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23 - ‘I Can Find No Rest’: Beijing, 1884–1885

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 May 2022

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Summary

PARKES’ STINT AS Minister in China was the peak of his career, or at least should have been. The foreign residents of China were, of course, delighted to see him back, glad that their interests would be represented by someone who could be trusted to be firm. To most he finally seemed in his rightful place.

The Chinese government, on the other hand, seemed to be actively hostile to him. He had hardly arrived when a complaint was being made about him to the Queen, something that had never happened to him in his eighteen years in Japan. It happened because of a disagreement about the light sentence in the Logan case (he had only received seven years for killing a Chinese boy) that degenerated into an almighty row.

Hillier, the Chinese Secretary, described how it all came about: Parkes was discussing the case with Ministers at the Foreign Office on 19 December, when he ‘rose somewhat abruptly from his seat’ and struck ‘the table with the palm of his hand, to emphasise his remark’. He had hardly started speaking again, when one of them

shouted out – ‘You strike the table do you? So can we’, and commenced to imitate the action of Sir H. Parkes in an exaggerated form. This appeared to be the signal for a general outburst on the part of all the Ministers present, each of whom proceeded to shout out at the top of his voice and strike the table as well, the Grand Secretary Li [Hongzhang] overturning his cup in the vehemence of his passion … [One of them] was heard to say that if Sir H. Parkes thought he could frighten them by blustering he was very much mistaken; they could bluster as well as he; he, Sir H. Parkes, (or, ‘You Parkes’ as he put it) had a reputation for violence already, and it was to him that China owed her last war with England. If he thought he was coming here to stir up another war with China, let him try.

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A Life of Sir Harry Parkes
British Minister to Japan, China and Korea, 1865–1885
, pp. 245 - 256
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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