GLIMPSES OF JOHN CHINAMAN.
When John Marshall picked up the first golden nugget in
California, a call was sounded for the gathering of an immense
gold-seeking army made up of many nationalities; and among the
rest China sent a battalion some fifty thousand strong.
John Chinaman has remained with us ever since, despised and
abused, being neither a co-worshiper nor a co-sympathizer in
aught save the getting of gold. In dress, custom and language
his is still a nationality as distinct from ours as are the
waters of the Gulf Stream from those of the ocean.
It is possible that this may be but the second migration of
Tartars to the American shore. It is possible that the North
American Indian and the Chinaman may be identical in origin and
race. Close observers find among the aboriginal tribes resident
far up on the north-west American coast peculiar habits and
customs, having closely-allied types among the Chinese. The
features of the Aleuts, the natives of the Aleutian Islands,
are said to approximate closely to those of the Mongolians. The
unvarying long black hair, variously-shaded brown skin,
beardless face and shaven head are points, natural and
artificial, common to the Indian and Mongolian. There is a hint
of common custom between the Indian scalplock and Chinese
cue.
"John" has been a thorough gleaner of the mines. The
"superior race" allowed him to make no valuable discoveries. He
could buy their half-worked-out placers. The "river-bed" they
sold him when its chances of yielding were deemed desperate.
When the golden fruitage of the banks was reduced to a dollar
per day, they became "China diggings." But wherever "John"
settled he worked steadily, patiently and systematically, no
matter whether his ten or twelve hours' labor brought fifty
cents or fifty dollars; for his industry is of an untiring
mechanical character. In the earlier and flusher days of
California's gold-harvest the white man worked spasmodically.
He was ever leaving the five-dollar diggings in hand for the
fifty- or hundred-dollar-per-day claims afar off in some
imaginary bush. These golden rumors were always on the wing.
The country was but half explored, and many localities were
rich in mystery. The white vanguard pushed north, south and
east, frequently enduring privation and suffering. "John," in
comparative comfort, trotted patiently after, carrying his
snugly made-up bundle of provisions and blankets at one end of
a bamboo pole, his pick, shovel, pan and rocker at the other,
to work over the leavings. The leavings sometimes turned out
more gold than "new ground," much to the chagrin of the
impatient Caucasian. But John, according to his own testimony,
never owned a rich claim. Ask him how much it yielded per day,
and he would tell you, "sometimes four, sometimes six bittee"
(four or six shillings). He had many inducements for
prevarication. Nearly every white man's hand was against him.
If he found a bit of rich ground, "jumpers" were ready to drive
him from it: Mexicans waylaid him and robbed him of his dust.
In remote localities he enclosed his camp by strong stockades:
even these were sometimes forced and carried at night by bands
of desperadoes. Lastly came the foreign miner's tax-collector,
with his demand of four dollars monthly per man for the
privilege of digging gold. There were hundreds and thousands of
other foreign laborers in the mines—English, German,
French, Italian and Portuguese—but they paid little or
none of this tax, for they might soon be entitled to a vote,
and the tax-collector was appointed by the sheriff of the
county, and the sheriff, like other officials, craved a
re-election. But John was never to be a voter, and so he
shouldered the whole of this load, and when he could not pay,
the official beat him and took away his tools. John often
fought this persecutor by strategy. In localities where no
white men would betray him he signalized his coming from afar.
From the crags of Red Mountain on the Tuolumne River I have
often seen the white flag waved as the dreaded collector came
down the steep trail to collect his monthly dues. That signal
or a puff of smoke told the Chinese for miles along the
river-valley to conceal themselves from the "license-man."
Rockers, picks and shovels were hastily thrust into clumps of
chapparal, and their owners clambered up the hillsides into
artificial caves or leafy coverts. Out of companies of fifty
the collector finds but twenty men at work. These pay their
tax, the official rides on down the river, the hidden thirty
Mongolians emerge from cover; and more than once has a keen
collector "doubled on them" by coming back unexpectedly and
detecting the entire gang on their claim.
John has been invaluable to the California demagogue,
furnishing for him a sop of hatred and prejudice to throw
before "enlightened constituencies." It needs but to mention
the "filthy Chinaman" to provoke an angry roar from the
mass-meeting. Yet the Chinaman is not entirely filthy. He
washes his entire person every day when practicable; he loves
clean clothes; his kitchen-utensils will bear inspection. When
the smallpox raged so severely in San Francisco a few years
since, there were very few deaths among his race. But John
is not nice about his house. He seems to have none of
our ideas concerning home comfort. Smoke has no terror for him;
soap he keeps entirely for his clothes and person; floor-and
wall-washing are things never hinted at; and the refuse of his
table is scarcely thrown out of doors. Privacy is not one of
his luxuries—he wants a house full: where there is room
for a bunk, there is room for a man. An anthill, a beehive, a
rabbit-warren are his models of domestic comfort: what is
stinted room for two Americans is spaciousness for a dozen
Chinese. Go into one of their cabins at night, and you are in
an oven full of opium- and lamp-smoke. Recumbent forms are
dimly seen lying on bunks above and below. The chattering is
incessant. Stay there ten minutes, and as your eye becomes
accustomed to the smoke you will dimly see blue bundles lying
on shelves aloft. Anon the bundles stir, talk and puff smoke.
Above is a loft six feet square: a ladder brings it in
communication with the ground floor. Mongolians are ever coming
down, but the gabble of tongues above shows that a host is
still left. Like an omnibus, a Chinese house is never full. Nor
is it ever quiet. At all hours of the night may be heard their
talk and the clatter of their wooden shoes. A Chinaman does not
retire like an American, intending to make a serious business
of his night's sleeping. He merely "lops down" half dressed,
and is ready to arise at the least call of business or
pleasure.
While at work in his claim his fire is always kindled near
by, and over it a tea-pot. This is his beverage every half
hour. His tea must be hot, strong and without milk or sugar. He
also consumes a terrible mixture sold him by white traders,
called indiscriminately brandy, gin or whisky, yet an
intoxicated Chinaman is the rarest of rare sights. Rice he can
cook elegantly, every grain being steamed to its utmost degree
of distension. Soup he makes of no other meat than pork. The
poorest among his hordes must have a chicken or duck for his
holiday. He eats it merely parboiled. He will eat dog also,
providing it is not long past maturity.
The Chinese grocery-stores are museums to the American.
There are strange dried roots, strange dried fish, strange
dried land and marine plants, ducks and chickens, split,
pressed thin and smoked; dried shellfish; cakes newly made,
yellow, glutinous and fatty, stamped with tea-box characters;
and great earthen jars filled with rottenness. I speak
correctly if perhaps too forcibly, for when those imposing jars
are opened to serve a customer with some manner of vegetable
cut in long strips, the native-born American finds it expedient
to hold his nose. American storekeepers in the mines deal
largely in Chinese goods. They know the Mongolian names of the
articles inquired for, but of their character, their
composition, how they are cooked or how eaten, they can give no
information. It is heathenish "truck," by whose sale they make
a profit. Only that and nothing more.
A Chinese miner's house is generally a conglomeration of old
boards, mats, brush, canvas and stones. Rusty sheets of tin
sometimes help to form the edifice. Anything lying about loose
in the neighborhood is certain in time to form a part of the
Mongolian mansion.
When the white man abandons mining-ground he often leaves
behind very serviceable frame houses. John comes along to glean
the gold left by the Caucasian. He builds a cluster of
shapeless huts. The deserted white man's house gradually
disappears. A clapboard is gone, and then another, and finally
all. The skeleton of the frame remains: months pass away; piece
by piece the joists disappear; some morning they are found
tumbled in a heap, and at last nothing is left save the cellar
and chimneys. Meantime, John's clusters of huts swell their
rude proportions, but you must examine them narrowly to detect
any traces of your vanished house, for he revels in smoke, and
everything about him is soon colored to a hue much resembling
his own brownish-yellow countenance. Thus he picks the
domiciliary skeleton bare, and then carries off the bones. He
is a quiet but skillful plunderer. John No. 1 on his way home
from his mining-claim rips off a board; John No. 2 next day
drags it a few yards from the house. John No. 3 a week
afterward drags it home. In this manner the dissolution of your
house is protracted for months. In this manner he distributes
the responsibility of the theft over his entire community. I
have seen a large boarding-house disappear in this way, and
when the owner, after a year's absence, revisited the spot to
look after his property, he found his real estate reduced to a
cellar.
John himself is a sort of museum in his character and
habits. We must be pardoned for giving details of these,
mingled promiscuously, rather after the museum style. His New
Year comes in February. For the Chinaman of limited means it
lasts a week, for the wealthy it may endure three. His
consumption of fire-crackers during that period is immense. He
burns strings a yard in length suspended from poles over his
balconies. The uproar and sputtering consequent on this
festivity in the Chinese quarter at San Francisco is
tremendous. The city authorities limit this Celestial
Pandemonium to a week.
He does not forsake the amusement of kite-flying even when
arrived at maturity. His artistic imitations of birds and
dragons float over our housetops. To these are often affixed
contrivances for producing hollow, mournful, buzzing sounds,
mystifying whole neighborhoods. His game of shuttlecock is to
keep a cork, one end being stuck with feathers, flying in the
air as long as possible, the impelling member being the foot,
the players standing in a circle and numbering from four to
twenty. Some show great dexterity in kicking with the heel. His
vocal music to our ears seems a monotonous caterwaul. His
violin has but one string: his execution is merely a modified
species of saw-filing.
He loves to gamble, especially in lotteries. He is a
diligent student of his own comfort. Traveling on foot during a
hot day, he protects himself with an umbrella and refreshes
himself with a fan. In place of prosaic signs on his
store-fronts, he often inscribes quotations from his favorite
authors.
He is a lover of flowers. His balconies and window-sills are
often thickly packed with shrubs and creepers in pots. He is
not a speedy and taciturn eater. His tea-table talks are full
of noisy jollity, and are often prolonged far into the
night.
He is a lover of the drama. A single play sometimes requires
months for representation, being, like a serial story,
"continued" night after night. He never dances. There is no
melody in the Mongolian foot. Dancing he regards as a species
of Caucasian insanity.
To make an oath binding he must swear by the head of a cock
cut off before him in open court. Chinese testimony is not
admissible in American courts. It is a legal California axiom
that a Chinaman cannot speak the truth. But cases have occurred
wherein, he being an eye-witness, the desire to hear what he
might tell as to what he had seen has proved stronger
than the prejudice against him; and the more effectually to
clinch the chances of his telling the truth, the above, his
national form of oath, has been resorted to. He has among us
some secret government of his own. Before his secret tribunals
more than one Mongolian has been hurried in Star-Chamber
fashion, and never seen afterward. The nature of the offences
thus visited by secret and bloody punishment is scarcely known
to Americans. He has two chief deities—a god and a devil.
Most of his prayers are offered to his devil. His god, he says,
being good and well-disposed, it is not necessary to propitiate
him. But his devil is ugly, and must be won over by offering
and petition. Once a year, wherever collected in any number, he
builds a flimsy sort of temple, decorates it with ornaments of
tinsel, lays piles of fruit, meats and sugared delicacies on an
altar, keeps up night and day a steady crash of gongs, and
installs therein some great, uncouth wooden idols. When this
period of worship is over the "josh-house" disappears, and the
idols are unceremoniously stowed away among other useless
lumber.
He shaves with an instrument resembling a butcher's cleaver
in miniature. Nature generally denies him beard, so he shaves
what a sailor would term the fore and after part of his head.
He reaps his hirsute crop dry, using no lather. His cue is
pieced out by silken braid, so interwoven as gradually to taper
into a slim tassel, something like a Missouri mule-driver's
"black snake" whip-lash. To lose this cue is to lose caste and
standing among his fellows. No misfortune for him can be
greater.
Coarse cowhide boots are the only articles of American wear
that he favors. He inclines to buy the largest sizes, thinking
he thereby gets the most for his money, and when his No. 7 feet
wobble and chafe in No. 12 boots he complains that they "fit
too much."
He cultivates the vegetables of his native land in
California. They are curiosities like himself. One resembles
our string-bean, but is circular in shape and from two to three
feet in length. It is not in the least stringy, breaks off
short and crisp, boils tender very quickly and affords
excellent eating. He is a very careful cultivator, and will
spend hours picking off dead leaves and insects from the young
plants. When he finds a dead cat, rat, dog or chicken, he
throws it into a small vat of water, allows it to decompose,
and sprinkles the liquid fertilizer thus obtained over his
plantation. Watermelon and pumpkin seeds are for him dessert
delicacies. He consumes his garden products about half cooked
in an American culinary point of view, merely wilting them by
an immersion in boiling water.
There are about fifteen English words to be learned by a
Chinaman on arriving in California, and no more. With these he
expresses all his wants, and with this limited stock you must
learn to convey all that is needful to him. The practice thus
forced upon one in employing a Chinese servant is useful in
preventing a circumlocutory habit of speech. Many of our
letters the Mongolian mouth has no capacity for sounding.
R he invariably sounds like l, so that the word
"rice" he pronounces "lice"—a bit of information which
may prevent an unpleasant apprehension when you come to employ
a Chinese cook. He rejects the English personal pronoun I, and
uses the possessive "my" in its place; thus, "My go home," in
place of "I go home."
When he buries a countryman he throws from the hearse into
the air handfuls of brown tissue-paper slips, punctured with
Chinese characters. Sometimes, at his burial-processions, he
gives a small piece of money to every person met on the road.
Over the grave he beats gongs and sets off packs of
fire-crackers. On it he leaves cooked meats, drink, delicacies
and lighted wax tapers. Eventually the bones are disinterred
and shipped to his native land. In the remotest
mining-districts of California are found Chinese graves thus
opened and emptied of their inmates. I have in one instance
seen him, so far as he was permitted, render some of these
funeral honors to an American. The deceased had gained this
honor by treating the Chinese as though they were partners in
our common humanity. "Missa Tom," as he was termed by them,
they knew they could trust. He acquired among them a reputation
as the one righteous American in their California Gomorrah.
Chinamen would come to him from distant localities, that he
might overlook their bills of sale and other documents used in
business intercourse with the white man. Their need of such, an
honest adviser was great. The descendants of the Pilgrim
Fathers often took advantage of their ignorance of the English
language, written or spoken. "Missa Tom" suddenly died. I had
occasion to visit his farm a few days after his death, and on
the first night of my stay there saw the array of meats, fruit,
wine and burning tapers on a table in front of the house, which
his Chinese friends told me was intended as an offering to
"Missa Tom's" spirit.
We will dive for a moment into a Chinese wash-cellar. "John"
does three-fourths of the washing of California. His lavatories
are on every street. "Hip Tee, Washing and Ironing," says the
sign, evidently the first production of an amateur in
lettering. Two doors above is the establishment of Tong
Wash—two below, that of Hi Sing. Hip Tee and five
assistants are busy ironing. The odor is a trinity of steam,
damp clothes and opium. More Mongolian tongues are heard from
smoky recesses in the rear. As we enter, Hip Tee is blowing a
shower of moisture from his mouth, "very like a whale." This is
his method of dampening the linen preparatory to ironing. It is
a skilled performance. The fluid leaves his lips as fine as
mist. If we are on business we leave our bundles, and in return
receive a ticket covered with hieroglyphics. These indicate the
kind and number of the garments left to be cleansed, and some
distinguishing mark (supposing this to be our first patronage
of Hip Tee) by which we may be again identified. It may be by a
pug nose, a hare lip, red hair, no hair or squint eyes. They
never ask one's name, for they can neither pronounce nor write
it when it is given. The ticket is an unintelligible tracery of
lines, curves, dots and dashes, made by a brush dipped in India
ink on a shred of flimsy Chinese paper. It may teem with abuse
and ridicule, but you must pocket all that, and produce it on
calling again, or your shirts and collars go into the Chinese
Circumlocution Wash-house Office. It is very difficult getting
one's clothes back if the ticket be lost—very. Hip Tee
now dabs a duplicate of your ticket in a long book, and all is
over. You will call on Saturday night for your linen. You do
so. There is apparently the same cellar, the same smell of
steam, damp clothes and opium, the same sputter of sprinkling
water, and apparently the same Hip Tee and assistants with
brown shaven foreheads and long cues hanging straight down
behind or coiled in snake-like fashion about their craniums.
You present your ticket. Hip Tee examines it and shakes his
head. "No good—oder man," he says, and points up the
street. You are now perplexed and somewhat alarmed. You say:
"John, I want my clothes. I left them here last Monday. You
gave me that ticket." "No," replies Hip Tee very decidedly,
"oder man;" and again he waves his arm upward. Then you are
wroth. You abuse, expostulate, entreat, and talk a great deal
of English, and some of it very strong English, which Hip Tee
does not understand; and Hip Tee talks a great deal of Chinese,
and perhaps strong Chinese, which you do not understand. You
commence sentences in broken Chinese and terminate them in
unbroken English. Hip Tee commences sentences in broken English
and terminates them in pure Chinese, from a like inability to
express his indignation in a foreign tongue. "What for you no
go oder man? No my ticket—tung sung lung, ya hip
kee—ping!" he cries; and all this time the
assistants are industriously ironing and spouting mist, and
leisurely making remarks in their sing-song unintelligibility
which you feel have uncomplimentary reference to yourself.
Suddenly a light breaks upon you. This is not Hip Tee's cellar,
this is not Hip Tee. It is the establishment of Hi Sing. This
is Hi Sing himself who for the last half hour has been
endeavoring with his stock of fifteen English words to make you
understand that you are in the wrong house. But these Chinese,
as to faces and their wash-houses, and all the paraphernalia of
their wash-houses, are so much alike that this is an easy
mistake to make. You find the lavatory of Hip Tee, who
pronounces the hieroglyphics all correct, and delivers you your
lost and found shirts clean, with half the buttons broken, and
the bosoms pounded, scrubbed and frayed into an irregular sort
of embroidery.
"He can only dig, cook and wash," said the American miner
contemptuously years ago: "he can't work rock." To work rock in
mining parlance is to be skillful in boring Earth's stony husk
after mineral. It is to be proficient in sledging, drilling and
blasting. The Chinaman seemed to have no aptitude for this
labor. He was content to use his pick and shovel in the
gravel-banks: metallic veins of gold, silver or copper he left
entirely to the white man.
Yet it was a great mistake to suppose he could not "work
rock," or do anything else required of him. John is a most apt
and intelligent labor-machine. Show him once your tactics in
any operation, and ever after he imitates them as accurately as
does the parrot its memorized sentences. So when the Pacific
Railroad was being bored through the hard granite of the
Sierras it was John who handled the drill and sledge as well as
the white laborer. He was hurled by thousands on that immense
work, and it was the tawny hand of China that hewed out
hundreds of miles for the transcontinental pathway. Nor is this
all. He is crowding into one avenue of employment after another
in California. He fills our woolen- and silk-mills; he makes
slippers and binds shoes; he is skilled in the use of the
sewing-machine; cellar after cellar in San Francisco is filled
with these Celestial brownies rolling cigars; his fishing-nets
are in every bay and inlet; he is employed in scores of the
lesser establishments for preserving fruit, grinding salt,
making matches, etc. He would quickly jump into the places of
the carpenter, mason and blacksmith were he allowed, for there
are numbers of them whose knowledge of these and other trades
is sufficient at least to render them useful as assistants. He
is handy on shipboard: the Panama steamers carry Chinese
foremast hands. He is preferred as a house-servant: the Chinese
boy of fourteen or sixteen learns quickly to cook and wash in
American fashion. He is neat in person, can be easily ruled,
does not set up an independent sovereignty in the kitchen, has
no followers, will not outshine his mistress in attire; and,
although not perfect, yet affords a refreshing change from our
Milesian tyrants of the roast and wash-tub. But when you catch
this Celestial domestic treasure, be sure that the first
culinary operations performed for his instruction are correctly
manipulated, for his imitativeness is of a cast-iron rigidity.
Once in the mould, it can only with great difficulty be
altered. Burn your toast or your pudding, and he is apt to
regard the accident as the rule.
The young Chinese, especially in San Francisco, are anxious
to acquire an English education. They may not attend the public
schools. A few years since certain Chinese mission-schools were
established by the joint efforts of several religious
denominations. Young ladies and gentlemen volunteered their
services on Sunday to teach these Chinese children to read.
They make eager, apt and docile pupils. Great is their pride on
mastering a few lines of English text. They become much
attached to their teachers, and it is possible, if the vote of
the latter were taken, it would evidence more liking for their
yellow, long-cued pupils than for any class of white children.
But while so assiduous to learn, it is rather doubtful whether
much real religious impression is made upon them. It is
possible that their home-training negatives that.
We have spoken entirely of the Chinaman. What of the
Chinawoman in America? In California the word "Chinawoman" is
synonymous with what is most vile and disgusting. Few, very
few, of a respectable class are in the State. The slums of
London and New York are as respectable thoroughfares compared
with the rows of "China alleys" in the heart of San Francisco.
These can hardly be termed "abandoned women." They have had no
sense of virtue, propriety or decency to abandon. They are
ignorant of the disgrace of their calling: if the term may be
allowed, they pursue it innocently. Many are scarcely more than
children. They are mere commodities, being by their own
countrymen bought in China, shipped and consigned to factors in
California, and there sold for a term of years.
The Chinaman has bitter enemies in San Francisco: they
thirst to annihilate him. He is accustomed to blows and
brickbats; he is legitimate game for rowdies, both grown and
juvenile; and children supposed to be better trained can scarce
resist the temptation of snatching at his pig-tail as he passes
through their groups in front of the public schools. Even on
Sundays nice little boys coming from Sabbath-school, with their
catechisms tucked under their jackets, and texts enjoining
mercy and gentleness fresh upon their lips, will sometimes
salute the benighted heathen as he passes by with a volley of
stones. If he turns on his small assailants, he is apt to meet
larger ones. Men are not wanting, ready and panting, to take up
the quarrel thus wantonly commenced by the offspring of the
"superior race." There are hundreds of families, who came over
the sea to seek in America the comfort and prosperity denied
them in the land of their birth, whose children from earliest
infancy are inculcated with the sentiment that the Chinaman is
a dog, a pest and a curse. On the occasion of William H.
Seward's visit to a San Francisco theatre, two Chinese
merchants were hissed and hooted by the gallery mob from a box
which they had ventured to occupy. This assumption of style and
exclusiveness proved very offensive to the shirt-sleeved,
upper-tier representatives of the "superior race," who had
assembled in large numbers to catch a glimpse of one of the
black man's great champions. Ethiopia could have sat in that
box in perfect safety, but China in such a place was the red
rag rousing the ire of the Democratic bull. John has a story of
his own to carry back home from a Christian land.
For this prejudice and hostility there are provocative
causes, although they may not be urged in extenuation. The
Chinaman is a dangerous competitor for the white laborer; and
when the latter, with other and smaller mouths to feed, once
gets the idea implanted in his mind that the bread is being
taken from them by what he deems a semi-human heathen, whose
beliefs, habits, appearance and customs are distasteful to him,
there are all the conditions ready for a state of mind toward
the almond-eyed Oriental which leans far away from brotherly
love.
Brotherly love sometimes depends on circumstances. "Am I not
a man and brother?" cries John from his native shore.
"Certainly," we respond. Pass round the hat—let us take
up a contribution for the conversion of the poor heathen. The
coins clink thickly in the bottom of the charitable chapeau. We
return home, feeling ourselves raised an inch higher
heavenward.
"Am I not a man and brother?" cries John in our midst,
digging our gold, setting up opposition laundries and wheeling
sand at half a dollar per day less wages. "No. Get out, ye
long-tailed baste! An' wad ye put me on a livil with
that—that baboon?" Pass round the hat. The coins mass
themselves more thickly than ever. For what? To buy muskets,
powder and ball. Wherefore? Wait! More than once has the
demagogue cried, "Drive them into the sea!"
PRENTICE MULFORD. |