Indiscreet Letters From Peking eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 435 pages of information about Indiscreet Letters From Peking.

Indiscreet Letters From Peking eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 435 pages of information about Indiscreet Letters From Peking.

At eight o’clock everyone was once more afoot, although most have hardly had a wink of sleep.  All over our Legation quarter, dusty and dirty men, unwashed and unbathed, now squatted along the edge of the streets, hanging their weary heads against their rifles, with their faces very white from too much sentry-go and too little sleep.  There is little distinction between sailors and Legation people, for we are all in the same dilemma.  On this eventful 20th of June, instead of being resolute and alert, everybody is merely tired and weakened by a couple of weeks’ watchfulness against Boxers during an unofficial semi-siege, a state of affairs which has quite unfitted us for fresh strains.  Yet beyond our barricades of upturned carts and stolen building-bricks all was quiet and peaceful, and hardly a thing moves.  It seemed as if we had been only dreaming....  Wandering down beyond the eastern end of Legation Street, which gives you the most view of the mysterious world around the great Ha-ta Street, which the Boxers have conquered, indeed you find everything practically deserted, the people having learned that it is best to stay indoors until this crisis is solved in some manner.  Occasionally a rag-picker, or some humble person so little separated from the life hereafter that to push a trifle closer does not spell much peril, can be seen hooking up rags and whatnots from the piles of Peking offal.  If you speak to him he gives an unintelligent pu chih tao—­“I do not know”—­and moves boorishly on.  As my old Chinese writer said a week ago, Peking has never been in such a state of topsy-turvydom since the robber who unseated the Ming dynasty rushed in two and a half centuries ago....

Going on top of the great Tartar Wall and gazing down on the scene of devastation and ruin beyond the Ch’ien Men Gate, one can hardly believe one’s eyes, for where there was once a mighty bustle one now sees thousands of houses with nothing but their walls standing and charred timbers strewing the grounds.  The great burned tower which blazed so wondrously a few nights ago is still half standing, its mighty brickwork too powerful and too proud to succumb totally to the flames’ destroying energy.  Gaunt and hollow-eyed, the old Tartar tower surveys the scene somewhat contemptuously, as if saying that the pigmy men of to-day are far removed from the paladins of old and their works....

Quiet and perfectly silent it all looks—­but below the tower, and, indeed, on all sides as far as the eyes can see, some search shows little ants of men are at work in the ruins—­not moving much, but bobbing up and down with unending energy and regularity.  They are the beggars of Peking in their hundreds and thousands salving what they can from all this immense destruction by poking deep holes into the ruins and pulling out all manner of things from under the mass of bricks and rubbish.  In the conserving hands of the Chinaman nothing is ever irremediably destroyed....

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Indiscreet Letters From Peking from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.