CHINA AND THE MANCHUSX
KUANG HSÜ
In 1875 the Emperor T`ung Chih died of smallpox, and with his death the malign
influence of his mother comes more freely into play. The young Empress was
about to become a mother; and had she borne a son, her position as mother of
the baby Emperor would have been of paramount importance, while the
grandmother, the older Empress Dowager, would have been relegated to a
subordinate status. Consequently,—it may now be said,
having regard to subsequent happenings,—the death of the Empress followed that
of her husband at an indecently short interval, for no particular reason of
health; and the old Empress Dowager became supreme. In order to ensure her
supremacy, she had previously, on the very day of the Emperor's death, caused the succession to be allotted, in utter violation of established
custom, to a first cousin, making him heir to the Emperor Hsien Fêng, instead of naming one of a lower generation who, as
heir to T`ung Chih, would
have been qualified to sacrifice to the spirit of his adopted father. Thus, the
late Emperor was left without a son, and his spirit without a ministrant at ancestral
worship, the only consolation being that when a son should be born to the new
Emperor (aged four), that child was to become son by adoption to his late
Majesty, T`ung Chih.
Remonstrances, even from Manchus, were soon heard on all sides; but to these
the Empress Dowager paid no attention until four years afterwards (1879), on
the occasion of the deferred funeral of the late Emperor, when a censor, named
Wu K`o-tu, committed suicide at the mausoleum,
leaving behind him a memorial in which he strongly condemned the action of the
two Empresses Dowager, still regarded officially as joint regents, and called
for a re-arrangement of the succession, under which the late Emperor would be
duly provided with an heir. Nothing, however, came of this sacrifice, except
promises, until 1900. A son of Prince Tuan, within a few months to espouse the
Boxer cause, was then made heir to his late Majesty, as required; but at the
beginning of 1901, this appointment was cancelled and the spirit of the Emperor T`ung Chih was left once
more unprovided for in the ancestral temple. The first cousin in question, who
reigned as Kuang Hsü (=
brilliant succession), was not even the next heir in his own generation; but he
was a child of four, and that suited the plans of the Empress Dowager, who,
having appointed herself Regent, now entered openly upon the career for which
she will be remembered in history. What she would have done if the Empress had
escaped and given birth to a son, can only be a matter of conjecture.
In 1876 the first resident Envoy ever sent by China to
Great Britain, or to any other nation, was accredited to the Court of St
James's. Kuo Sung-tao, who
was chosen for the post, was a fine scholar; he made several attempts on the
score of health to avoid what then seemed to all Chinese officials—no Manchu
would have been sent—to be a dangerous and unpleasant duty,
but was ultimately obliged to succeed. It was he who, on his departure
in 1879, said to Lord Salisbury that he liked everything about the English very
much, except their shocking immorality.
The question of railways for China had long been
simmering in the minds of enterprising foreigners; but it was out of the
question to think that the Government would allow land to be sold for such a
purpose; therefore there would be no sellers. In 1876
a private company succeeded in obtaining the necessary land by buying up
connecting strips between Shanghai and Woosung at the mouth of the river, about
eight miles in all. The company then proceeded to lay down a miniature railway,
which was an object of much interest to the native, whose amusement soon took
the form of a trip there and back. Political influence was then brought to
bear, and the whole thing was purchased by the Government; the rails were torn
up and sent to Formosa, where they were left to rot upon the sea-beach.
The suppression of rebellion in Turkestan and Yünnan has already been mentioned; also the retrocession of Kuldja, which brings us down to
the year 1881, when the Eastern Empress died. Death must have been more or less a relief to this colourless personage, who
had been entirely superseded on a stage on which by rights she should have
played the leading part, and who had been terrorized during her last years by
her more masterful colleague.
In 1882 there were difficulties with France over Tongking; these, however, were adjusted, and in 1884 a
convention was signed by Captain Fournier and Li Hung-chang.
A further dispute then arose as to a breach of the convention by the Chinese,
and an état de représailles followed, during which the French destroyed the Chinese fleet. After the peace which was arranged in 1885, a few years of comparative
tranquillity ensued; the Emperor was married (1889), and relieved his aunt of
her duties as Regent.
Japan, in earlier centuries contemptuously styled the
Dwarf-nation, and always despised as a mere imitator and brain-picker of
Chinese wisdom, now swims definitively into the ken of the Manchu court. The
Formosan imbroglio had been forgotten as soon as it was over, and the recent
rapid progress of Japan on Western lines towards national strength had been
ignored by all Manchu statesmen, each of whom lived in hope that the deluge
would not come in his own time. So far back as 1885, in consequence of serious
troubles involving much bloodshed, the two countries had agreed that neither
should send troops to Korea without due notification to the other. Now, in
1894, China violated this contract by dispatching troops, at the request of the
king of Korea, whose throne was threatened by a serious rebellion, without
sufficient warning to Japan, and further, by keeping a body of these troops at
the Korean capital even when the rebellion was at an end. A disastrous war
ensued. The Japanese were victorious on land and sea; the Chinese fleet was
destroyed; Port Arthur was taken; and finally, after surrendering Wei-hai-wei (1895), to which he had
retired with the remnant of his fleet, Admiral Ting, well known as "a
gallant sailor and true gentleman," committed suicide together with four
of his captains. Li Hung-chang was then sent to Japan
to sue for peace, and while there he was shot in the cheek by a fanatical
member of the Soshi class. This act brought him much
sympathy—he was then seventy-two years old; and in the treaty of Shimonoseki,
which he negotiated, better terms perhaps were obtained than would otherwise
have been the case. The terms granted included the independence of Korea, for
centuries a tribute-paying vassal of China, and the cession of the island of
Formosa. Japan had occupied the peninsula on which stands the impregnable
fortress of Port Arthur, and had captured the latter
in a few hours; but she was not to be allowed to keep them. A coalition of
European powers, Russia, Germany, and France—England refused to join—decided
that it would never do to let Japan possess Port Arthur, and forced her to accept a money payment instead. So it
was restored to China—for the moment; and at the same time a republic was
declared in Formosa; but of this the Japanese made short work.
[I once read the memoirs of a Japanese foreign
minister from this period. He didn't think much of most of the Chinese
diplomats, whom he considered completely untrustworthy.—JB.]
The following year was marked by an unusual display of
initiative on the part of the Emperor, who now ordered
the introduction of railways; but in 1897 complications with foreign powers
rather gave a check to these aspirations. Two German Catholic priests were
murdered, and as a punitive measure Germany seized Kiaochow in Shantung; while in 1898 Russia "leased" Port Arthur, and as a
counterblast, England thought it advisable to "lease" Wei-hai-wai. So soon as the Manchu
court had recovered from the shock of these events, and had resumed its normal
state of torpor, it was rudely shaken from within by a series of edicts which
peremptorily commanded certain reforms of a most far-reaching description. For
instance, the great public examinations, which had been conducted on much the
same system for seven or eight centuries past, were to be modified by the introduction
of subjects suggested by recent intercourse with Western nations. There was to
be a university in Peking, and the temples, which cover the empire in all
directions, were to be closed to religious services and opened for educational
purposes. The Manchus, indeed, have never shown any signs of a religious
temperament. There had not been, under the dynasty in question, any such wave
of devotional fervour as was experienced under more than one previous dynasty.
Neither the dreams of Buddhism, nor the promises of immortality held out by the
Taoists, seem to have influenced in a religious, as opposed to a superstitious
sense, the rather Boeotian mind of the Manchu. The learned emperors of the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries accepted Confucianism as sufficient for
every-day humanity, and did all in their power to
preserve it as a quasi-State religion. Thus, Buddhism was not favoured at the
expense of Taoism, nor vice versa; Mahometanism was
tolerated so long as there was no suspicion of disloyalty; Christianity, on the
other hand, was bitterly opposed, being genuinely regarded for a long time as a
cloak for territorial aggression.
To return to the reforms. Young Manchus of noble
family were to be sent abroad for an education on wider lines than it was
possible to obtain at home. This last was in every way a desirable measure. No
Manchu had ever visited the West; all the officials previously sent to foreign
countries had been Chinese. But other proposed changes were not of equal value.
At the back of this reform movement was a small band
of earnest men who suffered from too much zeal, which led to premature action.
A plot was conceived, under which the Empress Dowager was to be arrested and
imprisoned; but this was betrayed by Yüan Shih-k`ai, and she turned the tables by suddenly arresting and
imprisoning the Emperor, and promptly decapitating all
the conspirators, with the exception of K`ang Yu-wei, who succeeded in escaping. He had been the moving
spirit of the abortive revolution; he was a fine scholar, and had completely gained the ear of the Emperor. The latter became henceforth to
the end of his life a person of no importance, while China, for the third time
in history, passed under the dominion of a woman. There was no secret about it;
the Empress Dowager, popularly known as the Old Buddha, had succeeded in
terrorizing every one who
came in contact with her, and her word was law. It was said of one of the
Imperial princes that he was "horribly afraid of her Majesty, and that
when she spoke to him he was on tenter-hooks,
as though thorns pricked him, and the sweat ran down his face."
All promise of reform now disappeared from the
Imperial programme, and the recent edicts, which had raised premature hope in
this direction, were annulled; the old régime was to
prevail once more. The weakness of this policy was emphasized in the following
year (1899), when England removed from Japan the stigma of extra-territorial
jurisdiction, by which act British defendants, in civil and criminal cases
alike, now became amenable to Japanese tribunals. Japan had set herself to work
to frame a code, and had trained lawyers for the
administration of justice; China had done nothing, content that on her own
territory foreigners and their lawsuits, as above, should be tried by foreign
Consuls. One curious edict of this date had for its object the conferment of duly
graded civil rank, the right to salutes at official visits, and similar
ceremonial privileges, upon Roman Catholic archbishops, bishops, and priests of
the missionary body in China. The Catholic view was that the missionaries would
gain in the eyes of the people if treated with more deference than the majority of Chinese officials cared to display towards
what was to them an objectionable class; in practice, however, the system was
found to be unworkable, and was ultimately given up.
The autumn of this year witnessed the beginning of the
so-called Boxer troubles. There was great unrest, especially in Shantung, due,
it was said, to ill-feeling between the people at large and converts to
Christianity, and at any rate aggravated by recent foreign acquisitions of
Chinese territory. It was thus that what was originally one of the periodical
anti-dynastic risings, with the usual scion of the Ming dynasty as figure-head, lost sight of its objective and became a
bloodthirsty anti-foreign outbreak. The story of the siege of the Legations has
been written from many points of view; and most people know all they want to
know of the two summer months in 1900, the merciless bombardment of a thousand
foreigners, with their women and children, cooped up in a narrow space, and also of the awful butchery of missionaries, men, women,
and children alike, which took place at the capital of Shansi. Whatever may
have been the origin of the movement, there can be little doubt that it was
taken over by the Manchus, with the complicity of the Empress Dowager, as a
means of getting rid of all the foreigners in China. Considering the
extraordinary position the Empress Dowager had created
for herself, it is impossible to believe that she would not have been able to
put an end to the siege by a word, or even by a mere gesture. She did not do
so; and on the relief of the Legations, for a second time in her life—she had
accompanied Hsien Fêng to Jehol in 1860—she sought safety in an ignominious flight. Meanwhile, in response to a
memorial from the Governor of Shansi, she had sent him a secret decree, saying,
"Slay all foreigners wheresoever you find them; even though they be
prepared to leave your province, yet they must be slain." A second and
more urgent decree said, "I command that all foreigners, men, women, and
children, be summarily executed. Let not one escape, so that my empire may be
purged of this noisome source of corruption, and that peace may be restored to
my loyal subjects." The first of these decrees had been circulated to all
the high provincial officials, and the result might well have been an
indiscriminate slaughter of foreigners all over China, but for the action of
two Chinese officials, who had already incurred the displeasure of the Empress
Dowager by memorializing against the Boxer policy. These men secretly changed
the word "slay" into "protect," and this is the sense in
which the decree was acted upon by provincial officials generally, with the exception of the Governor of Shansi, who sent a
second memorial, eliciting the second decree as above. It is impossible to say
how many foreigners owe their lives to this alteration of a word, and the
Empress Dowager herself would scarcely have escaped so easily as she did, had
her cruel order been more fully executed. The trick was soon discovered, and
the two heroes, Yüan Ch`ang and Hsü Ching-ch`êng, were
both summarily beheaded, even though it was to the former that the Empress
Dowager was indebted for information which enabled her to frustrate the plot
against her life in 1898.
Now, at the very moment of departure, she perpetrated
a most brutal crime. A favourite concubine of the Emperor's,
who had previously given cause for offence, urged that his Majesty should not
take part in the flight, but should remain in Peking. For this suggestion the
Empress Dowager caused the miserable girl to be thrown down a well, in spite of
the supplications of the Emperor on her behalf. Then
she fled, ultimately to Hsi-an Fu, the capital of Shensi, and for a year and a half Peking was rid of her
presence. In 1902, she came back with the Emperor,
whose prerogative she still managed to usurp. She declared at once for reform, and took up the cause with much show of enthusiasm;
but those who knew the Manchu best, decided to "wait and see." She
began by suggesting intermarriage between Manchus and Chinese, which had so far
been prohibited, and advised Chinese women to give up the practice of footbinding, a custom which the ruling race had never
adopted. It was henceforth to be lawful for Manchus, even of the Imperial
family, to send their sons abroad to be educated,—a
step which no Manchu would be likely to take unless forcibly coerced into doing
so. Any spirit of enterprise which might have been possessed by the founders of
the dynasty had long since evaporated, and all that Manchu nobles asked was to
be allowed to batten in peace upon the Chinese people.
The direct issue of the emperors of the present
dynasty and of their descendants in the male line, dating from 1616, are
popularly known as Yellow Girdles, from a sash of that colour which they
habitually wear. Each generation becomes a degree lower in rank, until they are
mere members of the family with no rank whatever, although they still wear the
girdle and receive a trifling allowance from the government. Thus, beggars and
even thieves are occasionally seen with this badge of relationship to the
throne. Members of the collateral branches of the Imperial family wear a red
girdle, and are known as Gioros, Gioro being part of the surname—Aisin Gioro = Golden
Race—of an early progenitor of the Manchu emperors.
As a next step in reform, the examination system was
to be remodelled, but not in the one sense in which it would have appealed most
to the Chinese people. Examinations for Manchus have always been held
separately, and the standard attained has always been very far below that
reached by Chinese candidates, so that the scholarship of the Manchu became
long ago a by-word and a joke. Now, in 1904, it was settled that entry to an
official career should be obtainable only through the modern educational
colleges; but this again applied only to Chinese and not to Manchus. The
Manchus have always had wisdom enough to employ the best abilities they could
discover by process of examination among the Chinese, many of whom have risen
from the lowest estate to the highest positions in the empire,
and have proved themselves valuable servants and staunch upholders of
the dynasty. Still, in addition to numerous other posts, it may be said that
all the fat sinecures have always been the portion of Manchus. For instance,
the office of Hoppo, or superintendent of customs at
Canton (abolished 1904), was a position which was allowed to generate into a
mere opportunity for piling a large fortune in the shortest possible time, no particular ability being required from the holder of the
post, who was always a Manchu.
Then followed a mission to Europe, at the head of
which we now find a Manchu of high rank, an Imperial Duke, sent to study the
mysteries of constitutional government, which was henceforth promised to the
people, so soon as its introduction might be practicable. In
the midst of these attractive promises (1904-5) came the Russo-Japanese
war, with all its surprises. Among other causes to which the Manchu court
ascribed the success of the Japanese, freedom from the opium vice took high
rank, and this led to really serious enactments
against the growth and consumption of opium in China. Continuous and strenuous
efforts of philanthropists during the preceding half century had not produced
any results at all; but now it seemed as though this weakness had been all
along the chief reason for China's failures in her struggles with the
barbarian, and it was to be incontinently stamped out. Ten years' grace was
allowed, at the end of which period there was to be no more opium-smoking in
the empire. One awkward feature was that the Empress Dowager herself was an
opium-smoker; the difficulty, however, was got over by excluding from the
application of the edict of 1906 persons over sixty years of age. Whatever may
be thought of the wisdom of this policy, which so far has chiefly resulted in
the substitution of morphia, cocaine, and alcohol, the thoroughness and
rapidity with which it has been carried out, can only command the admiration of
all; of those most who know China best.
XI
HSÜAN T`UNG
|