Page:Crime and government at Hong Kong.pdf/63

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

59

to port, negociated for the highest obtainable sum, and then returned with the ransom to release their prizes.

"As a corrective of this growing evil, merchants and traders paid liberally for foreign convoy: an arrangement which for a time was mutually advantageous. As the junks sailed in fleets, a moderate contribution from each vessel secured it exemption from a heavy black-mail; while the foreigner was merely delayed a few days on his voyage. Even the imperial navy profited by it;—admirals put to sea in fair weather, going out with the ebb and returning by the flood, and performing a cruize in safety. Those were halycon days; but, unhappily, they were brief; in so much that they are now well nigh forgotten.

"Convoying became an object of competition. The proximity of the Macao Portuguese, with their simple lorchas or sloops, manned to a great extent by Manilamen or Cantonese, enabled them to underbid those who sailed square-rigged vessels; and soon the Lusitanian colours displaced all others from this line of business. Abuses quickly sprang up; causing mariners, fishermen, and coastlanders to sigh for the times, when native pirates pursued their comparatively harmless vocations. The poor people were formerly chastised with whips; now with scorpions. Smuggling, also, the never-ceasing vice of foreigners, assumed a systematic form at the non-consular ports.

"Lorchamen often dictated, to Custom-house officers, the amount of duty to be paid for the whole fleet; reserving to themselves the sum abated. While intimidating mandarins ashore, they prac-