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Further Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, The
CHAPTER XIII - ARRIVAL IN CHINA
Daniel Defoe
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       _ The greater weight the anxieties and perplexities of these things
       were to our thoughts while we were at sea, the greater was our
       satisfaction when we saw ourselves on shore; and my partner told me
       he dreamed that he had a very heavy load upon his back, which he
       was to carry up a hill, and found that he was not able to stand
       longer under it; but that the Portuguese pilot came and took it off
       his back, and the hill disappeared, the ground before him appearing
       all smooth and plain: and truly it was so; they were all like men
       who had a load taken off their backs. For my part I had a weight
       taken off from my heart that it was not able any longer to bear;
       and as I said above we resolved to go no more to sea in that ship.
       When we came on shore, the old pilot, who was now our friend, got
       us a lodging, together with a warehouse for our goods; it was a
       little hut, with a larger house adjoining to it, built and also
       palisadoed round with canes, to keep out pilferers, of which there
       were not a few in that country: however, the magistrates allowed
       us a little guard, and we had a soldier with a kind of half-pike,
       who stood sentinel at our door, to whom we allowed a pint of rice
       and a piece of money about the value of three-pence per day, so
       that our goods were kept very safe.
       The fair or mart usually kept at this place had been over some
       time; however, we found that there were three or four junks in the
       river, and two ships from Japan, with goods which they had bought
       in China, and were not gone away, having some Japanese merchants on
       shore.
       The first thing our old Portuguese pilot did for us was to get us
       acquainted with three missionary Romish priests who were in the
       town, and who had been there some time converting the people to
       Christianity; but we thought they made but poor work of it, and
       made them but sorry Christians when they had done. One of these
       was a Frenchman, whom they called Father Simon; another was a
       Portuguese; and a third a Genoese. Father Simon was courteous, and
       very agreeable company; but the other two were more reserved,
       seemed rigid and austere, and applied seriously to the work they
       came about, viz. to talk with and insinuate themselves among the
       inhabitants wherever they had opportunity. We often ate and drank
       with those men; and though I must confess the conversion, as they
       call it, of the Chinese to Christianity is so far from the true
       conversion required to bring heathen people to the faith of Christ,
       that it seems to amount to little more than letting them know the
       name of Christ, and say some prayers to the Virgin Mary and her
       Son, in a tongue which they understood not, and to cross
       themselves, and the like; yet it must be confessed that the
       religionists, whom we call missionaries, have a firm belief that
       these people will be saved, and that they are the instruments of
       it; and on this account they undergo not only the fatigue of the
       voyage, and the hazards of living in such places, but oftentimes
       death itself, and the most violent tortures, for the sake of this
       work.
       Father Simon was appointed, it seems, by order of the chief of the
       mission, to go up to Pekin, and waited only for another priest, who
       was ordered to come to him from Macao, to go along with him. We
       scarce ever met together but he was inviting me to go that journey;
       telling me how he would show me all the glorious things of that
       mighty empire, and, among the rest, Pekin, the greatest city in the
       world: "A city," said he, "that your London and our Paris put
       together cannot be equal to." But as I looked on those things with
       different eyes from other men, so I shall give my opinion of them
       in a few words, when I come in the course of my travels to speak
       more particularly of them.
       Dining with Father Simon one day, and being very merry together, I
       showed some little inclination to go with him; and he pressed me
       and my partner very hard to consent. "Why, father," says my
       partner, "should you desire our company so much? you know we are
       heretics, and you do not love us, nor cannot keep us company with
       any pleasure."--"Oh," says he, "you may perhaps be good Catholics
       in time; my business here is to convert heathens, and who knows but
       I may convert you too?"--"Very well, father," said I, "so you will
       preach to us all the way?"--"I will not be troublesome to you,"
       says he; "our religion does not divest us of good manners; besides,
       we are here like countrymen; and so we are, compared to the place
       we are in; and if you are Huguenots, and I a Catholic, we may all
       be Christians at last; at least, we are all gentlemen, and we may
       converse so, without being uneasy to one another." I liked this
       part of his discourse very well, and it began to put me in mind of
       my priest that I had left in the Brazils; but Father Simon did not
       come up to his character by a great deal; for though this friar had
       no appearance of a criminal levity in him, yet he had not that fund
       of Christian zeal, strict piety, and sincere affection to religion
       that my other good ecclesiastic had.
       But to leave him a little, though he never left us, nor solicited
       us to go with him; we had something else before us at first, for we
       had all this while our ship and our merchandise to dispose of, and
       we began to be very doubtful what we should do, for we were now in
       a place of very little business. Once I was about to venture to
       sail for the river of Kilam, and the city of Nankin; but Providence
       seemed now more visibly, as I thought, than ever to concern itself
       in our affairs; and I was encouraged, from this very time, to think
       I should, one way or other, get out of this entangled circumstance,
       and be brought home to my own country again, though I had not the
       least view of the manner. Providence, I say, began here to clear
       up our way a little; and the first thing that offered was, that our
       old Portuguese pilot brought a Japan merchant to us, who inquired
       what goods we had: and, in the first place, he bought all our
       opium, and gave us a very good price for it, paying us in gold by
       weight, some in small pieces of their own coin, and some in small
       wedges, of about ten or twelves ounces each. While we were dealing
       with him for our opium, it came into my head that he might perhaps
       deal for the ship too, and I ordered the interpreter to propose it
       to him. He shrunk up his shoulders at it when it was first
       proposed to him; but in a few days after he came to me, with one of
       the missionary priests for his interpreter, and told me he had a
       proposal to make to me, which was this: he had bought a great
       quantity of our goods, when he had no thoughts of proposals made to
       him of buying the ship; and that, therefore, he had not money to
       pay for the ship: but if I would let the same men who were in the
       ship navigate her, he would hire the ship to go to Japan; and would
       send them from thence to the Philippine Islands with another
       loading, which he would pay the freight of before they went from
       Japan: and that at their return he would buy the ship. I began to
       listen to his proposal, and so eager did my head still run upon
       rambling, that I could not but begin to entertain a notion of going
       myself with him, and so to set sail from the Philippine Islands
       away to the South Seas; accordingly, I asked the Japanese merchant
       if he would not hire us to the Philippine Islands and discharge us
       there. He said No, he could not do that, for then he could not
       have the return of his cargo; but he would discharge us in Japan,
       at the ship's return. Well, still I was for taking him at that
       proposal, and going myself; but my partner, wiser than myself,
       persuaded me from it, representing the dangers, as well of the seas
       as of the Japanese, who are a false, cruel, and treacherous people;
       likewise those of the Spaniards at the Philippines, more false,
       cruel, and treacherous than they.
       But to bring this long turn of our affairs to a conclusion; the
       first thing we had to do was to consult with the captain of the
       ship, and with his men, and know if they were willing to go to
       Japan. While I was doing this, the young man whom my nephew had
       left with me as my companion came up, and told me that he thought
       that voyage promised very fair, and that there was a great prospect
       of advantage, and he would be very glad if I undertook it; but that
       if I would not, and would give him leave, he would go as a
       merchant, or as I pleased to order him; that if ever he came to
       England, and I was there and alive, he would render me a faithful
       account of his success, which should be as much mine as I pleased.
       I was loath to part with him; but considering the prospect of
       advantage, which really was considerable, and that he was a young
       fellow likely to do well in it, I inclined to let him go; but I
       told him I would consult my partner, and give him an answer the
       next day. I discoursed about it with my partner, who thereupon
       made a most generous offer: "You know it has been an unlucky
       ship," said he, "and we both resolve not to go to sea in it again;
       if your steward" (so he called my man) "will venture the voyage, I
       will leave my share of the vessel to him, and let him make the best
       of it; and if we live to meet in England, and he meets with success
       abroad, he shall account for one half of the profits of the ship's
       freight to us; the other shall be his own."
       If my partner, who was no way concerned with my young man, made him
       such an offer, I could not do less than offer him the same; and all
       the ship's company being willing to go with him, we made over half
       the ship to him in property, and took a writing from him, obliging
       him to account for the other, and away he went to Japan. The Japan
       merchant proved a very punctual, honest man to him: protected him
       at Japan, and got him a licence to come on shore, which the
       Europeans in general have not lately obtained. He paid him his
       freight very punctually; sent him to the Philippines loaded with
       Japan and China wares, and a supercargo of their own, who,
       trafficking with the Spaniards, brought back European goods again,
       and a great quantity of spices; and there he was not only paid his
       freight very well, and at a very good price, but not being willing
       to sell the ship, then the merchant furnished him goods on his own
       account; and with some money, and some spices of his own which he
       brought with him, he went back to the Manillas, where he sold his
       cargo very well. Here, having made a good acquaintance at Manilla,
       he got his ship made a free ship, and the governor of Manilla hired
       him to go to Acapulco, on the coast of America, and gave him a
       licence to land there, and to travel to Mexico, and to pass in any
       Spanish ship to Europe with all his men. He made the voyage to
       Acapulco very happily, and there he sold his ship: and having
       there also obtained allowance to travel by land to Porto Bello, he
       found means to get to Jamaica, with all his treasure, and about
       eight years after came to England exceeding rich.
       But to return to our particular affairs, being now to part with the
       ship and ship's company, it came before us, of course, to consider
       what recompense we should give to the two men that gave us such
       timely notice of the design against us in the river Cambodia. The
       truth was, they had done us a very considerable service, and
       deserved well at our hands; though, by the way, they were a couple
       of rogues, too; for, as they believed the story of our being
       pirates, and that we had really run away with the ship, they came
       down to us, not only to betray the design that was formed against
       us, but to go to sea with us as pirates. One of them confessed
       afterwards that nothing else but the hopes of going a-roguing
       brought him to do it: however, the service they did us was not the
       less, and therefore, as I had promised to be grateful to them, I
       first ordered the money to be paid them which they said was due to
       them on board their respective ships: over and above that, I gave
       each of them a small sum of money in gold, which contented them
       very well. I then made the Englishman gunner in the ship, the
       gunner being now made second mate and purser; the Dutchman I made
       boatswain; so they were both very well pleased, and proved very
       serviceable, being both able seamen, and very stout fellows.
       We were now on shore in China; if I thought myself banished, and
       remote from my own country at Bengal, where I had many ways to get
       home for my money, what could I think of myself now, when I was
       about a thousand leagues farther off from home, and destitute of
       all manner of prospect of return? All we had for it was this:
       that in about four months' time there was to be another fair at the
       place where we were, and then we might be able to purchase various
       manufactures of the country, and withal might possibly find some
       Chinese junks from Tonquin for sail, that would carry us and our
       goods whither we pleased. This I liked very well, and resolved to
       wait; besides, as our particular persons were not obnoxious, so if
       any English or Dutch ships came thither, perhaps we might have an
       opportunity to load our goods, and get passage to some other place
       in India nearer home. Upon these hopes we resolved to continue
       here; but, to divert ourselves, we took two or three journeys into
       the country.
       First, we went ten days' journey to Nankin, a city well worth
       seeing; they say it has a million of people in it: it is regularly
       built, and the streets are all straight, and cross one another in
       direct lines. But when I come to compare the miserable people of
       these countries with ours, their fabrics, their manner of living,
       their government, their religion, their wealth, and their glory, as
       some call it, I must confess that I scarcely think it worth my
       while to mention them here. We wonder at the grandeur, the riches,
       the pomp, the ceremonies, the government, the manufactures, the
       commerce, and conduct of these people; not that there is really any
       matter for wonder, but because, having a true notion of the
       barbarity of those countries, the rudeness and the ignorance that
       prevail there, we do not expect to find any such thing so far off.
       Otherwise, what are their buildings to the palaces and royal
       buildings of Europe? What their trade to the universal commerce of
       England, Holland, France, and Spain? What are their cities to
       ours, for wealth, strength, gaiety of apparel, rich furniture, and
       infinite variety? What are their ports, supplied with a few junks
       and barks, to our navigation, our merchant fleets, our large and
       powerful navies? Our city of London has more trade than half their
       mighty empire: one English, Dutch, or French man-of-war of eighty
       guns would be able to fight almost all the shipping belonging to
       China: but the greatness of their wealth, their trade, the power
       of their government, and the strength of their armies, may be a
       little surprising to us, because, as I have said, considering them
       as a barbarous nation of pagans, little better than savages, we did
       not expect such things among them. But all the forces of their
       empire, though they were to bring two millions of men into the
       field together, would be able to do nothing but ruin the country
       and starve themselves; a million of their foot could not stand
       before one embattled body of our infantry, posted so as not to be
       surrounded, though they were not to be one to twenty in number;
       nay, I do not boast if I say that thirty thousand German or English
       foot, and ten thousand horse, well managed, could defeat all the
       forces of China. Nor is there a fortified town in China that could
       hold out one month against the batteries and attacks of an European
       army. They have firearms, it is true, but they are awkward and
       uncertain in their going off; and their powder has but little
       strength. Their armies are badly disciplined, and want skill to
       attack, or temper to retreat; and therefore, I must confess, it
       seemed strange to me, when I came home, and heard our people say
       such fine things of the power, glory, magnificence, and trade of
       the Chinese; because, as far as I saw, they appeared to be a
       contemptible herd or crowd of ignorant, sordid slaves, subjected to
       a government qualified only to rule such a people; and were not its
       distance inconceivably, great from Muscovy, and that empire in a
       manner as rude, impotent, and ill governed as they, the Czar of
       Muscovy might with ease drive them all out of their country, and
       conquer them in one campaign; and had the Czar (who is now a
       growing prince) fallen this way, instead of attacking the warlike
       Swedes, and equally improved himself in the art of war, as they say
       he has done; and if none of the powers of Europe had envied or
       interrupted him, he might by this time have been Emperor of China,
       instead of being beaten by the King of Sweden at Narva, when the
       latter was not one to six in number.
       As their strength and their grandeur, so their navigation,
       commerce, and husbandry are very imperfect, compared to the same
       things in Europe; also, in their knowledge, their learning, and in
       their skill in the sciences, they are either very awkward or
       defective, though they have globes or spheres, and a smattering of
       the mathematics, and think they know more than all the world
       besides. But they know little of the motions of the heavenly
       bodies; and so grossly and absurdly ignorant are their common
       people, that when the sun is eclipsed, they think a great dragon
       has assaulted it, and is going to run away with it; and they fall a
       clattering with all the drums and kettles in the country, to fright
       the monster away, just as we do to hive a swarm of bees!
       As this is the only excursion of the kind which I have made in all
       the accounts I have given of my travels, so I shall make no more
       such. It is none of my business, nor any part of my design; but to
       give an account of my own adventures through a life of inimitable
       wanderings, and a long variety of changes, which, perhaps, few that
       come after me will have heard the like of: I shall, therefore, say
       very little of all the mighty places, desert countries, and
       numerous people I have yet to pass through, more than relates to my
       own story, and which my concern among them will make necessary.
       I was now, as near as I can compute, in the heart of China, about
       thirty degrees north of the line, for we were returned from Nankin.
       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; so I referred it 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
       great homage from the people, who are sometimes greatly
       impoverished by them, being obliged to furnish provisions for them
       and all their attendants in their journeys. I particularly
       observed in our travelling with his baggage, 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 everything we had, after the market price of the
       country, and the mandarin's steward collected it duly from us.
       Thus our travelling in the retinue of the mandarin, though it was a
       great act of kindness, was not such a mighty favour to us, but was
       a great advantage to him, considering there were above thirty other
       people travelled in the same manner besides us, under the
       protection of his retinue; for the country furnished all the
       provisions for nothing to him, and yet he took our money for them.
       We were twenty-five days travelling to Pekin, through a country
       exceeding populous, but I think badly cultivated; the husbandry,
       the economy, and the way of living miserable, though they boast so
       much of the industry of the people: I say miserable, if compared
       with our own, but not so to these poor wretches, who know no other.
       The pride of the poor people is infinitely great, and exceeded by
       nothing but their poverty, in some parts, which adds to that which
       I call their misery; and I must needs think the savages of America
       live much more happy than the poorer sort of these, because as they
       have nothing, so they desire nothing; whereas these are proud and
       insolent and in the main are in many parts mere beggars and
       drudges. Their ostentation is inexpressible; and, if they can,
       they love to keep multitudes of servants or slaves, which is to the
       last degree ridiculous, as well as their contempt of all the world
       but themselves.
       I must confess I travelled more pleasantly afterwards in the
       deserts and vast wildernesses of Grand Tartary than here, and yet
       the roads here are well paved and well kept, and very convenient
       for travellers; but nothing was more awkward to me than to see such
       a haughty, imperious, insolent people, in the midst of the grossest
       simplicity and ignorance; and my friend Father Simon and I used to
       be very merry upon these occasions, to see their beggarly pride.
       For example, coming by the house of a country gentleman, as Father
       Simon called him, about ten leagues off the city of Nankin, we had
       first of all the honour to ride with the master of the house about
       two miles; the state he rode in was a perfect Don Quixotism, being
       a mixture of pomp and poverty. His habit was very proper for a
       merry-andrew, being a dirty calico, with hanging sleeves, tassels,
       and cuts and slashes almost on every side: it covered a taffety
       vest, so greasy as to testify that his honour must be a most
       exquisite sloven. His horse was a poor, starved, hobbling
       creature, and two slaves followed him on foot to drive the poor
       creature along; he had a whip in his hand, and he belaboured the
       beast as fast about the head as his slaves did about the tail; and
       thus he rode by us, with about ten or twelve servants, going from
       the city to his country seat, about half a league before us. We
       travelled on gently, but this figure of a gentleman rode away
       before us; and as we stopped at a village about an hour to refresh
       us, when we came by the country seat of this great man, we saw him
       in a little place before his door, eating a repast. It was a kind
       of garden, but he was easy to be seen; and we were given to
       understand that the more we looked at him the better he would be
       pleased. He sat under a tree, something like the palmetto, which
       effectually shaded him over the head, and on the south side; but
       under the tree was placed a large umbrella, which made that part
       look well enough. He sat lolling back in a great elbow-chair,
       being a heavy corpulent man, and had his meat brought him by two
       women slaves. He had two more, one of whom fed the squire with a
       spoon, and the other held the dish with one hand, and scraped off
       what he let fall upon his worship's beard and taffety vest.
       Leaving the poor wretch to please himself with our looking at him,
       as if we admired his idle pomp, we pursued our journey. Father
       Simon had the curiosity to stay to inform himself what dainties the
       country justice had to feed on in all his state, which he had the
       honour to taste of, and which was, I think, a mess of boiled rice,
       with a great piece of garlic in it, and a little bag filled with
       green pepper, and another plant which they have there, something
       like our ginger, but smelling like musk, and tasting like mustard;
       all this was put together, and a small piece of lean mutton boiled
       in it, and this was his worship's repast. Four or five servants
       more attended at a distance, who we supposed were to eat of the
       same after their master. As for our mandarin with whom we
       travelled, he was respected as a king, surrounded always with his
       gentlemen, and attended in all his appearances with such pomp, that
       I saw little of him but at a distance. I observed that there was
       not a horse in his retinue but that our carrier's packhorses in
       England seemed to me to look much better; though it was hard to
       judge rightly, for they were so covered with equipage, mantles,
       trappings, &c., that we could scarce see anything but their feet
       and their heads as they went along.
       I was now light-hearted, and all my late trouble and perplexity
       being over, I had no anxious thoughts about me, which made this
       journey the pleasanter to me; in which no ill accident attended me,
       only in passing or fording a small river, my horse fell and made me
       free of the country, as they call it--that is to say, threw me in.
       The place was not deep, but it wetted me all over. I mention it
       because it spoiled my pocket-book, wherein I had set down the names
       of several people and places which I had occasion to remember, and
       which not taking due care of, the leaves rotted, and the words were
       never after to be read.
       At length we arrived at Pekin. I had nobody with me but the youth
       whom my nephew had given me to attend me as a servant and who
       proved very trusty and diligent; and my partner had nobody with him
       but one servant, who was a kinsman. As for the Portuguese pilot,
       he being desirous to see the court, we bore his charges for his
       company, and for our use of him as an interpreter, for he
       understood the language of the country, and spoke good French and a
       little English. Indeed, this old man was most useful to us
       everywhere; for we had not been above a week at Pekin, when he came
       laughing. "Ah, Seignior Inglese," says he, "I have something to
       tell will make your heart glad."--"My heart glad," says I; "what
       can that be? I don't know anything in this country can either give
       me joy or grief to any great degree."--"Yes, yes," said the old
       man, in broken English, "make you glad, me sorry."--"Why," said I,
       "will it make you sorry?"--"Because," said he, "you have brought me
       here twenty-five days' journey, and will leave me to go back alone;
       and which way shall I get to my port afterwards, without a ship,
       without a horse, without pecune?" so he called money, being his
       broken Latin, of which he had abundance to make us merry with. In
       short, he told us there was a great caravan of Muscovite and Polish
       merchants in the city, preparing to set out on their journey by
       land to Muscovy, within four or five weeks; and he was sure we
       would take the opportunity to go with them, and leave him behind,
       to go back alone.
       I confess I was greatly surprised with this good news, and had
       scarce power to speak to him for some time; but at last I said to
       him, "How do you know this? are you sure it is true?"--"Yes," says
       he; "I met this morning in the street an old acquaintance of mine,
       an Armenian, who is among them. He came last from Astrakhan, and
       was designed to go to Tonquin, where I formerly knew him, but has
       altered his mind, and is now resolved to go with the caravan to
       Moscow, and so down the river Volga to Astrakhan."--"Well,
       Seignior," says I, "do not be uneasy about being left to go back
       alone; if this be a method for my return to England, it shall be
       your fault if you go back to Macao at all." We then went to
       consult together what was to be done; and I asked my partner what
       he thought of the pilot's news, and whether it would suit with his
       affairs? He told me he would do just as I would; for he had
       settled all his affairs so well at Bengal, and left his effects in
       such good hands, that as we had made a good voyage, if he could
       invest it in China silks, wrought and raw, he would be content to
       go to England, and then make a voyage back to Bengal by the
       Company's ships.
       Having resolved upon this, we agreed that if our Portuguese pilot
       would go with us, we would bear his charges to Moscow, or to
       England, if he pleased; nor, indeed, were we to be esteemed over-
       generous in that either, if we had not rewarded him further, the
       service he had done us being really worth more than that; for he
       had not only been a pilot to us at sea, but he had been like a
       broker for us on shore; and his procuring for us a Japan merchant
       was some hundreds of pounds in our pockets. So, being willing to
       gratify him, which was but doing him justice, and very willing also
       to have him with us besides, for he was a most necessary man on all
       occasions, we agreed to give him a quantity of coined gold, which,
       as I computed it, was worth one hundred and seventy-five pounds
       sterling, between us, and to bear all his charges, both for himself
       and horse, except only a horse to carry his goods. Having settled
       this between ourselves, we called him to let him know what we had
       resolved. I told him he had complained of our being willing to let
       him go back alone, and I was now about to tell him we designed he
       should not go back at all. That as we had resolved to go to Europe
       with the caravan, we were very willing he should go with us; and
       that we called him to know his mind. He shook his head and said it
       was a long journey, and that he had no pecune to carry him thither,
       or to subsist himself when he came there. We told him we believed
       it was so, and therefore we had resolved to do something for him
       that should let him see how sensible we were of the service he had
       done us, and also how agreeable he was to us: and then I told him
       what we had resolved to give him here, which he might lay out as we
       would do our own; and that as for his charges, if he would go with
       us we would set him safe on shore (life and casualties excepted),
       either in Muscovy or England, as he would choose, at our own
       charge, except only the carriage of his goods. He received the
       proposal like a man transported, and told us he would go with us
       over all the whole world; and so we all prepared for our journey.
       However, as it was with us, so it was with the other merchants:
       they had many things to do, and instead of being ready in five
       weeks, it was four months and some days before all things were got
       together. _