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The Heathen Chinee

"The Heathen Chinee", originally published as "Plain Language from Truthful James", is a narrative poem by American writer Bret Harte. It was published for the first time in September 1870 in the Overland Monthly.[1][2] It was written as a parody of Algernon Charles Swinburne's Atalanta in Calydon (1865),[1] and satirized anti-Chinese sentiment in northern California.

"Plain Language from Truthful James", as it first appeared in the Overland Monthly, September 1870

The poem became popular and was frequently republished. To Harte's dismay, however, the poem reinforced racism among his readers instead of challenging it as he intended. Nevertheless, he returned to the character years later. The poem also inspired or influenced several adaptations.

Overview edit

The narrative of the poem focuses on a Chinese immigrant character named Ah Sin who defeats an Irish immigrant named William Nye in a high-stakes game of euchre.[3]: 23  William Nye is a cheater, whom the "childlike" Ah Sin successfully out-cheats.[3]: 23  William Nye realizes nothing until it is too late.[3]: 23  Upon realizing he was cheated, William Nye attacks Ah Sin.[3]: 23–24 

Harte's narrative presented a fictionalized account of anti-Chinese attacks and intended his readers to sympathize with Ah Sin.[3]: 24 

Composition and publication history edit

 
Bret Harte in 1871, about a year after publishing "The Heathen Chinee"

Harte wrote the poem as an afterthought and did not initially intend to publish it.[3]: 24  According to Mark Twain, Harte wrote the poem "for his own amusement" and "threw it aside, but being one day suddenly called upon for copy he sent that very piece in."[4] In writing the poem, Harte echoed and, therefore, lampooned Algernon Charles Swinburne's 1865 verse tragedy Atalanta in Calydon.[5] Ambrose Bierce claimed Harte originally sent it to him to include in his San Francisco-based News Letter, but he suggested it was better suited for Harte's own journal, the Overland Monthly.[6] It appeared there under its original title, "Plain Language from Truthful James"[3]: 23  in the September 1870 issue. A Boston newspaper republished the work in 1871 as "The Heathen Chinee" and others have since used that name.[7]

The poem was republished several times within a short period, including in New York Evening Post, Prairie Farmer, New York Tribune, Boston Evening Transcript, Providence Journal, Hartford Courant, and Saturday Evening Post (published twice). The poem was also included in a book by Harte titled Poems, released in January 1871. Several periodicals and books would republish the poem with illustrations.[1]

In April 1870, James T. Fields had published a collection of Harte's stories, The Luck of Roaring Camp and Other Sketches through the Fields, Osgood, & Co. imprint.[5] After the sudden success of "The Heathen Chinee", Fields rushed to produce a collection of Harte's poetry in time for the Christmas market; its first six editions sold out in five days.[6]

The character of Ah Sin was revived for a theatrical play co-written by Harte and Twain, Ah Sin.[8] The two writers had a rift by February 1877 just before completing a final draft. Twain took over the project and, as he wrote to William Dean Howells, he "left hardly a foot-print of Harte in it".[9] Harte nevertheless attended the play's opening at the National Theatre in Washington, D.C., on May 7, 1877.[10]

Near the end of his life, Harte used the characters of both Truthful James and Ah Sin in his poem "Free Silver at Angel's", a satirical response to the silver plank in the 1896 Democratic National Convention platform.[11] Even so, when asked about the original poem in later years, Harte called the poem "trash", and "the worst poem I ever wrote, possibly the worst poem anyone ever wrote."[12]

Response edit

 
c.1871 Currier & Ives lithograph

"Plain Language from Truthful James" (or "The Heathen Chinee") was very popular among general readers. One New York newspaper reported on the frenzy over the poem: "Strolling down Broadway... we saw a crowd of men and boys, of high and low degree, swarming about a shop-window, pushing, laughing, and struggling... Elbowing our way through the crowd, we discovered an illustrated copy of Bret Harte's poem 'The Heathen Chinee.'"[13]

The poem's popularity came, in part, from the ambiguity over its racial message. The narrator implies that the cheating of the Chinese man was no worse than that of the white man,[5] but the irony was too subtle for general readers. The message matched one Harte had written elsewhere in exposing white people's hypocrisy. As he wrote later, the Chinese "did as the Caucasian did in all respects, and, being more patient and frugal, did it a little better".[6]

Harte had repeatedly opposed anti-Chinese sentiment since as early as 1863, both privately and publicly. In 1866, for example, he wrote a letter defending the "peaceable citizens" of San Francisco's Chinatown who were "patient under abuse, and that patience, I am ashamed to say, they have to exercise continually in California".[13] After the discovery of a murdered woman in Chinatown, whose cause of death was uncertain, Harte wrote, "as her head was caved in it is thought by some physicians that she died of galloping Christianity of the malignant California type".[14] His 1874 short story Wan Lee, the Pagan attacked stereotypes about Chinese immigrants and sought to portray white Americans as the true savages.[3]: 24 

In this vein, Harte intended "Plain Language from Truthful James" to be a satire of the prevalent prejudice among Irish laborers in northern California against the Chinese immigrants competing for the same work. He intended for the reader to sympathize with the victim, Ah Sin.[3]: 24  However, the predominantly white middle-class readership of the Overland and the periodicals that reprinted it interpreted and embraced the poem as mocking the Chinese. These immigrants had been drawn in by the California Gold Rush and a boom in labor jobs, but relations with American-born citizens were tense. The more recent economic downturn in California had made tensions even worse.[5] Readers took certain phrases of the poem out of context, including "we are ruined by Chinese cheap labor!", and used the poem to reinforce their own racism.[15] They sympathized with Ah Sin's attacker, William Nye.[3]: 24 

The poem was also frequently parodied. The poem "Three Aces", signed "Carl Byng", was published in the Buffalo Express in December 1870, not long after "Plain Language from Truthful James" first appeared.[16] The poem was widely attributed to Mark Twain and labeled a "feeble imitation" of Harte.[17] Twain angrily denied the charge and demanded a retraction, writing to the editor Thomas Bailey Aldrich, "I am not in the imitation business". Harte, in turn, targeted Twain years later in his 1893 story "Ingénue of the Sierras" by creating an unsavory character named "Charley Bing", modeled after Twain. The incident was one of several in a long rivalry between the two authors.[18] In 1898, The Overland Monthly ran a poem making fun of Harte himself, who had moved to Europe in 1871 and never returned, for forgetting what life was like in the west.[19]

Influence edit

 
"Heathen Chinee" pitcher

"The Heathen Chinee", as the poem was most often called, was recited in public among opponents to Chinese immigration, and Eugene Casserly, a Senator from California who was "vehemently opposed to the admission of Chinese labour", apparently thanked Harte in writing for supporting his cause.[12] The confusion was furthered by the altered title, which allowed for a more literal reading, and the illustrations in later republications.[15] Harte's poem shaped the popular American conception of the Chinese more than any other writing at the time,[12] and made him the most popular literary figure in America in 1870.[1] The poem was especially relevant to Harte's fame as his other most popular works, "The Luck of Roaring Camp" and "The Outcasts of Poker Flat", were originally published without the author's name.[4]

It inspired a series of west coast songwriters, for example, to produce songs which looked at Chinese immigrants through negative stereotypes and questioned their place in America. Some used Harte's poem word-for-word.[20] In November 1875, Union Porcelain Works in Long Island announced the release of a pitcher decorated with figures from "The Heathen Chinee". The title character was depicted with four aces falling from his sleeve.[21]

The influence continued for decades and spread into other authors' writings. In 1895, for example, Adeline Knapp published her short story "The Ways That Are Dark", quoting a line from the poem. In 1931, Earl Derr Biggers considered the same quote from the poem as a title for his sixth Charlie Chan novel, inspired by a movie studio executive's suggestion, "Incidentally, could you use the Bret Harte—heathen Chinee phrase of 'Ways that are dark' as a possible title for some forthcoming exploits?"[22] Ralph Townsend used the same line for his anti-Chinese book Ways That Are Dark.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Railton, Stephen. Harte: "The Heathen Chinee". West Meets East: Depicting the Chinese, 1860–1873. University of Virginia. URL accessed 2006-12-12.
  2. ^ Henderson, Victoria. Mark Canada, editor. "Bret Harte, 1836–1902 2006-12-14 at the Wayback Machine". All American: Literature, History, and Culture. University of North Carolina at Pembroke. URL accessed 2006-12-12.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Crean, Jeffrey (2024). The Fear of Chinese Power: an International History. New Approaches to International History series. London, UK: Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 978-1-350-23394-2.
  4. ^ a b Scharnhorst, Gary. Bret Harte: Opening the American Literary West. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 2000: 52. ISBN 0-8061-3254-X
  5. ^ a b c d Powers, Ron. Mark Twain: A Life. New York: Free Press, 2005: 289. ISBN 978-0-7432-4899-0
  6. ^ a b c Tarnoff, Ben. The Bohemians: Mark Twain and the San Francisco Writers Who Reinvented American Literature. New York: The Penguin Press, 2014: 188. ISBN 978-1-59420-473-9
  7. ^ Scott, David. China and the International System, 1840-1949: Power, Presence, and Perceptions in a Century of Humiliation. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2008: 60–61. ISBN 978-0-7914-7627-7
  8. ^ Tarnoff, Ben. The Bohemians: Mark Twain and the San Francisco Writers Who Reinvented American Literature. New York: The Penguin Press, 2014: 241. ISBN 978-1-59420-473-9
  9. ^ Scharnhorst, Gary. Bret Harte: Opening the American Literary West. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 2000: 127. ISBN 0-8061-3254-X
  10. ^ Nissen, Axel. Bret Harte: Prince and Pauper. University Press of Mississippi, 2000: 158. ISBN 1-57806-253-5
  11. ^ Scharnhorst, Gary. Bret Harte: Opening the American Literary West. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 2000: 214. ISBN 0-8061-3254-X
  12. ^ a b c Scharnhorst, Gary. "Ways That Are Dark": Appropriations of Bret Harte's "Plain Language from Truthful James". Nineteenth-Century Literature, Vol. 51, No. 3 (December 1996), pp. 377–399.
  13. ^ a b Ott, John. Manufacturing the Modern Patron in Victorian California: Cultural Philanthropy, Industrial Capital, and Social Authority. Burlington, VT: Ashgate Publishing Company, 2014: 200. ISBN 9781409463344
  14. ^ Tarnoff, Ben. The Bohemians: Mark Twain and the San Francisco Writers Who Reinvented American Literature. New York: The Penguin Press, 2014: 187. ISBN 978-1-59420-473-9
  15. ^ a b Ott, John. Manufacturing the Modern Patron in Victorian California: Cultural Philanthropy, Industrial Capital, and Social Authority. Burlington, VT: Ashgate Publishing Company, 2014: 201. ISBN 9781409463344
  16. ^ Scharnhorst, Gary. Bret Harte: Opening the American Literary West. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 2000: 200. ISBN 0-8061-3254-X
  17. ^ Powers, Ron. Mark Twain: A Life. New York: Free Press, 2005: 293. ISBN 978-0-7432-4899-0
  18. ^ Scharnhorst, Gary. Bret Harte: Opening the American Literary West. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 2000: 201. ISBN 0-8061-3254-X
  19. ^ Scharnhorst, Gary. Bret Harte: Opening the American Literary West. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 2000: 183–184. ISBN 0-8061-3254-X
  20. ^ Moon, Krystyn R. Yellowface: Creating the Chinese in American Popular Music and Performance, 1850–1920s. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2005: 38–40. ISBN 0-8135-3506-9
  21. ^ Frelinghuysen, Alice Cooney. American Porcelain, 1770-1920. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1989: 183. ISBN 0-87099-540-5
  22. ^ Huang, Yunte. Charlie Chan: The Untold Story of the Honorable Detective and His Rendezvous with American History. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2010: 131. ISBN 978-0-393-06962-4

External links edit

  • "Plain Language from Truthful James" with illustrations by S. Eytinge and Joseph Hull
  • "#CancelColbert, Meet 'the Heathen Chinee': Stephen Colbert, viral racism and 150 years of not getting the joke" by Ben Tarnoff, Politico (April 8, 2014)
  • "Plain Language from Bret Harte" by Margaret Duckett, Nineteenth-Century Fiction, Vol. 11, No. 4 (March 1957), pp. 241–260.
  • "Heathen Chinee: A Study of American Attitudes Toward China, 1890–1905" by Robert McClellan
  • "Equal Rights and the "Heathen 'Chinee'": Black Activism in San Francisco, 1865-1875" by Leigh Dana Johnsen, from Western Historical Quarterly, Vol. 11, No. 1 (January 1980), pp. 57–68.

heathen, chinee, originally, published, plain, language, from, truthful, james, narrative, poem, american, writer, bret, harte, published, first, time, september, 1870, overland, monthly, written, parody, algernon, charles, swinburne, atalanta, calydon, 1865, . The Heathen Chinee originally published as Plain Language from Truthful James is a narrative poem by American writer Bret Harte It was published for the first time in September 1870 in the Overland Monthly 1 2 It was written as a parody of Algernon Charles Swinburne s Atalanta in Calydon 1865 1 and satirized anti Chinese sentiment in northern California Plain Language from Truthful James as it first appeared in the Overland Monthly September 1870The poem became popular and was frequently republished To Harte s dismay however the poem reinforced racism among his readers instead of challenging it as he intended Nevertheless he returned to the character years later The poem also inspired or influenced several adaptations Contents 1 Overview 2 Composition and publication history 3 Response 4 Influence 5 References 6 External linksOverview editThe narrative of the poem focuses on a Chinese immigrant character named Ah Sin who defeats an Irish immigrant named William Nye in a high stakes game of euchre 3 23 William Nye is a cheater whom the childlike Ah Sin successfully out cheats 3 23 William Nye realizes nothing until it is too late 3 23 Upon realizing he was cheated William Nye attacks Ah Sin 3 23 24 Harte s narrative presented a fictionalized account of anti Chinese attacks and intended his readers to sympathize with Ah Sin 3 24 Composition and publication history edit nbsp Bret Harte in 1871 about a year after publishing The Heathen Chinee Harte wrote the poem as an afterthought and did not initially intend to publish it 3 24 According to Mark Twain Harte wrote the poem for his own amusement and threw it aside but being one day suddenly called upon for copy he sent that very piece in 4 In writing the poem Harte echoed and therefore lampooned Algernon Charles Swinburne s 1865 verse tragedy Atalanta in Calydon 5 Ambrose Bierce claimed Harte originally sent it to him to include in his San Francisco based News Letter but he suggested it was better suited for Harte s own journal the Overland Monthly 6 It appeared there under its original title Plain Language from Truthful James 3 23 in the September 1870 issue A Boston newspaper republished the work in 1871 as The Heathen Chinee and others have since used that name 7 The poem was republished several times within a short period including in New York Evening Post Prairie Farmer New York Tribune Boston Evening Transcript Providence Journal Hartford Courant and Saturday Evening Post published twice The poem was also included in a book by Harte titled Poems released in January 1871 Several periodicals and books would republish the poem with illustrations 1 In April 1870 James T Fields had published a collection of Harte s stories The Luck of Roaring Camp and Other Sketches through the Fields Osgood amp Co imprint 5 After the sudden success of The Heathen Chinee Fields rushed to produce a collection of Harte s poetry in time for the Christmas market its first six editions sold out in five days 6 The character of Ah Sin was revived for a theatrical play co written by Harte and Twain Ah Sin 8 The two writers had a rift by February 1877 just before completing a final draft Twain took over the project and as he wrote to William Dean Howells he left hardly a foot print of Harte in it 9 Harte nevertheless attended the play s opening at the National Theatre in Washington D C on May 7 1877 10 Near the end of his life Harte used the characters of both Truthful James and Ah Sin in his poem Free Silver at Angel s a satirical response to the silver plank in the 1896 Democratic National Convention platform 11 Even so when asked about the original poem in later years Harte called the poem trash and the worst poem I ever wrote possibly the worst poem anyone ever wrote 12 Response edit nbsp c 1871 Currier amp Ives lithograph Plain Language from Truthful James or The Heathen Chinee was very popular among general readers One New York newspaper reported on the frenzy over the poem Strolling down Broadway we saw a crowd of men and boys of high and low degree swarming about a shop window pushing laughing and struggling Elbowing our way through the crowd we discovered an illustrated copy of Bret Harte s poem The Heathen Chinee 13 The poem s popularity came in part from the ambiguity over its racial message The narrator implies that the cheating of the Chinese man was no worse than that of the white man 5 but the irony was too subtle for general readers The message matched one Harte had written elsewhere in exposing white people s hypocrisy As he wrote later the Chinese did as the Caucasian did in all respects and being more patient and frugal did it a little better 6 Harte had repeatedly opposed anti Chinese sentiment since as early as 1863 both privately and publicly In 1866 for example he wrote a letter defending the peaceable citizens of San Francisco s Chinatown who were patient under abuse and that patience I am ashamed to say they have to exercise continually in California 13 After the discovery of a murdered woman in Chinatown whose cause of death was uncertain Harte wrote as her head was caved in it is thought by some physicians that she died of galloping Christianity of the malignant California type 14 His 1874 short story Wan Lee the Pagan attacked stereotypes about Chinese immigrants and sought to portray white Americans as the true savages 3 24 In this vein Harte intended Plain Language from Truthful James to be a satire of the prevalent prejudice among Irish laborers in northern California against the Chinese immigrants competing for the same work He intended for the reader to sympathize with the victim Ah Sin 3 24 However the predominantly white middle class readership of the Overland and the periodicals that reprinted it interpreted and embraced the poem as mocking the Chinese These immigrants had been drawn in by the California Gold Rush and a boom in labor jobs but relations with American born citizens were tense The more recent economic downturn in California had made tensions even worse 5 Readers took certain phrases of the poem out of context including we are ruined by Chinese cheap labor and used the poem to reinforce their own racism 15 They sympathized with Ah Sin s attacker William Nye 3 24 The poem was also frequently parodied The poem Three Aces signed Carl Byng was published in the Buffalo Express in December 1870 not long after Plain Language from Truthful James first appeared 16 The poem was widely attributed to Mark Twain and labeled a feeble imitation of Harte 17 Twain angrily denied the charge and demanded a retraction writing to the editor Thomas Bailey Aldrich I am not in the imitation business Harte in turn targeted Twain years later in his 1893 story Ingenue of the Sierras by creating an unsavory character named Charley Bing modeled after Twain The incident was one of several in a long rivalry between the two authors 18 In 1898 The Overland Monthly ran a poem making fun of Harte himself who had moved to Europe in 1871 and never returned for forgetting what life was like in the west 19 Influence edit nbsp Heathen Chinee pitcher The Heathen Chinee as the poem was most often called was recited in public among opponents to Chinese immigration and Eugene Casserly a Senator from California who was vehemently opposed to the admission of Chinese labour apparently thanked Harte in writing for supporting his cause 12 The confusion was furthered by the altered title which allowed for a more literal reading and the illustrations in later republications 15 Harte s poem shaped the popular American conception of the Chinese more than any other writing at the time 12 and made him the most popular literary figure in America in 1870 1 The poem was especially relevant to Harte s fame as his other most popular works The Luck of Roaring Camp and The Outcasts of Poker Flat were originally published without the author s name 4 It inspired a series of west coast songwriters for example to produce songs which looked at Chinese immigrants through negative stereotypes and questioned their place in America Some used Harte s poem word for word 20 In November 1875 Union Porcelain Works in Long Island announced the release of a pitcher decorated with figures from The Heathen Chinee The title character was depicted with four aces falling from his sleeve 21 The influence continued for decades and spread into other authors writings In 1895 for example Adeline Knapp published her short story The Ways That Are Dark quoting a line from the poem In 1931 Earl Derr Biggers considered the same quote from the poem as a title for his sixth Charlie Chan novel inspired by a movie studio executive s suggestion Incidentally could you use the Bret Harte heathen Chinee phrase of Ways that are dark as a possible title for some forthcoming exploits 22 Ralph Townsend used the same line for his anti Chinese book Ways That Are Dark References edit a b c d Railton Stephen Harte The Heathen Chinee West Meets East Depicting the Chinese 1860 1873 University of Virginia URL accessed 2006 12 12 Henderson Victoria Mark Canada editor Bret Harte 1836 1902 Archived 2006 12 14 at the Wayback Machine All American Literature History and Culture University of North Carolina at Pembroke URL accessed 2006 12 12 a b c d e f g h i j Crean Jeffrey 2024 The Fear of Chinese Power an International History New Approaches to International History series London UK Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1 350 23394 2 a b Scharnhorst Gary Bret Harte Opening the American Literary West Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press 2000 52 ISBN 0 8061 3254 X a b c d Powers Ron Mark Twain A Life New York Free Press 2005 289 ISBN 978 0 7432 4899 0 a b c Tarnoff Ben The Bohemians Mark Twain and the San Francisco Writers Who Reinvented American Literature New York The Penguin Press 2014 188 ISBN 978 1 59420 473 9 Scott David China and the International System 1840 1949 Power Presence and Perceptions in a Century of Humiliation Albany State University of New York Press 2008 60 61 ISBN 978 0 7914 7627 7 Tarnoff Ben The Bohemians Mark Twain and the San Francisco Writers Who Reinvented American Literature New York The Penguin Press 2014 241 ISBN 978 1 59420 473 9 Scharnhorst Gary Bret Harte Opening the American Literary West Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press 2000 127 ISBN 0 8061 3254 X Nissen Axel Bret Harte Prince and Pauper University Press of Mississippi 2000 158 ISBN 1 57806 253 5 Scharnhorst Gary Bret Harte Opening the American Literary West Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press 2000 214 ISBN 0 8061 3254 X a b c Scharnhorst Gary Ways That Are Dark Appropriations of Bret Harte s Plain Language from Truthful James Nineteenth Century Literature Vol 51 No 3 December 1996 pp 377 399 a b Ott John Manufacturing the Modern Patron in Victorian California Cultural Philanthropy Industrial Capital and Social Authority Burlington VT Ashgate Publishing Company 2014 200 ISBN 9781409463344 Tarnoff Ben The Bohemians Mark Twain and the San Francisco Writers Who Reinvented American Literature New York The Penguin Press 2014 187 ISBN 978 1 59420 473 9 a b Ott John Manufacturing the Modern Patron in Victorian California Cultural Philanthropy Industrial Capital and Social Authority Burlington VT Ashgate Publishing Company 2014 201 ISBN 9781409463344 Scharnhorst Gary Bret Harte Opening the American Literary West Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press 2000 200 ISBN 0 8061 3254 X Powers Ron Mark Twain A Life New York Free Press 2005 293 ISBN 978 0 7432 4899 0 Scharnhorst Gary Bret Harte Opening the American Literary West Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press 2000 201 ISBN 0 8061 3254 X Scharnhorst Gary Bret Harte Opening the American Literary West Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press 2000 183 184 ISBN 0 8061 3254 X Moon Krystyn R Yellowface Creating the Chinese in American Popular Music and Performance 1850 1920s New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press 2005 38 40 ISBN 0 8135 3506 9 Frelinghuysen Alice Cooney American Porcelain 1770 1920 New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art 1989 183 ISBN 0 87099 540 5 Huang Yunte Charlie Chan The Untold Story of the Honorable Detective and His Rendezvous with American History New York W W Norton amp Company 2010 131 ISBN 978 0 393 06962 4External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article The Heathen Chinee nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Heathen Chinee pitcher Plain Language from Truthful James with illustrations by S Eytinge and Joseph Hull CancelColbert Meet the Heathen Chinee Stephen Colbert viral racism and 150 years of not getting the joke by Ben Tarnoff Politico April 8 2014 Plain Language from Bret Harte by Margaret Duckett Nineteenth Century Fiction Vol 11 No 4 March 1957 pp 241 260 Heathen Chinee A Study of American Attitudes Toward China 1890 1905 by Robert McClellan Equal Rights and the Heathen Chinee Black Activism in San Francisco 1865 1875 by Leigh Dana Johnsen from Western Historical Quarterly Vol 11 No 1 January 1980 pp 57 68 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Heathen Chinee amp oldid 1213692817, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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