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"Be regardful of the filial and fraternal duties, in order to give importance to the human relations."

The parents' tender care can be dispensed,

Not till three anxious years their child they 've nursed;
A father's watchful toil, a mother's love-
E'en with high Heaven equality demand.

Let, then, the son his parents' board provide
With meat nutritious,—and from winter's cold,
With warmest silk their feeble frames defend;
Nor with their downward years his efforts cease,

When walking, let his arm their steps support;
When sitting, let him in attendance wait.
With tender care let him their comfort seek ;
With fond affection all their wishes meet.

When pain and sickness do their strength impair,
Be all his fears and all his love aroused ;-
Let him with quicken'd steps best medicine seek ;
And the most skilled physicians' care invite.

And when, at length, the great event doth come,
Be shroud and coffin carefully prepared.
Yea, throughout life, by offerings and prayer,
Be parents present to his rev'rent thoughts.

Ye children, who this Sacred Edict hear,
Obey its mandates, and your steps direct
Tow'rds duty's paths;-for whose doth not thus,
How is he worthy of the name of man?

The senior brother first, the junior next,
Such is the order in which men are born;
Let then the junior, with sincere respect,
Obey the sage's rule, the lower station keep.

Let him, in walking, to the elder yield,
At festive boards, to th' elder give first place:
Whether at home he stay, or walk abroad,
Ne'er let him treat the elder with neglect.

Should some slight cause occasion angry strife,
Let each recal his thoughts once and again;
Nor act till ev'ry point he thrice hath turned;
Remembering whence they both at first have sprung.

*This expression is used emphatically for a parent's decease, which "is the greatest event of a man's life."

Though, like two twigs which from one stem diverge, Their growth perhaps doth tend tow'rd different points; Yet search unto the roof, they still are joined ;

One sap pervades the twigs,-one blood the brothers' veins.

In boyish sports, how often have they joined!
Or played together round their parents' knee!
And now, when old, shall love quick turn to hate,
While but few days are left them yet to love?

Hear, then, this Sacred Edict and obey,
Leave ev'ry unkind thought; what's past forget;
While singing of fraternal union's joys,
Remember that there 's pleasure yet behind.

JOURNAL OF OCCURRENCES.

THE REBELLION of the Yaou-jin and their Chinese associates is at an end. Two or three hundred boats, it is said, have gone to Leënchow to bring back the troops; and the imperial commissioners, Hengan and Hoo-sung-ih, have returned to Peking, with additional honors.

Hengan, who is said to have more influence with "the one man who rules the world," than any other courtier, has reported to his majesty a long series of victories in daily skirmishes with the rebels; stating, also, that more than one half of the mountain tribes have begged to be allowed to surrender, and to give up their leaders and their arms.

It is stated that Hengan and his colleague ordered the judge Yang Chinlin, to send forth among the mountaineers, a proclamation, that imperial legates had arrived; that troops were gathering like stormy clouds; and that, from all the provinces, large levies of veteran troops were pouring in, and would cer tainly, in the event of further resistance, wash like a deluge the whole population from the face of the earth; or, to change the figure, would burn them up, indiscriminate

ly-good and bad-whether precious gems or comnion stones, &c., &c.

The judge addressed the people like a friend, calling upon them to save themselves. The commissioners feigned perfect ignorance of the whole; and while the highlanders were treating, the imperialists were plotting and straining every nerve to ef fect their destruction.

The commissioners state, that their endeavor had been, in obedience to an imperial order, to scatter auxiliaries, and soothe principals,—to divide and conquer. The immense army of the manifesto, gathering like clouds from all the provinces, and covering the heavens with darkness, consisted of 3000 men ordered from Hookwang!

Hengan says, many of the tribes submitted even on the terms he proposed, viz. the Mantchou tonsure, together with depriving the ears of the rings commonly worn by the mountaineers. At the date of the memorial, from which we have collected these statements, Hengan supposed "ten days would be suffi cient to shut up the affair, and close

further proceedings." So it has proved.

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On the 15th instant, the imperial commissioners received a dispatch from the emperor, approving of their proceedings, but degrading govern or Le. Peacock's feathers, rings, &c., in profusion, have been sent down for the meritorious; among whom we observe the name of Ko Tse-tsin, who was lately at Macao, as the "Casa branca Mandarine,' the hae-fang tungche, or guardian of the coast. This little man, is by descent, one of the Yaou-jin, lately in rebellion; and governor Le sent him up, expressly to do the needHis death had been reported, but the report now appears to have been untrue.

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Two legal judges, Yang and King, sent up to the highlands, have so acted that their merits and demerits balanced each other; therefore the commissionerr requested that they might be passed over.

Thus the war has ended, as almost all wars do-in Europe. all parties (excepting a few slain, degraded, &c.,) returning to the state they were in before the war. The mountaineers have agreed to stay at home, and the imperialists have agreed not to go among the hills to extirpate them.

GOVERNOR LE, immediately after his disgrace, having delivered up to Hengan the seals of office, set out on his journey to Peking; where on his arrival, he is to be put on trial before the Hing Poo, or Tribunal of Punishments. His family left Canton for their home in Keängse, on the 15th instant.

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and most honorable scene of literary combat, in China, takes place at Peking, in the presence of the emperor. There Leaf succeeded, and was forthwith appointed to a respectable place in the Board of Revenue; in which situation he remained some years at the capital. Two or three years ago, his mother died; and he, being thereby incapacitated, by law, from holding office for three years, returned to his native village in Tungkwan dis triet, accompanied by a Peking servant, whom he brought with him.

Leaf, a clever man, and a treasury secretary from Peking, was a person greatly esteemed and feared in his native village. But he carried his acts of injustice in raising money by intimidation, and his acts of profligacy, on the persons of wives, daughters, and nuns, to such an extreme degree, that scores of accusers have appeared at Canton against him. His maltreatment of others to gratify his vicious propensities has caused upwards of ten suicides. We have the native details before us, but we decline entering into them minutely. The tyrant Leaf was a terror to all the neighborhood. The police men were afraid to attack him. But an old friend of his, the Pwanyu magistrate, succeeded in be. traying him. The magistrate and he were sworn brothers, that is, they had, in Chinese phrase, "exchanged cards." This magiste went and paid his old friend a cordial visit, and said, "Brother Leaf, there are various charges against you at Canton; go with me, and let us set them to rights." Leaf immediately consented, but as soon as the worshipful magistrate had brought his friend to Canton, he sent a posse of special thief catchers from the fooyuen's office, who speedily took him into safe custody.

The Kwangchow foo magistrate. who sat on the trial, was also an old friend of Leaf's.-Leaf denied, positively, every charge, and the magistrate was unwilling to torture him. He therefore said, "Brother Leaf, I wish you would confess, for it will disgrace our whole caste to subject you to the torture." But the prisoner was obstinate. So the magistrate took his Peking servant, who, having been constantly attached to his person, knew all his wicked ways, and tortured him, till he made a most ample confession of the criminal acts of his beloved master.

Leaf was found guilty, and is now in common jail, awaiting the imperial confirmation of the sentence passed upon him. It is said that the fooyuen and judge of Canton have been intent on putting him to death; but the Board in Peking has written a letter to Choo, requesting him "to punish lightly." This has enraged the fooyuen so much, that he has written to the emperor, requesting leave to retire from his majesty's service, on the plea of old age and sickness. Whether his resignation will he accepted or not remains to be seen.

THE MARCH OF ENTERPRISE.The other day a local magistrate reported for the fire-men of Canton, that one house having taken fire, it was burnt and four houses around it were pulled down, to prevent the flames spreading. The method was effectual, though the sacrifice was great. For this mode of operation, though in the present instance, judging after the fact, it seemed carried to an extreme, the Chinese are we believe, wholly indebted to Europeans. Formerly, the Chinese would not pull down their houses to stop the progress of fire; but they readily do so now, old custom notwithstanding.

DEATH CAUSED BY WHIPPING.-In Szechuen an officer of government has been dismissed theservice and brought to trial for having caused the death of one of his attendants, by subjecting him, on two successive occasions, to the infliction of one hundred blows on the back. The man was accused of appropriating part of the price of a coffin; and of speaking impertinently to the magistrate. There was an endeavor to show that opium smoking

caused his death, but the proof was deficient. No justice could be obtained in the province, till an appeal was made to Peking.

A THOUSAND NAMES OF BUDHA.Some persons at Peking, and among them a Tartar soldier, have been convicted of forming a sect, whose distinguishing feature was the reciting a thousand names of Budha, and collecting money. The proceedings are pronounced worthy of the most infense detestation. Some of the leaders have been capitally punished, and the general to whose division the soldier belonged, has requested a court martial on his conduct, for not discovering the affair sooner.

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PIRATES. A yushe, or censor, has reported to the emperor, respecting the lengths to which piracy is carried, all along the coast of Canton. 'According to the yushe," says his majesty, "the piratical banditti have the boldness and audacity to dig up graves, and plunder the clothes of the dead; yea, even to carry away the coffins and publicly in the face of day, to extort ransoms for them. This is the case throughout the province, but particularly near the provincial city, and in the districts subordinate to the capital;What are the local officers attending to ?-Why do they sit like wooden idols; and suffer such bold-faced unfearing wickedness? Let Le and Choo command severely all their subordinates, to exert themselves sincerely and bring to strict punishment every pirate that exists, till not one is left to slip out of the net. Thus shall cruelty be eradicated, and the spirit of perverseness be torn up."

Postscript. It has just been officially announced, that his excellency Loo, our new governor, will set out from Leenchow on the 1st of November, on his way hither. The anchǎsze or judge Yang, and the Kwänghee, or commandant of the town militia, King, will precede him a few days.

Yesterday, October 30th, at about 24 P. M., a fire broke out, and burn. ed with great violence, in part of the western suburbs of the city, called Sha-meen. Being almost entirely confined to wooden houses and mat sheds (occupied by gamblers and public women), and to small boats closely crowded together, the fire spread rapidly, and in the course of two hours consumed several streets or lines of houses, besides a large number of boats. We are at present wholly unprovided with details, but cannot doubt that the extent of loss has been very great.

THE

CHINESE REPOSITORY.

VOL. I.-NOVEMBER, 1832.-No. 7.

REVIEW.

MEMOIRS AND REMARKS, geographical, historical, topographical, physical, natural, astronomical, mechanical, military, mercantile, political, and ecclesiastical, made in above ten years' travels through the Empire of China. BY LEWIS LE COMTE, jesuit; confessor to the duchess of Burgundy, and one of the French king's mathematicians. A new translation from the best Paris edition. 1 Vol. pp. 536. London. MDCCXXXVII.

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TIME is not the destroyer of truth. Some parts. of Le Comte's book are of little value now,-as they were, indeed, when he wrote them,-being nothing more than complimentary addresses to ministers of state, and to lords and ladies of rank, to whom he 'communicated himself,' in a series of letters, which constitute the work before us: other parts of it, such for example, as that which contains a division of the empire into "fifteen provinces," are not applicable to the present condition of the country: much of the work, however, is exact narration of what now exists; and the period. of almost a century and a half, since which time it was composed, has taken nothing from many of its most beautiful and correct descriptions of persons, places, and things which belong to the

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