NOTES AND QUERIES
179
32. Before we left the higher ground, however, the most striking feature of the walk was, suddenly rounding a bend of the path and topping a rise, to be confronted with a low roaring noise which some of the party thought was jet engine noise but which turned out to be the din of the Kwai Chung section of Tsuen Wan New Town! This was a noise that accompanied us along much of our foothills walk thereafter.
33. The final stretch took us from the main stream above Lo Wai to Chuen Lung. It was marked by pine forests sowed, we were told by aeroplane, and by various large rocks and boulders. One of these was known locally as the Frog Stone (...), a name that it is claimed was given to it by the founder of the Tung Po To monastery at Lo Wai, the famous monk Mou Fung (***) who was fond of walking in the area, giving names to rocks whose shapes touched his fancy.
Hong Kong, 1976, 1978.
JAMES HAYES
BOOKS CITED:
Bourne, F. S. A., The Lo-Fou Mountains, An Excursion (Hong Kong,
Kelly and Walsh, 1895).
Davis, S. G., The Geology of Hong Kong (Hong Kong, Government
Printer, 1952).
Dingle, E. J., China's Revolution 1911-1912 (London, T. Fisher Unwin,
1912).
Giles, H. A., The Civilization of China (London, Williams and Norgate
1911).
Henry, B. C., The Cross and the Dragon (N.Y, 1882).
Heywood, G. S. P., Rambles in Hong Kong (Hong Kong, Kelly and
Walsh, second edition 1951).
Pitcher, P. W., In and About Amoy (Shanghai and Foochow, The
Methodist Publishing House in China, 1909).
ROYAL ASIATIC SOCIETY---VISIT TO THE TANG FAMILY GRAVES ON SATURDAY, 11TH DECEMBER, 1976
The Tang family is the oldest, largest and most famous of the New Territories' Chinese lineages. It has been settled in the area for just over 900 years and has a long history of local dominance. It has also produced many famous scholars and officials in the tradition of large, wealthy Chinese lineages.
Page 195
Page 196
NOTES AND QUERIES
179
32. Before we left the higher ground, however, the most striking feature of the walk was, suddenly rounding a bend of the path and topping a rise, to be confronted with a low roaring noise which some of the party thought was jet engine noise but which turned out to be the din of the Kwai Chung section of Tsuen Wan New Town! This was a noise that accompanied us along much of our foothills walk thereafter.
33. The final stretch took us from the main stream above Lo Wai to Chuen Lung. It was marked by pine forests sowed, we were told by aeroplane, and by various large rocks and boulders. One of these was known locally as the Frog Stone (), a name that it is claimed was given to it by the founder of the Tung Po To monastery at Lo Wai, the famous monk Mou Fung (***) who was fond of walking in the area, giving names to rocks whose shapes touched his fancy.
Hong Kong, 1976, 1978.
JAMES HAYES
BOOKS CITED:
Bourne, F. S. A., The Lo-Fou Mountains, An Excursion (Hong Kong,
Kelly and Walsh, 1895).
Davis, S. G., The Geology of Hong Kong (Hong Kong, Government
Printer, 1952).
Dingle, E. J., China's Revolution 1911-1912 (London, T. Fisher Unwin,
1912).
Giles, H. A., The Civilization of China (London, Williams and Norgate
1911).
Henry, B. C., The Cross and the Dragon (N.Y, 1882).
Heywood, G. S. P., Rambles in Hong Kong (Hong Kong, Kelly and
Walsh, second edition 1951).
Pitcher, P. W., In and About Amoy (Shanghai and Foochow, The
Methodist Publishing House in China, 1909).
ROYAL ASIATIC SOCIETY---VISIT TO THE TANG FAMILY GRAVES ON SATURDAY, 11TH DECEMBER, 1976
The Tang family is the oldest, largest and most famous of the New Territories' Chinese lineages. It has been settled in the area for just over 900 years and has a long history of local dominance. It has also produced many famous scholars and officials in the tradition of large, wealthy Chinese lineages.
Page 195Page 196
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