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Evolution Of The Japanese, Social And Psychic by Sidney L. (Sidney Lewis) Gulick
page 28 of 563 (04%)
a certain section of the English public, they do a great deal of
harm among a section of the Japanese public, as could be easily
shown in detail, did space allow."--_Japan Mail, May 7, 1898_.

But even more harmful to the reading public of England and America are
the hastily formed yet, nevertheless, widely published opinions of
tourists and newspaper correspondents. Could such writers realize the
inevitable limitations under which they see and try to generalize, the
world would be spared many crudities and exaggerations, not to say
positive errors. The impression so common to-day that Japan's recent
developments are anomalous, even contrary to the laws of national
growth, is chiefly due to the superficial writings of hasty observers.
Few of those who have dilated ecstatically on her recent growth have
understood either the history or the genius of her people.

"To mention but one among many examples," says Prof. Chamberlain,
"the ingenious Traveling Commissioner of the _Pall Mall Gazette_,
Mr. Henry Norman, in his lively letters on Japan published nine or
ten years ago, tells the story of Japanese education under the
fetching title of 'A Nation at School'; but the impression left is
that they have been their own schoolmasters. In another letter on
'Japan in Arms,' he discourses concerning 'The Japanese Military
Re-organizers,' 'The Yokosuka dockyard,' and other matters, but
omits to mention that the reorganizers were Frenchmen, and that the
Yokosuka dockyard was also a French creation. Similarly, when
treating of the development of the Japanese newspaper, he ignores
the fact that it owed its origin to an Englishman, which surely, to
a man whose object was reality, should have seemed an object worth
recording. These letters, so full and apparently so frank, really
so deceptive, are, as we have said, but one instance among many of
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