IV 
CONTENTS OF VOL. II, 
of the Hills — My Servant's Advice — Leave the Boat — The 
Opium-smoker outwitted — Town of Tun-che — Its Importance 
in Connection with the Tea-trade — Features of Country, Soil, 
and Productions — First Yiew of Sung-lo-shan . . . Page 48 
CHAPTER IV. 
Sung-lo-shan — Its Priests and Tea — Its Height above the Sea — 
Rock Formation — Cultivation of the Tea-shrub — Mode of pre- 
serving its Seeds — The young Plants — Method of dyeing Green 
Teas — Ingredients employed — Chinese Reason for the Practice 
— Quantity of Prussian Blue and Gypsum taken by a Green-tea 
Drinker — Such Teas not used by the Chinese — Mr. Warrington's 
Observations 66 
CHAPTER V. 
My Reception in the House of Wang's Father — A smoky Chinese 
Cottage — My Coolie and the Dwarf — The Dangers to which 
they had been exposed — Chinese Mode of warming themselves 
on a Cold Day — Tea-seeds, &c., obtained — Anecdote of the new 
Berberis — Obtain some young Plants of it — Deceitful Character 
of the Chinese — Leave the far-famed Sung-lo-shan — Wang tries 
to cheat the Chairmen — Invents a Story of a "great General" 
— Leave Tun-che — Mountain Scenery — Pleasure of going down 
the River — Gale of Wind amongst the Mountains — Arrive at 
Nechow — Shaou-hing-foo — Tsaou-o — Pak-wan — Arrive at 
Ning-po 73 
CHAPTER VL 
Kintang or Silver Island — Its Inhabitants and Productions — 
Bay of Chapoo — Advantages of an Inland Route — New Year at 
Shanghae — Flower-shops and Flowers — Sacred Bamboo — The 
Chrysanthemum — Sail for Hong-kong — A Game-ship — Canton 
Seeds, and Mode of packing them — False Notion regarding their 
being poisoned 90 
