| 1849 - 660 頁
...traits have been mentioned, the Chinese are still more left without excuse for their wickedness, since being without law, they are a law unto themselves...filthy expressions, and their lives of impure acts. " More uneradicable than the sins of the flesh is the falsity of the Chinese, and its attendant sin... | |
| Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight - 1874 - 820 頁
...better traits of Chinese character, such as peaceableness, industry, and good order, Mr. Williams says: "With a general regard for outward decency, they are...in a shocking degree, their conversation is full of impure expressions, and their lives of impure acts." "More noticeable than the sins of the flesh is... | |
| Edward Payson Tenney - 1895 - 714 頁
...Professor S. Wells Williams. But he also says in respect to domestic vice among the Chinese, that,— "with a general regard for outward decency, they are vile and polluted in a shocking degree." 2 This, however, is merely another way of saying that, in moral evolution, the Chinamen at home —... | |
| Edward Payson Tenney - 1895 - 714 頁
...Professor S. Wells Williams. But he also says in respect to domestic vice among the Chinese, that, — "with a general regard for outward decency, they are vile and polluted in a shocking degree."2 This, however, is merely another way of saying that, in moral evolution, the Chinamen at... | |
| Wayne Flynt, Gerald W. Berkley - 1997 - 452 頁
...writing in 1968 noted the unfavorable descriptions of the Chinese penned by one missionary: "The Chinese are vile and polluted in a shocking degree: their...filthy expressions and their lives of impure acts. . . . The universal practice of lying and dishonest dealings; the unblushing lewdness of old and young;... | |
| Willard B. Farwell - 1885 - 254 頁
...traits have been mentioned, the Chinese are still more left without excuse for their wickedness, since, being without law, they are a law unto themselves;...brothels and their inmates occur everywhere on land and water. One danger attending young girls going abroad alone is that they will be stolen for incarceration... | |
| Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight - 1849 - 658 頁
...traits have been mentioned, the Chinese are still more left without excuse for their wickedness, since being without law, they are a law unto themselves...filthy expressions, and their lives of impure acts. " More uneradicable than the sins of the flesh is the falsity of the Chinese, and its attendant sin... | |
| |