where a number of men are
working at
different desks in a large room,
and marvels at the quiet and
systematic" target="_blank" title="a.有系统的,成体系的">
systematic manner in which
they perform their tasks; or one goes to a big bank and is amazed
at the large number of customers ever going in and coming out.
It is difficult to calculate the
enormousamount of business
transacted every hour, yet all is done with perfect organization
and a proper division of labor, so that any information required
is furnished by the
manager or by a clerk, at a moment's notice.
I have often been in these places, and the calm, quiet,
earnest way
in which the employees performed their tasks was beyond praise.
It showed that the heads who organized and were directing the institutions
had a firm grasp of multiplex details.
We Chinese have a
reputation for being good business men.
When in business on our own
account, or in
partnership with a few friends,
we succeed
marvelously well; but we have yet much to learn
regarding large concerns such as corporations or joint stock companies.
This is not to be wondered at, for joint stock companies and corporations
as conducted in the West were unknown in China before the advent
of foreign merchants in our midst. Since then a few joint stock companies
have been started in Hongkong, Shanghai, and other ports;
these have been carried on by Chinese
exclusively, but the
managers have not
as yet mastered the
systematic" target="_blank" title="a.有系统的,成体系的">
systematic Western methods of conducting such concerns.
Even unpractised and inexpert eyes can see great room for improvement
in the
management of these businesses. Here, I must admit,
the Japanese are ahead of us. Take, for
instance, the Yokohama Specie Bank:
it has a paid-up capital of Yen 30,000,000 and has branches and agencies
not only in all the important towns in Japan, but also in
different ports
in China, London, New York, San Francisco, Honolulu, Bombay, Calcutta
and other places. It is conducted in the latest and most approved
scientific fashion; its reports and
accounts, published half-yearly,
reveal the exact state of the concern's
financial position
and
incidentally show that it makes
enormous profits. True,
several Chinese banks of a private or official nature have been established,
and some of them have been doing a fair business, but candor compels me to say
that they are not conducted as scientifically as is the Yokohama Specie Bank,
or most American banks. Corporations and joint stock companies
are still in their
infancy in China; but Chinese merchants and bankers,
profiting by the mistakes of the past, will
doubtless gradually improve
their
systems, so that in the future there will be less and less cause
to find fault with them.
One
system which has been in vogue within the last ten or twenty years
in America, and which has
lately figured much in the limelight,
is that of "Trusts". Here, again, it is only the
ingenuity of Americans
which could have brought the
system to such
gigantic proportions
as to make it possible for it to wield an
immense influence over trade,
not only in America but in other countries also. The main object of the Trust
seems to be to
combine several companies under one direction,
so as to economize expenses,
regulate production and the price of commodities
by destroying
competition. Its advocates declare their
policy to be
productive of good to the world,
inasmuch as it secures regular supplies
of commodities of the best kind at fair and
reasonable prices.
On the other hand, its opponents
contend that Trusts are
injurious to
the real interests of the public, as small companies cannot
compete with them,
and without
healthycompetition the
consumer always suffers.
Where experts
differ it were perhaps wiser for me not to express an opinion
lest I should show no more
wisdom than the boy who argued
that lobsters were black and not red because he had often seen them
swimming about on the
seashore, but was confuted by his friend
who said he knew they were red and not black for he had seen them
on his father's dinner table.
The fact, however, which remains indisputable, is the
immense power of wealth.
No one boycotts money. It is something no one seems to get enough of.
I have never heard that multi-millionaires like Carnegie or Rockefeller
ever expressed regrets at not being poor, even though they seem more eager
to give money away than to make it. Most people in America are desirous
for money, and rush every day to their business with no other thought
than to
accumulate it quickly. Their love of money leaves them scarcely time
to eat, to drink, or to sleep; waking or
sleeping they think of nothing else.
Wealth is their goal and when they reach it they will probably be
still unsatisfied. The Chinese are, of course, not
averse to wealth.
They can enjoy the jingling coin as much as anyone,
but money is not their only thought. They carry on their business
calmly and quietly, and they are very patient. I trust they will
always
retain these habits and never feel any temptation
to
imitate the Americans in their mad chase after money.
There is, however, one American
characteristic my countrymen
might learn with profit, and that is the
recognition of the fact
that punctuality is the soul of business. Americans know this;
it is one cause of their success. Make an appointment with an American
and you will find him in his office at the appointed time.
Everything to be done by him during the course of the day has its fixed hour,
and hence he is able to accomplish a greater
amount of work in a given time
than many others. Chinese,
unfortunately, have no
adequate conceptions
of the value of time. This is due, perhaps, to our mode of reckoning.
In the West a day is divided into twenty-four hours, and each hour
into sixty minutes, but in China it has been for centuries the custom
to divide day and night into twelve (shih) "periods" of two hours each,
so that an appointment is not made for a particular minute,
as in America, but for one or other of these two-hour periods.
This has created ingrained habits of unpunctuality which clocks and watches
and
contact with
foreigners are slow to remove. The time-keeping railway is,
however,
working a revolution, especially in places
where there is only one train a day, and a man who misses that
has to wait for the
morrow before he can resume his journey.
Some years ago a
luncheon -- "tiffin" we call it in China --
was given in my honor at a Peking
restaurant by a couple of friends;
the hour was fixed at noon sharp. I arrived on the stroke of twelve,
but found that not only were none of the guests there,
but that even the hosts themselves were
absent. As I had several engagements
I did not wait, but I ordered a few dishes and ate what I required.
None of the hosts had made their appearance by the time I had finished,
so I left with a request to the
waiter that he would
convey my thanks.
Knowing the unpunctuality of our people, the conveners of a public meeting
will often tell the Chinese that it will begin an hour or two before
the set time,
whereasforeigners are notified of the exact hour.
Not being aware of this
device I once attended a conference
at the appointed time, only to find that I had to wait for over an hour.
I protested that in future I should be treated as a
foreigner in this regard.
As
civilized people have always found it necessary to wear clothes
I ought not to omit a
reference to them here, but in view of what has already
been said in the
previous chapter I shall at this juncture content myself
with quoting Mrs. M. S. G. Nichols, an English lady who has written
on this subject. She characterizes the clothing of men as unbeautiful,
but she
principally devotes her attention to the dress of women.
I quote the following from her book:* "The relation of a woman's dress
to her health is seldom considered, still less is it contemplated
as to its effect upon the health of her children; yet
everyone must see
that all that concerns the mothers of our race is important.
The clothing of woman should be regarded in every
aspect if we wish to see
its effect upon her health, and
consequently upon the health of her offspring.
The usual way is to consider the beauty or fashion of dress first,
its comfort and healthfulness afterward, if at all.
We must
reverse this method. First, use, then beauty, flowing from,
or in
harmony with, use. That is the true law of life" (p. 14).
On page 23 she continues: "A great deal more clothing is worn by women
in some of fashion's phases than is needed for warmth,
and
mostly in the form of heavy skirts dragging down upon the hips.
The heavy trailing skirts also are burdens upon the spine.
Such evils of women's clothes, especially in view of maternity,
can hardly be over-estimated. The pains and perils that attend birth
are heightened, if not caused, by
improper clothing.
The nerves of the spine and the
maternalsystem of nerves
become
diseased together." And on page 32 she writes:
"When I first went to an evening party in a
fashionable town,
I was shocked at
seeing ladies with low dresses, and I cannot even now