Big People and Little People of Other Lands eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 72 pages of information about Big People and Little People of Other Lands.

Big People and Little People of Other Lands eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 72 pages of information about Big People and Little People of Other Lands.

The Chinese are so fond of lanterns that every year they have a “Feast of Lanterns.”  On that day and night lanterns are to be seen everywhere.  Bridges and houses and trees are covered with lighted lanterns.

They have fireworks, too, that look like stars and trees and flowers.

A Chinese dinner begins in the wrong way.  They have fruits and nuts first.  After this comes rice.  They eat more of rice than of anything else.  Then they drink tea without either milk or sugar.  They use neither forks nor knives.  Instead they eat with small sticks of wood or ivory.  These are called “chopsticks.”  They hold them between the thumb and first two fingers.  They use them to carry their food to their mouths as you use a fork or a spoon.

[Illustration:  Chopsticks.]

Do you know how they catch fish in China?

They have a bird which swims and dives into the water.  This bird lives on fish.  Every time he dives he catches one.  He is trained to bring the fish to his master.  A tight ring is put round the bird’s neck.  This is to keep him from swallowing the fish.  When enough fish have been caught, the bird is given some to eat.  This bird is called a cormorant.

A Chinese fisherman lives in his fishing boat.  But China is a very crowded country.  So other men as well as fishermen live on small flatboats in the rivers near the big towns.  Ducks and other fowls are raised on these boats.  The people on the water are as busy as the people on the land.

In China houses are one story high.  They are built of wood.  The roofs slope, and are made of sticks woven together.  The churches are called pagodas.  They are not like our churches, but are tall, like towers.  They are usually nine stories high.  They have little bells hung all around the roof.  These bells ring when the wind blows them back and forth.

[Illustration:  Chinese Boats and Pagoda.]

Between the houses are narrow streets without sidewalks.  There are no wagons.  If a lady goes to make a call, she sends for a sort of covered chair.  This has long poles on each side.  The chair is set on the ground before her door.  After she gets in, men lift the poles to their shoulders.  In this way they carry her.  Baggage and heavy articles are also carried on the shoulders of men.

[Illustration:  Covered Chair with Poles.]

But perhaps the most wonderful thing in China is the Great Wall.  It was built by kings a long time ago.  They wanted to keep savage people from coming into the country.  The wall is built very high and very wide.  It is so wide in some places that eight horses can be driven on top of it side by side.  It is hundreds of miles long.  The people of China think it is very wonderful.  They think there is nothing so wonderful in all the rest of the world.

[Illustration:  The Great Wall.]

China seems a curious country.  Boys shout out loud in school.  They read and write backward.  Men fly kites, like boys.  Women have feet as small as babies’ feet.  At dinner nuts and fruits are eaten first.  Men work like animals.  There are many ways in which the Chinese are different from the people in our country.

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Big People and Little People of Other Lands from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.