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 CHINA AND THE MANCHUSXII
                 SUN YAT-SEN
                 
             On January 1, 1912, Sun Yat-sen entered the republican capital, Nanking, and received a salute of twenty-one
            guns. He assumed the presidency of the provisional government, swearing
            allegiance, and taking an oath to dethrone the Manchus, restore peace, and
            establish a government based upon the people's will. These objects
            accomplished, he was prepared to resign his office, thus enabling the people to
            elect a president of a united China. The first act of the provisional
            government was to proclaim a new calendar forthwith, January 1 becoming the New
            Year's Day of the republic.
             On January 5 was issued the following republican manifesto:—
             
             "To all friendly nations,—Greeting.
            Hitherto irremediable suppression of the individual qualities and the national
            aspirations of the people having arrested the intellectual, moral, and material
            development of China, the aid of revolution was invoked to extirpate the primary
            cause. We now proclaim the consequent overthrow of the despotic sway of the
            Manchu dynasty, and the establishment of a republic. The substitution of a
            republic for a monarchy is not the fruit of transient passion, but the natural
            outcome of a long-cherished desire for freedom, contentment, and advancement.
            We Chinese people, peaceful and law-abiding, have not waged war except in
            self-defence. We have borne our grievance for two hundred and sixty-seven years
            with patience and forbearance. We have endeavoured by peaceful means to redress
            our wrongs, secure liberty, and ensure progress; but we failed. Oppressed
            beyond human endurance, we deemed it our inalienable right, as well as a sacred
            duty, to appeal to arms to deliver ourselves and our posterity from the yoke to
            which we have for so long been subjected. For the first time in history an
            inglorious bondage is transformed into inspiring freedom. The policy of the
            Manchus has been one of unequivocal seclusion and unyielding tyranny. Beneath
            it we have bitterly suffered. Now we submit to the free peoples of the world
            the reasons justifying the revolution and the inauguration of the present
            government. Prior to the usurpation of the throne by the Manchus the land was
            open to foreign intercourse, and religious tolerance existed, as is shown by
            the writings of Marco Polo and the inscription on the Nestorian tablet at Hsi-an Fu. Dominated by ignorance
            and selfishness, the Manchus closed the land to the outer world, and plunged
            the Chinese into a state of benighted mentality calculated to operate inversely
            to their natural talents, thus committing a crime against humanity and the
            civilized nations which it is almost impossible to extirpate. Actuated by a
            desire for the perpetual subjugation of the Chinese, and a vicious craving for
            aggrandizement and wealth, the Manchus have governed the country to the lasting
            injury and detriment of the people, creating privileges and monopolies,
            erecting about themselves barriers of exclusion, national custom, and personal
            conduct, which have been rigorously maintained for centuries. They have levied
            irregular and hurtful taxes without the consent of the people,
              and have restricted foreign trade to treaty ports. They have placed the
            likin embargo on merchandise, obstructed internal commerce, retarded the
            creation of industrial enterprises, rendered impossible the development of
            natural resources, denied a regular system of impartial administration of
            justice, and inflicted cruel punishment on persons charged with offences,
            whether innocent or guilty. They have connived at official corruption, sold
            offices to the highest bidder, subordinated merit to influence, rejected the
            most reasonable demands for better government, and reluctantly conceded
            so-called reforms under the most urgent pressure, promising without any
            intention of fulfilling. They have failed to appreciate the anguish-causing
            lessons taught them by foreign Powers, and in process of years have brought
            themselves and our people beneath the contempt of the world. A remedy of these
            evils will render possible the entrance of China into the family of nations. We
            have fought and have formed a government. Lest our good intentions should be
            misunderstood, we publicly and unreservedly declare the following to be our promises:—
             "The treaties entered into by the Manchus before
            the date of the revolution, will be continually effective to the time of their
            termination. Any and all treaties entered into after
            the commencement of the revolution will be repudiated. Foreign loans and indemnities
            incurred by the Manchus before the revolution will be acknowledged. Payments
            made by loans incurred by the Manchus after its commencement will be
            repudiated. Concessions granted to nations and their nationals before the
            revolution will be respected. Any and all granted
            after it will be repudiated. The persons and property of foreign nationals
            within the jurisdiction of the republic will be respected and protected. It
            will be our constant aim and firm endeavour to build on a stable and enduring
            foundation a national structure compatible with the potentialities of our
            long-neglected country. We shall strive to elevate the people to secure peace
            and to legislate for prosperity. Manchus who abide peacefully in the limits of
            our jurisdiction will be accorded equality, and given
            protection.
             "We will remodel the laws, revise the civil,
            criminal, commercial, and mining codes, reform the finances, abolish
            restrictions on trade and commerce, and ensure religious toleration and the
            cultivation of better relations with foreign peoples and governments than have
            ever been maintained before. It is our earnest hope that those foreign
            nationals who have been steadfast in their sympathy will bind more firmly the
            bonds of friendship between us, and will bear in
            patience with us the period of trial confronting us and our reconstruction
            work, and will aid the consummation of the far-reaching plans, which we are
            about to undertake, and which they have long vainly been urging upon our people
            and our country.
             "With this message of peace and good-will the
            republic cherishes the hope of being admitted into the
            family of nations, not merely to share its rights and privileges, but to cooperate
            in the great and noble task of building up the civilization of the world.
             "Sun Yat-sen,
            President."
             
             The next step was to displace the three-cornered
            Dragon flag, itself of quite modern origin, in favour of a new republican
            emblem. For this purpose was designed a flag of five stripes,—yellow,
            red, blue, white, black,—arranged at right angles to the flagstaff in the above
            order, and intended to represent the five races—Chinese, Manchus, Mongols,
            Tibetan, Mussulmans—gathered together under one rule.
             On February 12, three important edicts were issued. In
            the first, the baby-emperor renounces the throne, and approves the
            establishment of a provisional republican government, under the direction of Yüan Shih-k`ai, in conjunction
            with the existing provisional government at Nanking. In the second, approval is
            given to the terms under which the emperor retires, the chief item of which was
            an annual grant of four million taels. Other more sentimental privileges
            included the retention of a bodyguard, and the continuance of sacrifices to the
            spirits of the departed Manchu emperors. In the third, the people are exhorted
            to preserve order and abide by the Imperial will regarding the new form of
            government.
             Simultaneously with the publication of these edicts,
            the last scene of the drama was enacted near Nanking, at the mausoleum of the first
            sovereign of the Ming dynasty (A.D. 1368-1644). Sun Yat-sen,
            as provisional first president, accompanied by his Cabinet and a numerous
            escort, proceeded thither, and after offering sacrifice as usual, addressed,
            though a secretary, the following oration to the tablet representing the names
            of that great hero:—
             "Of old the Sung dynasty became effete, and the Kitan Tartars and Yüan dynasty
            Mongols seized the occasion to throw this domain of China into confusion, to
            the fierce indignation of gods and men. It was then that your Majesty, our
            founder, arose in your wrath from obscurity, and destroyed those monsters of
            iniquity, so that the ancient glory was won again. In twelve years you consolidated the Imperial sway, and the dominions of the Great Yü were purged of pollution and cleansed from the noisome
            Tartar. Often in history has our noble Chinese race been enslaved by petty
            frontier barbarians from the north. Never have such glorious triumphs been won
            over them as your Majesty achieved. But your descendants were degenerate, and failed to carry on your glorious heritage;
            they entrusted the reins of government to bad men, and pursued a short-sighted
            policy. In this way they encouraged the ambitions of the eastern Tartar savages
            (Manchus), and fostered the growth of their power.
            They were thus able to take advantage of the presence of rebels to invade and
            possess themselves of your sacred capital. From a bad eminence of glory basely
            won, they lorded it over this most holy soil, and our beloved China's rivers
            and hills were defiled by their corrupting touch, while the people fell victims
            to the headman's axe or the avenging sword. Although worthy patriots and
            faithful subjects of your dynasty crossed the mountain ranges into Canton and
            the far south, in the hope of redeeming the glorious Ming tradition from utter
            ruin, and of prolonging a thread of the old dynasty's life, although men gladly
            perished one after the other in the forlorn attempt, heaven's wrath remained
            unappeased, and mortal designs failed to achieve success. A brief and
            melancholy page was added to the history of your dynasty, and that was all.
             "As time went on, the law became ever harsher,
            and the meshes of its inexorable net grew closer. Alas for our Chinese people,
            who crouched in corners and listened with startled ears, deprived of power of
            utterance, and with tongues glued to their mouths, for their lives were past
            saving. Those others usurped titles to fictitious clemency and justice, while
            prostituting the sacred doctrines of the sages: whom they affected to honour.
            They stifled public opinion in the empire in order to force acquiescence in their tyranny. The Manchu despotism became so thorough
            and so embracing that they were enabled to prolong their dynasty's existence by
            cunning wiles. In Yung Chêng's reign the Hunanese Chang Hsi and Tsêng Ching preached sedition against the dynasty in their
            native province, while in Chia Ch`ing's reign the palace conspiracy of Lin
            Ching dismayed that monarch in his capital. These events were followed by
            rebellions in Ss{u}-ch`uan and Shensi; under Tao Kuang and his successor the T`ai-p`ings started their campaign from a remote Kuangsi village.
            Although these worthy causes were destined to ultimate defeat, the gradual
            trend of the national will became manifest. At last our own era dawned, the sun of freedom had risen, and a sense of the rights of
            the race animated men's minds. In addition the Manchu
            bandits could not even protect themselves. Powerful foes encroached upon the
            territory of China, and the dynasty parted with our sacred soil to enrich
            neighbouring nations. The Chinese race of today may be degenerate, but it is
            descended from mighty men of old. How should it endure that the spirits of the
            great dead should be insulted by the everlasting visitation of this scourge?
             "Then did patriots arise like a whirlwind, or
            like a cloud which is suddenly manifested in the firmament. They began with the
            Canton insurrection; then Peking was alarmed by Wu Yüeh's bomb (1905). A year later Hsü Hsi-lin fired his bullet into the vitals of the Manchu robber-chief, En Ming, Governor of Anhui. Hsiung Chêng-chi raised the standard of liberty on the Yang-tsze's banks; rising followed rising all over the empire,
            until the secret plot against the Regent was discovered, and the abortive
            insurrection in Canton startled the capital. One failure followed another, but
            other brave men took the place of the heroes who died, and the empire was born
            again to life. The bandit Manchu court was shaken with pallid terror, until the
            cicada threw off its shell in a glorious regeneration, and the present crowning
            triumph was achieved. The patriotic crusade started in Wu-ch`ang;
            the four corners of the empire responded to the call. Coast regions nobly
            followed in their wake, and the Yang-tsze was won
            back by our armies. The region south of the Yellow River was lost to the
            Manchus, and the north manifested its sympathy with our cause. An earthquake
            shook the barbarian court of Peking, and it was smitten with a paralysis. Today
            it has at last restored the government to the Chinese people, and the five
            races of China may dwell together in peace and mutual trust. Let us joyfully
            give thanks. How could we have attained this measure of victory had not your
            Majesty's soul in heaven bestowed upon us your protecting influence? I have
            heard say that the triumphs of Tartar savages over our China were destined
            never to last longer than a hundred years. But the reign of these Manchus
            endured unto double, ay, unto treble, that period. Yet Providence knows the
            appointed hour, and the moment comes at last. We are initiating the example to
            Eastern Asia of a republican form of government; success comes early or late to
            those who strive, but the good are surely rewarded in the end. Why then should
            we repine today that victory has tarried long?
             "I have heard that in the past many would-be
            deliverers of their country have ascended this lofty mound wherein is your
            sepulchre. It has served to them as a holy inspiration. As they looked down
            upon the surrounding rivers and upward to the hills, under an alien sway, they
            wept in the bitterness of their hearts, but today their sorrow is turned into
            joy. The spiritual influences of your grave at Nanking have come once more into
            their own. The dragon crouches in majesty as of old, and the tiger surveys his
            domain and his ancient capital. Everywhere a beautiful repose doth reign. Your
            legions line the approaches to the sepulchre; a noble host stands expectant.
            Your people have come here today to inform your Majesty of the final victory.
            May this lofty shrine wherein you rest gain fresh lustre from today's event,
            and may your example inspire your descendants in the times which are to come.
            Spirit! Accept this offering!"
             We are told by an eyewitness, Dr Lim Boon-keng, that when this ceremony was over, Sun Yat-sen turned to address the assembly. "He was
            speechless with emotion for a minute; then he briefly declared how, after two
            hundred and sixty years, the nation had again recovered her freedom; and now
            that the curse of Manchu domination was removed, the free peoples of a united
            republic could pursue their rightful aspirations. Three cheers for the
            president were now called for, and the appeal was responded to vigorously. The
            cheering was taken up by the crowds below, and then carried miles away by the thousands
            of troops, to mingle with the booming of distant guns."
             
             
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