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=INTRODUCTORY=
=INTRODUCTORY=
== THE PROBLEM ==
== THE PROBLEM ==
There is  a  peculiar  pathos  in  the  extinction  of  a
nation.  Especially  is  this  true  when  the  nation  is
one  whose  history  stretches  back  into  the  dim  cen-
turies until  it  becomes  lost  in  a  labyrinth  of  myth
and  legend ;  a  nation  which  has  played  an  important  part  in  the
moulding  of  other  nations  and  which  is  filled  with  monuments
of  past  achievements.  Kija,  the  founder  of  Korean  civilisation,
flourished  before  the  reign  of  David  in  Jerusalem.  In  the  fifth
century  after  Christ,  Korea  enjoyed  a  high  degree  of  civilisa-
tion, and  was  the  repository  from  which  the  half-savage  tribes
of  Japan  drew  their  first  impetus  toward  culture.  As  time  went
on  Japan  was  so  fortunate  as  to  become  split  up  into  numerous
semi-independent  baronies,  each  under  the  control  of  a  so-called
Daimyo  or  feudal  baron.  This  resulted,  as  feudalism  every-
where has  done,  in  the  development  of  an  intense  personal
loyalty  to  an  overlord,  which  is  impossible  in  a  large  state.  If
one  were  to  examine  the  condition  of  European  states  to-day,
he  would  find  that  they  are  enlightened  just  in  proportion  as  the
feudal  idea  was  worked  out  to  its  ultimate  issues,  and  wherever,
as  in  southern  Europe,  the  centrifugal  power  of  feudalism  was
checked  by  the  centripetal  power  of  ecclesiasticism  one  finds  a
lower  grade  of  enlightenment,  education  and  genuine  liberty.
In  other  words,  the  feudal  system  is  a  chrysalis  state  from  which
a  people  are  prepared  to  leap  into  the  full  light  of  free  self-
government.  Neither  China  nor  Korea  has  enjoyed  that  state,
and  it  is  therefore  manifestly  impossible  for  them  to  effect  any
such  startling  change  as  that  which  transformed  Japan  in  a
single  decade  from  a  cruel  and  bigoted  exclusiveness  to  an  open
and  enthusiastic  world-life.  Instead  of  bursting  forth  full-
winged  from  a  cocoon,  both  China  and  Korea  must  be  incu-
bated like  an  egg.
It  is  worth  while  asking  whether  the  ultimate  results  of  a
slow  and  laborious  process. like  this  may  not  in  the  end  bring
forth  a  product  superior  in  essential  respects  to  that  which  fol-
lows the  almost  magical  rise  of  modern  Japan;  or,  to  carry
out  the  metaphor,  whether  the  product  of  an  egg  is  not  likely
to  be  of  greater  value  than  that  of  a  cocoon.  In  order  to  a
clear  understanding  of  the  situation  it  will  be  necessary  to  fol-
low out  this  question  to  a  definite  answer.  The  world  has  been
held  entranced  by  the  splendid  military  and  naval  achievements
of  Japan,  and  it  is  only  natural  that  her  signal  capacity  in  war
should  have  argued  a  like  capacity  along  all  lines.  This  has
led  to  various  forms  of  exaggeration,  and  it  becomes  the  Ameri-
can citizen  to  ask  the  question  just  what  part  Japan  is  likely  to
play  in  the  development  of  the  Far  East.  One  must  study  the
factors  of  the  problem  in  a  judicial  spirit  if  he  would  arrive  at
the  correct  answer.  The  bearing  which  this  has  upon  Korea
will  appear  in  due  course.
When  in  1868  the  power  of  the  Mikado  or  Emperor  of
Japan  had  been  vindicated  in  a  sanguinary  war  against  many
of  the  feudal  barons,  the  Shogunate  was  done  away  with  once
for  all,  and  the  act  of  centralising  the  government  of  Japan
was  complete.  But  in  order  to  guard  against  insurrection  it
was  deemed  wise  to  compel  all  the  barons  to  take  up  their  resi-
dence in  Tokyo,  where  they  could  be  watched.  This  necessi-
tated the  disbanding  of  the  samurai  or  retainers  of  the  barons.
These  samurai  were  at  once  the  soldiers  and  the  scholars  of
Japan.  In  one  hand  they  held  the  sword  and  in  the  other  a
book;  not  as  in  medieval  Europe,  where  the  knights  could  but
rarely  read  and  write  and  where  literature  was  almost  wholly
confined  to  the  monasteries.  This  concentration  of  physical  and
intellectual  power  in  the  single  class  called  samurai  gave  them
far  greater  prestige  among  the  people  at  large  than  was  ever
enjoyed  by  any  set  of  men  in  any  other  land,  and  it  conse-
quently caused  a  wider  gulf  between  the  upper  and  lower  classes
than  elsewhere,  for  the  samurai  shared  with  no  one  the  fear  and
the  admiration  of  the  common  people.  The  lower  classes  cringed
before  them  as  they  passed,  and  a  samurai  could  wantonly  kill
a  man  of  low  degree  almost  without  fear  of  consequences.
When  the  barons  were  called  up  to  Tokyo,  the  samurai  were
disbanded  and  were  forbidden  to  wear  the  two  swords  which
had  always  been  their  badge  of  office.  This  brought  them  face
to  face  with  the  danger  of  falling  to  the  ranks  of  the  lower
people,  a  fate  that  was  all  the  more  terrible  because  of  the  absurd
height  to  which  in  their  pride  they  had  elevated  themselves.
At  this  precise  juncture  they  were  given  a  glimpse  of  the
West,  with  its  higher  civilisation  and  its  more  carefully  articu-
lated system  of  political  and  social  life.  With  the  very  genius
of  despair  they  grasped  the  fact  that  if  Japan  should  adopt  the
system  of  the  West  all  government  positions,  whether  diplo-
matic, consular,  constabulary,  financial,  educational  or  judicial,
whether  military  or  civil,  would  naturally  fall  to  them,  and  thus
they  would  be  saved  from  falling  to  the  plane  of  the  common
people.  Here,  stripped  of  all  its  glamour  of  romance,  is  the
vital  underlying  cause  of  Japan's  wonderful  metamorphosis.
With  a  very  few  significant  exceptions  it  was  a  purely  selfish
movement,  conceived  in  the  interests  of  caste  distinction  and
propagated  in  anything  but  an  altruistic  spirit.  The  central
government  gladly  seconded  this  proposition,  for  it  immediately
obviated  the  danger  of  constant  disaffection  and  rebellion  and
welded  the  state  together  as  nothing  else  could  have  done.  The
personal  fealty  which  the  samurai  had  reposed  in  his  overlord
was  transferred,  almost  intact,  to  the  central  government,  and
to-day  constitutes  a  species  of  national  pride  which,  in  the
absence  of  the  finer  quality,  constitutes  the  Japanese  form  of
patriotism.
From  that  day  to  this  the  wide  distinction  between  the  upper
and  lower  classes  in  Japan  has  been  maintained.  In  spite  of
the  fact  of  so-called  popular  or  representative  government,  there
can  be  no  doubt  that  class  distinctions  are  more  vitally  active
in  Japan  than  in  China,  and  there  is  a  wider  social  gap  between
them  than  anywhere  else  in  the  Far  East,  with  the  exception  of
India,  where  Brahmanism  has  accentuated  caste.  The  reason
for  this  lies  deep  in  the  Japanese  character.  When  he  adopted
Western  methods,  it  was  in  a  purely  utilitarian  spirit.  He  gave
no  thought  to  the  principles  on  which  our  civilisation  is  based.
It  was  the  finished  product  he  was  after  and  not  the  process.
He  judged,  and  rightly,  that  energy  and  determination  were
sufficient  to  the  donning  of  the  habiliments  of  the  West,  and  he
paid  no  attention  to  the  forces  by  which  those  habiliments  were
shaped  and  fitted.  The  position  of  woman  has  experienced  no
change  at  all  commensurate  with  Japan's  material  transforma-
tion. Religion  in  the  broadest  sense  is  less  in  evidence  than
before  the  change,  for,  although  the  intellectual  stimulus  of
the  West  has  freed  the  upper  classes  from  the  inanities  of  the
Buddhistic  cult,  comparatively  few  of  them  have  consented  to
accept  the  substitute.  Christianity  has  made  smaller  advances
in  Japan  than  in  Korea  herself,  and  everything  goes  to  prove
that  Japan,  instead  of  digging  until  she  struck  the  spring  of
Western  culture,  merely  built  a  cistern  in  which  she  stored  up
some  of  its  more  obvious  and  tangible  results.  This  is  shown
in  the  impatience  with  which  many  of  the  best  Japanese  regard
the  present  failure  to  amalgamate  the  borrowed  product  with
the  real  underlying  genius  of  Japanese  life.  It  is  one  constant
and  growing  incongruity.  And,  indeed,  if  we  look  at  it  ration-
ally, would  it  not  be  a  doubtful  compliment  to  Western  culture
if  a  nation  like  Japan  could  absorb  its  intrinsic  worth  and  enjoy
its  essential  quality  without  passing  through  the  long-centuried
struggle  through  which  we  ourselves  have  attained  to  it?  No
more  can  we  enter  into  the  subtleties  of  an  Oriental  cult  by  a
quick  though  intense  study  of  its  tenets.  The  self-conscious
babblings  of  a  Madam  Blavatsky  can  be  no  less  ludicrous  to
an  Oriental  Pundit  than  are  the  efforts  of  Japan  to  vindicate
her  claim  to  Western  culture  without  passing  through  the  fur-
nace which  made  that  culture  sterling.
The  highest  praise  must  be  accorded  to  the  earnestness  and
devotion  of  Christian  missionaries  in  Japan,  but  it  is  a  fact  deeply
to  be  regretted  that  the  results  of  their  work  are  so  closely  con-
fined to  the  upper  classes.  This  fact  throws  light  upon  the  state-
ment that  there  is  a  great  gap  between  the  upper  and  lower  classes
there.  Even  as  we  are  writing,  word  comes  from  a  keenly  observ-
ant traveller  in  Japan  that  everywhere  the  Buddhist  temples
are  undergoing  repairs.
It  is  difficult  to  foresee  what  the  resultant  civilisation  of
Japan  will  be.  There  is  nothing  final  as  yet,  nor  have  the  con-
flicting forces  indicated  along  what  definite  lines  the  intense
nationalism  of  the  Japanese  will  develop.
But  let  us  look  at  the  other  side  of  the  picture.  Here  is
China,  and  with  her  Korea,  for  they  are  essentially  one  in  gen-
eral temper.  They  cling  with  intense  loyalty  to  the  past  They
are  thoroughly  conservative.  Now,  how  will  you  explain  it?
Some  would  say  that  it  is  pure  obstinacy,  a  wilful  blindness,
an  intellectual  coma,  a  moral  obsession.  This  is  the  easiest,  and
superficially  the  most  logical,  explanation.  It  saves  time  and
trouble;  and,  after  all,  what  does  it  matter?  It  matters  much
every  way.  It  does  not  become  us  to  push  the  momentous
question  aside  because  those  people  are  contemptible.  Four
hundred  millions  are  saved  from  contempt  by  their  very  num-
bers. There  is  an  explanation,  and  a  rational  one.
One  must  not  forget  that  these  people  are  possessed  of
a  social  system  that  has  been  worked  out  through  long  cen-
turies, and  to  such  fine  issues  that  every  individual  has  his
set  place  and  value.  The  system  is  comprehensive,  consistent
and  homogeneous.  It  differs  widely  from  ours,  but  has  suf-
ficed to  hold  those  peoples  together  and  give  them  a  national
life  of  wonderful  tenacity.  There  must  be  something  in
the  system  fundamentally  good,  or  else  it  would  not  have  held
together  for  all  these  centuries  with  comparatively  so  little
modification.
We  have  seen  how  the  Japanese  were  shaken  out  of  their
long-centuried  sleep  by  a  happy  combination  of  circumstances.
There  are  doubtless  possible  combinations  which  might  similarly
affect  China  and  Korea,  but  the  difference  in  temperament
between  them  and  the  Japanese  renders  it  highly  improbable  that
we  shall  ever  see  anything  so  spectacular  as  that  which  occurred
in  Japan.  No  two  cults  were  ever  more  dissimilar  than  Con-
fucianism and  Buddhism;  and  if  we  were  to  condense  into  a
single  sentence  the  reason  why  China  and  Korea  can  never  follow
Japan's  example  it  would  be  this :  that  the  Chinese  and  Korean
temperament  followed  the  materialistic  bent  of  Confucianism,
while  the  Japanese  followed  the  idealistic  bent  of  Buddhism.
Now,  what  if  the  West,  instead  of  merely  lending  its  super-
ficial integuments  to  China  and  Korea,  should  leave  all  the
harmless  and  inconsequential  customs  of  those  lands  intact,  and
should  attempt  instead  to  reach  down  to  some  underlying  moral
and  fundamental  principle  and  begin  a  transformation  from
within,  working  outward ;  if,  instead  of  carrying  on  campaigns
against  pinched  feet  and  infanticide,  we  should  strike  straight
at  the  root  of  the  matter,  and  by  giving  them  the  secret  of
Western  culture  make  it  possible  for  them  to  evolve  a  new  civ-
ilisation embodying  all  the  culture  of  the  West,  but  expressed
in  terms  of  Oriental  life  and  habit?  Here  would  be  an  achieve-
ment to  be  proud  of,  for  it  would  prove  that  our  culture  is
fundamental,  and  that  it  does  not  depend  for  its  vindication
upon  the  mere  vestments  of  Western  life.
And  herein  lies  the  pathos  of  Korea's  position;  for,  lying
as  she  does  in  the  grip  of  Japan,  she  cannot  gain  from  that
power  more  than  that  power  is  capable  of  giving  —  nothing
more  than  the  garments  of  the  West.  She  may  learn  science
and  industrial  arts,  but  she  will  use  them  only  as  a  parrot  uses
human  speech.  There  are  American  gentlemen  in  Korea  who
could  lead  you  to  country  villages  in  that  land  where  the  fetich
shrines  have  been  swept  away,  where  schools  and  churches  have
been  built,  and  where  the  transforming  power  of  Christianity
has  done  a  fundamental  work  without  touching  a  single  one
of  the  time-honoured  customs  of  the  land;  where  hard-handed
farmers  have  begun  in  the  only  genuine  way  to  develop  the
culture  of  the  West.  That  culture  evinces  itself  in  its  ultimate
forms  of  honesty,  sympathy,  unselfishness,  and  not  in  the  use
of  a  swallow-tail  coat  and  a  silk  hat.  Which,  think  you,  is  the
proper  way  to  go  about  the  rehabilitation  of  the  East?  The
only  yellow  peril  possible  lies  in  the  arming  of  the  Orient  with
the  thunder-bolts  of  the  West,  without  at  the  same  time  giving
her  the  moral  forces  which  will  restrain  her  in  their  use.
The  American  public  has  been  persistently  told  that  the
Korean  people  are  a  degenerate  and  contemptible  nation,  in-
capable of  better  things,  intellectually  inferior,  and  better  off
under  Japanese  rule  than  independent.  The  following  pages
may  in  some  measure  answer  these  charges,  which  have  been
put  forth  for  a  specific  purpose,  —  a  purpose  that  came  to  full
fruition  on  the  night  of  November  17,  1905,  when,  at  the  point  of
the  sword,  Korea  was  forced  to  acquiesce  "  voluntarily  "  in  the
virtual  destruction  of  her  independence  once  for  all.  The  reader
will  here  find  a  narrative  of  the  course  of  events  which  led  up
to  this  crisis,  and  the  part  that  different  powers,  including  the
United  States,  played  in  the  tragedy.


=CHAPTER 1. WHERE AND WHAT KOREA IS ABOVE AND BELOW GROUND=
=CHAPTER 1. WHERE AND WHAT KOREA IS ABOVE AND BELOW GROUND=

2023년 2월 19일 (일) 16:55 판

The Passing of Korea, Hulbert.pdf

대한제국멸망사

Homer B. Hulbert

New York 1906

PREFACE

MANY excellent books have been written about Korea, each of them approaching the subject from a slightly different angle. In the present volume I have attempted to handle the theme from a more intimate standpoint than that of the casual tourist.


Much that is contained in this present volume is matter that has come under the writer's personal observation or has been derived directly from Koreans or from Korean works. Some of this matter has already appeared in The Korea Review and elsewhere. The historical survey is a condensation from the writer's " History of Korea. "


This book is a labour of love, undertaken in the days of Korea's distress, with the purpose of interesting the reading public in a country and a people that have been frequently maligned and sel- dom appreciated. They are overshadowed by China on the one hand in respect of numbers, and by Japan on the other in respect of wit. They are neither good merchants like the one nor good fighters like the other, and yet they are far more like Anglo-Saxons in temperament than either, and they are by far the pleasantest people in the Far East to live amongst. Their failings are such as follow in the wake of ignorance everywhere, and the bettering of their opportunities will bring swift betterment to their condition.


For aid in the compilation of this book my thanks are mainly due to a host of kindly Koreans from every class in society, from the silk-clad yangban to the fettered criminal in prison, from the men who go up the mountains to monasteries to those who go down to the sea in ships.


H. B. H.


NEW YORK, 1906.

INTRODUCTORY

THE PROBLEM

There is a peculiar pathos in the extinction of a nation. Especially is this true when the nation is one whose history stretches back into the dim cen- turies until it becomes lost in a labyrinth of myth and legend ; a nation which has played an important part in the moulding of other nations and which is filled with monuments of past achievements. Kija, the founder of Korean civilisation, flourished before the reign of David in Jerusalem. In the fifth century after Christ, Korea enjoyed a high degree of civilisa- tion, and was the repository from which the half-savage tribes of Japan drew their first impetus toward culture. As time went on Japan was so fortunate as to become split up into numerous semi-independent baronies, each under the control of a so-called Daimyo or feudal baron. This resulted, as feudalism every- where has done, in the development of an intense personal loyalty to an overlord, which is impossible in a large state. If one were to examine the condition of European states to-day, he would find that they are enlightened just in proportion as the feudal idea was worked out to its ultimate issues, and wherever, as in southern Europe, the centrifugal power of feudalism was checked by the centripetal power of ecclesiasticism one finds a lower grade of enlightenment, education and genuine liberty. In other words, the feudal system is a chrysalis state from which a people are prepared to leap into the full light of free self- government. Neither China nor Korea has enjoyed that state, and it is therefore manifestly impossible for them to effect any such startling change as that which transformed Japan in a single decade from a cruel and bigoted exclusiveness to an open and enthusiastic world-life. Instead of bursting forth full- winged from a cocoon, both China and Korea must be incu- bated like an egg.


It is worth while asking whether the ultimate results of a slow and laborious process. like this may not in the end bring forth a product superior in essential respects to that which fol- lows the almost magical rise of modern Japan; or, to carry out the metaphor, whether the product of an egg is not likely to be of greater value than that of a cocoon. In order to a clear understanding of the situation it will be necessary to fol- low out this question to a definite answer. The world has been held entranced by the splendid military and naval achievements of Japan, and it is only natural that her signal capacity in war should have argued a like capacity along all lines. This has led to various forms of exaggeration, and it becomes the Ameri- can citizen to ask the question just what part Japan is likely to play in the development of the Far East. One must study the factors of the problem in a judicial spirit if he would arrive at the correct answer. The bearing which this has upon Korea will appear in due course.


When in 1868 the power of the Mikado or Emperor of Japan had been vindicated in a sanguinary war against many of the feudal barons, the Shogunate was done away with once for all, and the act of centralising the government of Japan was complete. But in order to guard against insurrection it was deemed wise to compel all the barons to take up their resi- dence in Tokyo, where they could be watched. This necessi- tated the disbanding of the samurai or retainers of the barons. These samurai were at once the soldiers and the scholars of Japan. In one hand they held the sword and in the other a book; not as in medieval Europe, where the knights could but rarely read and write and where literature was almost wholly confined to the monasteries. This concentration of physical and intellectual power in the single class called samurai gave them far greater prestige among the people at large than was ever enjoyed by any set of men in any other land, and it conse- quently caused a wider gulf between the upper and lower classes than elsewhere, for the samurai shared with no one the fear and the admiration of the common people. The lower classes cringed before them as they passed, and a samurai could wantonly kill a man of low degree almost without fear of consequences.


When the barons were called up to Tokyo, the samurai were disbanded and were forbidden to wear the two swords which had always been their badge of office. This brought them face to face with the danger of falling to the ranks of the lower people, a fate that was all the more terrible because of the absurd height to which in their pride they had elevated themselves.


At this precise juncture they were given a glimpse of the West, with its higher civilisation and its more carefully articu- lated system of political and social life. With the very genius of despair they grasped the fact that if Japan should adopt the system of the West all government positions, whether diplo- matic, consular, constabulary, financial, educational or judicial, whether military or civil, would naturally fall to them, and thus they would be saved from falling to the plane of the common people. Here, stripped of all its glamour of romance, is the vital underlying cause of Japan's wonderful metamorphosis. With a very few significant exceptions it was a purely selfish movement, conceived in the interests of caste distinction and propagated in anything but an altruistic spirit. The central government gladly seconded this proposition, for it immediately obviated the danger of constant disaffection and rebellion and welded the state together as nothing else could have done. The personal fealty which the samurai had reposed in his overlord was transferred, almost intact, to the central government, and to-day constitutes a species of national pride which, in the absence of the finer quality, constitutes the Japanese form of patriotism.


From that day to this the wide distinction between the upper and lower classes in Japan has been maintained. In spite of the fact of so-called popular or representative government, there can be no doubt that class distinctions are more vitally active in Japan than in China, and there is a wider social gap between them than anywhere else in the Far East, with the exception of India, where Brahmanism has accentuated caste. The reason for this lies deep in the Japanese character. When he adopted Western methods, it was in a purely utilitarian spirit. He gave no thought to the principles on which our civilisation is based. It was the finished product he was after and not the process. He judged, and rightly, that energy and determination were sufficient to the donning of the habiliments of the West, and he paid no attention to the forces by which those habiliments were shaped and fitted. The position of woman has experienced no change at all commensurate with Japan's material transforma- tion. Religion in the broadest sense is less in evidence than before the change, for, although the intellectual stimulus of the West has freed the upper classes from the inanities of the Buddhistic cult, comparatively few of them have consented to accept the substitute. Christianity has made smaller advances in Japan than in Korea herself, and everything goes to prove that Japan, instead of digging until she struck the spring of Western culture, merely built a cistern in which she stored up some of its more obvious and tangible results. This is shown in the impatience with which many of the best Japanese regard the present failure to amalgamate the borrowed product with the real underlying genius of Japanese life. It is one constant and growing incongruity. And, indeed, if we look at it ration- ally, would it not be a doubtful compliment to Western culture if a nation like Japan could absorb its intrinsic worth and enjoy its essential quality without passing through the long-centuried struggle through which we ourselves have attained to it? No more can we enter into the subtleties of an Oriental cult by a quick though intense study of its tenets. The self-conscious babblings of a Madam Blavatsky can be no less ludicrous to an Oriental Pundit than are the efforts of Japan to vindicate her claim to Western culture without passing through the fur- nace which made that culture sterling.


The highest praise must be accorded to the earnestness and devotion of Christian missionaries in Japan, but it is a fact deeply to be regretted that the results of their work are so closely con- fined to the upper classes. This fact throws light upon the state- ment that there is a great gap between the upper and lower classes there. Even as we are writing, word comes from a keenly observ- ant traveller in Japan that everywhere the Buddhist temples are undergoing repairs.


It is difficult to foresee what the resultant civilisation of Japan will be. There is nothing final as yet, nor have the con- flicting forces indicated along what definite lines the intense nationalism of the Japanese will develop.


But let us look at the other side of the picture. Here is China, and with her Korea, for they are essentially one in gen- eral temper. They cling with intense loyalty to the past They are thoroughly conservative. Now, how will you explain it? Some would say that it is pure obstinacy, a wilful blindness, an intellectual coma, a moral obsession. This is the easiest, and superficially the most logical, explanation. It saves time and trouble; and, after all, what does it matter? It matters much every way. It does not become us to push the momentous question aside because those people are contemptible. Four hundred millions are saved from contempt by their very num- bers. There is an explanation, and a rational one.


One must not forget that these people are possessed of a social system that has been worked out through long cen- turies, and to such fine issues that every individual has his set place and value. The system is comprehensive, consistent and homogeneous. It differs widely from ours, but has suf- ficed to hold those peoples together and give them a national life of wonderful tenacity. There must be something in the system fundamentally good, or else it would not have held together for all these centuries with comparatively so little modification.


We have seen how the Japanese were shaken out of their long-centuried sleep by a happy combination of circumstances. There are doubtless possible combinations which might similarly affect China and Korea, but the difference in temperament between them and the Japanese renders it highly improbable that we shall ever see anything so spectacular as that which occurred in Japan. No two cults were ever more dissimilar than Con- fucianism and Buddhism; and if we were to condense into a single sentence the reason why China and Korea can never follow Japan's example it would be this : that the Chinese and Korean temperament followed the materialistic bent of Confucianism, while the Japanese followed the idealistic bent of Buddhism.


Now, what if the West, instead of merely lending its super- ficial integuments to China and Korea, should leave all the harmless and inconsequential customs of those lands intact, and should attempt instead to reach down to some underlying moral and fundamental principle and begin a transformation from within, working outward ; if, instead of carrying on campaigns against pinched feet and infanticide, we should strike straight at the root of the matter, and by giving them the secret of Western culture make it possible for them to evolve a new civ- ilisation embodying all the culture of the West, but expressed in terms of Oriental life and habit? Here would be an achieve- ment to be proud of, for it would prove that our culture is fundamental, and that it does not depend for its vindication upon the mere vestments of Western life.


And herein lies the pathos of Korea's position; for, lying as she does in the grip of Japan, she cannot gain from that power more than that power is capable of giving — nothing more than the garments of the West. She may learn science and industrial arts, but she will use them only as a parrot uses human speech. There are American gentlemen in Korea who could lead you to country villages in that land where the fetich shrines have been swept away, where schools and churches have been built, and where the transforming power of Christianity has done a fundamental work without touching a single one of the time-honoured customs of the land; where hard-handed farmers have begun in the only genuine way to develop the culture of the West. That culture evinces itself in its ultimate forms of honesty, sympathy, unselfishness, and not in the use of a swallow-tail coat and a silk hat. Which, think you, is the proper way to go about the rehabilitation of the East? The only yellow peril possible lies in the arming of the Orient with the thunder-bolts of the West, without at the same time giving her the moral forces which will restrain her in their use.


The American public has been persistently told that the Korean people are a degenerate and contemptible nation, in- capable of better things, intellectually inferior, and better off under Japanese rule than independent. The following pages may in some measure answer these charges, which have been put forth for a specific purpose, — a purpose that came to full fruition on the night of November 17, 1905, when, at the point of the sword, Korea was forced to acquiesce " voluntarily " in the virtual destruction of her independence once for all. The reader will here find a narrative of the course of events which led up to this crisis, and the part that different powers, including the United States, played in the tragedy.


CHAPTER 1. WHERE AND WHAT KOREA IS ABOVE AND BELOW GROUND

CHAPTER 2. THE PEOPLE

CHAPTER 3. GOVERMENT

CHAPTER 4. LEGENDARY AND ANCIENT HISTORY

CHAPTER 5. MEDIEVAL HISTORY

CHAPTER 6. THE GOLDEN AGE OF KOREA AND THE JAPANESE INVASION

CHAPTER 7. THE MANCHU INVASION AND EARLY CHRISTIANITY

CHAPTER 8. THE OPENING OF KOREA

CHAPTER 9. THE ASSASSINATION OF THE QUEEN

CHAPTER 10. THE INDEPENDENCE CLUB