1/3
[ stop the slideshow ]

A Bonze

A Bonze.jpg ThumbnailsWoman Selling Chow-chowThumbnailsWoman Selling Chow-chowThumbnailsWoman Selling Chow-chowThumbnailsWoman Selling Chow-chowThumbnailsWoman Selling Chow-chowThumbnailsWoman Selling Chow-chowThumbnailsWoman Selling Chow-chow

The priests of Fo in China are the same as the priests of Boudh are in India, from whence their religion passed into China in the first century of the Christian æra. The temples and the monasteries of China swarm with them; and they practice, ostensibly at least, all the austerities and mortifications of the several orders of monks in Europe, and inflict on themselves the same painful, laborious, and disgusting punishments which the faquirs of India undergo, either for the love of God, as they would have it supposed, or to impose on the multitude, as is most probably the real motive. In China, however, they are generally esteemed as men of correct morals: and there is reason to believe, that the calumnies heaped upon them by the Catholic missionaries are for the most part unfounded, and were occasioned by the mortification they experienced in finding their ceremonies, their altars, their images, their dress, to resemble so very nearly their own