George Carter Stent


George Carter Stent was an English soldier in India and China, an agent of the Chinese Imperial Maritime Customs Service, and a translator of Chinese texts into English.

Life

George Carter Stent was born into a family of modest means in Canterbury in 1833. He was the second son of James Stent, of 2 King's Bridge, Canterbury. Shortly after his twentieth birthday he joined the British Army as a soldier of the 14th Dragoons and proceeded with the regiment to India, where in the 1850s he witnessed and later wrote about the Great Mutiny. By the mid-1860s, he was in China, serving in the guard of the British legation at Peking. He displayed an affinity for Chinese literature, and with the help of Thomas Francis Wade was recruited into the Maritime Customs Service. He died on 1 September 1884, at Takaw, China.

Works

  • Scraps from my Sabretasche: Being Personal Adventures While in the 14th Dragoons.
  • Chinese and English Vocabulary in the Pekinese Dialect.
  • Chinese and English Pocket Dictionary.
  • The Jade Chaplet, in Twenty-Four Beads, a collection of songs, ballads, &c., from the Chinese.
  • Entombed Alive, and Other Poems, from the Chinese.