THE HOME OF THE COURT - THE FORBIDDEN CITY
During the past ten years, since the
dethronement of the late Emperor Kuang Hsu, I have
often been asked by Europeans visiting Peking:
“What would happen if the Emperor should die?”
“They would put a new Emperor
on the throne,” was my invariable answer.
They usually followed this with another question:
“What would happen if the Empress Dowager should
die?”
“In that case the Emperor, of
course, would again resume the throne,” I always
replied without hesitation. But during those ten
years, not one of my friends ever thought to propound
the question, nor did I have the wit to ask myself:
“What would happen if the Emperor
and the Empress Dowager should both suddenly snap
the frail cord of life at or about the same time?”
Had such a question come to me, I
confess I should not have known how to answer it.
It is a problem that probably never presented itself
to any one outside of that mysterious Forbidden City,
or the equally mysterious spectres that come and go
through its half-open gates in the darkness of the
early morning. There are three parties to whom
it may have come again and again, and to whom we may
perhaps be indebted both for the problem and the solution.
When the deaths of both of their Imperial
Majesties were announced at the same time, the news
also came that the Japanese suspected that there had
been foul play. With them, however, it was only
suspicion; none of them, so far as I know, ever undertook
to analyze the matter or unravel the mystery.
There is no doubt a reasonable explanation, but we
must go for it to the Forbidden City, the most mysterious
royal dwelling in the world, where white men have
never gone except by invitation from the throne, save
on one occasion.
In 1901, while the court was in hiding
at Hsianfu, the city to which they fled when the allies
entered Peking, the western half of the Forbidden
City was thrown open to the public, the only condition
being that said public have a certificate which would
serve as a pass to the American boys in blue who guarded
the Wu men, or front gate. I was fortunate enough
to have that pass.
My first move was to get a Chinese
photographer the best I could find in the
city to go with me and take pictures of
everything I wanted as well as anything else that
suited his fancy.
The city of Peking is regularly laid
out. Towards the south is the Chinese city, fifteen
miles in circumference. To the north is a square,
four miles on each side, and containing sixteen square
miles. In the centre of this square, enclosed
by a beautifully crenelated wall thirty feet thick
at the bottom, twenty feet thick at the top and twenty-five
feet high, surrounded by a moat one hundred feet wide,
is the Forbidden City, occupying less than one-half
a square mile. In this city there dwells but
one male human being, the Emperor, who is called the
“solitary man.”
There is a gate in the centre of each
of the four sides, that on the south, the Wu men,
being the front gate, through which the Emperor alone
is allowed to pass. The back gate, guarded by
the Japanese during the occupation, is for the Empress
Dowager, the Empress and the women of the court, while
the side gates are for the officials, merchants or
others who may have business in the palace.
Through the centre of this city, from
south to north, is a passageway about three hundred
feet wide, across which, at intervals of two hundred
yards, they have erected large buildings, such as the
imperial examination hall, the hall in which the Emperor
receives his bride, the imperial library, the imperial
kitchen, and others of a like nature, all covered
with yellow titles, and known to tourists, who see
them from the Tartar City wall, as the palace buildings.
These, however, are not the buildings in which the
royal family live. They are the places where
for the past five hundred years all those great diplomatic
measures and dark deeds of the
Chinese emperors and their great officials have been
transacted between midnight and daylight.
If you will go with me at midnight
to the great gate which leads from the Tartar to the
Chinese city the Chien men you
will hear the wailing creak of its hinges as it swings
open, and in a few moments the air will be filled
with the rumbling of carts and the clatter of the
feet of the mules on the stone pavement, as they take
the officials into the audiences with their ruler.
If you will remain with me there till a little before
daylight you will see them, like silent spectres,
sitting tailor-fashion on the bottom of their springless
carts, returning to their homes, but you will ask
in vain for any information as to the business they
have transacted. “They love darkness rather
than light,” not perhaps “because their
deeds are evil,” but because it has been the
custom of the country from time immemorial.
Immediately to the north of this row
of imperial palace buildings, and just outside the
north gate, there is an artificial mound called Coal
Hill, made of the dirt which was removed to make the
Lotus Lakes. It is said that in this hill there
is buried coal enough to last the city in time of
siege. This, however, was not the primary design
of the hill. It has a more mysterious meaning.
There have always been spirits in the earth, in the
air, in every tree and well and stream. And in
China it has ever been found necessary to locate a
house, a city or even a cemetery in such surroundings
as to protect them from the entrance of evil spirits.
“Coal Hill,” therefore, was placed to the
north of these imperial palace buildings to protect
them from the evil spirits of the cold, bleak north.
Just inside of that north gate there
is a beautiful garden, with rockeries and arbours,
flowering plants and limpid artificial streams gurgling
over equally artificial pebbles, though withal making
a beautiful sight and a cool shade in the hot summer
days. In the east side of this garden there is
a small imperial shrine having four doors at the four
points of the compass. In front of each of these
doors there is a large cypress-tree, some of them
five hundred years old, which were split up from the
root some seven or eight feet, and planted with the
two halves three feet apart, making a living arch through
which the worshipper must pass as he enters the temple.
To the north of the garden and east of the back gate
there is a most beautiful Buddhist temple, in which
only the members of the imperial family are allowed
to worship, in front of which there is also a living
arch like those described above, as may also be found
before the imperial temples in the Summer Palace.
This is one of the most unique and mysterious features
of temple worship I have found anywhere in China, and
no amount of questioning ever brought me any explanation
of its meaning.
Now if you will go with me to the
top of Coal Hill I will point out to you the buildings
in which their Majesties have lived. There are
six parallel rows of buildings, facing the south,
each behind the other, in the northwest quarter of
this Forbidden City, protected from the evil spirits
of the north by the dagoba on Prospect Hill.
Perhaps you would like to go with
me into these homes of their Majesties or,
as a woman’s home is always more interesting
than the den of a man, let me take you through the
private apartments of the greatest woman of her race the
late Empress Dowager. She occupied three of these
rows of buildings. The first was her drawing-room
and library, the second her dining-room and sleeping
apartments, and the third her kitchen.
One was strangely impressed by what
he saw here. There was no gorgeous display of
Oriental colouring, but there was beauty of a peculiarly
penetrating quality and yet a homelike beauty.
No description that can be written
of it will ever do it justice. Not until one
can see and appreciate the paintings of the old Chinese
masters of five hundred years ago hanging upon the
walls, the beautiful pieces of the best porcelain
of the time of Kang Hsi and Chien Lung, made especially
for the palace, arranged in their natural surroundings,
on exquisitely carved Chinese tables and brackets,
the gorgeously embroided silk portieres over the doorways,
and the matchless tapestries which only the Chinese
could weave for their greatest rulers, can we appreciate
the beauty, the richness, and the refined elegance
of the private apartments of the great Dowager.
I went into her sleeping apartments.
Others also entered there, sat upon her couch, and
had their friends photograph them. I could not
allow myself to do so. I stood silent, with head
uncovered as I gazed with wonder and admiration at
the bed, with its magnificently embroidered curtains
hanging from the ceiling to the floor, its yellow-satin
mattress ten feet in length and its great round, hard
pillow, with the delicate silk spreads turned back
as though it were prepared for Her Majesty’s
return. On the opposite side of the room there
was a brick kang bed, such as we find in the homes
of all the Chinese of the north, where her maids slept,
or sat like silent ghosts while the only woman that
ever ruled over one-third of the human race took her
rest. The furnishings were rich but simple.
No plants, no intricate carvings to catch the dust,
nothing but the two beds and a small table, with a
few simple and soothing wall decorations, and the
monotonous tick-tock of a great clock to lull her to
sleep.
If Shakespeare could say with an English
monarch in his mind, “Uneasy lies the head that
wears a crown,” we might repeat it with added
emphasis of Tze Hsi. For forty years she had to
rise at midnight, winter as well as summer, and go
into the dark, dreary, cold halls of the palace, lighted
much of the time with nothing but tallow dips, and
heated only with brass braziers filled with charcoal,
and there sit behind a screen where she could see
no one, and no one could see her, and listen to the
reports of those who came to these dark audiences.
Then she must, in conjunction with them, compose edicts
which were sent out to the Peking Gazette, the oldest
and poorest newspaper in the world, to be carved on
blocks, and printed, and then sent by courier to every
official in the empire. Ruling over a conquered
race, she must always be watching out for signs of
discontent and rebellion; being herself the daughter
of a poor man, and beginning as only the concubine
of an emperor, and he but a weak character, she must
be alert for dissatisfaction on the part of the princes
who might have some title to the throne. She
must watch the governors in the distant provinces and
the viceroys who are in charge of great armies, that
they do not direct them against instead of in defense
of the throne.
When her husband died while a fugitive
two hundred miles from her palace, she must see to
it that her three-year-old child was placed upon the
throne with her own hand at the helm, and when he died
she must also be ready with a successor, who would
give her another lease of office. Even when he
became of age and took the throne she must watch over
him like a guardian, to prevent his bringing down upon
their own heads the structure which she had builded.
Nay, more, when it became necessary for her to dethrone
him and rule in his name, banishing his friends and
pacifying his enemies, keeping him a prisoner in his
palace, it required a courage that was titanic to do
so. But she never flinched, though we may suppose
that many of her poorest subjects, who could sleep
from dark till daylight with nothing but a brick for
a pillow, might have rested more peacefully than she.
She had a myriad of other duties to
perform. She was the mother-in-law of that imperial
household, with the Emperor, the Empress, sixty concubines,
two thousand eunuchs, and any number of court ladies
and maid-servants. Their expenses were enormous
and she must keep her eye on every detail. The
food they ate was similar to that used by all the
Chinese people. I happen to know this, because
one of her eunuchs who visited me frequently to ask
my assistance in a matter which he had undertaken
for the Emperor, often brought me various kinds of
meat, or other delicacies of a like nature, from the
imperial kitchens.
I want you to visit three of the imperial
temples in these beautiful palace grounds. The
first is a tall, three-story building at the head
of that magnificent Lotus Lake. In it there stands
a Buddhist deity with one thousand heads and one thousand
arms and hands. Standing upon the ground floor
its head reaches almost to the roof. Its body,
face and arms are as white as snow. There is
nothing else in the building nothing but
this mild-faced Buddhist divinity for that brilliant,
black-eyed ruler of Chinas millions to worship.
Standing near by is another building
of far greater beauty. It is faced all over with
encaustic tiles, each made at the kiln a thousand miles
away, for the particular place it was to occupy.
Each one fits without a flaw, a suggestion to American
architects on Chinese architecture.
The second of these temples stands
to the west of the Coal Hill, immediately to the north
of the homes of their Majesties. One day while
passing through the forbidden grounds I came upon this
temple from the rear. In the dome of one of the
buildings is a circular space some ten feet in diameter,
carved and gilded in the form of two magnificent dragons
after the fabled pearl. It is to this place the
Emperor goes in time of drought to confess his sins,
for he confesses to the gods that the drought is all
his doing, and to pray for forgiveness, and for rain
to enrich the thirsty land. The towers on the
corners of the wall of the Forbidden City are the
same style of architecture as the small pavilion in
the front court of this temple.
Now as the buds of spring are bursting
and the eaves on the mulberry-trees are beginning
to develop, will you go with the Empress Dowager or
the Empress into a temple on Prospect Hill, between
the Coal Hill and the Lotus Lake, where she offers
sacrifices to the god of the silkworm and prays for
a prosperous year on the work of that little insect?
Above it stands one of the most hideous bronze deities
I have ever seen male and naked in
a beautiful little shrine, every tile of which is
made in the form of a Buddha’s head. During
the occupation tourists were allowed to visit this
place freely, and their desire for curios overcoming
their discretion, they knocked the heads off these
tiles until, when the place was closed, there was not
a single tile which had not been defaced.
One other building in the Forbidden
City is worthy of our attention. It is the art
gallery. It is not generally known that China
is the parent of all Oriental art. We know something
of the art of Japan but little about that of China.
And yet the best Japanese artists have never hoped
for anything better than to equal their Chinese teacher.
In this art gallery there are stored away the finest
specimens of the old masters for ten centuries or
more, together with portraits of all the noted emperors.
Among these portraits we may now find two of the Empress
Dowager, one painted by Miss Carl, and another by Mr.
Vos, a well-known American portrait painter.