“It is but a step from Confucius
to confusion,” said I, in a brief discussion
of the Chinese question. “Then let us take
it by all means,” replied the artist, who had
been an indulgent listener for at least ten minutes.
We were strolling upon the verge of the Chinese Quarter
in San Francisco, and, turning aside from one of the
chief thoroughfares of the city, we plunged into the
busiest portion of Chinatown. From our standpoint-the
corner of Kearny and Sacramento Streets-we
got the most favorable view of our Mongolian neighbors.
Here is a goodly number of merchant gentlemen of wealth
and station, comfortably, if not elegantly, housed
on two sides of a street that climbs a low hill quite
in the manner of a tea-box landscape.
A few of these gentlemen lodge on
the upper floors of their business houses, with Chinese
wives, and quaint, old-fashioned children gaudily
dressed, looking like little idols, chatting glibly
with one another, and gracefully gesticulating with
hands of exquisite slenderness. Confucius, in
his infancy, may have been like one of the least of
these. There are white draymen and porters in
the employ of these shrewd and civil merchants, and
the outward appearance of traffic, as conducted in
the immediate vicinity, is rather American than otherwise.
Farther up the hill, on Dupont Street,
from California to Pacific Streets, the five blocks
are almost monopolized by the Chinese. There
is, at first, a sprinkling of small shops in the hands
of Jews and Gentiles, and a mingling of Chinese bazaars
of the half-caste type, where American and English
goods are exposed in the show windows; but as we pass
on the Asiatic element increases, and finally every
trace of alien produce is withdrawn from the shelves
and counters.
Here little China flaunts her scarlet
streamers overhead, and flanks her doors with legends
in saffron and gold; even its window panes have a
foreign look, and within is a glimmering of tinsel,
a subdued light, and china lamps flickering before
graven images of barbaric hideousness. The air
is laden with the fumes of smoking sandal-wood and
strange odors of the East; and the streets, swarming
with coolies, resound with the echoes of an unknown
tongue. There is hardly room for us to pass; we
pick our way, and are sometimes curiously regarded
by slant-eyed pagans, who bear us no good-will, if
that shadow of scorn in the face has been rightly
interpreted. China is not more Chinese than this
section of our Christian city, nor the heart of Tartary
less American.
Turn which way we choose, within two
blocks, on either hand we find nothing but the infinitely
small and astonishingly numerous forms of traffic
on which the hordes around us thrive. No corner
is too cramped for the squatting street cobbler; and
as for the pipe cleaners, the cigarette rollers, the
venders of sweetmeats and conserves, they gather on
the curb or crouch under overhanging windows, and await
custom with the philosophical resignation of the Oriental.
On Dupont Street, between Clay and
Sacramento Streets-a single block,-there
are no less than five basement apartments devoted
exclusively to barbers. There are hosts of this
profession in the quarter. Look down the steep
steps leading into the basement and see, at any hour
of the day, with what deft fingers the tonsorial operators
manipulate the devoted pagan head.
There is no waste space in the quarter.
In apartments not more than fifteen feet square three
or four different professions are often represented,
and these afford employment to ten or a dozen men.
Here is a druggist and herb-seller, with huge spectacles
on his nose, at the left of the main entrance; a butcher
displays his meats in a show-window on the right,
serving his customers over the sill; a clothier is
in the rear of the shop, while a balcony filled with
tailors or cigar-makers hangs half-way to the ceiling.
Close about us there are over one
hundred and fifty mercantile establishments and numerous
mechanical industries. The seventy-five cigar
factories employ eight thousand coolies, and these
are huddled into the closest quarters. In a single
room, measuring twenty feet by thirty feet, sixty
men and boys have been discovered industriously rolling
real Havanas.
The traffic which itinerant fish and
vegetable venders drive in every part of the city
must be great, being as it is an extreme convenience
for lazy or thrifty housewives. A few of these
basket men cultivate gardens in the suburbs, but the
majority seek their supplies in the city markets.
Wash-houses have been established in every part of
the city, and are supplied with two sets of laborers,
who spend watch and watch on duty, so that the establishment
is never closed.
One frequently meets a travelling
bazaar-a coolie with his bundle of fans
and bric-a-brac, wandering from house to house,
even in the suburbs; and the old fellows, with a handful
of sliced bamboos and chairs swinging from the poles
over their shoulders, are becoming quite numerous;
chair mending and reseating must be profitable.
These little rivulets, growing larger and more varied
day by day, all spring from that great fountain of
Asiatic vitality-the Chinese Quarter.
This surface-skimming beguiles for an hour or two;
but the stranger who strolls through the streets of
Chinatown, and retires dazed with the thousand eccentricities
of an unfamiliar people, knows little of the mysterious
life that surrounds him.
Let us descend. We are piloted
by a special policeman, one who is well acquainted
with the geography of the quarter. Provided with
tapers, we plunge into one of the several dark recesses
at hand. Back of the highly respectable brick
buildings in Sacramento Street-the dwellings
and business places of the first-class Chinese merchants-there
are pits and deadfalls innumerable, and over all is
the blackness of darkness; for these human moles can
work in the earth faster than the shade of the murdered
Dane. Here, from the noisome vats three stories
underground to the hanging gardens of the fish-dryers
on the roofs, there is neither nook nor corner but
is populous with Mongolians of the lowest caste.
The better class have their reserved quarters; with
them there is at least room to stretch one’s
legs without barking the shins of one’s neighbor;
but from this comparative comfort to the condensed
discomfort of the impoverished coolie, how sudden
and great the change!
Between brick walls we thread our
way, and begin descending into the abysmal darkness;
the tapers, without which it were impossible to proceed
with safety, burn feebly in the double night of the
subterranean tenements. Most of the habitable
quarters under the ground are like so many pigeon-houses
indiscriminately heaped together. If there were
only sunshine enough to drink up the slime that glosses
every plank, and fresh air enough to sweeten the mildewed
kennels, this highly eccentric style of architecture
might charm for a time, by reason of its novelty;
there is, moreover, a suspicion of the picturesque
lurking about the place-but, heaven save
us, how it smells!
We pass from one black hole to another.
In the first there is a kind of bin for ashes and
coals, and there are pots and grills lying about-it
is the kitchen. A heap of fire kindling wood in
one corner, a bench or stool as black as soot can
paint it, a few bowls, a few bits of rags, a few fragments
of food, and a coolie squatting over a struggling
fire,-coolie who rises out of the dim smoke
like the evil genii in the Arabian tale.
There is no chimney, there is no window, there is no
drainage. We are in a cubic sink, where we can
scarcely stand erect. From the small door pours
a dense volume of smoke, some of it stale smoke, which
our entry has forced out of the corners; the kitchen
will only hold so much smoke, and we have made havoc
among the cubic inches. Underfoot, the thin planks
sag into standing pools, and there is a glimmer of
poisonous blue just along the base of the blackened
walls; thousands feed daily in troughs like these!
The next apartment, smaller yet, and
blacker and bluer, and more slippery and slimy, is
an uncovered cesspool, from which a sickening stench
exales continually. All about it are chambers-very
small ones,-state-rooms let me call them,
opening upon narrow galleries that run in various
directions, sometimes bridging one another in a marvelous
and exceedingly ingenious economy of space. The
majority of these state-rooms are just long enough
to lie down in, and just broad enough to allow a narrow
door to swing inward between two single beds, with
two sleepers in each bed. The doors are closed
and bolted; there is often no window, and always no
ventilation.
Our “special,” by the
authority vested in him, tries one door and demands
admittance. There is no response from within.
A group of coolies, who live in the vicinity and have
followed close upon our heels even since our descent
into the under world, assure us in soothing tones
that the place is vacant. We are suspicious and
persist in our investigation; still no response.
The door is then forced by the “special,”
and behold four of the “seven sleepers”
packed into this air-tight compartment, and insensible
even to the hearty greeting we offer them!
The air is absolutely overpowering.
We hasten from the spot, but are arrested in our flight
by the “special,” who leads us to the gate
of the catacombs, and bids us follow him. I know
not to what extent the earth has been riddled under
the Chinese Quarter; probably no man knows save he
who has burrowed, like a gopher, from one living grave
to another, fleeing from taxation or the detective.
I know that we thread dark passages, so narrow that
two of us may not cross tracks, so low that we often
crouch at the doorways that intercept pursuit at unexpected
intervals. Here the thief and the assassin seek
sanctuary; it is a city of refuge for lost souls.
The numerous gambling houses are so
cautiously guarded that only the private police can
ferret them out. Door upon door is shut against
you; or some ingenious panel is slid across your path,
and you are unconsciously spirited away through other
avenues. The secret signals that gave warning
of your approach caused a sudden transformation in
the ground-plan of the establishment.
Gambling and opium smoking are here
the ruling passions. A coolie will pawn anything
and everything to obtain the means with which to indulge
these fascinations. There are many games played
publicly at restaurants and in the retiring rooms
of mercantile establishments. Not only are cards,
dice, and dominos common, but sticks, straws,
brass rings, etc., are thrown in heaps upon the
table, and the fate of the gamester hangs literally
upon a breath.
These haunts are seldom visited by
the officers of justice, for it is almost impossible
to storm the barriers in season to catch the criminals
in the very act. To-day you approach a gambling
hell by this door, to-morrow the inner passages of
the house are mysteriously changed, and it is impossible
to track them without being frequently misled; meanwhile
the alarm is sounded throughout the building, and very
speedily every trace of guilt has disappeared.
The lottery is another popular temptation in the quarter.
Most of the very numerous wash-houses are said to
be private agencies for the sale of lottery tickets.
Put your money, no matter how little it is, on certain
of the characters that cover a small sheet of paper,
and your fate is soon decided; for there is a drawing
twice a day.
Enter any one of the pawn-shops licensed
by the city authorities, and cast your eye over the
motley collection of unredeemed articles. There
are pistols of every pattern and almost of every age,
the majority of them loaded. There are daggers
in infinite variety, including the ingenious fan stiletto,
which, when sheathed, may be carried in the hand without
arousing suspicion; for the sheath and handle bear;
an exact resemblance to a closed fan. There are
entire suits of clothes, beds and bedding, tea, sugar,
clocks-multitudes of them, a clock being
one of the Chinese hobbies, and no room is completely
furnished without at least a pair of them,-ornaments
in profusion; everything, in fact, save only the precious
queue, without which no Chinaman may hope for
honor in this life or salvation in the next.
The throngs of customers that keep
the pawn-shops crowded with pledges are probably most
of them victims of the gambling table or the opium
den. They come from every house that employs them;
your domestic is impatient of delay, and hastens through
his daily task in order that he may nightly indulge
his darling sin.
The opium habit prevails to an alarming
extent throughout the country, but no race is so dependent
on this seductive and fatal stimulant as the Chinese.
There are several hundred dens in San Francisco where,
for a very moderate sum, the coolie may repair, and
revel in dreams that end in a deathlike sleep.
Let us pause at the entrance of one
of these pleasure-houses. Through devious ways
we follow the leader, and come at last to a cavernous
retreat. The odors that salute us are offensive;
on every hand there is an accumulation of filth that
should naturally, if it does not, breed fever and
death. Forms press about us in the darkness,-forms
that hasten like shadows toward that den of shades.
We enter by a small door that is open for a moment
only, and find ourselves in an apartment about fifteen
feet square. We can touch the ceiling on tiptoe,
yet there are three tiers of bunks placed with head
boards to the wall, and each bunk just broad enough
for two occupants. It is like the steerage in
an emigrant vessel, eminently shipshape. Every
bunk is filled; some of the smokers have had their
dream and lie in grotesque attitudes, insensible,
ashen-pale, having the look of plague-stricken corpses.
Some are dreaming; you see it in the
vacant eye, the listless face, the expression that
betrays hopeless intoxication. Some are preparing
the enchanting pipe,-a laborious process,
that reminds one of an incantation. See those
two votaries lying face to face, chatting in low voices,
each loading his pipe with a look of delicious expectation
in every feature. They recline at full-length;
their heads rest upon blocks of wood or some improvised
pillow; a small oil lamp flickers between them.
Their pipes resemble flutes, with an inverted ink-bottle
on the side near the lower end. They are most
of them of bamboo, and very often are beautifully
colored with the mellowest and richest tints of a wisely
smoked meerschaum. A small jar of prepared opium-a
thick black paste resembling tar-stands
near the lamp.
The smoker leisurely dips a wire into
the paste; a few drops adhere to it, and he twirls
the wire in the flame of the lamp, where they fry and
bubble; he then draws them upon the rim of the clay
pipe-bowl, and at once inhales three or four mouthfuls
of whitish smoke. This empties the pipe, and
the slow process of feeding the bowl is lazily repeated.
It is a labor of love; the eyes gloat upon the bubbling
drug which shall anon witch the soul of those emaciated
toilers. They renew the pipe again and again;
their talk grows less frequent and dwindles to a whispered
soliloquy.
We address them, and are smiled at
by delirious eyes; but the ravenous lips are sealed
to that magic tube, from which they draw the breath
of a life we know not of. Their fingers relax;
their heads sink upon the pillows; they no longer
respond, even by a glance, when we now appeal to them.
Here is the famous Malay, the fearful enemy of De Quincy,
who nightly drugged his master into Asiatic seas;
and now himself is basking in the tropical heats and
vertical sunlight of Hindostan. Egypt and her
gods are his; for him the secret chambers of Cheops
are unlocked; he also is transfixed at the summit
of pagodas; he is the idol, the priest, the worshipped,
the sacrificed. The wrath of Brahma pursues him
through the forests of Asia; he is the hated of Vishnu;
Siva lies in wait for him; Isis and Osiris confront
him.
What is this key which seems for a
time to unlock the gates of heaven and of hell?
It is the most complicated drug in the pharmacopoeia.
Though apparently nothing more than a simple black,
slimy paste, analysis reveals the fact that it contains
no less than five-and-twenty elements, each one of
them a compound by itself, and many of them among
the most complex compounds known to modern chemistry.
This “dread agent of unimaginable pleasure and
pain,” this author of an “Iliad of woes,”
lies within reach of every creature in the commonwealth.
As the most enlightened and communicative of the opium
eaters has observed: “Happiness may be
bought for a penny, and carried in the waistcoat pocket;
portable ecstasy may be had corked up in a pint bottle;
peace of mind may be set down in gallons by the mail-coach.”
This is the chief, the inevitable
dissipation of our coolie tribes; this is one of the
evils with which we have to battle, and in comparison
with which the excessive indulgence in intoxicating
liquors is no more than what a bad dream is to hopeless
insanity. See the hundred forms on opium pillows
already under the Circean spell; swarms are without
the chambers awaiting their turn to enter and enjoy
the fictitious delights of this paradise.
While the opium habit is one that
should be treated at once with wisdom and severity,
there is another point which seriously involves the
Chinese question, and, unhappily, it must be handled
with gloves. Nineteen-twentieths of the Chinese
women in San Francisco are depraved!
Not far from one of the pleasure-houses
we intruded upon a domestic hearth smelling of punk
and pestilence. A child fled with a shrill scream
at our approach. This was the hospital of the
quarter. Nine cases of small-pox were once found
within its narrow walls, and with no one to care for
them. As we explored its cramped wards our path
was obstructed by a body stretched upon a bench.
The face was of that peculiar smoke-color which we
are obliged to accept as Chinese pallor; the trunk
was swathed like a mummy in folds of filthy rags; it
was motionless as stone, apparently insensible.
Thus did an opium victim await his dissolution.
In the next room a rough deal burial
case stood upon two stools; tapers were flickering
upon the floor; the fumes of burning punk freighted
the air and clouded the vision; the place was clean
enough, for it was perfectly bare, but it was eminently
uninteresting. Close at hand stood a second burial
case, an empty one, with the cover standing against
the wall; a few hours more and it would find a tenant-he
who was dying in rags and filth in the room adjoining.
This was the native hospital of the quarter, and the
mother of the child was the matron of the establishment.
I will cast but one more shadow on
the coolie quarter, and then we will search for sunshine.
It is folly to attempt to ignore the fact that the
seeds of leprosy are sown among the Chinese. If
you would have proof, follow me. It is a dreary
drive over the hills to the pest-house. Imagine
that we have dropped in upon the health officer at
his city office. Our proposed visitation has
been telephoned to the resident physician, who is
a kind of prisoner with his leprous patients on the
lonesome slope of a suburban hill. As we get into
the rugged edge of the city, among half-graded streets,
strips of marshland, and a semi-rustic population,
we ask our way to the pest-house. Yonder it lies,
surrounded by that high white fence on the hill-top,
above a marsh once clouded with clamorous water-fowl,
but now all, all under the spell of the quarantine,
and desolate beyond description. Our road winds
up the hill-slope, sown thick with stones, and stops
short at the great solid gate in the high rabbit fence
that walls in the devil’s acre, if I may so
call it. We ring the dreadful bell-the
passing-bell, that is seldom rung save to announce
the arrival of another fateful body clothed in living
death.
The doctor welcomes us to an enclosure
that is utterly whitewashed; the detached houses within
it are kept sweet and clean. Everything connected
with the lazaret is of the cheapest description;
there is a primitive simplicity, a modest nakedness,
an insulated air about the place that reminds one
of a chill December in a desert island. Cheap
as it is and unhandsome, the hospital is sufficient
to meet all the requirements of the plague in its
present stage of development. The doctor has weeded
out the enclosure, planted it, hedged it about with
the fever-dispelling eucalyptus, and has already a
little plot of flowers by the office window,-but
this is not what we have come to see. One ward
in the pest-house is set apart for the exclusive use
of the Chinese lepers, who have but recently been
isolated. We are introduced to the poor creatures
one after another, and then we take them all in at
a glance, or group them according to their various
stages of decomposition, or the peculiar character
of their physical hideousness.
They are not all alike; with some
the flesh has begun to wither and to slough off, yet
they are comparatively cheerful; as fatalists, it makes
very little difference to them how soon or in what
fashion they are translated to the other life.
There is one youth who doubtless suffers some inconveniences
from the clumsy development of his case. This
lad, about eighteen years of age, has a face that
is swollen like a sponge saturated with corruption;
he can not raise his bloated eyelids, but, with his
head thrown back, looks downward over his cheeks.
Two of these lepers are as astonishing specimens as
any that have ever come under my observation, yet
I have morbidly sought them from Palestine to Molokai.
In these cases the muscles are knotted, the blood curdled;
masses of unwholesome flesh cover them, lying fold
upon fold; the lobes of their ears hang almost to
the shoulder; the eyes when visible have an inhuman
glance that transfixes you with horror. Their
hands are shapeless stumps that have lost all natural
form or expression.
Of old there was a law for the leprosy
of a garment and of a house; yet, in spite of the
stringency of that Mosaic law, the isolation, the
purging with hyssop, and the cleansing by fire, St.
Luke records: “There met Him ten men who
were lepers, who stood afar off; and they lifted up
their voices and cried, Jesus, Master, have mercy on
us!” And to-day, more than eighteen hundred
years later, lepers gather on the slopes of Mount
Zion, and hover at the gates of Jerusalem, and crouch
in the shadow of the tomb of David, crying for the
bread of mercy. Leprosy once thoroughly engrafted
on our nation, and nor cedar-wood, nor scarlet, nor
hyssop, nor clean birds, nor ewes of the first year,
nor measures of fine flour, nor offerings of any sort,
shall cleanse us for evermore.
Let us turn to pleasanter prospects-the
Joss House, for instance, one of the several temples
whither the Chinese frequently repair to propitiate
the reposeful gods. It is an unpretentious building,
with nothing external to distinguish its façade from
those adjoining, save only a Chinese legend above
the door. There are many crooks and turns within
it; shrines in a perpetual state of fumigation adorn
its nooks and corners; overhead swing shelves of images
rehearsing historical tableaux; there is much carving
and gilding, and red and green paint. It is the
scene of a perennial feast of lanterns, and the worshipful
enter silently with burn-offerings and meat-offerings
and drink-offerings, which they spread before the
altar under the feet of some colossal god; then, with
repeated genuflections, they retire. The thundering
gong or the screaming pipes startle us at intervals,
and white-robed priests pass in and out, droning their
litanies.
At this point the artist suggests
refreshments; arm in arm we pass down the street,
surfeited with sight-seeing, weary of the multitudinous
bazaars, the swarming coolies, the boom of beehive
industry. Swamped in a surging crowd, we are
cast upon the catafalque of the celestial dead.
The coffin lies under a canopy, surrounded by flambeaux,
grave offerings, guards and musicians.
Chinatown has become sufficiently
acclimatized to begin to put forth its natural buds
again as freely as if this were indeed the Flowery
Land. The funeral pageant moves,-a
dozen carriages preceded by mourners on foot, clad
in white, their heads covered, their feet bare, their
grief insupportable, so that an attendant is at hand
to sustain each mourner howling at the wheels of the
hearse. An orchestra heads the procession; the
air is flooded with paper prayers that are cast hither
at you to appease the troubled spirit. They are
on their way to the cemetery among the hills toward
the sea, where the funeral rites are observed as rigorously
as they are on Asian soil.
We are still unrefreshed and sorely
in need of rest. Overhead swing huge balloon
lanterns and tufts of gold flecked scarlet streamers,-a
sight that maketh the palate of the hungry Asiatic
to water; for within this house may be had all the
delicacies of the season, ranging from the confections
of the fond suckling to funeral bake-meats. Legends
wrought in tinsel decorate the walls. Here is
a shrine with a vermilion-faced god and a native lamp,
and stalks of such hopelessly artificial flowers as
fortunately are unknown in nature. Saffron silks
flutter their fringes in the steams of nameless cookery-for
all this is but the kitchen, and the beginning of
the end we aim at.
A spiral staircase winds like a corkscrew
from floor to floor; we ascend by easy stages, through
various grades of hunger, from the economic appetite
on the first floor, where the plebian stomach is stayed
with tea and lentils, even to the very house-top,
where are administered comforting syrups and a menu
that is sweetened throughout its length with the twang
of lutes, the clash of cymbals, and the throb of the
shark-skin drum.
Servants slip to and fro in sandals,
offering edible birds’-nests, sharks’
fins, and bêche de mer,-or are these
unfamiliar dishes snatched from some other kingdom?
At any rate, they are native to the strange people
who have a little world of their own in our midst,
and who could, if they chose, declare their independence
to-morrow.
We see everywhere the component parts
of a civilization separate and distinct from our own.
They have their exits and their entrances; their religious
life and burial; their imports, exports, diversions,
tribunals, punishments. They are all under the
surveillance of the six companies, the great six-headed
supreme authority. They have laws within our
laws that to us are sealed volumes. Why should
they not? Fifty years ago there were scarcely
a dozen Chinese in America. In 1851, inclusive,
not more than 4,000 had arrived; but the next year
brought 18,000, seized with the lust of gold.
The incoming tide fluctuated, running as low as 4,000
and as high as 15,000 per annum. Since, 1868 we
have received from 10,000 to 15,000 yearly.
After supper we leaned from the high
balcony, among flowers and lanterns, and looked down
upon the street below; it was midnight, yet the pavements
were not deserted, and there arose to our ears a murmur
as of a myriad humming bees shut in clustering hives;
close about us were housed near twenty thousand souls;
shops were open; discordant orchestras resounded from
the theatres; in a dark passage we saw the flames
playing upon the thresholds of infamy to expel the
evil shades.
Away off in the Bay in the moonlight,
glimmered the ribbed sail of a fishing junk, and the
air was heavy with an indefinable odor which to this
hour puzzles me; but it must be attributed either to
sink or sandal-wood-perchance to both!
“It is a little bit of old China,
this quarter of ours,” said the artist, rising
to go. And so it is, saving only a noticeable
lack of dwarfed trees and pale pagodas and sprays
of willowy bamboo; of clumsy boats adrift on tideless
streams; of toy-like tea gardens hanging among artificial
rocks, and of troops of flat-faced but complaisant
people posing grotesquely in ridiculous perspective.