SIR ROBERT HART went home — nominally on leave; but we
knew we had seen the last of our great chief. Mr. Bredon, the
Deputy I.G., was passed over for succession; and so was
Mr. A. E. Hippisley, an expected appointee; and in 1910
Mr. F. A. Aglen got the acting post and was afterwards confirmed. I happened to be in Peking a few days after his
appointment, and he secured at once my loyalty by his modesty
and earnestness about it.
It was shortly after this that the Shanghai conservancy affair
occurred, and my diary shows that a year later I visited Peking
and found — to quote it — ' Conservancy matters have been referred to I.G. very opportunely, for he has made arrangements
for me to see Alfred Sze (an official of the Foreign Office) and
has given me a free hand.' I must have given the Government
people satisfaction in this affair, for when I left by train for
Hankow I found a private car — with cooks and servants and
food and wine — had been placed at my disposal; and there
was another and rather embarrassing attention that was accorded me. In those days the Peking-Hankow train did not
run at night, and, when we arrived at the stoppage, I found a
deputation of French engineers it was a French-built line —
on the platform, and I was told that they had been instructed to
entertain me; so would I come at once to dinner. And when
I went I found the engineers had wives — young and charming
— but none of the party could speak a word of English, and I,
though half French, knew very little of the language.(1)
1 — To counteract the supposed disadvantage of our mother being French,
she was not allowed to teach us her language. It was supposed it would
make us frenchified. But it was not only on our side that this national
prejudice existed. When my sister was to be married to an English General
my mother's brother, a French General, was invited to the ceremony. He
replied quite seriously: 'What, come to la perfide Albion? Never, unless
it is to conquer ! ' I am glad that later we became great friends, and that
he visited our country peaceably.
So there was an awkward situation. From their point of view I
must be a very important person to have been given a private
car and to have entertainment ordered for me; so they were
stiff, formal and watchful — the latter very disconcerting to one
not accustomed to be important — and there was not a smile
upon their lips. Positively something had to be done to relieve
the situation, so as best I could I told them of my mother, of
my regrets that I could not speak her lovely language, and how
all that I had learnt from her were terms of endearment. I
paused; and then from one of those young wives, Monsieur,
s'il vous plait, ne voulez-vous pas commencer? ' I had just
enough of them to go the round; it broke the ice, and in our
struggle at mutual understanding we became a very merry party.
A few weeks later I was called to Peking again. The
Waichiaopu — the Foreign Office — wished to consult me further
about conservancy affairs. I was in the middle of most interesting conversations — Waichiaopu, Sir John Jordan, and the
Inspector-General — and I was the leader in them, when I got
a cable from my wife, who had gone home some weeks before,
that our son — he was four years old and a sturdy boy — had died.
I dropped everything and started home next day across Siberia;
and the coming into effect of my conservancy scheme of 1901
was delayed for another year or two. Before I left, Sir John
Jordan wished me to tell him the results to date of my discussions with the Waichiaopu; but I had given my word that
they would not be so repeated. My wish to break my word
was very strong, not only on account of the British Minister's
desire but for the benefit of the situation.(2) Right or wrong, I
stuck to it against the general interest. I was not backward in
unscrupulousness of another kind when circumstances called
for it. When I was an apprentice in a sailing ship I stole — at
a very real risk — a quantity of stores in the interests of justice
and once — as will be told later — I misappropriated a very large
sum of money for the general good; but one's word is an
affair which touches one's honour more closely than any other.
2 — Here is a charming letter that Sir John sent me the day before I left: —
'Pray do not forget to let me have a copy of that paper before you leave,
as otherwise I shall be lost. I cannot thank you sufficiently for your goodness and self-denial in giving us the benefit of your assistance in such trying
circumstances, and I regret keenly that we are no longer to have your
knowledge and great experience to guide us.'
I was only a month in England, but I took advantage of it
to study chart production; and when I returned I arranged
with a Chinese publisher to install a camera for the purpose.
It had to have a special building; it ran on rails; it took a
plate of about four foot six by three; and its lens alone cost
£400. It was one of two or three of the best outfits for the
purpose in the world; and so we started chart work, of course
with the Inspectorate's permission.
I returned to China just as the revolution against the dynasty
had begun. That was in October 1911. It was not an
organized affair. Sun Yat-sen, the protagonist — from a distance — of revolution, had nothing to do with it. It was just
an accidental mutiny which developed into revolution because
every one was ripe for it. The general discontent had spread
and grown. The Empress Dowager got scared and in 1906
promised constitutional government, and then in 1908 she died,
having first proclaimed a three-year-old successor and a Regent
and having presumably arranged for the killing of Kwanghsii,
the imprisoned Emperor. Under the Regency things went from
bad to worse. It ordered Yuan Shih-kai — the one strong man
— to resign his offices and did everything it should not.
A sidelight on the situation is contained in a letter which I
wrote in 1907 to Lady Lugard — her husband was then Governor
of Hongkong: — ` I believe the question occupying the minds
of the high Chinese officials is that of declaring an heir to the
throne. The Empress Dowager is almost beyond work, and
the ease with which she is swayed one way or the other is the
cause of the present unstable condition of affairs. If a suitable
descendant of one of the Chinese dynasties could be found, a
strong effort would be made to nominate him. Such descendants can be found but only among peasants and small farmers —
so any move in that direction is now considered unlikely. I
think that almost certainly a young Manchu will be selected —
a mere child — and then a Regency of Chinese and Manchus
appointed. . . . There is a fairly strong opinion among diplomatic people that there must be a revolution — that blood must
be shed — before a thorough change in China's government
methods be effected. All history, I suppose, points to the
likelihood of this; but the history from which that is learnt
is not Chinese history. For myself I believe in the greater
likelihood of a bloodless revolution.'
With the outbreak of the revolution the Regency recalled
Yuan Shih-kai and placed the matter of suppressing it on him.
So he took his armies South and beat the rebels, and having
done so joined them and became their leader, persuaded
the Manchus to abdicate, and became the first President
of the so-called Republic. Had the old Buddha been alive,
he would have been loyal to her; but he owed nothing to
the Regency. Like others, he knew that the country was
ripe for revolution, and he learnt that Western sympathy was
with it — a quite important factor. It is improbable he held
that view when he took the commission from the Regency
but it grew, I think, as affairs developed. For many years he
had been a leader, and he knew that there was none other in
the field worthy of that name; but he must have seen that to
lead on behalf of that rotten Regency offered no chances of
success, so he made a volte-face and said to the rebels, I
myself will be your leader.'
Sun Yat-sen came from America before Yuan had declared
himself; they made him Provisional President, and doubtless
he thought it was he who had engineered the revolution. A
curious character: hopelessly impractical in all he did; unintelligible in what he wrote and said; earnest and patriotic
beyond a doubt; he can be credited with honesty; and he
served, and in memory still serves, as the ikon of republicanism
in China. It is appropriate that this is so, for republicanism is
impracticable in China for some generations to come; there
will continue a government that is called republican, but that
is a different matter; the name alone — apart from realities —
is a very potent thing, so potent that a reversion to a monarchy
can be considered quite impossible.
Here and elsewhere in this book I give in brief my version
of events, not of course as a contribution to history but merely
as background features for my story. But there is one little
bit of real unrecorded history that I can tell. I got it from a
Chinese friend who was present at the first meeting between
Yuan and Sun. The latter said: I am an agitator. I have
been that all my life, and it is all I am fit for. I am no administrator; and so I gladly pass things on to you.' If that
is not apocryphal, Sun for once said something that was quite
intelligible.
So the revolution was accomplished — the most civilized and
bloodless revolution of its magnitude which the world has ever
seen; and Yuan Shih-kai became established at Peking in the
palace of former Emperors. In deference to democratic views,
the old insignia of rank — the embroidered robes, the coloured
buttons, the Peacock and other feathers, the Orders of the
Double Dragon — were thrown into the limbo of the past; and
in their place appeared Western military uniforms, frock-coats,
full evening dress in the middle of the day and a batch of brand
new Orders — the Excellent Crop, the Striped Tiger, and others
of similarly curious names.