- 07 Jul 2022 15:57
#15237412
The presence of gold dust in these valleys in such paying quantities seemed to indicate that there must be gold in the mountains from which the sand had been washed and yet, up to the arrival of foreigners, quartz mining was almost unknown, or but poorly carried on. Conces- sions have of late years been granted to American, German, English, and French syndicates, and others have been demanded. As far as they have been worked, they are paying well.
With the exception of gold dust, which is largely exported to make up the balance of trade, Korean ginseng is the most profitable article of commerce in the kingdom. The variety of red ginseng, prepared from that grown here, and the preparation of which is a secret, is most highly prized in China. It is a government monopoly, and the output is very carefully guarded in the fear that an overstocking of the market may produce a "slump" in price.
Korea's resources are numerous, her possibilities are great and, for her size, with a proper government and good advisers, she would soon be a rich little country; but at the present time everything is most primitive. On reaching her shores and mingling among her people, especially when we first arrived, we felt that we were suddenly transplanted to the Middle Ages.
Each farm and farmer was almost absolutely self- dependent. True, their tools were crude, their means were meagre ; but it was astonishing to see the feats they had accomplished without machines of any kind. If you desired a piece of thick rope you could not purchase it...
With such a primitive people, great wealth, as we understand it, would not exist; and yet, there are powerful nobles, who have large estates and ample in- comes ; but to a Korean, unless he has influence with the powers that be, the possession of wealth will be a snare and a hindrance, rather than a benefit. It will be the bait to tempt some shark of an official. Some charge will be trumped up against him, his ar- rest ordered
It is only fair to note, however, in this connection, that the Korean, placed in favorable surroundings, proves himself neither lazy, shiftless, nor slow.In Hawaii, on the sugar plantations, the overseers have been very quick to recognize the value of the Koreans, asserting that they are more industrious, frugal, and sober than any laborers they have ever had. The superintendents of the Korean mines, both English and American, men who have had experience with every kind and class of miners in Australia, Col- orado, Alaska, and South Africa, are unanimous in awarding the palm to the Korean. The American and Korean Electric Company of Seoul have found the Korean not only reliable as a laborer but quick to learn and soon able to work into positions as con- ductors, motormen, and assistant engineers, and that in this work they are steady and trustworthy.
In 1868, at the tail end of the Industrial Revolution, with the Assassin Brotherhood all but eradicated in Victorian London, twins Jacob (Paul Amos) and Evie Frye (Victoria Atkin) leave Crawley for London and arrive to find a city controlled by the Templars, with both the Church and the Monarchy losing their power. Raised as Assassins to follow the Creed, Jacob and Evie aim to take back the city from Templar control by infiltrating and uniting London's criminal underworld,[5][13] aided by notable figures of the era such as novelist Charles Dickens (Des McAleer), biologist Charles Darwin (Julian Richings), inventor Alexander Graham Bell (Mark Rowley), political theorist Karl Marx (Matthew Marsh), nurse Florence Nightingale (Helen Johns), Maharaja Duleep Singh (the last maharajah of the Sikh Empire) (Avin Shah), Sergeant Frederick Abberline of the Metropolitan Police Service (known for his investigation of Jack the Ripper) (Sam Crane), and Queen Victoria (Ellen David).[14][15] Additionally, Jacob's granddaughter, Lydia Frye (Lisa Norton), appears in a separate World War I segment, where she aids Winston Churchill (Rick Miller) in defending London against a new enemy espionage faction.[16]
With his lieutenants dead, Starrick moves to retrieve the Shroud and kill Britain's heads of church and state. Jacob and Evie argue over his recklessness and her inaction, but agree to work together to stop Starrick. They infiltrate a ball held at Buckingham Palace, but Starrick beats them to the vault and obtains the Shroud. With Henry's help, the Frye twins kill Starrick, before reconciling and returning the Shroud to the vault. For their deeds, Queen Victoria knights the Frye twins and Henry.
The seven boroughs of London featured in the game are Westminster, the Strand, the City of London, Whitechapel, the Thames, Southwark and Lambeth.[1]
With the exception of gold dust, which is largely exported to make up the balance of trade, Korean ginseng is the most profitable article of commerce in the kingdom. The variety of red ginseng, prepared from that grown here, and the preparation of which is a secret, is most highly prized in China. It is a government monopoly, and the output is very carefully guarded in the fear that an overstocking of the market may produce a "slump" in price.
Korea's resources are numerous, her possibilities are great and, for her size, with a proper government and good advisers, she would soon be a rich little country; but at the present time everything is most primitive. On reaching her shores and mingling among her people, especially when we first arrived, we felt that we were suddenly transplanted to the Middle Ages.
Each farm and farmer was almost absolutely self- dependent. True, their tools were crude, their means were meagre ; but it was astonishing to see the feats they had accomplished without machines of any kind. If you desired a piece of thick rope you could not purchase it...
With such a primitive people, great wealth, as we understand it, would not exist; and yet, there are powerful nobles, who have large estates and ample in- comes ; but to a Korean, unless he has influence with the powers that be, the possession of wealth will be a snare and a hindrance, rather than a benefit. It will be the bait to tempt some shark of an official. Some charge will be trumped up against him, his ar- rest ordered
It is only fair to note, however, in this connection, that the Korean, placed in favorable surroundings, proves himself neither lazy, shiftless, nor slow.In Hawaii, on the sugar plantations, the overseers have been very quick to recognize the value of the Koreans, asserting that they are more industrious, frugal, and sober than any laborers they have ever had. The superintendents of the Korean mines, both English and American, men who have had experience with every kind and class of miners in Australia, Col- orado, Alaska, and South Africa, are unanimous in awarding the palm to the Korean. The American and Korean Electric Company of Seoul have found the Korean not only reliable as a laborer but quick to learn and soon able to work into positions as con- ductors, motormen, and assistant engineers, and that in this work they are steady and trustworthy.
In 1868, at the tail end of the Industrial Revolution, with the Assassin Brotherhood all but eradicated in Victorian London, twins Jacob (Paul Amos) and Evie Frye (Victoria Atkin) leave Crawley for London and arrive to find a city controlled by the Templars, with both the Church and the Monarchy losing their power. Raised as Assassins to follow the Creed, Jacob and Evie aim to take back the city from Templar control by infiltrating and uniting London's criminal underworld,[5][13] aided by notable figures of the era such as novelist Charles Dickens (Des McAleer), biologist Charles Darwin (Julian Richings), inventor Alexander Graham Bell (Mark Rowley), political theorist Karl Marx (Matthew Marsh), nurse Florence Nightingale (Helen Johns), Maharaja Duleep Singh (the last maharajah of the Sikh Empire) (Avin Shah), Sergeant Frederick Abberline of the Metropolitan Police Service (known for his investigation of Jack the Ripper) (Sam Crane), and Queen Victoria (Ellen David).[14][15] Additionally, Jacob's granddaughter, Lydia Frye (Lisa Norton), appears in a separate World War I segment, where she aids Winston Churchill (Rick Miller) in defending London against a new enemy espionage faction.[16]
With his lieutenants dead, Starrick moves to retrieve the Shroud and kill Britain's heads of church and state. Jacob and Evie argue over his recklessness and her inaction, but agree to work together to stop Starrick. They infiltrate a ball held at Buckingham Palace, but Starrick beats them to the vault and obtains the Shroud. With Henry's help, the Frye twins kill Starrick, before reconciling and returning the Shroud to the vault. For their deeds, Queen Victoria knights the Frye twins and Henry.
The seven boroughs of London featured in the game are Westminster, the Strand, the City of London, Whitechapel, the Thames, Southwark and Lambeth.[1]