LEAVING Wladivostak by the last Japanese steamer of the season, I spent two days at Wön-san, little changed, except that its
background of mountains was snow-covered, that the Koreans were enriched by the extravagant sums paid for labour by the Japanese
during the war, that business was active, and that Japanese sentries in wooden sentry-boxes guarded the peaceful streets. Twelve
thousand Japanese troops had passed through Wön-san on their way to Phyöng-yang. At Fusan, my next point, there were 200
Japanese soldiers, new waterworks, and a military cemetery on a height, in which the number of graves showed an enormous Japanese
mortality.
Reaching Chemulpo on 5th January 1895, viá Nagasaki, I found a singular contrast to the crowd, bustle, and excitement of the
previous June. In the outer harbour there were two foreign warships only, in the inner three Japanese merchant steamers. The former
predominant military element was represented by a few soldiers, ten large hospital sheds, and a crowded cemetery, in which the
Japanese military dead lie in rows of 60, each grave marked by a wooden obelisk. The solid and crowded Chinese quarter, with its
roaring trade, large shops, and noise of drums, gongs, and crackers, by day and night, was silent and deserted, and not a single Chinese
was in the street as I went up to I-tai's inn. One shop had ventured to reopen. At night, instead of throngs, noise, lights, and
jollification, there was a solitary glimmer from behind a closed shutter. The Japanese occupation had been as destructive of that quarter
of Chemulpo as a mediaeval pestilence.
In the Japanese quarter and all along the shore the utmost activity prevailed. The beach was stacked with incoming and outgoing cargo.
The streets were only just passable, not alone from the enormous traffic on bulls' and coolies' backs, but from the piles of beans and
rice which were being measured and packed on the roadway. Prices were high, wages had mo than doubled, "squeezing" was diminished,
and the Koreans were working with a will.
I went up to Seoul on horseback, snow falling the whole time. So safe was the country that no escort was needed, and I rode as far as
Orical without even a mapu. The half-way house of my first visit was a Japanese post, and going to it in ignorance of the change, I
was very kindly received by the Japanese soldiers, who gave me tea and a brazier of charcoal. The Seoul road, pegged out by Japanese
surveyors for a railroad, was thickly sprinkled for the whole distance with laden men and bulls.
At Seoul I was the guest of Mr. Hillier, the British Consul-General, for five weeks. The weather was glorious, and the mercury sank on
two occasions to 7 degrees below zero, the lowest temperature on record. I received the warmest welcome from the kindly foreign
community, and was steeped in Seoul life, the political and other interests growing upon me daily; and having a pony and a soldier at my
disposal, I saw the city in all its turning and windings, and the charming country outside the gates, and several of the Royal tombs with
their fine trees, and avenues of stately stone figures.
The stagnation of the previous winter was at an end. Japan was in the ascendant. She had a large garrison in the capital, some of the
leading men in the Cabinet were her nominees, her officers were drilling the Korean army, changes, if not improvements, were
everywhere, and the air was thick with rumours of more to come. The King, whose Royal authority was nominally restored to him,
accepted the situation, the Queen was credited with intriguing against the Japanese, but County Inouye was acting as Japanese minister,
and his firmness and tact kept everything smooth on the surface.
On the 8th of January 1895 I witnessed a singular ceremony, which may have far-reaching results in Korean history. The Japanese,
having presented Korea with the gift of Independence, demanded that the King should formally and publicly renounce the suzerainty of
China, and having resolved to cleanse the Augean stable of official corruption, they compelled him to inaugurate the task by proceeding
in semi-state to the Altar of the Spirits of the Land, and there proclaiming Korean independence, and swearing before the spirits of his
ancestors to the proposed reforms. His Majesty, by exaggerating a trivial ailment, had for some time delayed a step which was very
repulsive to him, and even the day before the ceremony, a dream in which an Ancestral Spirit had appeared to him adjuring him not to
depart from ancestral ways, terrified him from taking the proposed pledge.
But the spirit of Count Inouye proved more masterful than the Ancestral Spirit, and the oath was taken in circumstances of great
solemnity in a dark pine wood, under the shadow of Puk Han, at the most sacred altar in Korea, in presence of the Court and the
dignitaries of the kingdom. Old and serious men had fasted and mourned for two previous days, and in the vast crowd of white-robed
and black-hatted men which looked down upon the striking scene from a hill in the grounds of the Mulberry Palace, there was not a
smile or a spoken word. The sky was dark and grim, and a bitter east wind was blowing -- ominous signs in Korean estimation.
The Royal procession, which had something of the aspect of the kur-dong was shorn of the barbaric splendour which made that
ceremonial one of the most imposing in the Eastern world. It was, in fact, barbaric with the splendour left out; and there were
suggestions of a new era and a forthcoming swamping wave of Western civilisation, in the presence within the Palace gates and in the
procession of a few trim, dapper, blue-ulstered Japanese policemen, as the special protectors of the Home Minister Pak-Yöng-Ho, one
of the revolutionaries of 1884, against whom there was a vow of vengeance, though the King had been compelled to pardon him, to
reinstate his ancestors who had been degraded, to recall him from exile, and to confer upon him high office.
The long road outside the Palace was lined with Korean cavalry, who turned their faces to the wall and their backs and their ponies' tails
to the King. Great numbers of Korean soldiers carrying various makes of muskets, dressed in rusty black, brown, and blue cotton
uniforms, trousers sometimes a foot too short, at others a foot too long, white wadded socks, string shoes, and black felt hats of
Tyrolese style, with pink ribbon round the crowns stood in awkward huddles, mixed up with the newly-created Seoul police in blue
European uniforms, and a number of handsome over-fed ponies of Court officials, with saddles over a foot high, gorgeous barbaric
trappings, red pompons on their heads, and a flow of red manes. The populace stood without speech or movement.
After a long delay and much speculation as to whether the King at the last moment would resist the foreign pressure, the procession
emerged from the Palace gate -- huge flags on trident-headed poles, purple bundles carried aloft, a stand of stones conveyed with
much ceremony -- groups of scarlet- and blue-robed men in hats of the same colours, shaped like fools' caps, the King's
personal servants in yellow robes and yellow bamboo hats, and men carrying bannerets. Then came the red silk umbrella, followed not
by the magnificent State chair with its forty bearers, but by a plain wooden chair with glass sides, in which sat the sovereign, pale and
dejected, borne by only four men. The Crown Prince followed in a similar chair. Mandarins, ministers, and military officers were then
assisted to mount their caparisoned ponies, and each, with two attendants holding his stirrups and two more leading his pony, fell in
behind the Home Minister, riding a dark donkey, and rendered conspicuous by his foreign saddle and foreign guard. When the
procession reached the sacred enclosure, the military escort and the greater part of the cavalcade remained outside the wall, only the
King, dignitaries, and principal attendants proceeding to the altar. The grouping of the scarlet-robed men under the dark pines was
most effective from an artistic point of view, and from a political standpoint the taking of the following oath by the Korean King was one
of the most significant acts in the tedious drama of the late war.
[edit] THE KING'S OATH
On this 12th day of the 12th moon of the 503rd year of the founding of the Dynasty, we presume to announce clearly to the Spirits of
all our Sacred Imperial Ancestors that we, their lowly descendant, received in early childhood, now thirty and one years ago, the mighty
heritage of our ancestors, and that in reverent awe towards Heaven, and following in the rule and pattern of our ancestors, we, though
we have encountered many troubles, have not loosed hold of the thread. How dare we, your lowly descendant, aver that we are
acceptable to the heart of Heaven? It is only that our ancestors have graciously looked down upon us and benignly protected us.
Splendidly did your ancestor lay the foundation of our Royal House, opening a way for us his descendants through five hundred years
and three. Now, in our generation, the times are mightily changed, and men and matters are expanding. A friendly Power, designing to
prove faithful, and the deliberations of our Council aiding thereto, show that only as an independent ruler can we make our country
strong. How can we, your lowly descendant, not conform to the spirit of the time and thus guard the domain bequeathed by our
ancestors? How venture not to strenuously exert ourselves and stiffen and anneal us in order to add lustre to the virtues of our
predecessors? For all time from now no other State will we lean upon, but will make broad the steps of our country towards prosperity,
building up the happiness of our people in order to strengthen the foundations of our independence. When we ponder on this course, let
there be no sticking in the old ways, no practice of ease or of dalliance; but docilely let us carry out the great designs of our ancestors,
watching and observing sublunary conditions, reforming our internal administration, remedying there accumulated abuses.
We, your lowly descendant, do now take the fourteen clauses of the Great Charter and swear before the Spirits of our Ancestors in
Heaven that we, reverently trusting in the merits bequeathed by our ancestors, will bring these to a successful issue, nor will we dare to
go back on our word. Do you, bright Spirits, descend and behold!
1.All thoughts of dependence on China shall be cut away, and a firm foundation for independence secured.
2.A rule and ordinance for the Royal House shall be established, in order to make clear the line of succession and precedence among the
Royal family.
3.The King shall attend at the Great Hall for the inspection of affairs, where, after personally interrogating his Ministers, he shall decide
upon matters of State. The Queen and the Royal family are not allowed to interfere.
4.Palace matters and the government of the country must be kept separate, and may not be mixed up together.
5.The duties and powers of the Cabinet and of the various Ministers shall be clearly defined.
6.The payment of taxes by the people shall be regulated by law. Wrongful additions may not be made to the list, and no excess collected.
7.The assessment and collection of the land tax, and the disbursement of expenditure, shall be under the charge and control of the
Finance Department.
8.The expenses of the Royal household shall be the first to be reduced, by way of setting an example to the various Ministries and local
officials.
9.An estimate shall be drawn up in advance each year of the expenditure of the Royal household and the various official establishments,
putting on a firm foundation the management of the revenue.
10.The regulation of the local officers must be revised in order to discriminate the functions of the local officials.
11.Young men of intelligence in the country shall be sent abroad in order to study foreign science and industries.
12.The instruction of army officers, and the practice of the methods of enlistment, to secure the foundation of a military system.
13.Civil law and criminal law must be strictly and clearly laid down; none must be imprisoned or fined in excess, so that security of life and
property may be ensured for all alike.
14.Men shall be employed without regard to their origin, and in safekeeping for officials recourse shall be had to capital and country alike in
order to widen the avenues for ability.
- Official translation of the text of the oath taken by His Majesty, the King of Korea, at the Altar of Heaven, Seoul, on January 8, 1895.
Though at this date Korea is being reformed under other than Japanese auspices, it is noteworthy that nearly every step in advance is
on the lines load down by Japan.
Count Inouye is reported by the Nichi Nichi Shimbun to have said regarding Korea' "In my eyes there were only the Royal Family and
the nation." Such a conclusion was legitimate in the early part of 1895, and in arriving at it as I did I am glad to be sheltered by such an
unexceptionable authority.
Hence it was with real pleasure that I received an invitation from the Queen to a private audience, to which I was accompanied by Mrs.
Underwood, an American medical missionary and the Queen's physician and valued friend. Mr. Hillier sent me to the Kyeng-pok Palace
in an eight-bearer official chair, escorted by the Korean Legation Guard. I have been altogether six times at this palace, and always with
increased wonder at its intricacy, and admiration of it quaintness and beauty.
Entering by a grand three-arched gateway with its stone-balustraded stone staircase, and stone lions on stone pedestals below, one is
bewildered by the number of large flagged courtyards, huge audience-halls, pavilions, buildings of all descriptions more or less
decorated, stone bridges, narrow passages, and gateways with double-tiered carved roofs, through and among which one passes. A
Japanese policeman was at the grand gate. At each of the interior gates, and there a emany, there were six Korean sentries lounging,
who pulled themselves together as we approached and presented arms! What with 800 troops, 1500 attendants and officials of all
descriptions, courtiers and ministers and their attendants, secretaries, messengers, and hangers-on, the vast enclosure of the Palace
seemed as crowded and populated as the city itself. We had nearly half a ile of building to pass through before we reached a very pretty
artificial lake with a decorative island pavilion in the centre, near which are a foreign palace, built not long before, and the simple Korean
buildings then occupied by the King and Queen. Alighting at the gateway of the courtyard which led to the Queen's house, we were
received by the Court interpreter, a number of eunuchs, two of the Queen's ladies-in-waiting, and her nurse, who was at the head of the
Palace ladies, -- a very privileged person, middle-aged, with decidedly fine features.
In a simple room hung with yellow silk we were entertained in courteous fashion with coffee and cake on arriving, and afterwards at
dinner, the nurse, "supported" by the Court interpreter, taking the head of the very prettily decorated table. The dinner was admirably
cooked in "foreign style," and included soup, fish, quails, wild duck, pheasant, stuffed and rolled beef, vegetables, creams, glacé walnuts,
fruit, claret, and coffee. Several of the Court ladies and others sat at table with us. After this long delay we were ushered, accompanied
only by the interpreter, into a small audience-room, upon the dais at one end of which stood the King, the Crown Prince, and the
Queen, in front of three crimson velvet chairs, which, after Mrs. Underwood had presented me, they resumed, and asked us to be
seated on two chairs which were provided.
Her Majesty, who was then past forty, was a very nice-looking slender woman, with glossy raven-black hair and a very pale skin, the
pallor enhanced by the use of pearl powder. The eyes were cold and keen, and the general expression one of brilliant intelligence. She
wore a very handsome, very full, and very long skirt of mazarine blue brocade, heavily pleated, with the waist under the arms, and a
full-sleeved bodice of crimson and blue brocade, clasped at the threat by a coral rosette, and girdled by six crimson and blue cords,
each one clasped with a coral rosette, with a crimson silk tassel hanging from it. Her head-dress was a crownless black silk cap edged
with fur, pointed over the brow, with a coral rose and a full red tassel in front, and jewelled aigrettes on either side. Her shoes were of the
same brocade as her dress. As soon as she began to speak, and specially when she became interested in conversation, her face lighted
up into something very like beauty.
The King is short and sallow, certainly a plain man, wearing a thin moustache and a tuft on the chin. The is nervous and twitches his
hands, but his pose and manner are not without dignity. His face is pleasing, and his kindliness of nature is well known. In conversation
the Queen prompted him a good deal. He and the Crown Prince were dressed alike in white leather shoes, wadded silk socks, and
voluminous wadded white trousers. Over these they wore first, white silk tunics, next pale green ones, and over all sleeveless dresses of
mazarine blue brocade. The whole costume, being exquisitely fresh, was pleasing. On their heads they wore hats and mang-kuns of
very fine horsehair gauze, with black silk hoods bordered with fur, for the mercury stood at 5 degrees below zero. The Crown Prince is
fat and flabby, and though unfortunately very near-sighted, etiquette forbids him to wear spectacles, and at that time he produced on
every one, as on me, the impression of being completely an invalid. He was the only son and the il of his mother, who lived in ceaseless
anxiety about his health, and in dread lest the son of a concubine should be declared heir to the throne. To this cause must be attributed
several of her unscrupulous acts, her invoking the continual aid of sorcerers, and her always-increasing benefactions to the Buddhist
monks. During much of the audience mother and son sat with clasped hands.
After the Queen had said many kind things to me personally, showing herself quick-witted as well as courteous, she said something to
the King, who immediately took up the conversation and continued it for another half-hour. At the close of the audience I asked leave to
photograph the Lake Pavilion, and the King said, "Why that alone? come many days and photograph many things," mentioning several;
and he added, "I should like you to be suitably attended." We then curtseyed ourselves out, after a very agreeable and interesting hour,
and as it was dusk, the King sent soldiers with us, and a number of lantern-bearers, with floating drapery of red and green silk gauze.
Two days later the "suitable attendance" turned out to be an unwieldy and embarrassing crowd, consisting of five military officers, half a
regiment of soldiers, and a number of Palace attendants! I was greatly impressed by a certain grandeur and stateliness in the buildings,
the vast Hall of Audience resting on a much-elevated terrace ascended by a triple flight of granite stairs, the noble proportions of the
building, the richly-carved ceiling with its manifold reticulations, painted red, blue, and green, the colossal circular pillars, red with white
bases, and in the dimness of the vast area fronting the entrance, the shadowy splendour of the Korean throne. Grand, too, in its
simplicity and solidity, is the Summer Palace or "Hall of Congratulations," on a stone platform approached by three granite bridges, in a
lotus lake of oblong form beautified conventionally with two stone-faced islands, and by a broad flagged promenade carried the whole
way round it on a stone-faced embankment. This palace is a noble building. The upper hall, with its vast sweeping roof, is supported on
forty-eight granite pillars 16 feet in height and 3 feet square at the base -- all monoliths. The situation and the views are beautiful.
During the next three weeks I had three more audiences, on the second being accompanied as before by Mrs. Underwood, the third
being a formal reception, and the fourth a strictly private interview, lasting over an hour. On each occasion I was impressed with the
grace and charming manner of the Queen, her thoughtful kindness, her singular intelligence and force, and her remarkable
conversational power even through the medium of an interpreter. I was not surprised at her singular political influence, or her sway over
the Kg and many others. She was surrounded by enemies, chief among them being the Tai-Won-Kun, the King's father, all embittered
against her because by her talent and force she had succeeded in placing members of her family in nearly all the chief offices of State.
Her life was a battle. She fought with all her charm, shrewdness, and sagacity, for power, for the dignity and safety of her husband and
son, and for the downfall of the Tai-Won-Kun. She had cut short many live but in doing so she had not violated Korean tradition and
custom, and some excuse for her lies in the fact that soon after the King's accession his father sent to the house of Her Majesty's
brother an infernal machine in the shape of a beautiful box, which on being opened exploded, killing her mother, brother, and nephew, as
well as some others. Since then he plotted against her own life, and the feud between them was usually at fever heat.
The dynasty is worn out, and the King, with all his amiability and kindness of heart, is weak in character and is at the mercy of designing
men, as has appeared increasingly since the strong sway of the Queen was withdrawn. I believe him to be at heart, according to his
lights, a patriotic sovereign. Far from standing in the way of reform, he has accepted most of the suggestions offered to him. But
unfortunately for a man whose edicts become the law of the land, and more unfortunately for the land, he is persuadable by the last
person who gets his ear, he lacks backbone and tenacity of purpose, and many of the best projects of reform become abortive through
his weakness of will. To substitute constitutional restraints for absolutism would greatly mend matters, but cela va sans dire this
could only be successful under foreign initiative.
The King was forty-three, the Queen a little older. During his minority, and while he was receiving the usual Chinese education, his
father, the Tai-Won-Kun, who is described by a Korean writer as having "bowels of iron and a heart of stone," ruled as Regent with
excessive vigour for ten years, and in 1866 slaughtered 2000 Korean Catholics. Able, rapacious, and unscrupulous, his footsteps have
always been blood-stained. He even put to death one of his own sons. From the time when his Regency ceased until the murder of the
Queen, Korean political history is mainly the story of the deadly feud between the Queen and her clan and the Tai-Won-Kun. I was
presented to him at the Palace, and was much impressed by the vitality and energy of his expression, his keen glance, and the vigour of
his movements, though he is an old man.
The King's expression is gentle. He has a wonderful memory, and is said to know Korean history so well that when any question as to
fact or former custom arises he can give full particulars, with a precise reference to the reign in which any historic event occurred and
to the date. The office of Royal Reader is not a sinecure, and the Royal Library, which is contained in one of the most beautiful buildings
of the Kyeng-pok Palace, is a very extensive one in Chinese literature. He has no anti-foreign feeling. His friendliness to foreigners is
marked, and in his manifold perils he has frankly relied upon their aid. At the time of my second visit, when Japan was is the ascendant,
the King and Queen showed special attention and kindness to Europeans, and even invited the whole foreign community to a skating
party on the lake. The King's attitude towards Christian Missions is very friendly, and toleration is a reality. The American medical
attendants of both the King and Queen, as well as other foreigners, with whom they were in constant contact, were warmly attached to
them, and I think that the general feeling among Koreans is one of affectionate loyalty, the blame for oppressive and mistaken actions
being laid on the ministers.
I have dwelt so long on the King's personality because he is de facto the Korean Government, and not a mere figure-head, as there is
no constitution, written or un-written, no representative assembly, and it may be said no law except his published Edicts. He is
extremely industrious as a ruler, acquaints himself with all the work of departments, receives and attends to an infinity of reorts and
memorials, and concerns himself with all that is done in the name of Government. It is often said that in close attention to detail he
undertakes more than any one man could perform. At the same time he has not the capacity for getting a general grip of affairs. He has
so much goodness of heart and so much sympathy with progressive ideas, that if he had more force of character and intellect, and were
less easily swayed by unworthy men, he might make a good sovereign, but his weakness of character is fatal.
The subjects of conversation introduced at three of my audiences not only showed an intelligent desire for such information as might be
serviceable, but reflected the reforms which the Japanese were pressing on the King. I was very closely questioned as to what I had seen
of China and Siberia, as to the Siberian and Japanese railroads, cost of construction per li, as to the popular feeling in Japan
concerning the war, etc. Again I was catechised as to the avenues to official employment in England, the possibility of men "not of the
noble class" reaching high positions in the Government, the position of the English nobility with regard to "privileges," and their attitude
to inferiors. On one day the whole attention of the King and Queen was concentrated on the relations between the English Crown and
the Cabinet, specially with regard to the Civil List, on which the King's questions were so numerous and persistent as very nearly to
pose me. He was specially anxious to know if the "Finance Minister" (the Chancellor of the Exchequer, I suppose) exercised any control
over the personal expenditure of Her Majesty, and if the Queen's personal accounts were paid by herself or through the Treasury. The
affairs under the control of each Secretary of State were the subject of another series of questions.
Many querios were about the duties of the Home Minister, the position of the Premier, and his relations with the other Ministers and the
Crown. He was very anxious to know if the Queen could dismiss her Ministers if they failed to carry out her wishes, and it was
impossible to explain to him through an interpreter, to whom the ideas were unfamiliar, the constitutional checks on the English Crown,
and that the sovereign only nominally possesses the right of choosing her Ministers.
Just before I left Korea, I was summoned to a farewell audience, and asked to take the Legation interpreter with me. I went in an eight-
bearer chair, and was received with the usual honours, soldiers presenting arms, etc. ! There was no crowd of attendants and no delay.
As I was being escorted down a closed verandah by several eunuchs and military officers, a sliding window was opened by the King, who
beckoned to me to enter, and then closed it. I found myself in the raised alcove in which the Royal Family usually sat, but the sliding
panels between it and the audience-chamber were closed, and as it is not more than 6 feet wide, it was impossible to make the customary
profound curtseys. Instead of the usual throng of attendants, eunuchs, ladies-in-waiting in silk gowns a yard too long for them, and
heavy coils and pillows of artificial hair on their heads, and privileged persons standing behind the King and Queen and crowding the
many doorways, there were present only the Queen's nurse and my interpreter, who stood at a chink between the panels where he could
not see the Queen, bent into an attitude of abject reverent, never lifting his eyes from the ground or raising his voice above a whisper.
The precautions, however, failed to secure the privacy which the King and Queen desired. I was certain that through the chink I saw the
shadow of a man in the audience-room, and the interpreter's subsequent remark, "It was very hard for me to interpret for His Majesty
to-day," was intelligible when I heard that the "shadow" belonged to one of the Ministers of State specially distrusted by the King, and
who later had to fly from Korea. It was understood that this person carried the substance of what the King and Queen said to a foreign
legation.
I cannot here allude to the matter on which the King spoke, but the audience, which lasted for an hour, was an extremely interesting one.
On one point the King expressed himself very strongly, as he has done to many others. He considers that, now that Korea is formally
independent of China, she is entitled to a Resident Minister accredited solely to the Korean Court. He expressed great regard and
esteem for Mr. Hillier, and said that nothing would be more acceptable to him than his appointment as the first Minister to Korea.
The Queen spoke of Queen Victoria, and said, "She has everything that she can wish -- greatness, wealth, and power. Her sons and
grandsons are kings and emperors, and her daughters empresses. Does she ever in her glory think of poor Korea? She does so much
good in the world, her life is a good. We wish her long life and prosperity"; to which the King added, "England is our best friend." It was
really touching to hear the occupants of that ancient but shaky throne speaking in this fashion.
On this occasion the Queen was dressed in a bodice of brocaded amber satin, a mazarine blue brocaded trained skirt, a crimson girdle
with five clasps and tassels of coral, and a coral clasp at the throat. Her head was uncovered, and her abundant black hair gathered into
a knot at the back. She wore no ornament except a pearl and coral jewel on the top of the head. The King and Queen rose when I took
leave, and the Queen shook hands. They both spoke most kindly, and expressed the wish that I should return and see more of Korea.
When I did return nine months later, the Queen had been barbarously murdered, and the King was practically a prisoner in his own
palace.
Travellers received by the Korean King have often ridiculed the audience, the surroundings, and the Palace. I must say that I saw
nothing to ridicule, unless national customs and etiquette varying from our own are necessarily ridiculous. On the contrary, there were
a simplicity, dignity, kindliness, courtesy, and propriety which have left a very agreeable impression on me, and my four audiences at
the Palace were the great feature of my second visit to Korea.
These are ancient musical instruments called by the Chinese ch'ing, and were in use at courts in the days of Confucius.