y Lord Clarendon:
"No sovereign, having a due regard for his own dignity and independence,
could admit proposals which conferred upon a foreign and more powerful
sovereign a right of protection over his own subjects."
[110] pp. 35-37.
[111] From the latest Parliamentary Paper, containing the correspondence
between the Indian and English Governments on the subject of the
negotiations with China, it appears (sects. 43-50) that neither the
British nor Indian Government has any objection to the ratification of the
Chefoo Convention. The _difficulty is to get the other Powers to agree_.
[112] Sir Evelyn Baring. Financial Statement on India for 1882.
[113] A late medical missionary.
[114] Brereton, p. 50. It appears, however, that there are 6,000
Christians already in Japan, the result of fourteen years' preaching.
[115] Intense dislike to foreigners and foreign intercourse was an
ever-present reason for condemning a drug which, more than anything else,
kept the gates of the empire ajar to the "foreign devils."--_Opium
Question Solved._
[116] Comm. on E. I. Finance 1871, Q. 5831.
[117] The same who has lately been in correspondence with the leaders of
the Anti-Opium League.
[118] Comm. on E. I. Finance, Q. 5834.
[119] _Ibid._, Q. 5817.
[120] _Story of the Fuh-kien Mission_, p. 188.
[121] Capt. Hall, _Nemesis_, p. 375.
[122] _Story of the Fuh-kien Mission_, p. 252.
[123] _Times_, Aug. 22, 1882.
[124] _Times_, Aug. 22, 1882.
[125] _Times_, Aug. 22, 1882.
[126] Brereton, p. 68.
[127] See minute by Sir William Muir, Feb. 1868.
[128] Speech at Newcastle, 1880.
[129] Malwa bears a duty of 650, but the consistence of Malwa chest is
90-95, of Bengal 70-75.
[130] Owing to bad crops the revenue from opium _has_ considerably
diminished in the last two years, but the present (1884) crop promises
exceedingly well.
[131] 1882.
[132] Consul Medhurst, 1872.
[133] Sir Rutherford Alcock's paper before the Society of Arts, p. 225.
[134] Justin McCarthy, _History of Our Own Times_, vol. i., p. 181.
[135] Parliamentary Paper, 1882.
[136] The organ of the Society.
[137] Sir Wilfrid Lawson on the Egyptian War.
Transcriber's Notes:
Passages in italics are indicated by _italics_.
Footnote marker [52] does not appear in the original text. The placement
is a best guess based on the spacing of the text.
In footnote 102, the symbol representing "therefore" has been replaced
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