On a Chinese Screen by W. Somerset Maugham (best english books to read for beginners .TXT) ๐
Description
On a Chinese Screen was first published in 1922 by Heinemann Publishers, London. Its 58 short vignettes are based on Maughamโs travels along the Yangtze River from 1919 to 1920. Although later editions of the book added the subtitle โSketches of Life in China,โ there are actually only a few descriptions of the places he visited and the local Chinese people he met; rather, Maugham focuses on relaying his encounters with a range of Europeans living and working in the country. Maugham is quite critical of many of them and their lack of interest in, and sometimes disdain, for the country and its people, except for the extent to which their careers and pockets could benefit. His sketches highlight the difficulties that many expatriates encounter while living in a foreign culture.
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- Author: W. Somerset Maugham
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But he was harassed. He had had that day an unfortunate encounter and he was unable, trivial as it was, to put it out of his mind. It was on this account that his face bore a somewhat peevish expression. It was a thin and sensitive face, almost ascetic, with regular features and intelligent eyes. He was very long and thin, with the spindly legs of a grasshopper, and as he sat in his chair swaying a little with the motion of his bearers he reminded you, somewhat grotesquely, of a faded lily. A gentle creature. He could never have hurt a fly.
He had run across Dr. Saunders in one of the streets of the city. Dr. Saunders was a little grey-haired man, with a high colour and a snub nose which gave him a strangely impudent expression. He had a large sensual mouth and when he laughed, which he did very often, he showed decayed and discoloured teeth; when he laughed his little blue eyes wrinkled in a curious fashion and then he looked the very picture of malice. There was something faunlike in him. His movements were quick and unexpected. He walked with a rapid trip as though he were always in a hurry. He was a doctor who lived in the heart of the city among the Chinese. He was not on the register, but someone had made it his business to find out that he had been duly qualified; he had been struck off, but for what crime, whether social or purely professional, none know; nor how he had happened to come to the East and eventually settle on the China coast. But it was evident that he was a very clever doctor and the Chinese had great faith in him. He avoided the foreigners and rather disagreeable stories were circulated about him. Everyone knew him to say how do you do to, but no one asked him to his house nor visited him in his own.
When they had met that afternoon Dr. Saunders had exclaimed:
โWhat on earth has brought you to the city at this time of year?โ
โI have some business that I couldnโt leave any longer,โ answered the missionary, โand then I wanted to get the mail.โ
โThere was a stranger here the other day asking for you,โ said the doctor.
โFor me?โ cried the other with surprise.
โWell, not for you particularly,โ explained the doctor. โHe wanted to know the way to the American Mission. I told him; but I said he wouldnโt find anyone there. He seemed rather surprised at that, so I told him that you all went up to the hills in May and didnโt come back till September.โ
โA foreigner?โ asked the missionary, still wondering who the stranger could be.
โOh, yes, certainly.โ The doctorโs eyes twinkled. โThen he asked me about the other missions; I told him the London Mission had a settlement here, but it wasnโt the least use going there as all the missionaries were away in the hills. After all itโs devilish hot in the city. โThen Iโd like to go to one of the mission schools,โ said the stranger. โOh, theyโre all closed,โ I said. โWell, then Iโll go to the hospital.โ โThatโs well worth a visit,โ I said, โthe American hospital is equipped with all the latest contrivances. Their operating theatre is perfect.โ โWhat is the name of the doctor in charge?โ โOh, heโs up in the hills.โ โBut what about the sick?โ โThere are no sick between May and September,โ I said, โand if there are they have to put up with the native dispensers.โโโ
Dr. Saunders paused for a moment. The missionary looked ever so slightly vexed.
โWell?โ he said.
โThe stranger looked at me irresolutely for a moment or two. โI wanted to see something of the missions before I left,โ he said. โYou might try the Roman Catholics,โ I said, โtheyโre here all the year round.โ โWhen do they take their holidays then?โ he asked. โThey donโt,โ I said. He left me at that. I think he went to the Spanish convent.โ
The missionary fell into the trap and it irritated him to think how ingenuously he had done so. He ought to have seen what was coming.
โWho was this anyway?โ he asked innocently.
โI asked him his name,โ said the doctor. โโโOh, Iโm Christ,โ he said.โ
The missionary shrugged his shoulders and abruptly told his rickshaw boy to go on.
It had put him thoroughly out of temper. It was so unjust. Of course they went away from May to September. The heat made any useful activity quite out of the question and it had been found by experience that the missionaries preserved their health and strength much better if they spent the hot months in the hills. A sick missionary was only an encumbrance. It was a matter of practical politics and it had been found that the Lordโs
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