china under the empress dowager
Transcription
china under the empress dowager
CHINA UNDER THE EMPRESS DOWAGER the history of the life and times of tzu hsi J.O.P. Bland Edmund Backhouse China under the Empress Dowager By J.O.P. Bland & Sir Edmund Backhouse ISBN-13: 978-988-18667-4-5 Edition copyright © 2010 Earnshaw Books. China Under the Empress Dowager was first published in 1910. This edition with a new foreword is reprinted by China Economic Review Publishing (HK) Limited for Earnshaw Books, Hong Kong First printing March 2010 Second printing November 2010 All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in material form, by any means, whether graphic, electronic, mechanical or other, including photocopying or information storage, in whole or in part. May not be used to prepare other publications without written permission from the publisher. FO R EW O R D by Derek Sandhaus RARELY has a book on Chinese history captured the popular imagination like J.O.P Bland and Edmund Backhouse's China under the Empress Dowager. This unique look inside the scintillating and treacherous court life of China's last great despot, the Empress Dowager Cixi, appeared at just the right moment in history. In 1910, ten years after the Boxer Rebellion and two years after the death of Cixi, the Chinese Empire was on the verge of collapse and all eyes were on China. At a time when readers were hungry for news of the Middle Kingdom, this book gave them all that and more, providing a fresh perspective on China's previous fifty years with thrilling anecdotes from the court and newly translated first-hand accounts. Most amazing of all, the book featured the never-before-seen diary of a wellconnected Manchu official, Ching Shan, providing an insider's perspective on the mysterious machinations of the court during the Boxer Rebellion. But the story behind the book is equally captivating. John Otway Percy Bland, at the time of publication the more famous of the two authors, arrived in Shanghai in 1883. The Irish scholar had been recruited directly from Trinity College to work in the Imperial Maritime Customs Service under Sir Robert Hart, a position he held until 1896. During this time he rose to official rank in the Chinese government, gained fluency in the Chinese language and amassed a wealth of powerful connections. In 1897, now a member of Shanghai's Municipal Council, he accepted the vi C H I N A U N D E R T HE EM P R ES S DO W AGE R position of Shanghai correspondent for The Times of London, and it was in this capacity that he came in contact with a rising star of Chinese scholarship, Edmund Trelawny Backhouse. Backhouse was, by many accounts, a thoroughly strange yet endearing personality. He had arrived in Peking in 1898 as an Oxford dropout with a knack for languages. He chose to live outside of the foreign compound among the Chinese, shunning the company of other Europeans but allegedly amassing powerful Chinese and Manchu contacts. Within a year of arrival, he had become one of the most respected translators and informants in China, counting among his patrons the British Foreign Service, the Imperial Maritimes Customs Service and Dr. G.E. Morrison, the Peking correspondent of The Times. In 1899, Morrison introduced the two authors, sending a dog-bite wounded Backhouse to stay with Bland while seeking medical attention in Shanghai. The two men hit it off right away. At first glance Bland, the outgoing sportsman, and Backhouse, the introverted scholar, were an odd pair, but they had much in common. Both shared a deeply rooted respect for their adopted country and its people, and sought to correct Western misconceptions of China. Morrison, meanwhile, spoke no Chinese and had an unflinchingly colonialist outlook which they both despised. Their mutual disdain for the Australian Anglophile provided another strand to their friendship. In November 1908, Bland was covering all of China for The Times while Morrison was on vacation, and was consequently handed the biggest story of his career: the deaths of both the Empress and Emperor within a day of each other. At a bit of a loss, he turned to the well-informed Backhouse for assistance. Backhouse was able to provide all of the raw material and relevant cultural context for the obituary, while Bland was able to lend structure and a more polished style. The article was a great success, and shortly afterwards Bland suggested the pair compile a full-blown biography of Cixi along the same lines. Backhouse happily agreed and suggested including among other materials F OR EWOR D vii the diary of Ching Shan, which he claimed to have found while living in the deceased official's house following the aftermath of the Boxer Rebellion. Bland was understandably excited by the revelation and decided to make the diary a centerpiece of the work. In 1910, China under the Empress Dowager was released to near universal acclaim. "Probably no such collection of Chinese documents has ever before been given to the world, or one that better reflects the realities of Chinese official life," wrote Sidney Coryn of The New York Times. To the delight and surprise of its publishers, the book went through nine years on the market. The Ching Shan diary was donated to the British Museum for posterity and, four years later, the two authors followed up with another highly-regarded work, Memoirs and Annals of the Court of Peking. But China Under the Empress Dowager was not without its detractors. The most outspoken in the early years was Bland and Backhouse's colleague-turned-rival, G.E. Morrison, who charged that the Ching Shan diary was a fake. Two of the most prominent sinologists of the day, Sir Reginald Johnson and J.J.L. Duyvendak, studied and attested to the diary's authenticity, and Morrison was written off as a jealous instigator. About 25 years later, Shanghai-based journalist William Lewisohn again challenged the diary's veracity and submitted his findings to Duyvendak, who reexamined the diary and this time around concluded that it was indeed a forgery, though a masterful one in its complexity. "Why any one should have taken all this immense trouble," wrote Duyvendek, "is more than I can understand." Though Backhouse, the linguist, was the obvious candidate for the forgery, most people during his lifetime chose to believe that he was the victim of an elaborate Chinese hoax. In the 1970s, Backhouse biographer Hugh Trevor-Roper reached a different conclusion. He traced a pattern of hucksterism throughout Backhouse's life, culminating in an outrageous autobiography in which Backhouse claimed to have been the Empress viii C H I N A U N D E R T HE EM P R ES S DO W AGE R Dowager's long-time lover. Backhouse having been branded as being pathologically compelled to deceive, China under the Empress Dowager's credibility as an historical document all but evaporated. But it would be a grave error to overlook this most remarkable work on account of one suspect chapter. China under the Empress Dowager was, after all, one of the first books that attempted to portray the Chinese people and their leaders as something more than an amalgamation of clichés and stereotypes. At a time when, just like today, the outside world desperately wanted to know more about China and the Chinese, so much of the existing literature was founded in gross misunderstanding and racially-based fears of the 'Yellow Peril'. China under the Empress Dowager was one of the first books that sought to present a truly sympathetic portrayal of China. It might sound trite today, but the notion that the Chinese were people with similar wants and ambitions was groundbreaking in the days of 'spheres of influence' and 'White Man's burden'. In this book, Backhouse and Bland succeeded in painting a nuanced picture of the Chinese as few had done before them because they truly knew the country and its people. Using this knowledge, they were able to breathe a degree of clarity and understanding into the complex processes that had mystified the aloof Peking diplomats and the world at large. They were masters at using even the most mundane details to illustrate the infinite complexities and competing interests of the Qing court. Chapter VII, A Question of Etiquette, for example, is a marvelous examination of the superficially simple question of whether foreigners should be exempt from kneeling when granted an official audience. Chinese attitudes of cultural superiority, the need to preserve long-standing tradition, and how to save face before a more powerful enemy all come to the surface in brilliant clarity. The book's account of the Boxer Rebellion, embellished though it may be, is most compelling. The standard published F OR EWOR D ix narratives of this period focus on the triumph of noble Christians over the barbarous heathens, the bravery of the foreigners in the face of malicious unprovoked attacks. Backhouse and Bland, on the other hand, showed the crisis as the culmination of a decadesold debate playing out in a deeply fragmented court. In the book's narrative, the survival of most of the foreigners was not so much the result of their own grit and determination, but rather of the intervention of noble, self-sacrificing Manchu officials. The picture that emerges is thus one not of 'us versus them', but one with heroes and villains on both sides of the racial divide squaring off in a conflict with complex and tangled origins. The portrait the book paints of its subject, Empress Dowager Cixi, the 'iron hand in the velvet glove', also remains one of the most memorable ever written. She is portrayed as a fickle and often rash ruler, but one entirely in her element at the helm of state. Through one of China's most turbulent periods, she is able to repeatedly outmaneuver her political opponents and come out of every palace intrigue with both feet on the ground. In such a way, she was able to prolong the life of a crumbling dynasty that had long since outlived its usefulness. She is worthy, Bland and Backhouse told us, of being compared with the most cunning rulers of all time. By continually identifying with the Chinese and identifying the roots of misconceptions, China under the Empress Dowager forced its readers to grapple with a number of challenging notions: maybe the Chinese see us as the uncultured barbarians; maybe we are the ones being rude and presumptuous; maybe the root of conflict between our nations is misunderstanding rather than malevolence. The strength of this book lies not only in its substance, but also in its style. The concepts it deals with are sometimes difficult and remarkably obtuse, yet Bland and Backhouse provide the necessary context, and just the right amount of humor and excitement, necessary to create an easily understandable and thoroughly entertaining read. Much more than merely a biography, it is a smart, clearly written epic by two authors with a highly sophisticated understanding of Chinese culture, customs and court practices. So it is with great pleasure that we present the unabridged original version of Backhouse and Bland's timeless masterpiece, China under the Empress Dowager. Shanghai November, 2009 C H I N A UNDER THE EMP R ES S DOWAGER The "Holy Mother," Her Majesty Tzu Hsi. (From a Photograph taken in 1903.) CHINA UNDER THE EMPRESS DOWAGER BEING THE HISTORY OF THE LIFE AND TIMES OF TZŬ HSI COMPILED FROM STATE PAPERS AND THE PRIVATE DIARY OF THE COMPTROLLER OF HER HOUSEHOLD BY J.O.P. BLAND AND E. BACKHOUSE ILLUSTRATED MCMX NOTE THE thanks of the Authors are hereby gratefully expressed to Miss Katharine A. Carl, for permission to reproduce the photograph of her portrait of the Empress Dowager; to Mr. K. Ogawa, art publisher of Tokyo, for the use of his unique pictures of the Palace at Peking; to Mr. Geo. Bronson Rea, of the Far Eastern Review, for permission to reproduce illustrations originally published in that journal; to Messrs. Betines, of Peking, for the right to publish their views of the capital; and to the Editor of The Times, for his courtesy in permitting the inclusion in this volume of certain articles written for that paper. London, September 10th, 1910. CONTENTS I T HE PARENTAGE AND YOUT H OF YEHONALA page 1 II T HE FLIGHT TO JEHOL 14 III T HE TS AI Y ÜAN CON S P IRA C Y 32 IV T HE FIR ST REGENCY 53 V TS ENG KUO-FAN AND THE TAIP ING REBELLION ( 1 8 6 4 ) 66 VI TZ HSI AND T HE EUNU CH S 83 V II A Q UEST ION OF ET IQ UET T E 11 2 V III MAJORI TY AN D DEAT H OF THE EM PEROR T ' UNG - CHIH 11 9 IX T HE P RO T EST AND SUI CID E OF WU K ' O- T U 134 X TZ HSI BECO ME S SOLE REGENT TZ HSI " EN RE T RAIT E" 150 XI 164 XII T HE RE FOR M MO VE MENT OF 1 8 9 8 181 X III T HE HUNDRE D DAY S OF REFORM 193 XI V T HE COUP D'É T A T OF 1 8 9 8 203 XV TZ HSI RESUM ES THE REGENCY ( 1 8 9 8 ) 214 X VI T HE GENE SIS OF THE BO XER MOVEMENT 248 X V II T HE DIARY O F HIS E X CELLENC Y CHING S HAN 253 X VIII IN ME MORY O F TWO BRAVE MEN 310 XIX SI DELIGHTS ON T Z HS I ' S S TATE CRA F T 331 XX T HE FLIGHT FRO M PEKIN AND THE COURT IN E XILE 344 XXI HOW T HE BOXER LEADERS DIED 367 X XII T HE OL D BUDD HA PENIT ENT 378 X XIII T HE RE T URN OF THE C OURT TO PEKING 391 X XI V HER MAJESTY 'S NE W POLIC Y 420 XXV T HE VALEDICTORY MEMORIAL OF JUNG LU 438 X X VI HER MAJESTY 'S LA S T DAY S 445 X X V II TZ HSI 'S D EAT H AND BURIAL 468 X X V III C ONC LUSION 481 APPEN DI X 505 LIST O F I L L U S T R AT I ONS facing page T HE "HOLY M OT HER, " HER MAJES T Y TZ HSI F ron t i sp i ece MAP OF P EKING x i i , x i i i T HE REGEN T P RINC E CH ' UN, WI T H HIS T WO S ONS , T HE P RE SEN T EM P EROR ( S TANDING) AND P RINC E P 'U CHIEH T HE I MP ERIAL DAI S IN T HE CHIAO- TAL HALL 4 18 H.I.H. P' U JU , C OUS IN OF THE PRES ENT EM P EROR, S ON O F T HE BOXER P RINC E T SAI- YING, AN D GRAND SON O F P RINC E KUNG 20 HER MAJESTY T Z HS I IN THE YEAR 1 9 0 3 36 EXTERIOR O F T HE CH ' IEN C H' ING PALAC E 54 H.M. TZ HSI, WI T H T HE C ON S ORT ( LUNG YÜ ) AND P RINC IPAL CON C UBINE (JEN FEI ) OF H . M . KUANG - HS Ü , A C CO M PANIED BY C OURT LAD IES AND EUNUC HS 9 0 FACSIM ILE O F LE T TER WRIT T EN BY CHIEF EUNUCH LI LIEN - YING INTERIOR O F THE YANG HS IN TIEN. ( PALAC E O F " M IND NURTURE. " ) 98 122 INTERIOR O F THE I KUN KUNG 148 INTERIOR O F THE TAI HO T IEN 166 CIR C ULAR T HRONE HALL IN THE GROUND S O F T HE LAKE PALACE LOOT ED BY ALLIED TROOP S IN 1 9 0 0 2 0 8 PAV ILION ON LAKE TO THE W ES T OF FORBID D EN CI TY 208 T HE "BEILEH" T SAI YING, SON OF PRINC E KUNG ( CA S HIERED BY TZ HSI FOR PRO - BOXER P ROC LIVI TIE S ) , AN D HIS S ON 2 5 2