iip Class _^^sSZM Book_Jlia5_ COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT The Lore of Cathay Dr. Martin's '^ Compendium of Information" ^ p^YCLE OF pATHAY or China, South and North •WITH PERSONAL REMINISCENCES BY W. A. P. MARTIN, D.D.. LL.D. Formerly President of the Imperial University of Peking With Seventy Illustrations, Map and Index, 8vo, Decorated Cloth, $2.00 " A scholarly epitome of the life and thought of the Chi- nese nation for upwards of four thousand years." — Phila- delphia Times. "Will add even to the specialists knowledge of Chinese character. A storehouse of facts and personal reminiscen- ces." — San Francisco Chronicle. "Nowhere can be found a more luminous sketch of Chi- nese history during the last four thousand years , . . With the actual political and social condition of the country." — New York Sun. "Earnestly to be commended for its liberality of view, wealth of information and clear knowledge." — Boston Beacon. THE LORE OF CATHAY OR The Intellect of China ^pAfy/uA By WrAfP/^ MARTIN, D.D., LL.D. Formerly President of the Chinese Imperial Uni'versity Author of **A Cycle of Cathay," "The Siege in Peking," Etc., Etc. With an Introductory Note by JAMES S. DENNIS, D.D. ILLUSTRATED New York Chicago Toronto Fleming H. Revell Company London and Edinburgh Copyright, 1901, 1912, by FLEMING H. REVELL COMPANY J S T 0^ New York: 158 Fifth Avenue Chicago: 125 N. Wabash Ave. Toronto: 25 Richmond St., W. London: 21 Paternoster Square Edinburgh: ico Princes Street v£CI.A312296 TO THE Hon. JOHN W. FOSTER FORMERLY SECRETARY OF STATE OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA INTRODUCTORY NOTE It is now ten years since Dr. Martin gathered into this volume the results of his long and profound study of the intellectual life of the Chinese. It was the fruit of much original research into the literary, philosophical, edu- cational, and religious history of China. Since then a wonderful decade of change and progress has put out of date much of the current literature concerning China. The rush of events and the swift transformations which have marked the entrance of an ancient and stolid empire into its modern era have been accompanied by overturn- ings which are unexampled in national annals for their rapid consummations, radical reforms, and international sequences. The Lore of Cathay, however, is still a timely book, since it deals with standard aspects of China's past which' are closely related to recent developments; it presents a survey of the higher life of the empire which throws light upon the surprising preparedness of its leading spirits to respond to the opportunities of a new era. The book, therefore, has still an instructive message to pres- ent-day readers in that it gives an intelligent and illu- minating perspective to the tumultuous China of to-day in its awakened energy and phenomenal movement toward its goal of destiny. It is well for those who are reading the marvellous record of China in transition to look into the secrets of the past greatness of the Chinese, and discover the philo- INTRODUCTORY NOTE sophic, ethical, and social bases of such a prolonged, yet strangely unprogressive national existence. Such a study will help us also to understand the seeming mystery of China's readiness for the rapid evolutionary developments of the present. The surprising receptivity of a great people, noted for immemorial conservatism, will be more easily understood if we look carefully into the intellectual life, faulty though it may be in many respects, which lies back of it for long centuries past. Dr. Martin himself, in his capacity as a missionary and educator during sixty-two years of fruitful service in China, has been a stimulating factor in hastening and guiding the political, educational, and religious growth of the nation toward Western ideals. These studies in the lore of Old Cathay ought certainly to quicken our confidence that the, as yet, unwritten story of the New Cathay linked as it will be with the higher elements of modern, and we trust. Christian, civilization, presages a great and puissant nation holding in trust a sacred mis- sion for the uplift of the new-born East. James S. Dennis. February 4, 19 12. PREFACE ^Cfir^BE Lore of Cathay," is an essential comple- I ment to " A Cycle of Cathay." The latter ■- represents the active life of the Chinese as it appeared to the writer in the course of a long and varied experience. This book mirrors their intellectual life as it developed under investigations extending through many years of intimate association with Chinese scholars, and of identification with Chinese education. Its contents comprise the " Hanlin Papers," revised and enlarged by the addition of much new matter. Its materials have been drawn exclusively from native sources, and are the result of original research. The author has treated, with considerable detail, of subjects so diverse as Chinese education and Chinese alchemy; and he ven- tures to believe that he throws fresh light on some points of Oriental literature, science and philosophy ; and that he may fairly claim, as a field of his own discovery, the inter- national law and diplomacy of the ancient Chinese. In the San Kuo Chi it is laid down as a law of the national life, confirmed by history, that the Chinese Em- pire, when it has been long united, is sure to be divided; when it has been long divided, is sure to be reunited. Just now the centrifugal forces are portentously active. Should they eventuate in partition, that state of things could not be permanent, though it might accelerate the acquisition of our Western civilization by the people of China. Quickened into new life, they would be sure to 2 PREFACE reconstruct the Empire and to take their place among the leading powers of the civilized world. While the Manchu rulers have made grudging conces- sions to superior force, they have always, with the ex- ception of Kuang Hsu, contrived to maintain a latent hostility in the minds of their people. That hostility has diminished — strange to say — with each defeat by foreign powers, and it almost disappeared during the reform movement under the young Emperor, which followed the war with Japan. To prevent the recurrence of outrages it is necessary to foster a fellow-feeling with the rest of the world. As Captain Mahan says : *' Toward Asia in its present con- dition Europe has learned that it has a community of interest that may be defined as the need of bringing the Asian peoples within the compass of the family of Chris- tian States. They will have to insist that currency be permitted to our ideas — liberty to exchange thought in Chinese territory with the individual Chinaman. The open door, both for commerce and for intellectual inter- action, should be our aim everywhere in China." One essential to this intellectual interaction is mutual intellectual comprehension. If China is to be a part of the family of civilized States — Chinese thought, the principles at the basis of Chinese history and life must be understood. It is with the hope that this may be furthered that " The Lore of Cathay " is offered to the Anglo-Saxon public. W. A. P. M. Peking, Julyj ist. CONTENTS INTRODUCTION PAGE [/The Awakening in China 7 BOOK I CHINA'S CONTRIBUTION TO ARTS AND SCIENCES I. Chinese Discoveries 23 11. Chinese Speculations in Philosophy and Science 33 III. Alchemy in China; the Source of Chemistry . 44 BOOK II CHINESE LITERATURE IV. Poets and Poetry of China 75 V. The Confucian Apocrypha 87 VI. Confucius and Plato — A Coincidence . . . 106 VII. Chinese Prose Composition in VIII. Chinese Letter Writing 130 IX. Chinese Fables 144 X. Native Tracts of China 148 BOOK III RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY OF THE CHINESE XI. The San Chiao or Three Religions of China . 165 XII. The Ethical Philosophy of the Chinese . . 205 3 4 CONTENTS PAGE XIII. Chinese Ideas of Inspiration 234 . XIV. Buddhism a Preparation for Christianity . . 249 y XV. The Worship of Ancestors in China . . . 264 BOOK IV EDUCATION IN CHINA XVI. School and Family Training 281 XVII. Civil Service Examinations ..... 308 XVIII. The Imperial Academy 329 XIX. An Old University in China 37^ BOOK V STUDIES IN CHINESE HISTORY XX. The Study of Chinese History .... 387 XXI. The Tartars in Ancient China .... 409 XXII. International Law in Ancient China , . . 427 XXIII. Diplomacy in Ancient China 450 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Dr. W. A. p. Martin Frontispiece ^ FACING PAGES President Martin and Faculty of the Chinese Imperial Uni- versity i8 1/ Dr. Martin and some of his Students 34 ^'^ Shrine and Temple of Confucius 88 i^ The Temple of Heaven | ^ The Altar of Heaven . ) Arch and Temple of Confucius 200 v Gateway of Lama Temple 240 Buddhist Monument 254 V The Imperial Ancestral Temple 274* The Watch-tower in Examination Grounds . Furnace for burning paper in Examination Grounds Row of Cells in Examination University . . . . 326 ''' The Imperial Lecture Room, Old University. [. . 314*^ 373 ^ Prospect Hill where the last of the Mings hanged himself THE LORE OF CATHAY THE AWAKENING IN CHINA FOR a long time the giant of the East has been rubbing his eyes. Each colHsion with foreign powers has had the effect of making him more conscious of his helpless condition and more ready to open his lids to the light of a new day. Never was he more wide awake than during the few years following the war with Japan, when the young Emperor, Kuang Hsii, attempted to make his reign an era of reform. The counter-revolution brought about by the Empress Dowager,* and the cosmic shock by_ which it was succeeded, proved the strength and reality of the reform movement. So far from extinguishing that movement, the effect of this convulsion will be to wake it into fresh activity. The Chinese people may be ex- pected to welcome new ideas with more eagerness than ever before. This proposition will be received with distrust by some who are skeptical as to the doctrine of human progress. It will be questioned by others, who deride as visionary the efforts of Christian enterprise. Nor will it be readily admitted by that large class who are wont to regard the Chinese mind as hopelessly incrusted with the prejudices of antiquity. * Having treated that subject in " The Siege in Peking," it is unnecessary to enlarge upon it in this place. 7 8 THE LORE OF CATHAY \ Never have a great people been more misunderstood. They are denounced as stolid, because we are not in pos- session of a medium sufficiently transparent to convey our ideas to them, or transmit theirs to us; and stigmatized as barbarians, because we want the breadth to comprehend a civilization different from our own. They are repre- sented as servile imitators, though they have borrowed less than any other people; as destitute of the inventive faculty, though the world is indebted to them for a long catalogue of the most useful discoveries ; and as clinging with unquestioning tenacity to a heritage of traditions, though they have passed through many and profound changes in the course of their history. \ Nothing has done so much to lower them in our esteem and to exclude them from our sympathies as the atrocities of the Boxer outbreak. That, however, was the effect of a sudden recoil, stirred up for political purposes by a usurping Regent and her Manchu agents. Foreigners themselves, they were jealous of anything that tends to disturb the repose of the Chinese mind, or to strengthen the foothold of other foreigners. Exasperated, too, by a series of encroachments on their territory, they gave way to a mad fury that proved contagious.