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Browsing named entities in William Hepworth Dixon, White Conquest: Volume 2. You can also browse the collection for America (Netherlands) or search for America (Netherlands) in all documents.
Your search returned 18 results in 7 document sections:
Chapter 21: the Chinese legend.
The Chinese legend current in San Francisco is a little wild; making the Chinese in America a mere gang of bondsmen, owned by the Six Companies, and governed by an Asiatic Vehm Gericht, Grand Lodge or Council of Ten, who wield a secret and mysterious power, which neither male nor female can escape.
Feeling some doubt as to the truth of this Chinese legend, taken as a whole, we seek for light among persons who are likely to have ferretted out the facts-of t the Six Companies?
Six Companies!
Your people make mistakes about these Companies.
We have, in fact, Five Companies, not six.
The body called by you the Sixth Company is a committee of management and arbitration, a local body, living in America, and charged with looking after business on the Pacific coast.
The Five Companies have their seats in China, and are known by the localities in which their members live.
These Five Companies are-1.
Ning Yung; 2.
Kwong Chaw; 3.
Hop Wo; 4.
Chapter 23: Chinese labour.
More serious are the questions raised in San Francisco by the Chinese knack of learning trades.
The Mongol's advent in America has brought into the front the great struggle for existence between eaters of beef and eaters of rice.
Living on rice, asking no luxuries beyond a whiff of opium and a pinch of tea, John Chinaman can toil for less money than a beef-eating fellow who requires a solid dinner, after which he likes to smoke his cuddy, drain his pot of beer, and top his surfeit with a whisky-smash.
John will live and save where Pat must shrink and fall.
The first Chinese who came over were labourers, and their first rivals were Irish navvies and hodmen.
John drove these rivals off the field, doing more work at less cost, and pleasing his employers by his steady doings and his silent ways.
John builds the chapels, banks, hotels, and schools.
No room is left in San Francisco for the unskilled Irish peasant, and the movement of Irish laboure
Chapter 36: Outlook.
Is there no writing on the wall?
The wounds inflicted on America by the civil war were fresh and bleeding, even before they were reopened by the grave events in New Orleans.
The two sides seem as bitter as they were a month before the fall of Richmond.
Cincinnati, where I write these words, is a grea e wallowing in riot and drunkenness, threatening our country with a new secession, and lifting up their heads against the will of God.
It never will be well with America until these gentle and pious coloured people have obtained a fixed and lasting mastery in the Southern States.
Yet there are signs that this bad state of feeli es, and a population counting more than four hundred million souls.
But what a change has taken place!
China has been standing still, while England, Russia, and America have been conquering, planting, and annexing lands.
Look at the group of powers which occupy areas of surface counting above a million square miles each:--
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