in the heart of China, about the latitude of thirty
degrees north of the line, for we were returned from
Nanquin; I had indeed a mind to see the city of Pekin,
which I had heard so much of, and Father Simon importuned
me daily to do it. At length his time of going
away being set, and the other missionary, who was
to go with him, being arrived from Macao, it was necessary
that we should resolve either to go, or not to go;
so I referred him to my partner, and left it wholly
to his choice; who at length resolved it in the affirmative;
and we prepared for our journey. We set out with
very good advantage, as to finding the way; for we
got leave to travel in the retinue of one of their
mandarins, a kind of viceroy, or principal magistrate,
in the province where they reside, and who take great
state upon them, travelling with great attendance,
and with great homage from the people, who are sometimes
greatly impoverished by them, because all the countries
they pass through are obliged to furnish provisions
for them, and all their attendants. That which
I particularly observed, as to our travelling with
his baggage, was this; that though we received sufficient
provisions, both for ourselves and our horses, from
the country, as belonging to the mandarin, yet we
were obliged to pay for every thing we had after the
market-price of the country, and the mandarin’s
steward, or commissary of the provisions, collected
it duly from us; so that our travelling in the retinue
of the mandarin, though it was a very great kindness
to us, was not such a mighty favour in him, but was,
indeed, a great advantage to him, considering there
were about thirty other people travelling in the same
manner besides us, under the protection of his retinue,
or, as we may call it, under his convoy. This,
I say, was a great advantage to him; for the country
furnished all the provisions for nothing, and he took
all our money for them.
We were five-and-twenty days travelling to Pekin,
through a country infinitely populous, but miserably
cultivated; the husbandry, economy, and the way of
living, all very miserable, though they boast so much
of the industry of the people: I say miserable;
and so it is; if we, who understand how to live, were
to endure it, or to compare it with our own; but not
so to these poor wretches, who know no other.
The pride of these people is infinitely great, and
exceeded by nothing but their poverty, which adds
to that which I call their misery. I must needs
think the naked savages of America live much more happy,
because, as they have nothing, so they desire nothing;
whereas these are proud and insolent, and, in the
main, are mere beggars and drudges; their ostentation
is inexpressible, and is chiefly shewed in their clothes
and buildings, and in the keeping multitudes of servants
or slaves, and, which is to the last degree ridiculous,
their contempt of all the world but themselves.