Letters Of Travel (1892-1913) By Rudyard Kipling











































































































 -  To criticise these acts exists a
wild-cat Press, liable to suppression at any moment, as morbidly
sensitive to outside - Page 51
Letters Of Travel (1892-1913) By Rudyard Kipling - Page 51 of 264 - First - Home

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To Criticise These Acts Exists A Wild-Cat Press, Liable To Suppression At Any Moment, As Morbidly Sensitive To Outside Criticism As The American, And Almost As Childishly Untruthful, Fungoid In The Swiftness Of Its Growth, And Pitiable In Its Unseasoned Rashness.

Backers of this press in its wilder moments, lawless, ignorant, sensitive and vain, are the student class, educated in

The main at Government expense, and a thorn in the side of the State. Judges without training handle laws without precedents, and new measures are passed and abandoned with almost inconceivable levity. Out of the welter of classes and interests that are not those of the common folk is evolved the thing called Japanese policy that has the proportion and the perspective of a Japanese picture.

Finality and stability are absent from its councils. To-day, for reasons none can explain, it is pro-foreign to the verge of servility. To-morrow, for reasons equally obscure, the pendulum swings back, and - the students are heaving mud at the foreigners in the streets. Vexatious, irresponsible, incoherent, and, above all, cheaply mysterious, is the rule of the land - stultified by intrigue and counter-intrigue, chequered with futile reforms begun on European lines and light-heartedly thrown aside; studded, as a bower-bird's run is studded with shells and shining pebbles, with plagiarisms from half the world - an operetta of administration, wherein the shadow of the King among his wives, Samurai policemen, doctors who have studied under Pasteur, kid-gloved cavalry officers from St. Cyr, judges with University degrees, harlots with fiddles, newspaper correspondents, masters of the ancient ceremonies of the land, paid members of the Diet, secret societies that borrow the knife and the dynamite of the Irish, sons of dispossessed Daimios returned from Europe and waiting for what may turn up, with ministers of the syndicate who have wrenched Japan from her repose of twenty years ago, circle, flicker, shift, and reform, in bewildering rings, round the foreign resident.

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