoon, — now impress us afresh that the shipping of the world is to be seen in the Eastern Hemisphere. Here all nations, except the United States, are largely represented. The morning our vessel rode into the harbor at Hong- kong, we counted twenty-seven steamships of vast tonnage, representing half a score of nations. There were steamers of the French line. North German Lloyd line, half a dozen British lines, Italian, Scandinavian and Austrian lines, and 011c floating the United States flag. Arriving at Calcutta, we see similar fleets. Europeai7iz(5d Ii^dia. In the days that followed our arrival, while visiting the splendid suburbs at Barrackpore, fifteen miles above the city, and others, filled with villas of the most costly character, studding large velvety green swards, ensconced beneath great spreading banyans, — places in which the European elite of this part of India have their residences, where traders and merchant princes and queens of fashion are serving Mammon to the full, — we felt sure that the church had arrived tardily on the spot to follow up with the gospel the manif )ld forms of Western influence of another kind. The truth is that India, as well as other great parts of the East, has become immensely Europeanizecl. If you take a train from Calcutta and pass southwestward through Benares, Allahabad and Agra to Bombay, along the great railway over one of the great trunk lines, now extending for 18,000 miles through various parts of the vast DAKJEii LIXG, I\ THE 11E\E\LAV.-IS. 140 In Brightest Asia. peninsula, passing through stations of the most solid and stately character, every mile of this railway parallelled by telegraph lines, with the best of service, you will be amazed at the progress which civilization is making in this great heathen land. These stations are manned by " babus," as they are called, — educated natives, some of them Eurasians. They manipulate the telegraph instruments, they keep the books, sell the tickets, man the capital restaurants, often z£^^^ - conduct the trains, etc. There are gss- .^. ^g^^hw^ 5,000,000 of these English-speaking ^Ta^- ^^^jBgyjg" natives in India to-day. Bombay has one of the most elaborate and costly railway stations in the world. Look- ing at these marks of Occidental enterprise which have filled the East, the traveller w'ill be forced to say that whether or not missionaries go to follow up these strides of civilization with their divine work, all the rest of the world has made up its mind in ^ some representative way to go East. SfS Why should even a young lady y missionary, to say nothing of men, - 3; with the Bible in her heart, who has left friends and home to go abroad, carrying the possibilities of moral renovation to great peoples, be thought a fanatic, when, upon the decks of the same steamer, say of the Pen- insular and Oriental Line which she may board from London to Bombay, she will find a hundred of the most elegant ladies of English fashionable circles, promenading those decks, rustling with silks and glittering with jewels, upon the arms of army officers and merchant princes, who seem to find it no special privation, even for worldly purposes, to make their abodes in the tropics ? Our time in Calcutta was too limited for any detailed inquiries into particular features of local mission work. We visited the old Lai Bazaar Chapel, where Carey preached and Judson was baptized. We met Dr. Pentecost, and Rev. William Haslam of England, who are in the midst of special services, attended with some signs of the Lord's blessing. There seemed to be con- siderable stirring up on the part of European Christians, and there was evidently converting power attending the meetings held for considerable companies of Bengali young men. Many Brahmins were attracted to the meetings. SERAMPORE COLLEGE. India. 141 5era/npor^. It was an intercstinn; morninn; which we were permitted to s]5cn(l in visiting this early fountain head of missionary intluence and power in India. We took in tiie old missicjnary college, a superb and vast edifice, containing; a fine library and numerous relics suggestive of the great triumvirate who founded the institution. The original intention respecting this college was never carried out, owing to the large attention given by government to education in general, and perhaps because the Lord's blessing did not so signally attend movements largely educational. Our English brethren are still carrying on work here and training a few preachers, although the principal school work now conducted in the immense building is of a primary character. At the side of the college is still standing the house in which Carey spent his last years. We were shown to the room in which he died. Beautiful gardens lie in the rear of the group of buildings. house ix which carev died. Passing out through the campus in front of the college building, we stood upon the historic landing ghauts on the Ganges. Up these steps Carey, Rlarshman and Ward passed. Boardman, Ann Hasseltine Judson and Harriet Newell also trod these sacred stones ; hundreds of missionary workers have here landed, receiving welcome from those who, under God's hand, made it possible to undertake great things for God, first in India, and from thence planting themselves in regions beyond. Up the stream a few yards, we walked under the shade of a line of immense mahogany trees which were planted by Carey's own hands. We passed the ( ' -J.; - — building which was originally the printing-house. We went to the cemetery, a little north of the town in a retired spot, which contains an acre of ground enclosed by a good brick wall, and found the tombs of Carey, Marshman and Ward. The tomb for Carey is a plain cenotaph, built many years ago, bearing inscriptions for himself and his wife. On one surface is inscribed "William Carey, born 17th of August, 1761, died 9th of June, 1834," and also the stanza, "A wretched, poor and helpless worm, On Thy kind arms I fall; Be Thou my strength and righteousness, My Saviour and my all." The tombs for Marshman and Ward are also imposing and impressive, though of different form. TOMB OF CAREV. 142 In Brightest Asia. CHAPTER XVII. Oar P55am /T^issioi). January 22. ASSAM used to be, even from Calcutta, a far-distant province. When Messrs. Cutter and Brown, our first missionaries, went to Sadiya, the journey up the Brahmapootra without steam consumed five long months. Taking the mail route from Calcutta, mostly by rail, via Dhubri, and thence by steamer up the great river, we reached Gauhati in less than three days. Of course this was far short of Sadiya, which is 350 miles farther ; but it was sufficient to take us into the midst of our Assam field, and was a convenient place of rendezvous for several of our missionaries to come in to meet us. We find Assam by no means inaccessible nor out of the way in this day, even if it once was. It is a great and rich province of the Indian empire, picturesque and beautiful to the eye, espe- cially in its upper portions, and through its twofold channels of approach, viz., the railway and the daily steamship service, within easier reach from the seaboard than Upper Burma. Three great districts of the Assam field were impressed strongly upon us from this visit; viz., the Garo district, the great plains on both sides of the river for hundreds of miles, and the Naga Hills region, various subdivisions of the numerous and accessible people of Assam. These interesting people might be called the Karens of Assam. They occupy a large moun- tainous district in the hills south of the Brahmapootra River, and number not less than 130,000. They are a wild {leople, are not Hinduized, nor strictly speaking idolaters. Like the Karens, they are rather demon propitiators. They sacrifice to these spirits, sometimes even human lives, to avert dreadful calamities. So wild are these people in their mountain villages, that when our missionaries first visit them, they flee the tow-n from fear, and hide in the forests. When won and drawn out by the gentle suasions of love, and taught, they prove manly, frank, and vigorous in all noble qualities, and far more reliable and trust- worthy than the more civilized and long- perverted Hindu of the cities and plains. Our two missionaries, Mason and Phil- lips, who have been laboring among these people for some fifteen years from their mountain centre in Tura, established by .MAIL CARRIER IN' ASSAM. Our Assam Missivii. thcni in the \cry lU-ptlis nt" the iun.!;le, have wrought with rare si5 people. From Agia we all went together to (iauhati for a conference. Several additional missiona- ries from the various stations in the upper country met us here. The Moore Brothers, together with Miss Laura Amy, a former cherished parishioner of mine in Minneapolis, just out from home, bringing to me letters and mementos of the dear ones in the family nest, journeyed from Nowgong, eighty miles, in an ox cart, to meet us. Mr. and Mrs. Clark, also from an old charge of mine in Indianapolis, came down from Molung. Mr. and Mrs. Burdette cordially entertained us all in the mission-houses formerly occupied by the Bronsons and Barkers. Mrs. Bronson also went out to Assam from the church of my first charge at Rockford, 111. On the Goalpara hillside a couple of days before, we had visited the spot where sleeps, in the English cemetery. Miss Marie Bron- son, whom I once knew in Chicago. Two days after, while passing down the river, we met a Mrs. Harrison from Shillong, an English lady, in whose arms Miss Bronson, battling with cholera, had died in 1875, O'^ board a river steamer. How near to our hearts personnel oi the Assam Mission, past and present, brings us ! It seems like part of our own parish, and such it is. If on the day that we rode up from the landing to the Burdette mission-house, there had been no old and dear friends waiting on the veranda to greet us, as there were, the cordial welcome of the native church, expressed in the decorated roadway of the mission, hung with banners of welcome, with flowers and even lamps for an evening illumination, would have made us feel instantly " at home." Much work was bestowed by the early missionaries in Assam, as Bronson, Barker, Tolman, Scott and others, upon the plains people, who dwell upon both banks of the river along the whole district from Dhubri to Sibsagor. Here dwell the Assamese proper. They are semi-Hinduized, and less susceptible to the gospel than the hills people. The apparent fruits of the valley have been rather disappointing on the whole. Much, however, must be attributed to the frequent failure in health of the laborers, or their death, and to the lamentable lack of men to take the places of the fallen. There has not been preserved such a continuity of work as to bring to large NOWGONG M I ss I o X - 1 1 o r s y: . 146 In Jh-ightest Asia. fruition the labors bestowed. As a consequence, it is not strange that native churches, often left for years together without proper oversight and instruction, should wane and almost die out. While the husbandmen have slept, the enemy has sown tares, and there have been sad defections in such churches as those at Gauhati and Nowgong, where we once had strong bases of operation. The later missionaries have had trying and painful duties in disciplining the wayward and purg- ing out the leaven of evil. These same brethren, however, have had encouragements in their work, particularly as they have worked outward in surrounding villages. Among these millions of people who throng the lowlands, there are no representatives of the gospel except ourselves ; and there can be no question but a real and continuous and forceful occupancy of the river towns and adjacent districts would in the end prove very fruitful. We cannot without great infidelity abandon the work undertaken. Besides, if we should give up the plains, we cut away our base of supplies for the highly promising work of the hills, and invite Romanists and ritualists to come and build on the old foundations we have painfully laid. Our interview with Mr. and Mrs. Clark, who came down from Molung to meet us, opened up to us the various peoples of the Naga race, and the fine promise which these people, bordering on the northwest of Burma, afford to gospel effort. Among these hill peoples, doubtless also allied to the Karens, we count four great tribes of Nagas, the Mishmis and Singphos, all allied to the Kachins. These peoples are all accessible, and they have repeatedly sent delegations to our missionaries requesting teachers. If the Union were able to send several new families to enter in among these hopeful, hungering people, there can be no doubt that a work, in every element the counterpart of our Burman work among the Karens, could soon be developed. We are entering in among the Kachins, assisted by the Karens from Bhamo. Could we now also begin work from these adjacent tribes behind the Kachins, working back from the Brahmapootra on the one side, and from the Irrawaddy on the other, we might fairly join the work in Assam and Burma, thus strengthening both. ^ me^tlQ.^ u;itl7 tl?e Bral?mo 5ort\aj. j^^^^^^ Last night we had a most interesting meeting with a society of the Brahmo .Somaj, the Uni- tarians of India. Observing a fine little chapel on one side of the town with a pleasant garden, we ventured in just at sunset, and found a half-dozen bright and intelligent Hindus. They seemed inclined to converse, and pleased that we called in. They explained that it was their anniver- sary day ; that they were to have a meeting an hour later, and invited us to attend, though the exercises would be in Bengali. These, however, spoke English. After dinner we returned. It was a queer service. They played much on Hindu instruments, chanting a weird sort of psalm or sentimental ode on " Wake, O Sluggish Mind," etc. ; then for a half-hour they prayed, one after another, to the " One Spiritual God," in whom they professed to believe. In Brightest Asia. When we went away, a lialf-dozen of tliem followed us, evidently desiring to know what we thought of the service, and thanked us for attending. I then addressed them as tenderly as I knew how, for I had hoped to get a chance to preach to them. I commended them for abandoning idolatry, but urged that they needed to come further — to Christ, in fact, and to the Bible. One of them desired to argue. Him I avoided ; another one seemed hungry for the truth. I pressed on him and on the others the experimental method in testing Christianity. One seemed much moved. When I had preached my little sermon on how they might know Christ, I prayed for tliem, kneeling in the street, pleading earnestly for them then and there. It was a new experience, there in the moonlight on the banks of the Brahmapootra. I gave my testi- mony, at least, which I hope will not be lost. One of them followed me home, and we talked till near midnight. I got him down on his knees, and it was touching to hear him beg for forgiveness for his great sins, and that God would not let him die unpardoned ; but like any American sinner, he shrank from accepting Christ's atonement. This man was the high-school teacher; decidedly well informed respecting even the Bible and Christ. He said as we parted, "You have at least done your part kindly for me, and your skirts are clear." He was an Assamese. He asked for a missionary to be sent to Dhubri. I replied, " My dear fellow, with all the light that you have respecting the true God and the Bible, you yourself ought to become the missionary; and what is more, God will hold you responsible if you do not." prom (^aleutta to Bo/r^bay. We left Calcutta for Bombay by rail, making two or three stops at places full of historic interest. The first was at Benares, the great headquarters of Hinduism. We shall never forget the melancholy awe with w'hich we moved up and down the river on the boat, taking in the miles of massive ruins of Mohammedan and Hindu architecture, which are half-buried in confusion, on lofty terraces for hundreds of feet high overlooking the majestic river. The thousands of bathers in the sacred waters ; the poor mourners who stood wailing upon the terraces, looking down upon the funeral pyres, where the bodies of their dead were being reduced to ashes, were something sad beyond description. The sombre figures of the various fakirs, sitting in ashes amid some old ruin, leaning upon a staff, or hanging by ropes to support bodies which were said not to have sat for sixty years, with long masses of hair, matted with mud and filth, streaming down their shoulders, looking out of eyes that were strange and inhuman, made a scene of tragic impressive- ness. The filth and uncleanness were unspeakable. We were glad to get away from the horrors of the place. The " Light of Asia" is said to have emanated from near this spot. Indeed, five miles out from Benares, we visited some old ruins of a monastery where Siddhartha Gautama is said to have begun his preaching. The whole region is a sorry comment on anything professing to have light in it. It is the best sample of the blackness of darkness in the earthly condition of a people which my eyes have ever looked upon. We spent a day at Cawnpore, where are the memorials of the Sepoy Rebellion, and heard from those who were eye witnesses of those distressing times details of the cruelties of Indian Our Assam AIissio?t. treaclu'ry and tlic sutTcrini^s of iunot ciit wnmen and children, wlio were .slau<^IUcrcd by hundreds, and some buried alive. We went to Agra and saw the pictures(|ue fort, the Pearl Moscjue, and the many symijols of mogul dynasties now gone forever. Of course we saw the Taj Mahal, the most peerless tomb in the world, a dream of loveliness, a poem in marble. It has been described a hundred times — it has never been described ; it can only be felt. liy moonlight especially, it is like a house not made with hands. Of all expressions of human love tiiat ever embodied itself in architecture, this is supreme. From Agra we came on to Bombay, a long, hot ride. Bo/T\bay. Calcutta, Madras, Bombay ! These are the three great commercial cities of India. In many respects Bombay is the most impressive of the three. It contains extraordinary specimens of classic English architecture — such buildings as the High Court, the Cathedral, the Cathedral school, the various government buildings, hotels, railway stations, colleges, etc. What Glasgow is to Great Britain, that Bombay is to India — a great port, a vast merchan- dizing emporium, a solidly built, modernized, tumultuous city. Traders, merchantmen and all sorts of skilful artificers are here — Hindu, Mohammedan, Parsee, Arab, Kashmir, African and European. It has the rush of Chicago, the fashion of Paris, and the cosmopolitanism of London. Passing through great portions of it, you would scarcely think yourself to be in Asia. It is half occidental, half oriental. The crescent-shaped bay on which it stands, embossed with islands, with here and there rocky coasts, lends a Neapolitan beauty to the situation. A drive around the beach on the chief boulevard at sunset gives you a view of the world's fashion altogether unique, because it is so composite. What varieties of headgear and costume and vehicle, in colors as manifold as those of the dying dolphin ! Apart from the vigorous work here prosecuted by the Salvation Army under Mr. Ballington Booth, we saw but little of mission work. Bombay has extensive and successful missions, but limits of time forbade our exploration. The Parsees, or fire-worshippers, are numerous in Bombay. In externals they impressed us as an attractive people ; intelligent, keen-eyed, genteel, philosophic, even poetical. We visited their strange depository for the dead, — the far-famed " Towers of Silence," as they are called. These are simply great cylindrical towers of stone masonry, standing in a high, rocky garden of surpassing beauty in the outskirts of the city. In these towers the Parsees place their dead, exposed without coffins, and within a couple of hours all the flesh is picked from the bones of the dead by flocks of vultures kept for the purpose. The sun then bleaches the bones to decomposi- tion. Such are the notions of a people who, knowing not "Jesus and the resurrection," have fallen into this strange treatment of their dead. /;/ Brfo/ttcst Asia. ci!Ai''ri':R will. O9 5elu§u pi^ld. V 5f?e Deeear). E approached this field by rail from the Bombay side. From Calcutta around to Madras is a long and tedious journey, consuming, if unbroken, four days and nights. At Wadi, about two thirds of the way from Bombay to Madras, we were met by sev- eral of our missionaries in " the Deccan," so called, or the Nizam's dominions ; and there we were detained for a day of conference respecting the work in this particular district. In certain respects this field is distinct from the old original Telugu field. Here in the centre of India is a native independent empire, under the rule of the Nizam, with Hyderabad for its capital. It is the strongest Mohammedan centre in India. Nevertheless, in the midst of this dominion our workers, pioneered by Brother Campbell, who is now resting in America, have effected a vigorous entrance , and great blessing has attended the work. We have established stations at Secunderabad, Palmur, Hana- maconda and- Nalgonda, in all of which fruit from among the Telugu people has been gathered. The missionaries working here are Brother Maplesden and wife, at Secun- derabad ; Brother Chute, wife and sister, at Palmur, and Brother Friesen and wife, at Nalgonda. NIZAM'S PALACE, HYDERABAD. On the l^-ln^it I'icid. where we luive ;i good mission-house and a cliapcl, has been "wa\- car wliic li was placed at our disposal, and sei'ved for a The station at Ilananiaconda, unoccupied for two years. Our conference was held in a rail chapel by day and a lodging-place at night. To hear those earnest brethren and sisters represent, not only the needs, but also the rare promise of this great district, in which they so eagerly toil, was enough to melt adamant. To them the work is a living joy, and they wonder that other helpers do not come to share in toil so exalted and so rewarding. Not all fields by any means are so ripe as this. The Deccan missionaries repre- sent that the tidings of good things and the inspiration arising from the work in the older district about Ongole, have communicated them- selves to the region where they are laboring. The wave of blessing seems to sweep northwestward, and believers into the kingdom. Other denominations not only wonder that we are so slow to follow up such an advantage, but also think us on some fields so criminally negligent, — as, for example, at Hanamaconda, — that they regard our primacy there as about forfeited. They will desist from entering such fields no longer, but will proceed to reap the harvest which we are likely to allow to fall back into the ground. W'e met on this field Bishop Thoburn, than whom no man in India is more zealous or influential. He seems to know how to obtain both men and money to continually enlarge his work. His efficient superintendence of Methodist interests is phenomenal. U/orl^ for Eurasians. My detention at Wadi and the limits of my time prevented me from going to Madras. iVIr. W. went, however, greeting the ! rethren who awaited our coming, and preaching for them on ilie Sabbath. He also brought away some fine photographs of A EURASIAN GIRL. DECCAN MISSIONARIES, SECUNDERABAD. workers only are needed to soon gather thousands of •5-1 In J^rightcst Asia. the valuable mission property lately offered to our hoard by the English Baptists. The general feeling is that tliis action will prove a wise thing for them, and in every way advantageous to our work, especially in the matter of raising up from among the East Indians or Eurasians, workers and assistants for our missionaries. What I have observed on all hands in India has impressed me with the immense importance of utilizing this Eurasian element among the Indian people for our own sakes, if we would mani- fold our local hold on communities, and for their sakes also, and for the sake of the native ]Dopulations whose language they speak, and to whom they are our best interpreters. These Eurasians are readily Christianized. They are permanently identified with Indian life and well-being, fully acclimated, and habituated to life among Asiatics. They are a valuable go-between, as touching both Eastern and Western nations. Besides, more than likely, this is providentially their divine mission. Bishop Thoburn is giving primary and chief attention to these people as an ultimate means of reaching the heathen. The Methodists are both evangelizing and educating the Eurasians. <^T)fisr<{rje<{ at J^^eIlore. From Wadi we proceeded directly to Xellore, where it was arranged that a con- ference of all the coast missionaries should assemble. Nearly all were present, a score or more, and for two days we had delightful intercourse. Veterans in the work, — as'' Clough, Downie and Boggs, — returned work- Jt'LiA. ers, — as Drake, Manley and Thomssen, — several sisters, and new recruits, — as Hadley, Heinrichs and others, — were there. Records of past achievements and anticipations for the future were dwelt upon. Great concern filled the minds of all as to how existing and prospective vacancies are to be filled. Brethren fiiinting from long strain, and compelled soon to go home for recuperation, with the added pain of leaving their stations to vacancy or to eager proselyters, constrained our deep- est sympathy. On t/ic Tclugn Pi eld. 155 The native church which assembled to <;ieet us, and hear our message, filled us with great interest. I'reachers, students and Bible-women, trojjhies of Christ's gospel, won our hearts. Characters like old Lydia, and Julia, — that modern prophetess, — and her husband, Kanakiah, filled us with thankful wonder. The industrial school, under Dr. Downie's fostering care, com- manded our admiration. The seasons of united ])rayer we had together, were perhaps the most blest hours of all. I^amapatam. From Nellore we proceeded, in company with Dr. and Mrs. Hoggs and Miss Dr. Cummings, to Ramapatam. That was a unique ride, in a veritable pull-man car. In Dr. Downie"s rocka- way wagon we were wheeled by eight coolies over the forty-five miles in about ten hours. We changed coolies every ten miles. Our stay at Ramapatam was brief but pleasing. We found the seminary a real beehive of activity. A choicer, sweeter-spirited man than Dr. Boggs we could not have at the head of that BROWNSOX SEMINARY, RA.MAP.VT.AM. school. Now, after being long overworked, he is happily reinforced by his son. The native teachers impressed us as choice men. We looked with satisfaction into the kind of teacliing, biblical and other, that is being done. We addressed the 125 students assembled in the chapel of Brownson Hall on " Truth Experienced the Preacher's Power." It was all through an inter- In Brig Jit est Asia. preter, of course ; but never had we more eager hearing nor more sympathetic response. Evi- dently these men " know " Ckxl and " the things which are freely given unto us of Ciod." The after-speeches of the teachers " Daniel," " John " and " Samuel " gave us added assurance of soundness, both of head and heart, as well as their real apprehension of the message we brought to them. 09($oIe. Another ride, partly by night in our coolie carriage, and we drew up in the early morning before the mission-house of Dr. Clough, at Ongole. The missionary met us at the door with a lantern, and ushered us to our chamber for a little rest. ONGOLE HIGH SCHOOL. In the morning we were soon ready for the round of the half-dozen or more schools of which the mission is so justly proud. The various "palam" or hamlet primaries; the intermediates; the wondrously engaging caste-girls' schools, filled with the petite bejewelled little ladies from high-rank families of the town; and above all the high school — to our surprise quite a college — were visited one by one. O/i the 'J'clugu Field. DK. J. E. CLOUGH. We were not, however, prepared for such recep- tions as we had ; for wreaths of mari<;old to be hung about our necks by the children ; for si)ray baths of rose water showered over us ; and tor other earnests of Indian welcome. The kindergarten work, the lovely plays of the caste girls, would have delighted Froebel himself. At the high school, with its enthusiastic head master and its 200 boys, a prepared address was read and presented to us. When we began to respond, and turned about for our interpreter, we were told that we would be understood quite well in English. This was a wonder. We proceeded for twenty minutes, and point after point was responded to with cheers. This gave us a new token, not only that the Anglo-Saxon tongue is conquering all other tongues, but also that the East Indian student is as fully alive as his Western brothers. These boys and hosts of others, including Brahmin gentlemen of the town, petition that this school be made a college. Can we prevent it ? Dare we turn these inquisitive, alert youths of India over to non-Christian schools ? Here is a question for the wisdom of the wisest, and may the Most High help us ! iQlreruieu; u/itl^ Bral7/T\iQ$. During our visit to Ongole, we were one evening interviewed by a company of about a dozen Hindu gentlemen of the town, including several Brahmins and others of high-caste distinction. Some of these men were high officials of government, one of them being a district munsiff, or judge, another a sub-registrar, etc. Their object in obtaining the interview was threefold; viz., to express their welcome to an official of the American Baptist Mis- sionary Union ; to commend to him, in the strongest terms, the work wrought by our devoted missionaries in their land, and to petition that the valuable educational work instituted by our mission be further prosecuted, and that especially the high school at Ongole be raised to the status of a second-grade college. A movement had been instituted in the town, on the part of certain of the straitest sect of the Hindus, to maintain a sort of rival school, conducted on Hindu principles and at private expense. In the meeting above referred to, this whole matter was discussed in the presence of Dr. Clough and other missionaries. All united in the strongest commendation of our mission school work. The MR. RUNGANADAM PILLAI. In Brightest Asia. strictest Ilindvis even, in the event of maintaining their own school in the town, avowed the desire that it should be a feeder to our liigh school, especially if it should be made a college.* One of these gentlemen, Mr. Runganadam I'illai, was opposed to the Hindu school altogether, and in terms of great boldness and rare eloquence pleaded for concentration on the mission high school. In the course of his argument, he urged that the work of the mission school, under the control of the missionaries, is the only force which goes to the root of the evils which inhere in Hinduized society. " Leave the work of education entirely in the hands of Dr. Clough, who has done so much for a town like Ongole, and who has thrown his heart and soul together for educat- ing our children and for our weli being." The address, delivered in excellent English, came with such hot fervency, with such bold energy, in the very face of his Brahmin brethren, and with such surprise withal, that I afterwards requested the gentleman to write out his address for me. This he did, and sent it by the hand of Ur. Clough, remarking in the note which accompanied the speech, "There is some readable matter here which our American brethren must see." F(eli($iou5 D(?(5er?eratioi7 ip Ir>dia. Referring to the address of one of his Brahmin friends, which had preceded his, in which claim was made that the ancient Aryan ancestors of the Brahmins worshipped also one true God as the missionaries do, Mr. Runganadam proceeded to trace the historical degeneration of the Indian peoples from the early Aryan times, period by period through the Vedic period, the Puranic, through the periods when Kapila and Buddha, with their agnostic theories arose, through the period when the worship of idols, fetichism, and the caste system came in. His summation ran thus : — "In the first age, the Hindu mind recognized God and the equality of men ; in the second, it doubted God, and introduced the caste system ; in the third, it denied the government of God, and admitted the equality of men ; in the fourth, it firmly established idol-worship and caste dis- tinctions. Thus stage by stage, the great fundamental doctrines of the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man were stamped out from our minds. The pernicious caste system sur- rounds us on all sides from the day of our birth to the day of our death. It has bound our hand and foot together. We are under its yoke, and are now the willing slaves of this monster tyrant and intolerant taskmaster. It has sown the seeds of disunion and discord among us, made all honest manual labor contemptible in our sight, shut out all internal and external commerce, brought on physical degeneracy, and destroyed the germs of individuality and independence of character." " It has first enslaved us by the most abject spiritual tyranny, and then prepared us to take the yoke of foreign slavery. It has made the various classes of people to look upon each other with contempt. They appear more as enemies than as friends in their social relations. "The condition of women among us is wretched in the extreme. An infant girl is married at ten, and at twelve or thirteen often becomes a mother — most revolting, indeed, to the sense * This Hindu school has since been abandoned. Oil the Tcli(gii. I'/eld. of a rational hciui;' — and the child ninthcr often heconies a ijrandniother at the a<;e of thirty. Children born of such i)arents are extremely weak and puny creatures, often crawlin;; on all fours, and soon find an early grave. If they live, they prove effeminate, feeble in body and mind. If an infant girl loses her husband, slie becomes a widow, and is doomed to be a moving grave throughout her wiiole e.xistence, because our cruel customs cannot allow her to re-marry." iQdiar^ I^eforfT\5 putile. "We arc conside:ing reforms. Some think that reform must proceed from within, while others hold that it must come t'rom without. But show me one instance where we ourselves, unaided by the missionaries, have produced such changes as I plead for, in the amelioration of the condition of the masses, who are the backbone of the country. The Indian reformer merely, struggles hard and in vain. He has not yet succeeded in his attempts to any appreciable degree. He is, rather, baffled on all sides. I do not think I would wound the feeling of my friends here (Brahmins) if I say we cannot, unaided, accomplish the results needed. We may honestly endeavor, but the very structure of our social fabric docs not permit us to succeed. The work must be placed in the hands of more earnest and able men than ourselves. We have not the force of character nor the moral courage to do what is needed for the common good, for the improvement of a common society. Times, however, are changing, and we see the signs of life reviving. We must, therefore, try to acquire those virtues which we are said to lack, and to free ourselves from the faults with which we are justly charged. These lessons we must still learn, I think, from our English and American brethren ; and till we learn them we must put our children under their care and management." " For these reasons, I think there is no necessity for another high school to rival the mission school, and the work may be handed over to Dr. Clough, who will continue to do as he does now, impart both secular and spiritual education to our children with all parental care, and teach them also a sense of dut_\' and strength for duty." 5Ic Latids. '75 March 6. We came on thus far last night, thirty miles towards JafFa, preparatory to sailing to-day; so I finish from here, speaking only of the ride hither. C'.oing up to Jerusalem a week ago, we rode the entire distance in the rain. .Still, the road was interesting, altliough under such conditions. Returning we came under the full glow of an afternoon sun ; and the beauty of even the barren hill tops, to say nothing of the green, green valleys, vocal with the murmur of mountain brooks, was excjuisite. Leaving the Holy City from the Jaffa gate, on the high northwest side, we were 2,500 feet above the sea. Passing out on the magnificent mountain carriage road, now completed, we first see a much loftier mountain away northward, — Neby Samuel, where the prophet was entombed. A little farther down, we come to iMephtoah — a village named in the Hook of Josliua, marking the border line between Judah and Benjamin. An hour more, and we pass Emmaus, lying ruined on the right-hand slope. A little later, and we enter the reputed vale of Elali, and cross the brook from which David took the stones with which to slay Goliath. The vale lies between two lofty mountains, on the sides of which, possibly, the two armies were encamped. Later, we pass the ancient house of Obed Edom, and in a few minutes more Kirjath Jearim, from whence the ark was taken to Jerusalem. Considerable Syrian villages, built of rich yellow well-hewn limestone, are on all these spots. Trains of camels entering or emerging from all these villages meet us on the road, loaded with olive oil, vegetables, charcoal and what not. Two hours more down, down, the steep, winding and picturesque descent, increasingly beautiful with flowers, as we approach the broad plain of Sharon, and we spy southward, through an opening in the hills, the ancient fortified stronghold of the Maccabees. An hour more, and the town of John the Baptist's birth v?), now modernized, with French schools, etc., and ever beautiful, appears. Farther down, we get a peep into the valley of Ajalon ; and yonder, northward, between two mountain horns, we spy the pass of Beth-Horon, where Joshua took his stand in perhaps the most decisive battle in human history. Take that victory out, and there would have been no history of the Jews. Now we are upon the great plain, — one vast wheat-field ; and yet northward again those bald elevations, that seem loth to part with us, mark the camping-place of Richard Cceur de Lion, on his crusade to gain the Holy Sepulchre. Oh ! there is here a romance, nay, a divinitv of charm, that holds you with a spell from the moment when, approaching from the sea, you sight the mount on which Jaffa lies, till you leave the land. A grand climax it has made of my delightful round, and confirms the conviction, strong in me before, that the work of giving the gospel, which was here incarnated, to all the nations, is the very lowest aim that a redeemed mortal should set before him. There is something grander than a crusade to regain the sepulchre even of our Lord; viz., a systematic eiTort to proclaim among all peoples the risen power of Him who emptied that sepulchre, both for himself and for those who in all lands believe on His name. This, this is the true crusade! MISSIONARY BOOKS FOR HVHRY HOME AND S. S. LIBRARY. PAGODA SHADOWS; or, Studies from Life in China. By Adele M. Fielde of Svvatow, China. With introduction by Joseph Cook. 1 6 new illustrations. Cloth, i2mo., on fine paper. Price, postjxiid, $i.oo. In her presentation of Chinese character, life and customs. Miss Fielde has struck out a new and successful path. From her intimate acquaintance with the Chinese, and especially by allow- ing the people so largely to speak for themselves, slie has presented Chinese life in a vivid and impressive manner, whicli would not have otherwise been possible. OUR GOLD MINE. Sixth edition. Bv Mrs. Ada C. Chaplin. An illustrated story of our missions in India and Burma. Price, postpaid, $1.25. Many are inquiring how they may gain some reliable information, in a condensed form, con- cerning the early history of our mission work, its progress and results up to tlie present time. This book tells who our missionaries were and are, when they were sent out, the fields occupied, the obstacles overcome, and the results reached. To any who have not had an opportunity to inform themselves, this book is just what they need. MISSIONARY SKETCHES. By Dr. S. F. Smith, formerly editor of the Magazi.ve ; author of "America," etc. Brought up to date by P,e\'. E. F. Merriam. Sixth edition. Price, postpaid, $1.25. It is invaluable to those who wish to prepare matter for the missionary concerts and the mission circles in our churches. Tliere is no book that can till the place of Dr. Smith's " Missionary Sketches." The name of the author is a sufficient guaranty for its historical accuracy. FROM DARKNESS TO LIGHT. By Rev. J. E. Cloucwi of Ongole, India. Illustrated. Price, postpaid, $1.25. Though as intensely interesting and fascinating as a romance, this is a strictly true story, and contains descriptions of birtli and wedding ceremonies, festivals to the gods, and many customs peculiar to the Telugus, never before published, thus fully supplying the want so often expressed for a more extended knowledge of this wonderful people. MY CHILD-LIFE IN BURMA. By Miss O. Jennie Bixby. Price, postpaid, 60 cents. W. G. CORTHELL, Mission Rooms, Tremont Temple, BOSTON. MASS. THE HELPING HAND is published monthlv bv tlie Woman's Haitist Foi{kh;n Missionary .Society, and t'uniishcs every month the latest facts of interest — their work, and that of the Society of the West, at home and abroad. .Single subscriptions per year, thirty-five cents, postage prepaid. In packages of four or more, to tJte address of one person^ twenty-five cents each \icx year. The Helping Hand and The King's Messengers, to one address, forty cents. Send all subscriptions and money to W. G. Corthell, Missionary Rooms, Tremont Temple, Boston, Mass. THE KING'S MESSENGERS To Heathen Lands is published monthly by the Woman's Baptist Foreign Missionary Society. It is illustrated and designed especially for young people and .Sunday schools. Terms : One copy for one year, twenty-five cents. Two to twenty-five copies, to the address of one person^ each, per year, fifteen cents; twenty-five or more, twelve and a half cents each. Send all subscriptions and money to W. G. Corthell, Mission Rooms, Tre- mont Temple, Boston, Mass. THE BAPTIST MISSIONARY MAGAZINE, published exclusively in the interest of the American Baptist Missionary Union, is the oldest Baptist periodical in America. It contains the latest intelligence from the foreign mission-fields, together with editorials, and articles discussing questions relating to the enterprise of missions. Terms (postage prepaid) : One dollar per annum. Ten copies and upwards, to one address, eighty cents per copy. The Magazine and Helping Hand, to one address, one dollar and fifteen cents ; Magazine, Helping Hand, and King's Messengers, to one address, one dollar and thirty cents. THE KINGDOM is published monthly by the Executive Committee, by order of the Board of Mana- gers of the American Baptist Missionary Union. Its aim is to give, in a condensed form, a summary of the missionary news of each month. Terms : Single copies, ten cents a year. Clubs of twenty and more, to the address of one person^ fiv'e cents a copy per annum. Address "The Kingdom," Missionary Rooms, Tremont Temple, Boston, Mass. The Baptist Missionary Magazine. The Only Organ of tlie American Baptist Missionary Union. NOTICE CAREFULLY THE SIX DEPARTMENTS. 1. EDITORIAL. — In this (lci)ai-tment will be found items of special importance relating to the work of the Missionary Union, brief comments on current events in missions, and also articles on matters of general missionary interest. 2. GENERAL ARTICLES. — These will be chiefly original, contributed largely by our mission- aries on the various fields, and by our ablest writers at home; but in order to give a wide survey of missionary principles and work, judicious selections will be made from other publications, on topics not fully covered by the contributions to the Magazine. 3. MISSIONARY CORRESPONDENCE will contain ktters from our missionaries on the various fields, giving such views of their work and experiences as will be interesting and important to those who stay at home to " hold the ropes." 4. MISSIONARY OUTLOOK consists of short selections upon important points relating to missionary work everywhere, and the progress of Christianity throughout the world. 5. MISSIONARY NEWS gives, under appropriate geographical heads, the most important and freshest items of missionary intelligence from all missionary lands, gathered from a careful reading of a wide range of missionary periodicals. 6. DONATIONS. — Tn this department the donations and legacies to the Missionary Union are acknowledged in detail for each month in the year. TERMS. — Single Subscriptions, $1.00 per year. Ten copies or upwards, or clubs equal to 5 per cent of the church membership, 80 cents each. Clubs equal to 10 per cent of the church membership, 70 cents each. Copies sent to each individual address if desired. THE JULY NUMBER of the Magazine contains the Proceedings of the Annual Meetings and the Annual Report of the Union in full. All who are interested in our foreign misiions, and want to keep informed in regard to them, should take the Magazine. Address BAPTIST MISSIONARY MAGAZINE, TREMONT TEMPLE, BOSTON. Date Due PRINTED IN U. S. A.