ted ever since.
When Chu Hsi died, his coffin is said to have taken up a position,
suspended in the air, about three feet from the ground. Whereupon his
son-in-law, falling on his knees beside the bier, reminded the departed
spirit of the great principles of which he had been such a brilliant
exponent in life--and the coffin descended gently to the ground.
CHAPTER V--WOMEN AND CHILDREN
The Chinese are very fond of animals, and especially of birds; and on
the whole they may be said to be kind to their animals, though cases of
ill-treatment occur. At the same time it must be carefully remembered
that such quantum of humanity as they may exhibit is entirely of their
own making; there is no law to act persuasively on brutal natures, and
there is no Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals to see that
any such law is enforced. A very large number of beautiful birds, mostly
songless, are found in various parts of China, and a great variety of
fishes in the rivers and on the coast. Wild animals are represented by
the tiger (in both north and south), the panther and the bear, and even
the elephant and the rhinoceros may be found in the extreme south-west.
The wolf and the fox, the latter dreaded as an uncanny beast, are very
widely distributed.
Still less would there be any ground for establishing a Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty to Children, the very name of which would make
an ordinary, unsophisticated Chinaman stare. Chinese parents are, if
anything, over-indulgent to their children. The father is, indeed,
popularly known as the "Severe One," and it is a Confucian tradition
that he should not spare the rod and so spoil the child, but he draws
the line at a poker; and although as a father he possesses the power of
life and death over his offspring, such punishments as are inflicted are
usually of the mildest description. The mother, the "Gentle One," is,
speaking broadly, a soft-hearted, sweet-natured specimen of humanity;
one of those women to whom hundreds of Europeans owe deep debts of
gratitude for the care and affection lavished upon their alien children.
In the absence of the Severe One, it falls to her to chastise when
necessary; and we even read of a son who wept, not because his mother
hurt him, but because, owing to her advanced age, she was no longer able
to hit him hard enough!
Among other atrocious libels which have fastened upon the fair fame
of the Chinese people, first and foremost
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