Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Sketch Map to elucidate recent exploration on the TIBETO-CHINESE FRONTIER
- ILLUSTRATIONS and MAPS to VOL. I
- Errata in Vol. I
- INTRODUCTORY ESSAY
- CHAPTER I ‘OVER THE SEAS AND FAR AWAY’
- CHAPTER II ‘CHINA'S STUPENDOUS MOUND’
- CHAPTER III ‘ATHWART THE FLATS AND ROUNDING GRAY’
- CHAPTER IV ‘A CYCLE OF CATHAY’
- CHAPTER V THE OCEAN RIVER
- CHAPTER VI THE GORGES OF THE GREAT RIVER
- CHAPTER VII CH'UNG-CH'ING TO CH'ÊNG-TU-FU
- CHAPTER VIII A LOOP-CAST TOWARDS THE NORTHERN ALPS
- CHAPTER IX A LOOP-CAST TOWARDS THE NORTHERN ALPS—continued
- Plate section
CHAPTER V - THE OCEAN RIVER
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Sketch Map to elucidate recent exploration on the TIBETO-CHINESE FRONTIER
- ILLUSTRATIONS and MAPS to VOL. I
- Errata in Vol. I
- INTRODUCTORY ESSAY
- CHAPTER I ‘OVER THE SEAS AND FAR AWAY’
- CHAPTER II ‘CHINA'S STUPENDOUS MOUND’
- CHAPTER III ‘ATHWART THE FLATS AND ROUNDING GRAY’
- CHAPTER IV ‘A CYCLE OF CATHAY’
- CHAPTER V THE OCEAN RIVER
- CHAPTER VI THE GORGES OF THE GREAT RIVER
- CHAPTER VII CH'UNG-CH'ING TO CH'ÊNG-TU-FU
- CHAPTER VIII A LOOP-CAST TOWARDS THE NORTHERN ALPS
- CHAPTER IX A LOOP-CAST TOWARDS THE NORTHERN ALPS—continued
- Plate section
Summary
At length the time came for our departure, and the cordial good wishes that I received from so many, whose acquaintance I had hardly formed, made me feel that I was leaving many good friends behind; it was not therefore without some regrets that, finally turning my back on Shanghai, I stepped on board the steamer ‘Hankow,’ on the night of January 23, 1877.
The steamers that ply on the Yang-Tzŭ-Chiang, between Shanghai and Hankow, are built in the style of the American river-boats; they draw scarcely any water, are very light, and are perhaps the most luxurious steamers in the world.
Baber and I were the only passengers, and so there was plenty of room for us and our luggage, of which there was by no means an inconsiderable quantity.
Before turning into the luxurious cabin I went to see the dog, whose name was ‘Tib,’ but he barked at me as an intruder, and the endearing epithets and biscuits that I lavished upon him producing not the slightest acknowledgment of good-will on his part, I left him to renew his acquaintance at a later date.
This dog had been almost entirely amongst Chinese, and either the appearance or the smell of a European was distasteful to him. The Chinese, who to a European nose always emit a peculiar odour, declare that they can perfectly well distinguish the smell of a European.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The River of Golden SandThe Narrative of a Journey through China and Eastern Tibet to Burmah, pp. 172 - 200Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1880