China by Edward Rutherfurd (historical books to read TXT) π
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- Author: Edward Rutherfurd
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Mr. Zhou looked very unhappy.
Odstock spoke, and Mr. Singapore said, βThe fat barbarian asks if the Celestial Kingdom wants to sell tea.β
βThe Celestial Kingdom has no need to sell anything,β said Shi-Rong, βbut the goods it does sell are healthful, such as tea and the rhubarb herb, without which you will die.β He saw the two barbarians look surprised. Obviously they had not realized that he knew that their very lives depended on their getting the rhubarb. βWe will allow barbarian merchants to buy these things for silver,β Shi-Rong concluded firmly. βThat is all.β
Odstock and Zhou were silent. Shi-Rong turned his attention to Trader. βAsk him, if he is a scholar, why has he become a pirate,β he told Mr. Singapore.
βHe says he is not a pirate. He is a merchant.β
βWell then, if he is a scholar, why is he a merchant, the lowest form of humanity?β
βHe says the merchant is not the lowest form of humanity. Not in his country.β
It seemed to Shi-Rong that this young barbarian had replied hotly to his question, even defiantly, as if his own country were the equal of the Celestial Kingdom. And this when he and his fellow Fan Kuei were busy poisoning people for profit.
βWe consider,β Shi-Rong said firmly, βthat to be a peasant, honestly working the land, is a moral occupation. The merchant who takes the work of others and sells it for gain is clearly a person of a lower moral order, and he deserves to be despised. Tell him this.β
Mr. Singapore seemed to struggle a bit translating this, but he managed to do so. Trader said nothing.
Shi-Rong returned to the attack. βIn any case, his claim not to be a pirate is false. If he is honest, why is he breaking the law and selling opium to smugglers?β
βHe says he is not under Chinese law.β
βHe should respect the laws of the Celestial Kingdom, both because he is here and because those laws are benevolent, just, and wise.β
While Mr. Singapore tried to convey these ideas, Shi-Rong considered. It seemed to him that Traderβs answers did not really add up. βIs he truly a scholar?β he asked skeptically.
βHe says he attended the University of Oxford.β
βI do not know what that is. Ask him where his country is and how big it is.β
βHe says it is an island far, far to the west, but that it possesses an empire bigger than the Celestial Kingdom.β
Shi-Rong felt a sense of disappointment. Obviously this young man was not only arrogant, but a liar. Perhaps it was a waste of time talking to him. He kept his face impassive, however, and pressed on. βIs it true that his kingdom is ruled by women?β
βHe says nearly always by kings, but recently his country has a young queen.β
βAnd does his queen have good morals, or is she a wicked person?β
βHe says she is named Queen Victoria and that she has the highest morals.β
βThen why does she permit her merchants to sell opium?β
βHis queen does not think opium is bad. She takes it herself. Opium is healthfulβonly bad if taken to excess.β
βBut that is the point,β cried Shi-Rong. βIt is taken to excess. People smoke a little. Then they want more. Soon they are unable to stop. They spend all their money. They cannot work. They become like sick shadows. In the end they die. Millions of people in the Celestial Kingdom are being destroyed by this poison. How can he say it is healthful?β
βHe says that each man is responsible for his actions.β
βA good ruler should protect his people. He has the same responsibility as a father to his son. Does he know anything of Confucius?β
βHe has heard of Confucius.β
The barbarian was not completely ignorant, then.
βThen he will know that all men owe obedience: A son should obey his father; his father should obey the emperor. If the emperor rules wisely and justly, then this flows down through all his people. It is when the chains of proper conduct are broken that evil and chaos ensue. There are millions of people in the Celestial Kingdom. But they are all held together by obedience and right conduct, in service to the emperor, whose justice comes from the Mandate of Heaven. Therefore it is not for you or any barbarian ruler to judge what is right or wrong, but the emperor. Nothing else needs to be said.β
Shi-Rong noticed that Mr. Singapore struggled for quite a time in conveying this to Trader. But he was patient. Until this barbarian, whether he was a scholar or not, understood the basic facts of morality, there could be no basis for conversation between them.
βHe says that his queen is also anointed by Heaven,β declared Mr. Singapore at last.
βIn that case,β said Shi-Rong triumphantly, βI will show him the letter.β And he drew out a document and handed it to Trader. βYou may explain to him that this is a draft, that you have translated into his own tongue, of the letter that Commissioner Lin is going to send to his queen.β And he watched with satisfaction as Trader took the letter and began to read.
It was a good letter. A true mandarin composition. It was reasonable. It was polite.
It pointed out that trade had carried on between their countries for centuries with peace and harmony. But recently, the trade in opium had become huge and destructive. It respectfully suggested that the Way of Heaven was the same for all countries, and that the commissioner was sure Queen Victoria would feel exactly the same about the importation of a poisonous drug into her kingdom as did the emperor. He knew that the opium came only from certain lands under her rule, and that it could not have been sold under her direction. Lin explained that the trade must cease, and asked
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