Erik Ringmar, Thinking Men and Ideal Betrayed
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Thinking Men and Ideals Betrayed:Bentham, Coleridge and BritishImperialism in Nineteenth-CenturyChina
There are two men to whom their country is indebted, John Stuart Mill wrote in
1840, not only for the important ideas which have been thrown into circulation
among its thinking men in their time, but also for the revolution in its general
modes of thought and investigation. 1 The two were Jeremy Bentham and Samuel
Taylor Coleridge. Bentham was a progressive, Mill explained, and Coleridge a
conservative: Bentham's skill was to discover truths which were at variance with
the accepted consensus, whereas Coleridge focused on truths that lay neglected
in the existing doctrines and institutions. And although both were ignored - or
even held in contempt - by ordinary readers, Bentham and Coleridge were the
teachers of the teachers of their age:
there is hardly to be found in England an individual of any importancei n the world of mind, who (whatever opinions he may have afterwardsadopted) did not first learn to think from one of these two. 2
Two of these thinking men were John Bowring and James Bruce, the Eighth Earl
of Elgin. Bowring worked closely with Bentham on the Westminster Review , the
journal he started in 1823. Bowring was also Bentham's literary executor and the
editor of his Collected Works . Lord Elgin, for his part, fully mastered Coleridge's
thought when in college, and as a statesman he made continuous references to
Coleridge in his diaries and letters. By a curious coincidence, in the 1850s, both
men found themselves working for the British government in China. Between
1 John Stuart Mill, Bentham, in Dissertations and Discussions, Political Philosophical, and Historical. Reprinted Chiefly from the Edinburgh and
Westminster Reviews, Volume I (London: 1859), 330.2 Ibid . 330-331.
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1849 and 1853 Bowring served as British consul at Canton (Guangzhou), and
between 1854 and 1859 as plenipotentiary and governor of Hong Kong. In 1857,
after recklessly starting a war with the Chinese, Bowring was replaced as
plenipotentiary by Lord Elgin. Elgin negotiated a treaty with the Emperor in
Beijing, but he too made war on the Chinese.
Bentham and Coleridge held opposing views on the colonial system, although
neither of them was completely consistent in their positions. In the main,
Bentham was critical: he believed colonialism to be a mistake and an injustice
imposed both on the colonized and the colonizers. At the same time he was a
great defender of free trade and firmly believed that commerce would contribute
to assuring the greatest happiness of the greatest number. Coleridge, for his
part, had a keen appreciation of the devastations brought about by colonialism,
yet he saw colonies as Britain's imperative duty. By contrast, he remained
unconvinced regarding the virtues of free trade, which he called solemn
humbug, and saw as a threat against the vitality, and long-term viability, of the
country.
Meeting up in China, Bowring and Elgin clashed repeatedly with each other
over matters of policy. More surprisingly perhaps, they both ended up betraying
the ideals of their mentors. Very far from respecting the views of the Chinese, as
Bentham would have insisted, Bowring imposed his own version of their interests
on them. He began by demanding that they open up the gates of Canton, and
when the Chinese authorities refused, he ordered the city to be bombarded. The
result was the Second Opium War. Lord Elgin, for his part, betrayed his mentors
most famous dream - the vision of the imperial palace which Coleridge had
described in the poem Kubla Khan. To Coleridge the palace had been an earthly
version of paradise, as it indeed had been to the emperors who lived there. Yet on
October 18, 1860, Lord Elgin decided that paradise had to be destroyed. He
burned down the imperial palace complex, known as the Yuanmingyuan, located in
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the north-western suburbs of Beijing.
Comparing Bentham and Coleridge we can survey the spectrum of ideas
regarding colonialism as it existed in Britain in the first decades of the nineteenth-
century. Comparing Bowring and Elgin we can grasp how these ideas had changed
by the 1850s. What we want to explain are the betrayals. What turned Bowring -
the arch-Benthamite - into an aggressive imperialist? And what made Elgin - the
mild-mannered Coleridgean - into a destroyer of imperial palaces? Looking for
answers we will question Mill's thesis on the seminal importance of Bentham and
Coleridge for the thinking men of the age. Or rather, we want to know which
other, and ultimately more important, considerations that came to influence the
statesmen of the 1850s. As we will argue, by mid-century, new social forces were
at work, most notably an intensely competitive form of nationalism backed up by
theories of race and social evolution. These new social forces, the argument will
be, are what made both Bowring and Elgin betray the ideals of their mentors.
Bentham's principles
For Bentham, said Mill, arguments always started from first principles. His modus
operandi was to set up a rational standard and proceed to judge existing social
arrangements with its help. Institutions and traditions that survived the test of
his felicific calculus were accepted; those that did not were condemned, and
usually in the most energetic prose. Thus it was easy for Bentham to show, for
example, that freely moving interest rates increased the greatest happiness of the
greatest number whereas usury laws decreased it. 3 Or that free trade ultimately
was to everyones benefit. Or consider the Panopticon, Benthams notorious
solution to the problem of penitentiary reform. 4 By placing himself in the
3 Jeremy Bentham, Defence of Usury; Showing the Impolicy of the Present LegalRestraints on the Terms of Pecuniary Bargains; in Letters to a Friend, in TheWorks of Jeremy Bentham, Volume 3 , ed. John Bowring (London: 1843).
4 Jeremy Bentham, Panopticon; or, the Inspection-House: Containing the Idea of aNew Principle of Construction Applicable to Any Sort of Establishment, in Which
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inspectors lodge at the center of this construction, a single person could easily
survey the whole prison, and since all prisoners were visible while the inspector
was hidden, the prisoners would never know if they were under scrutiny or not.
This, Bentham insisted, was a more humane, more felicific, solution than
traditional forms of incarceration. The central inspection principle made it
easier, and cheaper, to control prisoners; riots and escapes were prevented and
inmates were more effectively reformed. 5
According to Benthams critics, such a priori reasoning gave his philosophy a
cold, mechanical, and ungenial air. 6 Proceeding not from individual cases but
from general principles meant that Bentham risked ignoring local variations and
historical circumstances. Bentham was legislating not for England or for Britain,
but for the world. This was not only extraordinarily pretentious, his critics argued,
but fraught with dangers. The same laws, as Mill pointed out, would not have
suited our wild ancestors, accustomed to rude independence, and a people of
Asiatics bowed down by military despotism, 7 Bentham defended himself
vigorously against such accusations. Indeed, he wrote an entire essay - On the
Influence of Time and Place in Matters of Legislation - emphasizing the fact that
social reformers always had to take local contexts into account. 8 Yet despite his
own protestations, it was as a legislator for the world that Bentham celebrated his
greatest triumphs. 9 To his students, the power of his argument rested in its
general principles, and any restrictions on these principles would for that reason
Persons of Any Description Are to Be Kept Under Inspection; and in Particular toPenitentiary-Houses, Works , vol 4. 37-172. On Benthams rejection of alternativemodes of punishment see R.V. Jackson, Bentham's Penal Theory in Action: TheCase Against New South Wales, Utilitas 25, no. 2 (1998): 226-241.
5 On the central inspection principle, see Jeremy Bentham, Panopticon Versus NewSouth Wales: Or, the Panopticon Penitentiary System, and the Penal ColonizationSystem, Compared, in Works . vol 4. 212.
6 Quoted in Mill, Bentham , 386.7 Ibid . 375.8 Jeremy Bentham, Essays on the Influence of Time and Place in Matters of
Legislation, in Works , vol 1.
9 Jennifer Pitts, A Turn to Empire: The Rise of Imperial Liberalism in Britain and France (Princeton: 2006), 103-22.
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always appeared as ad hoc and as unjustified.
Bentham's work had a particularly powerful impact in India. 10 Finding their
careers blocked in the British civil service, many of his followers - James and John
Stuart Mill included - joined the East India Company or the Indian colonial service.
India, it turned out, was full of unexamined prejudices and entrenched
institutions. 11 Besides, the despotic power which the British legislators had
created for themselves meant that there were no obstacles blocking the
implementation of their plans. The banning of sati , the custom of widow burning,
in 1829, was one reform for which the Benthamites were quick to take credit. 12
Considering the imperialist zeal of Bentham's students it may come as a
surprise that Bentham himself was skeptical of colonialism. 13 Starting in the
1790s, in essays like Emancipate Your Colonies!, Rid Yourself of Ultramaria,
and Plan for an Universal and Perpetual Peace, Bentham repeatedly made the
case against colonial possessions. 14 Empires, he argued, undermined the greatest
happiness of the greatest number in both Europe and the colony. The unlimited
power given to colonial administrators was conducive to corruption; colonies were
financially unsound and inefficient; they exacted a tax on the poor for the benefit
of the wealthy; they encouraged unnecessary growth of the state's military
expenses but left the home country exposed; and they were founded on misguided
conceptions of glory. 15 Colonies could not be profitable without being oppressive
10 Eric Stokes, The English Utilitarians and India (New Delhi: 1989).
11 James Mill, The History of British India, vol. 1 (London: Baldwin: 1817)12 Nancy G. Cassels, Bentinck: Humanitarian and Imperialist: The Abolition of Suttee, Journal of British Studies 5, no. 1 (1965): 77-87; Martha Kaplan,
Panopticon in Poona: An Essay on Foucault and Colonialism, Cultural Anthropology 10, no. 1 (February 1995): 85-98.
13 Pitts, Turn to Empire. 107-114. According to Wagner, Bentham's anti-colonialismwas inspired by Josiah Tucker and James Anderson. See Donald O. Wagner,
British Economists and the Empire I, Political Science Quarterly 46, no. 2 (June1931): 256-57.
14 Jeremy Bentham, Emancipate Your Colonies!: Addressed to the NationalConvention of France, Anno 1793, in Works , vol 4. 407-18; Jeremy Bentham, APlan for an Universal and Perpetual Peace, in Works , vol 2. On the status of the
latter source, see Pitts, Turn to Empire , n. 43, 296-97.15 Cf. the summary in Pitts, Turn to Empire , 108.
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and the oppression would sooner or later result in wars of national liberation. As
Bentham asked the French National Convention in 1793:
You choose your own government: why are not other people to choosetheirs? Do you seriously mean to govern the world, and do you callthat liberty ?16
Despite Benthams anti-colonial stance, colonies nevertheless fascinated him as a
location where his ideas might find an application, and to this extent at least he
acknowledged that British colonialism might have a beneficial impact on the yet-
to-be-enlightened parts of the world. His pet-project, the Panopticon, provides an
example. After unsuccessfully lobbying the British government to construct aprototype of the prison, he turned his eyes on India. 17 In a letter to the Indian
reformer Raja Ram Mohan Roy in 1828 he insisted that the central inspection
principle would work very well in India, and he returned to the topic no fewer
than three times in the same letter. What say you, he suggested to Roy, to the
making singly, or in conjunction with other enlightened philanthropists, an offer to
Government for that purpose? 18
Coleridge's dream
Coleridge's philosophy, as John Stuart Mill pointed out, began not with rational
principles, like Bentham's, but instead with the world as it was given to the
senses, and it proceeded towards the ideal and the unattainable. This basic mode
of thinking remained the same even as Coleridge's political outlook changed. Inhis youth, he had been a purveyor of radical utopias: inspired by the socialist
program of William Godwin, Coleridge and his friend Robert Southey, devised a
16 Jeremy Bentham, Emancipate Your Colonies , 408.17 In 1812 the government decided to go ahead with an alternative penitentiary
building. Although Bentham was awarded 23,000 pounds in compensation for hisefforts, the plans came to naught. Jackson, Bentham's Penal Theory , 241.
18 Jeremy Bentham, Bentham to Rammohun Roy, in Works , vol 10. 589-92, quotep. 92. Compare John Bowring, Ram Mohun Roy, Autobiographical Recollectionsof Sir John Bowring (London: 1877) 394-396. On actual cases of Panopticons inIndia, see Kaplan, Panopticon in Poona , 85-98.
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scheme for an ideal, Pantisocratic, community where private property was
abolished and men lived in perfect equality with each other. 19 Making increasingly
concrete plans, their eyes fell on the Susquehanna river in the backwoods of
Pennsylvania. What they wanted to construct here was a pastoral idyll, la
Rousseau , where they could escape the corrupting influences of society. But the
scheme foundered after a quarrel: Southey wanted to bring servants with him to
America whereas Coleridge rejected this as contrary to their egalitarian ideals.
Doing research for his Pantisocratic community in the 1790s, Coleridge read a
large number of accounts of European explorations in far away locations: Samuel
Purchas, Purchas Pilgrimage; William Bartram, Travels; James Bruces Travels to
Discover the Source of the Nile , among them. 20 The poetry he wrote in
subsequent years was also heavily inspired by exotic images, a tendency
accentuated by his increasing reliance on laudanum. 21 One of his most famous
poems, Kubla Khan, subtitled A Vision in a Dream, usually dated to 1797, was
such an opium-fueled description of the imperial palace in Shangdu built by Kublai
Khan, the thirteenth century Mongol emperor of China: 22
In Xanadu did Kubla Khana stately pleasure-dome decree,where Alph, the sacred river, ranthrough caverns measureless to mandown to a sunless sea.
19 On Coleridge's thought in a colonial context, see James C. McKusick, 'WiselyForgetful': Coleridge and the Politics of Pantisocracy, in , ed. Tim Fulford andPeter J. Kitson (Cambridge: 1998).
20 Samuel Purchas, Purchas His Pilgrimage: Or Relations of the World and theReligions Observed in All Ages and Places Discovered ... (London: 1614); WilliamBartram, Travels Through North and South Carolina, Georgia, East and West Florida ... (London: 1794); James Bruce, Travels to Discover the Source of theNile, in the Years 1768, 1769, 1770, 1771, 1772, and 1773, Volumes 1-4(Edinburgh:1790).The definitive work on the sources relied on by Coleridge's isJohn Livingston Lowes, The Road To Xanadu: A Study In The Ways Of theImagination, [1927] (Edinburg: 2008), 356-434.
21 Scholars have long disputed the extent to which opium inspired or caused thechange in Coleridges poetry in the mid-1790s. Lowes, Road to Xanadu , 414-425,provides a convincing case against such an interpretation.
22 The remains of the palace are described in Lawrence Impey, Shangtu, theSummer Capital of Kublai Khan, Geographical Review 15, no. 4 (October 1925):584-604.
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In his Introduction l'histoire des Mongols , Rashid-al-Din Hamadani, the
fourteenth-century Persian statesman and historian, describes how this palace
came into being. 23 Kublai Khan, says Rashid-al-Din, first saw the palace in a
dream and when he woke up he ordered the vision to be constructed. As Lus
Borges has pointed out, these two dreams - Kublai Khans and Coleridge's - form a
strange pair, not least since Coleridge could not have been aware of the origin of
the Emperors vision. 24 What seems eternal, says Borges, is the dream while the
palace, its concrete manifestation, is quite ephemeral.
Kublai Khan's palace, as Coleridge describes it, is surely a vision of paradise,
but the setting is no longer a pastoral, Rousseauesque, idyll, and the palace is not,
like the Pantisocratic community in Pennsylvania, an ideal intended to be realized.
Instead the images are violent, sexual and narcotic; the description is quasi-
religious, not quasi-political. Paradise, for Coleridge, is not a dream to be
constructed as much as a dream to which we passively have to submit. Kubla
Khan describes a sublime, Oriental, non-place, located beyond the reach of
reason, inspiring both longing and dread.
A savage place! As holy and enchantedas a'er beneath a waning moon was hauntedby woman wailing for her demon lover.
And all should cry, Beware! Beware!His flashing eyes, his floating hair!Weave a circle round him thrice,And close your eyes with holy dread,For he on honey-dew hath fed,And drunk the milk of Paradise.
23 Rashid-al-Din Hamadani, Contemporary Notices of Cathay under the Mongols:Retracted from the Historical Cyclopdia of Rashiduddin, Cathay and the Way Thither: Being a Collection of Medieval Notices of China, Volume 2 , edited byHenry Yule (London:1866), 260.
24 As Borges points out, Introduction l'histoire des Mongols, was translated intoEuropean languages only by mid nineteenth-century. Jorge Luis Borges,
Coleridge's Dream, in Selected Non-Fictions (Harmondsworth: 2000), 369-372.The first person to notice the curious similarity between the two dreams is HenryYule. See Yule, Cathay, volume 1:134, n. 2. The parallels between the dreaminclude details like the fountains produced by water imprisoned in the bowels of the earth. Rashid-al-Din, Contemporary Notices, 261.
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Politically speaking, by the end of the 1790s Coleridge had turned sharply to the
right. As he now saw it, radical experiments were doomed and only by accepting
societys existing traditions and institutions could an ideal political community be
constructed. 25 The loneliness of man in the contemporary world could only be
remedied by belonging to a state which unified society and granted meaning to
individuals. From the 1820s onward, Coleridge increasingly praised the national
church - the Church of England - as the physical and spiritual embodiment of
such a national community, and he identified the clerisy - a leading class of
guardians - as the moral and intellectual teachers of the rest of society. 26
Not surprisingly, Coleridge opposed Bentham on matters of free trade which
he regarded as nothing but a solemn humbug. Free trade was either a truism -
which is how Coleridge regarded the felicific calculus - or a dangerous scheme
which might undermine the vitality of the nation.
You talk about making this article cheaper by reducing its price in themarket from 8d. to 6d. But suppose, in so doing, you have rendered
your country weaker against a foreign foe; suppose you havedemoralized thousands of your fellow-countrymen, and have sowndiscontent between one class of society and another, your article istolerably dear, I take it, after all. Is not its real price enhanced to everyChristian and patriot a hundred-fold? 27
The entire tendency of modern political economy, said Coleridge in an aphorism,
works against the nation. It would dig up the charcoal foundations of the temple
of Ephesus to burn as fuel for a steam-engine! 28 On the question of colonies,
however, he was more equivocal. His eventual conclusion was in favor, at least aslong as colonialism served to unite the British state and the British people:
Colonization is not only a manifest expedient for, but an imperativeduty on, Great Britain. God seems to hold out his finger to us over the
25 Samuel Taylor Coleridge, On the Constitution of Church and State According to theIdea of Each (London: 1839).
26 Ibid , xv-xvi . There could, Coleridge added in his Table Talk , be no order, noharmony of the whole, without them. Coleridge, Table Talk , April 10, 1832, 2:41.
27 Ibid , 17 March, 1833, 2:131.28 Ibid . 20 June, 1834, 2:327.
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sea. But it must be a national colonization, such as was that of theScotch to America; a colonization of Hope, and not such as we havealone encouraged and effected for the last fifty years, a colonization of Despair. 29
What Coleridge approves of are communal projects similar to the Greek colonies of
Antiquity, not the market-driven imperialism of free trade practiced by
contemporary British merchants. 30 Coleridge was only too aware of the costs
which colonialism imposed. His essay, On the Slave Trade, 1796, contrasts the
plight of the slaves with the rural idyll which was Africa before the Europeans
arrived. 31 In fact the original African village was remarkably similar to the
Pantisocratic community which Coleridge wanted to establish:
the Africans who are situated beyond the contagion of European vice,are innocent and happy. The peaceful inhabitants of a fertile soil, theycultivate their fields in common, and reap the crop as the commonproperty of all. Each family, like the peasants in some parts of Europe,spins, weaves, sews, hunts, fishes, and makes baskets, fishing tackle,and the implements of agriculture; 32
As a conservative, Coleridge is clearly more respectful than his liberal
contemporaries of established institutions, even those of non-European societies.
Indeed, at least when under the influence of opium, he reverses the relationship
between Europe and the non-European. The Kubla Khan of the famous poem is
clearly not the kind of ruler you trade with, bully, and then occupy. The exact
opposite is true: after you have drunk the milk of Paradise, and closed your
eyes in holy dread, you are yourself quite helpless. And the experience is
pleasurable. This is not a dream of colonial possession but of being possessed, of
passively and blissfully submitting to a sublime, Oriental, overlord.
29 Ibid , May 4, 1833, 2:165-166.30 Coleridge was, for example, against a continued British presence in Ireland. Ibid ,
December 17, 1831, 2:14-15.31 Samuel Taylor Coleridge, On the Slave Trade, in Essays on His Own Times,
Volume I , from The Watchman, no. 4, Friday, March 25, 1796. (London: 1850),
137-53.32 Coleridge, Slave-trade , 143.
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John Bowring and the walls of Canton
John Bowring began his career as a linguist and translator of poetry. 33 He learned
French, German, Dutch, Spanish, Italian and Portuguese from an early age and
published a string of anthologies of Russian, Polish, Serbian, Czech and Hungarian
verse. 34 Getting to know Bentham in the 1820s, he joined the Westminster
Review as an editor in 1824, and wrote on literature, but also very extensively on
matters of free trade. Bowring soon became Bentham's confidante ; for a while he
lived in Benthams home and when he eventually moved out he became
Benthams neighbor. The friendship was evidently not hurt by Bentham's
dismissal of poetry nor by Bowrings ardent, Unitarian, religiosity. 35 After Bentham
had died in his arms in 1834, Bowring became his literary executor and the,
sometimes unreliable, editor of his Collected Works in eleven volumes. 36
In the late 1820s financial difficulties forced Bowring to look for a more secure
employment. 37 He landed a job as a commissioner charged with writing reports on
the state of trade with various European countries, and to assess the health of
their public finances. Bowring interpreted the job description as a license to
preach the virtues of free trade to anyone he came across on the Continent.
33 For biographical data see Bowring, Autobiographical Recollections ; Gerald Stone, Bowring, Sir John, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford: 2004),http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/3087. A highly critical portrait is providedin George Borrow, [1857], The Old Radical in The Romany Rye (London: 1907),381-392.
34 For an assessment see Arthur Prudden Coleman, John Bowring and the Poetry of the Slavs, Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 84, no. 3 (May 31,1941): 431-459. Not everyone was equally impressed with Bowrings linguisticpowers. He was, said Borrow, slightly acquainted with four or five of the easierdialects of Europe, on the strength of which knowledge he would fain pass for auniversal linguist. Borrow, Romany Rye, 388. His attempts to learn Chinese seemto have been largely unsuccessful. Wong, Deadly Dreams , 86-87.
35 Bowring, Autobiographical Recollections , 388-89. On Bowrings religion, see R. K.Webb, John Bowring and Unitarianism, Utilitas 4, no. 01 (1992): 43-79.
36 On the unreliability of Bentham as an editor, see Pitts, Turn to Empire , n. 43, 296-97.
37 In 1827 his firm, Bowring & Co, exporting herring to France and Spain, wentbankrupt leaving him without means of supporting his eight children. Stone,Bowring .
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Between 1832 and 1834 he toured the French countryside talking to assemblies of
merchants, wine growers, newspaper editors, and to liberal political activists.
Swaying public opinion, he had learned from Bentham, was the way to spread the
liberal revolution. 38 Yet his efforts backfired: rather than seeing the benefits of
free trade, many Frenchmen saw only so much pro-British propaganda. 39
To Bowring the free-trade doctrine was merely one aspect of a more general
principle of free communication which he applied to every aspect of life.
Communication is civilization in activity, he explained. He who can
communicate cheaply and rapidly with all his fellows must be elevated by the very
fact of that communication. 40 Bowrings defense of free communication went as
far as to reject quarantine regulations put in place during outbreaks of contagious
diseases. Quarantines, he argued, was an unwarranted abuse of state power. 41
And when he himself temporarily was detained by French authorities during a trip
in 1822, he was outraged. 42 Indefatigably, Bowring canvassed support for his
chosen causes. In the 1820s he was elected foreign secretary of the Society for
the Promotion of Permanent and Universal Peace, and in 1838 he was, together
38 Cf. the importance of counter-efficient influence, in Jeremy Bentham,Observations on the Restrictive and Prohibitory Commercial System; Especially with a Reference to the Decree of the Spanish Cortes of July 1820 (London: 1821),31-40. Bowrings activities are discussed in B.M. Ratcliff, Great Britain and Tariff Reform in France, 1831-1836, in Trade and Transport (Manchester: 1977), 98-135. For his own account, see Bowring, Autobiographical Recollections , 132-148.
39 Todd, Global Dissemination , 381-382.40 Quoted in ibid , 388. On the use of metaphors of circulation, exchange, and
trade, and the connection to civilization, see David Porter, A Peculiar butUninteresting Nation: China and the Discourse of Commerce in Eighteenth-CenturyEngland, Eighteenth-Century Studies 33, no. 2 (Winter 2000): 184-86.
41 As an MP Bowring returned to the question again and again. See, for example, Quarantine, House of Commons Debate, March 15, 1842, Hansard , vol. 61, cc.608-618; Quarantine Laws and Regulations, House of Commons Debate, July 23,1844, Hansard , vol. 76, cc. 1292-1310. For Coleridge's speculations regardingquarantines, see Coleridge, Table Talk , April 7, 1832, 2:37-40.
42 Sir John Bowring, Details of the Arrest, Imprisonment and Liberation of anEnglishman By the Bourbon Government of France (London: 1823). His outragewas cruelly lampooned, in French doggerel, in pitre a John Bowring, Arrt EtDtenu Illgalement Par Les Autorits Franaises, Puis Mis En Liberte SansJugement, The Morning Chronicle , December 26, 1822, issue 16750.
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with Richard Cobden, a founding member of the Anti-Corn Law League. 43 His
translations of poetry too were a part of this larger project: thanks to Bowrings
efforts, speakers even of small European languages would be able to communicate
their ideas freely with the members of the much larger English-speaking world. 44
In 1835, after several unsuccessful attempts, Bowring became a member of
parliament, and from 1841 he occupied a safe seat as the MP for Bolton.
However, renewed financial difficulties forced him again to look for a more
lucrative position. In 1848 he was made Consul in Canton and in 1854 Governor
of Hong Kong and British plenipotentiary in East Asia. China, at the time, had
very limited intercourse with the rest of the world: foreigners were not allowed to
settle freely, to trade, or to preach their religion; the country had no permanent
diplomatic relations and little apparent interest in the rest of the world. Clearly,
Chinas attitude clashed with Bowrings most cherished beliefs. And taking up his
new post he was fully determined to do something about it.
In the latter part of the eighteenth-century, an insatiable demand for tea had
given Britain a trade deficit with China. The problem was solved, however, once
the Chinese in the first decades of the nineteenth-century became thoroughly
addicted to opium, exported from British-controlled India. Although the Chinese
authorities repeatedly banned the trade, and even appealed to Queen Victoria to
have it stopped, they were powerless against British smugglers. 45 By mid-
nineteenth-century, the financial viability of the British government in India
depended entirely on its ability to sell opium to the Chinese. 46 Eventually two
wars - the First and the Second Opium Wars - were fought over the issue. The
43 Todd, Global Dissemination , 374.44 Coleman, Poetry of the Slavs , 431.45 For assorted documents on the opium question, see Hosea B. Morse, The
International Relations of the Chinese Empire, Volume 1 (New York: 1900), 171-212. On the appeal to Queen Victoria, see ibid :194.
46 Wong, Deadly Dreams, 434-454. Cf. Bowring, John Bowring, Colonization andCommerce in British India, The Westminster Review , no. 11 (1829):337; KarlMarx, Articles on China, Karl Marx in New York Daily Tribune ,http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1853/china/index.htm.
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first of these, concluded through the Treaty of Nanjing, 1842, did not explicitly
mention opium, but it opened up five Chinese ports to British merchants and it
gave Britain a permanent foothold in Hong Kong. 47
Yet for Bowring this was not enough. He wanted full and unimpeded access,
including the right to freely sell opium. Although he as an MP had voted against
the drug trade, he was now supporting it, indeed his son was a partner in Jardine
Mattheson & Co, the largest opium dealer in the East. 48 And once he permanently
returned to Britain in 1859, Bowring toured the countryside, much as he had done
in France thirty years earlier, making his case at public meetings. The use of
opium, he admitted, was certainly most deleterious, but compared with the
social evils, and the crimes resulting from intoxicating liquors in this country, the
results even of the abuse of opium in China are as nothing. 49 The opium smoker
dreams and fancies delightful visions, but he does not, like a drunken
Englishman, become a perfect ruffian.
As plenipotentiary in China, the walls of the city of Canton became his
particular obsession. 50 The British traded with the city each year, and they had a
presence in the factories located outside the city wall, but Bowring insisted that
Britain should have the right to trade permanently in the city itself and that British
officials could come and go as they pleased. Citing the strongly anti-British
sentiments among the population, the Chinese authorities rejected these
demands. Their refusal pushed Bowring to the brink. In increasingly emotional
dispatches, both to London and to the Chinese, he demanded that the gates of
47 Morse, International Relations , 1:298-318.48 As pointed out in a letter to the editor by An Old Resident in China, Sir John
Bowring and the Opium Question, The Times , October 5, 1859, issue 23429.49 Sir John Bowring on the Opium Trade, The Newcastle Courant , September 23,
1859, Issue 9639 edition. For objections see ibid as well as Henry Richard, SirJohn Bowring and the Opium Trade, The Leeds Mercury , December 6, 1859, Issue7039 edition.
50 John Bowring, Dr. Bowring to the Earl of Clarendon (Received June 14), inCorrespondence Relative to Entrance into Canton, 1850-1855 (London: 1857), 3-10. On the creation of this vocabulary as applied to China, see Porter, Peculiar but Uninteresting , 183-184, 187-192.
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Canton give way. 51 The Chinese did not want free communication with the rest of
the world; they were proud, and it was their pride which Bowring sought to
break.
In October 1856 Chinese officials seized the Arrow , a Chinese opium
smuggling ship flying the British flag. 52 Despite the fact that the boat's
registration had lapsed, and it no longer enjoyed British protection, Bowring seized
on the incident as a casus belli . Insisting that the Chinese provide an apology -
which they naturally refused - Bowring convinced the navy to lay a siege on
Canton. The city was shelled from British war-ships, and from a fort across the
harbor, and eventually a breech was made in the wall. But although the army
entered the city, they did not have enough men to occupy it. It was a pointless
victory. Indeed, since the European factories outside the city were burned down
by the Chinese, the victory caused a substantial loss in trade revenue. 53
Several members of the British parliament were highly critical of Bowring's
conduct, foremost among them traditional conservatives like Lord Derby, and
liberals, like Richard Cobden, who wanted free trade, but not colonies and not
war. 54 Other MPs resented Bowrings recklessness. [M]any of his own
associates, the newspaper editor Frederick Moy Thomas remembered, became
estranged from him when, departing from all the tradition of his life, he forced
upon the country a military expedition to China. 55 Lord Derby, who brought up
51 See Correspondence Relative to Entrance into Canton, 1850-1855 (London: 1857).52 Wong, Deadly Dreams , 84-108. Wongs meticulous research replaces all previouswork on the Second Opium War.
53 Bowring does not mention the Arrow and the bombardment of Canton in hisautobiography, merely stating that My career in China belongs so much tohistory, that I do not feel it needful to record its vicissitudes. I have been verelyblamed for the policy I pursued, yet that policy has been most beneficial to mycountry and to mankind at large. Bowring, Autobiographical Recollections , 217.
54 Wong, Deadly Dreams, 103-08. John Morley, Cobdens biographer concludes thatBowring was a man without practical judgment, and he became responsible forone of the worst of the Chinese wars. John Morley, The Life of Richard Cobden(London, 1903), http://oll.libertyfund.org/title/1742/90545.
55 Frederick Moy Thomas, Fifty Years of Fleet Street; Being the Life and Recollectionsof Sir John R. Robinson (London: 1904), 91.
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the issue of the new China war in the Lords on February 24, 1857, questioned the
monomania of Bowring's obsession with the walls of Canton. I believe he
dreams of the entrance into Canton," Derby said, "I believe he thinks of it first
thing in the morning, the last thing at night, and in the middle of the night if he
happen to awake.
I do not believe he would consider any sacrifice too great, anyinterruption to commerce to be deplored, any bloodshed almost to beregretted, when put in the scale with the immense advantage to bederived from the fact that Sir John Bowring had obtained an officialreception in the yamun [administrative office] in Canton. 56
Clearly Bowring had gone against his instructions. 57 Britain had already acceptedthe status quo in Canton for over a decade and, as his superiors explained to him,
it was necessary to proceed with much caution, and not to use menacing
language, let alone military force, lest Britain suffer damage to its trade. 58
Bowring's demands were particularly unreasonable given that they would result in
no additional benefits neither for Britain nor for the merchant community in Hong
Kong. As Cobden pointed out in the House of Commons, Britain already tradedwith the Canton merchants and nothing more would be gained from entering the
city itself.
I will ask the House, is it worth while fighting for this, that Sir JohnBowring should have the right to go into Canton in one costume oranother, especially when the Governor was ready to meet him half wayout of the town? 59
In his monomania, Bowring did not only ignore the instructions from his56 Lord Derby, Debate 24 February, 1857, House of Lords, Hansard , vol. 144, cc.
1177.57 Ibid , cc. 1192. Already in 1852, the Foreign Secretary, the Earl of Granville, felt
compelled to remind Bowring that you will not push argument on doubtful pointsin a manner to fetter the free action of your Government; and you will not resortto measures of force without previous reference home ... Earl of Granville to Dr.Bowring, January 19, 1852, in Correspondence , 3.
58 Lord Derby, Debate , cc. 1192.59 Richard Cobden, China War. House of Commons, February 26, 1857, in
Speeches on Questions of Public Policy : Vol. 2 War, Peace, and Reform, ed. JohnBright and J.E. Thorold Rogers (London: 1908), 384; Richard Cobden, Debate 26February, 1857, House of Commons, Hansard , vol. 144, cc. 1414.
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government but also the teachings of his mentor. Surely a principled Benthamite
would have respected the wishes of the Chinese. After all, the felicific calculus
prescribes no particular substantive content to peoples preferences; it does not
tell you what actions you are supposed to prefer. If a closed-door policy makes
the greatest number of Chinese happiest, that conclusion should be respected by
an objective observer. But Bowring was no objective observer. He was sure that
completely unimpeded trade would benefit Britain, but also that it would make
the Chinese happier still - and his actions were designed to prove it. 60
Indiscriminate bombings of defenseless civilians was a price even the Chinese
themselves, if they considered the matter carefully, would be prepared to accept.
And yet Bowring's obsession with the walls of Canton embodies a profoundly
Benthamite logic. After all, Bentham's brand of radicalism insisted on unimpeded
access - of enlightenment, of reason, of first principles, of trade. Bentham's was a
penetrative form of liberalism: it was through unlimited access that both free
communication and control were to be assured. Compare the central inspection
principle which guaranteed order and reform in his Panopticon. In Canton central
inspection was exactly what Bowring was denied. Walls, after all, block visibility,
and blocked visibility allows secrets to be kept and prejudices to spread. Not
surprisingly, the Chinese were famous both for their walls and for their
inscrutability. Bowring had no idea what the Chinese were up to, and it drove
him, as the MPs in London worriedly remarked, close to madness.
Lord Elgin and the destruction of the Yuanmingyuan
In the end, Bowring was removed from office. He was censored by the House of
Commons and although he formally remained as governor of Hong Kong until
1859, he was replaced as plenipotentiary in 1857 by James Bruce, the Eighth Earl
60 For an analogous argument applied to India see Bowring, Colonization and Commerce , 328.
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of Elgin. Elgins task, as Harriet Martineau put it, was to repair, or to turn to the
best account, the mischiefs done by Sir John Bowring's course, and by the
patronage of it at home. 61 Elgin, the son of the Seventh Earl, who robbed the
Pantheon of its marbles, had already served the British government in Jamaica
and Canada and he had proven himself both resourceful and measured in his
actions. 62
Like Bentham, Elgin was a religious man, yet far from a dissenter, he was a
man of the established, Anglican, church. Politically, he was a Tory, yet of a
liberal bent; and although he looked every bit the colonial administrator, he often,
in letters home to his wife, complained about the ruthless actions of British
merchants and insisted that he hated war. More than a conservative, Elgin was
a Coleridgean. At Oxford, according to his brother, his intellect was attracted to
high and abstract speculation; he read Plato, Milton, and Coleridge, the
philosophy of the latter he had thoroughly mastered. 63 Like Coleridge himself,
Elgin firmly believed in the benevolent actions of a patriarchal state. I am a
Conservative, he declared when successfully running for parliament in 1841,
because I believe that our admirable Constitution ... proclaims betweenmen of all classes and degrees in the body politic a sacred bond of brotherhood in the recognition of a common welfare here, and acommon hope hereafter. ... because I believe that the institutions of our country, religious as well as civil, are wisely adapted, when dulyand faithfully administered, to promote, not the interest of any class orclasses exclusively, but the happiness and welfare of the great body of the people. 64
Elgin opposed the Reform Bill of 1832, and his first political pamphlet, Letter to
61 Harriet Martineau, Memoir of the Earl of Elgin and Kincardine, in A BritishFriendship and Memoir of the Earl of Elgin and Kincardine , reprinted from DailyNews, Dec. 12th, 1863 (Windermere: 1866), 28.
62 The main biography is Theodore Walrond, Letters and Journals of James, EighthEarl of Elgin (London: 1872) which makes extensive references to Elgins letters;George McKinnon Wrong, The Earl of Elgin (Toronto: 1906) is derivative of Walrond, and John George Bourinot, Lord Elgin (Toronto: 1903) only deals onlywith Elgins time in Canada. Martineau, Memoir , is a contemporary hagiography.
63 Walrond, Letters and Journals , 3, 8.64 Ibid , 9-10.
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the Electors of Great Britain, 1834, was a staunch defense of the truly
reactionary, and at the time deeply unpopular, policies of the Duke of Wellington. 65
Like Coleridge, Elgin worried about the ravages brought by capitalism, and
although he in principle supported the idea of free trade, he worried about the
impact a reduction in tariffs would have on the rights of the labouring classes.
We must remember, he said, that the only capital of the labourer is his skill in his
own particular walk, and it is a mockery to tell him that he can find a satisfactory
compensation elsewhere. 66
Like other conservatives Elgin was morally uncomfortable with the opium
trade, a view strengthened by his first experiences from the East. 67 In Singapore
in June 1857 he visited some of the horrid opium-shops, which we are supposed
to do so much to encourage. 68 They are wretched dark places, and the smokers
are haggard and stupefied, except at the moment of inhaling, when an unnatural
brightness sparkles from their eyes. Elgin also objected strongly to Bowring's
free-booting style of diplomacy. The question of the Arrow , which had served as
the pretext for the 1856 war, was, Elgin insisted, a wretched business, and a
scandal to us, and is so considered, I have reason to know, by all except the few
who are personally compromised. 69 I have got to fight everybodys battles, and
make myself sponsor for everybodys follies. 70 Once in Hong Kong, Elgin made up
excuses to avoid having to visit Bowring, and the two clashed repeatedly over
issues of day-to-day policy. 71 On the larger question of the war, however, Elgin
65 Wrong, Earl of Elgin , 14.66 Ibid .67 A particularly ardent opponent was Lord Shaftesbury. See Anthony Ashley Cooper,
Earl of Shaftesbury, Suppression of the Opium Trade; the Speech of the Right Hon. Lord Ashley, M.P, in the House of Commons, on Tuesday, April 4, 1843(London: 1843).
68 James Bruce, Earl of Elgin, Extracts from the letters of James, Earl of Elgin toMary Louisa, Countess of Elgin, 1847-1862 (Edinburgh: 1864), 29.
69 Ibid , 62.70 Ibid , 64.
71 See, for example, ibid , 60, 62. On the disagreement over how to administerCanton once it was occupied, see Bowring, Autobiographical Recollections , 26.
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felt he had no choice but to stay the course. We should have done things
differently, but we cannot look back. We must do for the best, and trust in
Providence to carry us through our difficulties. 72
At the end of December, 1857, the British once again attacked Canton, and
although Elgin was responsible for drawing up the plans, he was a reluctant
warrior. I hate the whole thing so much, that I cannot trust myself to write
about it. 73 Looking at the British warships anchored in the harbor, I never felt so
ashamed of myself in my life ... I feel that I am earning for myself a place in the
Litany, immediately after plague, pestilence, and famine. 74 And when the final
attack for a while was deferred until December 29, he immediately noticed that
this was the day when Herod, in the Bible, massacred the innocents. In the end,
the city was captured with only a few hundred, official, casualties, and Elgin was
much relieved. 75
Elgin, in short, was a sensitive soul. He was fond of quoting Romantic poetry
- in addition to Coleridge, Tennyson was a favorite - and an emotionally stirring
book which his wife had sent him, he confessed, is too touching for me, and I
have been obliged to lay it aside. 76 He was also something of an Orientalist, with
a perceptive eye for the sublime. When visiting Egypt, en route to China, for
example, he made a night-time excursion to the pyramids - a classical setting for
sublime experiences. 77 And as we would expect from a well-educated gentleman I
touch with his Romantic side, Elgin was duly awe-struck. The sight of the sphinx
left a particularly strong impression:
72 Elgin, Extracts from Letters , 63.73 Ibid , 68.74 Ibid , 65-66.75 Ibid , 68. The number of casualties are given as between 200 and 300. Ibid , 77.76 Referring to that little pretty book of Guizots. Ibid , 48.77 The sight of the Egyptian pyramid ... moves one far more than one can imagine
from all the descriptions ... Immanuel Kant, Observations on the Feeling of theBeautiful and Sublime , [1763] (Berkeley: 2004), 49. A contemporary accountemphasizing the sublime nature of the pyramids is Robert Ferguson, The Shadow of the Pyramid, a Series of Sonnets (London: 1847).
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The mystical light and deep shadows cast by the moon, gave to it anintensity which I cannot attempt to describe. To me it seemed a look,earnest, searching, but unsatisfied. For a long time I remainedtransfixed, endeavouring to read the meaning conveyed by thiswonderful eye ... 78
China, however, inspired no similar sublime feelings. All in all, Elgin was
thoroughly unimpressed with what he saw. Chinese towns, and people, tended to
be ugly, poor and dirty. And he was scathing about Chinese religion: Buddhist
monks, invariably, seem particularly stupid, and temples contain a parcel of
hideous idols behind altars, somewhat resembling those of Roman Catholic
churches. 79
Not even the imperial institutions were worthy of much praise.Government offices were invariably in a bad state of repair, giving impressions of
decay rather than splendor. Surprisingly this was true even of the imperial palace
itself.
In June of 1858 a settlement, the Treaty of Tianjin, was finally concluded
between Elgin and his Chinese counterparts. The treaty opened up eleven new
Chinese cities to foreign trade, and gave Western powers, inter alia , the right to
establish permanent missions in Beijing, and the right to travel up the Yangtze
[Chang jiang] river. The opium trade was also legalized under a fixed tariff. 80 His
business concluded, Elgin left for home. In 1859, when ratifications were to be
exchanged, the British decided to bring a military force. They attacked the forts
at Dagu, which protected Beijing from the sea, but they were beaten back by the
Chinese defenders. In order to obtain the sought-for ratification, and get revenge
for the humiliating defeat, Lord Elgin was once again called into action, and he set
off at the head of a combined Anglo-French army. On August 21, they
successfully seized the Dagu forts and negotiations recommenced. 81 Yet Elgin
78 Elgin, Extracts from Letters, 178. By contrast, when Bowring visited the pyramidsin 1837, his only comment concerns how he was robbed in one of the darkchambers. Bowring, Autobiographical Recollections , 187.
79 Elgin, Extracts from Letters , 76, 27.
80 Morse, International Relations , 1:512-538.81 The capture of the Dagu Forts were famously captured by Felice Beato, one of the
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believed the Chinese were stalling for time, and after little hesitation he decided to
march on the capital itself. On September 18, the Chinese took 39 Allies hostage,
including twenty Indian soldiers and Thomas Bowlby, the correspondence for the
Times. 82 They would be returned, the Chinese promised, but only once the
Europeans were on their way back home.
In the evening of October 6, 1860, the army reached the gates of the
Yuanmingyuan, what the Europeans referred to as the Summer Palace of the
Chinese emperor. 83 Built by Emperor Kangxi in 1709, the Yuanmingyuan was a
vast complex of palaces, pagodas, pavilions, temples, lakes, gardens and groves,
including a European style palace built by Italian architects in the 1740s. 84 In
addition it contained a major library and it was the place where tributary gifts from
foreign princes were stored, making it one of the most extraordinary collections of
artefacts ever assembled. The Yuanmingyuan was, the Chinese insisted, the
garden of gardens, and just like Kublai Khans palace in Coleridge's poem, it was
a vision of Paradise.
The Yuanmingyuan was already well-known in Europe. In the middle of the
previous century a description of the palace by a Jesuit priest, Father Jean Denis
Attiret, was widely disseminated among the reading public and it inspired Chinese-
first war photographers. See David Harris, Of Battle and Beauty: Felice Beato'sPhotographs of China (Berkeley: 2000). On the war itself, see Morse, InternationalRelations, 1:593-608; For French sources see Henri Cordier, ed., L'Expdition deChine de 1860, histoire diplomatique, notes et documents (Paris: 1906), 255-282.
82 See Stanislas D'Escayrac de Lauture, Rcit de la captivit de M. le comted'Escayrac de Lauture par les Chinois, fait par lui-mme, in Nouvelles annalesdes voyages, de la gographie et de l'histoire, tome 2 , vol. 182, 6 (Paris: 1864);Henry Brougham Loch, Personal Narrative of Occurrences During Lord Elgin'sSecond Embassy to China, 1860 (London: 1869).
83 The best primary source is Garnet Wolseley, Narrative of the War with China in1860; to Which Is Added the Account of a Short Residence with the Tai-PingRebels at Nankin and a Voyage from Thence to Hankow (London: 1862). See alsoRobert Swinhoe, Narrative of the North China Campaign of 1860: ContainingPersonal Experiences of Chinese Character, and of the Moral and Social Conditionof the Country; Together with a Description of the Interior of Pekin (London:1861); D.F. Rennie, The British Arms in North China and Japan: Peking 1860,Kagosima (London: 1864).
84 Carroll Brown Malone, History of the Peking Summer Palace under the Ch'ingDynasty (Urbana: 1934), 43-44.
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style gardens to be constructed throughout the Continent. 85 Attirets account
prompted the architect William Chambers, responsible for the pagoda in Kew
Gardens and himself a visitor to China, to publish a manual on Chinese garden art.
In its combination of dread and irresistible attraction, Chambers description was
nothing short of Coleridgean. Chinese gardens, Chambers insisted, combine
delightful vistas with scenes of terror:
Bats, owls, and every bird of prey flutter in the groves; wolves, tigersand jackalls howl in the forests; half-famished animals wander uponthe plains; ... and in the most dismal recesses of the woods, where theways are rugged and overgrown with weeds, and where every object
bears the marks of depopulation, are temples dedicated to the king of vengeance, deep caverns in the rocks, and descents to subterraneoushabitations, overgrown with brushwood and brambles ... 86
To visit the Yuanmingyuan, in short, was a sublime experience. And many of the
soldiers who suddenly appeared here in 1860 agreed. I was dumbfounded,
stunned, bewildered by what I had seen, wrote one, suddenly Thousand and One
Nights new seem perfectly believable to me. 87 In order to properly depict the
palace, wrote another, I would need to dissolve all known precious stones inliquid gold and paint with a diamond feather whose bristles contain all the
fantasies of a poet of the East. 88 Elgin, however, was far less impressed. It is
really a fine thing, he admitted, like an English park. Numberless buildings with
handsome rooms, and filled with Chinese curios , and handsome clocks, bronzes,
85 Reprinted in English as Jean Denis Attiret, A Particular Account of the Emperor of China's Gardens Near Pekin: In a Letter from F. Attiret, a French Missionary, Now Employ'd by That Emperor to Paint the Apartments in Those Gardens, to HisFriend at Paris , M. Cooper (London: 1752).
86 William Chambers, A Dissertation on Oriental Gardening (London: 1772). In lightof Lowes thorough scholarship, it is impossible to add additional sources toColeridges Kubla Khan. Yet Chambers work was widely read in the last decadesof the eighteenth-century. Another possible inspiration is the account of GeorgeMacartneys visit to the palace of the Chinese emperor in 1793. See GeorgeLeonard Staunton, An Authentic Account of an Embassy from the King of Great Britain to the Emperor of China, Volumes 1 & 2 (London: 1797).
87 Armand Lucy, Lettres intimes sur la campagne de Chine (Marseille: 1861), 96.
88 Hrisson, Journal d'un interprte en Chine (Paris: 1886), 306. Cf. the reactions of the French general Montauban, quoted in Cordier, L'Expdition de Chine, 354.
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etc. 89 But clearly, once you have come to regard something as fine and
handsome, you can never regard it as sublime. 90 Elgin did not, like Coleridge,
close his eyes in holy dread and he drank no milk of Paradise. He did not
submit, instead he demanded submission.
On October 8 the first of the European hostages were returned by the Chinese
authorities. They showed signs of torture and told horrific tales of their treatment.
Next the bodies of dead hostages were returned, and in the end only 18 of the 39
men came back alive. 91 Outraged and offended, Elgin decided to teach the
Chinese a lesson. The best way, he decided, was to burn down the
Yuanmingyuan:
Having, to the best of my judgment, examined the question in all itsbearings, I came to the conclusion that the destruction of Yuen-ming-yuen was the least objectionable of the several courses open to me,unless I could have reconciled it to my sense of duty to suffer the crimewhich had been committed to pass practically unavenged. I had reason,moreover, to believe that it was an act which was calculated to producea greater effect in China, and on the Emperor, than persons who lookon from a distance may suppose. 92
It took the army two days to destroy the palace complex. "The clouds of smoke,"
wrote one eyewitness, "driven by the wind, hung like a vast black pall over
Pekin."93 Nous, Europens, nous sommes les civiliss, as Victor Hugo famously
concluded, et pour nous, les Chinois sont les barbares. Voil ce que la civilisation
a fait la barbarie. 94
This is how Elgin, the Coleridgean, came to destroy the physical manifestation
of the dream which his mentor had shared with Kublai Khan. And yet this is not
89 Elgin, Extracts from Letters , 220.90 By beauty, said Burke, I mean, that quality or those qualities in bodies by
which they cause love; whereas a mode of terror, or pain, is always the cause of the sublime. Edmund Burke, A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideasof the Sublime and the Beautiful , [1759] (Oxford: 1998): 83, 124. Cf. Kant,Observations , 47.
91 Morse, International Relations , 608.92 Walrond, Letters and Journals , 366. Cf. Wolseley, Narrative , 282.93 Loch, Personal Narrative , 274.
94 Victor Hugo, L'Expdition de Chine: Au Capitaine Butler, in Oeuvres compltesde Victor Hugo : Actes et paroles pendant l'exile, 1852-70 (Paris: 1880), 270.
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to say that his action cannot be given a Coleridgean rationale. Coleridge, after all,
was a great believer in the state, and it was the British state which Elgin was
serving. What blinded him to the splendors of Yuanmingyuan was his attention to
the duties of his office. Elgin had no time to dream; he had revenges to exact,
concessions to extract and wars to win. He destroyed one Coleridgean idea - the
emperors palace - while defending another - the idea of imperative duty. In
December 1857, at the time of the bombardment of Canton, such Realpolitik had
caused him great moral anguish, but in October 1860 he expressed no such
scruples. However, and very strikingly, he completely forgot to mention the
destruction of the palace in any of the letters he wrote to his wife. Perhaps, after
all, he was ashamed of his action. As Elgin himself had put it in 1857, after the
bombardment of Canton:
Whose work are we engaged in, when we burst thus with hideousviolence and brutal energy into these darkest and most mysteriousrecesses of the traditions of the past? I wish I could answer thatquestion in a manner satisfactory to myself. 95
nationalism, evolution and ideals betrayed
There are two men to whom we are indebted for the revolution in our general
modes of thought, wrote John Stuart Mill: Jeremy Bentham, the critical
rationalist, and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, the poetic communitarian. 96 On matters
of colonies, as we have seen, the two held opposite views, although neither was
completely consistent. Benthams felicific calculus indicated to him that colonieswere detrimental to the greatest happiness both of colonizers and colonized,
although he admitted that colonialism could have beneficial effects, at least if
guided by his own principles. Coleridge, for his part, saw the importance of
colonial expansion for the vigor and unity of the state, although he was aware of
95 Elgin, Extracts from Letters , 101.96 This is a dichotomy which clearly serves Mill's own agenda. What he really wants
to tell us is how he proposes to unite these two disparate bodies of thought into amore coherent whole. Cf. Pitts, Turn to Empire , 135.
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the heavy costs it imposed on the subject peoples. Yet, as we have seen, there
are good reasons to question Mill's conclusions. Bentham died in 1832 and
Coleridge in 1834; Mill wrote his essay in 1840. In the middle of the following
decade, however, the two teachers of the teachers no longer defined the
spectrum of political opinions. The world had already changed too much and new
factors, not considered by either man, had come to the fore. This is not least the
case when it comes to the question of colonialism.
Accounting for this transformation, a first thing to remember is that the
original impetus for both Benthams and Coleridge's writings on colonialism can be
located in the 1790s. Bentham's Emancipate Your Colonies! was written in
1793, at the same time as Coleridge began planning his Pantisocratic move to the
United States. In the 1790s, universal values were still dominant: the main
current of Enlightenment thought made few distinctions between Europeans,
Asians and Africans since everyone, everywhere, if to varying degrees, suffered
under the yoke of prejudice and irrationality. Non-European peoples too were
worthy of respect, and fit for self-governance, as long as they sought cast off this
yoke. 97 Benthams letter to Raja Ram Mohan Roy took for granted the ability of
the Indian reformer to understand, and act upon, rational arguments. And
Coleridge insisted that Africans, with their variety of employment, have a greater
acuteness of intellect than Europeans who the division of labor has condemned
to mechanically repeating a few simplistic tasks. 98
By the 1850s, however, this universalizing creed had largely been replaced
by a new ideology which made sharp distinctions between nations, peoples, and
their respective historical trajectories. 99 Social development, thinking men now
97 Compare the notice issued by William Bentinch, Governor-General of India, in1829 for addressed to all native gentlemen, landholders, merchants, and others for suggestions tending to promote any branch of national industry. Discussed inBowring, Colonization and Commerce , 331.
98 Coleridge, Slave-Trade , 143.
99 For comments on this shift, see Pitts, Turn to Empire , 133-162; K. TheodoreHoppen, The Mid-Victorian Generation 1846-1886 (Oxford, 1998), 472-510. Or,
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generally tended to believed, is a result of social evolution. 100 Evolution has placed
some societies and some people at a higher level of development than others;
some societies and people are civilized, others are barbarian, and a few in the
middle are semi-barbarian. It was James Mill who first brought the utilitarian
and the colonialist projects together. 101 In an essay on China from 1809, he
discredited one Chinese achievement after the other with the aim of depriving the
country of its status as a civilized. 102 In the six volumes of his History of India ,
1817, Mill pre gave India the same treatment. Indian, he concluded, was a
hopelessly backward society and Indians could not help themselves. Commenting
favorably on Mills work in the Westminster Review in 1829, John Bowring
endorsed this conclusion:A power, a stupendous power, of good is in our hands,
and the chances of happiness for the Indian people are greater from our dominion
than from that of any masters to whom it is likely they will be transferred.... 103
In his celebrated essay, On Liberty, written as news of Bowrings China war
reached Britain, Mill fils took the logical further step of arguing that if [the
Chinese] are ever to be farther improved, it must be by foreigners. 104 The
contrast with Mills earlier essay, Civilization, from 1836, is dramatic. 105 The two
essays cover essentially the same ground - emphasizing the importance of
individuality and of free expression as the engine of social improvement. Yet inmore generally, the contributions to Duncan Bell, ed., Victorian Visions of Global Order: Empire and International Relations in Nineteenth-Century Political Thought ,1st ed. (Cambridge: 2008).
100 Charles Darwins Origin of the Species was published in 1859, and drew onevolutionary ideas current at the time. See Gregory Claeys, The "Survival of theFittest" and the Origins of Social Darwinism, Journal of the History of Ideas 61,no. 2 (April 2000): 223-240.
101 Pitts, Turn to Empire , 123-133.102 There is not one of the arts in China in a state which indicates a stage of beyond
the infancy of agricultural society. James Mill, Review of M. de Guignes, Voyages Peking, Manille, et lIle de France, faits dans l'intervalle des annes 1784 1801, The Edinburgh Review 14 (July 1809):424.
103 Bowring, Colonization and Commerce , 328.104 John Stuart Mill, On Liberty (London: 1859), 129.105 John Stuart Mill, Civilization, [1836], in Dissertations and Discussions, Political
Philosophical, and Historical. Reprinted Chiefly from the Edinburgh and Westminster Reviews, Volume I (London: 1859), 160-205.
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1836 the foil for Mill's argument was a rather abstract, Hobbesian, state of nature,
whereas in 1859 the foil was an eternally stagnant, and history-less, China.
This evolutionary mode of thinking was accompanied by a new emphasis on
questions of race. 106 From being occasional remarks scattered in the pages of the
writers of the previous generation, racism had, by mid-century, developed into a
full-fledged theory which explained differences between individuals, societies,
even the general course of world history itself. It is clear that the representatives
of the British government in China shared these views. It is a terrible business,
said Lord Elgin in a letter to his wife, this living among inferior races. 107 And
John Bowring condemned the rampant miscegenation taking place in the
Portuguese colony of Macao: you can barely fancy, he wrote to his son, how any
European race could by mingling with Malayan, negro & Chinese blood degenerate
into such extreme ugliness. 108
This is thus how the secretary of the Society for the Promotion of Permanent
and Universal Peace came to make war on defenseless civilians, and how a
conservative supporter of time-honored institutions came to act like a barbarian
overrunning Rome. 109 In the end Bowring and Elgin were not Benthamites and
106 An early work is Robert Knox, The Races of Men: A Fragment (Philadelphia: 1850).See Gregory Claeys, The "Survival of the Fittest" and the Origins of SocialDarwinism, Journal of the History of Ideas 61, no. 2 (April 2000): 223-240. Andmore generally Tzvetan Todorov, On Human Diversity: Nationalism, Racism, and Exoticism in French Thought (Cambridge: 1998).
107 Elgin, Extracts from Letters, 44-45. Compare the rampant sinophobia of Coleridge's friend and fellow opium addict, Thomas de Quincey . See his TheChinese Question in 1857, in The Collected Writings of Thomas de Quincey,Volume 14 , ed. David Masson (London: 1897), 345-367.
108 Letter to his Son, 12 May, 1850, quoted in Todd, Global Dissemination , 390.109 No man, says Bowring in his Autobiographical Recollections, w as ever a more
ardent lover of peace than I. Yet the powers of reason fail when coming incontact with the unreasoning and unconvincible; with barbarous - ay, andsometimes with civilized nations - the words of peace are uttered in vain. Bowring, Autobiographical Recollections , 217-218. As general Hope Grant, militarycommander of the British forces in 1860, admitted:I don't know whether I shallbe justified at home for committing this, what may be called barbaric act, but inmy opinion it is a just retribution. James Hope Grant, Hope Grant to SidneyHerbert, October 17, 1860, in Athur H. Stanmore, Sidney Herbert, Lord Herbert of Lea: A Memoir (London: 1906), 349.
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Coleridgeans as much as employees of the British state. 110 And yet, there are
important respects in which the two remained faithful to their mentors. What has
taken place is not a break with, but rather a winnowing down of, the original
themes. In Bentham's mind, panopticism and anti-colonialism easily co-existed,
just as Coleridge combined Orientalist fantasies with metaphysical speculations
about the organic unity of the state. Fifty years later, however, these
combinations were no longer possible and their disciples were forced to emphasize
some parts of the legacy while turning their backs on others. Bowring and Elgin
were Benthamites and Coleridgeans not within an internationalist, but within a
nationalist, framework.
architecture of our imagination
Dreams strikingly often take architectural form. We first build things in our fancy
which we later go on to build in real life. 111 Kublai Khan and Coleridge dreamed of
an ideal palace and Bentham of an ideal prison. Kublai Khan, Rashid-al-Din
reported, wanted a building fit for an imperial ruler which could
spread his own fame - symbolize and aggrandize his power. 112 Bentham wanted
power too. The building he so desperately sought to construct was to assure a
centrally placed observer - himself, or a colonial administrator - complete control
over the movements of the people subject to him. Coleridge's dream, by contrast,
is not a dream of power but of how to relinquish it. It is a renunciation of the
white mans burden and, perhaps, a subconscious plead for colonizers and
colonized to trade places.
110 That these conclusions were not inevitable, or the only ones, is proven by thecontributions to the China debates in the Houses of Parliament in February andMarch, 1857. Here Lord Derby provided a traditional, and respectful, conservativedefense of Chinese institutions and Richard Cobden, taking a universalist liberalview, argued that no rationale existed for treating China different from anyEuropean country. Lord Derby, Debate, cc. 1155-1195; Cobden, China War , 1908.
111 The classical account is Gaston Bachelard, The Poetics of Space (Boston: 1994).112 Yule, Cathay , 2:258.
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Reading letters and diaries of nineteenth-century colonial administrators one
occasionally hears echoes of Coleridge's poem, and it is possible to hear them in
Lord Elgins private correspondence. Yet these subconscious voices, to the extent
that they existed, are never loud enough. And even Lord Elgin, when he came
face to face with the sublime apparition itself, did not submit to it but destroyed it.
He clearly never recognized it for what it was; he identified too closely with his
official role. Once the Emperors palace was reduced to a smoldering heap, it was
instead the Benthamite vision which came to be constructed. And eventually
China was completely opened up to inspection, and its markets, its people and its
land became subject to foreign control. 113
And yet, as Borges pointed out in his essay on Coleridge, the dream of Kublai
Khans palace is far more powerful than its dreamers. In the future the same
dream will surely be picked up by others - Europeans, North Americans and Asians
- and dreamed and re-dreamed over and over again:
Perhaps this series of dreams has no end, or perhaps the last will bethe key Perhaps an archetype not yet revealed to mankind, an eternalobject, is gradually entering the world. 114
Since the mid-nineteenth-century it is the Benthamite vision which has guided
European relations with the non-European world. On the whole these relations
have been unhappy and exploitative. Trusting in dreams, and in Borges, however,
we can perhaps look forward to the day when the archetype imagined by Kublai
Khan and Coleridge once again enters the world.
113 In the end, Morse concludes, the Chinese learned, and they accepted as theirlaw, that, whereas formerly it was China which dictated the conditions underwhich international relations were to be maintained, now it was the Western
nations which imposed their will on China. Morse, International Relations , 1:617.114 Borges, Coleridges Dream , 372.
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