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This marble boat is unsinkable and unmovable. The marble boat is found at the end of the Long Corridor at the Summer Palace in Beijing. This "boat" was used by the Chinese royals to take tea. The Marble Boat was built in 1755 in Chinese style, imitating the sailing boats which Qianlong (1711-1799) took during his inspection to Southern China. As an old saying goes, "water can carry the boat as well as overturn it," meaning that water symbolizing the common people can uphold the royal boat, or it can swamp the boat. Emperor Qianlong had the huge Marble Boat fastened in the water to indicate the steadfast rule of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). In 1860, it was burned down, and then rebuilt in Western style in 1893 through Empress Dowager Cixi's embezzling Chinese naval funds. Inlaid with colorful glass windows and wheels and paved with colored bricks, the boat is 36 meters (118.1 feet) long, two stories high. Using the huge mirrors fixed on each deck, on rainy days Cixi could enjoy the dainty lake scene while having tea. Four dragon heads mounted in each direction serve as drains, allowing rain water to be channeled picturesquely out of their mouths. The marble base of the boat was originally a platform for a Ming dynasty Buddhist monastery where fish and birds intended for the marketplace were released by the devout in order to gain karmic merit.
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