XXII
The Court and the New Education
Abolish the eight-legged essay. Let the new
learning be the test
of
scholarship, but include the classics, history,
geography and
government of China in the
examinations. The true essay will then
come out. If so desired, the eight-legged essay can be
studied at
home; but why trouble the school with them, and at the same time
waste time and strength that can be expended in something more
profitable? --Chang Chih-tung in "Chinas Only Hope,"
XXII
THE COURT AND THE NEW EDUCATION
The changes in the attitude of the court towards a new
educationalsystem began, as do many great under
takings, in a
very simple way. We have already shown how the eunuchs secured
all kinds of foreign
mechanical toys to
entertain the baby
Emperor Kuang Hsu; how these were supplemented in his
boyhood by
ingenious clocks and watches; how he became interested in the
telegraph, the telephone, steam cars, steamboats, electric light
and steam heat, and how he had them first brought into the palace
and then established throughout the empire: and how he had the
phonograph, graphophone, cinematograph,
bicycle, and indeed all
the useful and
unique inventions of modern times brought in for
his
entertainment.
He then began the study of English. When in 1894 a New Testament
was sent to the Empress Dowager on the occasion of her sixtieth
birthday, he at once secured from the American Bible Society a
copy of the complete Bible for himself. He began studying the
Gospel of Luke. This gave him a taste for foreign
literature and
he sent his eunuchs to the various book depositories and bought
every book that had been translated from the European languages
into the Chinese. To these he bent all his energies and it soon
became noised
abroad that the Emperor was studying foreign books
and was about to
embrace the Christian faith. This continued from
1894 till 1898, during which time his example was followed by
tens of thousands of young Chinese scholars throughout the
empire, and Chang Chih-tung wrote his epoch-making book "China's
Only Hope" which, being sent to the young Emperor, led him to
enter upon a
universalreform, the chief feature of which may be
considered the
adoption of a new
educationalsystem.
But now let us notice the animus of Kuang Hsu. He has been
praised without stint for his leaning towards foreign affairs,
when in
reality was it not simply an effort on the part of the
young man to make China strong enough to
resist the incursions of
the European powers? Germany had taken Kiaochou, Russia had taken
Port Arthur, Japan had taken Formosa, Great Britain had taken
Weihaiwei, France had taken Kuangchouwan, and even Italy was
anxious to have a slice of his territory, while all the English
papers in the port cities were talking of China being divided up
amongst the Powers, and it was these things which led the Emperor
to enter upon his work of
reform.
In the summer of 1898
therefore" target="_blank" title="ad.&conj.因此;所以">
therefore he sent out an edict to the
effect that: "Our scholars are now without solid and practical
education; our artisans are without
scientificinstructors; when
compared with other countries WE SOON SEE HOW WEAK WE ARE. DOES
ANY ONE THINK THAT OUR TROOPS ARE AS WELL DRILLED OR AS WELL LED
AS THOSE OF THE FOREIGN ARMIES? OR THAT WE CAN SUCCESSFULLY STAND
AGAINST THEM? Changes must be made to
accord with the necessities
of the times. . . . Keeping in mind the morals of the sages and
wise men, we must make them the basis on which to build newer and
better structures. WE MUST SUBSTITUTE MODERN ARMS AND WESTERN
ORGANIZATION FOR OUR OLD REGIME; WE MUST SELECT OUR MILITARY
OFFICERS ACCORDING TO WESTERN METHODS OF MILITARY EDUCATION; we
must establish
elementary and high schools, colleges and
universities, in
accordance with those of foreign countries; we
must
abolish the Wen-chang (
literary essay) and
obtain a
knowledge of ancient and modern world-history, a right conception
of the present-day state of affairs, with special
reference to
the governments and
institutions of the countries of the five
great continents; and we must understand their arts and
sciences."
The effect of this edict was to cause hundreds of thousands of
young aspirants for office to put aside the classics and unite in
establishing
reform clubs in many of the
provincial capitals,
open ports, and prefectural cities. Book depots were opened for
the sale of the same kind of
literature the Emperor had been
studying, magazines and newspapers were issued and circulated in
great numbers, lectures were delivered and libraries established,
and students flocked to the
mission schools ready to study
anything the course contained,
literary,
scientific or religious.
Christians and pastors were even invited into the palace by the
eunuchs to dine with and
instruct them. But the matter that gave
the deepest concern to the boy in the palace was: "How can we so
strengthen ourselves that we will be able to
resist the White
Peril from Europe?"
Among the important edicts issued in the
establishment of the new
education was the one of June 11, 1898, in which he ordered that
"a great central university be established at Peking," the funds
for which were provided by the government. Among other things he
said: "Let all take
advantage of the opportunities for the new
education thus open to them, so that in time we may have many who
will be
competent to help us in the
stupendous task of putting
our country on a level with the strongest of the
western powers."
It was not
wisdom the young man was after for the sake of
wisdom,
but he wanted knowledge because knowledge was power, and at that
time it was the particular kind of power that was necessary to
save China from utter destruction.
On the 26th of the same month he censured the princes and
ministers who were lax in reporting upon this edict, and ordered
them to do so at once, and it was not long until a favourable
report was given and, for the first time in the history of the
empire, a great university was
launched by the government,
destined, may we not hope, to accomplish the end the ambitious
boy Emperor had in view.
Kuang Hsu was aware that a single
institution was not sufficient
to accomplish that end. On July 10th
therefore" target="_blank" title="ad.&conj.因此;所以">
therefore he ordered that
"schools and colleges be established in all the
provincialcapitals, prefectoral, departmental and district cities, and
allowed the viceroys and governors but two months to report upon
the number of colleges and free schools within their provinces,"
saying that "all must be changed into practical schools for the
teaching of Chinese
literature, and Western
learning and become
feeders to the Peking Imperial University." He ordered further
that all
memorial and other temples that had been erected by the
people but which were not recorded in the list of the Board of
Rites or of Sacrificial Worship, were to be turned into schools
and colleges for the propagation of Western
learning, a thought
which was quite in
harmony with that advocated by Chang Chih-
tung. The funds for carrying on this work, and the
establishmentof these schools, were to be provided for by the China Merchants'
Steamship Company, the Telegraph Company and the Lottery at
Canton.
On August 4th he ordered that numerous
preparatory schools be
established in Peking as special feeders to the university; and
on the 9th appointed Dr. W. A. P. Martin as Head of the Faculty
and approved the site suggested for the university by Sun
Chia-nai, the president. On the 16th he authorized the
establishment of a Bureau for "translating into Chinese Western