Articles:



(1894 version) Chinese Characteristics CHAPTER VIII.THE TALENT FOR INDIRECTION

CHAPTER VIII.THE TALENT FOR INDIRECTION. ONE of the intellectual habits upon which we Anglo-Saxons pride ourselves most is that of going directly to the marrow of a subject, and when we have reached it saying exactly what we mean. Considerable abatements must no doubt be made in any claim set up for such a habit, when we consider the usages of polite society and those of diplomacy, yet it still remains substantially true that the instinct of rectilinearity is the governing one, albeit considerably modified by special circumstances. No very long acquaintance is required with any Asiatic...


(1894 version) Chinese Characteristics CHAPTER VII. THE TALENT FOR MISUNDERSTANDING

CHAPTER VII. THE TALENT FOR MISUNDERSTANDING. THIS remarkable gift of the Chinese people is first observed when the foreigner knows enough of the language to employ it as a vehicle of thought. To his pained surprise, he finds that he is not understood. He therefore returns to his studies with augmented diligence, and at the end of a series of years is able to venture with confidence to accost the general public, or any individual thereof, on miscellaneous topics. If the person addressed is a total stranger, especially if he has never before met a foreigner, the speaker will have opportu...


(1894 version) Chinese Characteristics CHAPTER VI. THE DISREGARD OF ACCURACY

CHAPTER VI THE DISREGARD OF ACCURACY. THE first impression which a stranger receives of the Chinese is that of uniformity. Their physiognomy appears to be all of one type, they all seem to be clad in one perpetual blue, the "hinges" of the national eye do not look as if they were "put on straight," and the resemblance between one Chinese cue and another is the likeness between a pair of peas from the same pod. But in a very brief experience the most unobservant traveller learns that, whatever else may be predicated of the Chinese, a dead level of uniformity cannot be safely assumed. The...


(1894 version) Chinese Characteristics CHAPTER V. THE DISREGARD OF TIME

CHINESE CHARACTERISTICSCHAPTER V. THE DISREGARD OF TIMEIT is a maxim of the developed civilisation of our day, that "time is money." The complicated arrangements of modern life are such that a business man in business hours is able to do an amount and variety of business which, in the past century, would have required the expenditure of time indefinitely greater. Steam and electricity have accomplished this change, and it is a change for which the Anglo-Saxon race was prepared beforehand by its constitutional tendencies. Whatever may have been the habits of our ancestors when they had l...


(1894 version) Chinese Characteristics CHAPTER IV. POLITENESS

CHINESE CHARACTERISTICSCHAPTER IV. POLITENESS ''THERE are two quite different aspects in which the politeness of the Chinese, and of Oriental peoples generally, may be viewed — the one of appreciation, the other of criticism. The Anglo-Saxon, as we are fond of reminding ourselves, has, no doubt, many virtues, and among them is to be found a very large percentage of fortiter in re, but a very small percentage of suaviter in modo. When, therefore, we come to the Orient, and find the vast populations of the immense Asiatic continent so greatly our superiors in the art of lubricating the f...


(1894 version) Chinese Characteristics CHAPTER III. INDUSTRY

CHINESE CHARACTERISTICSCHAPTER III.  INDUSTRYIndustry is defined as habitual diligence in any employment—steady attention to business. In this age of the world industry is one of the most highly prized among the virtues, and it is one which invariably commands respect.The industry of a people, speaking roughly, may be said to unite the three dimensions of length, breadth and thickness; or, to use a different expression, it may be said to have two qualities of extension, and one of intension. By the quality of length, we mean the amount of time during which the industry is exercised. By th...


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