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A
communication: magnificently our great Emperor soothes and pacifies
China and the foreign countries, regarding all with the same kindness.
If there is profit, then he shares it with the peoples of the world;
if there is harm, then he removes it on behalf of the world. This
is because he takes the mind of heaven and earth as his mind.
The kings of
your honorable country by a tradition handed down from generation
to generation have always been noted for their politeness and submissiveness.
We have read your successive tributary memorials saying, "In
general our countrymen who go to trade in China have always received
His Majesty the Emperor's gracious treatment and equal justice."
and so on. Privately we are delighted with the way in which the
honorable rulers of your countip deeply understand the grand principles
and are grateful for the Celestial grace. For this reason the Celestial
Court in soothing those from afar has redoubled its polite and kind
treatment. The profit from trade has been enjoyed by them continuously
for two hundred years. This is the source from which your country
has become known for its wealth.
But after a
long period of commercial intercourse, there appear among the crowh
of barbarians both good persons and bad, unevenly. Consequently
there are those who smuggle opium to seduce the Chinese people and
so cause the spread of the poison to all provinces. Such persons
who only care to profit themselves, and disregard their harm to
others, are not tolerated by the laws of heaven and are unanimoly
hated by human beings. His Majesty the Emperor, upon hearing of
this, is in a towering rage. He has especially sent me, his commissioner,
to come to Kwangtung, and together with the governor-general and
governor jointly to investigate and settle this matter.
All those people
in China who sell opium or smoke opium should receive the death
penalty. We trace the crime of those barbarians who through the
years have been selling opium, then the deep harm they have wrought
and the great profit they have usurped should fundamentally justify
their execution according to law. We take into to consideration,
however, the fact that the various barbarians have still known how
to repent their crimes and return to their allegiance to us by taking
the 20,183 chests of opium from their storeships and petitioning
us, through their consular officer [superintendent of trade], Elliot,
to receive it. It has been entirely destroyed and this has been
faithfully reported to the Throne in several memorials by this comissioner
and his colleagues.
Fortunately
we have received a specially extended favor Born His Majesty the
Emperor, who considers that for those who voluntarily surrender
there are still some circumstances to paliate their crime, and so
for the time being he has magnanimously excused them from punishment.
But as for those who again violate the opium prohibition, it is
difficult for the law to pardon them repeatedly. Having established
new regulations, we presume that the ruler of your honorable country,
who takes delight in our culture and whose disposition is inclined
towards us, must be able to instruct the various barbarians to observe
the law with care. It is only neccessary to explain to them the
advantages and advantages and then they will know that the legal
code of the Celestial Court must be absolutely obeyed with awe.
We find your
country is sixty or seventy thousand li [three li make one mile,
ordinarily] from China Yet there are barbanan ships that strive
to come here for trade for the purpose of making a great profit
The wealth of China is used to profit the barbarians. That is to
say, the great profit made by barbarians is all taken from the rightful
share of China. By what right do they then in return use the poisonous
drug to injure the Chinese people? Even though the barbarians may
not necessarily intend to do us harm, yet in coveting profit to
an extreme, they have no regard for injuring others. Let us ask,
where is your conscience? I have heard that the smoking of opium
is very strictly forbidden by your country; that is because the
harm caused by opium is clearly understood. Since it is not permitted
to do harm to your own country, then even less should you let it
be passed on to the harm of other countries -- how much less to
China! Of all that China exports to foreign countries, there is
not a single thing which is not beneficial to peo ple: they are
of benefit when eaten, or of benefit when used, or of benefit when
resold: all are beneficial. Is there a single article from China
which has done any harm to foreign countries? Take tea and rhubarb,
for example; the foreign countries cannot get along for a single
day without them. If China cuts off these benefits with no sympathy
for those who are to suffer, then what can the barbarians rely upon
to keep themselves alive? Moreover the woolens, camlets, and longells
[i.e., textiles] of foreign countries cannot be woven unless they
obtain Chinese silk. If China, again, cuts off this beneficial export,
what profit can the barbarians expect to make? As for other foodstuffs,
beginning with candy, ginger, cinnamon, and so forth, and articles
for use, beginning with silk, satin, chinaware, and so on, all the
things that must be had by foreign countries are innumerable. On
the other hand, articles coming from the outside to China can only
be used as toys. We can take them or get along without them. Since
they are not needed by China, what difficulty would there be if
we closed our the frontier and stopped the trade? Nevertheless,
our Celestial Court lets tea, silk, and other goods be shipped without
limit and circulated everywhere without begrudging it in the slightest.
This is for no other reason but to share the benefit with the people
of the whole world. The goods from China carried away by your country
not only supply your own consumption and use, but also can be divided
up and sold to other countries, producing a triple profit. Even
if you do not sell opium, you still have this threefold profit.
How can you bear to go further, selling products injurious to others
in order to fulfill your insatiable desire?
Suppose there
were people from another country who carried opium for sale to England
and seduced
your people into buying and smoking it; certainly your honorable
ruler would deeply hate it and be bitterly aroused. We have heard
heretofore that your honorable ruler is kind and benevolent. Naturally
you would not wish to give unto others what you yourself do not
want. We have also heard that the ships coming to Canton have all
had regulations promulgated and given to them in which it is stated
that it is not permitted to carry contraband goods. This indicates
that the administrative orders of your
honorable rule
have been originally strict and clear. Only because the trading
ships are numerous, heretofore perhaps they have not been examined
with care. Now after this communication has been dispatched and
you have clearly understood the strictness of the prohibitory laws
of the Celestial Gourt, certainly you will not let your subjects
dare again to violate the law.
We have further
learned that in London, the capital of your honorable rule, and
in Scotland, Ireland,
and other places, originally no opium has been produced. Only in
several places of India under your control such as Bengal, Madras,
Bombay, Patna, Benares, and Malwa has opium been planted from hill
to hill, and ponds h ave been opened for its manufacture. For months
and years wark is continued in order to accumulate the poison. The
obnoxious odor ascends, irritating heaven and frightening the spirits.
Indeed you, O King, can eradicate the opium plant in these places,
hoe over the fields entirely, and sow in its stead the five grains
[millet, barley, wheat, etc.]. Anyone who dares again attempt to
plant and manufacture opium should be severely punished. This will
really be a great, benevolent government policy that will increase
the common weal and get rid of evil. For this, Heaven must support
you and the spirits must bring you good fortune, prolonging your
old age and extending your descendants. All will depend on this
act.
As for the
barbarian merchants who come to China, their food and drink and
habitation, all
received by the gracious favor of our Celestial Court. Their accumulated
wealth is all benefit given with pleasure by our Celestial Court.
They spend rather few days in their own country but more time in
Canton. To digest clearly the le gal penalties as an aid to instruction
has been a valid principle in all ages. Suppose a man of another
country comes to England to trade, he still has to obey the English
laws; how much more should he obey in China the laws of the Celestial
Dynasty?
Now we have
set up regulations governing the Chinese people. He who sells opium
shall receive the death penalty and he who smokes it also the death
penalty. Now consider this: if the barbarians do not bring opium,
then how can the Chinese people resell it, and how can they smoke
it? The fact is that the wicked barbariians beguile the Ghinese
people into a death trap. How then can we grant life only to these
barbarians? He who takes the life of even one person still has to
atone for it with his own life; yet is the harm done by opium limited
to the taking of one life only? Therefore in the new regulations,
in regard to those barbarians who bring opium to China, the penalty
is fixed at decapitation or strangulation. This is what is called
getting rid a harmful thing on behalf of mankind.
Moreover we
have found that in the middle of the second month of this year [April
9] Consul [Superintendent] Elliot of your nation, because the opium
prohibition law was very stern and severe, petitioned for an extension
of the time limit. He requested an estension of five months for
India and its adjacent harbours and related territories, and ten
months for England proper, after which they would act in conformity
wi th the new regulations. Now we, the commissioner and.others,
have memorialized and have received the extraordinary Celestial
grace of His Majesty the Emperor, who has redoubled his consideration
and compassion. All those who from the period of the coming one
year (from England) or six months (from India) bring opium to China
by mistake, but who voluntarily confess and completely surrender
their opium, shall be exempt from their punishment. After this limit
of time, if there are still those who bring opium to China then
they will plainly have committed a wilful violation and shall at
once be executed according to law, with absolutely no clemency or
pardon. This may be called the height of kindness and the perfection
of justice.
Our Celestial
Dynasty rules over and supervises the myriad states, and surely
possesses unfathomable
spiritual dignity. Yet the Emperor cannot cear to execute people
without having first tried to reform them by instruction. Therefore
he especialiy prornulgates these fixed regulations. The barbarian
merchants of your country, if they wish to do business for a prolonged
period, are required to obey our statues respectfully and to cut
off permanently the source of opium. They must by no means try to
test the effectiveness
of the law with their lives. May you, O King, check your wicked
and sift your wicked people before
they come to China, in order to guarantee the peace of your nation,
to show further the sincerity of your politeness and subrnissiveness,
and to let the two countries enjoy together the blessings of peace
How fortunate, how fortunate indeed! After receiving this dispatch
will you immediately give us a prompt reply regarding the details
and circumstances of your cutting off the opium traffic. be sure
not to put this off. The above is what has to be communicated.
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