The Fight For The Republic in China by B. L. (Bertram Lenox) Putnam Weale
page 48 of 570 (08%)
page 48 of 570 (08%)
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_By courtesy of Major Isaac Newell, U.S. Military Attaché_.] [Illustration: Revival of the Imperialistic Worship of Heaven by Yuan Shih-kai in 1914: Scene on the Altar of Heaven, with Sacrificial Officers clothed in costumes dating from 2,000 years ago.] [Illustration: A Manchu Country Fair: The figures in the foreground are all Manchu women and girls.] [Illustration: A Manchu Woman grinding Grain.] It was on this astounding basis--by means of an organized revolt--that the Central Government was reorganized; and every act that followed bears the mark of its tainted parentage. Accepting readily as his Ministers in the more unimportant government Departments the nominees of the Southern Confederacy (which was now formally dissolved), Yuan Shih-kai was careful to reserve for his own men everything that concerned the control of the army and the police, as well as the all-important ministry of finance. The framework having been thus erected, attention was almost immediately concentrated on the problem of finding money, an amazing matter which would weary the stoutest reader if given in all its detail but which being part and parcel of the general problem must be referred to. Certain essential features can be very rapidly exposed. We have already made clear the purely economic nature of the forces which had sapped the foundations of Chinese society. Primarily it had been the disastrous nature of Chinese gold-indebtedness which had given the new ideas the force they required to work their will on the nation. And just because |
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