1895
Their Sale a Considerable Source of Revenue to the Royal Treasury.
There are slave girls innumerable around the royal palaces of the Hermit Kingdom of Korea. It is difficult to find out how many there are. One official will say hundreds, another thousands. A consul who has had opportunity to learn the facts in the case says there are about 1,500.
It is equally difficult to learn where they come from. Their appearance shows that they are not from any one stock. Some are Koreans, and some are Tonghaks from Guing-Shang-do, in the south of the kingdom; some show Japanese blood, others Chinese and still others Mantachurian. They are of all sorts and types. All speak Korean, and nearly all have a smattering of Chinese. They are all well brought up and quiet, polite and industrious. They begin their career as domestic servants when mere children and are seldom found in the royal establishment after they are 25 years old. A few who are unusually good looking become royal concubines, and a large number are taken for the same purpose by the princes and lords of the realm, and it is said for a very large price. The rest are sold as commodities to the highest bidder and the proceeds paid into the royal treasury.
The latest available blue book of Korea — 1884 — in summarizing the royal income, includes these entries: "9,917 stone of best rice; 41,484 stone of beans; 172,713 nyang in money; 24,000 nyang from sale of slave girls."
A nyang is a string of 100 copper coins whose value in American money ranges from 500 to 2,000 to the dollar. The market value of a girl in Korea varies from $10 to $40. Upon these figures the monarch must raise and sell in the public market every year from 30 to 480 young women.
This trade in human beings is considered perfectly legitimate and has come down from time immemorial. It is not confined to the royal palace, but is practiced to a certain extent all over Korea. The custom is followed likewise in China and seems to characterize nearly every Mongolian race. — Philadelphia Press.
Sunday, May 25, 2008
Slave Girls in Korea
Friday, June 22, 2007
Fiddling For A Howling Mob
1896
Once Cherubini had to figure as a fiddler in spite of himself.
In the stormy days of 1792 it was a perilous experiment to walk the streets of Paris. During an occasion of more than ordinary excitement the composer fell into the hands of a band of sans-culottes who were roving about seeking musicians to conduct their chants. To them it was a special gratification to compel the talent that had formerly delighted royalty to minister now to their gratification.
On Cherubini firmly refusing to lead them, a low murmur was heard from the crowd, and the fatal word, "Royalist! Royalist!" went up. At this critical moment one of Cherubini's friends — also a kidnapped musician — seeing his imminent danger, thrust a violin into his unwilling hands and bade him head the mob. The whole day these two musicians accompanied the hoarse and overpowering yells of the revolutionary horde, and when at last a halt was made in a public square, where a banquet was served, Cherubini and his friend had to mount empty barrels and play until the feasting was over.
Used Many Quill Pens
In 1768, 27,000,000 quills were shipped from Russia and Poland to England, to say nothing of those which were sent to other countries.
The Penalty of Bachelorhood
In Corea every unmarried man is considered a boy, though he should live to be a hundred years old. No matter what his age, he ranks below the youngest of the unmarried men, despite the fact, perhaps, of having lived long enough to be his father.
It takes a bad man to be a good politician.