of the
eunuchs from the
imperial palace, wandering about the city
in search of something to please little Tsai Tien, dropped into
this store on Legation Street and bought some of these foreign
toys for his
infant Majesty.
They had already ransacked the city for Chinese toys. They had
gone to every fair, visited every toy-shop, called upon every
private
dealer, and paid high prices for samples of their best
work made e
specially for the royal child. There were crowing
cocks and cackling hens; barking dogs and crying
infants; music
balls and music carts; horns, drums, diabolos and tops; there
were
gingham dogs and
calico cats; camels, elephants and fierce
tigers; and a thousand other toys, if only he had had other
children to share them with him. But none of them pleased him.
They lacked that subtile something which was necessary to
minister to the
peculiargenius of the child.
Among the foreign toys there were some in which there was
concealed a secret spring which seemed to
impart life to the
otherwise dead
plaything. Wind them up and they would move of
their own
energy. This was what the boy needed,--something to
appeal to that machine-loving
disposition which nature had given
him, and Budge and Toddy were never more curious to know "what
made the wheels go round" than was little Tsai Tien. He played
with them as toys until
overcome by
curiosity, when, like many
another child, he tore them apart and discovered the secret
spring. This was as much of a
revelation to the
eunuchs as to the
child, and they went and bought other toys of a more curious
pattern, and a more
intricate design, and it was not long until,
at the instigation of the
enterprising Dane, the toy-shops of
Europe were manufacturing
playthings
specially designed to please
the almond-eyed baby Emperor in the yellow-tiled palace in
Peking.
As the child grew the business of the Dane
shopkeeper increased.
His stock became larger and more
varied, and Tsai Tien continued
to be a
profitablecustomer. There were music boxes and music
carts--real music carts, not like those from the Chinese
shops,--trains of cars, wheeled boats,
striking clocks and Swiss
watches which, when the stem was pulled, would strike the hour or
half or quarter, and all these were bought in turn by the
eunuchs
and taken into the palace. As the Emperor grew to
boyhood the
Danish
shopkeeper supplied toys
suitable to his years from his
inexhaustible
shelves, until all the most
intricate and wonderful
toys of Europe,
suitable for a boy, had passed through the hands
of Kuang Hsu,--"continued brilliancy," as his name implied--and
he seemed to be making good the meaning of his name.
We would not lead any one to believe that Kuang Hsu was an ideal
child. He was not. If we may credit the reports that came from
the palace in those days, he had a
temper of his own. If he were
denied anything he wanted, he would lie down on his baby back on
the dirty ground and kick and
scream and
literally "raise the
dust" until he got it. My wife tells me that not infrequently
when she called at the Chinese homes, and they set before her a
dish of which she was e
specially fond, and she had eaten of it as
much as she thought she ought, the ladies would ask in a
good-natured way in reply to some of her remarks about her
voracious
appetite, "Shall we get down and knock our heads on the
floor, and beg you not to eat too much, and make yourself sick,
like the
eunuchs do to the Emperor?" There is nothing to wonder
at that Kuang Hsu, without parental
restraint, and fawned upon by
cringing
eunuchs and serving maids, should have been a spoiled
child; the wonder is that he was not worse than he was.
One day in 1901 while the court was
absent at Hsian, and the
front gate of the Forbidden City was guarded by our "boys in
blue," I obtained a pass and visited the
imperial palace. The
apartments of the Emperor consisted of a
series of one-story
Chinese buildings, with paper windows around a large central pane
of glass, tile roof and brick floor. The east part of the
building appeared to be the living-room, about twenty by
twenty-five feet. The window on the south side
extended the
entire length of the room, and was filled with clocks from end to
end. There were clocks of every
description from the finest
French cloisonne to the most
intricatecuckoo clocks from which a
bird hopped forth to announce the hour, and each ticking its own
time
regardless of every other. Tables were placed in various
parts of the room, on each of which were one, two or three
clocks. Swiss watches of the most curious and
unique designs hung
about the walls. Two sofas sat back to back in the centre of the
room, and a beautiful little gilt desk on which was the most
wonderful of all his clocks, with several large foreign chairs
upholstered in plush and
velvet, completed the furniture. I sat
down in one of these chairs to rest, for it was a hot summer day,
and immediately there proceeded from beneath me sweet strains of
music from a box concealed beneath the
cushion. It was not only a
surprise, it was soothing and restful; and I was prepared to see
an electric fan pop out of somewhere and fan me to sleep. It was
really an Oriental fairy tale of an apartment.
As Kuang Hsu grew to
boyhood he heard that out in this great
wonderful world, which he had never seen except with the eyes of
a child, there was a method of sending messages to distant cities
and provinces with the
rapidity of a flash of
lightning. For
centuries he and his ancestors had been sending their edicts, and
their Peking Gazette or court newspaper--the oldest
journal in
the world--by
runner, or relays of post horses, and the
possibility of sending them by a
lightning flash appealed to him.
He believed in doing things, and, as we shall see later, he
wanted to do them as rapidly as they could be done. He
thereforeordered that a
telegraphoutfit be secured for him, which he
"played with" as he had done with his most
ingenious toys, and
the
telegraph was soon established for court use throughout the
empire.
One day a number of officials came to us at the Peking University
and in the course of a conversation they said:
"The Emperor has heard that the foreigners have invented a talk
box. Is that true?"
"Quite true," we replied, "and as we have one in the physical
laboratory of the college we will let you see it."
We had one of the old Edison phonographs which worked with a
pedal, and looked very much like a sewing-machine, and we took
them to the
laboratory, allowed one of them to talk into it, and
then set the machine to repeating what had been told it. The
officials were
delighted and it was not long until they again
appeared and insisted on buying it as a present for the Emperor,
for in this way better than any other they might hope to obtain
official
recognition and position.
The Emperor then heard that the foreigners had invented a
"fire-wheel cart," but whether he had ever been informed that
they had built a small railroad at Wu-Sung near Shanghai, and
that the Chinese had bought it, and then torn it up and thrown it
into the river we cannot say. There are many things the officials
and people do which never reach the
imperial ears. However that
may be, when Kuang Hsu heard of the railroad and the carts that
were run by fire, he wanted one, and he would not be satisfied
until they had built a narrow gauge railroad along the west shore
of the lotus lake in the Forbidden City, and the factories of
Europe had made two small cars and an engine on which he could
take the court ladies for a ride on this
unusual merry-go-round.
The road and the cars and the engine were still there when I
visited the Forbidden City in 1901, but they were carried away to
Europe by some of the
allies as precious bits of loot, before the
court returned.