Peeps Into China; Or, The Missionary's Children. E. C. Phillips

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       E. C. Phillips

      Peeps Into China; Or, The Missionary's Children

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066237967

       CHAPTER I.

       CHAPTER II.

       CHAPTER III.

       CHAPTER V.

       CHAPTER VI.

       CHAPTER VIII.

       CHAPTER IX.

      CHAPTER X.

       CHAPTER XI.

       CHAPTER XII.

       Table of Contents

      THE COUNTRY RECTORY.

      OT really; you can't mean it really!"

      "As true as possible. Mother told me her very own self," was the emphatic reply.

      Two children, brother and sister, the boy aged ten, the girl three years older, were carrying on this conversation in the garden of a country rectory.

      "But really and truly, on your word of honour," repeated Leonard, as though he could not believe what his sister had just related to him.

      "I hope my word is always a word of honour; I thought everybody's word ought to be that," Sybil Graham replied a little proudly, for when she had run quickly to bring such important news to her brother, she could not help feeling hurt that he should refuse to believe what she said.

      "And we are really going there, and shall actually see the 'pig-tails' in their own country, and the splendid kites they fly, and all the wonderful things that father used to tell us about? Oh! it seems too good to be true."

      "But it is true," Sybil repeated with emphasis. "And I dare say we might even see tea growing, as it does grow there, you know, and I suppose we shall be carried about in sedan-chairs ourselves." She was really as happy as her brother, only not so excitable.

      At this moment their mother joined them. "Oh, mother!" the boy then exclaimed, "how beautiful! Sybil has just told me, but I could not believe her."

      "I thought the news would delight you both very much," Mrs. Graham answered. "Your father and I have been thinking about going to China for some time, but we would not tell you anything about it until matters were quite settled, and now everything seems to be satisfactorily arranged for us to start in three months' time."

      "That will be in August, then," they both said at once.

      "Oh, how very beautiful!" Sybil exclaimed. "I like my father to be a missionary very much. He must be glad too; isn't he, mother?"

      "Very glad indeed, although the joy will entail some sadness also. I expect your father will grieve a good deal to leave this dear little country parish of ours, and the duties he has so loved to perform here, but a wider field of usefulness having opened out for him, he is very thankful to obey the call."

      

THE CHURCH.

      "And father will do it so well, mother," answered Sybil. "I wonder whether I shall be able to do anything to help him there?"

      "I think you have long since found out, Sybil," was her mother's loving answer, "that you can always be doing something to help us."

      Sybil and Leonard had as yet only learnt a part of the story. They had still to learn the rest. This going to China would not be all beautiful, all joy for them, especially for Sybil, with her very affectionate nature and dread of saying "Good-byes," for she and Leonard were only to be taken out on a trip—a pleasure tour—to see something of China, and to return to England to go on with their education at the end of six months.

      Mr. Graham then calling his wife, the children were again left alone.

      It was no easy matter to go as a missionary to China. This Mr. Graham well knew, for his father, although only for a short time, had been one over there before him, and had discovered—what so many other later brother missionaries have found out also—that to obtain even a hearing on the subject of religion from a Chinaman, who has been trained and brought up to be a superstitious idolater, very vain of his wisdom and antiquity as a nation, and to look upon Europeans as barbarians, is often a most difficult matter.

      Eighteen years before Mr. Graham the elder went out to Peking as one of the first missionaries to China, and his only son, who had then just qualified for the medical profession, accompanied him. A year later, the father dying, his son returned at once to England, but with a changed mind, determined now to seek holy orders and enter the ministry, instead of following his profession, so as by thus doing to add one more to the number of earnest clergy that his short stay in China had shown him were so much needed. To carry out his resolution, he went to Oxford to prepare, and soon after his ordination he married, and settled down, in the little country village, where we find him, surrounded by his little family.

      Often since then had he contemplated leaving England for missionary work, but until now he had been prevented from carrying his wishes into effect.

      His knowledge of medicine had not been lost to him, for many a sufferer in the little, yet wide-spreading country parish, who lived at too great a distance to send for the doctor for a slight ailment, had been very thankful, when the clergyman came in to read and pray with him, to learn from him what his slight ailment was, and how he could prevent its becoming a great one.

      And this knowledge would be most helpful and invaluable in China, where Mr. Graham knew that the science of medicine was held

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