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21 - ‘I Am Deeply Sensible of the Services You Have Rendered’: Tokyo, 1882–1883

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 May 2022

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Summary

WHEN PARKES, MINNIE and Mabel arrived in Yokohama on 27 January 1882, they were greeted with genuine joy and enthusiasm, combined with a great deal of sympathy for the loss of Fanny. ‘Sir Harry's presence’ was, in the words of the Japan Weekly Mail, ‘an assurance that nothing unwise or dangerous will be permitted’. A group of the foreign residents addressed a combined letter to him, offering him a

cordial welcome … after your prolonged absence, to express the sincerest esteem in which we hold you, and the unfeigned pleasure it affords us to find you once again amongst us … you have so fully earned our gratitude … We tread here on sacred ground, but, remembering the dark shadow that has crossed your path since you were last amongst us, we … offer you our respectful sympathy.

Not everybody was pleased to see Parkes back, Satow thinking the Japanese regretted his return:

We have I think made a great mistake here in pursuing an unfriendly, harsh policy towards the Govt., the knowledge of which has come to the ears of the common people, and has caused them to look on foreigners in general, and Sir Harry Parkes in particular, as their enemy. You would not credit to what extent he is the bugbear of the Japanese public; in the popular estimation he occupies much the same position as “Boney” [Napoleon Bonaparte] with us fifty years ago. It has been going on for the past ten years … No one can deny his great qualities, and his fitness to meet any dangerous crisis. His talents are however thrown away here … He would do excellently well at Peking, but here he is the square man in the round hole. The Japanese require a diplomatist of the Talleyrand type, who would smooth them down and attain his ends at the same time.

This was not just Satow's disgruntlement talking as many others were saying that it was time for Parkes to leave. The trouble was there was nowhere else to put him and dismissing him was out of the question.

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A Life of Sir Harry Parkes
British Minister to Japan, China and Korea, 1865–1885
, pp. 224 - 233
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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