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What they had failed to take into account was this: THAT BETWEEN
THEM AND CHINA WAS NO COMMON PSYCHOLOGICAL SPEECH. Their thought-processes
were radically dissimilar. There was no intimate
vocabulary. The Western mind penetrated the Chinese mind but a
short distance when it found itself in a fathomless maze. The
Chinese mind penetrated the Western mind an equally short distance
when it fetched up against a blank, incomprehensible wall. It was
all a matter of language. There was no way to communicate Western
ideas to the Chinese mind. China remained asleep. The material
achievement and progress of the West was a closed book to her; nor
could the West open the book. Back and deep down on the tie-ribs
of consciousness, in the mind, say, of the English-speaking race,
was a capacity to thrill to short, Saxon words; back and deep down
on the tie-ribs of consciousness of the Chinese mind was a capacity
to thrill to its own hieroglyphics; but the Chinese mind could not
thrill to short, Saxon words; nor could the English-speaking mind
thrill to hieroglyphics. The fabrics of their minds were woven
from totally different stuffs. They were mental aliens. And so it
was that Western material achievement and progress made no dent on
the rounded sleep of China.
Came Japan and her victory over Russia in 1904. Now the Japanese
race was the freak and paradox among Eastern peoples. In some
strange way Japan was receptive to all the West had to offer.
Japan swiftly assimilated the Western ideas, and digested them, and
so capably applied them that she suddenly burst forth, full-panoplied,
a world-power. There is no explaining this peculiar
openness of Japan to the alien culture of the West. As well might
be explained any biological sport in the animal kingdom.
Having decisively thrashed the great Russian Empire, Japan promptly
set about dreaming a colossal dream of empire for herself. Korea
she had made into a granary and a colony; treaty privileges and
vulpine diplomacy gave her the monopoly of Manchuria. But Japan
was not satisfied. She turned her eyes upon China. There lay a
vast territory, and in that territory were the hugest deposits in
the world of iron and coal - the backbone of industrial
civilization. Given natural resources, the other great factor in
industry is labour. In that territory was a population of
400,000,000 souls - one quarter of the then total population of the
earth. Furthermore, the Chinese were excellent workers, while
their fatalistic philosophy (or religion) and their stolid nervous
organization constituted them splendid soldiers - if they were
properly managed. Needless to say, Japan was prepared to furnish
that management.
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