Tales of the Argonauts Author:Bret Harte Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: WAN LEE, THE PAGAN. AS I opened Hop Sing's letter, there fluttered to the ground a square strip of yellow paper covered with hieroglyphics, which, at first gl... more »ance, I innocently took to be the label from a pack of Chinese fire-crackers. But the same envelope also contained a smaller strip of rice-paper, with two Chinese characters traced in India ink, that I at once knew to be Hop Sing's visiting-card. The whole, as afterwards literally translated, ran as follows: — " To the stranger the gates of my house are not closed : the rice-jar is on the left, and the sweetmeats on the right, as you enter. Two sayings of the Master : — Hospitality is the virtue of the son and the wisdom of the ancestor. The Superior man is light hearted after the crop-gathering: he makes a festival. When the stranger is in your melon-patch, observe him not too closely: inattention is often the highest form of civility. Happiness, Peace, and Prosperity. HOP SlNQ." Admirable, certainly, as was this morality and proverbial wisdom, and although this last axiom was very characteristic of my friend Hop Sing, who was that most sombre of all humorists, a Chinese philosopher, I must confess, that, 3ven after a very free translation, I was at a loss to make any immediate application of the message. Luckily I discovered a third enclosure in the shape of a little note in English, and Hop Sing's own commercial hand. It ran thus: — " The pleasure of your company is requested at No. — Sacramento Street, on Friday evening at eight o'clock. A cup of tea at nine, — sharp. "Hop Sing." This explained all. It meant a visit to Hop Sing's warehouse, the opening and exhibition of some rare Chinese novelties and curios, a chat in the back office, a cup of tea of a perfection unknown beyond these sac...« less