ordered the court artists to paint
appropriate foreground and
background and then called young Yu, her court photographer, to
snap his camera and allow Old Sol the great artist of the
universe with a pencil of his light to paint her as she was.
One day while visiting a curio store on Liu Li Chang, the great
book street of Peking, my attention was called by the
dealer to
four small
paintings of peach
blossoms in black and white, from
the brush of the Empress Dowager. These pictures had been in the
panels of the
partition between two of the rooms of Her Majesty's
apartments in the Summer Palace, and so I considered myself
fortunate in securing them.
"You notice," said he, "that each section of these branches must
be drawn by a single stroke of the brush. This is no easy task.
She must be able to ink her brush in such a way as to give a
clear
outline of the limb, and at the same time to produce such
shading as she may desire. Should her
outline be
defective, she
dare not retouch it; should her shading be too heavy or
insufficient, she cannot take from it and she may not add to it,
as this would make it
defective in the matter of calligraphy. A
stroke once placed upon her paper, for they are done on paper, is
there forever. This style of work is among the most difficult in
Chinese art."
After securing these
paintings, I showed them to a number of the
best artists of the present day in Peking, and they all
pronounced them good specimens of plum
blossom work in
monochrome, and they agreed with Lady Miao, that if the Empress
Dowager had given her whole time to
painting she would have
passed into history as one of the great artists of the present
dynasty.
One day when one of her court painters called I showed him these
pictures. He agreed with all the others as to the quality of her
brush work, but called my attention to a diamond shaped twining
of the branches in one of them.
"That," said he, "is proof
positive that it is her work."
"Why?" I inquired.
"Because a
professional artist would never twine the twigs in
that fashion."
"And why not?"
"They would not do it," he replied. "It is not artistic."
"And why do not her friends call her attention to this fact?" I
inquired.
"Who would do it?" was his
counter question.
VII
The Empress Dowager--As a Woman
The first
audience given by Her Imperial Majesty to the seven
ladies of the Diplomatic Corps was sought and urged by the
foreign
ministers. After the troubles of 1900 and the return of
the court, Her Majesty assumed a different attitude, and, of her
own
accord, issued many invitations for
audiences, and these
invitations were accepted. Then followed my tiffin to the court
princesses and their tiffin in return. This opened the way for
other
princesses and wives of high officials to call, receive
calls, to
entertain and be
entertained. In many cases
arrangements were made through our
mutual friend Mrs. Headland,
an accepted
physician and
beloved friend of many of the higher
Chinese families; and through her innate tact, broad thought, and
great love for the good she may do, I have been able to come into
personal touch with many of these Chinese ladies.
--Mrs. E. H. Conger in "Letters from China.
VII
THE EMPRESS DOWAGER-AS A WOMAN
Although the great Dowager has passed away, it may be interesting
to know something about her life and
character as a woman as
those saw her who came in
contact with her in public and private
audiences. In order to
appreciate how quick she was to adopt
foreign customs, let me give in some detail the difference in her
table decorations at the earlier and later
audiences as they have
been
related by my wife.
"At the close of the formalities of our
introduction to the
Empress Dowager and the Emperor at one of the first
audiences,
we, with the ladies of the court, repaired to the
banqueting
hall. After we were seated, each with a
princess beside her, the
great Dowager appeared. We rose and remained
standing while she
took her place at the head of the table, with the Emperor
standing at her left a little distance behind her. As she sat
down she requested us to be seated, though the
princesses and the
Emperor all remained
standing, it being
improper for them to sit
in the presence of Her Majesty. Long-robed
eunuchs then appeared
with an
elaborate Chinese
banquet, and the one who served the
Empress Dowager always knelt when presenting her with a dish.
"After we had eaten for some little time, the doyen asked if the
princesses might not be seated. The Empress Dowager first turned
to the Emperor, and said, 'Your Majesty, please be seated'; then
turning to the
princesses and waving her hand, she told them to
sit down. They sat down in a timid, rather
uncomfortable way on
the edge of the chair, but did not
presume to touch any of the
food.
"The conversation ran upon various topics, and, among others, the
Boxer troubles. One of the ladies wore a badge. The Empress
Dowager noticing it, asked what it meant.
" 'Your Majesty,' was the reply, 'this was presented to me by my
Emperor because I was wounded in the Boxer insurrection.'
"The Empress Dowager took the hands of this lady in both her own,
and as the tears stood in her eyes, she said:
" 'I deeply regret all that occurred during those troublous
times. The Boxers for a time overpowered the government, and even
brought their guns in and placed them on the walls of the palace.
Such a thing shall never occur again.'
"The table was covered with
brilliantly coloured oilcloth, and
was without tablecloth or napkins
properly so called, but we used
as napkins square, coloured bits of
calico about the size of a
large bandana
handkerchief. There were no flowers, the table
decorations consisting of large stands of cakes and fruit. I
speak of this because it was all changed at future
audiences,
when the table was spread with snow-white cloths, and smiled with
its load of most
gorgeous flowers. Especially was this true after
the luncheons given to the
princesses and ladies of the court by
Mrs. Conger at the American legation, showing that the eyes of
these ladies were open to receive
whatever suggestions might come
to them even in so small a matter as the spreading and decoration
of a table. The
banquets
thereafter were made up of alternating
courses of Chinese and foreign food.
"With but one
exception, the Empress Dowager
thereafter never
appeared at table with her guests. But at the close of the formal
audiences, after descending from the
throne, and
speaking to
those whom she had
formerly met, she requested her guests to
enter the
banquet hall and enjoy the feast with the
princesses,
saying that the customs of her country
forbade their being seated
or partaking of food if she were present. After the
banquet,
however, the Empress Dowager always appeared and conversed
cordially with her guests.
"Her
failure to appear at table may have been influenced by the
following
incident: One of the leading lady guests,
anxious, no
doubt, to
obtain a
unique curio, requested the Empress Dowager to
present her with the bowl from which Her Majesty was eating--a
bowl which was different from those used by her guests, as the
dishes from which her food was served were never the same as
those used by others at the table!