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The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Problem of China, by Bertrand Russell
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This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
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almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
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re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
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with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
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Title: The Problem of China
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Author: Bertrand Russell
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Release Date: November 3, 2004 [EBook #13940]
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Language: English
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Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PROBLEM OF CHINA ***
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Produced by Brendan Lane and the PG Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
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THE PROBLEM OF CHINA
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BY
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BERTRAND RUSSELL
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O.M., F.K.S.
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_London_
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GEORGE ALLEN & UNWIN LTD
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RUSKIN HOUSE MUSEUM STREET
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FIRST PUBLISHED IN 1922
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SECOND IMPRESSION 1966
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PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN
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BY PHOTOLITHOGRAPHY
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UNWIN BROTHERS LIMITED
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WOKING AND LONDON
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CONTENTS
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CHAPTER
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FOREWORD
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I. QUESTIONS
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II. CHINA BEFORE THE NINETEENTH CENTURY
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III. CHINA AND THE WESTERN POWERS
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IV. MODERN CHINA
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V. JAPAN BEFORE THE RESTORATION
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VI. MODERN JAPAN
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VII. JAPAN AND CHINA BEFORE 1914
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VIII. JAPAN AND CHINA DURING THE WAR
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IX. THE WASHINGTON CONFERENCE
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X. PRESENT FORCES AND TENDENCIES IN THE FAR EAST
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XI. CHINESE AND WESTERN CIVILIZATION CONTRASTED
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XII. THE CHINESE CHARACTER
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XIII. HIGHER EDUCATION IN CHINA
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XIV. INDUSTRIALISM IN CHINA
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XV. THE OUTLOOK FOR CHINA
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APPENDIX
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INDEX
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The Ruler of the Southern Ocean was Sh� (Heedless), the Ruler of
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the Northern Ocean was H� (Sudden), and the Ruler of the Centre
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was Chaos. Sh� and H� were continually meeting in the land of
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Chaos, who treated them very well. They consulted together how
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they might repay his kindness, and said, "Men all have seven
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orifices for the purpose of seeing, hearing, eating, and
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breathing, while this poor Ruler alone has not one. Let us try
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and make them for him." Accordingly they dug one orifice in him
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every day; and at the end of seven days Chaos died.--[_Chuang
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Tze_, Legge's translation.]
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The Problem of China
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CHAPTER I
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QUESTIONS
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A European lately arrived in China, if he is of a receptive and
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reflective disposition, finds himself confronted with a number of very
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puzzling questions, for many of which the problems of Western Europe
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will not have prepared him. Russian problems, it is true, have important
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affinities with those of China, but they have also important
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differences; moreover they are decidedly less complex. Chinese problems,
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even if they affected no one outside China, would be of vast importance,
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since the Chinese are estimated to constitute about a quarter of the
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human race. In fact, however, all the world will be vitally affected by
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the development of Chinese affairs, which may well prove a decisive
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factor, for good or evil, during the next two centuries. This makes it
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important, to Europe and America almost as much as to Asia, that there
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should be an intelligent understanding of the questions raised by China,
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even if, as yet, definite answers are difficult to give.
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The questions raised by the present condition of China fall naturally
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into three groups, economic, political, and cultural. No one of these
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groups, however, can be considered in isolation, because each is
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intimately bound up with the other two. For my part, I think the
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cultural questions are the most important, both for China and for
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mankind; if these could be solved, I would accept, with more or less
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equanimity, any political or economic system which ministered to that
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end. Unfortunately, however, cultural questions have little interest for
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practical men, who regard money and power as the proper ends for nations
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as for individuals. The helplessness of the artist in a hard-headed
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business community has long been a commonplace of novelists and
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moralizers, and has made collectors feel virtuous when they bought up
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the pictures of painters who had died in penury. China may be regarded
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as an artist nation, with the virtues and vices to be expected of the
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artist: virtues chiefly useful to others, and vices chiefly harmful to
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oneself. Can Chinese virtues be preserved? Or must China, in order to
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survive, acquire, instead, the vices which make for success and cause
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misery to others only? And if China does copy the model set by all
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foreign nations with which she has dealings, what will become of all of
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us?
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China has an ancient civilization which is now undergoing a very rapid
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process of change. The traditional civilization of China had developed
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in almost complete independence of Europe, and had merits and demerits
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quite different from those of the West. It would be futile to attempt to
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strike a balance; whether our present culture is better or worse, on the
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whole, than that which seventeenth-century missionaries found in the
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Celestial Empire is a question as to which no prudent person would
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venture to pronounce. But it is easy to point to certain respects in
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which we are better than old China, and to other respects in which we
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are worse. If intercourse between Western nations and China is to be
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fruitful, we must cease to regard ourselves as missionaries of a
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superior civilization, or, worse still, as men who have a right to
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exploit, oppress, and swindle the Chinese because they are an "inferior"
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race. I do not see any reason to believe that the Chinese are inferior
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to ourselves; and I think most Europeans, who have any intimate
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knowledge of China, would take the same view.
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In comparing an alien culture with one's own, one is forced to ask
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oneself questions more fundamental than any that usually arise in regard
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to home affairs. One is forced to ask: What are the things that I
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ultimately value? What would make me judge one sort of society more
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desirable than another sort? What sort of ends should I most wish to see
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realized in the world? Different people will answer these questions
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differently, and I do not know of any argument by which I could persuade
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a man who gave an answer different from my own. I must therefore be
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content merely to state the answer which appeals to me, in the hope that
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the reader may feel likewise.
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The main things which seem to me important on their own account, and not
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merely as means to other things, are: knowledge, art, instinctive
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happiness, and relations of friendship or affection. When I speak of
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knowledge, I do not mean all knowledge; there is much in the way of dry
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lists of facts that is merely useful, and still more that has no
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appreciable value of any kind. But the understanding of Nature,
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incomplete as it is, which is to be derived from science, I hold to be a
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thing which is good and delightful on its own account. The same may be
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said, I think, of some biographies and parts of history. To enlarge on
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this topic would, however, take me too far from my theme. When I speak
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of art as one of the things that have value on their own account, I do
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not mean only the deliberate productions of trained artists, though of
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course these, at their best, deserve the highest place. I mean also the
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almost unconscious effort after beauty which one finds among Russian
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peasants and Chinese coolies, the sort of impulse that creates
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folk-songs, that existed among ourselves before the time of the
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Puritans, and survives in cottage gardens. Instinctive happiness, or joy
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of life, is one of the most important widespread popular goods that we
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have lost through industrialism and the high pressure at which most of
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us live; its commonness in China is a strong reason for thinking well of
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Chinese civilization.
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In judging of a community, we have to consider, not only how much of
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good or evil there is within the community, but also what effects it has
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in promoting good or evil in other communities, and how far the good
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things which it enjoys depend upon evils elsewhere. In this respect,
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also, China is better than we are. Our prosperity, and most of what we
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endeavour to secure for ourselves, can only be obtained by widespread
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oppression and exploitation of weaker nations, while the Chinese are not
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strong enough to injure other countries, and secure whatever they enjoy
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by means of their own merits and exertions alone.
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These general ethical considerations are by no means irrelevant in
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considering the practical problems of China. Our industrial and
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commercial civilization has been both the effect and the cause of
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certain more or less unconscious beliefs as to what is worth while; in
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China one becomes conscious of these beliefs through the spectacle of a
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society which challenges them by being built, just as unconsciously,
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upon a different standard of values. Progress and efficiency, for
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example, make no appeal to the Chinese, except to those who have come
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under Western influence. By valuing progress and efficiency, we have
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secured power and wealth; by ignoring them, the Chinese, until we
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brought disturbance, secured on the whole a peaceable existence and a
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life full of enjoyment. It is difficult to compare these opposite
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achievements unless we have some standard of values in our minds; and
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unless it is a more or less conscious standard, we shall undervalue the
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less familiar civilization, because evils to which we are not accustomed
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always make a stronger impression than those that we have learned to
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take as a matter of course.
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The culture of China is changing rapidly, and undoubtedly rapid change
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is needed. The change that has hitherto taken place is traceable
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ultimately to the military superiority of the West; but in future our
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economic superiority is likely to be quite as potent. I believe that, if
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the Chinese are left free to assimilate what they want of our
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civilization, and to reject what strikes them as bad, they will be able
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to achieve an organic growth from their own tradition, and to produce a
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very splendid result, combining our merits with theirs. There are,
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however, two opposite dangers to be avoided if this is to happen. The
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first danger is that they may become completely Westernized, retaining
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nothing of what has hitherto distinguished them, adding merely one more
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to the restless, intelligent, industrial, and militaristic nations
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which now afflict this unfortunate planet. The second danger is that
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they may be driven, in the course of resistance to foreign aggression,
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into an intense anti-foreign conservatism as regards everything except
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armaments. This has happened in Japan, and it may easily happen in
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China. The future of Chinese culture is intimately bound up with
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political and economic questions; and it is through their influence that
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dangers arise.
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China is confronted with two very different groups of foreign Powers, on
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the one hand the white nations, on the other hand Japan. In considering
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the effect of the white races on the Far East as a whole, modern Japan
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must count as a Western product; therefore the responsibility for
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Japan's doings in China rests ultimately with her white teachers.
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Nevertheless, Japan remains very unlike Europe and America, and has
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ambitions different from theirs as regards China. We must therefore
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distinguish three possibilities: (1) China may become enslaved to one or
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more white nations; (2) China may become enslaved to Japan; (3) China
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may recover and retain her liberty. Temporarily there is a fourth
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possibility, namely that a consortium of Japan and the White Powers may
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control China; but I do not believe that, in the long run, the Japanese
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will be able to co-operate with England and America. In the long run, I
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believe that Japan must dominate the Far East or go under. If the
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Japanese had a different character this would not be the case; but the
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nature of their ambitions makes them exclusive and unneighbourly. I
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shall give the reasons for this view when I come to deal with the
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relations of China and Japan.
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To understand the problem of China, we must first know something of
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Chinese history and culture before the irruption of the white man, then
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something of modern Chinese culture and its inherent tendencies; next,
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it is necessary to deal in outline with the military and diplomatic
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relations of the Western Powers with China, beginning with our war of
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1840 and ending with the treaty concluded after the Boxer rising of
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1900. Although the Sino-Japanese war comes in this period, it is
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possible to separate, more or less, the actions of Japan in that war,
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and to see what system the White Powers would have established if Japan
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had not existed. Since that time, however, Japan has been the dominant
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foreign influence in Chinese affairs. It is therefore necessary to
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understand how the Japanese became what they are: what sort of nation
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they were before the West destroyed their isolation, and what influence
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the West has had upon them. Lack of understanding of Japan has made
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people in England blind to Japan's aims in China, and unable to
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apprehend the meaning of what Japan has done.
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Political considerations alone, however, will not suffice to explain
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what is going on in relation to China; economic questions are almost
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more important. China is as yet hardly industrialized, and is certainly
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the most important undeveloped area left in the world. Whether the
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resources of China are to be developed by China, by Japan, or by the
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white races, is a question of enormous importance, affecting not only
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the whole development of Chinese civilization, but the balance of power
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in the world, the prospects of peace, the destiny of Russia, and the
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chances of development towards a better economic system in the advanced
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nations.
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The Washington Conference has partly exhibited and partly concealed the
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conflict for the possession of China between nations all of which have
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guaranteed China's independence and integrity. Its outcome has made it
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far more difficult than before to give a hopeful answer as regards Far
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Eastern problems, and in particular as regards the question: Can China
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preserve any shadow of independence without a great development of
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nationalism and militarism? I cannot bring myself to advocate
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nationalism and militarism, yet it is difficult to know what to say to
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patriotic Chinese who ask how they can be avoided. So far, I have found
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only one answer. The Chinese nation, is the most, patient in the world;
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it thinks of centuries as other nations think of decades. It is
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essentially indestructible, and can afford to wait. The "civilized"
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nations of the world, with their blockades, their poison gases, their
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bombs, submarines, and negro armies, will probably destroy each other
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within the next hundred years, leaving the stage to those whose pacifism
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has kept them alive, though poor and powerless. If China can avoid being
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goaded into war, her oppressors may wear themselves out in the end, and
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leave the Chinese free to pursue humane ends, instead of the war and
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rapine and destruction which all white nations love. It is perhaps a
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slender hope for China, and for ourselves it is little better than
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despair. But unless the Great Powers learn some moderation and some
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tolerance, I do not see any better possibility, though I see many that
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are worse.
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Our Western civilization is built upon assumptions, which, to a
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psychologist, are rationalizings of excessive energy. Our industrialism,
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our militarism, our love of progress, our missionary zeal, our
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imperialism, our passion for dominating and organizing, all spring from
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a superflux of the itch for activity. The creed of efficiency for its
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own sake, without regard for the ends to which it is directed, has
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become somewhat discredited in Europe since the war, which would have
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never taken place if the Western nations had been slightly more
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indolent. But in America this creed is still almost universally
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accepted; so it is in Japan, and so it is by the Bolsheviks, who have
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been aiming fundamentally at the Americanization of Russia. Russia, like
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China, may be described as an artist nation; but unlike China it has
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been governed, since the time of Peter the Great, by men who wished to
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introduce all the good and evil of the West. In former days, I might
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have had no doubt that such men were in the right. Some (though not
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many) of the Chinese returned students resemble them in the belief that
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Western push and hustle are the most desirable things on earth. I cannot
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now take this view. The evils produced in China by indolence seem to me
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far less disastrous, from the point of view of mankind at large, than
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those produced throughout the world by the domineering cocksureness of
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Europe and America. The Great War showed that something is wrong with
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our civilization; experience of Russia and China has made me believe
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that those countries can help to show us what it is that is wrong. The
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Chinese have discovered, and have practised for many centuries, a way of
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life which, if it could be adopted by all the world, would make all the
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world happy. We Europeans have not. Our way of life demands strife,
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exploitation, restless change, discontent and destruction. Efficiency
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directed to destruction can only end in annihilation, and it is to this
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consummation that our civilization is tending, if it cannot learn some
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of that wisdom for which it despises the East.
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It was on the Volga, in the summer of 1920, that I first realized how
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profound is the disease in our Western mentality, which the Bolsheviks
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are attempting to force upon an essentially Asiatic population, just as
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Japan and the West are doing in China. Our boat travelled on, day after
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day, through an unknown and mysterious land. Our company were noisy,
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gay, quarrelsome, full of facile theories, with glib explanations of
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everything, persuaded that there is nothing they could not understand
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and no human destiny outside the purview of their system. One of us lay
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at death's door, fighting a grim battle with weakness and terror and the
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indifference of the strong, assailed day and night by the sounds of
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loud-voiced love-making and trivial laughter. And all around us lay a
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great silence, strong as death, unfathomable as the heavens. It seemed
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that none had leisure to hear the silence, yet it called to me so
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insistently that I grew deaf to the harangues of propagandists and the
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endless information of the well-informed.
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One night, very late, our boat stopped in a desolate spot where there
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were no houses, but only a great sandbank, and beyond it a row of
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poplars with the rising moon behind them. In silence I went ashore, and
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found on the sand a strange assemblage of human beings, half-nomads,
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wandering from some remote region of famine, each family huddled
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together surrounded by all its belongings, some sleeping, others
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silently making small fires of twigs. The flickering flames lighted up
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gnarled, bearded faces of wild men, strong, patient, primitive women,
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and children as sedate and slow as their parents. Human beings they
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undoubtedly were, and yet it would have been far easier for me to grow
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intimate with a dog or a cat or a horse than with one of them. I knew
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that they would wait there day after day, perhaps for weeks, until a
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boat came in which they could go to some distant place in which they had
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heard--falsely perhaps--that the earth was more generous than in the
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country they had left. Some would die by the way, all would suffer
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hunger and thirst and the scorching mid-day sun, but their sufferings
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would be dumb. To me they seemed to typify the very soul of Russia,
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unexpressive, inactive from despair, unheeded by the little set of
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Westernizers who make up all the parties of progress or reaction. Russia
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is so vast that the articulate few are lost in it as man and his planet
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are lost in interstellar space. It is possible, I thought, that the
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theorists may increase the misery of the many by trying to force them
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into actions contrary to their primeval instincts, but I could not
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believe that happiness was to be brought to them by a gospel of
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industrialism and forced labour.
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Nevertheless, when morning came I resumed the interminable discussions
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of the materialistic conception of history and the merits of a truly
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popular government. Those with whom I discussed had not seen the
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sleeping wanderers, and would not have been interested if they had seen
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them, since they were not material for propaganda. But something of that
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patient silence had communicated itself to me, something lonely and
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unspoken remained in my heart throughout all the comfortable familiar
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intellectual talk. And at last I began to feel that all politics are
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inspired by a grinning devil, teaching the energetic and quickwitted to
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torture submissive populations for the profit of pocket or power or
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theory. As we journeyed on, fed by food extracted from the peasants,
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protected by an army recruited from among their sons, I wondered what we
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had to give them in return. But I found no answer. From time to time I
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heard their sad songs or the haunting music of the balalaika; but the
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sound mingled with the great silence of the steppes, and left me with a
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terrible questioning pain in which Occidental hopefulness grew pale.
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It was in this mood that I set out for China to seek a new hope.
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CHAPTER II
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CHINA BEFORE THE NINETEENTH CENTURY
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Where the Chinese came from is a matter of conjecture. Their early
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history is known only from their own annals, which throw no light upon
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the question. The Shu-King, one of the Confucian classics (edited, not
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composed, by Confucius), begins, like Livy, with legendary accounts of
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princes whose virtues and vices are intended to supply edification or
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warning to subsequent rulers. Yao and Shun were two model Emperors,
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whose date (if any) was somewhere in the third millennium B.C. "The age
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of Yao and Shun," in Chinese literature, means what "the Golden Age"
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mean with us. It seems certain that, when Chinese history begins, the
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Chinese occupied only a small part of what is now China, along the banks
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of the Yellow River. They were agricultural, and had already reached a
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fairly high level of civilization--much higher than that of any other
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part of Eastern Asia. The Yellow River is a fierce and terrible stream,
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too swift for navigation, turgid, and full of mud, depositing silt upon
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its bed until it rises above the surrounding country, when it suddenly
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alters its course, sweeping away villages and towns in a destructive
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torrent. Among most early agricultural nations, such a river would have
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inspired superstitious awe, and floods would have been averted by human
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sacrifice; in the Shu-King, however, there is little trace of
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superstition. Yao and Shun, and Y� (the latter's successor), were all
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occupied in combating the inundations, but their methods were those of
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the engineer, not of the miracle-worker. This shows, at least, the state
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of belief in the time of Confucius. The character ascribed to Yao shows
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what was expected of an Emperor:--
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He was reverential, intelligent, accomplished, and
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thoughtful--naturally and without effort. He was sincerely
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courteous, and capable of all complaisance. The display of these
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qualities reached to the four extremities of the empire, and
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extended from earth to heaven. He was able to make the able and
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virtuous distinguished, and thence proceeded to the love of the
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nine classes of his kindred, who all became harmonious. He also
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regulated and polished the people of his domain, who all became
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brightly intelligent. Finally, he united and harmonized the
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myriad States of the empire; and lo! the black-haired people were
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transformed. The result was universal concord.[1]
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The first date which can be assigned with precision in Chinese history
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is that of an eclipse of the sun in 776 B.C.[2] There is no reason to
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doubt the general correctness of the records for considerably earlier
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times, but their exact chronology cannot be fixed. At this period, the
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Chou dynasty, which fell in 249 B.C. and is supposed to have begun in
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1122 B.C., was already declining in power as compared with a number of
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nominally subordinate feudal States. The position of the Emperor at this
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time, and for the next 500 years, was similar to that of the King of
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France during those parts of the Middle Ages when his authority was at
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its lowest ebb. Chinese history consists of a series of dynasties, each
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strong at first and weak afterwards, each gradually losing control over
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subordinates, each followed by a period of anarchy (sometimes lasting
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for centuries), and ultimately succeeded by a new dynasty which
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temporarily re-establishes a strong Central Government. Historians
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always attribute the fall of a dynasty to the excessive power of
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eunuchs, but perhaps this is, in part, a literary convention.
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What distinguishes the Emperor is not so much his political power, which
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fluctuates with the strength of his personality, as certain religious
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prerogatives. The Emperor is the Son of Heaven; he sacrifices to Heaven
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at the winter solstice. The early Chinese used "Heaven" as synonymous
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with "The Supreme Ruler," a monotheistic God;[3] indeed Professor Giles
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maintains, by arguments which seem conclusive, that the correct
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translation of the Emperor's title would be "Son of God." The word
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"Tien," in Chinese, is used both for the sky and for God, though the
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latter sense has become rare. The expression "Shang Ti," which means
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"Supreme Ruler," belongs in the main to pre-Confucian times, but both
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terms originally represented a God as definitely anthropomorphic as the
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God of the Old Testament.[4]
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As time went by the Supreme Ruler became more shadowy, while "Heaven"
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remained, on account of the Imperial rites connected with it. The
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Emperor alone had the privilege of worshipping "Heaven," and the rites
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continued practically unchanged until the fall of the Manchu dynasty in
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1911. In modern times they were performed in the Temple of Heaven in
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Peking, one of the most beautiful places in the world. The annual
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sacrifice in the Temple of Heaven represented almost the sole official
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survival of pre-Confucian religion, or indeed of anything that could be
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called religion in the strict sense; for Buddhism and Taoism have never
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had any connection with the State.
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The history of China is known in some detail from the year 722 B.C.,
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because with this year begins Confucius' _Springs and Autumns_, which is
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a chronicle of the State of Lu, in which Confucius was an official.
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One of the odd things about the history of China is that after the
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Emperors have been succeeding each other for more than 2,000 years, one
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comes to a ruler who is known as the "First Emperor," Shih Huang Ti. He
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acquired control over the whole Empire, after a series of wars, in 221
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B.C., and died in 210 B.C. Apart from his conquests, he is remarkable
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for three achievements: the building of the Great Wall against the Huns,
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the destruction of feudalism, and the burning of the books. The
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destruction of feudalism, it must be confessed, had to be repeated by
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many subsequent rulers; for a long time, feudalism tended to grow up
497
again whenever the Central Government was in weak hands. But Shih Huang
498
Ti was the first ruler who made his authority really effective over all
499
China in historical times. Although his dynasty came to an end with his
500
son, the impression he made is shown by the fact that our word "China"
501
is probably derived from his family name, Tsin or Chin[5]. (The Chinese
502
put the family name first.) His Empire was roughly co-extensive with
503
what is now China proper.
504
505
The destruction of the books was a curious incident. Shih Huang Ti, as
506
appears from his calling himself "First Emperor," disliked being
507
reminded of the fact that China had existed before his time; therefore
508
history was anathema to him. Moreover the literati were already a strong
509
force in the country, and were always (following Confucius) in favour of
510
the preservation of ancient customs, whereas Shih Huang Ti was a
511
vigorous innovator. Moreover, he appears to have been uneducated and not
512
of pure Chinese race. Moved by the combined motives of vanity and
513
radicalism, he issued an edict decreeing that--
514
515
All official histories, except the memoirs of Tsin (his own
516
family), shall be burned; except the persons who have the office
517
of literati of the great learning, those who in the Empire permit
518
themselves to hide the Shi-King, the Shu-King (Confucian
519
classics), or the discourses of the hundred schools, must all go
520
before the local civil and military authorities so that they may
521
be burned. Those who shall dare to discuss among themselves the
522
Shi-King and the Shu-King shall be put to death and their corpses
523
exposed in a public place; those who shall make use of antiquity
524
to belittle modern times shall be put to death with their
525
relations.... Thirty days after the publication of this edict,
526
those who have not burned their books shall be branded and sent
527
to forced labour. The books which shall not be proscribed are
528
those of medicine and pharmacy, of divination ..., of agriculture
529
and of arboriculture. As for those who desire to study the laws
530
and ordinances, let them take the officials as masters. (Cordier,
531
op. cit. i. p. 203.)
532
533
It will be seen that the First Emperor was something of a Bolshevik. The
534
Chinese literati, naturally, have blackened his memory. On the other
535
hand, modern Chinese reformers, who have experienced the opposition of
536
old-fashioned scholars, have a certain sympathy with his attempt to
537
destroy the innate conservatism of his subjects. Thus Li Ung Bing[6]
538
says:--
539
540
No radical change can take place in China without encountering
541
the opposition of the literati. This was no less the case then
542
than it is now. To abolish feudalism by one stroke was a radical
543
change indeed. Whether the change was for the better or the
544
worse, the men of letters took no time to inquire; whatever was
545
good enough for their fathers was good enough for them and their
546
children. They found numerous authorities in the classics to
547
support their contention and these they freely quoted to show
548
that Shih Huang Ti was wrong. They continued to criticize the
549
government to such an extent that something had to be done to
550
silence the voice of antiquity ... As to how far this decree (on
551
the burning of the books) was enforced, it is hard to say. At any
552
rate, it exempted all libraries of the government, or such as
553
were in possession of a class of officials called Po Szu or
554
Learned Men. If any real damage was done to Chinese literature
555
under the decree in question, it is safe to say that it was not
556
of such a nature as later writers would have us believe. Still,
557
this extreme measure failed to secure the desired end, and a
558
number of the men of letters in Han Yang, the capital, was
559
subsequently buried alive.
560
561
This passage is written from the point of view of Young China, which is
562
anxious to assimilate Western learning in place of the dead scholarship
563
of the Chinese classics. China, like every other civilized country, has
564
a tradition which stands in the way of progress. The Chinese have
565
excelled in stability rather than in progress; therefore Young China,
566
which perceives that the advent of industrial civilization has made
567
progress essential to continued national existence, naturally looks with
568
a favourable eye upon Shih Huang Ti's struggle with the reactionary
569
pedants of his age. The very considerable literature which has come
570
down to us from before his time shows, in any case, that his edict was
571
somewhat ineffective; and in fact it was repealed after twenty-two
572
years, in 191. B.C.
573
574
After a brief reign by the son of the First Emperor, who did not inherit
575
his capacity, we come to the great Han dynasty, which reigned from 206
576
B.C. to A.D. 220. This was the great age of Chinese imperialism--exactly
577
coeval with the great age of Rome. In the course of their campaigns in
578
Northern India and Central Asia, the Chinese were brought into contact
579
with India, with Persia, and even with the Roman Empire.[7] Their
580
relations with India had a profound effect upon their religion, as well
581
as upon that of Japan, since they led to the introduction of Buddhism.
582
Relations with Rome were chiefly promoted by the Roman desire for silk,
583
and continued until the rise of Mohammedanism. They had little
584
importance for China, though we learn, for example, that about A.D. 164
585
a treatise on astronomy was brought to China from the Roman Empire.[8]
586
Marcus Aurelius appears in Chinese history under the name An Tun, which
587
stands for Antoninus.
588
589
It was during this period that the Chinese acquired that immense
590
prestige in the Far East which lasted until the arrival of European
591
armies and navies in the nineteenth century. One is sometimes tempted to
592
think that the irruption of the white man into China may prove almost as
593
ephemeral as the raids of Huns and Tartars into Europe. The military
594
superiority of Europe to Asia is not an eternal law of nature, as we are
595
tempted to think; and our superiority in civilization is a mere
596
delusion. Our histories, which treat the Mediterranean as the centre of
597
the universe, give quite a wrong perspective. Cordier,[9] dealing with
598
the campaigns and voyages of discovery which took place under the Han
599
dynasty, says:--
600
601
The Occidentals have singularly contracted the field of the
602
history of the world when they have grouped around the people of
603
Israel, Greece, and Rome the little that they knew of the
604
expansion of the human race, being completely ignorant of these
605
voyagers who ploughed the China Sea and the Indian Ocean, of
606
these cavalcades across the immensities of Central Asia up to the
607
Persian Gulf. The greatest part of the universe, and at the same
608
time a civilization different but certainly as developed as that
609
of the ancient Greeks and Romans, remained unknown to those who
610
wrote the history of their little world while they believed that
611
they, were setting forth the history of the world as a whole.
612
613
In our day, this provincialism, which impregnates all our culture, is
614
liable to have disastrous consequences politically, as well as for the
615
civilization of mankind. We must make room for Asia in our thoughts, if
616
we are not to rouse Asia to a fury of self-assertion.
617
618
After the Han dynasty there are various short dynasties and periods of
619
disorder, until we come to the Tang dynasty (A.D. 618-907). Under this
620
dynasty, in its prosperous days, the Empire acquired its greatest
621
extent, and art and poetry reached their highest point.[10] The Empire
622
of Jenghis Khan (died 1227) was considerably greater, and contained a
623
great part of China; but Jenghis Khan was a foreign conqueror. Jenghis
624
and his generals, starting from Mongolia, appeared as conquerors in
625
China, India, Persia, and Russia. Throughout Central Asia, Jenghis
626
destroyed every man, woman, and child in the cities he captured. When
627
Merv was captured, it was transformed into a desert and 700,000 people
628
were killed. But it was said that many had escaped by lying among the
629
corpses and pretending to be dead; therefore at the capture of Nishapur,
630
shortly afterwards, it was ordered that all the inhabitants should have
631
their heads cut off. Three pyramids of heads were made, one of men, one
632
of women, and one of children. As it was feared that some might have
633
escaped by hiding underground, a detachment of soldiers was left to kill
634
any that might emerge.[11] Similar horrors were enacted at Moscow and
635
Kieff, in Hungary and Poland. Yet the man responsible for these
636
massacres was sought in alliance by St. Louis and the Pope. The times of
637
Jenghis Khan remind one of the present day, except that his methods of
638
causing death were more merciful than those that have been employed
639
since the Armistice.
640
641
Kublai Khan (died 1294), who is familiar, at least by name, through
642
Marco Polo and Coleridge; was the grandson of Jenghis Khan, and the
643
first Mongol who was acknowledged Emperor of China, where he ousted the
644
Sung dynasty (960-1277). By this time, contact with China had somewhat
645
abated the savagery of the first conquerors. Kublai removed his capital
646
from Kara Korom in Mongolia to Peking. He built walls like those which
647
still surround the city, and established on the walls an observatory
648
which is preserved to this day. Until 1900, two of the astronomical
649
instruments constructed by Kublai were still to be seen in this
650
observatory, but the Germans removed them to Potsdam after the
651
suppression of the Boxers.[12] I understand they have been restored in
652
accordance with one of the provisions of the Treaty of Versailles. If
653
so, this was probably the most important benefit which that treaty
654
secured to the world.
655
656
Kublai plays the same part in Japanese history that Philip II plays in
657
the history of England. He prepared an Invincible Armada, or rather two
658
successive armadas, to conquer Japan, but they were defeated, partly by
659
storms, and partly by Japanese valour.
660
661
After Kublai, the Mongol Emperors more and more adopted Chinese ways,
662
and lost their tyrannical vigour. Their dynasty came to an end in 1370,
663
and was succeeded by the pure Chinese Ming dynasty, which lasted until
664
the Manchu conquest of 1644. The Manchus in turn adopted Chinese ways,
665
and were overthrown by a patriotic revolution in 1911, having
666
contributed nothing notable to the native culture of China except the
667
pigtail, officially abandoned at the Revolution.
668
669
The persistence of the Chinese Empire down to our own day is not to be
670
attributed to any military skill; on the contrary, considering its
671
extent and resources, it has at most times shown itself weak and
672
incompetent in war. Its southern neighbours were even less warlike, and
673
were less in extent. Its northern and western neighbours inhabited a
674
barren country, largely desert, which was only capable of supporting a
675
very sparse population. The Huns were defeated by the Chinese after
676
centuries of warfare; the Tartars and Manchus, on the contrary,
677
conquered China. But they were too few and too uncivilized to impose
678
their ideas or their way of life upon China, which absorbed them and
679
went on its way as if they had never existed. Rome could have survived
680
the Goths, if they had come alone, but the successive waves of
681
barbarians came too quickly to be all civilized in turn. China was saved
682
from this fate by the Gobi Desert and the Tibetan uplands. Since the
683
white men have taken to coming by sea, the old geographical immunity is
684
lost, and greater energy will be required to preserve the national
685
independence.
686
687
In spite of geographical advantages, however, the persistence of Chinese
688
civilization, fundamentally unchanged since the introduction of
689
Buddhism, is a remarkable phenomenon. Egypt and Babylonia persisted as
690
long, but since they fell there has been nothing comparable in the
691
world. Perhaps the main cause is the immense population of China, with
692
an almost complete identity of culture throughout. In the middle of the
693
eighth century, the population of China is estimated at over 50
694
millions, though ten years later, as a result of devastating wars, it is
695
said to have sunk to about 17 millions.[13] A census has been taken at
696
various times in Chinese history, but usually a census of houses, not of
697
individuals. From the number of houses the population is computed by a
698
more or less doubtful calculation. It is probable, also, that different
699
methods were adopted on different occasions, and that comparisons
700
between different enumerations are therefore rather unsafe. Putnam
701
Weale[14] says:--
702
703
The first census taken by the Manchus in 1651, after the
704
restoration of order, returned China's population at 55 million
705
persons, which is less than the number given in the first census
706
of the Han dynasty, A.D. 1, and about the same as when Kublai
707
Khan established the Mongal dynasty in 1295. (This is presumably
708
a misprint, as Kublai died in 1294.) Thus we are faced by the
709
amazing fact that, from the beginning of the Christian era, the
710
toll of life taken by internecine and frontier wars in China was
711
so great that in spite of all territorial expansion the
712
population for upwards of sixteen centuries remained more or less
713
stationary. There is in all history no similar record. Now,
714
however, came a vast change. Thus three years after the death of
715
the celebrated Manchu Emperor Kang Hsi, in 1720, the population
716
had risen to 125 millions. At the beginning of the reign of the
717
no less illustrious Ch'ien Lung (1743) it was returned at 145
718
millions; towards the end of his reign, in 1783, it had doubled,
719
and was given as 283 millions. In the reign of Chia Ch'ing (1812)
720
it had risen to 360 millions; before the Taiping rebellion (1842)
721
it had grown to 413 millions; after that terrible rising it sunk
722
to 261 millions.
723
724
I do not think such definite statements are warranted. The China Year
725
Book for 1919 (the latest I have seen) says (p. 1):--
726
727
The taking of a census by the methods adopted in Western nations
728
has never yet been attempted in China, and consequently estimates
729
of the total population have varied to an extraordinary degree.
730
The nearest approach to a reliable estimate is, probably, the
731
census taken by the Minchengpu (Ministry of Interior) in 1910,
732
the results of which are embodied in a report submitted to the
733
Department of State at Washington by Mr. Raymond P. Tenney, a
734
Student Interpreter at the U.S. Legation, Peking.... It is
735
pointed out that even this census can only be regarded as
736
approximate, as, with few exceptions, households and not
737
individuals were counted.
738
739
The estimated population of the Chinese Empire (exclusive of Tibet) is
740
given, on the basis of this census, as 329,542,000, while the population
741
of Tibet is estimated at 1,500,000. Estimates which have been made at
742
various other dates are given as follows (p. 2):
743
744
A.D. A.D.
745
1381 59,850,000 / 143,125,225
746
1412 66,377,000 1760--203,916,477
747
1580 60,692,000 1761 205,293,053
748
1662 21,068,000 1762 198,214,553
749
1668 25,386,209 1790 155,249,897
750
/ 23,312,200 / 307,467,200
751
1710 --27,241,129 1792- 333,000,000
752
1711 28,241,129 / 362,467,183
753
1736 125,046,245 1812--360,440,000
754
/ 157,343,975 1842 413,021,000
755
1743 149,332,730 1868 404,946,514
756
\ 150,265,475 1881 380,000,000
757
1753 103,050,600 1882 381,309,000
758
1885 377,636,000
759
760
These figures suffice to show how little is known about the population
761
of China. Not only are widely divergent estimates made in the same year
762
(_e.g._ 1760), but in other respects the figures are incredible. Mr.
763
Putnam Weale might contend that the drop from 60 millions in 1580 to 21
764
millions in 1662 was due to the wars leading to the Manchu conquest. But
765
no one can believe that between 1711 and 1736 the population increased
766
from 28 millions to 125 millions, or that it doubled between 1790 and
767
1792. No one knows whether the population of China is increasing or
768
diminishing, whether people in general have large or small families, or
769
any of the other facts that vital statistics are designed to elucidate.
770
What is said on these subjects, however dogmatic, is no more than
771
guess-work. Even the population of Peking is unknown. It is said to be
772
about 900,000, but it may be anywhere between 800,000 and a million. As
773
for the population of the Chinese Empire, it is probably safe to assume
774
that it is between three and four hundred millions, and somewhat likely
775
that it is below three hundred and fifty millions. Very little indeed
776
can be said with confidence as to the population of China in former
777
times; so little that, on the whole, authors who give statistics are to
778
be distrusted.
779
780
There are certain broad features of the traditional Chinese civilization
781
which give it its distinctive character. I should be inclined to select
782
as the most important: (1) The use of ideograms instead of an alphabet
783
in writing; (2) The substitution of the Confucian ethic for religion
784
among the educated classes; (3) government by literati chosen by
785
examination instead of by a hereditary aristocracy. The family system
786
distinguishes traditional China from modern Europe, but represents a
787
stage which most other civilizations have passed through, and which is
788
therefore not distinctively Chinese; the three characteristics which I
789
have enumerated, on the other hand, distinguish China from all other
790
countries of past times. Something must be said at this stage about each
791
of the three.
792
793
1. As everyone knows, the Chinese do not have letters, as we do, but
794
symbols for whole words. This has, of course, many inconveniences: it
795
means that, in learning to write, there are an immense number of
796
different signs to be learnt, not only 26 as with us; that there is no
797
such thing as alphabetical order, so that dictionaries, files,
798
catalogues, etc., are difficult to arrange and linotype is impossible;
799
that foreign words, such as proper names and scientific terms, cannot be
800
written down by sound, as in European languages, but have to be
801
represented by some elaborate device.[15] For these reasons, there is a
802
movement for phonetic writing among the more advanced Chinese reformers;
803
and I think the success of this movement is essential if China is to
804
take her place among the bustling hustling nations which consider that
805
they have a monopoly of all excellence. Even if there were no other
806
argument for the change, the difficulty of elementary education, where
807
reading and writing take so long to learn, would be alone sufficient to
808
decide any believer in democracy. For practical purposes, therefore, the
809
movement for phonetic writing deserves support.
810
811
There are, however, many considerations, less obvious to a European,
812
which can be adduced in favour of the ideographic system, to which
813
something of the solid stability of the Chinese civilization is probably
814
traceable. To us, it seems obvious that a written word must represent a
815
sound, whereas to the Chinese it represents an idea. We have adopted the
816
Chinese system ourselves as regards numerals; "1922," for example, can
817
be read in English, French, or any other language, with quite different
818
sounds, but with the same meaning. Similarly what is written in Chinese
819
characters can be read throughout China, in spite of the difference of
820
dialects which are mutually unintelligible when spoken. Even a Japanese,
821
without knowing a word of spoken Chinese, can read out Chinese script in
822
Japanese, just as he could read a row of numerals written by an
823
Englishman. And the Chinese can still read their classics, although the
824
spoken language must have changed as much as French has changed from
825
Latin.
826
827
The advantage of writing over speech is its greater permanence, which
828
enables it to be a means of communication between different places and
829
different times. But since the spoken language changes from place to
830
place and from time to time, the characteristic advantage of writing is
831
more fully attained by a script which does not aim at representing
832
spoken sounds than by one which does.
833
834
Speaking historically, there is nothing peculiar in the Chinese method
835
of writing, which represents a stage through which all writing probably
836
passed. Writing everywhere seems to have begun as pictures, not as a
837
symbolic representation of sounds. I understand that in Egyptian
838
hieroglyphics the course of development from ideograms to phonetic
839
writing can be studied. What is peculiar in China is the preservation of
840
the ideographic system throughout thousands of years of advanced
841
civilization--a preservation probably due, at least in part, to the fact
842
that the spoken language is monosyllabic, uninflected and full of
843
homonyms.
844
845
As to the way in which the Chinese system of writing has affected the
846
mentality of those who employ it, I find some suggestive reflections in
847
an article published in the _Chinese Students' Monthly_ (Baltimore),
848
for February 1922, by Mr. Chi Li, in an article on "Some Anthropological
849
Problems of China." He says (p. 327):--
850
851
Language has been traditionally treated by European scientists as
852
a collection of sounds instead of an expression of something
853
inner and deeper than the vocal apparatus as it should be. The
854
accumulative effect of language-symbols upon one's mental
855
formulation is still an unexploited field. Dividing the world
856
culture of the living races on this basis, one perceives a
857
fundamental difference of its types between the alphabetical
858
users and the hieroglyphic users, each of which has its own
859
virtues and vices. Now, with all respects to alphabetical
860
civilization, it must be frankly stated that it has a grave and
861
inherent defect in its lack of solidity. The most civilized
862
portion under the alphabetical culture is also inhabited by the
863
most fickled people. The history of the Western land repeats the
864
same story over and over again. Thus up and down with the Greeks;
865
up and down with Rome; up and down with the Arabs. The ancient
866
Semitic and Hametic peoples are essentially alphabetic users, and
867
their civilizations show the same lack of solidity as the Greeks
868
and the Romans. Certainly this phenomenon can be partially
869
explained by the extra-fluidity of the alphabetical language
870
which cannot be depended upon as a suitable organ to conserve any
871
solid idea. Intellectual contents of these people may be likened
872
to waterfalls and cataracts, rather than seas and oceans. No
873
other people is richer in ideas than they; but no people would
874
give up their valuable ideas as quickly as they do....
875
876
The Chinese language is by all means the counterpart of the
877
alphabetic stock. It lacks most of the virtues that are found in
878
the alphabetic language; but as an embodiment of simple and final
879
truth, it is invulnerable to storm and stress. It has already
880
protected the Chinese civilization for more than forty centuries.
881
It is solid, square, and beautiful, exactly as the spirit of it
882
represents. Whether it is the spirit that has produced this
883
language or whether this language has in turn accentuated the
884
spirit remains to be determined.
885
886
Without committing ourselves wholly to the theory here set forth, which
887
is impregnated with Chinese patriotism, we must nevertheless admit that
888
the Westerner is unaccustomed to the idea of "alphabetical civilization"
889
as merely one kind, to which he happens to belong. I am not competent to
890
judge as to the importance of the ideographic script in producing the
891
distinctive characteristics of Chinese civilization, but I have no doubt
892
that this importance is very great, and is more or less of the kind
893
indicated in the above quotation.
894
895
2. Confucius (B.C. 551-479) must be reckoned, as regards his social
896
influence, with the founders of religions. His effect on institutions
897
and on men's thoughts has been of the same kind of magnitude as that of
898
Buddha, Christ, or Mahomet, but curiously different in its nature.
899
Unlike Buddha and Christ, he is a completely historical character, about
900
whose life a great deal is known, and with whom legend and myth have
901
been less busy than with most men of his kind. What most distinguishes
902
him from other founders is that he inculcated a strict code of ethics,
903
which has been respected ever since, but associated it with very little
904
religious dogma, which gave place to complete theological scepticism in
905
the countless generations of Chinese literati who revered his memory and
906
administered the Empire.
907
908
Confucius himself belongs rather to the type of Lycurgus and Solon than
909
to that of the great founders of religions. He was a practical
910
statesman, concerned with the administration of the State; the virtues
911
he sought to inculcate were not those of personal holiness, or designed
912
to secure salvation in a future life, but rather those which lead to a
913
peaceful and prosperous community here on earth. His outlook was
914
essentially conservative, and aimed at preserving the virtues of former
915
ages. He accepted the existing religion--a rather unemphatic
916
monotheism, combined with belief that the spirits of the dead preserved
917
a shadowy existence, which it was the duty of their descendants to
918
render as comfortable as possible. He did not, however, lay any stress
919
upon supernatural matters. In answer to a question, he gave the
920
following definition of wisdom: "To cultivate earnestly our duty towards
921
our neighbour, and to reverence spiritual beings while maintaining
922
always a due reserve."[16] But reverence for spiritual beings was not an
923
_active_ part of Confucianism, except in the form of ancestor-worship,
924
which was part of filial piety, and thus merged in duty towards one's
925
neighbour. Filial piety included obedience to the Emperor, except when
926
he was so wicked as to forfeit his divine right--for the Chinese, unlike
927
the Japanese, have always held that resistance to the Emperor was
928
justified if he governed very badly. The following passage from
929
Professor Giles[17] illustrates this point:--
930
931
The Emperor has been uniformly regarded as the son of God by
932
adoption only, and liable to be displaced from that position as a
933
punishment for the offence of misrule.... If the ruler failed in
934
his duties, the obligation of the people was at an end, and his
935
divine right disappeared simultaneously. Of this we have an
936
example in a portion of the Canon to be examined by and by. Under
937
the year 558 B.C. we find the following narrative. One of the
938
feudal princes asked an official, saying, "Have not the people of
939
the Wei State done very wrong in expelling their ruler?" "Perhaps
940
the ruler himself," was the reply, "may have done very wrong....
941
If the life of the people is impoverished, and if the spirits
942
are deprived of their sacrifices, of what use is the ruler, and
943
what can the people do but get rid of him?"
944
945
This very sensible doctrine has been accepted at all times throughout
946
Chinese history, and has made rebellions only too frequent.
947
948
Filial piety, and the strength of the family generally, are perhaps the
949
weakest point in Confucian ethics, the only point where the system
950
departs seriously from common sense. Family feeling has militated
951
against public spirit, and the authority of the old has increased the
952
tyranny of ancient custom. In the present day, when China is confronted
953
with problems requiring a radically new outlook, these features of the
954
Confucian system have made it a barrier to necessary reconstruction, and
955
accordingly we find all those foreigners who wish to exploit China
956
praising the old tradition and deriding the efforts of Young China to
957
construct something more suited to modern needs. The way in which
958
Confucian emphasis on filial piety prevented the growth of public spirit
959
is illustrated by the following story:[18]
960
961
One of the feudal princes was boasting to Confucius of the high
962
level of morality which prevailed in his own State. "Among us
963
here," he said, "you will find upright men. If a father has
964
stolen a sheep, his son will give evidence against him." "In my
965
part of the country," replied Confucius, "there is a different
966
standard from this. A father will shield his son, a son will
967
shield his father. It is thus that uprightness will be found."
968
969
It is interesting to contrast this story with that of the elder Brutus
970
and his sons, upon which we in the West were all brought up.
971
972
Chao Ki, expounding the Confucian doctrine, says it is contrary to
973
filial piety to refuse a lucrative post by which to relieve the
974
indigence of one's aged parents.[19] This form of sin, however, is rare
975
in China as in other countries.
976
977
The worst failure of filial piety, however, is to remain without
978
children, since ancestors are supposed to suffer if they have no
979
descendants to keep up their cult. It is probable that this doctrine has
980
made the Chinese more prolific, in which case it has had great
981
biological importance. Filial piety is, of course, in no way peculiar to
982
China, but has been universal at a certain stage of culture. In this
983
respect, as in certain others, what is peculiar to China is the
984
preservation of the old custom after a very high level of civilization
985
had been attained. The early Greeks and Romans did not differ from the
986
Chinese in this respect, but as their civilization advanced the family
987
became less and less important. In China, this did not begin to happen
988
until our own day.
989
990
Whatever may be said against filial piety carried to excess, it is
991
certainly less harmful than its Western counterpart, patriotism. Both,
992
of course, err in inculcating duties to a certain portion of mankind to
993
the practical exclusion of the rest. But patriotism directs one's
994
loyalty to a fighting unit, which filial piety does not (except in a
995
very primitive society). Therefore patriotism leads much more easily to
996
militarism and imperialism. The principal method of advancing the
997
interests of one's nation is homicide; the principal method of advancing
998
the interest of one's family is corruption and intrigue. Therefore
999
family feeling is less harmful than patriotism. This view is borne out
1000
by the history and present condition of China as compared to Europe.
1001
1002
Apart from filial piety, Confucianism was, in practice, mainly a code
1003
of civilized behaviour, degenerating at times into an etiquette book. It
1004
taught self-restraint, moderation, and above all courtesy. Its moral
1005
code was not, like those of Buddhism and Christianity, so severe that
1006
only a few saints could hope to live up to it, or so much concerned with
1007
personal salvation as to be incompatible with political institutions. It
1008
was not difficult for a man of the world to live up to the more
1009
imperative parts of the Confucian teaching. But in order to do this he
1010
must exercise at all times a certain kind of self-control--an extension
1011
of the kind which children learn when they are taught to "behave." He
1012
must not break into violent passions; he must not be arrogant; he must
1013
"save face," and never inflict humiliations upon defeated adversaries;
1014
he must be moderate in all things, never carried away by excessive love
1015
or hate; in a word, he must keep calm reason always in control of all
1016
his actions. This attitude existed in Europe in the eighteenth century,
1017
but perished in the French Revolution: romanticism, Rousseau, and the
1018
guillotine put an end to it. In China, though wars and revolutions have
1019
occurred constantly, Confucian calm has survived them all, making them
1020
less terrible for the participants, and making all who were not
1021
immediately involved hold aloof. It is bad manners in China to attack
1022
your adversary in wet weather. Wu-Pei-Fu, I am told, once did it, and
1023
won a victory; the beaten general complained of the breach of etiquette;
1024
so Wu-Pei-Fu went back to the position he held before the battle, and
1025
fought all over again on a fine day. (It should be said that battles in
1026
China are seldom bloody.) In such a country, militarism is not the
1027
scourge it is with us; and the difference is due to the Confucian
1028
ethics.[20]
1029
1030
Confucianism did not assume its present form until the twelfth century
1031
A.D., when the personal God in whom Confucius had believed was thrust
1032
aside by the philosopher Chu Fu Tze,[21] whose interpretation of
1033
Confucianism has ever since been recognized as orthodox. Since the fall
1034
of the Mongols (1370), the Government has uniformly favoured
1035
Confucianism as the teaching of the State; before that, there were
1036
struggles with Buddhism and Taoism, which were connected with magic, and
1037
appealed to superstitious Emperors, quite a number of whom died of
1038
drinking the Taoist elixir of life. The Mongol Emperors were Buddhists
1039
of the Lama religion, which still prevails in Tibet and Mongolia; but
1040
the Manchu Emperors, though also northern conquerors, were
1041
ultra-orthodox Confucians. It has been customary in China, for many
1042
centuries, for the literati to be pure Confucians, sceptical in religion
1043
but not in morals, while the rest of the population believed and
1044
practised all three religions simultaneously. The Chinese have not the
1045
belief, which we owe to the Jews, that if one religion is true, all
1046
others must be false. At the present day, however, there appears to be
1047
very little in the way of religion in China, though the belief in magic
1048
lingers on among the uneducated. At all times, even when there was
1049
religion, its intensity was far less than in Europe. It is remarkable
1050
that religious scepticism has not led, in China, to any corresponding
1051
ethical scepticism, as it has done repeatedly in Europe.
1052
1053
3. I come now to the system of selecting officials by competitive
1054
examination, without which it is hardly likely that so literary and
1055
unsuperstitious a system as that of Confucius could have maintained its
1056
hold. The view of the modern Chinese on this subject is set forth by the
1057
present President of the Republic of China, Hsu Shi-chang, in his book
1058
on _China after the War_, pp. 59-60.[22] After considering the
1059
educational system under the Chou dynasty, he continues:
1060
1061
In later periods, in spite of minor changes, the importance of
1062
moral virtues continued to be stressed upon. For instance, during
1063
the most flourishing period of Tang Dynasty (627-650 A.D.), the
1064
Imperial Academy of Learning, known as Kuo-tzu-chien, was
1065
composed of four collegiate departments, in which ethics was
1066
considered as the most important of all studies. It was said that
1067
in the Academy there were more than three thousand students who
1068
were able and virtuous in nearly all respects, while the total
1069
enrolment, including aspirants from Korea and Japan, was as high
1070
as eight thousand. At the same time, there was a system of
1071
"elections" through which able and virtuous men were recommended
1072
by different districts to the Emperor for appointment to public
1073
offices. College training and local elections supplemented each
1074
other, but in both moral virtues were given the greatest
1075
emphasis.
1076
1077
Although the Imperial Academy exists till this day, it has never
1078
been as nourishing as during that period. For this change the
1079
introduction of the competitive examination or Ko-ch� system,
1080
must be held responsible. The "election" system furnished no
1081
fixed standard for the recommendation of public service
1082
candidates, and, as a result, tended to create an aristocratic
1083
class from which alone were to be found eligible men.
1084
Consequently, the Sung Emperors (960-1277 A.D.) abolished the
1085
elections, set aside the Imperial Academy, and inaugurated the
1086
competitive examination system in their place. The examinations
1087
were to supply both scholars and practical statesmen, and they
1088
were periodically held throughout the later dynasties until the
1089
introduction of the modern educational regime. Useless and
1090
stereotyped as they were in later days, they once served some
1091
useful purpose. Besides, the ethical background of Chinese
1092
education had already been so firmly established, that, in spite
1093
of the emphasis laid by these examinations on pure literary
1094
attainments, moral teachings have survived till this day in
1095
family education and in private schools.
1096
1097
Although the system of awarding Government posts for proficiency in
1098
examinations is much better than most other systems that have prevailed,
1099
such as nepotism, bribery, threats of insurrection, etc., yet the
1100
Chinese system, at any rate after it assumed its final form, was harmful
1101
through the fact that it was based solely on the classics, that it was
1102
purely literary, and that it allowed no scope whatever for originality.
1103
The system was established in its final form by the Emperor Hung Wu
1104
(1368-1398), and remained unchanged until 1905. One of the first objects
1105
of modern Chinese reformers was to get it swept away. Li Ung Bing[23]
1106
says:
1107
1108
In spite of the many good things that may be said to the credit
1109
of Hung Wu, he will ever be remembered in connection with a form
1110
of evil which has eaten into the very heart of the nation. This
1111
was the system of triennial examinations, or rather the form of
1112
Chinese composition, called the "Essay," or the "Eight Legs,"
1113
which, for the first time in the history of Chinese literature,
1114
was made the basis of all literary contests. It was so-named,
1115
because after the introduction of the theme the writer was
1116
required to treat it in four paragraphs, each consisting of two
1117
members, made up of an equal number of sentences and words. The
1118
theme was always chosen from either the Four Books, or the Five
1119
Classics. The writer could not express any opinion of his own, or
1120
any views at variance with those expressed by Chu Hsi and his
1121
school. All he was required to do was to put the few words of
1122
Confucius, or whomsoever it might be, into an essay in conformity
1123
with the prescribed rules. Degrees, which were to serve as
1124
passports to Government positions, were awarded the best writers.
1125
To say that the training afforded by the time required to make a
1126
man efficient in the art of such writing, would at the same time
1127
qualify him to hold the various offices under the Government, was
1128
absurd. But absurd as the whole system was, it was handed down to
1129
recent times from the third year of the reign of Hung Wu, and was
1130
not abolished until a few years ago. No system was more perfect
1131
or effective in retarding the intellectual and literary
1132
development of a nation. With her "Eight Legs," China long ago
1133
reached the lowest point on her downhill journey. It is largely
1134
on account of the long lease of life that was granted to this
1135
rotten system that the teachings of the Sung philosophers have
1136
been so long venerated.
1137
1138
These are the words of a Chinese patriot of the present day, and no
1139
doubt, as a modern system, the "Eight Legs" deserve all the hard things
1140
that he says about them. But in the fourteenth century, when one
1141
considers the practicable alternatives, one can see that there was
1142
probably much to be said for such a plan. At any rate, for good or evil,
1143
the examination system profoundly affected the civilization of China.
1144
Among its good effects were: A widely-diffused respect for learning; the
1145
possibility of doing without a hereditary aristocracy; the selection of
1146
administrators who must at least have been capable of industry; and the
1147
preservation of Chinese civilization in spite of barbarian conquest.
1148
But, like so much else in traditional China, it has had to be swept away
1149
to meet modern needs. I hope nothing of greater value will have to
1150
perish in the struggle to repel the foreign exploiters and the fierce
1151
and cruel system which they miscall civilization.
1152
1153
FOOTNOTES:
1154
1155
[Footnote 1: Legge's _Shu-King,_ p. 15. Quoted in Hirth, _Ancient
1156
History of China_, Columbia University Press, 1911--a book which gives
1157
much useful critical information about early China.]
1158
1159
[Footnote 2: Hirth, op. cit. p. 174. 775 is often wrongly given.]
1160
1161
[Footnote 3: See Hirth, op. cit., p. 100 ff.]
1162
1163
[Footnote 4: On this subject, see Professor Giles's _Confucianism and
1164
its Rivals,_ Williams & Norgate, 1915, Lecture I, especially p. 9.]
1165
1166
[Footnote 5: Cf. Henri Cordier, _Histoire G�n�rale de la Chine_, Paris,
1167
1920, vol. i. p. 213.]
1168
1169
[Footnote 6: _Outlines of Chinese History_ (Shanghai, Commercial Press,
1170
1914), p. 61.]
1171
1172
[Footnote 7: See Hirth, _China and the Roman Orient_ (Leipzig and
1173
Shanghai, 1885), an admirable and fascinating monograph. There are
1174
allusions to the Chinese in Virgil and Horace; cf. Cordier, op. cit., i.
1175
p. 271.]
1176
1177
[Footnote 8: Cordier, op. cit. i. p. 281.]
1178
1179
[Footnote 9: Cordier, op. cit. i. p. 237.]
1180
1181
[Footnote 10: Murdoch, in his _History of Japan_ (vol. i. p. 146), thus
1182
describes the greatness of the early Tang Empire:
1183
1184
"In the following year (618) Li Yuen, Prince of T'ang, established the
1185
illustrious dynasty of that name, which continued to sway the fortunes
1186
of China for nearly three centuries (618-908). After a brilliant reign
1187
of ten years he handed over the imperial dignity to his son, Tai-tsung
1188
(627-650), perhaps the greatest monarch the Middle Kingdom has ever
1189
seen. At this time China undoubtedly stood in the very forefront of
1190
civilization. She was then the most powerful, the most enlightened, the
1191
most progressive, and the best governed empire, not only in Asia, but on
1192
the face of the globe. Tai-tsung's frontiers reached from the confines
1193
of Persia, the Caspian Sea, and the Altai of the Kirghis steppe, along
1194
these mountains to the north side of the Gobi desert eastward to the
1195
inner Hing-an, while Sogdiana, Khorassan, and the regions around the
1196
Hindu Rush also acknowledged his suzerainty. The sovereign of Nepal and
1197
Magadha in India sent envoys; and in 643 envoys appeared from the
1198
Byzantine Empire and the Court of Persia."]
1199
1200
[Footnote 11: Cordier, op. cit. ii. p. 212.]
1201
1202
[Footnote 12: Cordier, op. cit. ii. p. 339.]
1203
1204
[Footnote 13: Cordier, op. cit. i. p. 484.]
1205
1206
[Footnote 14: _The Truth About China and Japan_. George Allen & Unwin,
1207
Ltd., pp. 13, 14.]
1208
1209
[Footnote 15: For example, the nearest approach that could be made in
1210
Chinese to my own name was "Lo-Su." There is a word "Lo," and a word
1211
"Su," for both of which there are characters; but no combination of
1212
characters gives a better approximation to the sound of my name.]
1213
1214
[Footnote 16: Giles, op. cit., p. 74. Professor Giles adds, _� propos_
1215
of the phrase "maintaining always a due reserve," the following
1216
footnote: "Dr. Legge has 'to keep aloof from them,' which would be
1217
equivalent to 'have nothing to do with them.' Confucius seems rather to
1218
have meant 'no familiarity.'"]
1219
1220
[Footnote 17: Op. cit., p. 21.]
1221
1222
[Footnote 18: Giles, op. cit. p. 86.]
1223
1224
[Footnote 19: Cordier, op. cit. i. p. 167.]
1225
1226
[Footnote 20: As far as anti-militarism is concerned, Taoism is even
1227
more emphatic. "The best soldiers," says Lao-Tze, "do not fight."
1228
(Giles, op. cit. p. 150.) Chinese armies contain many good soldiers.]
1229
1230
[Footnote 21: Giles, op. cit., Lecture VIII. When Chu Fu Tze was dead,
1231
and his son-in-law was watching beside his coffin, a singular incident
1232
occurred. Although the sage had spent his life teaching that miracles
1233
are impossible, the coffin rose and remained suspended three feet above
1234
the ground. The pious son-in-law was horrified. "O my revered
1235
father-in-law," he prayed, "do not destroy my faith that miracles are
1236
impossible." Whereupon the coffin slowly descended to earth again, and
1237
the son-in-law's faith revived.]
1238
1239
[Footnote 22: Translated by the Bureau of Economic Information, Peking,
1240
1920.]
1241
1242
[Footnote 23: Op. cit. p. 233.]
1243
1244
1245
1246
1247
CHAPTER III
1248
1249
CHINA AND THE WESTERN POWERS
1250
1251
1252
In order to understand the international position of China, some facts
1253
concerning its nineteenth-century history are indispensable. China was
1254
for many ages the supreme empire of the Far East, embracing a vast and
1255
fertile area, inhabited by an industrious and civilized people.
1256
Aristocracy, in our sense of the word, came to an end before the
1257
beginning of the Christian era, and government was in the hands of
1258
officials chosen for their proficiency in writing in a dead language, as
1259
in England. Intercourse with the West was spasmodic and chiefly
1260
religious. In the early centuries of the Christian era, Buddhism was
1261
imported from India, and some Chinese scholars penetrated to that
1262
country to master the theology of the new religion in its native home,
1263
but in later times the intervening barbarians made the journey
1264
practically impossible. Nestorian Christianity reached China in the
1265
seventh century, and had a good deal of influence, but died out again.
1266
(What is known on this subject is chiefly from the Nestorian monument
1267
discovered in Hsianfu in 1625.) In the seventeenth and early eighteenth
1268
centuries Roman Catholic missionaries acquired considerable favour at
1269
Court, because of their astronomical knowledge and their help in
1270
rectifying the irregularities and confusions of the Chinese
1271
calendar.[24] Their globes and astrolabes are still to be seen on the
1272
walls of Peking. But in the long run they could not resist quarrels
1273
between different orders, and were almost completely excluded from both
1274
China and Japan.
1275
1276
In the year 1793, a British ambassador, Lord Macartney, arrived in
1277
China, to request further trade facilities and the establishment of a
1278
permanent British diplomatic representative. The Emperor at this time
1279
was Chien Lung, the best of the Manchu dynasty, a cultivated man, a
1280
patron of the arts, and an exquisite calligraphist. (One finds specimens
1281
of his writing in all sorts of places in China.) His reply to King
1282
George III is given by Backhouse and Bland.[25] I wish I could quote it
1283
all, but some extracts must suffice. It begins:
1284
1285
You, O King, live beyond the confines of many seas, nevertheless,
1286
impelled by your humble desire to partake of the benefits of our
1287
civilization, you have despatched a mission respectfully bearing
1288
your memorial.... To show your devotion, you have also sent
1289
offerings of your country's produce. I have read your memorial:
1290
the earnest terms in which it is cast reveal a respectful
1291
humility on your part, which is highly praiseworthy.
1292
1293
He goes on to explain, with the patient manner appropriate in dealing
1294
with an importunate child, why George III's desires cannot possibly be
1295
gratified. An ambassador, he assures him, would be useless, for:
1296
1297
If you assert that your reverence for our Celestial Dynasty fills
1298
you with a desire to acquire our civilization, our ceremonies and
1299
code of laws differ so completely from your own that, even if
1300
your Envoy were able to acquire the rudiments of our
1301
civilization, you could not possibly transplant our manners and
1302
customs to your alien soil. Therefore, however adept the Envoy
1303
might become, nothing would be gained thereby.
1304
1305
Swaying the wide world, I have but one aim in view, namely, to
1306
maintain a perfect governance and to fulfil the duties of the
1307
State; strange and costly objects do not interest me. I ... have
1308
no use for your country's manufactures. ...It behoves you, O
1309
King, to respect my sentiments and to display even greater
1310
devotion and loyalty in future, so that, by perpetual submission
1311
to our Throne, you may secure peace and prosperity for your
1312
country hereafter.
1313
1314
He can understand the English desiring the produce of China, but feels
1315
that they have nothing worth having to offer in exchange:
1316
1317
"Our Celestial Empire possesses all things in prolific abundance and
1318
lacks no product within its own borders. There was therefore no need to
1319
import the manufactures of outside barbarians in exchange for our own
1320
produce. But as the tea, silk and porcelain which the Celestial Empire
1321
produces are absolute necessities to European nations and to
1322
yourselves," the limited trade hitherto permitted at Canton is to
1323
continue.
1324
1325
He would have shown less favour to Lord Macartney, but "I do not forget
1326
the lonely remoteness of your island, cut off from the world by
1327
intervening wastes of sea, nor do I overlook your excusable ignorance of
1328
the usages of our Celestial Empire." He concludes with the injunction:
1329
"Tremblingly obey and show no negligence!"
1330
1331
What I want to suggest is that no one understands China until this
1332
document has ceased to seem absurd. The Romans claimed to rule the
1333
world, and what lay outside their Empire was to them of no account. The
1334
Empire of Chien Lung was more extensive, with probably a larger
1335
population; it had risen to greatness at the same time as Rome, and had
1336
not fallen, but invariably defeated all its enemies, either by war or by
1337
absorption. Its neighbours were comparatively barbarous, except the
1338
Japanese, who acquired their civilization by slavish imitation of China.
1339
The view of Chien Lung was no more absurd than that of Alexander the
1340
Great, sighing for new worlds to conquer when he had never even heard of
1341
China, where Confucius had been dead already for a hundred and fifty
1342
years. Nor was he mistaken as regards trade: China produces everything
1343
needed for the happiness of its inhabitants, and we have forced trade
1344
upon them solely for our benefit, giving them in exchange only things
1345
which they would do better without.
1346
1347
Unfortunately for China, its culture was deficient in one respect,
1348
namely science. In art and literature, in manners and customs, it was at
1349
least the equal of Europe; at the time of the Renaissance, Europe would
1350
not have been in any way the superior of the Celestial Empire. There is
1351
a museum in Peking where, side by side with good Chinese art, may be
1352
seen the presents which Louis XIV made to the Emperor when he wished to
1353
impress him with the splendour of _Le Roi Soleil_. Compared to the
1354
Chinese things surrounding them, they were tawdry and barbaric. The fact
1355
that Britain has produced Shakespeare and Milton, Locke and Hume, and
1356
all the other men who have adorned literature and the arts, does not
1357
make us superior to the Chinese. What makes us superior is Newton and
1358
Robert Boyle and their scientific successors. They make us superior by
1359
giving us greater proficiency in the art of killing. It is easier for an
1360
Englishman to kill a Chinaman than for a Chinaman to kill an Englishman.
1361
Therefore our civilization is superior to that of China, and Chien Lung
1362
is absurd. When we had finished with Napoleon, we soon set to work to
1363
demonstrate this proposition.
1364
1365
Our first war with China was in 1840, and was fought because the Chinese
1366
Government endeavoured to stop the importation of opium. It ended with
1367
the cession of Hong-Kong and the opening of five ports to British trade,
1368
as well as (soon afterwards) to the trade of France, America and
1369
Scandinavia. In 1856-60, the English and French jointly made war on
1370
China, and destroyed the Summer Palace near Peking,[26] a building whose
1371
artistic value, on account of the treasures it contained, must have been
1372
about equal to that of Saint Mark's in Venice and much greater than that
1373
of Rheims Cathedral. This act did much to persuade the Chinese of the
1374
superiority of our civilization so they opened seven more ports and the
1375
river Yangtze, paid an indemnity and granted us more territory at
1376
Hong-Kong. In 1870, the Chinese were rash enough to murder a British
1377
diplomat, so the remaining British diplomats demanded and obtained an
1378
indemnity, five more ports, and a fixed tariff for opium. Next, the
1379
French took Annam and the British took Burma, both formerly under
1380
Chinese suzerainty. Then came the war with Japan in 1894-5, leading to
1381
Japan's complete victory and conquest of Korea. Japan's acquisitions
1382
would have been much greater but for the intervention of France, Germany
1383
and Russia, England holding aloof. This was the beginning of our support
1384
of Japan, inspired by fear of Russia. It also led to an alliance between
1385
China and Russia, as a reward for which Russia acquired all the
1386
important rights in Manchuria, which passed to Japan, partly after the
1387
Russo-Japanese war, and partly after the Bolshevik revolution.
1388
1389
The next incident begins with the murder of two German missionaries in
1390
Shantung in 1897. Nothing in their life became them like the leaving of
1391
it; for if they had lived they would probably have made very few
1392
converts, whereas by dying they afforded the world an object-lesson in
1393
Christian ethics. The Germans seized Kiaochow Bay and created a naval
1394
base there; they also acquired railway and mining rights in Shantung,
1395
which, by the Treaty of Versailles, passed to Japan in accordance with
1396
the Fourteen Points. Shantung therefore became virtually a Japanese
1397
possession, though America at Washington has insisted upon its
1398
restitution. The services of the two missionaries to civilization did
1399
not, however, end in China, for their death was constantly used in the
1400
German Reichstag during the first debates on the German Big Navy Bills,
1401
since it was held that warships would make Germany respected in China.
1402
Thus they helped to exacerbate the relations of England and Germany and
1403
to hasten the advent of the Great War. They also helped to bring on the
1404
Boxer rising, which is said to have begun as a movement against the
1405
Germans in Shantung, though the other Powers emulated the Germans in
1406
every respect, the Russians by creating a naval base at Port Arthur,
1407
the British by acquiring Wei-hai-wei and a sphere of influence in the
1408
Yangtze, and so on. The Americans alone held aloof, proclaiming the
1409
policy of Chinese integrity and the Open Door.
1410
1411
The Boxer rising is one of the few Chinese events that all Europeans
1412
know about. After we had demonstrated our superior virtue by the sack of
1413
Peking, we exacted a huge indemnity, and turned the Legation Quarter of
1414
Peking into a fortified city. To this day, it is enclosed by a wall,
1415
filled with European, American, and Japanese troops, and surrounded by a
1416
bare space on which the Chinese are not allowed to build. It is
1417
administered by the diplomatic body, and the Chinese authorities have no
1418
powers over anyone within its gates. When some unusually corrupt and
1419
traitorous Government is overthrown, its members take refuge in the
1420
Japanese (or other) Legation and so escape the punishment of their
1421
crimes, while within the sacred precincts of the Legation Quarter the
1422
Americans erect a vast wireless station said to be capable of
1423
communicating directly with the United States. And so the refutation of
1424
Chien Lung is completed.
1425
1426
Out of the Boxer indemnity, however, one good thing has come. The
1427
Americans found that, after paying all just claims for damages, they
1428
still had a large surplus. This they returned to China to be spent on
1429
higher education, partly in colleges in China under American control,
1430
partly by sending advanced Chinese students to American universities.
1431
The gain to China has been enormous, and the benefit to America from the
1432
friendship of the Chinese (especially the most educated of them) is
1433
incalculable. This is obvious to everyone, yet England shows hardly any
1434
signs of following suit.
1435
1436
To understand the difficulties with which the Chinese Government is
1437
faced, it is necessary to realize the loss of fiscal independence which,
1438
China has suffered as the result of the various wars and treaties which
1439
have been forced upon her. In the early days, the Chinese had no
1440
experience of European diplomacy, and did not know what to avoid; in
1441
later days, they have not been allowed to treat old treaties as scraps
1442
of paper, since that is the prerogative of the Great Powers--a
1443
prerogative which every single one of them exercises.
1444
1445
The best example of this state of affairs is the Customs tariff.[27] At
1446
the end of our first war with China, in 1842, we concluded a treaty
1447
which provided for a duty at treaty ports of 5 per cent. on all imports
1448
and not more than 5 per cent on exports. This treaty is the basis of the
1449
whole Customs system. At the end of our next war, in 1858, we drew up a
1450
schedule of conventional prices on which the 5 per cent. was to be
1451
calculated. This was to be revised every ten years, but has in fact only
1452
been revised twice, once in 1902 and once in 1918.[28] Revision of the
1453
schedule is merely a change in the conventional prices, not a change in
1454
the tariff, which remains fixed at 5 per cent. Change in the tariff is
1455
practically impossible, since China has concluded commercial treaties
1456
involving a most-favoured-nation clause, and the same tariff, with
1457
twelve States besides Great Britain, and therefore any change in the
1458
tariff requires the unanimous consent of thirteen Powers.
1459
1460
When foreign Powers speak of the Open Door as a panacea for China, it
1461
must be remembered that the Open Door does nothing to give the Chinese
1462
the usual autonomy as regards Customs that is enjoyed by other sovereign
1463
States.[29] The treaty of 1842 on which the system rests, has no
1464
time-limit of provision for denunciation by either party, such as other
1465
commercial treaties contain. A low tariff suits the Powers that wish to
1466
find a market for their goods in China, and they have therefore no
1467
motive for consenting to any alteration. In the past, when we practised
1468
free trade, we could defend ourselves by saying that the policy we
1469
forced upon China was the same as that which we adopted ourselves. But
1470
no other nation could make this excuse, nor can we now that we have
1471
abandoned free trade by the Safeguarding of Industries Act.
1472
1473
The import tariff being so low, the Chinese Government is compelled, for
1474
the sake of revenue, to charge the maximum of 5 per cent, on all
1475
exports. This, of course, hinders the development of Chinese commerce,
1476
and is probably a mistake. But the need of sources of revenue is
1477
desperate, and it is not surprising that the Chinese authorities should
1478
consider the tax indispensable.
1479
1480
There is also another system in China, chiefly inherited from the time
1481
of the Taiping rebellion, namely the erection of internal customs
1482
barriers at various important points. This plan is still adopted with
1483
the internal trade. But merchants dealing with the interior and sending
1484
goods to or from a Treaty Port can escape internal customs by the
1485
payment of half the duty charged under the external tariff. As this is
1486
generally less than the internal tariff charges, this provision favours
1487
foreign produce at the expense of that of China. Of course the system of
1488
internal customs is bad, but it is traditional, and is defended on the
1489
ground that revenue is indispensable. China offered to abolish internal
1490
customs in return for certain uniform increases in the import and export
1491
tariff, and Great Britain, Japan, and the United States consented. But
1492
there were ten other Powers whose consent was necessary, and not all
1493
could be induced to agree. So the old system remains in force, not
1494
chiefly through the fault of the Chinese central government. It should
1495
be added that internal customs are collected by the provincial
1496
authorities, who usually intercept them and use them for private armies
1497
and civil war. At the present time, the Central Government is not strong
1498
enough to stop these abuses.
1499
1500
The administration of the Customs is only partially in the hands of the
1501
Chinese. By treaty, the Inspector-General, who is at the head of the
1502
service, must be British so long as our trade with China exceeds that of
1503
any other treaty State; and the appointment of all subordinate officials
1504
is in his hands. In 1918 (the latest year for which I have the figures)
1505
there were 7,500 persons employed in the Customs, and of these 2,000
1506
were non-Chinese. The first Inspector-General was Sir Robert Hart, who,
1507
by the unanimous testimony of all parties, fulfilled his duties
1508
exceedingly well. For the time being, there is much to be said for the
1509
present system. The Chinese have the appointment of the
1510
Inspector-General, and can therefore choose a man who is sympathetic to
1511
their country. Chinese officials are, as a rule, corrupt and indolent,
1512
so that control by foreigners is necessary in creating a modern
1513
bureaucracy. So long as the foreign officials are responsible to the
1514
Chinese Government, not to foreign States, they fulfil a useful
1515
educative function, and help to prepare the way for the creation of an
1516
efficient Chinese State. The problem for China is to secure practical
1517
and intellectual training from the white nations without becoming their
1518
slaves. In dealing with this problem, the system adopted in the Customs
1519
has much to recommend it during the early stages.[30]
1520
1521
At the same time, there are grave infringements of Chinese independence
1522
in the present position of the Customs, apart altogether from the fact
1523
that the tariff is fixed by treaty for ever. Much of the revenue
1524
derivable from customs is mortgaged for various loans and indemnities,
1525
so that the Customs cannot be dealt with from the point of view of
1526
Chinese interests alone. Moreover, in the present state of anarchy, the
1527
Customs administration can exercise considerable control over Chinese
1528
politics by recognizing or not recognizing a given _de facto_
1529
Government. (There is no Government _de jure_, at any rate in the
1530
North.) At present, the Customs Revenue is withheld in the South, and an
1531
artificial bankruptcy is being engineered. In view of the reactionary
1532
instincts of diplomats, this constitutes a terrible obstacle to internal
1533
reform. It means that no Government which is in earnest in attempting
1534
to introduce radical improvements can hope to enjoy the Customs revenue,
1535
which interposes a formidable fiscal barrier in the way of
1536
reconstruction.
1537
1538
There is a similar situation as regards the salt tax. This also was
1539
accepted as security for various foreign loans, and in order to make the
1540
security acceptable the foreign Powers concerned insisted upon the
1541
employment of foreigners in the principal posts. As in the case of the
1542
Customs, the foreign inspectors are appointed by the Chinese Government,
1543
and the situation is in all respects similar to that existing as regards
1544
the Customs.
1545
1546
The Customs and the salt tax form the security for various loans to
1547
China. This, together with foreign administration, gives opportunities
1548
of interference by the Powers which they show no inclination to neglect.
1549
The way in which the situation is utilized may be illustrated by three
1550
telegrams in _The Times_ which appeared during January of this year.
1551
1552
On January 14, 1922, _The Times_ published the following in a telegram
1553
from its Peking correspondent:
1554
1555
It is curious to reflect that this country (China) could be
1556
rendered completely solvent and the Government provided with a
1557
substantial income almost by a stroke of the foreigner's pen,
1558
while without that stroke there must be bankruptcy, pure and
1559
simple. Despite constant civil war and political chaos, the
1560
Customs revenue consistently grows, and last year exceeded all
1561
records by �1,000,000. The increased duties sanctioned by the
1562
Washington Conference will provide sufficient revenue to
1563
liquidate the whole foreign and domestic floating debt in a very
1564
few years, leaving the splendid salt surplus unencumbered for the
1565
Government. The difficulty is not to provide money, but to find a
1566
Government to which to entrust it. Nor is there any visible
1567
prospect of the removal of this difficulty.
1568
1569
I venture to think _The Times_ would regard the difficulty as removed
1570
if the Manchu Empire were restored.
1571
1572
As to the "splendid salt surplus," there are two telegrams from the
1573
Peking correspondent to _The Times_ (of January 12th and 23rd,
1574
respectively) showing what we gain by making the Peking Government
1575
artificially bankrupt. The first telegram (sent on January 10th) is as
1576
follows:--
1577
1578
Present conditions in China are aptly illustrated by what is
1579
happening in one of the great salt revenue stations on the
1580
Yangtsze, near Chinkiang. That portion of the Chinese fleet
1581
faithful to the Central Government--the better half went over to
1582
the Canton Government long ago--has dispatched a squadron of
1583
gunboats to the salt station and notified Peking that if
1584
$3,000,000 (about �400,000) arrears of pay were not immediately
1585
forthcoming the amount would be forcibly recovered from the
1586
revenue. Meanwhile the immense salt traffic on the Yangtsze has
1587
been suspended. The Legations concerned have now sent an Identic
1588
Note to the Government warning it of the necessity for
1589
immediately securing the removal of the obstruction to the
1590
traffic and to the operations of the foreign collectorate.
1591
1592
The second telegram is equally interesting. It is as follows:--
1593
1594
The question of interference with the Salt Gabelle is assuming a
1595
serious aspect. The Chinese squadron of gunboats referred to in
1596
my message of the 10th is still blocking the salt traffic near
1597
Chingkiang, while a new intruder in the shape of an agent of
1598
Wu-Pei-Fu [the Liberal military leader] has installed himself in
1599
the collectorate at Hankow, and is endeavouring to appropriate
1600
the receipts for his powerful master. The British, French, and
1601
Japanese Ministers accordingly have again addressed the
1602
Government, giving notice that if these irregular proceedings do
1603
not cease they will be compelled to take independent action. The
1604
Reorganization Loan of �25,000,000 is secured on the salt
1605
revenues, and interference with the foreign control of the
1606
department constitutes an infringement of the loan agreement. In
1607
various parts of China, some independent of Peking, others not,
1608
the local _Tuchuns_ (military governors) impound the collections
1609
and materially diminish the total coming under the control of the
1610
foreign inspectorate, but the balance remaining has been so
1611
large, and protest so useless, that hitherto all concerned have
1612
considered it expedient to acquiesce. But interference at points
1613
on the Yangtsze, where naval force can be brought to bear, is
1614
another matter. The situation is interesting in view of the
1615
amiable resolutions adopted at Washington, by which the Powers
1616
would seem to have debarred themselves, in the future, from any
1617
active form of intervention in this country. In view of the
1618
extensive opposition to the Liang Shih-yi Cabinet and the present
1619
interference with the salt negotiations, the $90,000,000
1620
(�11,000,000) loan to be secured on the salt surplus has been
1621
dropped. The problem of how to weather the new year settlement on
1622
January 28th remains unsolved.
1623
1624
It is a pretty game: creating artificial bankruptcy, and then inflicting
1625
punishment for the resulting anarchy. How regrettable that the
1626
Washington Conference should attempt to interfere!
1627
1628
It is useless to deny that the Chinese have brought these troubles upon
1629
themselves, by their inability to produce capable and honest officials.
1630
This inability has its roots in Chinese ethics, which lay stress upon a
1631
man's duty to his family rather than to the public. An official is
1632
expected to keep all his relations supplied with funds, and therefore
1633
can only be honest at the expense of filial piety. The decay of the
1634
family system is a vital condition of progress in China. All Young China
1635
realizes this, and one may hope that twenty years hence the level of
1636
honesty among officials may be not lower in China than in Europe--no
1637
very extravagant hope. But for this purpose friendly contact with
1638
Western nations is essential. If we insist upon rousing Chinese
1639
nationalism as we have roused that of India and Japan, the Chinese will
1640
begin to think that wherever they differ from Europe, they differ for
1641
the better. There is more truth in this than Europeans like to think,
1642
but it is not wholly true, and if it comes to be believed our power for
1643
good in China will be at an end.
1644
1645
I have described briefly in this chapter what the Christian Powers did
1646
to China while they were able to act independently of Japan. But in
1647
modern China it is Japanese aggression that is the most urgent problem.
1648
Before considering this, however, we must deal briefly with the rise of
1649
modern Japan--a quite peculiar blend of East and West, which I hope is
1650
not prophetic of the blend to be ultimately achieved in China. But
1651
before passing to Japan, I will give a brief description of the social
1652
and political condition of modern China, without which Japan's action in
1653
China would be unintelligible.
1654
1655
FOOTNOTES:
1656
1657
[Footnote 24: In 1691 the Emperor Kang Hsi issued an edict explaining
1658
his attitude towards various religions. Of Roman Catholicism he says:
1659
"As to the western doctrine which glorifies _Tien Chu_, the Lord of the
1660
Sky, that, too, is heterodox; but because its priests are thoroughly
1661
conversant with mathematics, the Government makes use of them--a point
1662
which you soldiers and people should understand." (Giles, op. cit. p.
1663
252.)]
1664
1665
[Footnote 25: _Annals and Memoirs of the Court of Peking_, pp. 322 ff.]
1666
1667
[Footnote 26: The Summer Palace now shown to tourists is modern, chiefly
1668
built by the Empress Dowager.]
1669
1670
[Footnote 27: There is an admirable account of this question in Chap.
1671
vii. of Sih-Gung Cheng's _Modern China_, Clarendon Press, 1919.]
1672
1673
[Footnote 28: A new revision has been decided upon by the Washington
1674
Conference.]
1675
1676
[Footnote 29: If you lived in a town where the burglars had obtained
1677
possession of the Town Council, they would very likely insist upon the
1678
policy of the Open Door, but you might not consider it wholly
1679
satisfactory. Such is China's situation among the Great Powers.]
1680
1681
[Footnote 30: _The Times_ of November 26, 1921, had a leading article on
1682
Mr. Wellington Koo's suggestion, at Washington, that China ought to be
1683
allowed to recover fiscal autonomy as regards the tariff. Mr. Koo did
1684
not deal with the Customs _administration_, nevertheless _The Times_
1685
assumed that his purpose was to get the administration into the hands of
1686
the Chinese on account of the opportunities of lucrative corruption
1687
which it would afford. I wrote to _The Times_ pointing out that they had
1688
confused the administration with the tariff, and that Mr. Koo was
1689
dealing only with the tariff. In view of the fact that they did not
1690
print either my letter or any other to the same effect, are we to
1691
conclude that their misrepresentation was deliberate and intentional?]
1692
1693
1694
1695
1696
CHAPTER IV
1697
1698
MODERN CHINA
1699
1700
1701
The position of China among the nations of the world is quite peculiar,
1702
because in population and potential strength China is the greatest
1703
nation in the world, while in actual strength at the moment it is one of
1704
the least. The international problems raised by this situation have been
1705
brought into the forefront of world-politics by the Washington
1706
Conference. What settlement, if any, will ultimately be arrived at, it
1707
is as yet impossible to foresee. There are, however, certain broad facts
1708
and principles which no wise solution can ignore, for which I shall try
1709
to give the evidence in the course of the following chapters, but which
1710
it may be as well to state briefly at the outset. First, the Chinese,
1711
though as yet incompetent in politics and backward in economic
1712
development, have, in other respects, a civilization at least as good as
1713
our own, containing elements which the world greatly needs, and which we
1714
shall destroy at our peril. Secondly, the Powers have inflicted upon
1715
China a multitude of humiliations and disabilities, for which excuses
1716
have been found in China's misdeeds, but for which the sole real reason
1717
has been China's military and naval weakness. Thirdly, the best of the
1718
Great Powers at present, in relation to China, is America, and the worst
1719
is Japan; in the interests of China, as well as in our own larger
1720
interests, it is an immense advance that we have ceased to support Japan
1721
and have ranged ourselves on the side of America, in so far as America
1722
stands for Chinese freedom, but not when Japanese freedom is threatened.
1723
Fourthly, in the long run, the Chinese cannot escape economic domination
1724
by foreign Powers unless China becomes military or the foreign Powers
1725
become Socialistic, because the capitalist system involves in its very
1726
essence a predatory relation of the strong towards the weak,
1727
internationally as well as nationally. A strong military China would be
1728
a disaster; therefore Socialism in Europe and America affords the only
1729
ultimate solution.
1730
1731
After these preliminary remarks, I come to the theme of this chapter,
1732
namely, the present internal condition of China.
1733
1734
As everyone knows, China, after having an Emperor for forty centuries,
1735
decided, eleven years ago, to become a modern democratic republic. Many
1736
causes led up to this result. Passing over the first 3,700 years of
1737
Chinese history, we arrive at the Manchu conquest in 1644, when a
1738
warlike invader from the north succeeded in establishing himself upon
1739
the Dragon Throne. He set to work to induce Chinese men to wear pigtails
1740
and Chinese women to have big feet. After a time a statesmanlike
1741
compromise was arranged: pigtails were adopted but big feet were
1742
rejected; the new absurdity was accepted and the old one retained. This
1743
characteristic compromise shows how much England and China have in
1744
common.
1745
1746
The Manchu Emperors soon became almost completely Chinese, but
1747
differences of dress and manners kept the Manchus distinct from the
1748
more civilized people whom they had conquered, and the Chinese remained
1749
inwardly hostile to them. From 1840 to 1900, a series of disastrous
1750
foreign wars, culminating in the humiliation of the Boxer time,
1751
destroyed the prestige of the Imperial Family and showed all thoughtful
1752
people the need of learning from Europeans. The Taiping rebellion, which
1753
lasted for 15 years (1849-64), is thought by Putnam Weale to have
1754
diminished the population by 150 millions,[31] and was almost as
1755
terrible a business as the Great War. For a long time it seemed doubtful
1756
whether the Manchus could suppress it, and when at last they succeeded
1757
(by the help of Gordon) their energy was exhausted. The defeat of China
1758
by Japan (1894-5) and the vengeance of the Powers after the Boxer rising
1759
(1900) finally opened the eyes of all thoughtful Chinese to the need for
1760
a better and more modern government than that of the Imperial Family.
1761
But things move slowly in China, and it was not till eleven years after
1762
the Boxer movement that the revolution broke out.
1763
1764
The revolution of 1911, in China, was a moderate one, similar in spirit
1765
to ours of 1688. Its chief promoter, Sun Yat Sen, now at the head of the
1766
Canton Government, was supported by the Republicans, and was elected
1767
provisional President. But the Nothern Army remained faithful to the
1768
dynasty, and could probably have defeated the revolutionaries. Its
1769
Commander-in-Chief, Yuan Shih-k'ai, however, hit upon a better scheme.
1770
He made peace with the revolutionaries and acknowledged the Republic, on
1771
condition that he should be the first President instead of Sun Yat Sen.
1772
Yuan Shih-k'ai was, of course, supported by the Legations, being what is
1773
called a "strong man," _i.e._ a believer in blood and iron, not likely
1774
to be led astray by talk about democracy or freedom. In China, the North
1775
has always been more military and less liberal than the South, and Yuan
1776
Shih-k'ai had created out of Northern troops whatever China possessed in
1777
the way of a modern army. As he was also ambitious and treacherous, he
1778
had every quality needed for inspiring confidence in the diplomatic
1779
corps. In view of the chaos which has existed since his death, it must
1780
be admitted, however, that there was something to be said in favour of
1781
his policy and methods.
1782
1783
A Constituent Assembly, after enacting a provisional constitution, gave
1784
place to a duly elected Parliament, which met in April 1913 to determine
1785
the permanent constitution. Yuan soon began to quarrel with the
1786
Parliament as to the powers of the President, which the Parliament
1787
wished to restrict. The majority in Parliament was opposed to Yuan, but
1788
he had the preponderance in military strength. Under these
1789
circumstances, as was to be expected, constitutionalism was soon
1790
overthrown. Yuan made himself financially independent of Parliament
1791
(which had been duly endowed with the power of the purse) by
1792
unconstitutionally concluding a loan with the foreign banks. This led to
1793
a revolt of the South, which, however, Yuan quickly suppressed. After
1794
this, by various stages, he made himself virtually absolute ruler of
1795
China. He appointed his army lieutenants military governors of
1796
provinces, and sent Northern troops into the South. His r�gime might
1797
have lasted but for the fact that, in 1915, he tried to become Emperor,
1798
and was met by a successful revolt. He died in 1916--of a broken heart,
1799
it was said.
1800
1801
Since then there has been nothing but confusion in China. The military
1802
governors appointed by Yuan refused to submit to the Central Government
1803
when his strong hand was removed, and their troops terrorized the
1804
populations upon whom they were quartered. Ever since there has been
1805
civil war, not, as a rule, for any definite principle, but simply to
1806
determine which of various rival generals should govern various groups
1807
of provinces. There still remains the issue of North versus South, but
1808
this has lost most of its constitutional significance.
1809
1810
The military governors of provinces or groups of provinces, who are
1811
called Tuchuns, govern despotically in defiance of Peking, and commit
1812
depredations on the inhabitants of the districts over which they rule.
1813
They intercept the revenue, except the portions collected and
1814
administered by foreigners, such as the salt tax. They are nominally
1815
appointed by Peking, but in practice depend only upon the favour of the
1816
soldiers in their provinces. The Central Government is nearly bankrupt,
1817
and is usually unable to pay the soldiers, who live by loot and by such
1818
portions of the Tuchun's illgotten wealth as he finds it prudent to
1819
surrender to them. When any faction seemed near to complete victory, the
1820
Japanese supported its opponents, in order that civil discord might be
1821
prolonged. While I was in Peking, the three most important Tuchuns met
1822
there for a conference on the division of the spoils. They were barely
1823
civil to the President and the Prime Minister, who still officially
1824
represent China in the eyes of foreign Powers. The unfortunate nominal
1825
Government was obliged to pay to these three worthies, out of a bankrupt
1826
treasury, a sum which the newspapers stated to be nine million dollars,
1827
to secure their departure from the capital. The largest share went to
1828
Chang-tso-lin, the Viceroy of Manchuria and commonly said to be a tool
1829
of Japan. His share was paid to cover the expenses of an expedition to
1830
Mongolia, which had revolted; but no one for a moment supposed that he
1831
would undertake such an expedition, and in fact he has remained at
1832
Mukden ever since.[32]
1833
1834
In the extreme south, however, there has been established a Government
1835
of a different sort, for which it is possible to have some respect.
1836
Canton, which has always been the centre of Chinese radicalism,
1837
succeeded, in the autumn of 1920, in throwing off the tyranny of its
1838
Northern garrison and establishing a progressive efficient Government
1839
under the Presidency of Sun Yat Sen. This Government now embraces two
1840
provinces, Kwangtung (of which Canton is the capital) and Kwangsi. For a
1841
moment it seemed likely to conquer the whole of the South, but it has
1842
been checked by the victories of the Northern General Wu-Pei-Fu in the
1843
neighbouring province of Hunan. Its enemies allege that it cherishes
1844
designs of conquest, and wishes to unite all China under its sway.[33]
1845
In all ascertainable respects it is a Government which deserves the
1846
support of all progressive people. Professor Dewey, in articles in the
1847
_New Republic_, has set forth its merits, as well as the bitter enmity
1848
which it has encountered from Hong-Kong and the British generally. This
1849
opposition is partly on general principles, because we dislike radical
1850
reform, partly because of the Cassel agreement. This agreement--of a
1851
common type in China--would have given us a virtual monopoly of the
1852
railways and mines in the province of Kwangtung. It had been concluded
1853
with the former Government, and only awaited ratification, but the
1854
change of Government has made ratification impossible. The new
1855
Government, very properly, is befriended by the Americans, and one of
1856
them, Mr. Shank, concluded an agreement with the new Government more or
1857
less similar to that which we had concluded with the old one. The
1858
American Government, however, did not support Mr. Shank, whereas the
1859
British Government did support the Cassel agreement. Meanwhile we have
1860
lost a very valuable though very iniquitous concession, merely because
1861
we, but not the Americans, prefer what is old and corrupt to what is
1862
vigorous and honest. I understand, moreover, that the Shank agreement
1863
lapsed because Mr. Shank could not raise the necessary capital.
1864
1865
The anarchy in China is, of course, very regrettable, and every friend
1866
of China must hope that it will be brought to an end. But it would be a
1867
mistake to exaggerate the evil, or to suppose that it is comparable in
1868
magnitude to the evils endured in Europe. China must not be compared to
1869
a single European country, but to Europe as a whole. In _The Times_ of
1870
November 11, 1921, I notice a pessimistic article headed: "The Peril of
1871
China. A dozen rival Governments." But in Europe there are much more
1872
than a dozen Governments, and their enmities are much fiercer than those
1873
of China. The number of troops in Europe is enormously greater than in
1874
China, and they are infinitely better provided with weapons of
1875
destruction. The amount of fighting in Europe since the Armistice has
1876
been incomparably more than the amount in China during the same period.
1877
You may travel through China from end to end, and it is ten to one that
1878
you will see no signs of war. Chinese battles are seldom bloody, being
1879
fought by mercenary soldiers who take no interest in the cause for which
1880
they are supposed to be fighting. I am inclined to think that the
1881
inhabitants of China, at the present moment, are happier, on the
1882
average, than the inhabitants of Europe taken as a whole.
1883
1884
It is clear, I think, that political reform in China, when it becomes
1885
possible, will have to take the form of a federal constitution, allowing
1886
a very large measure of autonomy to the provinces. The division into
1887
provinces is very ancient, and provincial feeling is strong. After the
1888
revolution, a constitution more or less resembling our own was
1889
attempted, only with a President instead of a King. But the successful
1890
working of a non-federal constitution requires a homogeneous population
1891
without much local feeling, as may be seen from our own experience in
1892
Ireland. Most progressive Chinese, as far as I was able to judge, now
1893
favour a federal constitution, leaving to the Central Government not
1894
much except armaments, foreign affairs, and customs. But the difficulty
1895
of getting rid of the existing military anarchy is very great. The
1896
Central Government cannot disband the troops, because it cannot find
1897
the money to pay them. It would be necessary to borrow from abroad
1898
enough money to pay off the troops and establish them in new jobs. But
1899
it is doubtful whether any Power or Powers would make such a loan
1900
without exacting the sacrifice of the last remnants of Chinese
1901
independence. One must therefore hope that somehow the Chinese will find
1902
a way of escaping from their troubles without too much foreign
1903
assistance.
1904
1905
It is by no means impossible that one of the Tuchuns may become supreme,
1906
and may then make friends with the constitutionalists as the best way of
1907
consolidating his influence. China is a country where public opinion has
1908
great weight, and where the desire to be thought well of may quite
1909
possibly lead a successful militarist into patriotic courses. There are,
1910
at the moment, two Tuchuns who are more important than any of the
1911
others. These are Chang-tso-lin and Wu-Pei-Fu, both of whom have been
1912
already mentioned. Chang-tso-lin is supreme in Manchuria, and strong in
1913
Japanese support; he represents all that is most reactionary in China.
1914
Wu-Pei-Fu, on the other hand, is credited with liberal tendencies. He is
1915
an able general; not long ago, nominally at the bidding of Peking, he
1916
established his authority on the Yangtze and in Hunan, thereby dealing a
1917
blow to the hopes of Canton. It is not easy to see how he could come to
1918
terms with the Canton Government, especially since it has allied itself
1919
with Chang-tso-lin, but in the rest of China he might establish his
1920
authority and seek to make it permanent by being constitutional (see
1921
Appendix). If so, China might have a breathing-space, and a
1922
breathing-space is all that is needed.
1923
1924
The economic life of China, except in the Treaty Ports and in a few
1925
regions where there are mines, is still wholly pre-industrial. Peking
1926
has nearly a million inhabitants, and covers an enormous area, owing to
1927
the fact that all the houses have only a ground floor and are built
1928
round a courtyard. Yet it has no trams or buses or local trains. So far
1929
as I could see, there are not more than two or three factory chimneys in
1930
the whole town. Apart from begging, trading, thieving and Government
1931
employment, people live by handicrafts. The products are exquisite and
1932
the work less monotonous than machine-minding, but the hours are long
1933
and the pay infinitesimal.
1934
1935
Seventy or eighty per cent. of the population of China are engaged in
1936
agriculture. Rice and tea are the chief products of the south, while
1937
wheat and other kinds of grain form the staple crops in the north.[34]
1938
The rainfall is very great in the south, but in the north it is only
1939
just sufficient to prevent the land from being a desert. When I arrived
1940
in China, in the autumn of 1920, a large area in the north, owing to
1941
drought, was afflicted with a terrible famine, nearly as bad, probably,
1942
as the famine in Russia in 1921. As the Bolsheviks were not concerned,
1943
foreigners had no hesitation in trying to bring relief. As for the
1944
Chinese, they regarded it passively as a stroke of fate, and even those
1945
who died of it shared this view.
1946
1947
Most of the land is in the hands of peasant proprietors, who divide
1948
their holdings among their sons, so that each man's share becomes barely
1949
sufficient to support himself and his family. Consequently, when the
1950
rainfall is less than usual, immense numbers perish of starvation. It
1951
would of course be possible, for a time, to prevent famines by more
1952
scientific methods of agriculture, and to prevent droughts and floods by
1953
afforestation. More railways and better roads would give a vastly
1954
improved market, and might greatly enrich the peasants for a generation.
1955
But in the long run, if the birth-rate is as great as is usually
1956
supposed, no permanent cure for their poverty is possible while their
1957
families continue to be so large. In China, Malthus's theory of
1958
population, according to many writers, finds full scope.[35] If so, the
1959
good done by any improvement of methods will lead to the survival of
1960
more children, involving a greater subdivision of the land, and in the
1961
end, a return to the same degree of poverty. Only education and a higher
1962
standard of life can remove the fundamental cause of these evils. And
1963
popular education, on a large scale, is of course impossible until there
1964
is a better Government and an adequate revenue. Apart even from these
1965
difficulties, there does not exist, as yet, a sufficient supply of
1966
competent Chinese teachers for a system of universal elementary
1967
education.
1968
1969
Apart from war, the impact of European civilization upon the traditional
1970
life of China takes two forms, one commercial, the other intellectual.
1971
Both depend upon the prestige of armaments; the Chinese would never have
1972
opened either their ports to our trade or their minds to our ideas if we
1973
had not defeated them in war. But the military beginning of our
1974
intercourse with the Middle Kingdom has now receded into the background;
1975
one is not conscious, in any class, of a strong hostility to foreigners
1976
as such. It would not be difficult to make out a case for the view that
1977
intercourse with the white races is proving a misfortune to China, but
1978
apparently this view is not taken by anyone in China except where
1979
unreasoning conservative prejudice outweighs all other considerations.
1980
The Chinese have a very strong instinct for trade, and a considerable
1981
intellectual curiosity, to both of which we appeal. Only a bare minimum
1982
of common decency is required to secure their friendship, whether
1983
privately or politically. And I think their thought is as capable of
1984
enriching our culture as their commerce of enriching our pockets.
1985
1986
In the Treaty Ports, Europeans and Americans live in their own quarters,
1987
with streets well paved and lighted, houses in European style, and shops
1988
full of American and English goods. There is generally also a Chinese
1989
part of the town, with narrow streets, gaily decorated shops, and the
1990
rich mixture of smells characteristic of China. Often one passes through
1991
a gate, suddenly, from one to the other; after the cheerful disordered
1992
beauty of the old town, Europe's ugly cleanliness and
1993
Sunday-go-to-meeting decency make a strange complex impression,
1994
half-love and half-hate. In the European town one finds safety,
1995
spaciousness and hygiene; in the Chinese town, romance, overcrowding and
1996
disease. In spite of my affection for China, these transitions always
1997
made me realize that I am a European; for me, the Chinese manner of life
1998
would not mean happiness. But after making all necessary deductions for
1999
the poverty and the disease, I am inclined to think that Chinese life
2000
brings more happiness to the Chinese than English life does to us. At
2001
any rate this seemed to me to be true for the men; for the women I do
2002
not think it would be true.
2003
2004
Shanghai and Tientsin are white men's cities; the first sight of
2005
Shanghai makes one wonder what is the use of travelling, because there
2006
is so little change from what one is used to. Treaty Ports, each of
2007
which is a centre of European influence, exist practically all over
2008
China, not only on the sea coast. Hankow, a very important Treaty Port,
2009
is almost exactly in the centre of China. North and South China are
2010
divided by the Yangtze; East and West China are divided by the route
2011
from Peking to Canton. These two dividing lines meet at Hankow, which
2012
has long been an important strategical point in Chinese history. From
2013
Peking to Hankow there is a railway, formerly Franco-Belgian, now owned
2014
by the Chinese Government. From Wuchang, opposite Hankow on the southern
2015
bank of the river, there is to be a railway to Canton, but at present it
2016
only runs half-way, to Changsha, also a Treaty Port. The completion of
2017
the railway, together with improved docks, will greatly increase the
2018
importance of Canton and diminish that of Hong-Kong.
2019
2020
In the Treaty Ports commerce is the principal business; but in the lower
2021
Yangtze and in certain mining districts there are beginnings of
2022
industrialism. China produces large amounts of raw cotton, which are
2023
mostly manipulated by primitive methods; but there are a certain number
2024
of cotton-mills on modern lines. If low wages meant cheap labour for the
2025
employer, there would be little hope for Lancashire, because in Southern
2026
China the cotton is grown on the spot, the climate is damp, and there is
2027
an inexhaustible supply of industrious coolies ready to work very long
2028
hours for wages upon which an English working-man would find it
2029
literally impossible to keep body and soul together. Nevertheless, it is
2030
not the underpaid Chinese coolie whom Lancashire has to fear, and China
2031
will not become a formidable competitor until improvement in methods and
2032
education enables the Chinese workers to earn good wages. Meanwhile, in
2033
China, as in every other country, the beginnings of industry are sordid
2034
and cruel. The intellectuals wish to be told of some less horrible
2035
method by which their country may be industrialized, but so far none is
2036
in sight.
2037
2038
The intelligentsia in China has a very peculiar position, unlike that
2039
which it has in any other country. Hereditary aristocracy has been
2040
practically extinct in China for about 2,000 years, and for many
2041
centuries the country has been governed by the successful candidates in
2042
competitive examinations. This has given to the educated the kind of
2043
prestige elsewhere belonging to a governing aristocracy. Although the
2044
old traditional education is fast dying out, and higher education now
2045
teaches modern subjects, the prestige of education has survived, and
2046
public opinion is still ready to be influenced by those who have
2047
intellectual qualifications. The Tuchuns, many of whom, including
2048
Chang-tso-lin, have begun by being brigands,[36] are, of course, mostly
2049
too stupid and ignorant to share this attitude, but that in itself makes
2050
their r�gime weak and unstable. The influence of Young China--_i.e._ of
2051
those who have been educated either abroad or in modern colleges at
2052
home--is far greater than it would be in a country with less respect for
2053
learning. This is, perhaps, the most hopeful feature in the situation,
2054
because the number of modern students is rapidly increasing, and their
2055
outlook and aims are admirable. In another ten years or so they will
2056
probably be strong enough to regenerate China--if only the Powers will
2057
allow ten years to elapse without taking any drastic action.
2058
2059
It is important to try to understand the outlook and potentialities of
2060
Young China. Most of my time was spent among those Chinese who had had a
2061
modern education, and I should like to give some idea of their
2062
mentality. It seemed to me that one could already distinguish two
2063
generations: the older men, who had fought their way with great
2064
difficulty and almost in solitude out of the traditional Confucian
2065
prejudices; and the younger men, who had found modern schools and
2066
colleges waiting for them, containing a whole world of modern-minded
2067
people ready to give sympathy and encouragement in the inevitable fight
2068
against the family. The older men--men varying in age from 30 to
2069
50--have gone through an inward and outward struggle resembling that of
2070
the rationalists of Darwin's and Mill's generation. They have had,
2071
painfully and with infinite difficulty, to free their minds from the
2072
beliefs instilled in youth, and to turn their thoughts to a new science
2073
and a new ethic. Imagine (say) Plotinus recalled from the shades and
2074
miraculously compelled to respect Mr. Henry Ford; this will give you
2075
some idea of the centuries across which these men have had to travel in
2076
becoming European. Some of them are a little weary with the effort,
2077
their forces somewhat spent and their originality no longer creative.
2078
But this can astonish no one who realizes the internal revolution they
2079
have achieved in their own minds.
2080
2081
It must not be supposed that an able Chinaman, when he masters our
2082
culture, becomes purely imitative. This may happen among the second-rate
2083
Chinese, especially when they turn Christians, but it does not happen
2084
among the best. They remain Chinese, critical of European civilization
2085
even when they have assimilated it. They retain a certain crystal
2086
candour and a touching belief in the efficacy of moral forces; the
2087
industrial revolution has not yet affected their mental processes. When
2088
they become persuaded of the importance of some opinion, they try to
2089
spread it by setting forth the reasons in its favour; they do not hire
2090
the front pages of newspapers for advertising, or put up on hoardings
2091
along the railways "So-and-so's opinion is the best." In all this they
2092
differ greatly from more advanced nations, and particularly from
2093
America; it never occurs to them to treat opinions as if they were
2094
soaps. And they have no admiration for ruthlessness, or love of bustling
2095
activity without regard to its purpose. Having thrown over the
2096
prejudices in which they were brought up, they have not taken on a new
2097
set, but have remained genuinely free in their thoughts, able to
2098
consider any proposition honestly on its merits.
2099
2100
The younger men, however, have something more than the first generation
2101
of modern intellectuals. Having had less of a struggle, they have
2102
retained more energy and self-confidence. The candour and honesty of the
2103
pioneers survive, with more determination to be socially effective. This
2104
may be merely the natural character of youth, but I think it is more
2105
than that. Young men under thirty have often come in contact with
2106
Western ideas at a sufficiently early age to have assimilated them
2107
without a great struggle, so that they can acquire knowledge without
2108
being torn by spiritual conflicts. And they have been able to learn
2109
Western knowledge from Chinese teachers to begin with, which has made
2110
the process less difficult. Even the youngest students, of course, still
2111
have reactionary families, but they find less difficulty than their
2112
predecessors in resisting the claims of the family, and in realizing
2113
practically, not only theoretically, that the traditional Chinese
2114
reverence for the old may well be carried too far. In these young men I
2115
see the hope of China. When a little experience has taught them
2116
practical wisdom, I believe they will be able to lead Chinese opinion in
2117
the directions in which it ought to move.
2118
2119
There is one traditional Chinese belief which dies very hard, and that
2120
is the belief that correct ethical sentiments are more important then
2121
detailed scientific knowledge. This view is, of course, derived from the
2122
Confucian tradition, and is more or less true in a pre-industrial
2123
society. It would have been upheld by Rousseau or Dr. Johnson, and
2124
broadly speaking by everybody before the Benthamites. We, in the West,
2125
have now swung to the opposite extreme: we tend to think that technical
2126
efficiency is everything and moral purpose nothing. A battleship may be
2127
taken as the concrete embodiment of this view. When we read, say, of
2128
some new poison-gas by means of which one bomb from an aeroplane can
2129
exterminate a whole town, we have a thrill of what we fondly believe to
2130
be horror, but it is really delight in scientific skill. Science is our
2131
god; we say to it, "Though thou slay me, yet will I trust in thee." And
2132
so it slays us. The Chinese have not this defect, but they have the
2133
opposite one, of believing that good intentions are the only thing
2134
really necessary. I will give an illustration. Forsythe Sherfesee,
2135
Forestry Adviser to the Chinese Government, gave an address at the
2136
British Legation in January 1919 on "Some National Aspects of Forestry
2137
in China."[37] In this address he proves (so far as a person ignorant of
2138
forestry can judge) that large parts of China which now lie waste are
2139
suitable for forestry, that the importation of timber (_e.g_. for
2140
railway sleepers) which now takes place is wholly unnecessary, and that
2141
the floods which often sweep away whole districts would be largely
2142
prevented if the slopes of the mountains from which the rivers come were
2143
reafforested. Yet it is often difficult to interest even the most
2144
reforming Chinese in afforestation, because it is not an easy subject
2145
for ethical enthusiasm. Trees are planted round graves, because
2146
Confucius said they should be; if Confucianism dies out, even these will
2147
be cut down. But public-spirited Chinese students learn political theory
2148
as it is taught in our universities, and despise such humble questions
2149
as the utility of trees. After learning all about (say) the proper
2150
relations of the two Houses of Parliament, they go home to find that
2151
some Tuchun has dismissed both Houses, and is governing in a fashion not
2152
considered in our text-books. Our theories of politics are only true in
2153
the West (if there); our theories of forestry are equally true
2154
everywhere. Yet it is our theories of politics that Chinese students are
2155
most eager to learn. Similarly the practical study of industrial
2156
processes might be very useful, but the Chinese prefer the study of our
2157
theoretical economics, which is hardly applicable except where industry
2158
is already developed. In all these respects, however, there is beginning
2159
to be a marked improvement.
2160
2161
It is science that makes the difference between our intellectual outlook
2162
and that of the Chinese intelligentsia. The Chinese, even the most
2163
modern, look to the white nations, especially America, for moral maxims
2164
to replace those of Confucius. They have not yet grasped that men's
2165
morals in the mass are the same everywhere: they do as much harm as they
2166
dare, and as much good as they must. In so far as there is a difference
2167
of morals between us and the Chinese, we differ for the worse, because
2168
we are more energetic, and can therefore commit more crimes _per diem_.
2169
What we have to teach the Chinese is not morals, or ethical maxims about
2170
government, but science and technical skill. The real problem for the
2171
Chinese intellectuals is to acquire Western knowledge without acquiring
2172
the mechanistic outlook.
2173
2174
Perhaps it is not clear what I mean by "the mechanistic outlook." I mean
2175
something which exists equally in Imperialism, Bolshevism and the
2176
Y.M.C.A.; something which distinguishes all these from the Chinese
2177
outlook, and which I, for my part, consider very evil. What I mean is
2178
the habit of regarding mankind as raw material, to be moulded by our
2179
scientific manipulation into whatever form may happen to suit our fancy.
2180
The essence of the matter, from the point of view of the individual who
2181
has this point of view, is the cultivation of will at the expense of
2182
perception, the fervent moral belief that it is our duty to force other
2183
people to realize our conception of the world. The Chinese intellectual
2184
is not much troubled by Imperialism as a creed, but is vigorously
2185
assailed by Bolshevism and the Y.M.C.A., to one or other of which he is
2186
too apt to fall a victim, learning a belief from the one in the
2187
class-war and the dictatorship of the communists, from the other in the
2188
mystic efficacy of cold baths and dumb-bells. Both these creeds, in
2189
their Western adepts, involve a contempt for the rest of mankind except
2190
as potential converts, and the belief that progress consists in the
2191
spread of a doctrine. They both involve a belief in government and a
2192
life against Nature. This view, though I have called it mechanistic, is
2193
as old as religion, though mechanism has given it new and more virulent
2194
forms. The first of Chinese philosophers, Lao-Tze, wrote his book to
2195
protest against it, and his disciple Chuang-Tze put his criticism into a
2196
fable[38]:--
2197
2198
Horses have hoofs to carry them over frost and snow; hair, to
2199
protect them from wind and cold. They eat grass and drink water,
2200
and fling up their heels over the champaign. Such is the real
2201
nature of horses. Palatial dwellings are of no use to them.
2202
2203
One day Po Lo appeared, saying: "I understand the management of
2204
horses."
2205
2206
So he branded them, and clipped them, and pared their hoofs, and
2207
put halters on them, tying them up by the head and shackling them
2208
by the feet, and disposing them in stables, with the result that
2209
two or three in every ten died. Then he kept them hungry and
2210
thirsty, trotting them and galloping them, and grooming, and
2211
trimming, with the misery of the tasselled bridle before and the
2212
fear of the knotted whip behind, until more than half of them
2213
were dead.
2214
2215
The potter says: "I can do what I will with clay. If I want it
2216
round, I use compasses; if rectangular, a square."
2217
2218
The carpenter says: "I can do what I will with wood. If I want it
2219
curved, I use an arc; if straight, a line."
2220
2221
But on what grounds can we think that the natures of clay and
2222
wood desire this application of compasses and square, of arc and
2223
line? Nevertheless, every age extols Po Lo for his skill in
2224
managing horses, and potters and carpenters for their skill with
2225
clay and wood. Those who _govern_ the Empire make the same
2226
mistake.
2227
2228
Although Taoism, of which Lao-Tze was the founder and Chuang-Tze the
2229
chief apostle, was displaced by Confucianism, yet the spirit of this
2230
fable has penetrated deeply into Chinese life, making it more urbane and
2231
tolerant, more contemplative and observant, than the fiercer life of the
2232
West. The Chinese watch foreigners as we watch animals in the Zoo, to
2233
see whether they "drink water and fling up their heels over the
2234
champaign," and generally to derive amusement from their curious habits.
2235
Unlike the Y.M.C.A., they have no wish to alter the habits of the
2236
foreigners, any more than we wish to put the monkeys at the Zoo into
2237
trousers and stiff shirts. And their attitude towards each other is, as
2238
a rule, equally tolerant. When they became a Republic, instead of
2239
cutting off the Emperor's head, as other nations do, they left him his
2240
title, his palace, and four million dollars a year (about �600,000), and
2241
he remains to this moment with his officials, his eunuchs and his
2242
etiquette, but without one shred of power or influence. In talking with
2243
a Chinese, you feel that he is trying to understand you, not to alter
2244
you or interfere with you. The result of his attempt may be a caricature
2245
or a panegyric, but in either case it will be full of delicate
2246
perception and subtle humour. A friend in Peking showed me a number of
2247
pictures, among which I specially remember various birds: a hawk
2248
swooping on a sparrow, an eagle clasping a big bough of a tree in his
2249
claws, water-fowl standing on one leg disconsolate in the snow. All
2250
these pictures showed that kind of sympathetic understanding which one
2251
feels also in their dealings with human beings--something which I can
2252
perhaps best describe as the antithesis of Nietzsche. This quality,
2253
unfortunately, is useless in warfare, and foreign nations are doing
2254
their best to stamp it out. But it is an infinitely valuable quality, of
2255
which our Western world has far too little. Together with their
2256
exquisite sense of beauty, it makes the Chinese nation quite
2257
extraordinarily lovable. The injury that we are doing to China is wanton
2258
and cruel, the destruction of something delicate and lovely for the sake
2259
of the gross pleasures of barbarous millionaires. One of the poems
2260
translated from the Chinese by Mr. Waley[39] is called _Business Men_,
2261
and it expresses, perhaps more accurately than I could do, the respects
2262
in which the Chinese are our superiors:--
2263
2264
Business men boast of their skill and cunning
2265
But in philosophy they are like little children.
2266
Bragging to each other of successful depredations
2267
They neglect to consider the ultimate fate of the body.
2268
What should they know of the Master of Dark Truth
2269
Who saw the wide world in a jade cup,
2270
By illumined conception got clear of heaven and earth:
2271
On the chariot of Mutation entered the Gate of Immutability?
2272
2273
I wish I could hope that some respect for "the Master of Dark Truth"
2274
would enter into the hearts of our apostles of Western culture. But as
2275
that is out of the question, it is necessary to seek other ways of
2276
solving the Far Eastern question.
2277
2278
FOOTNOTES:
2279
2280
[Footnote 31: _The Truth about China and Japan_, Allen & Unwin, 1921, p.
2281
14. On the other hand Sih-Gung Cheng (_Modern China_, p. 13) says that
2282
it "killed twenty million people," which is the more usual estimate, cf.
2283
_China of the Chinese_ by E.T.C. Werner, p. 24. The extent to which the
2284
population was diminished is not accurately known, but I have no doubt
2285
that 20 millions is nearer the truth than 150 millions.]
2286
2287
[Footnote 32: In January 1922, he came to Peking to establish a more
2288
subservient Government, the dismissal of which has been ordered by
2289
Wu-Pei-Fu. A clash is imminent. See Appendix.]
2290
2291
[Footnote 33: The blame for this is put upon Sun Yat Sen, who is said to
2292
have made an alliance with Chang-tso-lin. The best element in the Canton
2293
Government was said to be represented by Sun's colleague General Cheng
2294
Chiung Ming, who is now reported to have been dismissed (_The Times_,
2295
April 24, 1922). These statements are apparently unfounded. See
2296
Appendix.]
2297
2298
[Footnote 34: The soya bean is rapidly becoming an important product,
2299
especially in Manchuria.]
2300
2301
[Footnote 35: There are, however, no accurate statistics as to the
2302
birth-rate or the death-rate in China, and some writers question whether
2303
the birth-rate is really very large. From a privately printed pamphlet
2304
by my friend Mr. V.K. Ting, I learn that Dr. Lennox, of the Peking Union
2305
Medical College, from a careful study of 4,000 families, found that the
2306
average number of children (dead and living) per family was 2.1, while
2307
the infant mortality was 184.1. Other investigations are quoted to show
2308
that the birth-rate near Peking is between 30 and 50. In the absence of
2309
statistics, generalizations about the population question in China must
2310
be received with extreme caution.]
2311
2312
[Footnote 36: I repeat what everybody, Chinese or foreign, told me. Mr.
2313
Bland, _per contra_, describes Chang-tso-lin as a polished Confucian.
2314
Contrast p. 104 of his _China, Japan and Korea_ with pp. 143, 146 of
2315
Coleman's _The Far East Unveiled_, which gives the view of everybody
2316
except Mr. Bland. Lord Northcliffe had an interview with Chang-tso-lin
2317
reported in _The Times_ recently, but he was, of course, unable to
2318
estimate Chang-tso-lin's claims to literary culture.]
2319
2320
[Footnote 37: Printed in _China in 1918_, published by the _Peking
2321
Leader_.]
2322
2323
[Footnote 38: _Musings of a Chinese Mystic_, by Lionel Giles (Murray),
2324
p. 66. For Legge's translation, see Vol. I, p. 277 of his _Texts of
2325
Taoism_ in _Sacred Books of the East_, Vol. XXXIX.]
2326
2327
[Footnote 39: Waley, 170 _Chinese Poems_, p. 96.]
2328
2329
2330
2331
2332
CHAPTER V
2333
2334
JAPAN BEFORE THE RESTORATION
2335
2336
2337
For modern China, the most important foreign nation is Japan. In order
2338
to understand the part played by Japan, it is necessary to know
2339
something of that country, to which we must now turn our attention.
2340
2341
In reading the history of Japan, one of the most amazing things is the
2342
persistence of the same forces and the same beliefs throughout the
2343
centuries. Japanese history practically begins with a "Restoration" by
2344
no means unlike that of 1867-8. Buddhism was introduced into Japan from
2345
Korea in 552 A.D.[40] At the same time and from the same source Chinese
2346
civilization became much better known in Japan than it had been through
2347
the occasional intercourse of former centuries. Both novelties won
2348
favour. Two Japanese students (followed later by many others) went to
2349
China in 608 A.D., to master the civilization of that country. The
2350
Japanese are an experimental nation, and before adopting Buddhism
2351
nationally they ordered one or two prominent courtiers to adopt it,
2352
with a view to seeing whether they prospered more or less than the
2353
adherents of the traditional Shinto religion.[41] After some
2354
vicissitudes, the experiment was held to have favoured the foreign
2355
religion, which, as a Court religion, acquired more prestige than
2356
Shinto, although the latter was never ousted, and remained the chief
2357
religion of the peasantry until the thirteenth century. It is remarkable
2358
to find that, as late as the sixteenth century, Hideyoshi, who was of
2359
peasant origin, had a much higher opinion of "the way of the gods"
2360
(which is what "Shinto" means) than of Buddhism.[42] Probably the
2361
revival of Shinto in modern times was facilitated by a continuing belief
2362
in that religion on the part of the less noisy sections of the
2363
population. But so far as the people mentioned in history are concerned,
2364
Buddhism plays a very much greater part than Shinto.
2365
2366
The object of the Restoration in 1867-8 was, at any rate in part, to
2367
restore the constitution of 645 A.D. The object of the constitution of
2368
645 A.D. was to restore the form of government that had prevailed in the
2369
good old days. What the object was of those who established the
2370
government of the good old days, I do not profess to know. However that
2371
may be, the country before 645 A.D. was given over to feudalism and
2372
internal strife, while the power of the Mikado had sunk to a very low
2373
ebb. The Mikado had had the civil power, but had allowed great
2374
feudatories to acquire military control, so that the civil government
2375
fell into contempt. Contact with the superior civilization of China made
2376
intelligent people think that the Chinese constitution deserved
2377
imitation, along with the Chinese morals and religion. The Chinese
2378
Emperor was the Son of Heaven, so the Mikado came to be descended from
2379
the Sun Goddess. The Chinese Emperor, whenever he happened to be a
2380
vigorous man, was genuinely supreme, so the Mikado must be made so.
2381
2382
The similarity of the influence of China in producing the Restoration of
2383
645 A.D. and that of Europe in producing the Restoration of 1867-8 is
2384
set forth by Murdoch[43] as follows:--
2385
2386
In the summer of 1863 a band of four Choshu youths were smuggled
2387
on board a British steamer by the aid of kind Scottish friends
2388
who sympathized with their endeavour to proceed to Europe for
2389
purposes of study. These, friends possibly did not know that some
2390
of the four had been protagonists in the burning down of the
2391
British Legation on Gotenyama a few months before, and they
2392
certainly could never have suspected that the real mission of the
2393
four youths was to master the secrets of Western civilization
2394
with a sole view of driving the Western barbarians from the
2395
sacred soil of Japan. Prince Ito and Marquis Inouye--for they
2396
were two of this venturesome quartette--have often told of their
2397
rapid disillusionment when they reached London, and saw these
2398
despised Western barbarians at home. On their return to Japan
2399
they at once became the apostles of a new doctrine, and their
2400
effective preaching has had much to do with the pride of place
2401
Dai Nippon now holds among the Great Powers of the world.
2402
2403
The two students who went to China in 608 A.D. "rendered even more
2404
illustrious service to their country perhaps than Ito and Inouye have
2405
done. For at the Revolution of 1868, the leaders of the movement harked
2406
back to the 645-650 A.D. period for a good deal of their inspiration,
2407
and the real men of political knowledge at that time were the two
2408
National Doctors."
2409
2410
Politically, what was done in 645 A.D. and the period immediately
2411
following was not unlike what was done in France by Louis XI and
2412
Richelieu--curbing of the great nobles and an exaltation of the
2413
sovereign, with a substitution of civil justice for military anarchy.
2414
The movement was represented by its promoters as a Restoration, probably
2415
with about the same amount of truth as in 1867. At the latter date,
2416
there was restoration so far as the power of the Mikado was concerned,
2417
but innovation as regards the introduction of Western ideas. Similarly,
2418
in 645 A.D., what was done about the Mikado was a return to the past,
2419
but what was done in the way of spreading Chinese civilization was just
2420
the opposite. There must have been, in both cases, the same curious
2421
mixture of antiquarian and reforming tendencies.
2422
2423
Throughout subsequent Japanese history, until the Restoration, one seems
2424
to see two opposite forces struggling for mastery over people's minds,
2425
namely the ideas of government, civilization and art derived from China
2426
on the one hand, and the native tendency to feudalism, clan government,
2427
and civil war on the other. The conflict is very analogous to that which
2428
went on in medi�val Europe between the Church, which represented ideas
2429
derived from Rome, and the turbulent barons, who were struggling to
2430
preserve the way of life of the ancient Teutons. Henry IV at Canossa,
2431
Henry II doing penance for Becket, represent the triumph of civilization
2432
over rude vigour; and something similar is to be seen at intervals in
2433
Japan.
2434
2435
After 645, the Mikado's Government had real power for some centuries,
2436
but gradually it fell more and more under the sway of the soldiers. So
2437
long as it had wealth (which lasted long after it ceased to have power)
2438
it continued to represent what was most civilized in Japan: the study
2439
of Chinese literature, the patronage of art, and the attempt to preserve
2440
respect for something other than brute force. But the Court nobles (who
2441
remained throughout quite distinct from the military feudal chiefs) were
2442
so degenerate and feeble, so stereotyped and unprogressive, that it
2443
would have been quite impossible for the country to be governed by them
2444
and the system they represented. In this respect they differed greatly
2445
from the medi�val Church, which no one could accuse of lack of vigour,
2446
although the vigour of the feudal aristocracy may have been even
2447
greater. Accordingly, while the Church in Europe usually defeated the
2448
secular princes, the exact opposite happened in Japan, where the Mikado
2449
and his Court sank into greater and greater contempt down to the time of
2450
the Restoration.
2451
2452
The Japanese have a curious passion for separating the real and the
2453
nominal Governments, leaving the show to the latter and the substance of
2454
power to the former. First the Emperors took to resigning in favour of
2455
their infant sons, and continuing to govern in reality, often from some
2456
monastery, where they had become monks. Then the Shogun, who represented
2457
the military power, became supreme, but still governed in the name of
2458
the Emperor. The word "Shogun" merely means "General"; the full title of
2459
the people whom we call "Shogun" is "Sei-i-Tai Shogun," which means
2460
"Barbarian-subduing great General"; the barbarians in question being the
2461
Ainus, the Japanese aborigines. The first to hold this office in the
2462
form which it had at most times until the Restoration was Minamoto
2463
Yoritomo, on whom the title was conferred by the Mikado in 1192. But
2464
before long the Shogun became nearly as much of a figure-head as the
2465
Mikado. Custom confined the Shogunate to the Minamoto family, and the
2466
actual power was wielded by Regents in the name of the Shogun. This
2467
lasted until near the end of the sixteenth century, when it happened
2468
that Iyeyasu, the supreme military commander of his day, belonged to the
2469
Minamoto family, and was therefore able to assume the office of Shogun
2470
himself. He and his descendants held the office until it was abolished
2471
at the Restoration. The Restoration, however, did not put an end to the
2472
practice of a real Government behind the nominal one. The Prime Minister
2473
and his Cabinet are presented to the world as the Japanese Government,
2474
but the real Government is the Genro, or Elder Statesmen, and their
2475
successors, of whom I shall have more to say in the next chapter.
2476
2477
What the Japanese made of Buddhism reminds one in many ways of what the
2478
Teutonic nations made of Christianity. Buddhism and Christianity,
2479
originally, were very similar in spirit. They were both religions aiming
2480
at the achievement of holiness by renunciation of the world. They both
2481
ignored politics and government and wealth, for which they substituted
2482
the future life as what was of real importance. They were both religions
2483
of peace, teaching gentleness and non-resistance. But both had to
2484
undergo great transformations in adapting themselves to the instincts of
2485
warlike barbarians. In Japan, a multitude of sects arose, teaching
2486
doctrines which differed in many ways from Mahayana orthodoxy. Buddhism
2487
became national and militaristic; the abbots of great monasteries became
2488
important feudal chieftains, whose monks constituted an army which was
2489
ready to fight on the slightest provocation. Sieges of monasteries and
2490
battles with monks are of constant occurrence in Japanese history.
2491
2492
The Japanese, as every one knows, decided, after about 100 years'
2493
experience of Western missionaries and merchants, to close their country
2494
completely to foreigners, with the exception of a very restricted and
2495
closely supervised commerce with the Dutch. The first arrival of the
2496
Portuguese in Japan was in or about the year 1543, and their final
2497
expulsion was in the year 1639. What happened between these two dates is
2498
instructive for the understanding of Japan. The first Portuguese brought
2499
with them Christianity and fire-arms, of which the Japanese tolerated
2500
the former for the sake of the latter. At that time there was virtually
2501
no Central Government in the country, and the various Daimyo were
2502
engaged in constant wars with each other. The south-western island,
2503
Kyushu, was even more independent of such central authority as existed
2504
than were the other parts of Japan, and it was in this island
2505
(containing the port of Nagasaki) that the Portuguese first landed and
2506
were throughout chiefly active. They traded from Macao, bringing
2507
merchandise, match-locks and Jesuits, as well as artillery on their
2508
larger vessels. It was found that they attached importance to the spread
2509
of Christianity, and some of the Daimyo, in order to get their trade and
2510
their guns, allowed themselves to be baptized by the Jesuits. The
2511
Portuguese of those days seem to have been genuinely more anxious to
2512
make converts than to extend their trade; when, later on, the Japanese
2513
began to object to missionaries while still desiring trade, neither the
2514
Portuguese nor the Spaniards could be induced to refrain from helping
2515
the Fathers. However, all might have gone well if the Portuguese had
2516
been able to retain the monopoly which had been granted to them by a
2517
Papal Bull. Their monopoly of trade was associated with a Jesuit
2518
monopoly of missionary activity. But from 1592 onward, the Spaniards
2519
from Manila competed with the Portuguese from Macao, and the Dominican
2520
and Franciscan missionaries, brought by the Spaniards, competed with the
2521
Jesuit missionaries brought by the Portuguese. They quarrelled
2522
furiously, even at times when they were suffering persecution; and the
2523
Japanese naturally believed the accusations that each side brought
2524
against the other. Moreover, when they were shown maps displaying the
2525
extent of the King of Spain's dominions, they became alarmed for their
2526
national independence. In the year 1596, a Spanish ship, the _San
2527
Felipe_, on its way from Manila to Acapulco, was becalmed off the coast
2528
of Japan. The local Daimyo insisted on sending men to tow it into his
2529
harbour, and gave them instructions to run it aground on a sandbank,
2530
which they did. He thereupon claimed the whole cargo, valued at 600,000
2531
crowns. However, Hideyoshi, who was rapidly acquiring supreme power in
2532
Japan, thought this too large a windfall for a private citizen, and had
2533
the Spanish pilot interviewed by a man named Masuda. The pilot, after
2534
trying reason in vain, attempted intimidation.
2535
2536
He produced a map of the world, and on it pointed out the vast
2537
extent of the dominions of Philip II. Thereupon Masuda asked him
2538
how it was so many countries had been brought to acknowledge the
2539
sway of a single man.... "Our Kings," said this outspoken seaman,
2540
"begin by sending into the countries they wish to conquer
2541
_religieux_ who induce the people to embrace our religion, and
2542
when they have made considerable progress, troops are sent who
2543
combine with the new Christians, and then our Kings have not
2544
much trouble in accomplishing the rest."[44]
2545
2546
As Spain and Portugal were at this time both subject to Philip II, the
2547
Portuguese also suffered from the suspicions engendered by this speech.
2548
Moreover, the Dutch, who were at war with Spain, began to trade with
2549
Japan, and to tell all they knew against Jesuits, Dominicans,
2550
Franciscans, and Papists generally. A breezy Elizabethan sea captain,
2551
Will Adams, was wrecked in Japan, and on being interrogated naturally
2552
gave a good British account of the authors of the Armada. As the
2553
Japanese had by this time mastered the use and manufacture of fire-arms,
2554
they began to think that they had nothing more to learn from Christian
2555
nations.
2556
2557
Meanwhile, a succession of three great men--Nobunaga, Hideyoshi, and
2558
Iyeyasu--had succeeded in unifying Japan, destroying the
2559
quasi-independence of the feudal nobles, and establishing that reign of
2560
internal peace which lasted until the Restoration--period of nearly two
2561
and a half centuries. It was possible, therefore, for the Central
2562
Government to enforce whatever policy it chose to adopt with regard to
2563
the foreigners and their religion. The Jesuits and the Friars between
2564
them had made a considerable number of converts in Japan, probably about
2565
300,000. Most of these were in the island of Kyushu, the last region to
2566
be subdued by Hideyoshi. They tended to disloyalty, not only on account
2567
of their Christianity, but also on account of their geographical
2568
position. It was in this region that the revolt against the Shogun began
2569
in 1867, and Satsuma, the chief clan in the island of Kyushu, has had
2570
great power in the Government ever since the Restoration, except during
2571
its rebellion of 1877. It is hard to disentangle what belongs to
2572
Christianity and what to mere hostility to the Central Government in the
2573
movements of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. However that may
2574
be, Iyeyasu decided to persecute the Christians vigorously, if possible
2575
without losing the foreign trade. His successors were even more
2576
anti-Christian and less anxious for trade. After an abortive revolt in
2577
1637, Christianity was stamped out, and foreign trade was prohibited in
2578
the most vigorous terms:--
2579
2580
So long as the sun warms the earth, let no Christian be so bold
2581
as to come to Japan, and let all know that if King Philip
2582
himself, or even the very God of the Christians, or the great
2583
Shaka contravene this prohibition, they shall pay for it with
2584
their heads.[45]
2585
2586
The persecution of Christians, though it was ruthless and exceedingly
2587
cruel, was due, not to religious intolerance, but solely to political
2588
motives. There was reason to fear that the Christians might side with
2589
the King of Spain if he should attempt to conquer Japan; and even if no
2590
foreign power intervened, there was reason to fear rebellions of
2591
Christians against the newly established central power. Economic
2592
exploitation, in the modern sense of the word, did not yet exist apart
2593
from political domination, and the Japanese would have welcomed trade if
2594
there had been no danger of conquest. They seem to have overrated the
2595
power of Spain, which certainly could not have conquered them. Japanese
2596
armies were, in those days, far larger than the armies of Europe; the
2597
Japanese had learnt the use of fire-arms; and their knowledge of
2598
strategy was very great. Kyoto, the capital, was one of the largest
2599
cities in the world, having about a million inhabitants. The population
2600
of Japan was probably greater than that of any European State. It would
2601
therefore have been possible, without much trouble, to resist any
2602
expedition that Europe could have sent against Japan. It would even have
2603
been easy to conquer Manila, as Hideyoshi at one time thought of doing.
2604
But we can well understand how terrifying would be a map of the world
2605
showing the whole of North and South America as belonging to Philip II.
2606
Moreover the Japanese Government sent pretended converts to Europe,
2607
where they became priests, had audience of the Pope, penetrated into the
2608
inmost councils of Spain, and mastered all the meditated villainies of
2609
European Imperialism. These spies, when they came home and laid their
2610
reports before the Government, naturally increased its fears. The
2611
Japanese, therefore, decided to have no further intercourse with the
2612
white men. And whatever may be said against this policy, I cannot feel
2613
convinced that it was unwise.
2614
2615
For over two hundred years, until the coming of Commodore Perry's
2616
squadron from the United States in 1853, Japan enjoyed complete peace
2617
and almost complete stagnation--the only period of either in Japanese
2618
history, It then became necessary to learn fresh lessons in the use of
2619
fire-arms from Western nations, and to abandon the exclusive policy
2620
until they were learnt. When they have been learnt, perhaps we shall see
2621
another period of isolation.
2622
2623
FOOTNOTES:
2624
2625
[Footnote 40: The best book known to me on early Japan is Murdoch's
2626
_History of Japan_, The volume dealing with the earlier period is
2627
published by Kegan Paul, 1910. The chronologically later volume was
2628
published earlier; its title is: _A History of Japan during the Century
2629
of Early Foreign Intercourse_ (1542--1651), by James Murdoch M.A. in
2630
collaboration with Isoh Yamagata. Kobe, office of the _Japan Chronicle_,
2631
1903. I shall allude to these volumes as Murdoch I and Murdoch II
2632
respectively.]
2633
2634
[Footnote 41: Murdoch I. pp. 113 ff.]
2635
2636
[Footnote 42: Ibid., II. pp. 375 ff.]
2637
2638
[Footnote 43: Murdoch I. p. 147.]
2639
2640
[Footnote 44: Murdoch, II, p. 288.]
2641
2642
[Footnote 45: Murdoch II, p. 667.]
2643
2644
2645
2646
2647
CHAPTER VI
2648
2649
MODERN JAPAN
2650
2651
2652
The modern Japanese nation is unique, not only in this age, but in the
2653
history of the world. It combines elements which most Europeans would
2654
have supposed totally incompatible, and it has realized an original plan
2655
to a degree hardly known in human affairs. The Japan which now exists is
2656
almost exactly that which was intended by the leaders of the Restoration
2657
in 1867. Many unforeseen events have happened in the world: American has
2658
risen and Russia has fallen, China has become a Republic and the Great
2659
War has shattered Europe. But throughout all these changes the leading
2660
statesmen of Japan have gone along the road traced out for them at the
2661
beginning of the Meiji era, and the nation has followed them with
2662
ever-increasing faithfulness. One single purpose has animated leaders
2663
and followers alike: the strengthening and extension of the Empire. To
2664
realize this purpose a new kind of policy has been created, combining
2665
the sources of strength in modern America with those in Rome at the time
2666
of the Punic Wars, uniting the material organization and scientific
2667
knowledge of pre-war Germany with the outlook on life of the Hebrews in
2668
the Book of Joshua.
2669
2670
The transformation of Japan since 1867 is amazing, and people have been
2671
duly amazed by it. But what is still more amazing is that such an
2672
immense change in knowledge and in way of life should have brought so
2673
little change in religion and ethics, and that such change as it has
2674
brought in these matters should have been in a direction opposite to
2675
that which would have been naturally expected. Science is supposed to
2676
tend to rationalism; yet the spread of scientific knowledge in Japan has
2677
synchronized with a great intensification of Mikado-Worship, the most
2678
anachronistic feature in the Japanese civilization. For sociology, for
2679
social psychology, and for political theory, Japan is an extraordinarily
2680
interesting country. The synthesis of East and West which has been
2681
effected is of a most peculiar kind. There is far more of the East than
2682
appears on the surface; but there is everything of the West that tends
2683
to national efficiency. How far there is a genuine fusion of Eastern and
2684
Western elements may be doubted; the nervous excitability of the people
2685
suggests something strained and artificial in their way of life, but
2686
this may possibly be a merely temporary phenomenon.
2687
2688
Throughout Japanese politics since the Restoration, there are two
2689
separate strands, one analogous to that of Western nations, especially
2690
pre-war Germany, the other inherited from the feudal age, which is more
2691
analogous to the politics of the Scottish Highlands down to 1745. It is
2692
no part of my purpose to give a history of modern Japan; I wish only to
2693
give an outline of the forces which control events and movements in that
2694
country, with such illustrations as are necessary. There are many good
2695
books on Japanese politics; the one that I have found most informative
2696
is McLaren's _Political History of Japan during the Meiji Era_
2697
1867-1912 (Allen and Unwin, 1916). For a picture of Japan as it appeared
2698
in the early years of the Meiji era, Lafcadio Hearn is of course
2699
invaluable; his book _Japan, An Interpretation_ shows his dawning
2700
realization of the grim sides of the Japanese character, after the
2701
cherry-blossom business has lost its novelty. I shall not have much to
2702
say about cherry-blossom; it was not flowering when I was in Japan.
2703
2704
Before, 1867, Japan was a feudal federation of clans, in which the
2705
Central Government was in the hands of the Shogun, who was the head of
2706
his own clan, but had by no means undisputed sway over the more powerful
2707
of the other clans. There had been various dynasties of Shoguns at
2708
various times, but since the seventeenth century the Shogunate had been
2709
in the Tokugawa clan. Throughout the Tokugawa Shogunate, except during
2710
its first few years, Japan had been closed to foreign intercourse,
2711
except for a strictly limited commerce with the Dutch. The modern era
2712
was inaugurated by two changes: first, the compulsory opening of the
2713
country to Western trade; secondly, the transference of power from the
2714
Tokugawa clan to the clans of Satsuma and Choshu, who have governed
2715
Japan ever since. It is impossible to understand Japan or its politics
2716
and possibilities without realizing the nature of the governing forces
2717
and their roots in the feudal system of the former age. I will therefore
2718
first outline these internal movements, before coming to the part which
2719
Japan has played in international affairs.
2720
2721
What happened, nominally, in 1867 was that the Mikado was restored to
2722
power, after having been completely eclipsed by the Shogun since the end
2723
of the twelfth century. During this long period, the Mikado seems to
2724
have been regarded by the common people with reverence as a holy
2725
personage, but he was allowed no voice in affairs, was treated with
2726
contempt by the Shogun, was sometimes deposed if he misbehaved, and was
2727
often kept in great poverty.
2728
2729
Of so little importance was the Imperial person in the days of
2730
early foreign intercourse that the Jesuits hardly knew of the
2731
Emperor's existence. They seem to have thought of him as a
2732
Japanese counterpart of the Pope of Rome, except that he had no
2733
aspirations for temporal power. The Dutch writers likewise were
2734
in the habit of referring to the Shogun as "His Majesty," and on
2735
their annual pilgrimage from Dashima to Yedo, Kyoto (where the
2736
Mikado lived) was the only city which they were permitted to
2737
examine freely. The privilege was probably accorded by the
2738
Tokugawa to show the foreigners how lightly the Court was
2739
regarded. Commodore Perry delivered to the Shogun in Yedo the
2740
autograph letter to the Emperor of Japan, from the President of
2741
the United States, and none of the Ambassadors of the Western
2742
Powers seem to have entertained any suspicion that in dealing
2743
with the authorities in Yedo they were not approaching the
2744
throne.
2745
2746
In the light of these facts, some other explanation of the
2747
relations between the Shogunate and the Imperial Court must be
2748
sought than that which depends upon the claim now made by
2749
Japanese historians of the official type, that the throne,
2750
throughout this whole period, was divinely preserved by the
2751
Heavenly Gods.[46]
2752
2753
What happened, in outline, seems to have been a combination of very
2754
different forces. There were antiquarians who observed that the Mikado
2755
had had real power in the tenth century, and who wished to revert to the
2756
ancient customs. There were patriots who were annoyed with the Shogun
2757
for yielding to the pressure of the white men and concluding commercial
2758
treaties with them. And there were the western clans, which had never
2759
willingly submitted to the authority of the Shogun. To quote McLaren
2760
once more (p. 33):--
2761
2762
The movement to restore the Emperor was coupled with a form of
2763
Chauvinism or intense nationalism which may be summed up in the
2764
expression "Exalt the Emperor! Away with the barbarians!" (Kinno!
2765
Joi!) From this it would appear that the Dutch scholars' work in
2766
enlightening the nation upon the subject of foreign scientific
2767
attainments was anathema, but a conclusion of that kind must not
2768
be hastily arrived at. The cry, "Away with the barbarians!" was
2769
directed against Perry and the envoys of other foreign Powers,
2770
but there was nothing in that slogan which indicates a general
2771
unwillingness to emulate the foreigners' achievements in
2772
armaments or military tactics. In fact, for a number of years
2773
previous to 1853, Satsuma and Choshu and other western clans had
2774
been very busily engaged in manufacturing guns and practising
2775
gunnery: to that extent, at any rate, the discoveries of the
2776
students of European sciences had been deliberately used by those
2777
men who were to be foremost in the Restoration.
2778
2779
This passage gives the key to the spirit which has animated modern Japan
2780
down to the present day.
2781
2782
The Restoration was, to a greater extent than is usually realized in the
2783
West, a conservative and even reactionary movement. Professor Murdoch,
2784
in his authoritative _History of Japan,_[47] says:--
2785
2786
2787
2788
In the interpretation of this sudden and startling development
2789
most European writers and critics show themselves seriously at
2790
fault. Even some of the more intelligent among them find the
2791
solution of this portentous enigma in the very superficial and
2792
facile formula of "imitation." But the Japanese still retain
2793
their own unit of social organization, which is not the
2794
individual, as with us, but the _family_. Furthermore, the
2795
resemblance of the Japanese administrative system, both central
2796
and local, to certain European systems is not the result of
2797
imitation, or borrowing, or adaptation. Such resemblance is
2798
merely an odd and fortuitous resemblance. When the statesmen who
2799
overthrew the Tokugawa r�gime in 1868, and abolished the feudal
2800
system in 1871, were called upon to provide the nation with a new
2801
equipment of administrative machinery, they did not go to Europe
2802
for their models. They simply harked back for some eleven or
2803
twelve centuries in their own history and resuscitated the
2804
administrative machinery that had first been installed in Japan
2805
by the genius of Fujiwara Kamatari and his coadjutors in 645
2806
A.D., and more fully supplemented and organized in the succeeding
2807
fifty or sixty years. The present Imperial Cabinet of ten
2808
Ministers, with their departments and departmental staff of
2809
officials, is a modified revival of the Eight Boards adapted from
2810
China and established in the seventh century.... The present
2811
administrative system is indeed of alien provenance; but it was
2812
neither borrowed nor adapted a generation ago, nor borrowed nor
2813
adapted from Europe. It was really a system of hoary antiquity
2814
that was revived to cope with pressing modern exigencies.
2815
2816
The outcome was that the clans of Satsuma and Choshu acquired control of
2817
the Mikado, made his exaltation the symbol of resistance to the
2818
foreigner (with whom the Shogun had concluded unpopular treaties), and
2819
secured the support of the country by being the champions of
2820
nationalism. Under extraordinarily able leaders, a policy was adopted
2821
which has been pursued consistently ever since, and has raised Japan
2822
from being the helpless victim of Western greed to being one of the
2823
greatest Powers in the world. Feudalisim was abolished, the Central
2824
Government was made omnipotent, a powerful army and navy were created,
2825
China and Russia were successively defeated, Korea was annexed and a
2826
protectorate established over Manchuria and Inner Mongolia, industry and
2827
commerce were developed, universal compulsory education instituted; and
2828
worship of the Mikado firmly established by teaching in the schools and
2829
by professorial patronage of historical myths. The artificial creation
2830
of Mikado-worship is one of the most interesting features of modern
2831
Japan, and a model to all other States as regards the method of
2832
preventing the growth of rationalism. There is a very instructive little
2833
pamphlet by Professor B.H. Chamberlain, who was Professor of Japanese
2834
and philosophy at Tokyo, and had a knowledge of Japanese which few
2835
Europeans had equalled. His pamphlet is called _The Invention of a New
2836
Religion_, and is published by the Rationalist Press Association. He
2837
points out that, until recent times, the religion of Japan was Buddhism,
2838
to the practical exclusion of every other. There had been, in very
2839
ancient times, a native religion called Shinto, and it had lingered on
2840
obscurely. But it is only during the last forty years or so that Shinto
2841
has been erected into a State religion, and has been reconstructed so as
2842
to suit modern requirements.[48] It is, of course, preferable to
2843
Buddhism because it is native and national; it is a tribal religion, not
2844
one which aims at appealing to all mankind. Its whole purpose, as it has
2845
been developed by modern statesmen, is to glorify Japan and the Mikado.
2846
2847
Professor Chamberlain points out how little reverence there was for the
2848
Mikado until some time after the Restoration:--
2849
2850
The sober fact is that no nation probably has ever treated its
2851
sovereigns more cavalierly than the Japanese have done, from the
2852
beginning of authentic history down to within the memory of
2853
living men. Emperors have been deposed, emperors have been
2854
assassinated; for centuries every succession to the throne was
2855
the signal for intrigues and sanguinary broils. Emperors have
2856
been exiled; some have been murdered in exile.... For long
2857
centuries the Government was in the hands of Mayors of the
2858
Palace, who substituted one infant sovereign for another,
2859
generally forcing each to abdicate as he approached man's estate.
2860
At one period, these Mayors of the Palace left the Descendant of
2861
the Sun in such distress that His Imperial Majesty and the
2862
Imperial Princes were obliged to gain a livelihood by selling
2863
their autographs! Nor did any great party in the State protest
2864
against this condition of affairs. Even in the present reign
2865
(that of Meiji)--the most glorious in Japanese history--there
2866
have been two rebellions, during one of which a rival Emperor was
2867
set up in one part of the country, and a Republic proclaimed in
2868
another.
2869
2870
This last sentence, though it states sober historical fact, is scarcely
2871
credible to those who only know twentieth-century Japan. The spread of
2872
superstition has gone _pari passu_ with the spread of education, and a
2873
revolt against the Mikado is now unthinkable. Time and again, in the
2874
midst of political strife, the Mikado has been induced to intervene, and
2875
instantly the hottest combatants have submitted abjectly. Although there
2876
is a Diet, the Mikado is an absolute ruler--as absolute as any sovereign
2877
ever has been.
2878
2879
The civilization of Japan, before the Restoration, came from China.
2880
Religion, art, writing, philosophy and ethics, everything was copied
2881
from Chinese models. Japanese history begins in the fifth century A.D.,
2882
whereas Chinese history goes back to about 2,000 B.C., or at any rate to
2883
somewhere in the second millennium B.C. This was galling to Japanese
2884
pride, so an early history was invented long ago, like the theory that
2885
the Romans were descended from �neas. To quote Professor Chamberlain
2886
again:--
2887
2888
The first glimmer of genuine Japanese history dates from the
2889
fifth century _after_ Christ, and even the accounts of what
2890
happened in the sixth century must be received with caution.
2891
Japanese scholars know this as well as we do; it is one of the
2892
certain results of investigation. But the Japanese bureaucracy
2893
does not desire to have the light let in on this inconvenient
2894
circumstance. While granting a dispensation _re_ the national
2895
mythology, properly so called, it exacts belief in every iota of
2896
the national historic legends. Woe to the native professor who
2897
strays from the path of orthodoxy. His wife and children (and in
2898
Japan every man, however young, has a wife and children) will
2899
starve. From the late Prince Ito's grossly misleading _Commentary
2900
on the Japanese Constitution_ down to school compendiums, the
2901
absurd dates are everywhere insisted upon.
2902
2903
This question of fictitious early history might be considered
2904
unimportant, like the fact that, with us, parsons have to pretend to
2905
believe the Bible, which some people think innocuous. But it is part of
2906
the whole system, which has a political object, to which free thought
2907
and free speech are ruthlessly sacrificed. As this same pamphlet says:--
2908
2909
Shinto, a primitive nature cult, which had fallen into discredit,
2910
was taken out of its cupboard and dusted. The common people, it
2911
is true, continued to place their affections on Buddhism, the
2912
popular festivals were Buddhist; Buddhist also the temples where
2913
they buried their dead. The governing class determined to change
2914
all this. They insisted on the Shinto doctrine that the Mikado
2915
descends in direct succession from the native Goddess of the Sun,
2916
and that He himself is a living God on earth who justly claims
2917
the absolute fealty of his subjects. Such things as laws and
2918
constitutions are but free gifts on His part, not in any sense
2919
popular rights. Of course, the ministers and officials, high and
2920
low, who carry on His government, are to be regarded not as
2921
public servants, but rather as executants of supreme--one might
2922
say supernatural--authority. Shinto, because connected with the
2923
Imperial family, is to be alone honoured.
2924
2925
All this is not mere theorizing; it is the practical basis of Japanese
2926
politics. The Mikado, after having been for centuries in the keeping of
2927
the Tokugawa Shoguns, was captured by the clans of Satsuma and Choshu,
2928
and has been in their keeping ever since. They were represented
2929
politically by five men, the Genro or Elder Statesmen, who are sometimes
2930
miscalled the Privy Council. Only two still survive. The Genro have no
2931
constitutional existence; they are merely the people who have the ear of
2932
the Mikado. They can make him say whatever they wish; therefore they are
2933
omnipotent. It has happened repeatedly that they have had against them
2934
the Diet and the whole force of public opinion; nevertheless they have
2935
invariably been able to enforce their will, because they could make the
2936
Mikado speak, and no one dare oppose the Mikado. They do not themselves
2937
take office; they select the Prime Minister and the Ministers of War and
2938
Marine, and allow them to bear the blame if anything goes wrong. The
2939
Genro are the real Government of Japan, and will presumably remain so
2940
until the Mikado is captured by some other clique.
2941
2942
From a patriotic point of view, the Genro have shown very great wisdom
2943
in the conduct of affairs. There is reason to think that if Japan were
2944
a democracy its policy would be more Chauvinistic than it is. Apologists
2945
of Japan, such as Mr. Bland, are in the habit of telling us that there
2946
is a Liberal anti-militarist party in Japan, which is soon going to
2947
dominate foreign policy. I see no reason to believe this. Undoubtedly
2948
there is a strong movement for increasing the power of the Diet and
2949
making the Cabinet responsible to it; there is also a feeling that the
2950
Ministers of War and Marine ought to be responsible to the Cabinet and
2951
the Prime Minister, not only to the Mikado directly.[49] But democracy
2952
in Japan does not mean a diminution of Chauvinism in foreign policy.
2953
There is a small Socialist party which is genuinely anti-Chauvinist and
2954
anti-militarist; this party, probably, will grow as Japanese
2955
industrialism grows. But so-called Japanese Liberals are just as
2956
Chauvinistic as the Government, and public opinion is more so. Indeed
2957
there have been occasions when the Genro, in spite of popular fury, has
2958
saved the nation from mistakes which it would certainly have committed
2959
if the Government had been democratic. One of the most interesting of
2960
these occasions was the conclusion of the Treaty of Portsmouth, after
2961
the Sino-Japanese war, which deserves to be told as illustrative of
2962
Japanese politics.[50]
2963
2964
In 1905, after the battles of Tsushima and Mukden, it became clear to
2965
impartial observers that Russia could accomplish nothing further at sea,
2966
and Japan could accomplish nothing further on land. The Russian
2967
Government was anxious to continue the war, having gradually accumulated
2968
men and stores in Manchuria, and greatly improved the working of the
2969
Siberian railway. The Japanese Government, on the contrary, knew that it
2970
had already achieved all the success it could hope for, and that it
2971
would be extremely difficult to raise the loans required for a
2972
prolongation of the war. Under these circumstances, Japan appealed
2973
secretly to President Roosevelt requesting his good offices for the
2974
restoration of peace. President Roosevelt therefore issued invitations
2975
to both belligerents to a peace conference. The Russian Government,
2976
faced by a strong peace party and incipient revolution, dared not refuse
2977
the invitation, especially in view of the fact that the sympathies of
2978
neutrals were on the whole with Japan. Japan, being anxious for peace,
2979
led Russia to suppose that Japan's demands would be so excessive as to
2980
alienate the sympathy of the world and afford a complete answer to the
2981
peace party in Russia. In particular, the Japanese gave out that they
2982
would absolutely insist upon an indemnity. The Government had in fact
2983
resolved, from the first, not to insist on an indemnity, but this was
2984
known to very few people in Japan, and to no one outside Japan. The
2985
Russians, believing that the Japanese would not give way about the
2986
indemnity, showed themselves generous as regards all other Japanese
2987
demands. To their horror and consternation, when they had already packed
2988
up and were just ready to break up the conference, the Japanese
2989
announced (as they had from the first intended to do) that they accepted
2990
the Russian concessions and would waive the claim to an indemnity. Thus
2991
the Russian Government and the Japanese people were alike furious,
2992
because they had been tricked--the former in the belief that it could
2993
yield everything except the indemnity without bringing peace, the latter
2994
in the belief that the Government would never give way about the
2995
indemnity. In Russia there was revolution; in Japan there were riots,
2996
furious diatribes in the Press, and a change of Government--of the
2997
nominal Government, that is to say, for the Genro continued to be the
2998
real power throughout. In this case, there is no doubt that the decision
2999
of the Genro to make peace was the right one from every point of view;
3000
there is also very little doubt that a peace advantageous to Japan could
3001
not have been made without trickery.
3002
3003
Foreigners unacquainted with Japan, knowing that there is a Diet in
3004
which the Lower House is elected, imagine that Japan is at least as
3005
democratic as pre-war Germany. This is a delusion. It is true that
3006
Marquis Ito, who framed the Constitution, which was promulgated in 1889,
3007
took Germany for his model, as the Japanese have always done in all
3008
their Westernizing efforts, except as regards the Navy, in which Great
3009
Britain has been copied. But there were many points in which the
3010
Japanese Constitution differed from that of the German Empire. To begin
3011
with, the Reichstag was elected by manhood suffrage, whereas in Japan
3012
there is a property qualification which restricts the franchise to about
3013
25 per cent of the adult males. This, however, is a small matter
3014
compared to the fact that the Mikado's power is far less limited than
3015
that of the Kaiser was. It is true that Japan does not differ from
3016
pre-war Germany in the fact that Ministers are not responsible to the
3017
Diet, but to the Emperor, and are responsible severally, not
3018
collectively. The War Minister must be a General, the Minister of Marine
3019
must be an Admiral; they take their orders, not from the Prime Minister,
3020
but from the military and naval authorities respectively, who, of
3021
course, are under the control of the Mikado. But in Germany the
3022
Reichstag had the power of the purse, whereas in Japan, if the Diet
3023
refuses to pass the Budget, the Budget of the previous year can be
3024
applied, and when the Diet is not sitting, laws can be enacted
3025
temporarily by Imperial decree--a provision which had no analogue in the
3026
German Constitution.
3027
3028
The Constitution having been granted by the Emperor of his free grace,
3029
it is considered impious to criticize it or to suggest any change in it,
3030
since this would imply that His Majesty's work was not wholly perfect.
3031
To understand the Constitution, it is necessary to read it in
3032
conjunction with the authoritative commentary of Marquis Ito, which was
3033
issued at the same time. Mr. Coleman very correctly summarizes the
3034
Constitution as follows[51]:--
3035
3036
Article I of the Japanese Constitution provides that "The Empire
3037
of Japan shall be reigned over and governed by a line of Emperors
3038
unbroken for ages eternal."
3039
3040
"By reigned over and governed," wrote Marquis Ito in his
3041
_Commentaries on the Constitution of Japan_, "it is meant that
3042
the Emperor on His Throne combines in Himself the Sovereignty of
3043
the State and the Government of the country and of His subjects."
3044
3045
Article 3 of the Constitution states that "the Emperor is sacred
3046
and inviolate." Marquis Ito's comment in explanation of this is
3047
peculiarly Japanese. He says, "The Sacred Throne was established
3048
at the time when the heavens and earth became separated. The
3049
Empire is Heaven-descended, divine and sacred; He is pre-eminent
3050
above all His subjects. He must be reverenced and is inviolable.
3051
He has, indeed, to pay due respect to the law, but the law has no
3052
power to hold Him accountable to it. Not only shall there be no
3053
irreverence for the Emperor's person, but also shall He neither
3054
be made a topic of derogatory comment nor one of discussion."
3055
3056
Through the Constitution of Japan the Japanese Emperor exercises
3057
the legislative power, the executive power, and the judiciary
3058
power. The Emperor convokes the Imperial Diet, opens, closes,
3059
prorogues, and dissolves it. When the Imperial Diet is not
3060
sitting, Imperial ordinances may be issued in place of laws. The
3061
Emperor has supreme control of the Army and Navy, declares war,
3062
makes peace, and concludes treaties; orders amnesty, pardon and
3063
commutation of punishments.
3064
3065
As to the Ministers of State, the Constitution of Japan, Article
3066
55, says: "The respective Ministers of State shall give their
3067
advice to the Emperor and be responsible for it."
3068
3069
Ito's commentary on this article indicates his intention in
3070
framing it. "When a Minister of State errs in the discharge of
3071
his functions, the power of deciding upon his responsibilities
3072
belongs to the Sovereign of the State: he alone can dismiss a
3073
Minister who has appointed him. Who then is it, except the
3074
Sovereign, that can appoint, dismiss, and punish a Minister of
3075
State? The appointment and dismissal of them having been included
3076
by the Constitution in the sovereign power of the Emperor, it is
3077
only a legitimate consequence that the power of deciding as to
3078
the responsibility of Ministers is withheld from the Diet. But
3079
the Diet may put questions to the Ministers and demand open
3080
answers from them before the public, and it may also present
3081
addresses to the Sovereign setting forth its opinions.
3082
3083
"The Minister President of State is to make representations to
3084
the Emperor on matters of State, and to indicate, according to
3085
His pleasure, the general course of the policy of the State,
3086
every branch of the administration being under control of the
3087
said Minister. The compass of his duties is large, and his
3088
responsibilities cannot but be proportionately great. As to the
3089
other Ministers of State, they are severally held responsible for
3090
the matters within their respective competency; there is no joint
3091
responsibility among them in regard to such matters. For, the
3092
Minister President and the other Ministers of State, being alike
3093
personally appointed by the Emperor, the proceedings of each one
3094
of them are, in every respect, controlled by the will of the
3095
Emperor, and the Minister President himself has no power of
3096
control over the posts occupied by other Ministers, while the
3097
latter ought not to be dependent upon the former. In some
3098
countries, the Cabinet is regarded as constituting a corporate
3099
body, and the Ministers are not held to take part in the conduct
3100
of the Government each one in an individual capacity, but joint
3101
responsibility is the rule. The evil of such a system is that the
3102
power of party combination will ultimately overrule the supreme
3103
power of the Sovereign. Such a state of things can never be
3104
approved of according to our Constitution."
3105
3106
In spite of the small powers of the Diet, it succeeded, in the first
3107
four years of its existence (1890-94), in causing some annoyance to the
3108
Government. Until 1894, the policy of Japan was largely controlled by
3109
Marquis Ito, who was opposed to militarism and Chauvinism. The statesmen
3110
of the first half of the Meiji era were concerned mainly with
3111
introducing modern education and modern social organization; they wished
3112
to preserve Japanese independence _vis-�-vis_ the Western Powers, but
3113
did not aim, for the time being, at imperialist expansion on their own
3114
account. Ito represented this older school of Restoration statesmen.
3115
Their ideas of statecraft were in the main derived from the Germany of
3116
the 'eighties, which was kept by Bismarck from undue adventurousness.
3117
But when the Diet proved difficult to manage, they reverted to an
3118
earlier phase of Bismarck's career for an example to imitate. The
3119
Prussian Landtag (incredible as it may seem) was vigorously obstreperous
3120
at the time when Bismarck first rose to power, but he tamed it by
3121
glutting the nation with military glory in the wars against Austria and
3122
France. Similarly, in 1894, the Japanese Government embarked on war
3123
against China, and instantly secured the enthusiastic support of the
3124
hitherto rebellious Diet. From that day to this, the Japanese Government
3125
has never been vigorously opposed except for its good deeds (such as the
3126
Treaty of Portsmouth); and it has atoned for these by abundant
3127
international crimes, which the nation has always applauded to the echo.
3128
Marquis Ito was responsible for the outbreak of war in 1894. He was
3129
afterwards again opposed to the new policy of predatory war, but was
3130
powerless to prevent it.[52] His opposition, however, was tiresome,
3131
until at last he was murdered in Korea.
3132
3133
Since the outbreak of the Sino-Japanese war in 1894, Japan has pursued a
3134
consistent career of imperialism, with quite extraordinary success. The
3135
nature and fruits of that career I shall consider in the next two
3136
chapters. For the time being, it has arrested whatever tendency existed
3137
towards the development of democracy; the Diet is quite as unimportant
3138
as the English Parliament was in the time of the Tudors. Whether the
3139
present system will continue for a long time, it is impossible to guess.
3140
An unsuccessful foreign war would probably destroy not only the existing
3141
system, but the whole unity and _morale_ of the nation; I do not believe
3142
that Japan would be as firm in defeat as Germany has proved to be.
3143
Diplomatic failure, without war, would probably produce a more Liberal
3144
regime, without revolution. There is, however, one very explosive
3145
element in Japan, and that is industrialism. It is impossible for Japan
3146
to be a Great Power without developing her industry, and in fact
3147
everything possible is done to increase Japanese manufactures. Moreover,
3148
industry is required to absorb the growing population, which cannot
3149
emigrate to English-speaking regions, and will not emigrate to the
3150
mainland of Asia because Chinese competition is too severe. Therefore
3151
the only way to support a larger population is to absorb it into
3152
industrialism, manufacturing goods for export as a means of purchasing
3153
food abroad. Industrialism in Japan requires control of China, because
3154
Japan contains hardly any of the raw materials of industry, and cannot
3155
obtain them sufficiently cheaply or securely in open competition with
3156
America and Europe. Also dependence upon imported food requires a strong
3157
navy. Thus the motives for imperialism and navalism in Japan are very
3158
similar to those that have prevailed in England. But this policy
3159
requires high taxation, while successful competition in neutral markets
3160
requires--or rather, is thought to require--starvation wages and long
3161
hours for operatives. In the cotton industry of Osoka, for example, most
3162
of the work is done by girls under fourteen, who work eleven hours a day
3163
and got, in 1916, an average daily wage of 5d.[53] Labour organization
3164
is in its infancy, and so is Socialism;[54] but both are certain to
3165
spread if the number of industrial workers increases without a very
3166
marked improvement in hours and wages. Of course the very rigidity of
3167
the Japanese policy, which has given it its strength, makes it incapable
3168
of adjusting itself to Socialism and Trade Unionism, which are
3169
vigorously persecuted by the Government. And on the other hand Socialism
3170
and Trade Unionism cannot accept Mikado-worship and the whole farrago of
3171
myth upon which the Japanese State depends.[55] There is therefore a
3172
likelihood, some twenty or thirty years hence--assuming a peaceful and
3173
prosperous development in the meantime--of a very bitter class conflict
3174
between the proletarians on the one side and the employers and
3175
bureaucrats on the other. If this should happen to synchronize with
3176
agrarian discontent, it would be impossible to foretell the issue.
3177
3178
The problems facing Japan are therefore very difficult. To provide for
3179
the growing population it is necessary to develop industry; to develop
3180
industry it is necessary to control Chinese raw materials; to control
3181
Chinese raw materials it is necessary to go against the economic
3182
interests of America and Europe; to do this successfully requires a
3183
large army and navy, which in turn involve great poverty for
3184
wage-earners. And expanding industry with poverty for wage-earners
3185
means growing discontent, increase of Socialism, dissolution of filial
3186
piety and Mikado-worship in the poorer classes, and therefore a
3187
continually greater and greater menace to the whole foundation on which
3188
the fabric of the State is built. From without, Japan is threatened with
3189
the risk of war against America or of a revival of China. From within,
3190
there will be, before long, the risk of proletarian revolution.
3191
3192
From all these dangers, there is only one escape, and that is a
3193
diminution of the birth-rate. But such an idea is not merely abhorrent
3194
to the militarists as diminishing the supply of cannon-fodder; it is
3195
fundamentally opposed to Japanese religion and morality, of which
3196
patriotism and filial piety are the basis. Therefore if Japan is to
3197
emerge successfully, a much more intense Westernizing must take place,
3198
involving not only mechanical processes and knowledge of bare facts, but
3199
ideals and religion and general outlook on life. There must be free
3200
thought, scepticism, diminution in the intensity of herd-instinct.
3201
Without these, the population question cannot be solved; and if that
3202
remains unsolved, disaster is sooner or later inevitable.
3203
3204
FOOTNOTES:
3205
3206
[Footnote 46: McLaren, op. cit. p. 19.]
3207
3208
[Footnote 47: Kegan Paul, 1910, vol. i. p. 20.]
3209
3210
[Footnote 48: "What _popular_ Shinto, as expounded by its village
3211
priests in the old time, was we simply do not know. Our carefully
3212
selected and edited official edition of Shinto is certainly not true
3213
aboriginal Shinto as practised in Yamato before the introduction of
3214
Buddhism and Chinese culture, and many plausible arguments which
3215
disregard that indubitable fact lose much of their weight." (Murdoch, I,
3216
p. 173 n.)]
3217
3218
[Footnote 49: The strength of this movement may, however, be doubted.
3219
Murdoch (op. cit. i, p. 162) says: "At present, 1910, the War Office and
3220
Admiralty are, of all Ministries, by far the strongest in the Empire.
3221
When a party Government does by any strange hap make its appearance on
3222
tho political stage, the Ministers of War and of Marine can afford to
3223
regard its advent with the utmost insouciance. For tho most extreme of
3224
party politicians readily and unhesitatingly admit that the affairs of
3225
the Army and Navy do not fall within the sphere of party politics, but
3226
are the exclusive concern of the Commander-in-Chief, his Imperial
3227
Majesty the Emperor of Japan. On none in the public service of Japan are
3228
titles of nobility, high rank, and still more substantial emoluments
3229
showered with a more liberal hand than upon the great captains and the
3230
great sailors of the Empire. In China, on the other hand, the military
3231
man is, if not a pariah, at all events an exceptional barbarian, whom
3232
policy makes it advisable to treat with a certain amount of gracious,
3233
albeit semi-contemptuous, condescension."]
3234
3235
[Footnote 50: The following account is taken from McLaren, op. cit.
3236
chaps, xii. and xiii.]
3237
3238
[Footnote 51: _The Far East Unveiled_, pp. 252-58.]
3239
3240
[Footnote 52: See McLaren, op. cit. pp. 227, 228, 289.]
3241
3242
[Footnote 53: Coleman, op. cit. chap. xxxv.]
3243
3244
[Footnote 54: See an invaluable pamphlet, "The Socialist and Labour
3245
Movements in Japan," published by the _Japan Chronicle_, 1921, for an
3246
account of what is happening in this direction.]
3247
3248
[Footnote 55: _The Times_ of February 7, 1922, contains a telegram from
3249
its correspondent in Tokyo, _� propos_ of the funeral of Prince
3250
Yamagata, Chief of the Genro, to the following effect:--
3251
3252
"To-day a voice was heard in the Diet in opposition to the grant of
3253
expenses for the State funeral of Prince Yamagata. The resolution, which
3254
was introduced by the member for Osaka constituency, who is regarded as
3255
the spokesman of the so-called Parliamentary Labour Party founded last
3256
year, states that the Chief of the Genro (Elder Statesmen) did not
3257
render true service to the State, and, although the recipient of the
3258
highest dignities, was an enemy of mankind and suppressor of democratic
3259
institutions. The outcome was a foregone conclusion, but the fact that
3260
the introducer could obtain the necessary support to table the
3261
resolution formally was not the least interesting feature of the
3262
incident."]
3263
3264
3265
3266
3267
CHAPTER VII
3268
3269
JAPAN AND CHINA BEFORE 1914
3270
3271
3272
Before going into the detail of Japan's policy towards China, it is
3273
necessary to put the reader on his guard against the habit of thinking
3274
of the "Yellow Races," as though China and Japan formed some kind of
3275
unity. There are, of course, reasons which, at first sight, would lead
3276
one to suppose that China and Japan could be taken in one group in
3277
comparison with the races of Europe and of Africa. To begin with, the
3278
Chinese and Japanese are both yellow, which points to ethnic affinities;
3279
but the political and cultural importance of ethnic affinities is very
3280
small. The Japanese assert that the hairy Ainus, who are low in the
3281
scale of barbarians, are a white race akin to ourselves. I never saw a
3282
hairy Ainu, and I suspect the Japanese of malice in urging us to admit
3283
the Ainus as poor relations; but even if they really are of Aryan
3284
descent, that does not prove that they have anything of the slightest
3285
importance in common with us as compared to what the Japanese and
3286
Chinese have in common with us. Similarity of culture is infinitely more
3287
important than a common racial origin.
3288
3289
It is true that Japanese culture, until the Restoration, was derived
3290
from China. To this day, Japanese script is practically the same as
3291
Chinese, and Buddhism, which is still the religion of the people, is of
3292
the sort derived originally from China. Loyalty and filial piety, which
3293
are the foundations of Japanese ethics, are Confucian virtues, imported
3294
along with the rest of ancient Chinese culture. But even before the
3295
irruption of European influences, China and Japan had had such different
3296
histories and national temperaments that doctrines originally similar
3297
had developed in opposite directions. China has been, since the time of
3298
the First Emperor (_c._ 200 B.C.), a vast unified bureaucratic land
3299
empire, having much contact with foreign nations--Annamese, Burmese,
3300
Mongols, Tibetans and even Indians. Japan, on the other hand, was an
3301
island kingdom, having practically no foreign contact except with Korea
3302
and occasionally with China, divided into clans which were constantly at
3303
war with each other, developing the virtues and vices of feudal
3304
chivalry, but totally unconcerned with economic or administrative
3305
problems on a large scale. It was not difficult to adapt the doctrines
3306
of Confucius to such a country, because in the time of Confucius China
3307
was still feudal and still divided into a number of petty kingdoms, in
3308
one of which the sage himself was a courtier, like Goethe at Weimar. But
3309
naturally his doctrines underwent a different development from that
3310
which befel them in their own country.
3311
3312
In old Japan, for instance, loyalty to the clan chieftain is the virtue
3313
one finds most praised; it is this same virtue, with its scope enlarged,
3314
which has now become patriotism. Loyalty is a virtue naturally praised
3315
where conflicts between roughly equal forces are frequent, as they were
3316
in feudal Japan, and are in the modern international world. In China, on
3317
the contrary, power seemed so secure, the Empire was so vast and
3318
immemorial, that the need for loyalty was not felt. Security bred a
3319
different set of virtues, such as courtesy, considerateness, and
3320
compromise. Now that security is gone, and the Chinese find themselves
3321
plunged into a world of warring bandits, they have difficulty in
3322
developing the patriotism, ruthlessness, and unscrupulousness which the
3323
situation demands. The Japanese have no such difficulty, having been
3324
schooled for just such requirements by their centuries of feudal
3325
anarchy. Accordingly we find that Western influence has only accentuated
3326
the previous differences between China and Japan: modern Chinese like
3327
our thought but dislike our mechanism, while modern Japanese like our
3328
mechanism but dislike our thought.
3329
3330
From some points of view, Asia, including Russia, may be regarded as a
3331
unity; but from this unity Japan must be excluded. Russia, China, and
3332
India contain vast plains given over to peasant agriculture; they are
3333
easily swayed by military empires such as that of Jenghis Khan; with
3334
modern railways, they could be dominated from a centre more securely
3335
than in former times. They could be self-subsistent economically, and
3336
invulnerable to outside attack, independent of commerce, and so strong
3337
as to be indifferent to progress. All this may come about some day, if
3338
Russia happens to develop a great conqueror supported by German
3339
organizing ability. But Japan stands outside this order of
3340
possibilities. Japan, like Great Britain, must depend upon commerce for
3341
power and prosperity. As yet, Japan has not developed the Liberal
3342
mentality appropriate to a commercial nation, and is still bent upon
3343
Asiatic conquest and military prowess. This policy brings with it
3344
conflicts with China and Russia, which the present weakness of those
3345
Powers has enabled Japan, hitherto, to conduct successfully. But both
3346
are likely to recover their strength sooner or later, and then the
3347
essential weakness of present Japanese policy will become apparent.
3348
3349
It results naturally from the situation that the Japanese have two
3350
somewhat incompatible ambitions. On the one hand, they wish to pose as
3351
the champions of Asia against the oppression of the white man; on the
3352
other hand, they wish to be admitted to equality by the white Powers,
3353
and to join in the feast obtained by exploiting the nations that are
3354
inefficient in homicide. The former policy should make them friendly to
3355
China and India and hostile to the white races; the latter policy has
3356
inspired the Anglo-Japanese Alliance and its fruits in the annexation of
3357
Korea and the virtual annexation of Manchuria and Inner Mongolia. As a
3358
member of the League of Nations, of the Big Five at Versailles, and of
3359
the Big Three at Washington, Japan appears as one of the ordinary Great
3360
Powers; but at other moments Japan aims at establishing a hegemony in
3361
Asia by standing for the emancipation from white tyranny of those who
3362
happen to be yellow or brown, but not black. Count Okuma, speaking in
3363
the Kobe Chamber of Commerce, said: "There are three hundred million
3364
natives in India looking to us to rescue them from the thraldom of Great
3365
Britain."[56] While in the Far East, I inquired of innumerable
3366
Englishmen what advantage our Government could suppose that we derived
3367
from the Japanese Alliance. The only answer that seemed to me to supply
3368
an intelligible motive was that the Alliance somewhat mitigates the
3369
intensity of Japanese anti-British propaganda in India. However that may
3370
be, there can be no doubt that the Japanese would like to pose before
3371
the Indians as their champions against white tyranny. Mr. Pooley[57]
3372
quotes Dr. Ichimura of the Imperial University of Kyoto as giving the
3373
following list of white men's sins:--
3374
3375
(1) White men consider that they alone are human beings, and that
3376
all coloured races belong to a lower order of civilization.
3377
3378
(2) They are extremely selfish, insisting on their own interests,
3379
but ignoring the interests of all whom they regard as inferiors.
3380
3381
(3) They are full of racial pride and conceit. If any concession
3382
is made to them they demand and take more.
3383
3384
(4) They are extreme in everything, exceeding the coloured races
3385
in greatness and wickedness.
3386
3387
(5) They worship money, and believing that money is the basis of
3388
everything, will adopt any measures to gain it.
3389
3390
This enumeration of our vices appears to me wholly just. One might have
3391
supposed that a nation which saw us in this light would endeavour to be
3392
unlike us. That, however, is not the moral which the Japanese draw. They
3393
argue, on the contrary, that it is necessary to imitate us as closely as
3394
possible. We shall find that, in the long catalogue of crimes committed
3395
by Europeans towards China, there is hardly one which has not been
3396
equalled by the Japanese. It never occurs to a Japanese, even in his
3397
wildest dreams, to think of a Chinaman as an equal. And although he
3398
wants the white man to regard himself as an equal, he himself regards
3399
Japan as immeasurably superior to any white country. His real desire is
3400
to be above the whites, not merely equal with them. Count Okuma put the
3401
matter very simply in an address given in 1913:--
3402
3403
The white races regard the world as their property and all other
3404
races are greatly their inferiors. They presume to think that the
3405
r�le of the whites in the universe is to govern the world as they
3406
please. The Japanese were a people who suffered by this policy,
3407
and wrongfully, for the Japanese were not inferior to the white
3408
races, but fully their equals. The whites were defying destiny,
3409
and woe to them.[58]
3410
3411
It would be easy to quote statements by eminent men to the effect that
3412
Japan is the greatest of all nations. But the same could be said of the
3413
eminent men of all other nations down to Ecuador. It is the acts of the
3414
Japanese rather than their rhetoric that must concern us.
3415
3416
The Sino-Japanese war of 1894-5 concerned Korea, with whose internal
3417
affairs China and Japan had mutually agreed not to interfere without
3418
first consulting each other. The Japanese claimed that China had
3419
infringed this agreement. Neither side was in the right; it was a war
3420
caused by a conflict of rival imperialisms. The Chinese were easily and
3421
decisively defeated, and from that day to this have not ventured to
3422
oppose any foreign Power by force of arms, except unofficially in the
3423
Boxer rebellion. The Japanese were, however, prevented from reaping the
3424
fruits of their victory by the intervention of Russia, Germany and
3425
France, England holding aloof. The Russians coveted Korea for
3426
themselves, the French came in as their allies, and the Germans
3427
presumably joined them because of William II's dread of the Yellow
3428
Peril. However that may be, this intervention made the Russo-Japanese
3429
war inevitable. It would not have mattered much to Japan if the Chinese
3430
had established themselves in Korea, but the Russians would have
3431
constituted a serious menace. The Russians did not befriend China for
3432
nothing; they acquired a lease of Port Arthur and Dalny (now called
3433
Dairen), with railway and mining rights in Manchuria. They built the
3434
Chinese Eastern Railway, running right through Manchuria, connecting
3435
Port Arthur and Peking with the Siberian Railway and Europe. Having
3436
accomplished all this, they set to work to penetrate Korea. The
3437
Russo-Japanese war would presumably not have taken place but for the
3438
Anglo-Japanese Alliance, concluded in 1902. In British policy, this
3439
Alliance has always had a somewhat minor place, while it has been the
3440
corner-stone of Japanese foreign policy, except during the Great War,
3441
when the Japanese thought that Germany would win. The Alliance provided
3442
that, in the event of either Power being attacked by two Powers at once,
3443
the other should come to its assistance. It was, of course, originally
3444
inspired by fear of Russia, and was framed with a view to preventing the
3445
Russian Government, in the event of war with Japan or England, from
3446
calling upon the help of France. In 1902 we were hostile to France and
3447
Russia, and Japan remained hostile to Russia until after the Treaty of
3448
Portsmouth had been supplemented by the Convention of 1907. The Alliance
3449
served its purpose admirably for both parties during the Russo-Japanese
3450
war. It kept France from joining Russia, and thereby enabled Japan to
3451
acquire command of the sea. It enabled Japan to weaken Russia, thus
3452
curbing Russian ambitions, and making it possible for us to conclude an
3453
Entente with Russia in 1907. Without this Entente, the Entente concluded
3454
with France in 1904 would have been useless, and the alliance which
3455
defeated Germany could not have been created.
3456
3457
Without the Anglo-Japanese Alliance, Japan could not have fought Russia
3458
alone, but would have had to fight France also. This was beyond her
3459
strength at that time. Thus the decisive step in Japan's rise to
3460
greatness was due to our support.
3461
3462
The war ended with a qualified victory for Japan. Russia renounced all
3463
interference in Korea, surrendered Port Arthur and Dalny (since called
3464
Dairen) to the Japanese, and also the railway as far north as Changchun.
3465
This part of the railway, with a few branch lines, has since then been
3466
called the South Manchurian Railway. From Dairen to Changchun is 437
3467
miles; Changchun is 150 miles south of Harbin. The Japanese use Dairen
3468
as the commercial port for Manchuria, reserving Port Arthur for purely
3469
naval purposes. In regard to Korea, Japan has conformed strictly to
3470
Western models. During the Russo-Japanese war, the Japanese made a
3471
treaty guaranteeing the independence and integrity of Korea; in 1910
3472
they annexed Korea; since then they have suppressed Korean nationalists
3473
with every imaginable severity. All this establishes their claim to be
3474
fully the equals of the white men.
3475
3476
The Japanese not merely hold the South Manchurian Railway, but have a
3477
monopoly of railway construction in South Manchuria. As this was
3478
practically the beginning of Japan's control of large regions in China
3479
by means of railways monopolies, it will be worth while to quote Mr.
3480
Pooley's account of the Fa-ku-Men Railway incident,[59] which shows how
3481
the South Manchurian monopoly was acquired:--
3482
3483
"In November 1907 the Chinese Government signed a contract with Messrs
3484
Pauling and Co. for an extension of the Imperial Chinese railways
3485
northwards from Hsin-min-Tung to Fa-ku-Men, the necessary capital for
3486
the work being found by the British and Chinese Corporation. Japan
3487
protested against the contract, firstly, on an alleged secret protocol
3488
annexed to the treaty of Peking, which was alleged to have said that
3489
'the Chinese Government shall not construct any main line in the
3490
neighbourhood of or parallel to the South Manchurian Railway, nor any
3491
branch line which should be prejudicial to the interests of that
3492
railway'; and, secondly, on the Convention of 1902, between China and
3493
Russia, that no railway should be built from Hsin-min-Tung without
3494
Russian consent. As by the Treaty of Portsmouth, Japan succeeded to the
3495
Russian rights, the projected line could not be built without her
3496
consent. Her diplomatic communications were exceedingly offensive in
3497
tone, and concluded with a notification that, if she was wrong, it was
3498
obviously only Russia who could rightfully take her to task!
3499
3500
"The Chinese Government based its action in granting the contract on the
3501
clause of the 1898 contract for the construction of the Chung-hon-so to
3502
Hsin-min-Tung line, under which China specifically reserved the right to
3503
build the Fa-ku-Men line with the aid of the same contractors. Further,
3504
although by the Russo-British Note of 1898 British subjects were
3505
specificially excluded from participation in railway construction north
3506
of the Great Wall, by the Additional Note attached to the Russo-British
3507
Note the engagements between the Chinese Government and the British and
3508
Chinese Corporation were specifically reserved from the purview of the
3509
agreement.
3510
3511
"Even if Japan, as the heir of Russia's assets and liabilities in
3512
Manchuria, had been justified in her protest by the Convention of 1902
3513
and by the Russo-British Note of 1899, she had not fulfilled her part of
3514
the bargain, namely, the Russian undertaking in the Note to abstain from
3515
seeking concession, rights and privileges in the valley of the Yangtze.
3516
Her reliance on the secret treaty carried weight with Great Britain, but
3517
with no one else, as may be gauged from the records of the State
3518
Department at Washington. A later claim advanced by Japan that her
3519
action was justified by Article VI of the Treaty of Portsmouth, which
3520
assigned to Japan all Russian rights in the Chinese Eastern Railway
3521
(South Manchurian Railway) 'with all rights and properties appertaining
3522
thereto,' was effectively answered by China's citation of Articles III
3523
and IV of the same Treaty. Under the first of these articles it is
3524
declared that 'Russia has no territorial advantages or preferential or
3525
exclusive concessions in Manchuria in impairment of Chinese sovereignty
3526
or inconsistent with the principle of equal opportunity'; whilst the
3527
second is a reciprocal engagement by Russia and Japan 'not to obstruct
3528
any general measures common to all countries which China may take for
3529
the development of the commerce and industry of Manchuria.'
3530
3531
"It would be interesting to know whether a refusal to allow China to
3532
build a railway on her own territory is or is not an impairment of
3533
Chinese sovereignty and whether such a railway as that proposed was not
3534
a measure for the 'development of the commerce and industry of
3535
Manchuria.'
3536
3537
"It is doubtful if even the Russo-Japanese war created as much feeling
3538
in China as did the Fa-ku-men incident. Japan's action was of such
3539
flagrant dishonesty and such a cynical repudiation of her promises and
3540
pledges that her credit received a blow from which it has never since
3541
recovered. The abject failure of the British Government to support its
3542
subjects' treaty rights was almost as much an eye-opener to the world as
3543
the protest from Tokio....
3544
3545
"The methods which had proved so successful in stopping the Fa-ku-men
3546
railway were equally successful in forcing the abandonment of other
3547
projected railways. Among these were the Chin-chou-Aigun line and the
3548
important Antung-Mukden line.[60] The same alleged secret protocol was
3549
used equally brutally and successfully for the acquisition of the
3550
Newchwang line, and participation in 1909, and eventual acquisition in
3551
1914, of the Chan-Chun-Kirin lines. Subsequently by an agreement with
3552
Russia the sixth article of the Russo-Chinese Agreement of 1896 was
3553
construed to mean 'the absolute and exclusive rights of administration
3554
within the railway zone.'"
3555
3556
Japan's spheres of influence have been subsequently extended to cover
3557
the whole of Manchuria and the whole of Shantung--though the latter has
3558
been nominally renounced at Washington. By such methods as the above, or
3559
by loans to impecunious Chinese authorities, the Japanese have acquired
3560
vast railway monopolies wherever their influence has penetrated, and
3561
have used the railways as a means of acquiring all real power in the
3562
provinces through which they run.
3563
3564
After the Russo-Japanese war, Russia and Japan became firm friends, and
3565
agreed to bring pressure on China jointly in any matter affecting
3566
Manchuria. Their friendship lasted until the Bolshevik revolution.
3567
Russia had entered into extensive obligations to support Japan's claims
3568
at the Peace Conference, which of course the Bolsheviks repudiated.
3569
Hence the implacable hostility of Japan to Soviet Russia, leading to the
3570
support of innumerable White filibusters in the territory of the Far
3571
Eastern Republic, and to friendship with France in all international
3572
questions. As soon as there began to be in China a revolutionary party
3573
aiming at the overthrow of the Manchus, the Japanese supported it. They
3574
have continuously supported either or both sides in Chinese dissensions,
3575
as they judged most useful for prolonging civil war and weakening China
3576
politically. Before the revolution of 1911, Sun Yat Sen was several
3577
times in Japan, and there is evidence that as early as 1900 he was
3578
obtaining financial support from some Japanese.[61] When the revolution
3579
actually broke out, Japan endeavoured to support the Manchus, but was
3580
prevented from doing so effectively by the other Legations. It seems
3581
that the policy of Japan at that time, as later, was to prevent the
3582
union of North and South, and to confine the revolution to the South.
3583
Moreover, reverence for monarchy made Japan unwilling to see the Emperor
3584
of China dispossessed and his whole country turned into a Republic,
3585
though it would have been agreeable to see him weakened by the loss of
3586
some southern provinces. Mr. Pooley gives a good account of the actions
3587
of Japan during the Chinese Revolution, of which the following quotation
3588
gives the gist[62]:--
3589
3590
It [the Genro] commenced with a statement from Prince Katsura on
3591
December 18th [1911], that the time for intervention had arrived,
3592
with the usual rider "for the sake of the peace of the Far East."
3593
This was followed by a private instruction to M. Ijuin, Japanese
3594
Minister in Peking, whereunder the latter on December 23rd
3595
categorically informed Yuan-shi-kai that under no circumstances
3596
would Japan recognize a republican form of government in
3597
China.... In connection with the peace conference held at
3598
Shanghai, Mr. Matsui (now Japanese Ambassador to France), a
3599
trusted Councillor of the Foreign Office, was dispatched to
3600
Peking to back M. Ijuin in the negotiations to uphold the
3601
dynasty. Simultaneously, Mr. Denison, Legal Adviser to the
3602
Japanese Foreign Office, was sent to Shanghai to negotiate with
3603
the rebel leaders. Mr. Matsui's mission was to bargain for
3604
Japanese support of the Manchus against the rebels, Manchuria
3605
against the throne; Mr. Denison's mission was to bargain for
3606
Japanese support of the rebels against the throne, recognition by
3607
Peking of the Southern Republic against virtually a Japanese
3608
protectorate of that Republic and exclusive railway and mining
3609
concessions within its borders. The rebels absolutely refused Mr.
3610
Denison's offer, and sent the proposed terms to the Russian
3611
Minister at Peking, through whom they eventually saw the light of
3612
day. Needless to say the Japanese authorities strenuously denied
3613
their authenticity.
3614
3615
The British Legation, however, supported Yuan Shi-k'ai, against both the
3616
Manchus and Sun Yat Sen; and it was the British policy which won the
3617
day. Yuan Shi-k'ai became President, and remained so until 1915. He was
3618
strongly anti-Japanese, and had, on that ground, been opposed as
3619
strongly as Japan dared. His success was therefore a blow to the
3620
influence of Japan in China. If the Western Powers had remained free to
3621
make themselves felt in the Far East, the course of events would
3622
doubtless have been much less favourable to the Japanese; but the war
3623
came, and the Japanese saw their chance. How they used it must be told
3624
in a separate chapter.
3625
3626
FOOTNOTES:
3627
3628
[Footnote 56: Quoted by A.M. Pooley, _Japan's Foreign Policy_, Allen &
3629
Unwin, 1920, p. 18.]
3630
3631
[Footnote 57: Op. cit. p. 16 n.]
3632
3633
[Footnote 58: Pooley, op. cit. p. 17.]
3634
3635
[Footnote 59: A.M. Pooley, _Japan's Foreign Policies_, pp. 48-51.]
3636
3637
[Footnote 60: This line was subsequently built by the Japanese.]
3638
3639
[Footnote 61: Pooley, op. cit., pp. 67-8.]
3640
3641
[Footnote 62: Page 66.]
3642
3643
3644
3645
3646
CHAPTER VIII
3647
3648
JAPAN AND CHINA DURING THE WAR
3649
3650
3651
The most urgent problem in China's relations with foreign powers is
3652
Japanese aggression. Originally Japan was less powerful than China, but
3653
after 1868 the Japanese rapidly learnt from us whatever we had to teach
3654
in the way of skilful homicide, and in 1894 they resolved to test their
3655
new armaments upon China, just as Bismarck tested his on Denmark. The
3656
Chinese Government preserved its traditional haughtiness, and appears to
3657
have been quite unaware of the defeat in store for it. The question at
3658
issue was Korea, over which both Powers claimed suzerainty. At that time
3659
there would have been no reason for an impartial neutral to take one
3660
side rather than the other. The Japanese were quickly and completely
3661
victorious, but were obliged to fight Russia before obtaining secure
3662
possession of Korea. The war with Russia (1904-5) was fought chiefly in
3663
Manchuria, which the Russians had gained as a reward for befriending
3664
China. Port Arthur and Southern Manchuria up to Mukden were acquired by
3665
the Japanese as a result of the Russo-Japanese war; the rest of
3666
Manchuria came under Japanese control as a result of Russia's collapse
3667
after the Great War.
3668
3669
The nominal sovereignty in Manchuria is still Chinese; the Chinese have
3670
the civil administration, an army, and the appointment of the Viceroy.
3671
But the Japanese also have troops in Manchuria; they have the railways,
3672
the industrial enterprises, and the complete economic and military
3673
control. The Chinese Viceroy could not remain in power a week if he were
3674
displeasing to the Japanese, which, however, he takes care not to be.
3675
(See Note A.) The same situation was being brought about in Shantung.
3676
3677
Shantung brings us to what Japan did in the Great War. In 1914, China
3678
could easily have been induced to join the Allies and to set to work to
3679
turn the Germans out of Kiao-Chow, but this did not suit the Japanese,
3680
who undertook the work themselves and insisted upon the Chinese
3681
remaining neutral (until 1917). Having captured Tsing-tau, they
3682
presented to the Chinese the famous Twenty-One Demands, which gave the
3683
Chinese Question its modern form. These demands, as originally presented
3684
in January 1915, consisted of five groups. The first dealt with
3685
Shantung, demanding that China should agree in advance to whatever terms
3686
Japan might ultimately make with Germany as regarded this Chinese
3687
province, that the Japanese should have the right to construct certain
3688
specified railways, and that certain ports (unspecified) should be
3689
opened to trade; also that no privileges in Shantung should be granted
3690
to any Power other than Japan. The second group concerns South Manchuria
3691
and Eastern Inner Mongolia, and demands what is in effect a
3692
protectorate, with control of railways, complete economic freedom for
3693
Japanese enterprise, and exclusion of all other foreign industrial
3694
enterprise. The third group gives Japan a monopoly of the mines and iron
3695
and steel works in a certain region of the Yangtze,[63] where we claim
3696
a sphere of influence. The fourth group consists of a single demand,
3697
that China shall not cede any harbour, bay or island to any Power except
3698
Japan. The fifth group, which was the most serious, demanded that
3699
Japanese political, financial, and military advisers should be employed
3700
by the Chinese Government; that the police in important places should be
3701
administered by Chinese and Japanese jointly, and should be largely
3702
Japanese in _personnel_; that China should purchase from Japan at least
3703
50 per cent. of her munitions, or obtain them from a Sino-Japanese
3704
arsenal to be established in China, controlled by Japanese experts and
3705
employing Japanese material; that Japan should have the right to
3706
construct certain railways in and near the Yangtze valley; that Japan
3707
should have industrial priority in Fukien (opposite Formosa); and
3708
finally that the Japanese should have the right of missionary propaganda
3709
in China, to spread the knowledge of their admirable ethics.
3710
3711
These demands involved, as is obvious, a complete loss of Chinese
3712
independence, the closing of important areas to the commerce and
3713
industry of Europe and America, and a special attack upon the British
3714
position in the Yangtze. We, however, were so busy with the war that we
3715
had no time to think of keeping ourselves alive. Although the demands
3716
constituted a grave menace to our trade, although the Far East was in an
3717
uproar about them, although America took drastic diplomatic action
3718
against them, Mr. Lloyd George never heard of them until they were
3719
explained to him by the Chinese Delegation at Versailles.[64] He had no
3720
time to find out what Japan wanted, but had time to conclude a secret
3721
agreement with Japan in February 1917, promising that whatever Japan
3722
wanted in Shantung we would support at the Peace Conference.[65] By the
3723
terms of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance, Japan was bound to communicate the
3724
Twenty-one Demands to the British Government. In fact, Japan
3725
communicated the first four groups, but not the fifth and worst, thus
3726
definitely breaking the treaty;[66] but this also, one must suppose, Mr.
3727
Lloyd George only discovered by chance when he got to Versailles.
3728
3729
China negotiated with Japan about the Twenty-one Demands, and secured
3730
certain modifications, but was finally compelled to yield by an
3731
ultimatum. There was a modification as regards the Hanyehping mines on
3732
the Yangtze, presumably to please us; and the specially obnoxious fifth
3733
group was altered into an exchange of studiously vague Notes.[67] In
3734
this form, the demands were accepted by China on May 9, 1915. The United
3735
States immediately notified Japan that they could not recognize the
3736
agreement. At that time America was still neutral, and was therefore
3737
still able to do something to further the objects for which we were
3738
supposed to be fighting, such as protection of the weaker nations. In
3739
1917, however, after America had entered the war for self-determination,
3740
it became necessary to placate Japan, and in November of that year the
3741
Ishii-Lansing Agreement was concluded, by which "the Government of the
3742
United States recognizes that Japan has special interests in China,
3743
particularly for the parts to which her possessions are contiguous." The
3744
rest of the agreement (which is long) consists of empty verbiage.[68]
3745
3746
I come now to the events leading up to China's entry into the war.[69]
3747
In this matter, the lead was taken by America so far as severing
3748
diplomatic relations was concerned, but passed to Japan as regards the
3749
declaration of war. It will be remembered that, when America broke off
3750
diplomatic relations with Germany, President Wilson called upon all
3751
neutrals to do likewise. Dr. Paul S. Reinsch, United States Minister in
3752
Peking, proceeded to act with vigour in accordance with this policy. He
3753
induced China first, on February 9, 1917, to send a Note of
3754
expostulation to Germany on the subject of the submarine campaign; then,
3755
on March 14th, to break off diplomatic relations. The further step of
3756
declaring war was not taken until August 14th. The intrigues connected
3757
with these events deserve some study.
3758
3759
In view of the fact that the Japanese were among the Allies, the Chinese
3760
had not any strong tendency to take sides against Germany. The English,
3761
French and Russians had always desired the participation of China (for
3762
reasons which I shall explain presently), and there appears to have been
3763
some suggestion, in the early days of the war, that China should
3764
participate in return for our recognizing Yuan Shi-k'ai as Emperor.
3765
These suggestions, however, fell through owing to the opposition of
3766
Japan, based partly on hostility to Yuan Shi-k'ai, partly on the fear
3767
that China would be protected by the Allies if she became a belligerent.
3768
When, in November 1915, the British, French and Russian Ambassadors in
3769
Tokyo requested Japan to join in urging China to join the Allies,
3770
Viscount Ishii said that "Japan considered developments in China as of
3771
paramount interest to her, and she must keep a firm hand there. Japan
3772
could not regard with equanimity the organization of an efficient
3773
Chinese army such as would be required for her active participation in
3774
the war, nor could Japan fail to regard with uneasiness a liberation of
3775
the economic activities of 400,000,000 people."[70] Accordingly the
3776
proposal lapsed. It must be understood that throughout the war the
3777
Japanese were in a position to blackmail the Allies, because their
3778
sympathies were with Germany, they believed Germany would win, and they
3779
filled their newspapers with scurrilous attacks on the British, accusing
3780
them of cowardice and military incompetence.[71]
3781
3782
But when America severed diplomatic relations with Germany, the
3783
situation for China was changed. America was not bound to subservience
3784
to Japan, as we were; America was not one of the Allies; and America had
3785
always been China's best friend. Accordingly, the Chinese were willing
3786
to take the advice of America, and proceeded to sever diplomatic
3787
relations with Germany in March 1917. Dr. Reinsch was careful to make no
3788
_promises_ to the Chinese, but of course he held out hopes. The American
3789
Government, at that time, could honestly hold out hopes, because it was
3790
ignorant of the secret treaties and agreements by which the Allies were
3791
bound. The Allies, however, can offer no such excuse for having urged
3792
China to take the further step of declaring war. Russia, France, and
3793
Great Britain had all sold China's rights to secure the continued
3794
support of Japan.
3795
3796
In May 1916, the Japanese represented to the Russians that Germany was
3797
inviting Japan to make a separate peace. In July 1916, Russia and Japan
3798
concluded a secret treaty, subsequently published by the Bolsheviks.
3799
This treaty constituted a separate alliance, binding each to come to the
3800
assistance of the other in any war, and recognizing that "the vital
3801
interests of one and the other of them require the safeguarding of China
3802
from the political domination of any third Power whatsoever, having
3803
hostile designs against Russia or Japan." The last article provided that
3804
"the present agreement must remain profoundly secret except to both of
3805
the High Contracting Parties."[72] That is to say, the treaty was not
3806
communicated to the other Allies, or even to Great Britain, in spite of
3807
Article 3 of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance, which provides that "The High
3808
Contracting Parties agree that neither of them will, without consulting
3809
the other, enter into a separate agreement with another Power to the
3810
prejudice of the objects described in the preamble of this Agreement,"
3811
one of which objects was the preservation of equal opportunity for all
3812
Powers in China and of the independence and integrity of the Chinese
3813
Empire.
3814
3815
On February 16, 1917, at the very time when America was urging China to
3816
sever diplomatic relations with Germany, we concluded an agreement with
3817
Japan containing the following words:--
3818
3819
His Britannic Majesty's Government accedes with pleasure to the
3820
request of the Japanese Government, for an assurance that they
3821
will support Japan's claims in regard to the disposal of
3822
Germany's rights in Shantung and possessions in the islands north
3823
of the equator on the occasion of the Peace Conference; it being
3824
understood that the Japanese Government will, in the eventual
3825
peace settlement, treat in the same spirit Great Britain's claims
3826
to the German islands south of the equator.
3827
3828
The French attitude about Shantung, at the same time, is indicated by
3829
Notes which passed between France and Japan at Tokyo.[73] On February
3830
19th, Baron Motono sent a communication to the French and Russian
3831
Ambassadors stating, among other things, that "the Imperial Japanese
3832
Government proposes to demand from Germany at the time of the peace
3833
negotiations, the surrender of the territorial rights and special
3834
interests Germany possessed before the war in Shantung and the islands
3835
belonging to her situated north of the equator in the Pacific Ocean."
3836
The French Ambassador, on March 2nd, replied as follows:--
3837
3838
The Government of the French Republic is disposed to give the
3839
Japanese Government its accord in regulating at the time of the
3840
Peace Negotiations questions vital to Japan concerning Shantung
3841
and the German islands on the Pacific north of the equator. It
3842
also agrees to support the demands of the Imperial Japanese
3843
Government for the surrender of the rights Germany possessed
3844
before the war in this Chinese province and these islands.
3845
3846
M. Briand demands on the other hand that Japan give its support
3847
to obtain from China the breaking of its diplomatic relations
3848
with Germany, and that it give this act desirable significance.
3849
The consequences in China should be the following:
3850
3851
First, handing passports to the German diplomatic agents and
3852
consuls;
3853
3854
Second, the obligation of all under German jurisdiction to leave
3855
Chinese territory;
3856
3857
Third, the internment of German ships in Chinese ports and the
3858
ultimate requisition of these ships in order to place them at the
3859
disposition of the Allies, following the example of Italy and
3860
Portugal;
3861
3862
Fourth, requisition of German commercial houses, established in
3863
China; forfeiting the rights of Germany in the concessions she
3864
possesses in certain ports of China.
3865
3866
The Russian reply to Baron Motono's Note to the French and Russian
3867
Ambassadors, dated March 5, 1917, was as follows:--
3868
3869
In reply to the Note of the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
3870
under the date of February 19th last, the Russian Embassy is
3871
charged with giving the Japanese Government the assurance that it
3872
can entirely count on the support of the Imperial Government of
3873
Russia with regard to its desiderata concerning the eventual
3874
surrender to Japan of the rights belonging to Germany in Shantung
3875
and of the German Islands, occupied by the Japanese forces, in
3876
the Pacific Ocean to the north of the Equator.[74]
3877
3878
It will be observed that, unlike England and France, Russia demands no
3879
_quid pro quo_, doubtless owing to the secret treaty concluded in the
3880
previous year.
3881
3882
After these agreements, Japan saw no further objection to China's
3883
participation in the war. The chief inducement held out to China was the
3884
hope of recovering Shantung; but as there was now no danger of this hope
3885
being realized, Japan was willing that America, in more or less honest
3886
ignorance, should unofficially use this hope for the persuasion of the
3887
Chinese. It is true that Japan had reason to fear America until the last
3888
days of the Peace Conference, but this fear was considerably diminished
3889
by the conclusion of the Lansing-Ishii Agreement in November 1917.
3890
3891
Meanwhile Japan had discovered that the question of China's entry into
3892
the war could be used to increase internal strife in China, which has
3893
been one of the aims of Japanese policy ever since the beginning of the
3894
revolutionary movement.[75] If the Chinese had not been interfered with
3895
at this time, there was some prospect of their succeeding in
3896
establishing a stable democratic government. Yuan was dead, and his
3897
successor in the Presidency, Li Yuan Hung, was a genuine
3898
constitutionalist. He reassembled the Parliament which Yuan had
3899
dismissed, and the work of drafting a permanent constitution was
3900
resumed. The President was opposed to severing diplomatic relations,
3901
and, of course, still more to declaring war. The Prime Minister, Tuan
3902
Chih-jui, a militarist, was strongly in favour of war. He and his
3903
Cabinet persuaded a considerable majority of both Houses of the Chinese
3904
Parliament to side with them on the question of severing diplomatic
3905
relations, and the President, as in duty bound, gave way on this issue.
3906
3907
On the issue of declaring war, however, public opinion was different. It
3908
was President Wilson's summons to the neutrals to follow him in breaking
3909
off diplomatic relations that had given force to the earlier campaign;
3910
but on June 5th the American Minister, acting on instructions, presented
3911
a Note to the Chinese Government urging that the preservation of
3912
national unity was more important than entry into the war, and
3913
suggesting the desirability of preserving peace for the present. What
3914
had happened in the meantime was that the war issue, which might never
3915
have become acute but for President's Wilson's action, had been used by
3916
the Japanese to revive the conflict between North and South, and to
3917
instigate the Chinese militarists to unconstitutional action. Sun Yat
3918
Sen and most of the Southern politicians were opposed to the declaration
3919
of war; Sun's reasons were made known in an open letter to Mr. Lloyd
3920
George on March 7th. They were thoroughly sound.[76] The Cabinet, on
3921
May 1st, decided in favour of war, but by the Constitution a declaration
3922
of war required the consent of Parliament. The militarists attempted to
3923
coerce Parliament, which had a majority against war; but as this proved
3924
impossible, they brought military force to bear on the President to
3925
compel him to dissolve Parliament unconstitutionally. The bulk of the
3926
Members of Parliament retired to the South, where they continued to act
3927
as a Parliament and to regard themselves as the sole source of
3928
constitutional government. After these various illegalities, the
3929
military autocrats were still compelled to deal with one of their
3930
number, who, in July, effected a five days' restoration of the Manchu
3931
Emperor. The President resigned, and was succeeded by a person more
3932
agreeable to the militarists, who have henceforth governed in the North,
3933
sometimes without a Parliament, sometimes with a subservient
3934
unconstitutional Northern Parliament. Then at last they were free to
3935
declare war. It was thus that China entered the war for democracy and
3936
against militarism.
3937
3938
Of course China helped little, if at all, towards the winning of the
3939
war, but that was not what the Allies expected of her. The objects of
3940
the European Allies are disclosed in the French Note quoted above. We
3941
wished to confiscate German property in China, to expel Germans living
3942
in China, and to prevent, as far as possible, the revival of German
3943
trade in China after the war. The confiscation of German property was
3944
duly carried out--not only public property, but private property also,
3945
so that the Germans in China were suddenly reduced to beggary. Owing to
3946
the claims on shipping, the expulsion of the Germans had to wait till
3947
after the Armistice. They were sent home through the Tropics in
3948
overcrowded ships, sometimes with only 24 hours' notice; no degree of
3949
hardship was sufficient to secure exemption. The British authorities
3950
insisted on expelling delicate pregnant women, whom they officially knew
3951
to be very likely to die on the voyage. All this was done after the
3952
Armistice, for the sake of British trade. The kindly Chinese often took
3953
upon themselves to hide Germans, in hard cases, from the merciless
3954
persecution of the Allies; otherwise, the miseries inflicted would have
3955
been much greater.
3956
3957
The confiscation of private property during the war and by the Treaty of
3958
Versailles was a new departure, showing that on this point all the
3959
belligerents agreed with the Bolsheviks. Dr. Reid places side by side
3960
two statements, one by President Wilson when asking Congress to agree to
3961
the Declaration of War: "We shall, I feel confident, conduct our
3962
operations as belligerents without passion, and ourselves observe with
3963
proud punctilio the principles of right and fairplay we profess to be
3964
fighting for"; the other by Senator Hitchcock, when the war was over,
3965
after a day spent with President Wilson in learning the case for
3966
ratification of the Versailles Treaty: "Through the Treaty, we will yet
3967
get very much of importance.... In violation of all international law
3968
and treaties we have made disposition of a billion dollars of
3969
German-owned properly here. The Treaty validates all that."[77] The
3970
European Allies secured very similar advantages from inducing China to
3971
enter the war for righteousness.
3972
3973
We have seen what England and France gained by the Chinese declaration
3974
of war. What Japan gained was somewhat different.
3975
3976
The Northern military faction, which controlled the Peking Government,
3977
was completely dependent upon Japan, and could do nothing to resist
3978
Japanese aggression. All the other Powers were fully occupied with the
3979
war, and had sold China to Japan in return for Japanese neutrality--for
3980
Japan can hardly be counted as a belligerent after the capture of
3981
Tsingtau in November 1914. The Southern Government and all the liberal
3982
elements in the North were against the clique which had seized the
3983
Central Government. In March 1918, military and naval agreements were
3984
concluded between China and Japan, of which the text, never officially
3985
published, is given by Millard.[78] By these agreements the Japanese
3986
were enabled, under pretence of military needs in Manchuria and
3987
Mongolia, to send troops into Chinese territory, to acquire control of
3988
the Chinese Eastern Railway and consequently of Northern Manchuria, and
3989
generally to keep all Northern China at their mercy. In all this, the
3990
excuse of operations against the Bolsheviks was very convenient.
3991
3992
After this the Japanese went ahead gaily. During the year 1918, they
3993
placed loans in China to the extent of Yen 246,000,000,[79] _i.e.,_
3994
about �25,000,000. China was engaged in civil war, and both sides were
3995
as willing as the European belligerents to sell freedom for the sake of
3996
victory. Unfortunately for Japan, the side on which Japan was fighting
3997
in the war proved suddenly victorious, and some portion of the energies
3998
of Europe and America became available for holding Japan in check. For
3999
various reasons, however, the effect of this did not show itself until
4000
after the Treaty of Versailles was concluded. During the peace
4001
negotiations, England and France, in virtue of secret agreements, were
4002
compelled to support Japan. President Wilson, as usual, sacrificed
4003
everything to his League of Nations, which the Japanese would not have
4004
joined unless they had been allowed to keep Shantung. The chapter on
4005
this subject in Mr. Lansing's account of the negotiations is one of the
4006
most interesting in his book.[80] By Article 156 of the Treaty of
4007
Versailles, "Germany renounces, in favour of Japan, all her rights,
4008
title, and privileges" in the province of Shantung.[81] Although
4009
President Wilson had consented to this gross violation of justice,
4010
America refused to ratify the Treaty, and was therefore free to raise
4011
the issue of Shantung at Washington. The Chinese delegates at Versailles
4012
resisted the clauses concerning Shantung to the last, and finally,
4013
encouraged by a vigorous agitation of Young China,[82] refused to sign
4014
the Treaty. They saw no reason why they should be robbed of a province
4015
as a reward for having joined the Allies. All the other Allies agreed to
4016
a proceeding exactly as iniquitous as it would have been if we had
4017
annexed Virginia as a reward to the Americans for having helped us in
4018
the war, or France had annexed Kent on a similar pretext.
4019
4020
Meanwhile, Young China had discovered that it could move Chinese public
4021
opinion on the anti-Japanese cry. The Government in Peking in 1919-20
4022
was in the hands of the pro-Japanese An Fu party, but they were forcibly
4023
ejected, in the summer of 1920, largely owing to the influence of the
4024
Young China agitation on the soldiers stationed in Peking. The An Fu
4025
leaders took refuge in the Japanese Legation, and since then the Peking
4026
Government has ventured to be less subservient to Japan, hoping always
4027
for American support. Japan did everything possible to consolidate her
4028
position in Shantung, but always with the knowledge that America might
4029
re-open the question at any time. As soon as the Washington Conference
4030
was announced, Japan began feverishly negotiating with China, with a
4031
view to having the question settled before the opening of the
4032
Conference. But the Chinese, very wisely, refused the illusory
4033
concessions offered by Japan, and insisted on almost unconditional
4034
evacuation. At Washington, both parties agreed to the joint mediation of
4035
England and America. The pressure of American public opinion caused the
4036
American Administration to stand firm on the question of Shantung, and I
4037
understand that the British delegation, on the whole, concurred with
4038
America. Some concessions were made to Japan, but they will not amount
4039
to much if American interest in Shantung lasts for another five years.
4040
On this subject, I shall have more to say when I come to the Washington
4041
Conference.
4042
4043
There is a question with which the Washington Conference determined not
4044
to concern itself, but which nevertheless is likely to prove of great
4045
importance in the Far East--I mean the question of Russia. It was
4046
considered good form in diplomatic circles, until the Genoa Conference,
4047
to pretend that there is no such country as Russia, but the Bolsheviks,
4048
with their usual wickedness, have refused to fall in with this pretence.
4049
Their existence constitutes an embarrassment to America, because in a
4050
quarrel with Japan the United States would unavoidably find themselves
4051
in unwilling alliance with Russia. The conduct of Japan towards Russia
4052
has been quite as bad as that of any other Power. At the time of the
4053
Czecho-Slovak revolt, the Allies jointly occupied Vladivostok, but after
4054
a time all withdrew except the Japanese. All Siberia east of Lake
4055
Baikal, including Vladivostok, now forms one State, the Far Eastern
4056
Republic, with its capital at Chita. Against this Republic, which is
4057
practically though not theoretically Bolshevik, the Japanese have
4058
launched a whole series of miniature Kolchaks--Semenov, Horvath, Ungern,
4059
etc. These have all been defeated, but the Japanese remain in military
4060
occupation of Vladivostok and a great part of the Maritime Province,
4061
though they continually affirm their earnest wish to retire.
4062
4063
In the early days of the Bolshevik r�gime the Russians lost Northern
4064
Manchuria, which is now controlled by Japan. A board consisting partly
4065
of Chinese and partly of reactionary Russians forms the directorate of
4066
the Chinese Eastern Railway, which runs through Manchuria and connects
4067
with the Siberian Railway. There is not through communication by rail
4068
between Peking and Europe as in the days before 1914. This is an extreme
4069
annoyance to European business men in the Far East, since it means that
4070
letters or journeys from Peking to London take five or six weeks instead
4071
of a fortnight. They try to persuade themselves that the fault lies with
4072
the Bolsheviks, but they are gradually realizing that the real cause is
4073
the reactionary control of the Chinese Eastern Railway. Meanwhile,
4074
various Americans are interesting themselves in this railway and
4075
endeavouring to get it internationalized. Motives similar to those which
4076
led to the Vanderlip concession are forcing friendship with Russia upon
4077
all Americans who have Siberian interests. If Japan were engaged in a
4078
war with America, the Bolsheviks would in all likelihood seize the
4079
opportunity to liberate Vladivostok and recover Russia's former position
4080
in Manchuria. Already, according to _The Times_ correspondent in Peking,
4081
Outer Mongolia, a country about as large as England, France and Germany
4082
combined, has been conquered by Bolshevik armies and propaganda.
4083
4084
The Bolsheviks have, of course, the enthusiastic sympathy of the younger
4085
Chinese students. If they can weather their present troubles, they have
4086
a good chance of being accepted by all vigorous progressive people in
4087
Asia as the liberators of Asia from the tyranny of the Great Powers. As
4088
they were not invited to Washington, they are not a party to any of the
4089
agreements reached there, and it may turn out that they will upset
4090
impartially the ambitions of Japan, Great Britain and America.[83] For
4091
America, no less than other Powers, has ambitions, though they are
4092
economic rather than territorial. If America is victorious in the Far
4093
East, China will be Americanized, and though the shell of political
4094
freedom may remain, there will be an economic and cultural bondage
4095
beneath it. Russia is not strong enough to dominate in this way, but may
4096
become strong enough to secure some real freedom for China. This,
4097
however, is as yet no more than a possibility. It is worth remembering,
4098
because everybody chooses to forget it, and because, while Russia is
4099
treated as a pariah, no settlement of the Far East can be stable. But
4100
what part Russia is going to play in the affairs of China it is as yet
4101
impossible to say.
4102
4103
FOOTNOTES:
4104
4105
[Footnote 63: On this subject George Gleason, _What Shall I Think of
4106
Japan?_ pp. 174-5, says: "This paragraph concerns the iron and steel
4107
mills at the city of Hanyang, which, with Wuchang and Hangkow, form the
4108
Upper Yangtze commercial centre with a population of 1,500,000 people.
4109
The Hanyeping Company owns a large part of the Tayeh iron mines, eighty
4110
miles east of Hangkow, with which there are water and rail connections.
4111
The ore is 67 per cent. iron, fills the whole of a series of hills 500
4112
feet high, and is sufficient to turn out 1,000,000 tons a year for 700
4113
years. [Probably an overstatement.] Coal for the furnaces is obtained
4114
from Pinghsiang, 200 miles distant by water, where in 1913 five thousand
4115
miners dug 690,000 tons. Japanese have estimated that the vein is
4116
capable of producing yearly a million tons for at least five
4117
centuries....
4118
4119
"Thus did Japan attempt to enter and control a vital spot in the heart
4120
of China which for many years Great Britain has regarded as her special
4121
trade domain."
4122
4123
Mr. Gleason is an American, not an Englishman. The best account of this
4124
matter is given by Mr. Coleman, _The Far East Unveiled_, chaps. x.-xiv.
4125
See below, pp. 232-3.]
4126
4127
[Footnote 64: See letter from Mr. Eugene Chen, _Japan Weekly Chronicle_,
4128
October 20, 1921.]
4129
4130
[Footnote 65: The Notes embodying this agreement are quoted in Pooley,
4131
_Japan's Foreign Policies_, Allen & Unwin, 1920, pp. 141-2.]
4132
4133
[Footnote 66: On this subject, Baron Hayashi, now Japanese Ambassador to
4134
the United Kingdom, said to Mr. Coleman: "When Viscount Kato sent China
4135
a Note containing five groups, however, and then sent to England what
4136
purported to be a copy of his Note to China, and that copy only
4137
contained four of the groups and omitted the fifth altogether, which was
4138
directly a breach of the agreement contained in the Anglo-Japanese
4139
Alliance, he did something which I can no more explain than you can.
4140
Outside of the question of probity involved, his action was unbelievably
4141
foolish" (_The Far East Unveiled_, p. 73).]
4142
4143
[Footnote 67: The demands in their original and revised forms, with the
4144
negotiations concerning them, are printed in Appendix B of _Democracy
4145
and the Eastern Question_, by Thomas F. Millard, Allen & Unwin, 1919.]
4146
4147
[Footnote 68: The texts concerned in the various stages of the Shantung
4148
question are printed in S.G. Cheng's _Modern China_, Appendix ii, iii
4149
and ix. For text of Ishii-Lansing Agreement, see Gleason, op. cit. pp.
4150
214-6.]
4151
4152
[Footnote 69: Three books, all by Americans, give the secret and
4153
official history of this matter. They are: _An American Diplomat in
4154
China_, by Paul S. Reinsch, Doubleday, Page & Co., 1922; _Democracy and
4155
the Eastern Question_, by Thomas F. Millard, Allen & Unwin, 1919; and
4156
_China, Captive or Free?_ by the Rev. Gilbert Reid, A.M., D.D. Director
4157
of International Institute of China, Allen & Unwin, 1922.]
4158
4159
[Footnote 70: Millard, p. 99.]
4160
4161
[Footnote 71: See Pooley, _Japan's Foreign Policies_, pp. 23 ff;
4162
Coleman, _The Far East Unveiled_, chap, v., and Millard, chap. iii.]
4163
4164
[Footnote 72: Millard, pp. 64-66.]
4165
4166
[Footnote 73: Reid, op. cit. pp. 114-5; Cheng, op. cit., pp. 343-6.]
4167
4168
[Footnote 74: See Appendix III of Cheng's _Modern China_, which contains
4169
this note (p. 346) as well as the other "documents relative to the
4170
negotiations between Japan and the Allied Powers as to the disposal of
4171
the German rights in respect of Shantung Province, and the South Sea
4172
Islands north of the Equator."]
4173
4174
[Footnote 75: The story of the steps leading up to China's declaration
4175
of war is admirably told in Reid, op. cit. pp. 88-109.]
4176
4177
[Footnote 76: Port of the letter is quoted by Dr. Reid, p. 108.]
4178
4179
[Footnote 77: Reid, op. cit. p. 161. Chap. vii. of this book,
4180
"Commercial Rivalries as affecting China," should be read by anyone who
4181
still thinks that the Allies stood for honesty or mercy or anything
4182
except money-grubbing.]
4183
4184
[Footnote 78: Appendix C, pp. 421-4.]
4185
4186
[Footnote 79: A list of these loans is given by Hollington K. Tong in an
4187
article on "China's Finances in 1918" in _China in_ 1918, published
4188
early in 1919 by the Peking leader, pp. 61-2. The list and some of the
4189
comments appear also in Putnam Weale's _The Truth about China and
4190
Japan_.]
4191
4192
[Footnote 80: Mr. Lansing's book, in so far as it deals with Japanese
4193
questions, is severely criticized from a Japanese point of view in Dr.
4194
Y. Soyeda's pamphlet "Shantung Question and Japanese Case," League of
4195
Nations Association of Japan, June 1921. I do not think Dr. Soyeda's
4196
arguments are likely to appeal to anyone who is not Japanese.]
4197
4198
[Footnote 81: See the clauses concerning Shantung, in full, in Cheng's
4199
_Modern China_, Clarendon Press, pp. 360-1.]
4200
4201
[Footnote 82: This agitation is well described in Mr. M.T.Z. Tyau's
4202
_China Awakened_ (Macmillan, 1922) chap, ix., "The Student Movement."]
4203
4204
[Footnote 83: "Soviet Russia has addressed to the Powers a protest
4205
against the discussion at the Washington Conference of the East China
4206
Railway, a question exclusively affecting China and Russia, and declares
4207
that it reserves for itself full liberty of action in order to compel
4208
due deference to the rights of the Russian labouring masses and to make
4209
demands consistent with those rights" (_Daily Herald_, December 22,
4210
1921). This is the new-style imperialism. It was not the "Russian
4211
labouring masses," but the Chinese coolies, who built the railway. What
4212
Russia contributed was capital, but one is surprised to find the
4213
Bolsheviks considering that this confers rights upon themselves as heirs
4214
of the capitalists.]
4215
4216
4217
4218
4219
CHAPTER IX
4220
4221
THE WASHINGTON CONFERENCE
4222
4223
4224
The Washington Conference, and the simultaneous conference, at
4225
Washington, between the Chinese and Japanese, have somewhat modified the
4226
Far Eastern situation. The general aspects of the new situation will be
4227
dealt with in the next chapter; for the present it is the actual
4228
decisions arrived at in Washington that concern us, as well as their
4229
effect upon the Japanese position in Siberia.
4230
4231
In the first place, the Anglo-Japanese Alliance has apparently been
4232
brought to an end, as a result of the conclusion of the Four Power Pact
4233
between America, Great Britain, France and Japan. Within this general
4234
alliance of the exploiting Powers, there is a subordinate grouping of
4235
America and Great Britain against France and Japan, the former standing
4236
for international capitalism, the latter for national capitalism. The
4237
situation is not yet plain, because England and America disagree as
4238
regards Russia, and because America is not yet prepared to take part in
4239
the reconstruction of Europe; but in the Far East, at any rate, we seem
4240
to have decided to seek the friendship of America rather than of Japan.
4241
It may perhaps be hoped that this will make our Chinese policy more
4242
liberal than it has been. We have announced the restoration of
4243
Wei-hai-wei--a piece of generosity which would have been more impressive
4244
but for two facts: first, that Wei-hai-wei is completely useless to us,
4245
and secondly, that the lease had only two more years to run. By the
4246
terms of the lease, in fact, it should have been restored as soon as
4247
Russia lost Port Arthur, however many years it still had to run at that
4248
date.
4249
4250
One very important result of the Washington Conference is the agreement
4251
not to fortify islands in the Pacific, with certain specified
4252
exceptions. This agreement, if it is adhered to, will make war between
4253
America and Japan very difficult, unless we were allied with America.
4254
Without a naval base somewhere near Japan, America could hardly bring
4255
naval force to bear on the Japanese Navy. It had been the intention of
4256
the Navy Department to fortify Guam with a view to turning it into a
4257
first-class naval base. The fact that America has been willing to forgo
4258
this intention must be taken as evidence of a genuine desire to preserve
4259
the peace with Japan.
4260
4261
Various small concessions were made to China. There is to be a revision
4262
of the Customs Schedule to bring it to an effective five per cent. The
4263
foreign Post Offices are to be abolished, though the Japanese have
4264
insisted that a certain number of Japanese should be employed in the
4265
Chinese Post Office. They had the effrontery to pretend that they
4266
desired this for the sake of the efficiency of the postal service,
4267
though the Chinese post is excellent and the Japanese is notoriously one
4268
of the worst in the world. The chief use to which the Japanese have put
4269
their postal service in China has been the importation of morphia, as
4270
they have not allowed the Chinese Customs authorities to examine parcels
4271
sent through their Post Office. The development of the Japanese
4272
importation of morphia into China, as well as the growth of the poppy
4273
in Manchuria, where they have control, has been a very sinister feature
4274
of their penetration of China.[84]
4275
4276
Of course the Open Door, equality of opportunity, the independence and
4277
integrity of China, etc. etc., were reaffirmed at Washington; but these
4278
are mere empty phrases devoid of meaning.
4279
4280
From the Chinese point of view, the chief achievement at Washington was
4281
the Shantung Treaty. Ever since the expulsion by the Germans at the end
4282
of 1914, the Japanese had held Kiaochow Bay, which includes the port of
4283
Tsingtau; they had stationed troops along the whole extent of the
4284
Shantung Railway; and by the treaty following the Twenty-one Demands,
4285
they had preferential treatment as regards all industrial undertakings
4286
in Shantung. The railway belonged to them by right of conquest, and
4287
through it they acquired control of the whole province. When an excuse
4288
was needed for increasing the garrison, they supplied arms to brigands,
4289
and claimed that their intervention was necessary to suppress the
4290
resulting disorder. This state of affairs was legalized by the Treaty of
4291
Versailles, to which, however, America and China were not parties. The
4292
Washington Conference, therefore, supplied an opportunity of raising the
4293
question afresh.
4294
4295
At first, however, it seemed as if the Japanese would have things all
4296
their own way. The Chinese wished to raise the question before the
4297
Conference, while the Japanese wished to settle it in direct negotiation
4298
with China. This point was important, because, ever since the
4299
Lansing-Ishii agreement, the Japanese have tried to get the Powers to
4300
recognize, in practice if not in theory, an informal Japanese
4301
Protectorate over China, as a first step towards which it was necessary
4302
to establish the principle that the Japanese should not be interfered
4303
with in their diplomatic dealings with China. The Conference agreed to
4304
the Japanese proposal that the Shantung question should not come before
4305
the Conference, but should be dealt with in direct negotiations between
4306
the Japanese and Chinese. The Japanese victory on this point, however,
4307
was not complete, because it was arranged that, in the event of a
4308
deadlock, Mr. Hughes and Sir Arthur Balfour should mediate. A deadlock,
4309
of course, soon occurred, and it then appeared that the British were no
4310
longer prepared to back up the Japanese whole-heartedly, as in the old
4311
days. The American Administration, for the sake of peace, showed some
4312
disposition to urge the Chinese to give way. But American opinion was
4313
roused on the Shantung question, and it appeared that, unless a solution
4314
more or less satisfactory to China was reached, the Senate would
4315
probably refuse to ratify the various treaties which embodied the work
4316
of the Conference. Therefore, at the last moment, the Americans strongly
4317
urged Japan to give way, and we took the same line, though perhaps less
4318
strongly. The result was the conclusion of the Shantung Treaty between
4319
China and Japan.
4320
4321
By this Treaty, the Chinese recover everything in Shantung, except the
4322
private property of Japanese subjects, and certain restrictions as
4323
regards the railway. The railway was the great difficulty in the
4324
negotiations, since, so long as the Japanese could control that, they
4325
would have the province at their mercy. The Chinese offered to buy back
4326
the railway at once, having raised about half the money as a result of
4327
a patriotic movement among their merchants. This, however, the Japanese
4328
refused to agree to. What was finally done was that the Chinese were
4329
compelled to borrow the money from the Japanese Government to be repaid
4330
in fifteen years, with an option of repayment in five years. The railway
4331
was valued at 53,400,000 gold marks, plus the costs involved in repairs
4332
or improvements incurred by Japan, less deterioration; and it was to be
4333
handed over to China within nine months of the signature of the treaty.
4334
Until the purchase price, borrowed from Japan, is repaid, the Japanese
4335
retain a certain degree of control over the railway: a Japanese traffic
4336
manager is to be appointed, and two accountants, one Chinese and the
4337
other Japanese, under the control of a Chinese President.
4338
4339
It is clear that, on paper, this gives the Chinese everything five years
4340
hence. Whether things will work out so depends upon whether, five years
4341
hence, any Power is prepared to force Japan to keep her word. As both
4342
Mr. Hughes and Sir Arthur Balfour strongly urged the Chinese to agree to
4343
this compromise, it must be assumed that America and Great Britain have
4344
some responsibility for seeing that it is properly carried out. In that
4345
case, we may perhaps expect that in the end China will acquire complete
4346
control of the Shantung railway.
4347
4348
On the whole, it must be said that China did better at Washington than
4349
might have been expected. As regards the larger aspects of the new
4350
international situation arising out of the Conference, I shall deal with
4351
them in the next chapter. But in our present connection it is necessary
4352
to consider certain Far Eastern questions _not_ discussed at Washington,
4353
since the mere fact that they were not discussed gave them a new form.
4354
4355
The question of Manchuria and Inner Mongolia was not raised at
4356
Washington. It may therefore be assumed that Japan's position there is
4357
secure until such time as the Chinese, or the Russians, or both
4358
together, are strong enough to challenge it. America, at any rate, will
4359
not raise the question unless friction occurs on some other issue. (See
4360
Appendix.)
4361
4362
The Siberian question also was not settled. Therefore Japan's ambitions
4363
in Vladivostok and the Maritime Provinces will presumably remain
4364
unchecked except in so far as the Russians unaided are able to check
4365
them. There is a chronic state of semi-war between the Japanese and the
4366
Far Eastern Republic, and there seems no reason why it should end in any
4367
near future. The Japanese from time to time announce that they have
4368
decided to withdraw, but they simultaneously send fresh troops. A
4369
conference between them and the Chita Government has been taking place
4370
at Dairen, and from time to time announcements have appeared to the
4371
effect that an agreement has been reached or was about to be reached.
4372
But on April 16th (1922) the Japanese broke up the Conference. _The
4373
Times_ of April 27th contains both the Japanese and the Russian official
4374
accounts of this break up. The Japanese statement is given in _The
4375
Times_ as follows:--
4376
4377
The Japanese Embassy communicates the text of a statement given
4378
out on April 20th by the Japanese Foreign Office on the Dairen
4379
Conference.
4380
4381
It begins by recalling that in response to the repeatedly
4382
expressed desire of the Chita Government, the Japanese Government
4383
decided to enter into negotiations. The first meeting took place
4384
on August 26th last year.
4385
4386
The Japanese demands included the non-enforcement of communistic
4387
principles in the Republic against Japanese, the prohibition of
4388
Bolshevist propaganda, the abolition of menacing military
4389
establishments, the adoption of the principle of the open door in
4390
Siberia, and the removal of industrial restrictions on
4391
foreigners. Desiring speedily to conclude an agreement, so that
4392
the withdrawal of troops might be carried out as soon as
4393
possible, Japan met the wishes of Chita as far as practicable.
4394
Though, from the outset, Chita pressed for a speedy settlement of
4395
the Nicolaievsk affair, Japan eventually agreed to take up the
4396
Nicolaievsk affair immediately after the conclusion of the basis
4397
agreement. She further assured Chita that in settling the affair
4398
Japan had no intention of violating the sovereignty and
4399
territorial integrity of Russia, and that the troops would be
4400
speedily withdrawn from Saghalin after the settlement of the
4401
affair, and that Chita'a wishes in regard to the transfer of
4402
property now in the custody of the Japanese authorities would be
4403
met.
4404
4405
The 11th Division of the troops in Siberia was originally to be
4406
relieved during April, but if the Dairen Conference had
4407
progressed satisfactorily, the troops, instead of being relieved,
4408
would have been sent home. Japan therefore intimated to Chita
4409
that should the basis agreement be concluded within a reasonable
4410
period these troops would be immediately withdrawn, and proposed
4411
the signature of the agreement by the middle of April, so that
4412
the preparations for the relief of the said division might be
4413
dispensed with. Thereupon Chita not only proposed the immediate
4414
despatch of Chita troops to Vladivostok without waiting for the
4415
withdrawal of the Japanese troops, but urged that Japan should
4416
fix a tine-limit for the complete withdrawal of all her troops.
4417
4418
Japan informed Chita that the withdrawal would be carried out
4419
within a short period after the conclusion of the detailed
4420
arrangements, giving a definite period as desired, and at the
4421
same time she proposed the signing of the agreement drawn up by
4422
Japan.
4423
4424
Whereas Japan thus throughout the negotiations maintained a
4425
sincere and conciliatory attitude, the Chita delegates entirely
4426
ignored the spirit in which she offered concessions and brought
4427
up one demand after another, thereby trying to gain time. Not
4428
only did they refuse to entertain the Japanese proposals, but
4429
declared that they would drop the negotiations and return to
4430
Chita immediately. The only conclusion from this attitude of the
4431
Chita Government is that they lacked a sincere effort to bring
4432
the negotiations to fruition, and the Japanese Government
4433
instructed its delegates to quit Dairen.
4434
4435
The Russian official account is given by _The Times_ immediately below
4436
the above. It is as follows:--
4437
4438
On April 16th the Japanese broke up the Dairen Conference with
4439
the Far Eastern Republic. The Far Eastern Delegation left Dairen.
4440
Agreement was reached between the Japanese and Russian
4441
Delegations on March 30th on all points of the general treaty,
4442
but when the question of military evacuation was reached the
4443
Japanese Delegation proposed a formula permitting continued
4444
Japanese intervention.
4445
4446
Between March 30th and April 15th the Japanese dragged on the
4447
negotiations _re_ military convention, reproaching the Far
4448
Eastern delegates for mistrusting the Japanese Government. The
4449
Russian Delegation declared that the general treaty would be
4450
signed only upon obtaining precise written guarantees of Japanese
4451
military evacuation.
4452
4453
On April 15th the Japanese Delegation presented an ultimatum
4454
demanding a reply from the Far Eastern representatives in half an
4455
hour as to whether they were willing to sign a general agreement
4456
with new Japanese conditions forbidding an increase in the Far
4457
Eastern Navy and retaining a Japanese military mission on Far
4458
Eastern territory. _Re_ evacuation, the Japanese presented a Note
4459
promising evacuation if "not prevented by unforeseen
4460
circumstances." The Russian Delegation rejected this ultimatum.
4461
On April 16th the Japanese declared the Dairen Conference broken
4462
up. The Japanese delegates left for Tokyo, and Japanese troops
4463
remain in the zone established by the agreement of March 29th.
4464
4465
Readers will believe one or other of these official statements according
4466
to their prejudices, while those who wish to think themselves impartial
4467
will assume that the truth lies somewhere between the two. For my part,
4468
I believe the Russian statement. But even from the Japanese communiqu�
4469
it is evident that what wrecked the Conference was Japanese
4470
unwillingness to evacuate Vladivostok and the Maritime Province; all
4471
that they were willing to give was a vague promise to evacuate some day,
4472
which would have had no more value than Mr. Gladstone's promise to
4473
evacuate Egypt.
4474
4475
It will be observed that the Conference went well for Chita until the
4476
Senate had ratified the Washington treaties. After that, the Japanese
4477
felt that they had a free hand in all Far Eastern matters not dealt with
4478
at Washington. The practical effect of the Washington decisions will
4479
naturally be to make the Japanese seek compensation, at the expense of
4480
the Far Eastern Republic, for what they have had to surrender in China.
4481
This result was to be expected, and was presumably foreseen by the
4482
assembled peacemakers.[85]
4483
4484
It will be seen that the Japanese policy involves hostility to Russia.
4485
This is no doubt one reason for the friendship between Japan and France.
4486
Another reason is that both are the champions of nationalistic
4487
capitalism, as against the international capitalism aimed at by Messrs.
4488
Morgan and Mr. Lloyd George, because France and Japan look to their
4489
armaments as the chief source of their income, while England and America
4490
look rather to their commerce and industry. It would be interesting to
4491
compute how much coal and iron France and Japan have acquired in recent
4492
years by means of their armies. England and America already possessed
4493
coal and iron; hence their different policy. An uninvited delegation
4494
from the Far Eastern Republic at Washington produced documents tending
4495
to show that France and Japan came there as secret allies. Although the
4496
authenticity of the documents was denied, most people, apparently,
4497
believed them to be genuine. In any case, it is to be expected that
4498
France and Japan will stand together, now that the Anglo-Japanese
4499
Alliance has come to an end and the Anglo-French Entente has become
4500
anything but cordial. Thus it is to be feared that Washington and Genoa
4501
have sown the seeds of future wars--unless, by some miracle, the
4502
"civilized" nations should grow weary of suicide.
4503
4504
FOOTNOTES:
4505
4506
[Footnote 84: See _e.g._ chap. viii. of Millard's _Democracy and the
4507
Eastern Question._]
4508
4509
[Footnote 85: I ought perhaps to confess that I have a bias in favour of
4510
the Far Eastern Republic, owing to my friendship for their diplomatic
4511
mission which was in Peking while I was there. I never met a more
4512
high-minded set of men in any country. And although they were
4513
communists, and knew the views that I had expressed on Russia, they
4514
showed me great kindness. I do not think, however, that these courtesies
4515
have affected my view of the dispute between Chita and Tokyo.]
4516
4517
4518
4519
4520
CHAPTER X
4521
4522
PRESENT FORCES AND TENDENCIES IN THE FAR EAST
4523
4524
4525
The Far Eastern situation is so complex that it is very difficult to
4526
guess what will be the ultimate outcome of the Washington Conference,
4527
and still more difficult to know what outcome we ought to desire. I will
4528
endeavour to set forth the various factors each in turn, not simplifying
4529
the issues, but rather aiming at producing a certain hesitancy which I
4530
regard as desirable in dealing with China. I shall consider successively
4531
the interests and desires of America, Japan, Russia and China, with an
4532
attempt, in each case, to gauge what parts of these various interests
4533
and desires are compatible with the welfare of mankind as a whole.[86]
4534
4535
I begin with America, as the leading spirit in the Conference and the
4536
dominant Power in the world. American public opinion is in favour of
4537
peace, and at the same time profoundly persuaded that America is wise
4538
and virtuous while all other Powers are foolish and wicked. The
4539
pessimistic half of this opinion I do not desire to dispute, but the
4540
optimistic half is more open to question. Apart from peace, American
4541
public opinion believes in commerce and industry, Protestant morality,
4542
athletics, hygiene, and hypocrisy, which may be taken as the main
4543
ingredients of American and English Kultur. Every American I met in the
4544
Far East, with one exception, was a missionary for American Kultur,
4545
whether nominally connected with Christian Missions or not. I ought to
4546
explain that when I speak of hypocrisy I do not mean the conscious
4547
hypocrisy practised by Japanese diplomats in their dealings with Western
4548
Powers, but that deeper, unconscious kind which forms the chief strength
4549
of the Anglo-Saxons. Everybody knows Labouchere's comment on Mr.
4550
Gladstone, that like other politicians he always had a card up his
4551
sleeve, but, unlike the others, he thought the Lord had put it there.
4552
This attitude, which has been characteristic of England, has been
4553
somewhat chastened among ourselves by the satire of men like Bernard
4554
Shaw; but in America it is still just as prevalent and self-confident as
4555
it was with us fifty years ago. There is much justification for such an
4556
attitude. Gladstonian England was more of a moral force than the England
4557
of the present day; and America is more of a moral force at this moment
4558
than any other Power (except Russia). But the development from
4559
Gladstone's moral fervour to the cynical imperialism of his successors
4560
is one which we can now see to be inevitable; and a similar development
4561
is bound to take place in the United States. Therefore, when we wish to
4562
estimate the desirability of extending the influence of the United
4563
States, we have to take account of this almost certain future loss of
4564
idealism.
4565
4566
Nor is idealism in itself always an unmixed blessing to its victims. It
4567
is apt to be incompatible with tolerance, with the practice of
4568
live-and-let-live, which alone can make the world endurable for its less
4569
pugnacious and energetic inhabitants. It is difficult for art or the
4570
contemplative outlook to exist in an atmosphere of bustling practical
4571
philanthropy, as difficult as it would be to write a book in the middle
4572
of a spring cleaning. The ideals which inspire a spring-cleaning are
4573
useful and valuable in their place, but when they are not enriched by
4574
any others they are apt to produce a rather bleak and uncomfortable sort
4575
of world.
4576
4577
All this may seem, at first sight, somewhat remote from the Washington
4578
Conference, but it is essential if we are to take a just view of the
4579
friction between America and Japan. I wish to admit at once that,
4580
hitherto, America has been the best friend of China, and Japan the worst
4581
enemy. It is also true that America is doing more than any other Power
4582
to promote peace in the world, while Japan would probably favour war if
4583
there were a good prospect of victory. On these grounds, I am glad to
4584
see our Government making friends with America and abandoning the
4585
militaristic Anglo-Japanese Alliance. But I do not wish this to be done
4586
in a spirit of hostility to Japan, or in a blind reliance upon the
4587
future good intentions of America. I shall therefore try to state
4588
Japan's case, although, _for the present_, I think it weaker than
4589
America's.
4590
4591
It should be observed, in the first place, that the present American
4592
policy, both in regard to China and in regard to naval armaments, while
4593
clearly good for the world, is quite as clearly in line with American
4594
interests. To take the naval question first: America, with a navy equal
4595
to our own, will be quite strong enough to make our Admiralty understand
4596
that it is out of the question to go to war with America, so that
4597
America will have as much control of the seas as there is any point in
4598
having.[87] The Americans are adamant about the Japanese Navy, but very
4599
pliant about French submarines, which only threaten us. Control of the
4600
seas being secured, limitation of naval armaments merely decreases the
4601
cost, and is an equal gain to all parties, involving no sacrifice of
4602
American interests. To take next the question of China: American
4603
ambitions in China are economic, and require only that the whole country
4604
should be open to the commerce and industry of the United States. The
4605
policy of spheres of influence is obviously less advantageous, to so
4606
rich and economically strong a country as America, than the policy of
4607
the universal Open Door. We cannot therefore regard America's liberal
4608
policy as regards China and naval armaments as any reason for expecting
4609
a liberal policy when it goes against self-interest.
4610
4611
In fact, there is evidence that when American interests or prejudices
4612
are involved liberal and humanitarian principles have no weight
4613
whatever. I will cite two instances: Panama tolls, and Russian trade. In
4614
the matter of the Panama canal, America is bound by treaty not to
4615
discriminate against our shipping; nevertheless a Bill has been passed
4616
by a two-thirds majority of the House of Representatives, making a
4617
discrimination in favour of American shipping. Even if the President
4618
ultimately vetoes it, its present position shows that at least
4619
two-thirds of the House of Representatives share Bethmann-Hollweg's view
4620
of treaty obligations. And as for trade with Russia, England led the
4621
way, while American hostility to the Bolsheviks remained implacable, and
4622
to this day Gompers, in the name of American labour, thunders against
4623
"shaking hands with murder." It cannot therefore be said that America is
4624
_always_ honourable or humanitarian or liberal. The evidence is that
4625
America adopts these virtues when they suit national or rather financial
4626
interests, but fails to perceive their applicability in other cases.
4627
4628
I could of course have given many other instances, but I content myself
4629
with one, because it especially concerns China. I quote from an American
4630
weekly, The _Freeman_ (November 23, 1921, p. 244):--
4631
4632
On November 1st, the Chinese Government failed to meet an
4633
obligation of $5,600,000, due and payable to a large
4634
banking-house in Chicago. The State Department had facilitated
4635
the negotiation of this loan in the first instance; and now, in
4636
fulfilment of the promise of Governmental support in an
4637
emergency, an official cablegram was launched upon Peking, with
4638
intimations that continued defalcation might have a most serious
4639
effect upon the financial and political rating of the Chinese
4640
Republic. In the meantime, the American bankers of the new
4641
international consortium had offered to advance to the Chinese
4642
Government an amount which would cover the loan in default,
4643
together with other obligations already in arrears, and still
4644
others which will fall due on December 1st; and this proposal had
4645
also received the full and energetic support of the Department of
4646
State. That is to say, American financiers and politicians were
4647
at one and the same time the heroes and villains of the piece;
4648
having co-operated in the creation of a dangerous situation, they
4649
came forward handsomely in the hour of trial with an offer to
4650
save China from themselves as it were, if the Chinese Government
4651
would only enter into relations with the consortium, and thus
4652
prepare the way for the eventual establishment of an American
4653
financial protectorate.
4654
4655
It should be added that the Peking Government, after repeated
4656
negotiations, had decided not to accept loans from the consortium on the
4657
terms on which they were offered. In my opinion, there were very
4658
adequate grounds for this decision. As the same article in the _Freeman_
4659
concludes:--
4660
4661
If this plan is put through, it will make the bankers of the
4662
consortium the virtual owners of China; and among these bankers,
4663
those of the United States are the only ones who are prepared to
4664
take full advantage of the situation.
4665
4666
There is some reason to think that, at the beginning of the Washington
4667
Conference, an attempt was made by the consortium banks, with the
4668
connivance of the British but not of the American Government, to
4669
establish, by means of the Conference, some measure of international
4670
control over China. In the _Japan Weekly Chronicle_ for November 17,
4671
1921 (p. 725), in a telegram headed "International Control of China," I
4672
find it reported that America is thought to be seeking to establish
4673
international control, and that Mr. Wellington Koo told the
4674
_Philadelphia Public Ledger_: "We suspect the motives which led to the
4675
suggestion and we thoroughly doubt its feasibility. China will bitterly
4676
oppose any Conference plan to offer China international aid." He adds:
4677
"International control will not do. China must be given time and
4678
opportunity to find herself. The world should not misinterpret or
4679
exaggerate the meaning of the convulsion which China is now passing
4680
through." These are wise words, with which every true friend of China
4681
must agree. In the same issue of the _Japan Weekly Chronicle_--which, by
4682
the way, I consider the best weekly paper in the world--I find the
4683
following (p. 728):--
4684
4685
Mr. Lennox Simpson [Putnam Weale] is quoted as saying: "The
4686
international bankers have a scheme for the international control
4687
of China. Mr. Lamont, representing the consortium, offered a
4688
sixteen-million-dollar loan to China, which the Chinese
4689
Government refused to accept because Mr. Lamont insisted that the
4690
Hukuang bonds, German issue, which had been acquired by the
4691
Morgan Company, should be paid out of it." Mr. Lamont, on hearing
4692
this charge, made an emphatic denial, saying: "Simpson's
4693
statement is unqualifiedly false. When this man Simpson talks
4694
about resisting the control of the international banks he is
4695
fantastic. We don't want control. We are anxious that the
4696
Conference result in such a solution as will furnish full
4697
opportunity to China to fulfil her own destiny."
4698
4699
Sagacious people will be inclined to conclude that so much anger must be
4700
due to being touched on the raw, and that Mr. Lamont, if he had had
4701
nothing to conceal, would not have spoken of a distinguished writer and
4702
one of China's best friends as "this man Simpson."
4703
4704
I do not pretend that the evidence against the consortium is conclusive,
4705
and I have not space here to set it all forth. But to any European
4706
radical Mr. Lamont's statement that the consortium does not want control
4707
reads like a contradiction in terms. Those who wish to lend to a
4708
Government which is on the verge of bankruptcy, must aim at control,
4709
for, even if there were not the incident of the Chicago Bank, it would
4710
be impossible to believe that Messrs. Morgan are so purely philanthropic
4711
as not to care whether they get any interest on their money or not,
4712
although emissaries of the consortium in China have spoken as though
4713
this were the case, thereby greatly increasing the suspicions of the
4714
Chinese.
4715
4716
In the _New Republic_ for November 30, 1921, there is an article by Mr.
4717
Brailsford entitled "A New Technique of Peace," which I fear is
4718
prophetic even if not wholly applicable at the moment when it was
4719
written. I expect to see, if the Americans are successful in the Far
4720
East, China compelled to be orderly so as to afford a field for foreign
4721
commerce and industry; a government which the West will consider good
4722
substituted for the present go-as-you-please anarchy; a gradually
4723
increasing flow of wealth from China to the investing countries, the
4724
chief of which is America; the development of a sweated proletariat; the
4725
spread of Christianity; the substitution of the American civilization
4726
for the Chinese; the destruction of traditional beauty, except for such
4727
_objets d'art_ as millionaires may think it worth while to buy; the
4728
gradual awakening of China to her exploitation by the foreigner; and one
4729
day, fifty or a hundred years hence, the massacre of every white man
4730
throughout the Celestial Empire at a signal from some vast secret
4731
society. All this is probably inevitable, human nature being what it is.
4732
It will be done in order that rich men may grow richer, but we shall be
4733
told that it is done in order that China may have "good" government. The
4734
definition of the word "good" is difficult, but the definition of "good
4735
government" is as easy as A.B.C.: it is government that yields fat
4736
dividends to capitalists.
4737
4738
The Chinese are gentle, urbane, seeking only justice and freedom. They
4739
have a civilization superior to ours in all that makes for human
4740
happiness. They have a vigorous movement of young reformers, who, if
4741
they are allowed a little time, will revivify China and produce
4742
something immeasurably better than the worn-out grinding mechanism that
4743
we call civilization. When Young China has done its work, Americans will
4744
be able to make money by trading with China, without destroying the soul
4745
of the country. China needs a period of anarchy in order to work out her
4746
salvation; all great nations need such a period, from time to time. When
4747
America went through such a period, in 1861-5, England thought of
4748
intervening to insist on "good government," but fortunately abstained.
4749
Now-a-days, in China, all the Powers want to intervene. Americans
4750
recognize this in the case of the wicked Old World, but are smitten with
4751
blindness when it comes to their own consortium. All I ask of them is
4752
that they should admit that they are as other men, and cease to thank
4753
God that they are not as this publican.
4754
4755
So much by way of criticism by America; we come now to the defence of
4756
Japan.
4757
4758
Japan's relations with the Powers are not of her own seeking; all that
4759
Japan asked of the world was to be let alone. This, however, did not
4760
suit the white nations, among whom America led the way. It was a United
4761
States squadron under Commodore Perry that first made Japan aware of
4762
Western aggressiveness. Very soon it became evident that there were only
4763
two ways of dealing with the white man, either to submit to him, or to
4764
fight him with his own weapons. Japan adopted the latter course, and
4765
developed a modern army trained by the Germans, a modern navy modelled
4766
on the British, modern machinery derived from America, and modern
4767
morals copied from the whole lot. Everybody except the British was
4768
horrified, and called the Japanese "yellow monkeys." However, they began
4769
to be respected when they defeated Russia, and after they had captured
4770
Tsing-tao and half-enslaved China they were admitted to equality with
4771
the other Great Powers at Versailles. The consideration shown to them by
4772
the West is due to their armaments alone; none of their other good
4773
qualities would have saved them from being regarded as "niggers."
4774
4775
People who have never been outside Europe can hardly imagine the
4776
intensity of the colour prejudice that white men develop when brought
4777
into contact with any different pigmentation. I have seen Chinese of the
4778
highest education, men as cultured as (say) Dean Inge, treated by greasy
4779
white men as if they were dirt, in a way in which, at home, no Duke
4780
would venture to treat a crossing-sweeper. The Japanese are not treated
4781
in this way, because they have a powerful army and navy. The fact that
4782
white men, as individuals, no longer dare to bully individual Japanese,
4783
is important as a beginning of better relations towards the coloured
4784
races in general. If the Japanese, by defeat in war, are prevented from
4785
retaining the status of a Great Power, the coloured races in general
4786
will suffer, and the tottering insolence of the white man will be
4787
re-established. Also the world will have lost the last chance of the
4788
survival of civilizations of a different type from that of the
4789
industrial West.
4790
4791
The civilization of Japan, in its material aspect, is similar to that of
4792
the West, though industrialism, as yet, is not very developed. But in
4793
its mental aspect it is utterly unlike the West, particularly the
4794
Anglo-Saxon West. Worship of the Mikado, as an actually divine being,
4795
is successfully taught in every village school, and provides the popular
4796
support for nationalism. The nationalistic aims of Japan are not merely
4797
economic; they are also dynastic and territorial in a medi�val way. The
4798
morality of the Japanese is not utilitarian, but intensely idealistic.
4799
Filial piety is the basis, and includes patriotism, because the Mikado
4800
is the father of his people. The Japanese outlook has the same kind of
4801
superstitious absence of realism that one finds in thirteenth-century
4802
theories as to the relations of the Emperor and the Pope. But in Europe
4803
the Emperor and the Pope were different people, and their quarrels
4804
promoted freedom of thought; in Japan, since 1868, they are combined in
4805
one sacred person, and there are no internal conflicts to produce doubt.
4806
4807
Japan, unlike China, is a religious country. The Chinese doubt a
4808
proposition until it is proved to be true; the Japanese believe it until
4809
it is proved to be false. I do not know of any evidence against the view
4810
that the Mikado is divine. Japanese religion is essentially
4811
nationalistic, like that of the Jews in the Old Testament. Shinto, the
4812
State religion, has been in the main invented since 1868,[88] and
4813
propagated by education in schools. (There was of course an old Shinto
4814
religion, but most of what constitutes modern Shintoism is new.) It is
4815
not a religion which aims at being universal, like Buddhism,
4816
Christianity, and Islam; it is a tribal religion, only intended to
4817
appeal to the Japanese. Buddhism subsists side by side with it, and is
4818
believed by the same people. It is customary to adopt Shinto rites for
4819
marriages and Buddhist rites for funerals, because Buddhism is
4820
considered more suitable for mournful occasions. Although Buddhism is a
4821
universal religion, its Japanese form is intensely national,[89] like
4822
the Church of England. Many of its priests marry, and in some temples
4823
the priesthood is hereditary. Its dignitaries remind one vividly of
4824
English Archdeacons.
4825
4826
The Japanese, even when they adopt industrial methods, do not lose their
4827
sense of beauty. One hears complaints that their goods are shoddy, but
4828
they have a remarkable power of adapting artistic taste to
4829
industrialism. If Japan were rich it might produce cities as beautiful
4830
as Venice, by methods as modern as those of New York. Industrialism has
4831
hitherto brought with it elsewhere a rising tide of ugliness, and any
4832
nation which can show us how to make this tide recede deserves our
4833
gratitude.
4834
4835
The Japanese are earnest, passionate, strong-willed, amazingly hard
4836
working, and capable of boundless sacrifice to an ideal. Most of them
4837
have the correlative defects: lack of humour, cruelty, intolerance, and
4838
incapacity for free thought. But these defects are by no means
4839
universal; one meets among them a certain number of men and women of
4840
quite extraordinary excellence. And there is in their civilization as a
4841
whole a degree of vigour and determination which commands the highest
4842
respect.
4843
4844
The growth of industrialism in Japan has brought with it the growth of
4845
Socialism and the Labour movement.[90] In China, the intellectuals are
4846
often theoretical Socialists, but in the absence of Labour
4847
organizations there is as yet little room for more than theory. In
4848
Japan, Trade Unionism has made considerable advances, and every variety
4849
of socialist and anarchist opinion is vigorously represented. In time,
4850
if Japan becomes increasingly industrial, Socialism may become a
4851
political force; as yet, I do not think it is. Japanese Socialists
4852
resemble those of other countries, in that they do not share the
4853
national superstitions. They are much persecuted by the Government, but
4854
not so much as Socialists in America--so at least I am informed by an
4855
American who is in a position to judge.
4856
4857
The real power is still in the hands of certain aristocratic families.
4858
By the constitution, the Ministers of War and Marine are directly
4859
responsible to the Mikado, not to the Diet or the Prime Minister. They
4860
therefore can and do persist in policies which are disliked by the
4861
Foreign Office. For example, if the Foreign Office were to promise the
4862
evacuation of Vladivostok, the War Office might nevertheless decide to
4863
keep the soldiers there, and there would be no constitutional remedy.
4864
Some part, at least, of what appears as Japanese bad faith is explicable
4865
in this way. There is of course a party which wishes to establish real
4866
Parliamentary government, but it is not likely to come into power unless
4867
the existing r�gime suffers some severe diplomatic humiliation. If the
4868
Washington Conference had compelled the evacuation of not only Shantung
4869
but also Vladivostok by diplomatic pressure, the effect on the internal
4870
government of Japan would probably have been excellent.
4871
4872
The Japanese are firmly persuaded that they have no friends, and that
4873
the Americana are their implacable foes. One gathers that the
4874
Government regards war with America as unavoidable in the long run. The
4875
argument would be that the economic imperialism of the United States
4876
will not tolerate the industrial development of a formidable rival in
4877
the Pacific, and that sooner or later the Japanese will be presented
4878
with the alternative of dying by starvation or on the battlefield. Then
4879
Bushido will come into play, and will lead to choice of the battlefield
4880
in preference to starvation. Admiral Sato[91] (the Japanese Bernhardi,
4881
as he is called) maintains that absence of Bushido in the Americans will
4882
lead to their defeat, and that their money-grubbing souls will be
4883
incapable of enduring the hardships and privations of a long war. This,
4884
of course, is romantic nonsense. Bushido is no use in modern war, and
4885
the Americans are quite as courageous and obstinate as the Japanese. A
4886
war might last ten years, but it would certainly end in the defeat of
4887
Japan.
4888
4889
One is constantly reminded of the situation between England and Germany
4890
in the years before 1914. The Germans wanted to acquire a colonial
4891
empire by means similar to those which we had employed; so do the
4892
Japanese. We considered such methods wicked when employed by foreigners;
4893
so do the Americans. The Germans developed their industries and roused
4894
our hostility by competition; the Japanese are similarly competing with
4895
America in Far Eastern markets. The Germans felt themselves encircled by
4896
our alliances, which we regarded as purely defensive; the Japanese,
4897
similarly, found themselves isolated at Washington (except for French
4898
sympathy) since the superior diplomatic skill of the Americans has
4899
brought us over to their side. The Germans at last, impelled by terrors
4900
largely of their own creation, challenged the whole world, and fell; it
4901
is very much to be feared that Japan may do likewise. The pros and cons
4902
are so familiar in the case of Germany that I need not elaborate them
4903
further, since the whole argument can be transferred bodily to the case
4904
of Japan. There is, however, this difference, that, while Germany aimed
4905
at hegemony of the whole world, the Japanese only aim at hegemony in
4906
Eastern Asia.
4907
4908
The conflict between America and Japan is superficially economic, but,
4909
as often happens, the economic rivalry is really a cloak for deeper
4910
passions. Japan still believes in the divine right of kings; America
4911
believes in the divine right of commerce. I have sometimes tried to
4912
persuade Americans that there may be nations which will not gain by an
4913
extension of their foreign commerce, but I have always found the attempt
4914
futile. The Americans believe also that their religion and morality and
4915
culture are far superior to those of the Far East. I regard this as a
4916
delusion, though one shared by almost all Europeans. The Japanese,
4917
profoundly and with all the strength of their being, long to preserve
4918
their own culture and to avoid becoming like Europeans or Americans; and
4919
in this I think we ought to sympathize with them. The colour prejudice
4920
is even more intense among Americans than among Europeans; the Japanese
4921
are determined to prove that the yellow man may be the equal of the
4922
white man. In this, also, justice and humanity are on the side of Japan.
4923
Thus on the deeper issues, which underlie the economic and diplomatic
4924
conflict, my feelings go with the Japanese rather than with the
4925
Americans.
4926
4927
Unfortunately, the Japanese are always putting themselves in the wrong
4928
through impatience and contempt. They ought to have claimed for China
4929
the same consideration that they have extorted towards themselves; then
4930
they could have become, what they constantly profess to be, the
4931
champions of Asia against Europe. The Chinese are prone to gratitude,
4932
and would have helped Japan loyally if Japan had been a true friend to
4933
them. But the Japanese despise the Chinese more than the Europeans do;
4934
they do not want to destroy the belief in Eastern inferiority, but only
4935
to be regarded as themselves belonging to the West. They have therefore
4936
behaved so as to cause a well-deserved hatred of them in China. And this
4937
same behaviour has made the best Americans as hostile to them as the
4938
worst. If America had had none but base reasons for hostility to them,
4939
they would have found many champions in the United States; as it is,
4940
they have practically none. It is not yet too late; it is still possible
4941
for them to win the affection of China and the respect of the best
4942
Americans. To achieve this, they would have to change their Chinese
4943
policy and adopt a more democratic constitution; but if they do not
4944
achieve it, they will fall as Germany fell. And their fall will be a
4945
great misfortune for mankind.
4946
4947
A war between America and Japan would be a very terrible thing in
4948
itself, and a still more terrible thing in its consequences. It would
4949
destroy Japanese civilization, ensure the subjugation of China to
4950
Western culture, and launch America upon a career of world-wide
4951
militaristic imperialism. It is therefore, at all costs, to be avoided.
4952
If it is to be avoided, Japan must become more liberal; and Japan will
4953
only become more liberal if the present r�gime is discredited by
4954
failure. Therefore, in the interests of Japan no less than in the
4955
interests of China, it would be well if Japan were forced, by the joint
4956
diplomatic pressure of England and America, to disgorge, not only
4957
Shantung, but also all of Manchuria except Port Arthur and its immediate
4958
neighbourhood. (I make this exception because I think nothing short of
4959
actual war would lead the Japanese to abandon Port Arthur.) Our Alliance
4960
with Japan, since the end of the Russo-Japanese war, has been an
4961
encouragement to Japan in all that she has done amiss. Not that Japan
4962
has been worse than we have, but that certain kinds of crime are only
4963
permitted to very great Powers, and have been committed by the Japanese
4964
at an earlier stage of their career than prudence would warrant. Our
4965
Alliance has been a contributory cause of Japan's mistakes, and the
4966
ending of the Alliance is a necessary condition of Japanese reform.
4967
4968
We come now to Russia's part in the Chinese problem. There is a tendency
4969
in Europe to regard Russia as decrepit, but this is a delusion. True,
4970
millions are starving and industry is at a standstill. But that does not
4971
mean what it would in a more highly organized country. Russia is still
4972
able to steal a march on us in Persia and Afghanistan, and on the
4973
Japanese in Outer Mongolia. Russia is still able to organize Bolshevik
4974
propaganda in every country in Asia. And a great part of the
4975
effectiveness of this propaganda lies in its promise of liberation from
4976
Europe. So far, in China proper, it has affected hardly anyone except
4977
the younger students, to whom Bolshevism appeals as a method of
4978
developing industry without passing through the stage of private
4979
capitalism. This appeal will doubtless diminish as the Bolsheviks are
4980
more and more forced to revert to capitalism. Moreover, Bolshevism, as
4981
it has developed in Russia, is quite peculiarly inapplicable to China,
4982
for the following reasons: (1) It requires a strong centralized State,
4983
whereas China has a very weak State, and is tending more and more to
4984
federalism instead of centralization; (2) Bolshevism requires a very
4985
great deal of government, and more control of individual lives by the
4986
authorities than has ever been known before, whereas China has developed
4987
personal liberty to an extraordinary degree, and is the country of all
4988
others where the doctrines of anarchism seem to find successful
4989
practical application; (3) Bolshevism dislikes private trading, which is
4990
the breath of life to all Chinese except the literati. For these
4991
reasons, it is not likely that Bolshevism as a creed will make much
4992
progress in China proper. But Bolshevism as a political force is not the
4993
same thing as Bolshevism as a creed. The arguments which proved
4994
successful with the Ameer of Afghanistan or the nomads of Mongolia were
4995
probably different from those employed in discussion with Mr. Lansbury.
4996
The Asiatic expansion of Bolshevik influence is not a distinctively
4997
Bolshevik phenomenon, but a continuation of traditional Russian policy,
4998
carried on by men who are more energetic, more intelligent, and less
4999
corrupt than the officials of the Tsar's r�gime, and who moreover, like
5000
the Americans, believe themselves to be engaged in the liberation of
5001
mankind, not in mere imperialistic expansion. This belief, of course,
5002
adds enormously to the vigour and success of Bolshevik imperialism, and
5003
gives an impulse to Asiatic expansion which is not likely to be soon
5004
spent, unless there is an actual restoration of the Tsarist r�gime
5005
under some new Kolchak dependent upon alien arms for his throne and his
5006
life.
5007
5008
It is therefore not at all unlikely, if the international situation
5009
develops in certain ways, that Russia may set to work to regain
5010
Manchuria, and to recover that influence over Peking which the control
5011
of Manchuria is bound to give to any foreign Power. It would probably be
5012
useless to attempt such an enterprise while Japan remains unembarrassed,
5013
but it would at once become feasible if Japan were at war with America
5014
or with Great Britain. There is therefore nothing improbable in the
5015
supposition that Russia may, within the next ten or twenty years,
5016
recover the position which she held in relation to China before the
5017
Russo-Japanese war. It must be remembered also that the Russians have an
5018
instinct for colonization, and have been trekking eastward for
5019
centuries. This tendency has been interrupted by the disasters of the
5020
last seven years, but is likely to assert itself again before long.
5021
5022
The hegemony of Russia in Asia would not, to my mind, be in any way
5023
regrettable. Russia would probably not be strong enough to tyrannize as
5024
much as the English, the Americans, or the Japanese would do. Moreover,
5025
the Russians are sufficiently Asiatic in outlook and character to be
5026
able to enter into relations of equality and mutual understanding with
5027
Asiatics, in a way which seems quite impossible for the English-speaking
5028
nations. And an Asiatic block, if it could be formed, would be strong
5029
for defence and weak for attack, which would make for peace. Therefore,
5030
on the whole, such a result, if it came about, would probably be
5031
desirable In the interests of mankind as a whole.
5032
5033
What, meanwhile, is China's interest? What would be ideally best for
5034
China would be to recover Manchuria and Shantung, and then be let alone.
5035
The anarchy in China might take a long time to subside, but in the end
5036
some system suited to China would be established. The artificial ending
5037
of Chinese anarchy by outside interference means the establishment of
5038
some system convenient for foreign trade and industry, but probably
5039
quite unfitted to the needs of the Chinese themselves. The English in
5040
the seventeenth century, the French in the eighteenth, the Americans in
5041
the nineteenth, and the Russians in our own day, have passed through
5042
years of anarchy and civil war, which were essential to their
5043
development, and could not have been curtailed by outside interference
5044
without grave detriment to the final solution. So it is with China.
5045
Western political ideas have swept away the old imperial system, but
5046
have not yet proved strong enough to put anything stable in its place.
5047
The problem of transforming China into a modern country is a difficult
5048
one, and foreigners ought to be willing to have some patience while the
5049
Chinese attempt its solution. They understand their own country, and we
5050
do not. If they are let alone, they will, in the end, find a solution
5051
suitable to their character, which we shall certainly not do. A solution
5052
slowly reached by themselves may be stable, whereas one prematurely
5053
imposed by outside Powers will be artificial and therefore unstable.
5054
5055
There is, however, very little hope that the decisions reached by the
5056
Washington Conference will permanently benefit China, and a considerable
5057
chance that they may do quite the reverse. In Manchuria the _status quo_
5058
is to be maintained, while in Shantung the Japanese have made
5059
concessions, the value of which only time can show. The Four
5060
Powers--America, Great Britain, France, and Japan--have agreed to
5061
exploit China in combination, not competitively. There is a consortium
5062
as regards loans, which will have the power of the purse and will
5063
therefore be the real Government of China. As the Americans are the only
5064
people who have much spare capital, they will control the consortium. As
5065
they consider their civilization the finest in the world, they will set
5066
to work to turn the Chinese into muscular Christians. As the financiers
5067
are the most splendid feature of the American civilization, China must
5068
be so governed as to enrich the financiers, who will in return establish
5069
colleges and hospitals and Y.M.C.A.'s throughout the length and breadth
5070
of the land, and employ agents to buy up the artistic treasures of China
5071
for sepulture in their mansions. Chinese intellect, like that of
5072
America, will be, directly or indirectly, in the pay of the Trust
5073
magnates, and therefore no effective voice will be, raised in favour of
5074
radical reform. The inauguration of this system will be welcomed even by
5075
some Socialists in the West as a great victory for peace and freedom.
5076
5077
But it is impossible to make a silk purse out of a sow's ear, or peace
5078
and freedom out of capitalism. The fourfold agreement between England,
5079
France, America and Japan is, perhaps, a safeguard of peace, but in so
5080
far as it brings peace nearer it puts freedom further off. It is the
5081
peace obtained when competing firms join in a combine, which is by no
5082
means always advantageous to those who have profited by the previous
5083
competition. It is quite possible to dominate China without infringing
5084
the principle of the Open Door. This principle merely ensures that the
5085
domination everywhere shall be American, because America is the
5086
strongest Power financially and commercially. It is to America's
5087
interest to secure, in China, certain things consistent with Chinese
5088
interests, and certain others inconsistent with them. The Americans, for
5089
the sake of commerce and good investments, would wish to see a stable
5090
government in China, an increase in the purchasing power of the people,
5091
and an absence of territorial aggression by other Powers. But they will
5092
not wish to see the Chinese strong enough to own and work their own
5093
railways or mines, and they will resent all attempts at economic
5094
independence, particularly when (as is to be expected) they take the
5095
form of State Socialism, or what Lenin calls State Capitalism. They will
5096
keep a _dossier_ of every student educated in colleges under American
5097
control, and will probably see to it that those who profess Socialist or
5098
Radical opinions shall get no posts. They will insist upon the standard
5099
of hypocrisy which led them to hound out Gorky when he visited the
5100
United States. They will destroy beauty and substitute tidiness. In
5101
short, they will insist upon China becoming as like as possible to
5102
"God's own country," except that it will not be allowed to keep the
5103
wealth generated by its industries. The Chinese have it in them to give
5104
to the world a new contribution to civilization as valuable as that
5105
which they gave in the past. This would be prevented by the domination
5106
of the Americans, because they believe their own civilization to be
5107
perfect.
5108
5109
The ideal of capitalism, if it could be achieved, would be to destroy
5110
competition among capitalists by means of Trusts, but to keep alive
5111
competition among workers. To some extent Trade Unionism has succeeded
5112
in diminishing competition among wage-earners within the advanced
5113
industrial countries; but it has only intensified the conflict between
5114
workers of different races, particularly between the white and yellow
5115
races.[92] Under the existing economic system, the competition of cheap
5116
Asiatic labour in America, Canada or Australia might well be harmful to
5117
white labour in those countries. But under Socialism an influx of
5118
industrious, skilled workers in sparsely populated countries would be an
5119
obvious gain to everybody. Under Socialism, the immigration of any
5120
person who produces more than he or she consumes will be a gain to every
5121
other individual in the community, since it increases the wealth per
5122
head. But under capitalism, owing to competition for jobs, a worker who
5123
either produces much or consumes little is the natural enemy of the
5124
others; thus the system makes for inefficient work, and creates an
5125
opposition between the general interest and the individual interest of
5126
the wage-earner. The case of yellow labour in America and the British
5127
Dominions is one of the most unfortunate instances of the artificial
5128
conflicts of interest produced by the capitalist system. This whole
5129
question of Asiatic immigration, which is liable to cause trouble for
5130
centuries to come, can only be radically solved by Socialism, since
5131
Socialism alone can bring the private interests of workers in this
5132
matter into harmony with the interests of their nation and of the world.
5133
5134
The concentration of the world's capital in a few nations, which, by
5135
means of it, are able to drain all other nations of their wealth, is
5136
obviously not a system by which permanent peace can be secured except
5137
through the complete subjection of the poorer nations. In the long run,
5138
China will see no reason to leave the profits of industry in the hands
5139
of foreigners. If, for the present, Russia is successfully starved into
5140
submission to foreign capital, Russia also will, when the time is ripe,
5141
attempt a new rebellion against the world-empire of finance. I cannot
5142
see, therefore, any establishment of a stable world-system as a result
5143
of the syndicate formed at Washington. On the contrary, we may expect
5144
that, when Asia has thoroughly assimilated our economic system, the
5145
Marxian class-war will break out in the form of a war between Asia and
5146
the West, with America as the protagonist of capitalism, and Russia as
5147
the champion of Asia and Socialism. In such a war, Asia would be
5148
fighting for freedom, but probably too late to preserve the distinctive
5149
civilizations which now make Asia valuable to the human family. Indeed,
5150
the war would probably be so devastating that no civilization of any
5151
sort would survive it.
5152
5153
To sum up: the real government of the world is in the hands of the big
5154
financiers, except on questions which rouse passionate public interest.
5155
No doubt the exclusion of Asiatics from America and the Dominions is due
5156
to popular pressure, and is against the interests of big finance. But
5157
not many questions rouse so much popular feeling, and among them only a
5158
few are sufficiently simple to be incapable of misrepresentation in the
5159
interests of the capitalists. Even in such a case as Asiatic
5160
immigration, it is the capitalist system which causes the anti-social
5161
interests of wage-earners and makes them illiberal. The existing system
5162
makes each man's individual interest opposed, in some vital point, to
5163
the interest of the whole. And what applies to individuals applies also
5164
to nations; under the existing economic system, a nation's interest is
5165
seldom the same as that of the world at large, and then only by
5166
accident. International peace might conceivably be secured under the
5167
present system, but only by a combination of the strong to exploit the
5168
weak. Such a combination is being attempted as the outcome of
5169
Washington; but it can only diminish, in the long run, the little
5170
freedom now enjoyed by the weaker nations. The essential evil of the
5171
present system, as Socialists have pointed out over and over again, is
5172
production for profit instead of for use. A man or a company or a nation
5173
produces goods, not in order to consume them, but in order to sell them.
5174
Hence arise competition and exploitation and all the evils, both in
5175
internal labour problems and in international relations. The development
5176
of Chinese commerce by capitalistic methods means an increase, for the
5177
Chinese, in the prices of the things they export, which are also the
5178
things they chiefly consume, and the artificial stimulation of new needs
5179
for foreign goods, which places China at the mercy of those who supply
5180
these goods, destroys the existing contentment, and generates a feverish
5181
pursuit of purely material ends. In a socialistic world, production will
5182
be regulated by the same authority which represents the needs of the
5183
consumers, and the whole business of competitive buying and selling will
5184
cease. Until then, it is possible to have peace by submission to
5185
exploitation, or some degree of freedom by continual war, but it is not
5186
possible to have both peace and freedom. The success of the present
5187
American policy may, for a time, secure peace, but will certainly not
5188
secure freedom for the weaker nations, such as Chinese. Only
5189
international Socialism can secure both; and owing to the stimulation of
5190
revolt by capitalist oppression, even peace alone can never be secure
5191
until international Socialism is established throughout the world.
5192
5193
FOOTNOTES:
5194
5195
[Footnote 86: The interests of England, apart from the question of
5196
India, are roughly the same as those of America. Broadly speaking,
5197
British interests are allied with American finance, as against the
5198
pacifistic and agrarian tendencies of the Middle West.]
5199
5200
[Footnote 87: It is interesting to observe that, since the Washington
5201
Conference, the American Administration has used the naval ratio there
5202
agreed upon to induce Congress to consent to a larger expenditure on the
5203
navy than would otherwise have been sanctioned. Expenditure on the navy
5204
is unpopular in America, but by its parade of pacifism the Government
5205
has been enabled to extract the necessary money out of the pockets of
5206
reluctant taxpayers. See _The Times'_ New York Correspondent's telegram
5207
in _The Times_ of April 10, 1922; also April 17 and 22.]
5208
5209
[Footnote 88: See Chamberlain, _The Invention of a New Religion_,
5210
published by the Rationalist Press Association.]
5211
5212
[Footnote 89: See Murdoch, _History of Japan_, I. pp. 500 ff.]
5213
5214
[Footnote 90: An excellent account of these is given in _The Socialist
5215
and Labour Movement in Japan_, by an American Sociologist, published by
5216
the _Japan Chronicle_.]
5217
5218
[Footnote 91: Author of a book called _If Japan and America Fight_.]
5219
5220
[Footnote 92: The attitude of white labour to that of Asia is
5221
illustrated by the following telegram which appeared in _The Times_ for
5222
April 5, 1922, from its Melbourne correspondent: "A deputation of
5223
shipwrights and allied trades complained to Mr. Hughes, the Prime
5224
Minister, that four Commonwealth ships had been repaired at Antwerp
5225
instead of in Australia, and that two had been repaired in India by
5226
black labour receiving eight annas (8d.) a day. When the deputation
5227
reached the black labour allegation Mr. Hughes jumped from his chair and
5228
turned on his interviewers with, 'Black labour be damned. Go to
5229
blithering blazes. Don't talk to me about black labour.' Hurrying from
5230
the room, he pushed his way through the deputation...." I do not
5231
generally agree with Mr. Hughes, but on this occasion, deeply as I
5232
deplore his language, I find myself in agreement with his sentiments,
5233
assuming that the phrase "black labour be damned" is meant to confer a
5234
blessing.]
5235
5236
5237
5238
5239
CHAPTER XI
5240
5241
CHINESE AND WESTERN CIVILIZATION CONTRASTED
5242
5243
5244
There is at present in China, as we have seen in previous chapters, a
5245
close contact between our civilization and that which is native to the
5246
Celestial Empire. It is still a doubtful question whether this contact
5247
will breed a new civilization better than either of its parents, or
5248
whether it will merely destroy the native culture and replace it by that
5249
of America. Contacts between different civilizations have often in the
5250
past proved to be landmarks in human progress. Greece learnt from Egypt,
5251
Rome from Greece, the Arabs from the Roman Empire, medi�val Europe from
5252
the Arabs, and Renaissance Europe from the Byzantines. In many of these
5253
cases, the pupils proved better than their masters. In the case of
5254
China, if we regard the Chinese as the pupils, this may be the case
5255
again. In fact, we have quite as much to learn from them as they from
5256
us, but there is far less chance of our learning it. If I treat the
5257
Chinese as our pupils, rather than vice versa, it is only because I fear
5258
we are unteachable.
5259
5260
I propose in this chapter to deal with the purely cultural aspects of
5261
the questions raised by the contact of China with the West. In the three
5262
following chapters, I shall deal with questions concerning the internal
5263
condition of China, returning finally, in a concluding chapter, to the
5264
hopes for the future which are permissible in the present difficult
5265
situation.
5266
5267
With the exception of Spain and America in the sixteenth century, I
5268
cannot think of any instance of two civilizations coming into contact
5269
after such a long period of separate development as has marked those of
5270
China and Europe. Considering this extraordinary separateness, it is
5271
surprising that mutual understanding between Europeans and Chinese is
5272
not more difficult. In order to make this point clear, it will be worth
5273
while to dwell for a moment on the historical origins of the two
5274
civilizations.
5275
5276
Western Europe and America have a practically homogeneous mental life,
5277
which I should trace to three sources: (1) Greek culture; (2) Jewish
5278
religion and ethics; (3) modern industrialism, which itself is an
5279
outcome of modern science. We may take Plato, the Old Testament, and
5280
Galileo as representing these three elements, which have remained
5281
singularly separable down to the present day. From the Greeks we derive
5282
literature and the arts, philosophy and pure mathematics; also the more
5283
urbane portions of our social outlook. From the Jews we derive fanatical
5284
belief, which its friends call "faith"; moral fervour, with the
5285
conception of sin; religious intolerance, and some part of our
5286
nationalism. From science, as applied in industrialism, we derive power
5287
and the sense of power, the belief that we are as gods, and may justly
5288
be, the arbiters of life and death for unscientific races. We derive
5289
also the empirical method, by which almost all real knowledge has been
5290
acquired. These three elements, I think, account for most of our
5291
mentality.
5292
5293
No one of these three elements has had any appreciable part in the
5294
development of China, except that Greece indirectly influenced Chinese
5295
painting, sculpture, and music.[93] China belongs, in the dawn of its
5296
history, to the great river empires, of which Egypt and Babylonia
5297
contributed to our origins, by the influence which they had upon the
5298
Greeks and Jews. Just as these civilizations were rendered possible by
5299
the rich alluvial soil of the Nile, the Euphrates, and the Tigris, so
5300
the original civilization of China was rendered possible by the Yellow
5301
River. Even in the time of Confucius, the Chinese Empire did not stretch
5302
far either to south or north of the Yellow River. But in spite of this
5303
similarity in physical and economic circumstances, there was very little
5304
in common between the mental outlook of the Chinese and that of the
5305
Egyptians and Babylonians. Lao-Tze[94] and Confucius, who both belong to
5306
the sixth century B.C., have already the characteristics which we should
5307
regard as distinctive of the modern Chinese. People who attribute
5308
everything to economic causes would be hard put to it to account for the
5309
differences between the ancient Chinese and the ancient Egyptians and
5310
Babylonians. For my part, I have no alternative theory to offer. I do
5311
not think science can, at present, account wholly for national
5312
character. Climate and economic circumstances account for part, but not
5313
the whole. Probably a great deal depends upon the character of dominant
5314
individuals who happen to emerge at a formative period, such as Moses,
5315
Mahomet, and Confucius.
5316
5317
The oldest known Chinese sage is Lao-Tze, the founder of Taoism. "Lao
5318
Tze" is not really a proper name, but means merely "the old
5319
philosopher." He was (according to tradition) an older contemporary of
5320
Confucius, and his philosophy is to my mind far more interesting. He
5321
held that every person, every animal, and every thing has a certain way
5322
or manner of behaving which is natural to him, or her, or it, and that
5323
we ought to conform to this way ourselves and encourage others to
5324
conform to it. "Tao" means "way," but used in a more or less mystical
5325
sense, as in the text: "I am the Way and the Truth and the Life." I
5326
think he fancied that death was due to departing from the "way," and
5327
that if we all lived strictly according to nature we should be immortal,
5328
like the heavenly bodies. In later times Taoism degenerated into mere
5329
magic, and was largely concerned with the search for the elixir of life.
5330
But I think the hope of escaping from death was an element in Taoist
5331
philosophy from the first.
5332
5333
Lao-Tze's book, or rather the book attributed to him, is very short, but
5334
his ideas were developed by his disciple Chuang-Tze, who is more
5335
interesting than his master. The philosophy which both advocated was one
5336
of freedom. They thought ill of government, and of all interferences
5337
with Nature. They complained of the hurry of modern life, which they
5338
contrasted with the calm existence of those whom they called "the pure
5339
men of old." There is a flavour of mysticism in the doctrine of the Tao,
5340
because in spite of the multiplicity of living things the Tao is in some
5341
sense one, so that if all live according to it there will be no strife
5342
in the world. But both sages have already the Chinese characteristics of
5343
humour, restraint, and under-statement. Their humour is illustrated by
5344
Chuang-Tze's account of Po-Lo who "understood the management of
5345
horses," and trained them till five out of every ten died.[95] Their
5346
restraint and under-statement are evident when they are compared with
5347
Western mystics. Both characteristics belong to all Chinese literature
5348
and art, and to the conversation of cultivated Chinese in the present
5349
day. All classes in China are fond of laughter, and never miss a chance
5350
of a joke. In the educated classes, the humour is sly and delicate, so
5351
that Europeans often fail to see it, which adds to the enjoyment of the
5352
Chinese. Their habit of under-statement is remarkable. I met one day in
5353
Peking a middle-aged man who told me he was academically interested in
5354
the theory of politics; being new to the country, I took his statement
5355
at its face value, but I afterwards discovered that he had been governor
5356
of a province, and had been for many years a very prominent politician.
5357
In Chinese poetry there is an apparent absence of passion which is due
5358
to the same practice of under-statement. They consider that a wise man
5359
should always remain calm, and though they have their passionate moments
5360
(being in fact a very excitable race), they do not wish to perpetuate
5361
them in art, because they think ill of them. Our romantic movement,
5362
which led people to like vehemence, has, so far as I know, no analogue
5363
in their literature. Their old music, some of which is very beautiful,
5364
makes so little noise that one can only just hear it. In art they aim at
5365
being exquisite, and in life at being reasonable. There is no admiration
5366
for the ruthless strong man, or for the unrestrained expression of
5367
passion. After the more blatant life of the West, one misses at first
5368
all the effects at which they are aiming; but gradually the beauty and
5369
dignity of their existence become visible, so that the foreigners who
5370
have lived longest in China are those who love the Chinese best.
5371
5372
The Taoists, though they survive as magicians, were entirely ousted from
5373
the favour of the educated classes by Confucianism. I must confess that
5374
I am unable to appreciate the merits of Confucius. His writings are
5375
largely occupied with trivial points of etiquette, and his main concern
5376
is to teach people how to behave correctly on various occasions. When
5377
one compares him, however, with the traditional religious teachers of
5378
some other ages and races, one must admit that he has great merits, even
5379
if they are mainly negative. His system, as developed by his followers,
5380
is one of pure ethics, without religious dogma; it has not given rise to
5381
a powerful priesthood, and it has not led to persecution. It certainly
5382
has succeeded in producing a whole nation possessed of exquisite manners
5383
and perfect courtesy. Nor is Chinese courtesy merely conventional; it is
5384
quite as reliable in situations for which no precedent has been
5385
provided. And it is not confined to one class; it exists even in the
5386
humblest coolie. It is humiliating to watch the brutal insolence of
5387
white men received by the Chinese with a quiet dignity which cannot
5388
demean itself to answer rudeness with rudeness. Europeans often regard
5389
this as weakness, but it is really strength, the strength by which the
5390
Chinese have hitherto conquered all their conquerors.
5391
5392
There is one, and only one, important foreign element in the traditional
5393
civilization of China, and that is Buddhism. Buddhism came to China from
5394
India in the early centuries of the Christian era, and acquired a
5395
definite place in the religion of the country. We, with the intolerant
5396
outlook which we have taken over from the Jews, imagine that if a man
5397
adopts one religion he cannot adopt another. The dogmas of Christianity
5398
and Mohammedanism, in their orthodox forms, are so framed that no man
5399
can accept both. But in China this incompatibility does not exist; a man
5400
may be both a Buddhist and a Confucian, because nothing in either is
5401
incompatible with the other. In Japan, similarly, most people are both
5402
Buddhists and Shintoists. Nevertheless there is a temperamental
5403
difference between Buddhism and Confucianism, which will cause any
5404
individual to lay stress on one or other even if he accepts both.
5405
Buddhism is a religion in the sense in which we understand the word. It
5406
has mystic doctrines and a way of salvation and a future life. It has a
5407
message to the world intended to cure the despair which it regards as
5408
natural to those who have no religious faith. It assumes an instinctive
5409
pessimism only to be cured by some gospel. Confucianism has nothing of
5410
all this. It assumes people fundamentally at peace with the world,
5411
wanting only instruction as to how to live, not encouragement to live at
5412
all. And its ethical instruction is not based upon any metaphysical or
5413
religious dogma; it is purely mundane. The result of the co-existence of
5414
these two religions in China has been that the more religious and
5415
contemplative natures turned to Buddhism, while the active
5416
administrative type was content with Confucianism, which was always the
5417
official teaching, in which candidates for the civil service were
5418
examined. The result is that for many ages the Government of China has
5419
been in the hands of literary sceptics, whose administration has been
5420
lacking in those qualities of energy and destructiveness which Western
5421
nations demand of their rulers. In fact, they have conformed very
5422
closely to the maxims of Chuang-Tze. The result has been that the
5423
population has been happy except where civil war brought misery; that
5424
subject nations have been allowed autonomy; and that foreign nations
5425
have had no need to fear China, in spite of its immense population and
5426
resources.
5427
5428
Comparing the civilization of China with that of Europe, one finds in
5429
China most of what was to be found in Greece, but nothing of the other
5430
two elements of our civilization, namely Judaism and science. China is
5431
practically destitute of religion, not only in the upper classes, but
5432
throughout the population. There is a very definite ethical code, but it
5433
is not fierce or persecuting, and does not contain the notion "sin."
5434
Except quite recently, through European influence, there has been no
5435
science and no industrialism.
5436
5437
What will be the outcome of the contact of this ancient civilization
5438
with the West? I am not thinking of the political or economic outcome,
5439
but of the effect on the Chinese mental outlook. It is difficult to
5440
dissociate the two questions altogether, because of course the cultural
5441
contact with the West must be affected by the nature of the political
5442
and economic contact. Nevertheless, I wish to consider the cultural
5443
question as far as I can in isolation.
5444
5445
There is, in China, a great eagerness to acquire Western learning, not
5446
simply in order to acquire national strength and be able to resist
5447
Western aggression, but because a very large number of people consider
5448
learning a good thing in itself. It is traditional in China to place a
5449
high value on knowledge, but in old days the knowledge sought was only
5450
of the classical literature. Nowadays it is generally realized that
5451
Western knowledge is more useful. Many students go every year to
5452
universities in Europe, and still more to America, to learn science or
5453
economics or law or political theory. These men, when they return to
5454
China, mostly become teachers or civil servants or journalists or
5455
politicians. They are rapidly modernizing the Chinese outlook,
5456
especially in the educated classes.
5457
5458
The traditional civilization of China had become unprogressive, and had
5459
ceased to produce much of value in the way of art and literature. This
5460
was not due, I think, to any decadence in the race, but merely to lack
5461
of new material. The influx of Western knowledge provides just the
5462
stimulus that was needed. Chinese students are able and extraordinarily
5463
keen. Higher education suffers from lack of funds and absence of
5464
libraries, but does not suffer from any lack of the finest human
5465
material. Although Chinese civilization has hitherto been deficient in
5466
science, it never contained anything hostile to science, and therefore
5467
the spread of scientific knowledge encounters no such obstacles as the
5468
Church put in its way in Europe. I have no doubt that if the Chinese
5469
could get a stable government and sufficient funds, they would, within
5470
the next thirty years, begin to produce remarkable work in science. It
5471
is quite likely that they might outstrip us, because they come with
5472
fresh zest and with all the ardour of a renaissance. In fact, the
5473
enthusiasm for learning in Young China reminds one constantly of the
5474
renaissance spirit in fifteenth-century Italy.
5475
5476
It is very remarkable, as distinguishing the Chinese from the Japanese,
5477
that the things they wish to learn from us are not those that bring
5478
wealth or military strength, but rather those that have either an
5479
ethical and social value, or a purely intellectual interest. They are
5480
not by any means uncritical of our civilization. Some of them told me
5481
that they were less critical before 1914, but that the war made them
5482
think there must be imperfections in the Western manner of life. The
5483
habit of looking to the West for wisdom was, however, very strong, and
5484
some of the younger ones thought that Bolshevism could give what they
5485
were looking for. That hope also must be suffering disappointment, and
5486
before long they will realize that they must work out their own
5487
salvation by means of a new synthesis. The Japanese adopted our faults
5488
and kept their own, but it is possible to hope that the Chinese will
5489
make the opposite selection, keeping their own merits and adopting ours.
5490
5491
The distinctive merit of our civilization, I should say, is the
5492
scientific method; the distinctive merit of the Chinese is a just
5493
conception of the ends of life. It is these two that one must hope to
5494
see gradually uniting.
5495
5496
Lao-Tze describes the operation of Tao as "production without
5497
possession, action without self-assertion, development without
5498
domination." I think one could derive from these words a conception of
5499
the ends of life as reflective Chinese see them, and it must be admitted
5500
that they are very different from the ends which most white men set
5501
before themselves. Possession, self-assertion, domination, are eagerly
5502
sought, both nationally and individually. They have been erected into a
5503
philosophy by Nietzsche, and Nietzsche's disciples are not confined to
5504
Germany.
5505
5506
But, it will be said, you have been comparing Western practice with
5507
Chinese theory; if you had compared Western theory with Chinese
5508
practice, the balance would have come out quite differently. There is,
5509
of course, a great deal of truth in this. Possession, which is one of
5510
the three things that Lao-Tze wishes us to forego, is certainly dear to
5511
the heart of the average Chinaman. As a race, they are tenacious of
5512
money--not perhaps more so than the French, but certainly more than the
5513
English or the Americans. Their politics are corrupt, and their powerful
5514
men make money in disgraceful ways. All this it is impossible to deny.
5515
5516
Nevertheless, as regards the other two evils, self-assertion and
5517
domination, I notice a definite superiority to ourselves in Chinese
5518
practice. There is much less desire than among the white races to
5519
tyrannize over other people. The weakness of China internationally is
5520
quite as much due to this virtue as to the vices of corruption and so on
5521
which are usually assigned as the sole reason. If any nation in the
5522
world could ever be "too proud to fight," that nation would be China.
5523
The natural Chinese attitude is one of tolerance and friendliness,
5524
showing courtesy and expecting it in return. If the Chinese chose, they
5525
could be the most powerful nation in the world. But they only desire
5526
freedom, not domination. It is not improbable that other nations may
5527
compel them to fight for their freedom, and if so, they may lose their
5528
virtues and acquire a taste for empire. But at present, though they have
5529
been an imperial race for 2,000 years, their love of empire is
5530
extraordinarily slight.
5531
5532
Although there have been many wars in China, the natural outlook of the
5533
Chinese is very pacifistic. I do not know of any other country where a
5534
poet would have chosen, as Po-Chui did in one of the poems translated by
5535
Mr. Waley, called by him _The Old Man with the Broken Arm_, to make a
5536
hero of a recruit who maimed himself to escape military service. Their
5537
pacifism is rooted in their contemplative outlook, and in the fact that
5538
they do not desire to change whatever they see. They take a pleasure--as
5539
their pictures show--in observing characteristic manifestations of
5540
different kinds of life, and they have no wish to reduce everything to a
5541
preconceived pattern. They have not the ideal of progress which
5542
dominates the Western nations, and affords a rationalization of our
5543
active impulses. Progress is, of course, a very modern ideal even with
5544
us; it is part of what we owe to science and industrialism. The
5545
cultivated conservative Chinese of the present day talk exactly as their
5546
earliest sages write. If one points out to them that this shows how
5547
little progress there has been, they will say: "Why seek progress when
5548
you already enjoy what is excellent?" At first, this point of view seems
5549
to a European unduly indolent; but gradually doubts as to one's own
5550
wisdom grow up, and one begins to think that much of what we call
5551
progress is only restless change, bringing us no nearer to any desirable
5552
goal.
5553
5554
It is interesting to contrast what the Chinese have sought in the West
5555
with what the West has sought in China. The Chinese in the West seek
5556
knowledge, in the hope--which I fear is usually vain--that knowledge may
5557
prove a gateway to wisdom. White men have gone to China with three
5558
motives: to fight, to make money, and to convert the Chinese to our
5559
religion. The last of these motives has the merit of being idealistic,
5560
and has inspired many heroic lives. But the soldier, the merchant, and
5561
the missionary are alike concerned to stamp our civilization upon the
5562
world; they are all three, in a certain sense, pugnacious. The Chinese
5563
have no wish to convert us to Confucianism; they say "religions are
5564
many, but reason is one," and with that they are content to let us go
5565
our way. They are good merchants, but their methods are quite different
5566
from those of European merchants in China, who are perpetually seeking
5567
concessions, monopolies, railways, and mines, and endeavouring to get
5568
their claims supported by gunboats. The Chinese are not, as a rule, good
5569
soldiers, because the causes for which they are asked to fight are not
5570
worth fighting for, and they know it. But that is only a proof of their
5571
reasonableness.
5572
5573
I think the tolerance of the Chinese is in excess of anything that
5574
Europeans can imagine from their experience at home. We imagine
5575
ourselves tolerant, because we are more so than our ancestors. But we
5576
still practise political and social persecution, and what is more, we
5577
are firmly persuaded that our civilization and our way of life are
5578
immeasurably better than any other, so that when we come across a nation
5579
like the Chinese, we are convinced that the kindest thing we can do to
5580
them is to make them like ourselves. I believe this to be a profound
5581
mistake. It seemed to me that the average Chinaman, even if he is
5582
miserably poor, is happier than the average Englishman, and is happier
5583
because the nation is built upon a more humane and civilized outlook
5584
than our own. Restlessness and pugnacity not only cause obvious evils,
5585
but fill our lives with discontent, incapacitate us for the enjoyment of
5586
beauty, and make us almost incapable of the contemplative virtues. In
5587
this respect we have grown rapidly worse during the last hundred years.
5588
I do not deny that the Chinese go too far in the other direction; but
5589
for that very reason I think contact between East and West is likely to
5590
be fruitful to both parties. They may learn from us the indispensable
5591
minimum of practical efficiency, and we may learn from them something of
5592
that contemplative wisdom which has enabled them to persist while all
5593
the other nations of antiquity have perished.
5594
5595
When I went to China, I went to teach; but every day that I stayed I
5596
thought less of what I had to teach them and more of what I had to learn
5597
from them. Among Europeans who had lived a long time in China, I found
5598
this attitude not uncommon; but among those whose stay is short, or who
5599
go only to make money, it is sadly rare. It is rare because the Chinese
5600
do not excel in the things we really value--military prowess and
5601
industrial enterprise. But those who value wisdom or beauty, or even the
5602
simple enjoyment of life, will find more of these things in China than
5603
in the distracted and turbulent West, and will be happy to live where
5604
such things are valued. I wish I could hope that China, in return for
5605
our scientific knowledge, may give us something of her large tolerance
5606
and contemplative peace of mind.
5607
5608
FOOTNOTES:
5609
5610
[Footnote 93: See Cordier, op. cit. i. p. 368, and Giles, op. cit. p.
5611
187.]
5612
5613
[Footnote 94: With regard to Lao-Tze, the book which bears his name is
5614
of doubtful authenticity, and was probably compiled two or three
5615
centuries after his death. Cf. Giles, op. cit., Lecture V.]
5616
5617
[Footnote 95: Quoted in Chap. IV, pp. 82-3.]
5618
5619
5620
5621
5622
CHAPTER XII
5623
5624
THE CHINESE CHARACTER
5625
5626
5627
There is a theory among Occidentals that the Chinaman is inscrutable,
5628
full of secret thoughts, and impossible for us to understand. It may be
5629
that a greater experience of China would have brought me to share this
5630
opinion; but I could see nothing to support it during the time when I
5631
was working in that country. I talked to the Chinese as I should have
5632
talked to English people, and they answered me much as English people
5633
would have answered a Chinese whom they considered educated and not
5634
wholly unintelligent. I do not believe in the myth of the "Subtle
5635
Oriental": I am convinced that in a game of mutual deception an
5636
Englishman or American can beat a Chinese nine times out of ten. But as
5637
many comparatively poor Chinese have dealings with rich white men, the
5638
game is often played only on one side. Then, no doubt, the white man is
5639
deceived and swindled; but not more than a Chinese mandarin would be in
5640
London.
5641
5642
One of the most remarkable things about the Chinese is their power of
5643
securing the affection of foreigners. Almost all Europeans like China,
5644
both those who come only as tourists and those who live there for many
5645
years. In spite of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance, I can recall hardly a
5646
single Englishman in the Far East who liked the Japanese as well as the
5647
Chinese. Those who have lived long among them tend to acquire their
5648
outlook and their standards. New arrivals are struck by obvious evils:
5649
the beggars, the terrible poverty, the prevalence of disease, the
5650
anarchy and corruption in politics. Every energetic Westerner feels at
5651
first a strong desire to reform these evils, and of course they ought to
5652
be reformed.
5653
5654
But the Chinese, even those who are the victims of preventable
5655
misfortunes, show a vast passive indifference to the excitement of the
5656
foreigners; they wait for it to go off, like the effervescence of
5657
soda-water. And gradually strange hesitations creep into the mind of the
5658
bewildered traveller; after a period of indignation, he begins to doubt
5659
all the maxims he has hitherto accepted without question. Is it really
5660
wise to be always guarding against future misfortune? Is it prudent to
5661
lose all enjoyment of the present through thinking of the disasters that
5662
may come at some future date? Should our lives be passed in building a
5663
mansion that we shall never have leisure to inhabit?
5664
5665
The Chinese answer these questions in the negative, and therefore have
5666
to put up with poverty, disease, and anarchy. But, to compensate for
5667
these evils, they have retained, as industrial nations have not, the
5668
capacity for civilized enjoyment, for leisure and laughter, for pleasure
5669
in sunshine and philosophical discourse. The Chinese, of all classes,
5670
are more laughter-loving than any other race with which I am acquainted;
5671
they find amusement in everything, and a dispute can always be softened
5672
by a joke.
5673
5674
I remember one hot day when a party of us were crossing the hills in
5675
chairs--the way was rough and very steep, the work for the coolies very
5676
severe. At the highest point of our journey, we stopped for ten minutes
5677
to let the men rest. Instantly they all sat in a row, brought out their
5678
pipes, and began to laugh among themselves as if they had not a care in
5679
the world. In any country that had learned the virtue of forethought,
5680
they would have devoted the moments to complaining of the heat, in order
5681
to increase their tip. We, being Europeans, spent the time worrying
5682
whether the automobile would be waiting for us at the right place.
5683
Well-to-do Chinese would have started a discussion as to whether the
5684
universe moves in cycles or progresses by a rectilinear motion; or they
5685
might have set to work to consider whether the truly virtuous man shows
5686
_complete_ self-abnegation, or may, on occasion, consider his own
5687
interest.
5688
5689
One comes across white men occasionally who suffer under the delusion
5690
that China is not a civilized country. Such men have quite forgotten
5691
what constitutes civilization. It is true that there are no trams in
5692
Peking, and that the electric light is poor. It is true that there are
5693
places full of beauty, which Europeans itch to make hideous by digging
5694
up coal. It is true that the educated Chinaman is better at writing
5695
poetry than at remembering the sort of facts which can be looked up in
5696
_Whitaker's Almanac_. A European, in recommending a place of residence,
5697
will tell you that it has a good train service; the best quality he can
5698
conceive in any place is that it should be easy to get away from. But a
5699
Chinaman will tell you nothing about the trains; if you ask, he will
5700
tell you wrong. What he tells you is that there is a palace built by an
5701
ancient emperor, and a retreat in a lake for scholars weary of the
5702
world, founded by a famous poet of the Tang dynasty. It is this outlook
5703
that strikes the Westerner as barbaric.
5704
5705
The Chinese, from the highest to the lowest, have an imperturbable quiet
5706
dignity, which is usually not destroyed even by a European education.
5707
They are not self-assertive, either individually or nationally; their
5708
pride is too profound for self-assertion. They admit China's military
5709
weakness in comparison with foreign Powers, but they do not consider
5710
efficiency in homicide the most important quality in a man or a nation.
5711
I think that, at bottom, they almost all believe that China is the
5712
greatest nation in the world, and has the finest civilization. A
5713
Westerner cannot be expected to accept this view, because it is based on
5714
traditions utterly different from his own. But gradually one comes to
5715
feel that it is, at any rate, not an absurd view; that it is, in fact,
5716
the logical outcome of a self-consistent standard of values. The typical
5717
Westerner wishes to be the cause of as many changes as possible in his
5718
environment; the typical Chinaman wishes to enjoy as much and as
5719
delicately as possible. This difference is at the bottom of most of the
5720
contrast between China and the English-speaking world.
5721
5722
We in the West make a fetish of "progress," which is the ethical
5723
camouflage of the desire to be the cause of changes. If we are asked,
5724
for instance, whether machinery has really improved the world, the
5725
question strikes us as foolish: it has brought great changes and
5726
therefore great "progress." What we believe to be a love of progress is
5727
really, in nine cases out of ten, a love of power, an enjoyment of the
5728
feeling that by our fiat we can make things different. For the sake of
5729
this pleasure, a young American will work so hard that, by the time he
5730
has acquired his millions, he has become a victim of dyspepsia,
5731
compelled to live on toast and water, and to be a mere spectator of the
5732
feasts that he offers to his guests. But he consoles himself with the
5733
thought that he can control politics, and provoke or prevent wars as may
5734
suit his investments. It is this temperament that makes Western nations
5735
"progressive."
5736
5737
There are, of course, ambitious men in China, but they are less common
5738
than among ourselves. And their ambition takes a different form--not a
5739
better form, but one produced by the preference of enjoyment to power.
5740
It is a natural result of this preference that avarice is a widespread
5741
failing of the Chinese. Money brings the means of enjoyment, therefore
5742
money is passionately desired. With us, money is desired chiefly as a
5743
means to power; politicians, who can acquire power without much money,
5744
are often content to remain poor. In China, the _tuchuns_ (military
5745
governors), who have the real power, almost always use it for the sole
5746
purpose of amassing a fortune. Their object is to escape to Japan at a
5747
suitable moment; with sufficient plunder to enable them to enjoy life
5748
quietly for the rest of their days. The fact that in escaping they lose
5749
power does not trouble them in the least. It is, of course, obvious that
5750
such politicians, who spread devastation only in the provinces committed
5751
to their care, are far less harmful to the world than our own, who ruin
5752
whole continents in order to win an election campaign.
5753
5754
The corruption and anarchy in Chinese politics do much less harm than
5755
one would be inclined to expect. But for the predatory desires of the
5756
Great Powers--especially Japan--the harm would be much less than is
5757
done by our own "efficient" Governments. Nine-tenths of the activities
5758
of a modern Government are harmful; therefore the worse they are
5759
performed, the better. In China, where the Government is lazy, corrupt,
5760
and stupid, there is a degree of individual liberty which has been
5761
wholly lost in the rest of the world.
5762
5763
The laws are just as bad as elsewhere; occasionally, under foreign
5764
pressure, a man is imprisoned for Bolshevist propaganda, just as he
5765
might be in England or America. But this is quite exceptional; as a
5766
rule, in practice, there is very little interference with free speech
5767
and a free Press.[96] The individual does not feel obliged to follow the
5768
herd, as he has in Europe since 1914, and in America since 1917. Men
5769
still think for themselves, and are not afraid to announce the
5770
conclusions at which they arrive. Individualism has perished in the
5771
West, but in China it survives, for good as well as for evil.
5772
Self-respect and personal dignity are possible for every coolie in
5773
China, to a degree which is, among ourselves, possible only for a few
5774
leading financiers.
5775
5776
The business of "saving face," which often strikes foreigners in China
5777
as ludicrous, is only the carrying-out of respect for personal dignity
5778
in the sphere of social manners. Everybody has "face," even the humblest
5779
beggar; there are humiliations that you must not inflict upon him, if
5780
you are not to outrage the Chinese ethical code. If you speak to a
5781
Chinaman in a way that transgresses the code, he will laugh, because
5782
your words must be taken as spoken in jest if they are not to constitute
5783
an offence.
5784
5785
Once I thought that the students to whom I was lecturing were not as
5786
industrious as they might be, and I told them so in just the same words
5787
that I should have used to English students in the same circumstances.
5788
But I soon found I was making a mistake. They all laughed uneasily,
5789
which surprised me until I saw the reason. Chinese life, even among the
5790
most modernized, is far more polite than anything to which we are
5791
accustomed. This, of course, interferes with efficiency, and also (what
5792
is more serious) with sincerity and truth in personal relations. If I
5793
were Chinese, I should wish to see it mitigated. But to those who suffer
5794
from the brutalities of the West, Chinese urbanity is very restful.
5795
Whether on the balance it is better or worse than our frankness, I shall
5796
not venture to decide.
5797
5798
The Chinese remind one of the English in their love of compromise and in
5799
their habit of bowing to public opinion. Seldom is a conflict pushed to
5800
its ultimate brutal issue. The treatment of the Manchu Emperor may be
5801
taken as a case in point. When a Western country becomes a Republic, it
5802
is customary to cut off the head of the deposed monarch, or at least to
5803
cause him to fly the country. But the Chinese have left the Emperor his
5804
title, his beautiful palace, his troops of eunuchs, and an income of
5805
several million dollars a year. He is a boy of sixteen, living peaceably
5806
in the Forbidden City. Once, in the course of a civil war, he was
5807
nominally restored to power for a few days; but he was deposed again,
5808
without being in any way punished for the use to which he had been put.
5809
5810
Public opinion is a very real force in China, when it can be roused. It
5811
was, by all accounts, mainly responsible for the downfall of the An Fu
5812
party in the summer of 1920. This party was pro-Japanese and was
5813
accepting loans from Japan. Hatred of Japan is the strongest and most
5814
widespread of political passions in China, and it was stirred up by the
5815
students in fiery orations. The An Fu party had, at first, a great
5816
preponderance of military strength; but their soldiers melted away when
5817
they came to understand the cause for which they were expected to fight.
5818
In the end, the opponents of the An Fu party were able to enter Peking
5819
and change the Government almost without firing a shot.
5820
5821
The same influence of public opinion was decisive in the teachers'
5822
strike, which was on the point of being settled when I left Peking. The
5823
Government, which is always impecunious, owing to corruption, had left
5824
its teachers unpaid for many months. At last they struck to enforce
5825
payment, and went on a peaceful deputation to the Government,
5826
accompanied by many students. There was a clash with the soldiers and
5827
police, and many teachers and students were more or less severely
5828
wounded. This led to a terrific outcry, because the love of education in
5829
China is profound and widespread. The newspapers clamoured for
5830
revolution. The Government had just spent nine million dollars in
5831
corrupt payments to three Tuchuns who had descended upon the capital to
5832
extort blackmail. It could not find any colourable pretext for refusing
5833
the few hundred thousands required by the teachers, and it capitulated
5834
in panic. I do not think there is any Anglo-Saxon country where the
5835
interests of teachers would have roused the same degree of public
5836
feeling.
5837
5838
Nothing astonishes a European more in the Chinese than their patience.
5839
The educated Chinese are well aware of the foreign menace. They realize
5840
acutely what the Japanese have done in Manchuria and Shantung. They are
5841
aware that the English in Hong-Kong are doing their utmost to bring to
5842
naught the Canton attempt to introduce good government in the South.
5843
They know that all the Great Powers, without exception, look with greedy
5844
eyes upon the undeveloped resources of their country, especially its
5845
coal and iron. They have before them the example of Japan, which, by
5846
developing a brutal militarism, a cast-iron discipline, and a new
5847
reactionary religion, has succeeded in holding at bay the fierce lusts
5848
of "civilized" industrialists. Yet they neither copy Japan nor submit
5849
tamely to foreign domination. They think not in decades, but in
5850
centuries. They have been conquered before, first by the Tartars and
5851
then by the Manchus; but in both cases they absorbed their conquerors.
5852
Chinese civilization persisted, unchanged; and after a few generations
5853
the invaders became more Chinese than their subjects.
5854
5855
Manchuria is a rather empty country, with abundant room for
5856
colonization. The Japanese assert that they need colonies for their
5857
surplus population, yet the Chinese immigrants into Manchuria exceed the
5858
Japanese a hundredfold. Whatever may be the temporary political status
5859
of Manchuria, it will remain a part of Chinese civilization, and can be
5860
recovered whenever Japan happens to be in difficulties. The Chinese
5861
derive such strength from their four hundred millions, the toughness of
5862
their national customs, their power of passive resistance, and their
5863
unrivalled national cohesiveness--in spite of the civil wars, which
5864
merely ruffle the surface--that they can afford to despise military
5865
methods, and to wait till the feverish energy of their oppressors shall
5866
have exhausted itself in internecine combats.
5867
5868
China is much less a political entity than a civilization--the only one
5869
that has survived from ancient times. Since the days of Confucius, the
5870
Egyptian, Babylonian, Persian, Macedonian, and Roman Empires have
5871
perished; but China has persisted through a continuous evolution. There
5872
have been foreign influences--first Buddhism, and now Western science.
5873
But Buddhism did not turn the Chinese into Indians, and Western science
5874
will not turn them into Europeans. I have met men in China who knew as
5875
much of Western learning as any professor among ourselves; yet they had
5876
not been thrown off their balance, or lost touch with their own people.
5877
What is bad in the West--its brutality, its restlessness, its readiness
5878
to oppress the weak, its preoccupation with purely material aims--they
5879
see to be bad, and do not wish to adopt. What is good, especially its
5880
science, they do wish to adopt.
5881
5882
The old indigenous culture of China has become rather dead; its art and
5883
literature are not what they were, and Confucius does not satisfy the
5884
spiritual needs of a modern man, even if he is Chinese. The Chinese who
5885
have had a European or American education realize that a new element, is
5886
needed to vitalize native traditions, and they look to our civilization
5887
to supply it. But they do not wish to construct a civilization just like
5888
ours; and it is precisely in this that the best hope lies. If they are
5889
not goaded into militarism, they may produce a genuinely new
5890
civilization, better than any that we in the West have been able to
5891
create.
5892
5893
So far, I have spoken chiefly of the good sides of the Chinese
5894
character; but of course China, like every other nation, has its bad
5895
sides also. It is disagreeable to me to speak of these, as I experienced
5896
so much courtesy and real kindness from the Chinese, that I should
5897
prefer to say only nice things about them. But for the sake of China, as
5898
well as for the sake of truth, it would be a mistake to conceal what is
5899
less admirable. I will only ask the reader to remember that, on the
5900
balance, I think the Chinese one of the best nations I have come across,
5901
and am prepared to draw up a graver indictment against every one of the
5902
Great Powers. Shortly before I left China, an eminent Chinese writer
5903
pressed me to say what I considered the chief defects of the Chinese.
5904
With some reluctance, I mentioned three: avarice, cowardice and
5905
callousness. Strange to say, my interlocutor, instead of getting angry,
5906
admitted the justice of my criticism, and proceeded to discuss possible
5907
remedies. This is a sample of the intellectual integrity which is one of
5908
China's greatest virtues.
5909
5910
The callousness of the Chinese is bound to strike every Anglo-Saxon.
5911
They have none of that humanitarian impulse which leads us to devote one
5912
per cent. of our energy to mitigating the evils wrought by the other
5913
ninety-nine per cent. For instance, we have been forbidding the
5914
Austrians to join with Germany, to emigrate, or to obtain the raw
5915
materials of industry. Therefore the Viennese have starved, except those
5916
whom it has pleased us to keep alive from philanthropy. The Chinese
5917
would not have had the energy to starve the Viennese, or the
5918
philanthropy to keep some of them alive. While I was in China, millions
5919
were dying of famine; men sold their children into slavery for a few
5920
dollars, and killed them if this sum was unobtainable. Much was done by
5921
white men to relieve the famine, but very little by the Chinese, and
5922
that little vitiated by corruption. It must be said, however, that the
5923
efforts of the white men were more effective in soothing their own
5924
consciences than in helping the Chinese. So long as the present
5925
birth-rate and the present methods of agriculture persist, famines are
5926
bound to occur periodically; and those whom philanthropy keeps alive
5927
through one famine are only too likely to perish in the next.
5928
5929
Famines in China can be permanently cured only by better methods of
5930
agriculture combined with emigration or birth-control on a large scale.
5931
Educated Chinese realize this, and it makes them indifferent to efforts
5932
to keep the present victims alive. A great deal of Chinese callousness
5933
has a similar explanation, and is due to perception of the vastness of
5934
the problems involved. But there remains a residue which cannot be so
5935
explained. If a dog is run over by an automobile and seriously hurt,
5936
nine out of ten passers-by will stop to laugh at the poor brute's howls.
5937
The spectacle of suffering does not of itself rouse any sympathetic pain
5938
in the average Chinaman; in fact, he seems to find it mildly agreeable.
5939
Their history, and their penal code before the revolution of 1911, show
5940
that they are by no means destitute of the impulse of active cruelty;
5941
but of this I did not myself come across any instances. And it must be
5942
said that active cruelty is practised by all the great nations, to an
5943
extent concealed from us only by our hypocrisy.
5944
5945
Cowardice is prima facie a fault of the Chinese; but I am not sure that
5946
they are really lacking in courage. It is true that, in battles between
5947
rival tuchuns, both sides run away, and victory rests with the side that
5948
first discovers the flight of the other. But this proves only that the
5949
Chinese soldier is a rational man. No cause of any importance is
5950
involved, and the armies consist of mere mercenaries. When there is a
5951
serious issue, as, for instance, in the Tai-Ping rebellion, the Chinese
5952
are said to fight well, particularly if they have good officers.
5953
Nevertheless, I do not think that, in comparison with the Anglo-Saxons,
5954
the French, or the Germans, the Chinese can be considered a courageous
5955
people, except in the matter of passive endurance. They will endure
5956
torture, and even death, for motives which men of more pugnacious races
5957
would find insufficient--for example, to conceal the hiding-place of
5958
stolen plunder. In spite of their comparative lack of _active_ courage,
5959
they have less fear of death than we have, as is shown by their
5960
readiness to commit suicide.
5961
5962
Avarice is, I should say, the gravest defect of the Chinese. Life is
5963
hard, and money is not easily obtained. For the sake of money, all
5964
except a very few foreign-educated Chinese will be guilty of corruption.
5965
For the sake of a few pence, almost any coolie will run an imminent risk
5966
of death. The difficulty of combating Japan has arisen mainly from the
5967
fact that hardly any Chinese politician can resist Japanese bribes. I
5968
think this defect is probably due to the fact that, for many ages, an
5969
honest living has been hard to get; in which case it will be lessened as
5970
economic conditions improve. I doubt if it is any worse now in China
5971
than it was in Europe in the eighteenth century. I have not heard of any
5972
Chinese general more corrupt than Marlborough, or of any politician more
5973
corrupt than Cardinal Dubois. It is, therefore, quite likely that
5974
changed industrial conditions will make the Chinese as honest as we
5975
are--which is not saying much.
5976
5977
I have been speaking of the Chinese as they are in ordinary life, when
5978
they appear as men of active and sceptical intelligence, but of somewhat
5979
sluggish passions. There is, however, another side to them: they are
5980
capable of wild excitement, often of a collective kind. I saw little of
5981
this myself, but there can be no doubt of the fact. The Boxer rising was
5982
a case in point, and one which particularly affected Europeans. But
5983
their history is full of more or less analogous disturbances. It is this
5984
element in their character that makes them incalculable, and makes it
5985
impossible even to guess at their future. One can imagine a section of
5986
them becoming fanatically Bolshevist, or anti-Japanese, or Christian, or
5987
devoted to some leader who would ultimately declare himself Emperor. I
5988
suppose it is this element in their character that makes them, in spite
5989
of their habitual caution, the most reckless gamblers in the world. And
5990
many emperors have lost their thrones through the force of romantic
5991
love, although romantic love is far more despised than it is in the
5992
West.
5993
5994
To sum up the Chinese character is not easy. Much of what strikes the
5995
foreigner is due merely to the fact that they have preserved an ancient
5996
civilization which is not industrial. All this is likely to pass away,
5997
under the pressure of the Japanese, and of European and American
5998
financiers. Their art is already perishing, and being replaced by crude
5999
imitations of second-rate European pictures. Most of the Chinese who
6000
have had a European education are quite incapable of seeing any beauty
6001
in native painting, and merely observe contemptuously that it does not
6002
obey the laws of perspective.
6003
6004
The obvious charm which the tourist finds in China cannot be preserved;
6005
it must perish at the touch of industrialism. But perhaps something may
6006
be preserved, something of the ethical qualities in which China is
6007
supreme, and which the modern world most desperately needs. Among these
6008
qualities I place first the pacific temper, which seeks to settle
6009
disputes on grounds of justice rather than by force. It remains to be
6010
seen whether the West will allow this temper to persist, or will force
6011
it to give place, in self-defence, to a frantic militarism like that to
6012
which Japan has been driven.
6013
6014
FOOTNOTES:
6015
6016
[Footnote 96: This vexes the foreigners, who are attempting to establish
6017
a very severe Press censorship in Shanghai. See "The Shanghai Printed
6018
Matter Bye-Law." Hollington K. Tong, _Review of the Far East,_ April 16,
6019
1922.]
6020
6021
6022
6023
6024
CHAPTER XIII
6025
6026
HIGHER EDUCATION IN CHINA
6027
6028
6029
China, like Italy and Greece, is frequently misjudged by persons of
6030
culture because they regard it as a museum. The preservation of ancient
6031
beauty is very important, but no vigorous forward-looking man is content
6032
to be a mere curator. The result is that the best people in China tend
6033
to be Philistines as regards all that is pleasing to the European
6034
tourist. The European in China, quite apart from interested motives, is
6035
apt to be ultra-conservative, because he likes everything distinctive
6036
and non-European. But this is the attitude of an outsider, of one who
6037
regards China as a country to be looked at rather than lived in, as a
6038
country with a past rather than a future. Patriotic Chinese naturally do
6039
not view their country in this way; they wish their country to acquire
6040
what is best in the modern world, not merely to remain an interesting
6041
survival of a by-gone age, like Oxford or the Yellowstone Park. As the
6042
first step to this end, they do all they can to promote higher
6043
education, and to increase the number of Chinese who can use and
6044
appreciate Western knowledge without being the slaves of Western
6045
follies. What is being done in this direction is very interesting, and
6046
one of the most hopeful things happening in our not very cheerful epoch.
6047
6048
There is first the old traditional curriculum, the learning by rote of
6049
the classics without explanation in early youth, followed by a more
6050
intelligent study in later years. This is exactly like the traditional
6051
study of the classics in this country, as it existed, for example, in
6052
the eighteenth century. Men over thirty, even if, in the end, they have
6053
secured a thoroughly modern education, have almost all begun by learning
6054
reading and writing in old-fashioned schools. Such schools still form
6055
the majority, and give most of the elementary education that is given.
6056
Every child has to learn by heart every day some portion of the
6057
classical text, and repeat it out loud in class. As they all repeat at
6058
the same time, the din is deafening. (In Peking I lived next to one of
6059
these schools, so I can speak from experience.) The number of people who
6060
are taught to read by these methods is considerable; in the large towns
6061
one finds that even coolies can read as often as not. But writing (which
6062
is very difficult in Chinese) is a much rarer accomplishment. Probably
6063
those who can both read and write form about five per cent, of the
6064
population.
6065
6066
The establishment of normal schools for the training of teachers on
6067
modern lines, which grew out of the edict of 1905 abolishing the old
6068
examination system and proclaiming the need of educational reform, has
6069
done much, and will do much more, to transform and extend elementary
6070
education. The following statistics showing the increase in the number
6071
of schools, teachers, and students in China are taken from Mr. Tyau's
6072
_China Awakened_, p. 4:--
6073
6074
1910 1914 1917 1919
6075
6076
Number of Schools 42,444 59,796 128,048 134,000
6077
Number of Teachers 185,566 200,000 326,417 326,000
6078
Number of Students 1,625,534 3,849,554 4,269,197 4,500,000
6079
6080
Considering that the years concerned are years of revolution and civil
6081
war, it must be admitted that the progress shown by these figures is
6082
very remarkable.
6083
6084
There are schemes for universal elementary education, but so far, owing
6085
to the disturbed condition of the country and the lack of funds, it has
6086
been impossible to carry them out except in a few places on a small
6087
scale. They would, however, be soon carried out if there were a stable
6088
government.
6089
6090
The traditional classical education was, of course, not intended to be
6091
only elementary. The amount of Chinese literature is enormous, and the
6092
older texts are extremely difficult to understand. There is scope,
6093
within the tradition, for all the industry and erudition of the finest
6094
renaissance scholars. Learning of this sort has been respected in China
6095
for many ages. One meets old scholars of this type, to whose opinions,
6096
even in politics, it is customary to defer, although they have the
6097
innocence and unworldliness of the old-fashioned don. They remind one
6098
almost of the men whom Lamb describes in his essay on Oxford in the
6099
Vacation--learned, lovable, and sincere, but utterly lost in the modern
6100
world, basing their opinions of Socialism, for example, on what some
6101
eleventh-century philosopher said about it. The arguments for and
6102
against the type of higher education that they represent are exactly the
6103
same as those for and against a classical education in Europe, and one
6104
is driven to the same conclusion in both cases: that the existence of
6105
specialists having this type of knowledge is highly desirable, but that
6106
the ordinary curriculum for the average educated person should take more
6107
account of modern needs, and give more instruction in science, modern
6108
languages, and contemporary international relations. This is the view,
6109
so far as I could discover, of all reforming educationists in China.
6110
6111
The second kind of higher education in China is that initiated by the
6112
missionaries, and now almost entirely in the hands of the Americans. As
6113
everyone knows, America's position in Chinese education was acquired
6114
through the Boxer indemnity. Most of the Powers, at that time, if their
6115
own account is to be believed, demanded a sum representing only actual
6116
loss and damage, but the Americans, according to their critics, demanded
6117
(and obtained) a vastly larger sum, of which they generously devoted the
6118
surplus to educating Chinese students, both in China and at American
6119
universities. This course of action has abundantly justified itself,
6120
both politically and commercially; a larger and larger number of posts
6121
in China go to men who have come under American influence, and who have
6122
come to believe that America is the one true friend of China among the
6123
Great Powers.
6124
6125
One may take as typical of American work three institutions of which I
6126
saw a certain amount: Tsing-Hua College (about ten miles from Peking),
6127
the Peking Union Medical College (connected with the Rockefeller
6128
Hospital), and the so-called Peking University.
6129
6130
Tsing-Hua College, delightfully situated at the foot of the Western
6131
hills, with a number of fine solid buildings,[97] in a good American
6132
style, owes its existence entirely to the Boxer indemnity money. It has
6133
an atmosphere exactly like that of a small American university, and a
6134
(Chinese) President who is an almost perfect reproduction of the
6135
American College President. The teachers are partly American, partly
6136
Chinese educated in America, and there tends to be more and more of the
6137
latter. As one enters the gates, one becomes aware of the presence of
6138
every virtue usually absent in China: cleanliness, punctuality,
6139
exactitude, efficiency. I had not much opportunity to judge of the
6140
teaching, but whatever I saw made me think that the institution was
6141
thorough and good. One great merit, which belongs to American
6142
institutions generally, is that the students are made to learn English.
6143
Chinese differs so profoundly from European languages that even with the
6144
most skilful translations a student who knows only Chinese cannot
6145
understand European ideas; therefore the learning of some European
6146
language is essential, and English is far the most familiar and useful
6147
throughout the Far East.
6148
6149
The students at Tsing-Hua College learn mathematics and science and
6150
philosophy, and broadly speaking, the more elementary parts of what is
6151
commonly taught in universities. Many of the best of them go afterwards
6152
to America, where they take a Doctor's degree. On returning to China
6153
they become teachers or civil servants. Undoubtedly they contribute
6154
greatly to the improvement of their country in efficiency and honesty
6155
and technical intelligence.
6156
6157
The Rockefeller Hospital is a large, conspicuous building, representing
6158
an interesting attempt to combine something of Chinese beauty with
6159
European utilitarian requirements. The green roofs are quite Chinese,
6160
but the walls and windows are European. The attempt is praiseworthy,
6161
though perhaps not wholly successful. The hospital has all the most
6162
modern scientific apparatus, but, with the monopolistic tendency of the
6163
Standard Oil Company, it refuses to let its apparatus be of use to
6164
anyone not connected with the hospital. The Peking Union Medical College
6165
teaches many things besides medicine--English literature, for
6166
example--and apparently teaches them well. They are necessary in order
6167
to produce Chinese physicians and surgeons who will reach the European
6168
level, because a good knowledge of some European language is necessary
6169
for medicine as for other kinds of European learning. And a sound
6170
knowledge of scientific medicine is, of course, of immense importance to
6171
China, where there is no sort of sanitation and epidemics are frequent.
6172
6173
The so-called Peking University is an example of what the Chinese have
6174
to suffer on account of extra-territoriality. The Chinese Government (so
6175
at least I was told) had already established a university in Peking,
6176
fully equipped and staffed, and known as the Peking University. But the
6177
Methodist missionaries decided to give the name "Peking University" to
6178
their schools, so the already existing university had to alter its name
6179
to "Government University." The case is exactly as if a collection of
6180
old-fashioned Chinamen had established themselves in London to teach the
6181
doctrine of Confucius, and had been able to force London University to
6182
abandon its name to them. However, I do not wish to raise the question
6183
of extra-territoriality, the more so as I do not think it can be
6184
abandoned for some years to come, in spite of the abuses to which it
6185
sometimes gives rise.
6186
6187
Returned students (_i.e._ students who have been at foreign
6188
universities) form a definite set in China.[98] There is in Peking a
6189
"Returned Students' Club," a charming place. It is customary among
6190
Europeans to speak ill of returned students, but for no good reason.
6191
There are occasionally disagreements between different sections; in
6192
particular, those who have been only to Japan are not regarded quite as
6193
equals by those who have been to Europe or America. My impression was
6194
that America puts a more definite stamp upon a student than any other
6195
country; certainly those returning from England are less Anglicized than
6196
those returning from the United States are Americanized. To the Chinaman
6197
who wishes to be modern and up-to-date, skyscrapers and hustle seem
6198
romantic, because they are so unlike his home. The old traditions which
6199
conservative Europeans value are such a mushroom growth compared to
6200
those of China (where authentic descendants of Confucius abound) that it
6201
is useless to attempt that way of impressing the Chinese. One is
6202
reminded of the conversation in _Eothen_ between the English country
6203
gentleman and the Pasha, in which the Pasha praises England to the
6204
refrain: "Buzz, buzz, all by steam; whir, whir, all on wheels," while
6205
the Englishman keeps saying: "Tell the Pasha that the British yeoman is
6206
still, thank God, the British yeoman."
6207
6208
Although the educational work of the Americans in China is on the whole
6209
admirable, nothing directed by foreigners can adequately satisfy the
6210
needs of the country. The Chinese have a civilization and a national
6211
temperament in many ways superior to those of white men. A few Europeans
6212
ultimately discover this, but Americans never do. They remain always
6213
missionaries--not of Christianity, though they often think that is what
6214
they are preaching, but of Americanism. What is Americanism? "Clean
6215
living, clean thinking, and pep," I think an American would reply. This
6216
means, in practice, the substitution of tidiness for art, cleanliness
6217
for beauty, moralizing for philosophy, prostitutes for concubines (as
6218
being easier to conceal), and a general air of being fearfully busy for
6219
the leisurely calm of the traditional Chinese. Voltaire--that hardened
6220
old cynic--laid it down that the true ends of life are "_aimer et
6221
penser_." Both are common in China, but neither is compatible with
6222
"pep." The American influence, therefore, inevitably tends to eliminate
6223
both. If it prevailed it would, no doubt, by means of hygiene, save the
6224
lives of many Chinamen, but would at the same time make them not worth
6225
saving. It cannot therefore be regarded as wholly and altogether
6226
satisfactory.
6227
6228
The best Chinese educationists are aware of this, and have established
6229
schools and universities which are modern but under Chinese direction.
6230
In these, a certain proportion of the teachers are European or
6231
American, but the spirit of the teaching is not that of the Y.M.C.A. One
6232
can never rid oneself of the feeling that the education controlled by
6233
white men is not disinterested; it seems always designed, unconsciously
6234
in the main, to produce convenient tools for the capitalist penetration
6235
of China by the merchants and manufacturers of the nation concerned.
6236
Modern Chinese schools and universities are singularly different: they
6237
are not hotbeds of rabid nationalism as they would be in any other
6238
country, but institutions where the student is taught to think freely,
6239
and his thoughts are judged by their intelligence, not by their utility
6240
to exploiters. The outcome, among the best young men, is a really
6241
beautiful intellectual disinterestedness. The discussions which I used
6242
to have in my seminar (consisting of students belonging to the Peking
6243
Government University) could not have been surpassed anywhere for
6244
keenness, candour, and fearlessness. I had the same impression of the
6245
Science Society of Nanking, and of all similar bodies wherever I came
6246
across them. There is, among the young, a passionate desire to acquire
6247
Western knowledge, together with a vivid realization of Western vices.
6248
They wish to be scientific but not mechanical, industrial but not
6249
capitalistic. To a man they are Socialists, as are most of the best
6250
among their Chinese teachers. They respect the knowledge of Europeans,
6251
but quietly put aside their arrogance. For the present, the purely
6252
Chinese modern educational institutions, such as the Peking Government
6253
University, leave much to be desired from the point of view of
6254
instruction; there are no adequate libraries, the teaching of English is
6255
not sufficiently thorough, and there is not enough mental discipline.
6256
But these are the faults of youth, and are unimportant compared with the
6257
profoundly humanistic attitude to life which is formed in the students.
6258
Most of the faults may be traced to the lack of funds, because the
6259
Government--loved by the Powers on account of its weakness--has to part
6260
with all its funds to the military chieftains who fight each other and
6261
plunder the country, as in Europe--for China must be compared with
6262
Europe, not with any one of the petty States into which Europe is
6263
unhappily divided.
6264
6265
The students are not only full of public spirit themselves, but are a
6266
powerful force in arousing it throughout the nation. What they did in
6267
1919, when Versailles awarded Shangtung to Japan, is well told by Mr.
6268
Tyau in his chapter on "The Student Movement." And what they did was not
6269
merely political. To quote Mr. Tyau (p. 146):--
6270
6271
Having aroused the nation, prevented the signature of the
6272
Versailles Treaty and assisted the merchants to enforce the
6273
Japanese boycott, the students then directed their energies to
6274
the enlightenment of their less educated brothers and sisters.
6275
For instance, by issuing publications, by popular lectures
6276
showing them the real situation, internally as well as
6277
externally; but especially by establishing free schools and
6278
maintaining them out of their own funds. No praise can be too
6279
high for such self-sacrifice, for the students generally also
6280
teach in these schools. The scheme is endorsed everywhere with
6281
the greatest enthusiasm, and in Peking alone it is estimated that
6282
fifty thousand children are benefited by such education.
6283
6284
One thing which came as a surprise to me was to find that, as regards
6285
modern education under Chinese control, there is complete equality
6286
between men and women. The position of women in Peking Government
6287
University is better than at Cambridge. Women are admitted to
6288
examinations and degrees, and there are women teachers in the
6289
university. The Girls' Higher Normal School in Peking, where prospective
6290
women teachers are taught, is a most excellent and progressive
6291
institution, and the spirit of free inquiry among the girls would
6292
horrify most British head mistresses.
6293
6294
There is a movement in favour of co-education, especially in elementary
6295
education, because, owing to the inadequate supply of schools, the girls
6296
tend to be left out altogether unless they can go to the same school as
6297
the boys. The first time I met Professor and Mrs. Dewey was at a banquet
6298
in Chang-sha, given by the Tuchun. When the time came for after-dinner
6299
speeches, Mrs. Dewey told the Tuchun that his province must adopt
6300
co-education. He made a statesmanlike reply, saying that the matter
6301
should receive his best consideration, but he feared the time was not
6302
ripe in Hunan. However, it was clear that the matter was within the
6303
sphere of practical politics. At the time, being new to China and having
6304
imagined China a somewhat backward country, I was surprised. Later on I
6305
realized that reforms which we only talk about can be actually carried
6306
out in China.
6307
6308
Education controlled by missionaries or conservative white men cannot
6309
give what Young China needs. After throwing off the native superstitions
6310
of centuries, it would be a dismal fiasco to take on the European
6311
superstitions which have been discarded here by all progressive people.
6312
It is only where progressive Chinese themselves are in control that
6313
there is scope for the renaissance spirit of the younger students, and
6314
for that free spirit of sceptical inquiry by which they are seeking to
6315
build a new civilization as splendid as their old civilization in its
6316
best days.
6317
6318
While I was in Peking, the Government teachers struck, not for higher
6319
pay, but for pay, because their salaries had not been paid for many
6320
months. Accompanied by some of the students, they went on a deputation
6321
to the Government, but were repulsed by soldiers and policemen, who
6322
clubbed them so severely that many had to be taken to hospital. The
6323
incident produced such universal fury that there was nearly a
6324
revolution, and the Government hastened to come to terms with the
6325
teachers with all possible speed. The modern teachers have behind them
6326
all that is virile, energetic, and public-spirited in China; the gang of
6327
bandits which controls the Government has behind it Japanese money and
6328
European intrigue. America occupies an intermediate position. One may
6329
say broadly that the old traditional education, with the military
6330
governors and the British and Japanese influence, stands for
6331
Conservatism; America and its commerce and its educational institutions
6332
stand for Liberalism; while the native modern education, practically
6333
though not theoretically, stands for Socialism. Incidentally, it alone
6334
stands for intellectual freedom.
6335
6336
The Chinese are a great nation, incapable of permanent suppression by
6337
foreigners. They will not consent to adopt our vices in order to acquire
6338
military strength; but they are willing to adopt our virtues in order to
6339
advance in wisdom. I think they are the only people in the world who
6340
quite genuinely believe that wisdom is more precious than rubies. That
6341
is why the West regards them as uncivilized.
6342
6343
FOOTNOTES:
6344
6345
[Footnote 97: It should be said that one sees just as fine buildings in
6346
purely Chinese institutions, such as Peking Government University and
6347
Nanking Teachers' Training College.]
6348
6349
[Footnote 98: Mr. Tyau (op. cit. p. 27) quotes from _Who's Who of
6350
American Returned Students_, a classification of the occupations of 596
6351
Chinese who have returned from American universities. The larger items
6352
are: In education, 38 as administrators and 197 as teachers; in
6353
Government service, 129 in executive offices (there are also three
6354
members of Parliament and four judges); 95 engineers; 35 medical
6355
practitioners (including dentists); 60 in business; and 21 social and
6356
religious workers. It is estimated that the total number of Chinese
6357
holding university degrees in America is 1,700, and in Great Britain 400
6358
_(ib.)._ This disproportion is due to the more liberal policy of America
6359
in the matter of the Boxer indemnity. In 1916 there were 292 Chinese
6360
university students in Great Britain, and Mr. Tyau (p. 28) gives a
6361
classification of them by their subjects. The larger groups are:
6362
Medicine, 50; law and economics, 47; engineering, 42; mining, 22;
6363
natural science (including chemistry and geology, which are classified
6364
separately), 19.]
6365
6366
6367
6368
6369
CHAPTER XIV
6370
6371
INDUSTRIALISM IN CHINA
6372
6373
6374
China is as yet only slightly industrialized, but the industrial
6375
possibilities of the country are very great, and it may be taken as
6376
nearly certain that there will be a rapid development throughout the
6377
next few decades. China's future depends as much upon the manner of this
6378
development as upon any other single factor; and China's difficulties
6379
are very largely connected with the present industrial situation. I will
6380
therefore first briefly describe this situation, and then consider the
6381
possibilities of the near future.
6382
6383
We may take railways and mines as the foundation of a nation's
6384
industrial life. Let us therefore consider first the railways and then
6385
the mines, before going on to other matters.
6386
6387
When railways were new, the Manchu Government, like the universities of
6388
Oxford and Cambridge (which it resembled in many ways), objected to
6389
them, and did all it could to keep them at a distance.[99] In 1875 a
6390
short line was built by foreigners from Shanghai to Woosung, but the
6391
Central Government was so shocked that it caused it to be destroyed. In
6392
1881 the first permanent railway was constructed, but not very much was
6393
accomplished until after the Japanese War of 1894-5. The Powers then
6394
thought that China was breaking up, and entered upon a scramble for
6395
concessions and spheres of influence. The Belgians built the important
6396
line from Peking to Hankow; the Americans obtained a concession for a
6397
Hankow-Canton railway, which, however, has only been constructed as far
6398
as Changsha. Russia built the Manchurian Railway, connecting Peking with
6399
the Siberian Railway and with Europe. Germany built the Shantung
6400
Railway, from Tsingtau to Tsinanfu. The French built a railway in the
6401
south. England sought to obtain a monopoly of the railways in the
6402
Yangtze valley. All these railways were to be owned by foreigners and
6403
managed by foreign officials of the respective countries which had
6404
obtained the concessions. The Boxer rising, however, made Europe aware
6405
that some caution was needed if the Chinese were not to be exasperated
6406
beyond endurance. After this, ownership of new railways was left to the
6407
Chinese Government, but with so much foreign control as to rob it of
6408
most of its value. By this time, Chinese public opinion had come to
6409
realize that there must be railways in China, and that the real problem
6410
was how to keep them under Chinese control. In 1908, the Tientsin-Pukow
6411
line and the Shanghai-Hangchow line were sanctioned, to be built by the
6412
help of foreign loans, but with all the administrative control in the
6413
hands of the Chinese Government. At the same time, the Peking-Hankow
6414
line was bought back by the Government, and the Peking-Kalgan line was
6415
constructed by the Chinese without foreign financial assistance. Of the
6416
big main lines of China, this left not much foreign control outside the
6417
Manchurian Railway (Chinese Eastern Railway) and the Shantung Railway.
6418
The first of these is mainly under foreign control and must now be
6419
regarded as permanently lost, until such time as China becomes strong
6420
enough to defeat Japan in war; and the whole of Manchuria has come more
6421
or less under Japanese control. But the Shantung Railway, by the
6422
agreement reached at Washington, is to be bought back by China--five
6423
years hence, if all goes well. Thus, except in regions practically lost
6424
to China, the Chinese now have control of all their more important
6425
railways, or will have before long. This is a very hopeful feature of
6426
the situation, and a distinct credit to Chinese sagacity.
6427
6428
Putnam Weale (Mr. Lennox Simpson) strongly urges--quite rightly, as I
6429
think--the great importance of nationalizing _all_ Chinese railways. At
6430
Washington recently, he helped to secure the Shantung Railway award, and
6431
to concentrate attention on the railway as the main issue. Writing early
6432
in 1919, he said[100]:--
6433
6434
_The key to the proper control of China and the building-up of
6435
the new Republican State is the railway key_.... The revolution
6436
of 1911, and the acceptance in principle of Western ideas of
6437
popular government, removed the danger of foreign provinces being
6438
carved out of the old Manchu Empire. There was, however, left
6439
behind a more subtle weapon. _This weapon is the railway_. Russia
6440
with her Manchurian Railway scheme taught Japan the new method.
6441
Japan, by the Treaty of Portsmouth in 1905, not only inherited
6442
the richer half of the Manchurian railways, but was able to put
6443
into practice a new technique, based on a mixture of twisted
6444
economics, police control, and military garrisons. Out of this
6445
grew the latter-day highly developed railway-zone which, to all
6446
intents and purposes, creates a new type of foreign _enclave_,
6447
subversive of the Chinese State. _The especial evil to-day is
6448
that Japan has transferred from Manchuria to Shantung this new
6449
technique,_ which ... she will eventually extend into the very
6450
heart of intramural China ... and also into extramural Chihli and
6451
Inner Mongolia (thus outflanking Peking) unless she is summarily
6452
arrested. _At all costs this must be stopped._ The method of
6453
doing so is easy: _It is to have it laid down categorically, and
6454
accepted by all the Powers, that henceforth all railways on
6455
Chinese soil are a vital portion of Chinese sovereignty and must
6456
be controlled directly from Peking by a National Railway Board;
6457
that stationmasters, personnel and police, must be Chinese
6458
citizens, technical foreign help being limited to a set standard;
6459
and that all railway concessions are henceforth to be considered
6460
simply as building concessions which must be handed over, section
6461
by section, as they are built, to the National Railway Board_.
6462
6463
If the Shantung Railway Agreement is loyally carried out, this
6464
reform--as to whose importance I quite agree with Putnam Weale--will
6465
have been practically completed five years hence. But we must expect
6466
Japan to adopt every possible means of avoiding the carrying out of her
6467
promises, from instigating Chinese civil war to the murdering of
6468
Japanese employees by Japanese secret agents masquerading as Chinese.
6469
Therefore, until the Chinese actually have complete control of the
6470
Shantung Railway, we cannot feel confident that they will ever get it.
6471
6472
It must not be supposed that the Chinese run railways badly. The Kalgan
6473
Railway, which they built, is just as well built as those constructed by
6474
foreigners; and the lines under Chinese administration are admirably
6475
managed. I quote from Mr. Tyau[101] the following statistics, which
6476
refer to the year 1919: Government railways, in operation, 6027
6477
kilometres; under construction, 383 kilometres; private and provincial
6478
railways, 773 kilometres; concessioned railways, 3,780 kilometres.
6479
Total, 10,963 kilometres, or 6,852 miles. (The concessioned railways are
6480
mainly those in Manchuria and Shantung, of which the first must be
6481
regarded as definitely lost to China, while the second is probably
6482
recovered. The problem of concessioned railways has therefore no longer
6483
the importance that it had, though, by detaching Manchuria, the foreign
6484
railway has shown its power for evil). As regards financial results, Mr.
6485
Tyau gives the following figures for the principal State railways in
6486
1918:--
6487
6488
Name of Line. Kilometres Year Per cent, earned
6489
Operated. Completed. on Investment.
6490
6491
Peking-Mukden 987 1897 22.7
6492
Peking-Hankow 1306 1905 15.8
6493
Shanghai-Nanking 327 1908 6.2
6494
Tientsin-Pukow 1107 1912 6.2
6495
Peking-Suiyuan 490 1915 5.6
6496
6497
Subsequent years, for which I have not the exact figures, have been less
6498
prosperous.
6499
6500
I cannot discover any evidence of incompetence in Chinese railway
6501
administration. On the contrary, much has been done to overcome the
6502
evils due to the fact that the various lines were originally constructed
6503
by different Powers, each following its own customs, so that there was
6504
no uniformity, and goods trucks could not be moved from one line on to
6505
another. There is, however, urgent need of further railways, especially
6506
to open up the west and to connect Canton with Hankow, the profit of
6507
which would probably be enormous.
6508
6509
Mines are perhaps as important as railways, for if a country allows
6510
foreign control of its mineral resources it cannot build up either its
6511
industries or its munitions to the point where they will be independent
6512
of foreign favour. But the situation as regards mining is at present far
6513
from satisfactory. Mr. Julean Arnold, American Commercial Attach� at
6514
Peking, writing early in 1919, made the following statement as regards
6515
China's mineral resources:--
6516
6517
China is favoured with a wonderful wealth in coal and in a good
6518
supply of iron ore, two essentials to modern industrial
6519
development. To indicate how little China has developed its
6520
marvellous wealth in coal, this country imported, during 1917,
6521
14,000,000 tons. It is estimated that China produces now
6522
20,000,000 tons annually, but it is supposed to have richer
6523
resources in coal than has the United States which, in 1918,
6524
produced 650,000,000 tons. In iron ore it has been estimated that
6525
China has 400,000,000 tons suitable for furnace reaction, and an
6526
additional 300,000,000 tons which might be worked by native
6527
methods. During 1917, it is estimated that China's production of
6528
pig iron was 500,000 tons. The developments in the iron and steel
6529
industry in China are making rapid strides, and a few years hence
6530
it is expected that the production of pig iron and of finished
6531
steel will be several millions of tons annually.... In antimony
6532
and tin China is also particularly rich, and considerable
6533
progress has taken place in the mining and smelting of these ores
6534
during the past few years. China should jealously safeguard its
6535
mineral wealth, so as to preserve it for the country's
6536
welfare.[102]
6537
6538
The _China Year Book_ for 1919 gives the total Chinese production of
6539
coal for 1914 as 6,315,735 tons, and of iron ore at 468,938 tons.[103]
6540
Comparing these with Mr. Arnold's figures for 1917, namely 20,000,000
6541
tons of coal and 500,000 tons of pig iron (not iron ore), it is evident
6542
that great progress was made during those three years, and there is
6543
every reason to think that at least the same rate of progress has been
6544
maintained. The main problem for China, however, is not _rapid_
6545
development, but _national_ development. Japan is poor in minerals, and
6546
has set to work to acquire as much as possible of the mineral wealth of
6547
China. This is important to Japan, for two different reasons: first,
6548
that only industrial development can support the growing population,
6549
which cannot be induced to emigrate to Japanese possessions on the
6550
mainland; secondly, that steel is an indispensable requisite for
6551
imperialism.
6552
6553
The Chinese are proud of the Kiangnan dock and engineering works at
6554
Shanghai, which is a Government concern, and has proved its capacity for
6555
shipbuilding on modern lines. It built four ships of 10,000 tons each
6556
for the American Government. Mr. S.G. Cheng[104] says:--
6557
6558
For the construction of these ships, materials were mostly
6559
supplied by China, except steel, which had to be shipped from
6560
America and Europe (the steel produced in China being so limited
6561
in quantity, that after a certain amount is exported to Japan by
6562
virtue of a previous contract, little is left for home
6563
consumption).
6564
6565
Considering how rich China is in iron ore, this state of affairs needs
6566
explanation. The explanation is valuable to anyone who wishes to
6567
understand modern politics.
6568
6569
The _China Year Book_ for 1919[105] (a work as little concerned with
6570
politics as _Whitaker's Almanack_) gives a list of the five principal
6571
iron mines in China, with some information about each. The first and
6572
most important are the Tayeh mines, worked by the Hanyehping Iron and
6573
Coal Co., Ltd., which, as the reader may remember, was the subject of
6574
the third group in the Twenty-one Demands. The total amount of ore in
6575
sight is estimated by the _China Year Book_ at 50,000,000 tons, derived
6576
chiefly from two mines, in one of which the ore yields 65 per cent. of
6577
iron, in the other 58 to 63 per cent. The output for 1916 is given as
6578
603,732 tons (it has been greatly increased since then). The _Year Book_
6579
proceeds: "Japanese capital is invested in the Company, and by the
6580
agreement between China and Japan of May 1915 [after the ultimatum which
6581
enforced the revised Twenty-one Demands], the Chinese Government
6582
undertook not to convert the Company into a State-owned concern nor to
6583
compel it to borrow money from other than Japanese sources." It should
6584
be added that there is a Japanese accountant and a Japanese technical
6585
adviser, and that pig-iron and ore, up to a specified value, must be
6586
sold to the Imperial Japanese works at much below the market price,
6587
leaving a paltry residue for sale in the open market.[106]
6588
6589
The second item in the _China Year Book's_ list is the Tungkuan Shan
6590
mines. All that is said about these is as follows: "Tungling district on
6591
the Yangtze, 55 miles above Wuhu, Anhui province. A concession to work
6592
these mines, granted to the London and China Syndicate (British) in
6593
1904, was surrendered in 1910 for the sum of �52,000, and the mines were
6594
transferred to a Chinese Company to be formed for their exploitation."
6595
These mines, therefore, are in Chinese hands. I do not know what their
6596
capacity is supposed to be, and in view of the price at which they were
6597
sold, it cannot be very great. The capital of the Hanyehping Co. is
6598
$20,000,000, which is considerably more than �52,000. This was the only
6599
one of the five iron mines mentioned in the _Year Book_ which was not
6600
in Japanese hands at the time when the _Year Book_ was published.
6601
6602
Next comes the Taochung Iron Mine, Anhui province. "The concession which
6603
was granted to the Sino-Japanese Industrial Development Co. will be
6604
worked by the Orient Steel Manufacturing Co. The mine is said to contain
6605
60,000,000 tons of ore, containing 65 per cent. of pure iron. The plan
6606
of operations provides for the production of pig iron at the rate of
6607
170,000 tons a year, a steel mill with a capacity of 100,000 tons of
6608
steel ingots a year, and a casting and forging mill to produce 75,000
6609
tons a year."
6610
6611
The fourth mine is at Chinlingchen, in Shantung, "worked in conjunction
6612
with the Hengshan Colliery by the railway." I presume it is to be sold
6613
back to China along with the railway.
6614
6615
The fifth and last mine mentioned is the Penhsihu Mine, "one of the most
6616
promising mines in the nine mining areas in South Manchuria, where the
6617
Japanese are permitted by an exchange of Notes between the Chinese and
6618
Japanese Governments (May 25, 1915) to prospect for and operate mines.
6619
The seam of this mine extends from near Liaoyang to the neighbourhood of
6620
Penhsihu, and in size is pronounced equal to the Tayeh mine." It will be
6621
observed that this mine, also, was acquired by the Japanese as a result
6622
of the ultimatum enforcing the Twenty-one Demands. The _Year Book_ adds:
6623
"The Japanese Navy is purchasing some of the Penhsihu output. Osaka
6624
ironworks placed an order for 15,000 tons in 1915 and the arsenal at
6625
Osaka in the same year accepted a tender for Penhsihu iron."
6626
6627
It will be seen from these facts that, as regards iron, the Chinese have
6628
allowed the Japanese to acquire a position of vantage from which they
6629
can only be ousted with great difficulty. Nevertheless, it is absolutely
6630
imperative that the Chinese should develop an iron and steel industry of
6631
their own on a large scale. If they do not, they cannot preserve their
6632
national independence, their own civilization, or any of the things that
6633
make them potentially of value to the world. It should be observed that
6634
the chief reason for which the Japanese desire Chinese iron is in order
6635
to be able to exploit and tyrannize over China. Confucius, I understand,
6636
says nothing about iron mines;[107] therefore the old-fashioned Chinese
6637
did not realize the importance of preserving them. Now that they are
6638
awake to the situation, it is almost too late. I shall come back later
6639
to the question of what can be done. For the present, let us continue
6640
our survey of facts.
6641
6642
It may be presumed that the population of China will always be mainly
6643
agricultural. Tea, silk, raw cotton, grain, the soya bean, etc., are
6644
crops in which China excels. In production of raw cotton, China is the
6645
third country in the world, India being the first and the United States
6646
the second. There is, of course, room for great progress in agriculture,
6647
but industry is vital if China is to preserve her national independence,
6648
and it is industry that is our present topic.
6649
6650
To quote Mr. Tyau: "At the end of 1916 the number of factory hands was
6651
officially estimated at 560,000 and that of mine workers 406,000. Since
6652
then no official returns for the whole country have been published ...
6653
but perhaps a million each would be an approximate figure for the
6654
present number of factory operatives and mine workers."[108] Of course,
6655
the hours are very long and the wages very low; Mr. Tyau mentions as
6656
specially modern and praiseworthy certain textile factories where the
6657
wages range from 15 to 45 cents a day.[109] (The cent varies in value,
6658
but is always somewhere between a farthing and a halfpenny.) No doubt as
6659
industry develops Socialism and labour unrest will also develop. If Mr.
6660
Tyau is to be taken as a sample of the modern Chinese governing classes,
6661
the policy of the Government towards Labour will be very illiberal. Mr.
6662
Tyau's outlook is that of an American capitalist, and shows the extent
6663
to which he has come under American influence, as well as that of
6664
conservative England (he is an LL.D. of London). Most of the Young
6665
Chinese I came across, however, were Socialists, and it may be hoped
6666
that the traditional Chinese dislike of uncompromising fierceness will
6667
make the Government less savage against Labour than the Governments of
6668
America and Japan.
6669
6670
There is room for the development of a great textile industry in China.
6671
There are a certain number of modern mills, and nothing but enterprise
6672
is needed to make the industry as great as that of Lancashire.
6673
6674
Shipbuilding has made a good beginning in Shanghai, and would probably
6675
develop rapidly if China had a flourishing iron and steel industry in
6676
native hands.
6677
6678
The total exports of native produce in 1919 were just under �200,000,000
6679
(630,000,000 taels), and the total imports slightly larger. It is
6680
better, however, to consider such statistics in taels, because currency
6681
fluctuations make the results deceptive when reckoned in sterling. The
6682
tael is not a coin, but a certain weight of silver, and therefore its
6683
value fluctuates with the value of silver. The _China Year Book_ gives
6684
imports and exports of Chinese produce for 1902 as 325 million taels and
6685
214 million taels respectively; for 1911, as 482 and 377; for 1917, as
6686
577 and 462; for 1920, as 762 and 541. (The corresponding figures in
6687
pounds sterling for 1911 are 64 millions and 50 millions; for 1917, 124
6688
millions and 99,900,000.) It will thus be seen that, although the
6689
foreign trade of China is still small in proportion to population, it is
6690
increasing very fast. To a European it is always surprising to find how
6691
little the economic life of China is affected by such incidents as
6692
revolutions and civil wars.
6693
6694
Certain principles seem to emerge from a study of the Chinese railways
6695
and mines as needing to be adopted by the Chinese Government if national
6696
independence is to be preserved. As regards railways, nationalization is
6697
obviously desirable, even if it somewhat retards the building of new
6698
lines. Railways not in the hands of the Government will be controlled,
6699
in the end if not in the beginning, by foreigners, who will thus acquire
6700
a power over China which will be fatal to freedom. I think we may hope
6701
that the Chinese authorities now realize this, and will henceforth act
6702
upon it.
6703
6704
In regard to mines, development by the Chinese themselves is urgent,
6705
since undeveloped resources tempt the greed of the Great Powers, and
6706
development by foreigners makes it possible to keep China enslaved. It
6707
should therefore be enacted that, in future, no sale of mines or of any
6708
interest in mines to foreigners, and no loan from foreigners on the
6709
security of mines, will be recognized as legally valid. In view of
6710
extra-territoriality, it will be difficult to induce foreigners to
6711
accept such legislation, and Consular Courts will not readily admit its
6712
validity. But, as the example of extra-territoriality in Japan shows,
6713
such matters depend upon the national strength; if the Powers fear
6714
China, they will recognize the validity of Chinese legislation, but if
6715
not, not. In view of the need of rapid development of mining by Chinese,
6716
it would probably be unwise to nationalize all mines here and now. It
6717
would be better to provide every possible encouragement to genuinely
6718
Chinese private enterprise, and to offer the assistance of geological
6719
and mining experts, etc. The Government should, however, retain the
6720
right (_a_) to buy out any mining concern at a fair valuation; (_b_) to
6721
work minerals itself in cases where the private owners fail to do so, in
6722
spite of expert opinion in favour of their being worked. These powers
6723
should be widely exercised, and as soon as mining has reached the point
6724
compatible with national security, the mines should be all nationalized,
6725
except where, as at Tayeh, diplomatic agreements stand in the way. It is
6726
clear that the Tayeh mines must be recovered by China as soon as
6727
opportunity offers, but when or how that will be it is as yet impossible
6728
to say. Of course I have been assuming an orderly government established
6729
in China, but without that nothing vigorous can be done to repel foreign
6730
aggression. This is a point to which, along with other general questions
6731
connected with the industrializing of China, I shall return in my last
6732
chapter.
6733
6734
It is said by Europeans who have business experience in China that the
6735
Chinese are not good at managing large joint-stock companies, such as
6736
modern industry requires. As everyone knows, they are proverbially
6737
honest in business, in spite of the corruption of their politics. But
6738
their successful businesses--so one gathers--do not usually extend
6739
beyond a single family; and even they are apt to come to grief sooner or
6740
later through nepotism. This is what Europeans say; I cannot speak from
6741
my own knowledge. But I am convinced that modern education is very
6742
quickly changing this state of affairs, which was connected with
6743
Confucianism and the family ethic. Many Chinese have been trained in
6744
business methods in America; there are Colleges of Commerce at Woosung
6745
and other places; and the patriotism of Young China has led men of the
6746
highest education to devote themselves to industrial development. The
6747
Chinese are no doubt, by temperament and tradition, more suited to
6748
commerce than to industry, but contact with the West is rapidly
6749
introducing new aptitudes and a new mentality. There is, therefore,
6750
every reason to expect, if political conditions are not too adverse,
6751
that the industrial development of China will proceed rapidly throughout
6752
the next few decades. It is of vital importance that that development
6753
should be controlled by the Chinese rather than by foreign nations. But
6754
that is part of the larger problem of the recovery of Chinese
6755
independence, with which I shall deal in my last chapter.
6756
6757
FOOTNOTES:
6758
6759
[Footnote 99: For the history of Chinese railways, see Tyau, op. cit.
6760
pp. 183 ff.]
6761
6762
[Footnote 100: _China in_ 1918. Published by the _Peking Leader_, pp.
6763
45-6.]
6764
6765
[Footnote 101: Op. cit. chap. xi.]
6766
6767
[Footnote 102: _China in_ 1918, p. 26. There is perhaps some mistake in
6768
the figures given for iron ore, as the Tayeh mines alone are estimated
6769
by some to contain 700,000,000 tons of iron ore. Coleman, op cit. p.
6770
51.]
6771
6772
[Footnote 103: Page 63. The 1922 _Year Book_ gives 19,500,000 tons of
6773
coal production.]
6774
6775
[Footnote 104: _Modern China,_ p, 265.]
6776
6777
[Footnote 105: Pages 74-5.]
6778
6779
[Footnote 106: Coleman, op. cit. chap. xiv.]
6780
6781
[Footnote 107: It seems it would be inaccurate to maintain that there is
6782
nothing on the subject in the Gospels. An eminent American divine
6783
pointed out in print, as regards the advice against laying up treasure
6784
where moth and rust doth corrupt, that "moth and rust do not get at Mr.
6785
Rockefeller's oil wells, and thieves do not often break through and
6786
steal a railway. What Jesus condemned was hoarding wealth." See Upton
6787
Sinclair, _The Profits of Religion_, 1918, p. 175.]
6788
6789
[Footnote 108: Page 237.]
6790
6791
[Footnote 109: Page 218.]
6792
6793
6794
6795
6796
CHAPTER XV
6797
6798
THE OUTLOOK FOR CHINA
6799
6800
6801
In this chapter I propose to take, as far as I am able, the standpoint
6802
of a progressive and public-spirited Chinese, and consider what reforms,
6803
in what order, I should advocate in that case.
6804
6805
To begin with, it is clear that China must be saved by her own efforts,
6806
and cannot rely upon outside help. In the international situation, China
6807
has had both good and bad fortune. The Great War was unfortunate,
6808
because it gave Japan temporarily a free hand; the collapse of Tsarist
6809
Russia was fortunate, because it put an end to the secret alliance of
6810
Russians and Japanese; the Anglo-Japanese Alliance was unfortunate,
6811
because it compelled us to abet Japanese aggression even against our own
6812
economic interests; the friction between Japan and America was
6813
fortunate; but the agreement arrived at by the Washington Conference,
6814
though momentarily advantageous as regards Shantung, is likely, in the
6815
long run, to prove unfortunate, since it will make America less willing
6816
to oppose Japan. For reasons which I set forth in Chap. X., unless China
6817
becomes strong, either the collapse of Japan or her unquestioned
6818
ascendency in the Far East is almost certain to prove disastrous to
6819
China; and one or other of these is very likely to come about. All the
6820
Great Powers, without exception, have interests which are incompatible,
6821
in the long run, with China's welfare and with the best development of
6822
Chinese civilization. Therefore the Chinese must seek salvation in their
6823
own energy, not in the benevolence of any outside Power.
6824
6825
The problem is not merely one of _political_ independence; a certain
6826
cultural independence is at least as important. I have tried to show in
6827
this book that the Chinese are, in certain ways, superior to us, and it
6828
would not be good either for them or for us if, in these ways, they had
6829
to descend to our level in order to preserve their existence as a
6830
nation. In this matter, however, a compromise is necessary. Unless they
6831
adopt some of our vices to some extent, we shall not respect them, and
6832
they will be increasingly oppressed by foreign nations. The object must
6833
be to keep this process within the narrowest limits compatible with
6834
safety.
6835
6836
First of all, a patriotic spirit is necessary--not, of course, the
6837
bigoted anti-foreign spirit of the Boxers, but the enlightened attitude
6838
which is willing to learn from other nations while not willing to allow
6839
them to dominate. This attitude has been generated among educated
6840
Chinese, and to a great extent in the merchant class, by the brutal
6841
tuition of Japan. The danger of patriotism is that, as soon as it has
6842
proved strong enough for successful defence, it is apt to turn to
6843
foreign aggression. China, by her resources and her population, is
6844
capable of being the greatest Power in the world after the United
6845
States. It is much to be feared that, in the process of becoming strong
6846
enough to preserve their independence, the Chinese may become strong
6847
enough to embark upon a career of imperialism. It cannot be too
6848
strongly urged that patriotism should be only defensive, not aggressive.
6849
But with this proviso, I think a spirit of patriotism is absolutely
6850
necessary to the regeneration of China. Independence is to be sought,
6851
not as an end in itself, but as a means towards a new blend of Western
6852
skill with the traditional Chinese virtues. If this end is not achieved,
6853
political independence will have little value.
6854
6855
The three chief requisites, I should say, are: (1) The establishment of
6856
an orderly Government; (2) industrial development under Chinese control;
6857
(3) The spread of education. All these aims will have to be pursued
6858
concurrently, but on the whole their urgency seems to me to come in the
6859
above order. We have already seen how large a part the State will have
6860
to take in building up industry, and how impossible this is while the
6861
political anarchy continues. Funds for education on a large scale are
6862
also unobtainable until there is good government. Therefore good
6863
government is the prerequisite of all other reforms. Industrialism and
6864
education are closely connected, and it would be difficult to decide the
6865
priority between them; but I have put industrialism first, because,
6866
unless it is developed very soon by the Chinese, foreigners will have
6867
acquired such a strong hold that it will be very difficult indeed to
6868
oust them. These reasons have decided me that our three problems ought
6869
to be taken in the above order.
6870
6871
1. _The establishment of an orderly government_.--At the moment of
6872
writing, the condition of China is as anarchic as it has ever been. A
6873
battle between Chang-tso-lin and Wu-Pei-Fu is imminent; the former is
6874
usually considered, though falsely according to some good authorities,
6875
the most reactionary force in China; Wu-Pei-Fu, though _The Times_ calls
6876
him "the Liberal leader," may well prove no more satisfactory than
6877
"Liberal" leaders nearer home. It is of course possible that, if he
6878
wins, he may be true to his promises and convoke a Parliament for all
6879
China; but it is at least equally possible that he may not. In any case,
6880
to depend upon the favour of a successful general is as precarious as to
6881
depend upon the benevolence of a foreign Power. If the progressive
6882
elements are to win, they must become a strong organized force.
6883
6884
So far as I can discover, Chinese Constitutionalists are doing the best
6885
thing that is possible at the moment, namely, concerting a joint
6886
programme, involving the convoking of a Parliament and the cessation of
6887
military usurpation. Union is essential, even if it involves sacrifice
6888
of cherished beliefs on the part of some. Given a programme upon which
6889
all the Constitutionalists are united, they will acquire great weight in
6890
public opinion, which is very powerful in China. They may then be able,
6891
sooner or later, to offer a high constitutional position to some
6892
powerful general, on condition of his ceasing to depend upon mere
6893
military force. By this means they may be able to turn the scales in
6894
favour of the man they select, as the student agitation turned the
6895
scales in July 1920 in favour of Wu-Pei-Fu against the An Fu party. Such
6896
a policy can only be successful if it is combined with vigorous
6897
propaganda, both among the civilian population and among the soldiers,
6898
and if, as soon as peace is restored, work is found for disbanded
6899
soldiers and pay for those who are not disbanded. This raises the
6900
financial problem, which is very difficult, because foreign Powers will
6901
not lend except in return for some further sacrifice of the remnants of
6902
Chinese independence. (For reasons explained in Chap. X., I do not
6903
accept the statement by the American consortium bankers that a loan from
6904
them would not involve control over China's internal affairs. They may
6905
not mean control to be involved, but I am convinced that in fact it
6906
would be.) The only way out of this difficulty that I can see is to
6907
raise an internal loan by appealing to the patriotism of Chinese
6908
merchants. There is plenty of money in China, but, very naturally, rich
6909
Chinese will not lend to any of the brigands who now control the
6910
Government.
6911
6912
When the time comes to draft a permanent Constitution, I have no doubt
6913
that it will have to be federal, allowing a very large measure of
6914
autonomy to the provinces, and reserving for the Central Government few
6915
things except customs, army and navy, foreign relations and railways.
6916
Provincial feeling is strong, and it is now, I think, generally
6917
recognized that a mistake was made in 1912 in not allowing it more
6918
scope.
6919
6920
While a Constitution is being drafted, and even after it has been agreed
6921
upon, it will not be possible to rely upon the inherent prestige of
6922
Constitutionalism, or to leave public opinion without guidance. It will
6923
be necessary for the genuinely progressive people throughout the country
6924
to unite in a strongly disciplined society, arriving at collective
6925
decisions and enforcing support of those decisions upon all its members.
6926
This society will have to win the confidence of public opinion by a very
6927
rigid avoidance of corruption and political profiteering; the slightest
6928
failure of a member in this respect must be visited by expulsion. The
6929
society must make itself obviously the champion of the national
6930
interests as against all self-seekers, speculators and toadies to
6931
foreign Powers. It will thus become able authoritatively to commend or
6932
condemn politicians and to wield great influence over opinion, even in
6933
the army. There exists in Young China enough energy, patriotism and
6934
honesty to create such a society and to make it strong through the
6935
respect which it will command. But unless enlightened patriotism is
6936
organized in some such way, its power will not be equal to the political
6937
problems with which China is faced.
6938
6939
Sooner or later, the encroachments of foreign Powers upon the sovereign
6940
rights of China must be swept away. The Chinese must recover the Treaty
6941
Ports, control of the tariff, and so on; they must also free themselves
6942
from extra-territoriality. But all this can probably be done, as it was
6943
in Japan, without offending foreign Powers (except perhaps the
6944
Japanese). It would be a mistake to complicate the early stages of
6945
Chinese recovery by measures which would antagonize foreign Powers in
6946
general. Russia was in a stronger position for defence than China, yet
6947
Russia has suffered terribly from the universal hostility provoked by
6948
the Bolsheviks. Given good government and a development of China's
6949
resources, it will be possible to obtain most of the needed concessions
6950
by purely diplomatic means; the rest can wait for a suitable
6951
opportunity.
6952
6953
2. _Industrial development._--On this subject I have already written in
6954
Chap. XIV.; it is certain general aspects of the subject that I wish to
6955
consider now. For reasons already given, I hold that all railways ought
6956
to be in the hands of the State, and that all successful mines ought to
6957
be purchased by the State at a fair valuation, even if they are not
6958
State-owned from the first. Contracts with foreigners for loans ought to
6959
be carefully drawn so as to leave the control to China. There would not
6960
be much difficulty about this if China had a stable and orderly
6961
government; in that case, many foreign capitalists would be willing to
6962
lend on good security, without exacting any part in the management.
6963
Every possible diplomatic method should be employed to break down such a
6964
monopoly as the consortium seeks to acquire in the matter of loans.
6965
6966
Given good government, a large amount of State enterprise would be
6967
desirable in Chinese industry. There are many arguments for State
6968
Socialism, or rather what Lenin calls State Capitalism, in any country
6969
which is economically but not culturally backward. In the first place,
6970
it is easier for the State to borrow than for a private person; in the
6971
second place, it is easier for the State to engage and employ the
6972
foreign experts who are likely to be needed for some time to come; in
6973
the third place, it is easier for the State to make sure that vital
6974
industries do not come under the control of foreign Powers. What is
6975
perhaps more important than any of these considerations is that, by
6976
undertaking industrial enterprise from the first, the State can prevent
6977
the growth of many of the evils of private capitalism. If China can
6978
acquire a vigorous and honest State, it will be possible to develop
6979
Chinese industry without, at the same time, developing the overweening
6980
power of private capitalists by which the Western nations are now both
6981
oppressed and misled.
6982
6983
But if this is to be done successfully, it will require a great change
6984
in Chinese morals, a development of public spirit in place of the family
6985
ethic, a transference to the public service of that honesty which
6986
already exists in private business, and a degree of energy which is at
6987
present rare. I believe that Young China is capable of fulfilling these
6988
requisites, spurred on by patriotism; but it is important to realize
6989
that they are requisites, and that, without them, any system of State
6990
Socialism must fail.
6991
6992
For industrial development, it is important that the Chinese should
6993
learn to become technical experts and also to become skilled workers. I
6994
think more has been done towards the former of these needs than towards
6995
the latter. For the latter purpose, it would probably be wise to import
6996
skilled workmen--say from Germany--and cause them to give instruction to
6997
Chinese workmen in any new branch of industrial work that it might be
6998
desired to develop.
6999
7000
3. _Education._--If China is to become a democracy, as most progressive
7001
Chinese hope, universal education is imperative. Where the bulk of the
7002
population cannot read, true democracy is impossible. Education is a
7003
good in itself, but is also essential for developing political
7004
consciousness, of which at present there is almost none in rural China.
7005
The Chinese themselves are well aware of this, but in the present state
7006
of the finances it is impossible to establish universal elementary
7007
education. Until it has been established for some time, China must be,
7008
in fact, if not in form, an oligarchy, because the uneducated masses
7009
cannot have any effective political opinion. Even given good government,
7010
it is doubtful whether the immense expense of educating such a vast
7011
population could be borne by the nation without a considerable
7012
industrial development. Such industrial development as already exists is
7013
mainly in the hands of foreigners, and its profits provide warships for
7014
the Japanese, or mansions and dinners for British and American
7015
millionaires. If its profits are to provide the funds for Chinese
7016
education, industry must be in Chinese hands. This is another reason why
7017
industrial development must probably precede any complete scheme of
7018
education.
7019
7020
For the present, even if the funds existed, there would not be
7021
sufficient teachers to provide a schoolmaster in every village. There
7022
is, however, such an enthusiasm for education in China that teachers are
7023
being trained as fast as is possible with such limited resources; indeed
7024
a great deal of devotion and public spirit is being shown by Chinese
7025
educators, whose salaries are usually many months in arrears.
7026
7027
Chinese control is, to my mind, as important in the matter of education
7028
as in the matter of industry. For the present, it is still necessary to
7029
have foreign instructors in some subjects, though this necessity will
7030
soon cease. Foreign instructors, however, provided they are not too
7031
numerous, do no harm, any more than foreign experts in railways and
7032
mines. What does harm is foreign management. Chinese educated in mission
7033
schools, or in lay establishments controlled by foreigners, tend to
7034
become de-nationalized, and to have a slavish attitude towards Western
7035
civilization. This unfits them for taking a useful part in the national
7036
life, and tends to undermine their morals. Also, oddly enough, it makes
7037
them more conservative in purely Chinese matters than the young men and
7038
women who have had a modern education under Chinese auspices. Europeans
7039
in general are more conservative about China than the modern Chinese
7040
are, and they tend to convey their conservatism to their pupils. And of
7041
course their whole influence, unavoidably if involuntarily, militates
7042
against national self-respect in those whom they teach.
7043
7044
Those who desire to do research in some academic subject will, for some
7045
time to come, need a period of residence in some European or American
7046
university. But for the great majority of university students it is far
7047
better, if possible, to acquire their education in China. Returned
7048
students have, to a remarkable extent, the stamp of the country from
7049
which they have returned, particularly when that country is America. A
7050
society such as was foreshadowed earlier in this chapter, in which all
7051
really progressive Chinese should combine, would encounter difficulties,
7052
as things stand, from the divergencies in national bias between students
7053
returned from (say) Japan, America and Germany. Given time, this
7054
difficulty can be overcome by the increase in purely Chinese university
7055
education, but at present the difficulty would be serious.
7056
7057
To overcome this difficulty, two things are needed: inspiring
7058
leadership, and a clear conception of the kind of civilization to be
7059
aimed at. Leadership will have to be both intellectual and practical. As
7060
regards intellectual leadership, China is a country where writers have
7061
enormous influence, and a vigorous reformer possessed of literary skill
7062
could carry with him the great majority of Young China. Men with the
7063
requisite gifts exist in China; I might mention, as an example
7064
personally known to me, Dr. Hu Suh.[110] He has great learning, wide
7065
culture, remarkable energy, and a fearless passion for reform; his
7066
writings in the vernacular inspire enthusiasm among progressive Chinese.
7067
He is in favour of assimilating all that is good in Western culture, but
7068
by no means a slavish admirer of our ways.
7069
7070
The practical political leadership of such a society as I conceive to be
7071
needed would probably demand different gifts from those required in an
7072
intellectual leader. It is therefore likely that the two could not be
7073
combined in one man, but would need men as different as Lenin and Karl
7074
Marx.
7075
7076
The aim to be pursued is of importance, not only to China, but to the
7077
world. Out of the renaissance spirit now existing in China, it is
7078
possible, if foreign nations can be prevented from working havoc, to
7079
develop a new civilization better than any that the world has yet known.
7080
This is the aim which Young China should set before itself: the
7081
preservation of the urbanity and courtesy, the candour and the pacific
7082
temper, which are characteristic of the Chinese nation, together with a
7083
knowledge of Western science and an application of it to the practical
7084
problems of China. Of such practical problems there are two kinds: one
7085
due to the internal condition of China, and the other to its
7086
international situation. In the former class come education, democracy,
7087
the diminution of poverty, hygiene and sanitation, and the prevention of
7088
famines. In the latter class come the establishment of a strong
7089
government, the development of industrialism, the revision of treaties
7090
and the recovery of the Treaty Ports (as to which Japan may serve as a
7091
model), and finally, the creation of an army sufficiently strong to
7092
defend the country against Japan. Both classes of problems demand
7093
Western science. But they do not demand the adoption of the Western
7094
philosophy of life.
7095
7096
If the Chinese were to adopt the Western philosophy of life, they would,
7097
as soon as they had made themselves safe against foreign aggression,
7098
embark upon aggression on their own account. They would repeat the
7099
campaigns of the Han and Tang dynasties in Central Asia, and perhaps
7100
emulate Kublai by the invasion of Japan. They would exploit their
7101
material resources with a view to producing a few bloated plutocrats at
7102
home and millions dying of hunger abroad. Such are the results which the
7103
West achieves by the application of science. If China were led astray by
7104
the lure of brutal power, she might repel her enemies outwardly, but
7105
would have yielded to them inwardly. It is not unlikely that the great
7106
military nations of the modern world will bring about their own
7107
destruction by their inability to abstain from war, which will become,
7108
with every year that passes, more scientific and more devastating. If
7109
China joins in this madness, China will perish like the rest. But if
7110
Chinese reformers can have the moderation to stop when they have made
7111
China capable of self-defence, and to abstain from the further step of
7112
foreign conquest; if, when they have become safe at home, they can turn
7113
aside from the materialistic activities imposed by the Powers, and
7114
devote their freedom to science and art and the inauguration of a better
7115
economic system--then China will have played the part in the world for
7116
which she is fitted, and will have given to mankind as a whole new hope
7117
in the moment of greatest need. It is this hope that I wish to see
7118
inspiring Young China. This hope is realizable; and because it is
7119
realizable, China deserves a foremost place in the esteem of every lover
7120
of mankind.
7121
7122
FOOTNOTES:
7123
7124
[Footnote 110: An account of a portion of his work will be found in
7125
Tyau, op. cit. pp. 40 ff.]
7126
7127
7128
7129
7130
APPENDIX
7131
7132
7133
While the above pages were going through the Press, some important
7134
developments have taken place in China. Wu-Pei-Fu has defeated
7135
Chang-tso-lin and made himself master of Peking. Chang has retreated
7136
towards Manchuria with a broken army, and proclaimed the independence of
7137
Manchuria. This might suit the Japanese very well, but it is hardly to
7138
be supposed that the other Powers would acquiesce. It is, therefore, not
7139
unlikely that Chang may lose Manchuria also, and cease to be a factor in
7140
Chinese politics.
7141
7142
For the moment, Wu-Pei-Fu controls the greater part of China, and his
7143
intentions become important. The British in China have, for some years,
7144
befriended him, and this fact colours all Press telegrams appearing in
7145
our newspapers. According to _The Times_, he has pronounced in favour of
7146
the reassembling of the old all-China Parliament, with a view to the
7147
restoration of constitutional government. This is a measure in which the
7148
South could concur, and if he really adheres to this intention he has it
7149
in his power to put an end to Chinese anarchy. _The Times_ Peking
7150
correspondent, telegraphing on May 30, reports that "Wu-Pei-Fu declares
7151
that if the old Parliament will reassemble and work in national
7152
interests he will support it up to the limit, and fight any
7153
obstructionists."
7154
7155
On May 18, the same correspondent telegraphed that "Wu-Pei-Fu is lending
7156
his support to the unification movements, and has found common ground
7157
for action with Chen Chiung Ming," who is Sun's colleague at Canton and
7158
is engaged in civil war with Sun, who is imperialistic and wants to
7159
conquer all China for his government, said to be alone constitutional.
7160
The programme agreed upon between Wu and Chen Chiung Ming is given in
7161
the same telegram as follows:
7162
7163
Local self-government shall be established and magistrates shall
7164
be elected by the people; District police shall be created under
7165
District Boards subject to Central Provincial Boards; Civil
7166
governors shall be responsible to the Central Government, not to
7167
the Tuchuns; a national army shall be created, controlled and
7168
paid by the Central Government; Provincial police and
7169
_gendarmerie_, not the Tuchuns or the army, shall be responsible
7170
for peace and order in the provinces; the whole nation shall
7171
agree to recall the old Parliament and the restoration of the
7172
Provisional Constitution of the first year of the Republic; Taxes
7173
shall be collected by the Central Government, and only a
7174
stipulated sum shall be granted to each province for expenses,
7175
the balance to be forwarded to the Central Government as under
7176
the Ching dynasty; Afforestation shall be undertaken, industries
7177
established, highways built, and other measures taken to keep the
7178
people on the land.
7179
7180
This is an admirable programme, but it is impossible to know how much of
7181
it will ever be carried out.
7182
7183
Meanwhile, Sun Yat Sen is still at war with Wu-Pei-Fu. It has been
7184
stated in the British Press that there was an alliance between Sun and
7185
Chang, but it seems there was little more than a common hostility to Wu.
7186
Sun's friends maintain that he is a genuine Constitutionalist, and that
7187
Wu is not to be trusted, but Chen Chiung Ming has a better reputation
7188
than Sun among reformers. The British in China all praise Wu and hate
7189
Sun; the Americans all praise Sun and decry Wu. Sun undoubtedly has a
7190
past record of genuine patriotism, and there can be no doubt that the
7191
Canton Government has been the best in China. What appears in our
7192
newspapers on the subject is certainly designed to give a falsely
7193
unfavourable impression of Canton. For example, in _The Times_ of May
7194
15, a telegram appeared from Hong-Kong to the following effect:
7195
7196
I learn that the troops of Sun Yat Sen, President of South China,
7197
which are stated to be marching north from Canton, are a rabble.
7198
Many are without weapons and a large percentage of the uniforms
7199
are merely rags. There is no discipline, and gambling and
7200
opium-smoking are rife.
7201
7202
Nevertheless, on May 30, _The Times_ had to confess that this army had
7203
won a brilliant victory, capturing "the most important stronghold in
7204
Kiangsi," together with 40 field guns and large quantities of munitions.
7205
7206
The situation must remain obscure until more detailed news has arrived
7207
by mail. It is to be hoped that the Canton Government, through the
7208
victory of Chen Chiung Ming, will come to terms with Wu-Pei-Fu, and will
7209
be strong enough to compel him to adhere to the terms. It is to be hoped
7210
also that Chang's proclamation of the independence of Manchuria will not
7211
be seized upon by Japan as an excuse for a more complete absorption of
7212
that country. If Wu-Pei-Fu adheres to the declaration quoted above,
7213
there can be no patriotic reason why Canton should not co-operate with
7214
him; on the other hand, the military strength of Canton makes it more
7215
likely that Wu will find it prudent to adhere to his declaration. There
7216
is certainly a better chance than there was before the defeat of Chang
7217
for the unification of China and the ending of the Tuchuns' tyranny. But
7218
it is as yet no more than a chance, and the future is still
7219
problematical.
7220
7221
_June_ 21, 1922.
7222
7223
7224
7225
7226
INDEX
7227
7228
Academy, Imperial, 44
7229
Adams, Will, 94
7230
Afghanistan, 175
7231
Ainu, 117
7232
America, 17, 54, 63, 69, 134, 136, 145 ff., 159 ff
7233
and naval policy, 161-2
7234
and trade with Russia, 162-3
7235
and Chinese finance, 163-5, 244
7236
and Japan, 167 ff.
7237
Americanism, 221
7238
Ancestor-worship, 39
7239
An Fu Party, 145, 205, 243
7240
Anglo-Japanese Alliance, 120, 123, 133, 137, 149, 175
7241
Annam, 52
7242
Arnold, Julean, 231
7243
Art, 11, 12, 28, 189
7244
Australia, 181
7245
7246
Backhouse, 49
7247
Balfour, 152, 153
7248
Benthamites, 80
7249
Birth-rate--
7250
in China, 73
7251
in Japan, 116
7252
Bismarck, 112, 130
7253
Bland, 49, 77 n, 107
7254
Bolsheviks, 17, 18, 128, 136, 143, 146 ff., 175 ff., 245
7255
Bolshevism, 82
7256
in China, 175, 194, 204
7257
Books, burning of, 24 ff.
7258
Boxer rising, 53, 54, 227
7259
indemnity, 54, 217
7260
Brailsford, 166
7261
Buddhism, 27, 31, 48, 190
7262
in Japan, 86 ff., 91, 105, 169
7263
Burma, 52
7264
Bushido, 172
7265
7266
Canada, 181
7267
Canton, 50, 68, 71, 75, 207
7268
Capitalism, 179
7269
Cassel agreement, 69
7270
Chamberlain, Prof. B.H., 103, 105
7271
Changchun, 124
7272
Chang-tso-lin, 68, 71, 77,242, 253
7273
Chao Ki, 40
7274
Chen Chiung Ming, 68, 253-5
7275
Chen, Eugene, 133 n.
7276
Cheng, S.G., 55 n., 65, 134 n., 139 n., 232
7277
Chien Lung, Emperor, 49 ff.
7278
Chi Li, Mr., 37
7279
China--
7280
early history, 21 S ff.
7281
derivation of name, 24
7282
population, 31-4
7283
Year Book, 32
7284
produce, 72
7285
influence on Japan, 86 ff.,104
7286
and the war, 134 ff.
7287
Post Offices, 150
7288
Chinese--
7289
character of, 199-213
7290
love of laughter, 188-9, 200
7291
dignity, 202
7292
pacifism, 195, 213
7293
callousness, 209
7294
cowardice, 210
7295
avarice, 211
7296
patience, 206
7297
excitability, 212
7298
Chingkiang, 60
7299
Chinlingchen mine, 234
7300
Chita, 146, 154
7301
Choshu, 99, 101, 102, 106
7302
Chou dynasty, 22
7303
Christianity in Japan, 92 ff.
7304
Chuang Tze, 8, 82, 188, 192
7305
Chu Fu Tze, 43
7306
Chu Hsi, 46
7307
Civilization--
7308
alphabetical, 37
7309
Chinese, 187 ff.
7310
European, 186
7311
Coal in China, 132 n., 231 ff.
7312
Coleman, 77 n., 110, 132 n., 133 n.
7313
Colour prejudice, 168, 173
7314
and labour, 181 ff.
7315
Confucius, 21, 22, 24, 38, 187, 208
7316
Confucianism, 34, 38 ff., 190
7317
in Japan, 118
7318
Consortium, 14, 163 ff., 179, 244
7319
Cordier, Henri, 24 n., 25, 27 n., 28, 30 n., 31 n., 187 n.
7320
Cotton, 76, 235
7321
industry in Osaka, 114
7322
Customs--
7323
Chinese, 55 ff.,
7324
on exports, 56
7325
internal, 56-7
7326
7327
Dairen, 123
7328
Conference at, 154 ff.
7329
Denison, 129
7330
Dewey, Professor, 69, 224
7331
Mrs., 224
7332
Diet, Japanese, 109 ff.
7333
Dutch in Japan, 94 ff., 100
7334
7335
Education, 44 ff., 76 ff., 193, 214-225, 247 ff.
7336
statistics of, 215
7337
classical, 215-7
7338
European and American, 217-21
7339
modern Chinese, 221 ff.
7340
of women, 223-4
7341
Efficiency, creed of, 17
7342
"Eight Legs," 45, 46
7343
Emperor of China 22 ff, 39, 83, 88, 205
7344
"First," 24 ff.
7345
Empress Dowager, 52 n.
7346
Examination, competitive, 34, 44 ff, 76
7347
7348
"Face," 204
7349
Famines in China, 72, 210
7350
Far Eastern Republic, 140, 154
7351
Federalism in China, 70, 244
7352
Feudalism--
7353
in China, 24, 26
7354
in Japan, 89 ff.
7355
Filial Piety, 39 ff., 61
7356
and patriotism, 41
7357
in Japan, 118, 169
7358
Foreign Trade statistics, 236-7
7359
Forestry, 80
7360
Fourteen Points, 53
7361
France, 52, 53, 123
7362
and Shantung, 137-8
7363
and Japan, 157
7364
Fukien, 132
7365
7366
Galileo, 186
7367
Genoa Conference, 146
7368
Genro, the, 91, 106 ff., 128
7369
George III, 49
7370
Germany, 30, 53, 109, 138, 172
7371
property in China during war, 141 ff.
7372
Giles, Lionel, 82 n.
7373
Giles, Professor, 23, 39, 43 n., 49 n., 187 n.
7374
Gladstone, 157, 160
7375
Gleason, 132 n., 134 n.
7376
Gobi desert, 31
7377
Gompers, 163
7378
Great Britain--
7379
and China, 52 ff.
7380
and Shantung, 137
7381
Great Wall, 24
7382
Greeks, 186
7383
Guam, 150
7384
7385
Han dynasty, 27
7386
Hanyehping Co., 132 n., 232-3
7387
Hart, Sir Robert, 57
7388
Hayashi, 133 n.
7389
Hearn, Lafcadio, 99
7390
Heaven (in Chinese religion), 23, 43
7391
Temple of, 23, 24
7392
Hideyoshi, 87, 93, 94
7393
Hirth, 22 n., 23 n., 27 n.
7394
Hong Kong, 52, 69, 75, 207
7395
Hsu Shi-chang, President, 44
7396
Hughes, Premier, 181 n.
7397
Hughes, Secretary, 152, 153
7398
Hung Wu, Emperor, 45
7399
Huns, 24, 27, 31
7400
Hu Suh, 250
7401
7402
Ichimura, Dr., 121
7403
Ideograms, 34 ff.
7404
Immigration, Asiatic, 181 ff.
7405
Imperialism. 82
7406
India, 27, 29, 48, 119, 120
7407
Industrialism, 186
7408
in China, 75, 76, 212,
7409
226-39, 245 ff.
7410
in Japan, 114
7411
Inouye, 88
7412
Intelligentsia in China, 76
7413
Iron in China, 131, 132 n., 231 ff.
7414
Japanese control of, 232 ff.
7415
Ishii, 135. _See_ also Lansing-Ishii
7416
Agreement.
7417
Ito, 88. 109 ff
7418
lyeyasu, 91, 94, 95
7419
7420
Japan, 14, 15, 27, 30, 52, 53, 62, 63, 86-175
7421
early history, 86 ff.
7422
constitution, 109 ff.
7423
war with China, 113, 122, 130
7424
war with Russia, 108, 123, 130
7425
clan loyalty, 118
7426
loyalty to Allies, 136
7427
hegemony in Asia, 120
7428
loans to China in 1918, 143
7429
Socialism in, 114, 170
7430
Jenghis Khan, 28 ff.
7431
Jews, 186
7432
7433
Kang Hsi, Emperor, 49 n.
7434
Kara Korum, 30
7435
Kato, 133 n.
7436
Kiangnan Dock, 232
7437
Kiaochow, 53, 131, 151
7438
Kieff, 29
7439
Koo, Mr. Wellington, 58 n., 164
7440
Korea, 53, 86, 120, 122, 124
7441
Kublai Khan, 29, 30
7442
Kyoto, 96
7443
Kyushu, 92, 94
7444
7445
Lama Religion, 43
7446
Lamont, 165
7447
Lansing, 144
7448
Lansing-Ishii Agreement, 134, 139, 151
7449
Lao-Tze, 43, 82, 187, 194
7450
Legge, 22 n., 39 n., 82 n.
7451
Lenin, 180, 250,
7452
Lennox, Dr., 73 n.
7453
Literati, 25, 26, 38 ff.
7454
Li Ung Bing, 26, 45
7455
Li Yuan Hung, President, 140 ff.
7456
Li Yuen, 28 n.
7457
Lloyd George, 133, 140, 157
7458
Louis XIV., 51
7459
Louis, Saint, 29
7460
7461
Macao, 62
7462
Macartney, 49
7463
Malthus, 73
7464
Manchu dynasty, 30, 31, 43, 64
7465
Manchuria, 53, 68, 120, 123, 127, 130, 146, 154, 177, 178, 207
7466
Manila, 93
7467
Marco Polo, 29
7468
Marcus Aurelius, 27
7469
Marx, 250
7470
Masuda, 93
7471
McLaren, 98, 103 n.
7472
Mechanistic Outlook, 81 ff.
7473
Merv, 29
7474
Mikado, 87, 99, 106
7475
worship of, 98, 103, 168-9
7476
Militarism, 16, 42, 43 n.
7477
Millard, 134 n., 143, 151 n.
7478
Minamoto Yoritomo, 90
7479
Mines, 230 ff.
7480
Ming dynasty, 30
7481
Missionaries, 196
7482
Roman Catholic, 48, 49 n.
7483
in Japan, 92 ff.
7484
Mongol dynasty, 28 ff., 43
7485
Mongolia, 29, 43, 120, 147, 154
7486
Morgan, J.P., 157, 165
7487
Morphia, 150
7488
Moscow, 29
7489
Mukden, 130
7490
Murdoch, 28 n., 86 n., 101, 107 n.
7491
7492
Nationalism, 16
7493
Nestorianism, 48
7494
Nicolaievsk, 155
7495
Nietzsche, 84, 194
7496
Nishapur, 29
7497
Nobunaga, 94
7498
Northcliffe, Lord, 77 n.
7499
7500
Observatory, Peking, 30, 49
7501
Okuma, 120, 122
7502
Open Door, 55, 162, 179
7503
Opium, 52
7504
7505
Panama Tolls, 162
7506
Peking, 30, 34, 52, 72
7507
Legation Quarter, 54
7508
Union Medical College, 73, 219
7509
Government University, 217 n., 222
7510
Girls' High Normal School, 224
7511
Penhsihu mine, 234
7512
Perry, Commodore, 96, 100, 167
7513
Persia, 27, 29, 175
7514
Phonetic writing, 35
7515
Plato, 186
7516
Po Chui, 195
7517
Po Lo, 83
7518
Pooley, 120 n., 121, 124, 128, 133 n.
7519
Pope, The, 29, 169
7520
Port Arthur, 54, 123, 130, 150, 175
7521
Portsmouth, Treaty of, 108-9, 125
7522
Portuguese, 92 ff.
7523
Progress, 13, 196, 202
7524
Putnam Weale, 32, 33, 65, 143 n., 165, 228
7525
7526
Railways, 226 ff.
7527
nationalization of, 228 ff.
7528
statistics of, 230
7529
Chinese Eastern, 123, 126, 143, 146, 227
7530
Fa-ku-Men, 124
7531
Hankow-Canton, 227
7532
Peking-Kalgan, 227, 229
7533
Peking-Hankow, 227
7534
Shantung, 151 ff., 227
7535
Siberian, 146, 227
7536
South Manchurian, 124, 125, 126
7537
Tientsin-Pukow, 227
7538
Reid, Rev. Gilbert, 134 n., 139 n. 142
7539
Reinsch, 134 n., 135, 136
7540
Restoration in Japan, 87, 97 8.
7541
Revolution of 1911, 30, 65 ff.
7542
and Japan, 128 ff.
7543
Rockefeller Hospital, 218
7544
Rome, 27, 51
7545
Roosevelt, 108
7546
Rousseau, 42
7547
Russia, 15, 18-20, 29, 53, 108, 119, 127, 146 ff., 175 ff.
7548
war with Japan, 108,123, 130
7549
secret treaty with Japan, 136
7550
and Shantung, 138-9
7551
7552
Salt tax, 59, 60
7553
_San Felipe_, 93
7554
Sato, Admiral, 172
7555
Satsuma, 94, 99, 101, 102, 106
7556
Science, 51, 80, 81, 186, 193
7557
Shank, Mr., 69
7558
Shantung, 53, 127, 131 ff., 178
7559
secret treaties concerning, 137
7560
in Versailles Treaty, 144
7561
and Washington Conference, 145, 151 ff.
7562
Shaw, Bernard, 160
7563
Sherfesee, 80
7564
Shih Huang Ti, _See_ Emperor, "First"
7565
Shi-King, 25
7566
Shinto, 87 ff., 103, 105, 169
7567
Shogun, The, 90, 99 ff.
7568
Shu-King, 21, 22 n., 25
7569
Simpson, Lennox. _See_ Putnam Weale
7570
Socialism, 64, 181 ff.
7571
State, 180, 246
7572
in Japan, 114, 170
7573
in China, 222, 236
7574
Soyeda, 144 n.
7575
Spaniards in Japan, 93
7576
Student Movement, 223, 243
7577
Students--
7578
returned, 17, 193, 219
7579
statistics of, 220 n.
7580
Summer Palace, 52
7581
Sung dynasty, 30, 45
7582
Sun Yat Sen, 65, 68, 128, 140, 253-6
7583
Supreme Ruler. _See_ Heaven
7584
7585
Taiping Rebellion, 32, 56, 65
7586
Tai-tsung, 28 n.
7587
Tang dynasty, 28, 44
7588
Taochung iron mine, 234
7589
Taoism, 43, 187 ff.
7590
Tartars, 27, 31
7591
Tayeh mines, 231 n., 232-3
7592
Teachers' strike, 206, 225
7593
Tenny, Raymond P., 33
7594
Tibet, 31, 43
7595
Ting, Mr. V.K., 73 n.
7596
Tokugawa, 99
7597
Tong, Hollington K., 143 n., 204 n.
7598
Trade Unionism, 180-1
7599
in Japan, 114-5
7600
Treaty Ports, 74
7601
Tsing-hua College, 217
7602
Tsing-tau, 131, 151
7603
Tuan Chih-jui, 140 ff.
7604
Tuangkuan Shan mines, 233
7605
Tuchuns, 61, 67, 71, 76, 203, 206
7606
Twenty-one Demands, 131 ff., 233, 234
7607
Tyau, M.T.Z., 144 n., 215, 220 n., 223, 226 n., 230, 235
7608
7609
United States. _See_ America.
7610
7611
Versailles Treaty, 53, 142, 144,151
7612
Vladivostok, 146, 154
7613
Volga, 18
7614
Voltaire, 221
7615
7616
Waley, 84, 195
7617
War, Great, idealistic aims of, 141 ff.
7618
Washington Conference, 16, 55 n., 61, 63, 127, 145, 149 ff., 178
7619
Wei-hai-wei, 54, 149
7620
White men, virtues of, 121
7621
William II., 122
7622
Wilson, President, 140, 142
7623
Women, position of, in China, 223-4
7624
Woosung College, 239
7625
Wu-Pei-Fu, 42, 60, 68, 71, 242, 253-3
7626
7627
Yamagata, Prince, 115 n.
7628
Yangtze, 52, 132
7629
Yao and Shun, 21, 22
7630
Yellow River, 21, 187
7631
Y.M.C.A., 82, 83, 222
7632
Young China, 26, 61, 77 ff., 144, 145, 167, 193, 247, 250
7633
Y�, 22
7634
Yuan Shi-k'ai, 65 ff., 129, 135
7635
7636
7637
7638
7639
7640
7641
7642
7643
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