
Herbert A. Giles offers a series of vivid travel sketches that capture the everyday pulse of late‑19th‑century China. Drawing from eight years of wandering through bustling cities with pencil and notebook, he records the sights, sounds, and customs that most foreign observers overlook, presenting a China that is industrious, sober and surprisingly content despite the hardships of the age.
Among the most striking pieces is a sensitive portrait of the imperial court surrounding the untimely death of a teenage emperor. Giles explains the delicate rituals of succession, the hidden role of the empress‑dowager, and the theatrical life within the palace walls, all while gently challenging the prevailing Western caricatures of a “degraded” nation.
The collection balances scholarly insight with lively anecdote, inviting listeners to hear China through the eyes of a traveler who sought to understand rather than judge. It is both a cultural record and a reminder that even distant societies share common hopes, fears, and moments of quiet humanity.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (279K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by John Bickers; Dagny and David Widger
Release date
2006-03-28
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1845–1935
A pioneering British sinologist and former diplomat in China, he helped shape how generations of English-speaking readers encountered Chinese language and literature. Best known for the Wade–Giles romanization system, he also translated and explained classic Chinese texts for a wide audience.
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