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  • Nov. 4, 1876
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  • SECRET SOCIETIES IN CHINA.
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The Freemason's Chronicle, Nov. 4, 1876: Page 10

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Our Weekly Budget.

placed Henry V . on the stage magnificently , as regards the appointments and scenery ; he has also brought together a company of actors and actresses which , in general ability , are certainly above tbe averago of London companies , while , in the case of more than one of its membors , tho like are

not to be found elsewhere . Mr . Phelps , for instance , as an interpreter of Shakspearian character is unsurpassed ; we may almost venture to add in these days of respectable mediocrity , unsurpassable . To him is assigned the role of King Henry IV ., in the closing scene of the second part of

that play , which serves as a prologue to Mr . Coleman ' s edition . It is hardly necessary to point out how skilfully the veteran interprets the grand conceptions of the poet . Mr . Ryder plays the part of the Lord Chief Justice , and likewise that of the soldier Bates in the night scene round

the camp fire . Mr . Ryder is a man of commanding presence , and the solemn dignity of his utterances , which never , by the way , verges in the slightest degree on pomposity , makes him perhaps the best exponent of that " majesty and power of law and justice" which

Shakspeare presents to us . Miss Leighton was admirable as the Chorus , and to Miss Fowler was assigned the task of personating the French King ' s daughter , the Princess Katharine , a task she fulfilled successfully . Mr . T . Mead ' s conception of Pistol was evidently the result of the most

careful study , Mr . Coleman himself played Henry V . His performance was very unequal . In the scene where the King joins the guard round one of the camp fires , Mr . Coleman was perfect , but in the more exacting scenes he lacked the vigour and energy which Shakspeare has infused

into the part . Mr . James was most admirably made up as the old Knight William , the Sire de Willoughby , but Mr . J . Denis Coyne was singularly feeble in his delineation of the Dauphin . To note each member in succession would occupy too much space . Suffice ifc , then ,

if we say , that while as a rule the most important characters were very ably filled , the importance of having the minor parts carefully presented was not overlooked . We were sensibly reminded , indeed , of that general care and quality of acting which marked tho course of

Shakspearian presentations at the Wells during the many years of Mr . Phelps ' s management . If our readers are desirous of seeing one of the finest of Shakspeare ' s historical

plays , well presented as to all tho stage accessories , and fairly well acted , let them go to tbe Queen ' s , and we feel sure they will have every reason to be pleased with their visit .

Secret Societies In China.

SECRET SOCIETIES IN CHINA .

SECRET societies have been very active of late in China . From all parts of the Erapiro rumours are rife about the doings of the Hung Brethren , tho members of the Society of the Queen of Heaven , tho followers of the White Lily sect , and of a host of other leagues . At towns on the Yang-tsze-Keang the members of somo restless brotherhood have been creating quite a panic by cutting off the queues of

unsuspecting citizens ; and in the province of Keang-soo the Roman Catholic missionaries report the appearance of a secret sect in the rites of which they consider there are to be traced remnants of a debased Christianity . Of these last-named people , who describe themselves as " Fasters , " little is known beyond the information supplied by one of their members to Pore Rizzi on the subject of the

rites attending tho " Feast of Tapers . " On that occasion ten tables are placed so as to represent the human form , and around them are arranged twenty-iive tapers , of an aggregate weight of a thousand ounces . Tho president and twenty-four " Fasters , " each bearing a cross tipped with wax , then take their places at tho tables , and having struck a light with a steel and flint , tho president lights the

extremities of his own cross , and with that , lights the twenty-five tapers , and the crosses of the brethren . That done , rice cakes , rice , and tea , which havo been previously prepared , ave blessed by tho president with the sigu of the cross , and are then divided among the associates . According to Pure Rizzi , the founder of the " Fasters " was Tamo . " Must not this bo St . Thomas f " adds tho missionary .

But the probability is that tho sect is not of any foreign origin , and , that it , as well as most other political societies throughout the Empire , is only a branch of the Hung League . In the same way the giiasi-Christinn rites , which are said to be used , might very readily bo remnants of the religious ceremouies practised at Nanking by Huug Sew-tseuen , the leader of the Tai-ping rebels , who was a prominent

leader of the league , and who professed Christianity . The members of the Hung League , like tho Freemasons , contend that their society Las existed through all time , but history throivs no light on aiiy earlier formation of their body than towards the close of the Han dynasty ( , v . i > . 185 ) , when the three patriots , Lew Pei , Chang

Fei , and Kvvau Yu , having associated themselves together by a solemn oath , successfully defended the throne against the "Yellow-cap " rebels . From that time until the establishment of the present Tartar dynasty tbo League showed few signs of vitality . But at the beg inning of thq ei ghteenth century the empire was seriously threatened

Secret Societies In China.

by an invasion of the Eleuths ; and , like the three worthies who supported the Han ruler , a hundred and twenty-eight priests of the Shaoulin Monastery , deeming themselves to be " sufficiently versed in the military art and magics to destroy the Eleuthian soldiers , " took the field against the invaders . By the order of their prior they separately attacked the Eleuths on all sides ; and when tho battle

was at its height so f nrions a storm of wind and sand arose , in answer to their prayer , that tho air was darkened , and the Eleuths , tevriSed at this display of supernatural power , tnrned and ran , crushing and maiming each other in their headlong flight . Haviug thus satisfied their patriotic desire , the monks , loaded with honours , returned to their monastery .

But their success raised a nnmber of enemies against them , and shortly afterwards their monastery was attacked and burned , aad live monks only escaped with their lives . After various vicissitudes , these survivors found themselves on tho banks of a stream in the neighbourhood of Kaon-ko ; and as one of their number went down to drink , ho found a white porcelain jar , on the bottom of which wa 3

inscribed the sentence , " Overthrow the Tsings ( tho present Tartar dynasty ) and restore the Mings" ( the dispossessed Chinese dynasty ) , this was accepted by tho monks as a command from heaven j and , having added to their number five horse dealers , a dismissed ministor , and a priest , they bound themselves by a solemn oath , which thoy ratified by mixing blood from the arm of each in a chalice of wino

and drinking . it in common , to do all which in them lay to overthrow the House of Tsing . Thoy all adopted the surname of Hung , and took " Patriotism " as their watchword . This done , they betook themselves to different parts of tho empire to enlist recruits ; and , in order to avoid the appearance of belonging to one and the samo sooiety , they gave different titles to the branches which they established .

Thus there were soon spread over the empire brotherhoods known as the " Triad Society , " the " White Lily League , " the " Blue Lotus Hall , " the " Golden Orchid District , " and others , all of which , however , constituted the great Hung League . It was not long before tho society thus formed attracted the attention oE the Government , and sternly repressive measures were applied to it , which were also shared

in by the Roman Catholics , whose organization was considered by the mandarins to resemble that of the Hnngs . Yielding to the storm , tho League abstained from all public manifestation , and little was heard of it until the crack-brained leader of tho Taiping rebellion brought its machinery to bear to further his insurrectionary movement . With his defeat and death it again subsided into obscurity ,

and it has only been quite of late that renewed activity has been observable in the ranks of the brethren . A short time sinco M . Schlegel , Chinese interpreter to tho Govern , ment of Netherlands-India at Batavia , became possessed of somo documents relating to the formation and tho organization of the League . Theso ho translated and published in a volume entitled

" Thian ti Hwiu—The Hung League , " and it is from this and other works that the above and following particulars aro gathered . Tho Hung lodges are built in a square , and aro surrounded by walls , which are pierced at the four cardinal points by as many gates . The faces of tho walls aro adorned by tho mysterious symbol of " union , " tho triangle , and with the old symbol for " a State " a hollow squaro—a

combination which is intended to imply that the League is a united Stato enjoying universal peaco . Within tho enclosure is the hall of fidelity and loyalty , where the oaths of membership aro taken , and in which is kept the genealogical table of the founders of the League . Hero , also , stand the altar and the sacred tablets , beforo which the brethren worship , and from the centre rises tho " precious nine-storied

padoga , " in which the images of the five founders are enshrined . Of course the lodges appear in their legitimate splendour only in out-ofthe-way districts , where thoy are safe from the observation of the mandarins ; but in towns and populous neighbourhoods , the lodgo is dispensed with altogether , and the meetings are held at the house of tho president . The instruments of the lodge are numerous . First

in importance is tho diploma , consisting of a large Bquaro seal , having two squaro margins , whilo the inner margins are octagonal . In tho outer rim are the names of the eight genii , and the rest of tho seal is covered with symbolical stanzas and signs . The official flags are numerous , and emblematize tho warlike character of the League ; and in each lodge is a " bnshel , " which contains among other articles the

" red staff " with which justice is done to offenders against tho laws of the society , the scissors with which the hair of the neophytes is cut off , a jade foot measure , a balance , an abacus , an inkstone , a pencil , and a host of flags and other symbols . The supreme Government of the League is vested in tho Grand Masters of the five principal lodges in the provinces jof Fuh-keen

, Kwang-tung , Yunnan , Hoo-nan , and Che-keang ; and tho affairs of each lodge are administered by a president , two vice-presidents , one master , two introducers , one fiscal , thirteen councillors , sevoral agents , who are otherwise known as " grass shoes , " " iron planks , " or " night brethren , " and some minor officials , who , as indicative of their rank , wear flowers in their hair .

In peaceful times the ranks of tho society aro recruited by volun . teers , but when the League is preparing to take the field threats and violence are often used to secure members . At such crises a man returning home finds a slip of paper bearing the seal of the Leaguo awaiting him , which calls upon him at a given hour to betake himself to a certain spot , and warns him that the murder of himself and his

family will be tho penalty of disobedience to tho command . Sometimes it is said , also , that one of tho brotherhood iusnlts a stranger on the road , and , pretending to fly from the just consequences of Ins act , leads tho uususpectiug wayfarer to some lonely spot , where he is seized upon by a number of brothers , and is carried away to tbe plnco whero the lodgo is held . On tho appointed evening the recruits

present themselves at the " City of Willows , " as tho lodges are called , where they are met by the " vanguard , " who carefully enters their names and places of residence in a book kept for the purpose . Tho vanguard then gives orders to form the " bridge of swords , " where , upon the brethren place themselves in a double row , and drawing their swords oross them iu the air ia the form of a bridge or arch .

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1876-11-04, Page 10” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 18 July 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_04111876/page/10/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE DISCUSSION OF MASONIC QUESTIONS. Article 1
MASONIC PORTRAITS. (No. 35.)| THE STATESMAN. Article 1
OPENING OF A NEW LODGE AT GORLESTON. Article 3
CONSECRATION OF THE LODGE DRAMATIC, No. 571. GLASGOW. Article 3
Untitled Ad 3
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 4
THE TWO DOCTORS. Article 4
A MISSING CASE AND JEWELS. Article 5
GRAND LODGE OF MARK MASTER MASONS. Article 5
HISTORIES OF OUR LODGES. UNITED INDUSTRIOUS LODGE, No. 31. Article 6
Old Warrants. Article 7
THE DRAMA. Article 7
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Ad 8
Untitled Article 8
OUR WEEKLY BUDGET. Article 8
SECRET SOCIETIES IN CHINA. Article 10
LITERATURE. Article 11
DIARY FOR THE WEEK. Article 12
NOTICES OF MEETINGS. Article 13
CONSECRATION OF THE UNITY LODGE, NO. 1637. Article 14
THIRSK FALCON LODGE, ARCHAEOLOGICAL SECTION, No. 1416. Article 14
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Our Weekly Budget.

placed Henry V . on the stage magnificently , as regards the appointments and scenery ; he has also brought together a company of actors and actresses which , in general ability , are certainly above tbe averago of London companies , while , in the case of more than one of its membors , tho like are

not to be found elsewhere . Mr . Phelps , for instance , as an interpreter of Shakspearian character is unsurpassed ; we may almost venture to add in these days of respectable mediocrity , unsurpassable . To him is assigned the role of King Henry IV ., in the closing scene of the second part of

that play , which serves as a prologue to Mr . Coleman ' s edition . It is hardly necessary to point out how skilfully the veteran interprets the grand conceptions of the poet . Mr . Ryder plays the part of the Lord Chief Justice , and likewise that of the soldier Bates in the night scene round

the camp fire . Mr . Ryder is a man of commanding presence , and the solemn dignity of his utterances , which never , by the way , verges in the slightest degree on pomposity , makes him perhaps the best exponent of that " majesty and power of law and justice" which

Shakspeare presents to us . Miss Leighton was admirable as the Chorus , and to Miss Fowler was assigned the task of personating the French King ' s daughter , the Princess Katharine , a task she fulfilled successfully . Mr . T . Mead ' s conception of Pistol was evidently the result of the most

careful study , Mr . Coleman himself played Henry V . His performance was very unequal . In the scene where the King joins the guard round one of the camp fires , Mr . Coleman was perfect , but in the more exacting scenes he lacked the vigour and energy which Shakspeare has infused

into the part . Mr . James was most admirably made up as the old Knight William , the Sire de Willoughby , but Mr . J . Denis Coyne was singularly feeble in his delineation of the Dauphin . To note each member in succession would occupy too much space . Suffice ifc , then ,

if we say , that while as a rule the most important characters were very ably filled , the importance of having the minor parts carefully presented was not overlooked . We were sensibly reminded , indeed , of that general care and quality of acting which marked tho course of

Shakspearian presentations at the Wells during the many years of Mr . Phelps ' s management . If our readers are desirous of seeing one of the finest of Shakspeare ' s historical

plays , well presented as to all tho stage accessories , and fairly well acted , let them go to tbe Queen ' s , and we feel sure they will have every reason to be pleased with their visit .

Secret Societies In China.

SECRET SOCIETIES IN CHINA .

SECRET societies have been very active of late in China . From all parts of the Erapiro rumours are rife about the doings of the Hung Brethren , tho members of the Society of the Queen of Heaven , tho followers of the White Lily sect , and of a host of other leagues . At towns on the Yang-tsze-Keang the members of somo restless brotherhood have been creating quite a panic by cutting off the queues of

unsuspecting citizens ; and in the province of Keang-soo the Roman Catholic missionaries report the appearance of a secret sect in the rites of which they consider there are to be traced remnants of a debased Christianity . Of these last-named people , who describe themselves as " Fasters , " little is known beyond the information supplied by one of their members to Pore Rizzi on the subject of the

rites attending tho " Feast of Tapers . " On that occasion ten tables are placed so as to represent the human form , and around them are arranged twenty-iive tapers , of an aggregate weight of a thousand ounces . Tho president and twenty-four " Fasters , " each bearing a cross tipped with wax , then take their places at tho tables , and having struck a light with a steel and flint , tho president lights the

extremities of his own cross , and with that , lights the twenty-five tapers , and the crosses of the brethren . That done , rice cakes , rice , and tea , which havo been previously prepared , ave blessed by tho president with the sigu of the cross , and are then divided among the associates . According to Pure Rizzi , the founder of the " Fasters " was Tamo . " Must not this bo St . Thomas f " adds tho missionary .

But the probability is that tho sect is not of any foreign origin , and , that it , as well as most other political societies throughout the Empire , is only a branch of the Hung League . In the same way the giiasi-Christinn rites , which are said to be used , might very readily bo remnants of the religious ceremouies practised at Nanking by Huug Sew-tseuen , the leader of the Tai-ping rebels , who was a prominent

leader of the league , and who professed Christianity . The members of the Hung League , like tho Freemasons , contend that their society Las existed through all time , but history throivs no light on aiiy earlier formation of their body than towards the close of the Han dynasty ( , v . i > . 185 ) , when the three patriots , Lew Pei , Chang

Fei , and Kvvau Yu , having associated themselves together by a solemn oath , successfully defended the throne against the "Yellow-cap " rebels . From that time until the establishment of the present Tartar dynasty tbo League showed few signs of vitality . But at the beg inning of thq ei ghteenth century the empire was seriously threatened

Secret Societies In China.

by an invasion of the Eleuths ; and , like the three worthies who supported the Han ruler , a hundred and twenty-eight priests of the Shaoulin Monastery , deeming themselves to be " sufficiently versed in the military art and magics to destroy the Eleuthian soldiers , " took the field against the invaders . By the order of their prior they separately attacked the Eleuths on all sides ; and when tho battle

was at its height so f nrions a storm of wind and sand arose , in answer to their prayer , that tho air was darkened , and the Eleuths , tevriSed at this display of supernatural power , tnrned and ran , crushing and maiming each other in their headlong flight . Haviug thus satisfied their patriotic desire , the monks , loaded with honours , returned to their monastery .

But their success raised a nnmber of enemies against them , and shortly afterwards their monastery was attacked and burned , aad live monks only escaped with their lives . After various vicissitudes , these survivors found themselves on tho banks of a stream in the neighbourhood of Kaon-ko ; and as one of their number went down to drink , ho found a white porcelain jar , on the bottom of which wa 3

inscribed the sentence , " Overthrow the Tsings ( tho present Tartar dynasty ) and restore the Mings" ( the dispossessed Chinese dynasty ) , this was accepted by tho monks as a command from heaven j and , having added to their number five horse dealers , a dismissed ministor , and a priest , they bound themselves by a solemn oath , which thoy ratified by mixing blood from the arm of each in a chalice of wino

and drinking . it in common , to do all which in them lay to overthrow the House of Tsing . Thoy all adopted the surname of Hung , and took " Patriotism " as their watchword . This done , they betook themselves to different parts of tho empire to enlist recruits ; and , in order to avoid the appearance of belonging to one and the samo sooiety , they gave different titles to the branches which they established .

Thus there were soon spread over the empire brotherhoods known as the " Triad Society , " the " White Lily League , " the " Blue Lotus Hall , " the " Golden Orchid District , " and others , all of which , however , constituted the great Hung League . It was not long before tho society thus formed attracted the attention oE the Government , and sternly repressive measures were applied to it , which were also shared

in by the Roman Catholics , whose organization was considered by the mandarins to resemble that of the Hnngs . Yielding to the storm , tho League abstained from all public manifestation , and little was heard of it until the crack-brained leader of tho Taiping rebellion brought its machinery to bear to further his insurrectionary movement . With his defeat and death it again subsided into obscurity ,

and it has only been quite of late that renewed activity has been observable in the ranks of the brethren . A short time sinco M . Schlegel , Chinese interpreter to tho Govern , ment of Netherlands-India at Batavia , became possessed of somo documents relating to the formation and tho organization of the League . Theso ho translated and published in a volume entitled

" Thian ti Hwiu—The Hung League , " and it is from this and other works that the above and following particulars aro gathered . Tho Hung lodges are built in a square , and aro surrounded by walls , which are pierced at the four cardinal points by as many gates . The faces of tho walls aro adorned by tho mysterious symbol of " union , " tho triangle , and with the old symbol for " a State " a hollow squaro—a

combination which is intended to imply that the League is a united Stato enjoying universal peaco . Within tho enclosure is the hall of fidelity and loyalty , where the oaths of membership aro taken , and in which is kept the genealogical table of the founders of the League . Hero , also , stand the altar and the sacred tablets , beforo which the brethren worship , and from the centre rises tho " precious nine-storied

padoga , " in which the images of the five founders are enshrined . Of course the lodges appear in their legitimate splendour only in out-ofthe-way districts , where thoy are safe from the observation of the mandarins ; but in towns and populous neighbourhoods , the lodgo is dispensed with altogether , and the meetings are held at the house of tho president . The instruments of the lodge are numerous . First

in importance is tho diploma , consisting of a large Bquaro seal , having two squaro margins , whilo the inner margins are octagonal . In tho outer rim are the names of the eight genii , and the rest of tho seal is covered with symbolical stanzas and signs . The official flags are numerous , and emblematize tho warlike character of the League ; and in each lodge is a " bnshel , " which contains among other articles the

" red staff " with which justice is done to offenders against tho laws of the society , the scissors with which the hair of the neophytes is cut off , a jade foot measure , a balance , an abacus , an inkstone , a pencil , and a host of flags and other symbols . The supreme Government of the League is vested in tho Grand Masters of the five principal lodges in the provinces jof Fuh-keen

, Kwang-tung , Yunnan , Hoo-nan , and Che-keang ; and tho affairs of each lodge are administered by a president , two vice-presidents , one master , two introducers , one fiscal , thirteen councillors , sevoral agents , who are otherwise known as " grass shoes , " " iron planks , " or " night brethren , " and some minor officials , who , as indicative of their rank , wear flowers in their hair .

In peaceful times the ranks of tho society aro recruited by volun . teers , but when the League is preparing to take the field threats and violence are often used to secure members . At such crises a man returning home finds a slip of paper bearing the seal of the Leaguo awaiting him , which calls upon him at a given hour to betake himself to a certain spot , and warns him that the murder of himself and his

family will be tho penalty of disobedience to tho command . Sometimes it is said , also , that one of tho brotherhood iusnlts a stranger on the road , and , pretending to fly from the just consequences of Ins act , leads tho uususpectiug wayfarer to some lonely spot , where he is seized upon by a number of brothers , and is carried away to tbe plnco whero the lodgo is held . On tho appointed evening the recruits

present themselves at the " City of Willows , " as tho lodges are called , where they are met by the " vanguard , " who carefully enters their names and places of residence in a book kept for the purpose . Tho vanguard then gives orders to form the " bridge of swords , " where , upon the brethren place themselves in a double row , and drawing their swords oross them iu the air ia the form of a bridge or arch .

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