Historic China, and other sketches eBook

Herbert Giles
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 173 pages of information about Historic China, and other sketches.

Historic China, and other sketches eBook

Herbert Giles
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 173 pages of information about Historic China, and other sketches.

FUNERALS

Of all their cherished ceremonies, there are none the Chinese observe with more scrupulous exactness than those connected with death and mourning.  We have just heard of the Governor of Kiangsu going into retirement because of the decease of his mother; and so he will remain, ineligible to any office, for the space of three years.  He will not shave his head for one hundred days.  For forty-nine nights he will sleep in a hempen garment, with his head resting on a brick and stretched on the hard ground, by the side of the coffin which holds the remains of the parent who gave him birth.  He will go down upon his knees and humbly kotow to each friend and relative at their first meeting after the sad event—­a tacit acknowledgment that it was but his own want of filial piety which brought his beloved mother prematurely to the grave.  To the coolies who bear the coffin to its resting-place on the slope of some wooded hill, or beneath the shade of a clump of dark-leaved cypress trees, he will make the same obeisance.  Their lives and properties are at his disposal day and night; but he now has a favour to ask which no violence could secure, and pleads that his mother’s body may be carried gently, without jar or concussion of any kind.  He will have her laid by the side of his father, in a coffin which cost perhaps 100 pounds, and repair thither periodically to appease her departed spirit with votive offerings of fruit, vegetables, and pork.

Immediately after the decease of a parent, the children and other near relatives communicate the news to friends living farther off, by what is called an “announcement of death,” which merely states that the father or mother, as the case may be, has died, and that they, the survivors, are entirely to blame.  With this is sent a “sad report,” or in other words a detailed account of deceased’s last illness, how it originated, what medicine was prescribed and taken, and sundry other interesting particulars.  Their friends reply by sending a present of money to help defray funeral expenses, a present of food or joss-stick, or even a detachment of priests to read the prescribed liturgies over the dead.  Sometimes a large scroll is written and forwarded, inscribed with a few such appropriate words as—­“A hero has gone!” When all these have been received, the members of the bereaved family issue a printed form of thanks, one copy being left at the house of each contributor and worded thus:—­“This is to express the thanks of . . . the orphaned son who weeps tears of blood and bows his head:  of . . . the mourning brother who weeps and bows his head:  of . . . the mourning nephew who wipes away his tears and bows his head.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Historic China, and other sketches from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.