"Chinese women devote very little superfluous time to hair-dressing.
Their tresses are arranged once a month, and they sleep with their heads in boxes."
What we want in place of all this is a serious and systematic examination of the manners and customs, and modes of thought, of the Chinese people.
Their long line of Dynastic Histories must be explored and their literature ransacked by students who have got through the early years of drudgery inseparable from the peculiar nature of the written language, and who are prepared to devote themselves, not, as we do now, to a general knowledge of the whole, but to a thorough acquaintance with some particular branch.
The immediate advantages of such a course, as I must point out once more, for the last time, to commerce and to diplomatic relations will be incalculable. And they will be shared in by the student of history, philosophy, and religion, who will then for the first time be able to a.s.sign to China her proper place in the family of nations.
The founder of this Chinese Chair has placed these advantages within the grasp of Columbia University.