CHINESE HIGHER EDUCATION--THE
VILLAGE HIGH SCHOOL--EXAMINATIONS--RECENT
EDUCATIONAL EDICTS
When it is definitely decided that
a pupil is to study for the examinations, he enters
a high school, which differs in many respects from
the ones which he has hitherto attended. The teacher
must be a man of more than average attainments, or
he can neither gain nor hold such a place. His
salary is much greater than that given by the ordinary
school. The pupils are much harder worked, being
compelled to spend almost all their waking hours in
the study of model examination essays. These are
to be committed to memory by the score and even by
the hundred, as a result of which process the mind
of the student gradually becomes so saturated with
the materials of which they are composed, that he will
always be able to take advantage of the accumulations
of his patient memorizing in weaving his own compositions
in the examination hall.
During the preceding years of study
he has already committed to memory the most important
parts of the literature of his native land. He
is now intimately familiar with the orthodox explanations
of the same. He has been gradually but thoroughly
inducted into the mystery of tones and rhymes, the
art of constructing poetry, and the weaving of antithetical
couplets, beginning with the announcement that the
heaven is high, balanced by the proposition that the
earth is thick, and proceeding to the intricate and
well-nigh inscrutable laws by which relation and correlation,
thesis and antithesis are governed. He has now
to learn by carefully graded stages the art of employing
all his preceding learning in the production of the
essay, which will hereafter constitute the warp and
the woof of his intellectual fabric. In future
he will eat, drink, write, talk, and sleep essays,
essays, essays.
Measured by Chinese standards, the
construction of a perfect essay is one of the noblest
achievements of which the human mind is capable.
The man who knows all that has been preserved of the
wisdom of the ancients, and who can at a moment’s
notice dash off essays of a symmetrical construction,
lofty in sentiment, elevated in style, and displaying
a wide acquaintance not only with the theme, but also
with cognate subjects, such a man is fit not only
to stand before kings, but before the very Son of
Heaven himself.
A high official called a provincial
Literary Chancellor, (Hsiao YA1/4an), is despatched
from Peking to the provinces, to hold periodical examinations
once in three or twice in five years. Upon the
occasion of an emperor’s ascending the throne,
his marriage, the birth of an heir, etc., there
are extra examinations bestowed as a favour (en
k’o). When the village scholar is able
to produce an essay, and to write a poem that will
pass the scrutiny of this formidable Literary Chancellor,
he may hope to become a hsiu-ts’ai or graduate.
In order to fit him for this ordeal, which is regarded
by outsiders with awe, and is anticipated by the young
candidate himself with mingled hope and terror, it
is necessary that he should run the gauntlet of a
long series of preliminary test examinations.
Some months before the visit of the
Chancellor is to take place, of which notice is communicated
to the Governor of the Province, and from him to the
District Magistrates, preparations are made by the
latter officer for the first examination, which is
held before him, and in the District city. It
is part of the duty of some of the numerous staff of
this official to disseminate the notice of such an
impending examination. In any Western country,
this would be accomplished by the insertion of a brief
advertisement in the official newspaper of the District,
or County. In China, where there are no newspapers,
the message must be orally delivered. The high
schools in which pupils are trained with special reference
to such examinations, are visited, and the day of the
examination notified. Literary graduates within
the district, who must be examined with reference
to passing a higher grade, are also informed of the
date. A small sum, the equivalent of fifteen or
twenty cents, is expected by the yamen messengers
as a solace for the “bitterness” which
they have suffered in distributing the notices.
Notwithstanding this clumsy method of circulating
the notifications, it is rare that any one concerned
fails to receive the message.
Those who intend to be examined, make
their way to the city, a day or two in advance of
the time fixed, that they may rent quarters for the
half month which they will be obliged to spend there.
If the student chance to have friends in the city,
he may avoid the expense of renting a place, and if
his home should be near the city, he may be able to
return thither at intervals, and thus lessen the expenditure;
for all these trifles are important to the poor scholar,
who has abundant need of money. As many scholars
combine to rent one room or one house, the cost to
each is not great, perhaps the equivalent of one or
two dollars. Each candidate must furnish himself
with provisions for half a month. In some district
cities there are special examination buildings, capable
by crowding, of seating 600 or 800 persons. In
other cities, where these buildings have either never
been built, or have been allowed to go to ruin, the
examination is conducted in the Confucian temple,
or at the yamen of the District Magistrate.
On the first day of the examination,
two themes are given out at daylight, by which time
every candidate must be in the place assigned him,
and from there he must not stir. The themes are
each taken from the Four Books, and the essay is not
expected to exceed 600 characters. By nine or
ten o’clock the stamp of the examiner is affixed
to the last character written in the essay, preventing
further additions if it should not be finished, and
the essays are gathered up. About eleven o’clock,
the third theme is given out. This is an exercise
in poetry, the subject of which may be taken from
the Book of Odes, or from some standard poet.
The poem is to be composed of not more than sixty
characters, five in each line. A rapid writer
and composer, may be able to hand in his paper by
three or four in the afternoon, and many others will
require much longer. The limit of time may be
fixed at midnight, or possibly at daylight the next
morning. The physical condition of a scholar
who has been pinned to his seat for four and twenty
hours, struggling to produce an essay and poem which
shall be regarded by the severest critic as ideal,
can be but faintly imagined by the Occidental reader.
The next two days being devoted to
the inspection of the wilderness of essays and poems,
the product of this first trial, the unhappy competitors
have leisure for much needed rest and sleep. On
the morning of the fourth day, the “boards are
hung,” that is, the list of those whose essays
have passed, is exposed. If the whole number
of candidates should be 500 an extremely
moderate estimate for a reasonably populous district the
proportion of those whose hopes are at once wrecked
may be half. Only those whose names are posted
after the first trial can enter the succeeding one.
If the subordinates of the magistrate perceive that
a great many names are thrown out, they may come kneeling
before the magistrate, knocking their heads, and begging
that he will kindly allow a few more names to pass.
If he happens to be in good humour at the moment,
he may grant their request, which is not in the smallest
degree prompted by any interest in the affairs of
the disappointed candidates, but on the important
principle, that the fewer the sheep, the smaller will
be the crop of wool.
The only fee required for the examination
is that paid for registration, which amounts to about
twenty cents. Not the name of the candidate only,
but those of his father and grandfather are to be recorded,
to make it sure that no one legally disqualified is
admitted. The paper upon which the examination
essays and poems are written is of a special kind,
sold only at the yamen, and at a cost for each examination
equivalent to about ten cents, or fifty cents for
the whole five examinations, but the candidate must
pay three-fifths of this amount for the first supply,
whether he is admitted to a further examination or
not. If he is, he becomes entitled to a rebate
of this amount on his subsequent purchases.
On the fifth or sixth day, those who
have been selected from the whole number examined,
again file into the examination hall, and are seated
according to their newly-acquired rank for the second
test. Three themes are again propounded, the
first from the Four Books, the second from one of
the Five Classics, the third a poetical one, in a manner
similar to the first examination. A day or two
is allowed for the inspection of these essays, when
the boards are again hung, and the result is to drop
out perhaps one-half of the competitors.
At the third examination the themes,
which are given out somewhat later than in the previous
trials, are two in number, one from the Four Books,
the other poetical. About noon of this day, the
magistrate has a meal of vermicelli, rice, etc.,
sent to the candidates. By four in the afternoon
the hall is empty. After the interval of another
day the boards are again hung, indicating that all
but perhaps fifty are excluded from further competition.
The fourth examination begins at a
later hour than the third, and while the number of
the themes may be larger than before all
of them from the Four Books time is not
allowed for the completion of any of them. In
addition to the classical themes, a philosophical one
may be given. Besides this, there are poetical
themes, to be treated in a way different from those
in the preceding examinations, and much more difficult,
as the lines of poetry are subject also to the rules
governing the composition of antithetical couplets.
The metre, whether five characters
to a line, or seven, (the only varieties to choose
from), is left to the option of the candidate, who,
if he be a fine scholar and a rapid penman, may treat
the same theme in both ways. A meal is served
as at the preceding trial, and by five or six o’clock,
the hall is empty. After the interval of another
day, the fourth board is hung, and the number who
have survived this examination is found to be a small
one perhaps twenty or thirty.
A day later the final examination
occurs. The theme is from the Four Books, and
may be treated fully or partially according to the
examiner’s orders at the moment. A
poem is required in the five-character metre, and
also a transcript of some section of the “Sacred
Edicts” of the Emperor Yung Cheng. The
design of the latter is to furnish a specimen of the
candidate’s handwriting, in case it should be
afterward needed for comparison. A meal is furnished
as before, and by the middle of the afternoon the
hall is cleared. The next day the board is again
hung, announcing the names who have finally passed.
The number is a fixed one, and it is relatively lowest
where the population is most dense. In two contiguous
districts, for example, which furnish on an average
500 or 600 candidates, the number of those who can
pass is limited, in the one case to twenty and in
the other to seventeen. In another district where
there are often 2,000 candidates, only thirty
can pass. It thus appears that the chances of
success for the average candidate, are extremely tenuous.
Every candidate for a degree, is required
to have a “surety.” These are selected
from graduates of former years, who have advanced one
step beyond that of hsiu-ts’ai, to that of ling-sheng
hsiu-ts’ai. The total number of sureties
is not necessarily large, perhaps four from each district,
and many of them may be totally unacquainted with
the persons for whom they become thus responsible.
The nature of this responsibility is twofold, first
to guarantee that the persons who enter under a particular
name, really bear that name, and second that during
the examination they will not violate any of the established
rules. If a false name is shown to have been
entered, or if a violation of the rules occurs, the
ling-sheng would be held responsible, and would be
likely to lose his own rank as a graduate. Each
candidate is required to furnish not only a surety,
but also an alternate surety, and in consideration
of a present of from ten cents to five or six dollars,
the ling-shengs are quite willing to guarantee as
many candidates as apply. They must be paid in
advance, or they will prevent the candidate from entering
the examination hall.
The preliminary examinations in the
District city, having been thus completed, are followed
about a month later by similar ones in the Prefectural
city, before the Prefect, (chih-fu). Here
are gathered candidates from all the districts within
the jurisdiction of the Fu city, districts ranging
in number according to density of population, from
two or three, to twelve or more. Those who have
failed to pass the District examinations are not on
that account disqualified from appearing at the Prefectural
examinations, which, like the former, are intended
to act as a process of sifting, in preparation for
the final and decisive trial before the Literary Chancellor.
The details of the Prefectural examinations are similar
to those already described, and the time required is
about the same. The number of candidates in a
thickly-settled Prefecture, will often amount to more
than 10,000. As no ordinary examination building
will accommodate so many at once, they are examined
in relays. The examinations are conducted by
the Prefect, but it by no means follows that those
who have been first in the District examinations will
be so now. The order changes, indeed, from day
to day, but those who are constantly toward the head
of the list, are regarded as certain to pass the Chancellor’s
examination.
The writer is acquainted with a man
who at his examination for the first degree, stood
last in a list of seventeen, at the trial next before
the final one. But in that test he was dropped
one number, missing his degree by this narrow margin.
His grief and rage were so excessive as to unbalance
his mind, and for the greater part of his life he has
been a heavy burden on his wife, doing absolutely
nothing either for her support or for his own.
Those who have already attained the
degree of hsiu-ts’ai, are examined by themselves
for promotion. The expense of obtaining sureties
is confined to the last two sets of examinations.
The final trial before the Literary Chancellor is
conducted with far greater care and caution than the
preliminary ones before the local officials. The
candidates having been duly guaranteed and entered,
are assigned to seats, distinguished by the characters
in the Millenary Classic, which as already mentioned,
affords a convenient system of notation, being familiar,
and having no repeated characters. The students
are closely packed together, fifteen or twenty at
each table. The first table is termed “Heaven”
after the first character in the Millenary Classic,
and its occupants are denoted as “heaven one,”
“heaven two,” etc. Each candidate
notes his designation; for in the final lists of those
who have passed, no names are used, but only the description
of the seat as above described. Every student
is carefully searched as he enters the hall, to ascertain
whether he has about him any books or papers which
might aid him in his task. The examination begins
at an extremely early hour, the theme being given
out by sunrise. This theme is written on a large
wooden tablet, and is carried about to all parts of
the room, that each candidate may see it distinctly.
It is also read out, in a loud voice. By nine
or ten o’clock another subject is announced from
the Four Books and a poetical theme in five-metre rhythm.
A rapid writer and composer might finish his work
by one or two o’clock in the afternoon.
As in other examinations, those who have completed
their tasks are allowed to leave the hall at fixed
times, and in detachments. By five or six P. M.
the time is up, and the fatal stamp is affixed to the
last character, whatever the stage of the composition.
During the whole of this examination, no one is allowed
on any pretext whatever to move from his position.
If one should be taken deathly sick, he reports to
the superintendent of his section, and requests permission
to be taken out, but in this case he cannot return.
A student who should merely rise in his seat and look
around, would be beaten a hundred blows on his hand,
like a schoolboy (as indeed he is supposed to be),
would be compelled to kneel during the whole of the
examination, and at the close would be ejected in
disgrace, losing the opportunity for examination until
another year.
Some years ago the examination hall
of the city of Chi-nan Fu, the capital of Shan-tung,
was in a very bad condition. The Chancellor held
the summer examinations at that city, because the
situation is near to hills, and to water, and thus
was supposed to be a little cooler than others.
At one of these examinations, a violent rain came
on, and the roof of the building leaked like a sieve.
Many of the poor candidates were wet to the skin,
their essays and poems being likewise in soak, yet
there they were obliged to remain, riveted to their
seats. The unhealthy season caused much sickness,
and many of the candidates suffered severely, seven
or eight dying of cholera while the examinations were
in progress. That this is not an exceptional
state of things, is evident from the fact that it has
since been repeated. In the autumn examinations
for 1888, at this same place, it was reported that
over one hundred persons died in the quarters, either
of cholera or of some epidemic closely resembling
it. Of these, some were servants, some copyists,
some students, and a few officials. On the same
occasion one of the main examination buildings fell
in, as a result of which several persons were said
to have been killed. The utterly demoralizing
effect of such occurrences is obvious.
On the second or third day after the
examinations the boards are hung, and the number of
those successful appears. Yet to make the choice
doubly sure, and to guard against fraud and accidents,
still another examination is added, which is final
and decisive. In addition to the twenty or thirty
who have passed, half as many more names are taken
of those next highest, making perhaps thirty or forty
candidates, between whom the final choice will lie.
At this examination a theme from the Four Books is
again announced, on which only a fragment, the beginning,
middle or end of an essay, is to be produced, under
the immediate eye of the Chancellor himself.
The number of those examined being so limited, it is
easy to supervise them strictly, and changes in the
previous order are sure to occur.
When the results of this examination
are posted, the persons who have finally passed, and
whose talents are definitely adjudged to be “flourishing,”
are for the first time known. Those who have failed
at any stage of the trial may return to their homes,
but those who have “entered school” must
remain at the Prefectural city, to escort the Chancellor
upon his way to the next city where he is to hold
examinations.
The expenses of the Chancellor’s
examination, to those who fail to pass, are the same
as those of the preceding ones. But for those
who have “entered” there are other and
most miscellaneous expenses, illustrating the Chinese
aphorism that it is the sick man who must furnish the
perspiration. The fee to the ling-sheng who is
surety, has been already mentioned. There are
also other fees or gratuities, the amount of which
will depend upon the circumstances of the student,
but all of which must be paid. The underlings
who transact the business of the examination receive
presents to the amount of several dollars, the “board-hangers”
must be rewarded with a few hundred cash, etc.,
etc.
As soon as the candidate is known
to have “entered,” a strip of red paper
is prepared, announcing this fact, and a messenger
is posted off to the graduate’s home. For
this service, a fee of several thousand cash is expected.
Large proclamations, called “Joyful Announcements,”
are prepared by establishments where characters are
cut on blocks, and sold to successful competitors,
at the rate of three or four cents apiece. A poor
scholar may not be able to afford these luxuries, but
those who can afford it buy great numbers of them,
sending them in every direction to friends and relatives,
who take care to have them properly posted. On
receipt of these notifications, it is customary for
the friends of the fortunate family to pay a visit
of congratulation, at which they must be handsomely
entertained at a feast. Each one brings with him
a present in money, varying according to his circumstances,
and his relations to the family of the graduate.
If the newmade Bachelor has a wide circle of relatives
and friends, especially if some of them happen to be
occupying official positions, he will not improbably
receive enough in gifts of this sort, to reimburse
himself for the costs attending his examinations, and
in exceptional instances, his congratulatory presents
may greatly exceed the total of his expenses.
The style of these notices is the
same, a blank being left for the name and rank of
the graduate which is inserted in writing. It
is a very common practice in some regions to announce
that the person concerned, “entered as first
on the list,” though as a matter of fact he may
have been one of the last. This is considered
a very easy and desirable way to get a name, though
no one is deceived by the fraud, for when a dead wall
is covered by scores of these announcements, each
recording the entry of some one as the “first
name,” it is obvious that the phrase is merely
employed for display.
It would naturally be supposed that
the result of competition so severe and so protracted
as that for the degree of hsiu-ts’ai, would be
certified in the most careful manner, such as by a
diploma bearing the seal of the Chancellor. There
is, however, nothing of the kind. The essays of
the successful candidates are supposed to be forwarded
to the Board of Rites in Peking, where it is to be
hoped they eventually grow mouldy and disappear, else
the capital might be buried beneath the enormous mass.
But the individual whose talent is at last flourishing,
has of that fact no tangible evidence whatever.
When it becomes desirable to investigate the claim
of a hsiu-ts’ai, he is asked in what year he
graduated, the name of the examiner, the several themes
propounded, etc. It will be difficult to
manufacture plausible replies, which will not give
some clew to their falsity. In one case of this
sort within the writer’s knowledge, a man who
had been examined, but who did not pass, on being questioned
gave the name, the subjects, etc., which belonged
to his own brother, who really was a graduate.
The man himself, as afterward appeared, was in prison
at the very time when he professed to have graduated.
This absence of credentials for a
degree so much coveted, makes it easy for scholars
of shrewdness, and real ability, to pass themselves
off in districts remote from their own, as having
attained to a rank which they have not in reality
reached.
A graduate is allowed to wear a plain
brass button on his cap, which he prefers to the pewter
one given him on graduating. In case of violations
of law, the Magistrate of the District in which the
offender lives, may have his button taken away, and
the graduate reduced to the level of any other person.
As long, however, as he continues to be a graduate,
he cannot be beaten like other Chinese, except on
the palm of the hand. If a Magistrate were to
violate the rights of any graduate, the act would raise
a tornado about his head, before which he would be
glad to retreat, for the whole body of graduates would
rise like a swarm of hornets to resent the insult.
The financial exigencies of the past
generation or two have led to the open sale of literary
degrees, a practice resorted to on a great scale by
the Chinese Government, whenever there is any unusual
pressure for funds, such as the repair of the disasters
caused by the change in the Yellow River. It
is often quite possible to buy the degree of hsiu-ts’ai,
for about $100, and the purchaser is provided with
a certificate, being in this respect on a better footing
than the graduate. But subscription degrees are
regarded with merited contempt, and their sale great
as it has been, does not appear to have seriously
affected the regular examinations, by diminishing
the number of contestants.
There are other methods than purchase
of a degree, by which the candidate for literary honours,
whose means admit of it, may try to weight the wheel
of fortune in his favour. There are three common
ways of providing oneself with examination essays
without undergoing the labour of composing them.
Of these the first is known as the “box plan,”
(hsiang-tzA-), and it is not so much cramming,
as padding. The Four Books and Five Classics seem
at first sight to afford an almost unbounded field
for subjects of essays, and as the Chancellor does
not announce his themes until he enters the hall,
it is hopeless to attempt to ascertain them in advance.
But the shrewd Celestial has an empirical, if not
a scientific acquaintance with the doctrine of chances
and of averages. He knows that in the course of
years, the same themes recur, and that essays which
were composed long before he was born are just as
good in the present year as they ever were. The
“padding” method consists in lining one’s
clothing with an immense number of essays, the characters
of which are of that minute kind known as “fly-eye,”
scarcely legible without a magnifying glass. Upon
this scale, it is easy to reduce an essay with 300
characters to a compass of extreme insignificance,
and a moderately “padded” scholar might
be provided with 8,000 or 10,000 such essays.
Sometimes they are concealed in the baskets in which
the students bring their provisions to the hall.
By dint of a complete index, the student who is padded,
can readily ascertain whether he is provided with
an essay upon the passage desired, and though the
withdrawal of an essay from a pack might seem a more
difficult feat, it is easily done by the judicious
expenditure of a fee to the guards both at the door
and within the hall. A variation of the padding
method is to have essays written all over the lining
of the inner jackets, which are made of white silk
for this purpose.
A second and very common way of obtaining
essays without writing them, is by purchase.
In furtherance of this plan, there is a special system
of machinery, which (with appropriate financial lubrication)
may be easily set in motion.
The purchase of an essay is one of
those acts which in China can by no possibility be
concealed. “There is no hedge that excludes
the wind,” and the close proximity of so many
witnesses would, in any case, render the transaction
in a manner a public one. Why then do not those
scholars who are honestly toiling for a degree, agree
to expose the frauds by which every one of them is
so seriously wronged? It is not, indeed, an unknown
circumstance for a scholar to cry out, so as to attract
the attention of the examiners, when he witnesses
the transfer of essays, but it is not apparently a
common act. The custom of selling essays, like
other abuses in China, is too universal and too ancient
to be broken up, without the steady cooperation of
many forces, for which it is hopeless to look.
The Chinese dread to give offence by any such burst
of indignation as would be, for an Occidental, irrepressible.
And so things go on in the old way. As to the
morality of the affair, if the consideration of it
ever occurs to any one, it is hard to make that appear
culpable in a poor scholar, which is legitimate for
the emperor.
The proportion of students who obtain
their degrees unfairly must be large, but there is
no means of ascertaining the facts, even approximately.
No two examinations are alike, and in all of them much
depends upon the temper and vigilance of the presiding
officer. In one district in which the writer
lived, there was an examination in which so many persons
obtained their degrees by fraud, that even the patience
of the most patient of peoples was exhausted.
Some defeated candidate wrote a complaint of the wrong,
and tossed it into the examination hall where it was
brought to the attention of the Chancellor, who had
all the successful candidates examined on their essays,
an examination which eleven out of fifteen were unable
to pass, having bought their essays, and the result
was their summary disgrace. Since this occurrence,
much greater care has been exercised at this particular
examination than was formerly the rule. In another
district a candidate known to the writer succeeded
in passing the first of the two examinations before
the Chancellor, but the second was too much for him.
His essay and poem were adjudged bad, and he was beaten
a hundred blows on the hand. It was then the custom
to publish the names of those who passed the best
examination on the first trial before the Chancellor,
as already having attained a degree. This notice
had already been sent to the home of the candidate,
who now had the exquisite mortification of having
his name erased, when the prize was already within
his grasp. The subordinates in the yamen of the
Chancellor kneeled to his Excellency, and implored
him to overlook the amazing stupidity of this candidate,
which the great man was kind enough to do, and thus
a degree was wrested even from fate itself.
At all varieties of examinations,
there are present many persons who act as essay brokers
and as middle-men between those who have essays to
sell, and those who wish to buy. It is supposed
that both the seller of the essay and the purchaser
will be among those examined, but the practical difficulty
arises from the uncertainty whether their respective
seats in the hall, which cannot be known in advance,
will be within reach of each other. As any two
persons are very liable to be so far apart that communication
will be impossible, it is usual for the essay broker
to introduce a number of essay vendors to each intending
purchaser, so that the chances of effecting a transfer
between any two of them may be increased. To
bind the bargain, before the essay is composed, a brief
but explicit contract is signed by the purchaser in
the hall. The terms are arranged on a sliding
scale, called “first two and after two,”
“first five and after five,” etc.
This signifies that it is agreed that the person who
furnishes the essay shall receive in any event a first
payment of 20,000 cash, or 50,000 cash, as the case
may be, and should the purchaser win a degree, there
is to be an after payment of 200,000 cash, or 500,000
cash, according to the terms. These payments
are enforced by the brokers, who must be well acquainted
with the financial circumstances of the several parties.
These obligations, like gambling debts, cannot of course
be legally prosecuted, but the Chinese have in all
such cases simple ways of enforcing payment, such
as raising a disturbance in an annoying and public
way.
The reputation of having bought an
examination essay is not one which any candidate wishes
to have made public authentically, however notorious
the fact may be, but the reputation of having bought
an essay and of having declined payment, would be
intolerable. Some essay vendors frequent examinations
for a long series of years, with no view to obtaining
a degree for themselves, but in order to reap more
substantial benefits from their scholarship than a
degree is likely to confer. If they have once
taken a degree themselves, they can only carry on this
trade by assuming the name of some candidate, to whom
a fee must be paid for the privilege of personating
him. Graduates of the rank of Selected Men also
carry on this business, sometimes in a double way,
taking a degree for the person whom they personate,
and also having leisure to write essays for sale,
after their own are finished, thus killing two birds
with one stone. In either case, it is necessary
to bribe the ling-sheng who is the guarantee of the
identity of the undergraduate.
The third method of obtaining the
essays of other persons, is called “transmission”
(ch’uan ti). This can only be accomplished
by the cooperation of the inspectors (hsA1/4n ch’ang)
who, like all other mortals, are supposed to be perfectly
open to considerations of temporal advantage, if only
arguments of sufficient strength are employed.
As soon as the Chancellor’s theme is announced,
it is copied, and at a preconcerted signal thrown
over the wall of the examination premises to persons
waiting for it. Several scholars outside may
have been previously engaged to write essays for different
persons within the hall. When the essays are finished
they are carefully done up, and at a signal, such as
a call for a dog or for a cat, are thrown over the
wall to the watchman, who has been previously paid
to receive them. The inspector, also liberally
fed, ascertains from a private mark on each essay,
for whom it is intended, and while pacing back and
forth through the hall, contrives to deliver them,
without being seen by the Chancellor. In one case,
six persons were known to have received their degrees,
on the merits of essays which were brought into the
hall after being thrown over the wall in a single bundle.
Sometimes essays are concealed in the body of a harmless-looking
bread-cake, which is tossed carelessly from one candidate
to another when the lunches are eaten, with the connivance,
no doubt, of the inspectors. The District Magistrates
sometimes post the Secretaries at the corners of the
examination hall, where it is easy to see all that
goes on. But much more often, it is probable,
that the Magistrate takes little interest in such
details.
In some examinations, the Chancellors
are very strict, and forbid any of the watchmen to
enter the hall at all, which, of course, checkmates
the plan last described. Such instances are much
more than offset by others, in which the Chancellor
does not remain through the examination himself, but
entrusts the conduct of affairs to his Secretaries.
These functionaries are then at liberty to furnish
essays to candidates who can afford to pay the heavy
price necessary. In such cases, while ostensibly
examining the essays, the Secretaries find it easy
to throw one of their own under a stool, or in some
place from which it may be readily captured by the
purchaser.
In a case reported in the Peking
Gazette some years since, a bold vendor of essays
succeeded in getting his paper conveyed to the individual
for whom it was intended, by hooking it on the garments
of the venerable Chancellor himself, who thus unconsciously
became the bearer of the very documents which he was
endeavouring to suppress! The candidates at the
Chancellor’s examination are generally seated
in such proximity, that including those on each side,
most of the students are within easy reach of ten
or fifteen other persons. This renders the transfer
of papers an easy matter. In the second of these
trials, when the number is reduced to a mere handful,
the students are often seated just as compactly as
before.
A scholar with whom the writer is
acquainted, once found himself near a poor fellow,
who was utterly at a loss how to treat the theme from
Mencius, “Like climbing a tree to catch a fish.”
A verbal arrangement was hastily made for the purchase
of an essay, but the usual written agreement was omitted.
The essay was indited in the lawless style of chirography
known as the “grass character,” and handed
to the purchaser to be copied. Here an untoward
accident occurred, for the man who bought the essay
mistook two characters, when he copied out the paper,
for two others which they much resembled, thus ruining
the chances of success. The poor scholar begged
off from the amount which he had agreed to pay, (which
was about ten dollars) on the plea of poverty.
The angry essay-seller then raised a kind of mob of
students, went to the lodgings of his debtor and made
an uproar, the result of which was to extract from
the latter about a dollar and a half, which was all
that could be got! The preceptor of the man who
sold the essay, who was himself one of the candidates
at this examination, claimed, with many others, that
the essay which was sold, as represented by the author,
must certainly have resulted in a degree for the poor
scholar if he had not blundered in inditing false characters.
Should an examiner overlook a wrong
character, and the fact be afterward made public,
he might be degraded for his carelessness. A case
of this sort was reported a few years ago in the Peking
Gazette. At the triennial examination for
the Han-lin, in the year 1871, after the
essays had been submitted to the Han-lin
examiners, the nine most meritorious ones were selected,
and were sent in to the Empress Dowager the
Emperor being under age to have the award
formally confirmed. The work of greatest merit
was placed uppermost, but the old lady, who had an
imperial will of her own, was anxious to thwart the
decision of the learned pundits; and, as chance would
have it, the sunlight fell upon the chosen manuscript,
and she discovered a flaw, a thinness in the paper,
indicating a place in the composition where one character
had been erased and another substituted. The
Empress rated the examiners for allowing such “slovenly
work” to pass, and proclaimed another man, whose
name was Hsiang, as victor. This individual hailed
from the province of Kuang-tung a province
which had produced a Senior Wrangler but once in 250
years. On his return to his native province the
successful scholar was received by the local authorities
with the highest possible honours. All the families
owning his surname who could afford to do so paid enormous
sums to be permitted to come and worship at his ancestral
hall, for by this means they established a pseudo
claim to relationship, and were allowed to place tablets
over the entrances of their own halls inscribed with
the title Chuang YA1/4an, or Senior Wrangler.
The superstitious Cantonese believed that the sunbeam
which revealed the fatal flaw was a messenger sent
from heaven!
The fact that a man has taken the
degree of hsiu-ts’ai, does not release him from
the necessity of studying. On the contrary, this
is called “entering school,” and the graduate
is required to present himself at each triennial examination,
to compete for the next step in the scale of honours,
that of ling-sheng hsiu-ts’ai. The number
of graduates who can attain the rank of ling-sheng
in any one year is limited. In a district which
graduates seventeen hsiu-ts’ai, there may be
but one or two ling-sheng graduates passed at a time.
There are, however, extra examinations, as already
explained, in case of the accession of an Emperor,
etc., and when a vacancy in the fixed number takes
place through death, an additional candidate is allowed
to pass to fill the place. A hsiu-ts’ai
is not allowed to decline the examination merely on
account of the improbability of his passing it; on
the contrary, every graduate is required to compete
as often as examinations occur. This is the theory,
but as a matter of fact, the payment of about a dollar
and a half to the underlings of the Superintendent
of Instruction for the District will enable the candidate
to have an entry opposite his name, signifying that
he is “incapacitated by illness,” or is
“not at home.” But after the graduate
has been examined ten times, and has persistently failed
to show any capacity for further advance, he is excused
from examination thereafter, and his name is dropped.
At these examinations the candidates are divided into
four classes according to the respective merits of
their essays. If any candidate fails to get into
the first three classes, he is regarded as having
forfeited his title to the grade of hsiu-ts’ai,
and he loses his rank as such, unless the Chancellor
can be prevailed upon to excuse his “rotten
scholarship,” and give the unfortunate student
another trial. Hence the proverb, “The
hsiu-ts’ai dreads the fourth class.”
The ling-sheng is entitled to a small allowance of
about $10 a year, from the Government, to assist him
in the prosecution of his studies, though the amount
can hardly be regarded as proportioned to the difficulty
of attaining the rank which alone is entitled to receive
this meagre help.
The ling-sheng graduates are required
to compete at the triennial examinations, for the
next step, which is that of kung-sheng. Only
one candidate can enter this rank at one examination
unless there should be a special vacancy.
There are five varieties of kung-sheng,
according to the time at which and the conditions
under which they have graduated. These scholars
do not, like the ling-sheng, act as bondsmen for
undergraduates, nor do they like them, have an allowance.
They are permitted to wear a semi-official robe, and
are addressed by a title of respect, but in a pecuniary
point of view their honours are empty ones, unless
they secure the place of Superintendent of Instruction,
which must, however, be in some district other than
their own. The kung-sheng and the hsiu-ts’ai
are at opposite ends of one division of the long educational
road. The former is regarded as a schoolboy,
and the latter is for the first time a man, and need
be examined no more, unless he chooses to compete
for the rank of Selected Man, (chA1/4-jen) an examination
which has intricacies and perils of its own.
“The hsiu-ts’ai,” says the proverb,
“must have talent, but the chA1/4-jen must
have fate,” that is, no amount of talent, by
itself, will suffice to win this higher rank, unless
the fates are on one’s side, a proposition which
we are prepared to believe, from what has already been
seen of the lower grades of scholarship.
At any part of the long process which
we have described, it is possible to become a candidate
for honours above, by purchasing those below.
A man of real talent, studiously inclined, might for
example buy the rank of ling-sheng, and then with
a preceptor of his own, and great diligence, become
a kung-sheng, a chA1/4-jen, and perhaps at last an
official, skipping all the tedious lower steps.
The taint of having climbed over the wall, instead
of entering by the straight and narrow way, would doubtless
cling to him forever, but this circumstance would
probably not interfere with his equanimity, so long
as it did not diminish his profits. As a matter
of experience, however, it is probable that it would
be more worth while to buy an office outright, rather
than to enter the field, by the circuitous route of
a combination of purchase and examinations.
Whether to be examined or not is not
always optional in China. A father was determined
that his son should study for a degree, which the son
was very unwilling to do, yielding however to compulsion.
He was so successful that at the age of nineteen he
became a Bachelor, only to find that his father’s
ambition was far from satisfied, and that he now required
him to go on and work for the next degree of Selected
Man. Perceiving that there was no hope of escaping
this discouraging task, the youth hung himself, and
was examined no more!
The office of Superintendent of Instruction,
is considered a very desirable one, since the duties
are light, and the income considerable. This
income arises partly from a large tract of land set
apart for the support of the two Superintendents,
partly from “presents” of grain exacted
twice a year after the manner of Buddhist priests,
and partly from fees which every graduate is required
to pay, varying as all such Chinese payments do, according
to the circumstances of the individual. The Superintendent
is careful to inquire privately into the means at the
disposal of each graduate, and fixes his tax accordingly.
From his decision there is no appeal. If the
payment is resisted as excessive, the Superintendent,
who is theoretically his preceptor, will have the
hsiu-ts’ai beaten on the hands, and probably
double the amount of the assessment. If any of
the graduates in a district are accused of a crime,
they are reported to the District Magistrate, who turns
them over to the Superintendent of Instruction, for
an inquiry. The Superintendent and the Magistrate
together, could secure the disgrace of a graduate,
as already explained.
The Government desires to encourage
learning as much as possible, and to this end there
are in many cities, what may be termed Government
high-schools or colleges, where preceptors of special
ability are appointed to explain the Classics, and
to hold frequent examinations, similar to those in
the regular course, as described. The funds for
the support of such institutions, are sometimes derived
from the voluntary subscriptions of wealthy persons,
who have been rewarded by the gift of an honourary
title, or perhaps from a tax on a cattle fair, etc.
Where the arrangement is carried out in good faith,
it has worked well, but in two districts known to
the writer, the whole plan has been brought into discredit
of late years, on account of the promotion to office
of District Magistrates who have bought their way
upward, and who have no learning of their own.
In such cases, the management of the examination is
probably left to a Secretary, who disposes of it as
quickly and with as little trouble to himself as possible.
The themes for the essays are given out, and prizes
promised for the best, but instead of remaining to
superintend the competition, the Secretary goes about
his business, leaving the scholars who wish to compete
to go to their homes, and write their essays there,
or to have others do it for them, as they prefer.
In some instances, the same man registers under a
variety of names, and writes competitive essays for
them all, or he perhaps writes his essays and sells
them to others, and when they are handed in, no questions
are asked. It would be easy to stop abuses of
this sort, if it were the concern or the interest
of any one to do so, but it is not, and so they continue.
A school-teacher with whom the writer is acquainted,
happening to have a school near the district city,
made it a constant practice for many years, to attend
examinations of this sort. He was examined about
a hundred times, and on four occasions received a
prize, once a sum in money equivalent to about seventy-five
cents, and three other times a sum equal to about
half-a-dollar!
It is a constant wonder to Occidentals,
by what motives the Chinese are impelled, in their
irrepressible thirst for literary degrees, even under
all the drawbacks and disadvantages, some of which
have been described. These motives, like all
others in human experience are mixed, but at the base
of them all, is a desire for fame and for power.
In China the power is in the hands of the learned
and of the rich. Wealth is harder to acquire
than learning, and incomparably more difficult to keep.
The immemorial traditions of the empire are all in
favour of the man who is willing to submit to the
toils that he may win the rewards of the scholar.
Every village as already explained,
has its headmen. Among them the literary graduate,
provided he is also a practical man, will inevitably
take the lead. He will often come into relations
with the District Magistrate, which makes him a marked
man among his fellows. He will be constantly
called upon to assist in the settlement of disputes,
and every such occasion will afford opportunities
for the privilege, so dear to the Chinese, of enjoying
a feast at the expense of his neighbours, besides
putting them under an obligation to him for his trouble.
At the weddings and funerals within the large circle
of his acquaintance he will be a frequent guest, and
always in the place of honour due to his literary
degree. This is especially the case in funeral
ceremonies of those who are buried with the most elaborate
ritual. On these occasions the ancestral tablet
of the deceased is to be written, and as an important
part of the exercises a red dot over one character
signifying King is to be placed, thus changing it
into the symbol denoting Lord. It is not uncommon
to have the performances connected with such funerals
extended over several days, each furnishing three
excellent feasts, as well as abundant supplies of
opium for those who wish to smoke. In a country
like China the participation in revels such as these
approach more nearly to paradisaic bliss than anything
of which the Chinese mind can conceive. Every
scholar is desirous of getting into such relations
with his environment that honours of this sort come
to him as a matter of course. If he happens to
be very poor, they furnish a not unimportant part of
his support, as well as of his happiness.
The village graduate who knows how
to help in lawsuits by preparing complaints, and by
assisting in the intricate proceedings ensuing at each
stage is often able by means of the prestige thus gained,
to get his living at the expense of others more ignorant.
No country offers a better field for such an enterprise
than China. Unbounded respect for learning coexists
with unbounded ignorance, and the experienced literary
man knows how to turn each of these elements to the
very best account. In all lands and in all ages,
the man who is possessed with what is vulgarly termed
the “gift of the gab,” is able to make
his own way, and in China he carries everything before
him.
The range of territory which any aspirant
for literary honours in China must expect to traverse,
is, as we have seen, continental. In order to
have any hope of success, he must be acquainted with
every square inch of it, and must be prepared to sink
an artesian well from any given point to any given
depth. To the uneducated peasant, whose whole
being is impregnated with a blind respect for learning,
amounting at times to a kind of idolatry, such knowledge
as this seems an almost supernatural acquirement,
and inspires all the reverence of which he is capable.
The thought of the estimate in which they will be
held for the whole term of their lives, is thus a
powerful stimulus to scholars of ambition, even under
the greatest discouragements.
There could scarcely be a better exemplification
of what the Chinese saying calls “superiority
to those below, and inferiority to those above,”
than the position of the hsiu-ts’ai. While
he is looked upon by the vulgar herd in the light
we have described, by the educated classes above him
he is regarded, as we have so often termed him, as
a schoolboy who is not yet even in school. The
popular dictum avers that though the whole body of
hsiu-ts’ai should attempt to start a rebellion,
and should be left undisturbed in the effort for three
years, the result would be failure, albeit this proverb
finds no support in the history of the great rebellion,
which originated with a discontented undergraduate
who was exasperated at his repeated failures to get
his talent recognized. Literary examinations,
as we have abundantly seen, are like the game of backgammon,
an equal mixture of skill and luck, but the young graduate
easily comes to regard the luck as due to the skill,
and thus becomes filled to the full of that intellectual
pride which is one of the greatest barriers to the
national progress of China.
Differing by millenniums from the
system just described is that recently decreed after
successful agitation by a few reformers. During
the summer of 1898 His Majesty Kuang HsA1/4, Emperor
of China, issued several Edicts which abolished the
“eight-legged examination essay” as an
avenue to the attainment of literary degrees, and
introduced in their place what was termed Practical
Chinese Literature, and Western Learning, which were
to be combined in Provincial and County Academies.
Existing institutions were to be remodelled after
a more or less definite pattern set in Peking.
All except official temples (that is, those where offerings
or services were required from the Magistrates) were
to be surrendered as seats of the New Learning.
Reports were demanded from Provincial Governors as
to the present status of these temples, and the future
prospects for income from them.
These Edicts potentially revolutionized
the intellectual life of China. They were received
very differently in different parts of the empire,
but there is no reason to doubt that they would have
been widely welcomed by an influential minority of
the literati of China, who had in various ways come
to realize the futility of the present instruction
for the needs of to-day. The immediate effect
was to bring Western Learning into universal demand.
Scholars who had never deigned to recognize the existence
of foreigners, were now glad to become their pupils
and purchasers of their text-books on a large scale.
For a few weeks examination themes were strongly tinctured
with Western topics, and those who were able to show
any familiarity with those branches of learning were
almost sure of a degree. Correct answers to simple
mathematical, geographical, or astronomical questions
are said to have rendered success certain, and it
is even alleged that a candidate in one place took
his honours by writing out and commenting upon the
Ten Commandments, which he represented as The Western
Code of Laws.
Toward the close of September, 1898,
the Empress Dowager seized the reins, suppressed her
nephew, and nearly all reforms, educational and political,
were extinguished. A new Imperial University in
Peking survived the storm, but almost all of the extended
and beneficent program of His Majesty was relegated
to the Greek Kalends. It is only a question of
time when the pendulum shall swing back, but every
well-wisher of China hopes that it may not be delayed
until the national existence of the Chinese shall have
been lost.