| Robert Hart - 1901 - 280 sivua
...by foreigners. Prince Kung, as is well known, said to the British Minister, about the same time, " Take away your opium and your missionaries, and you will be welcome ! " During the negotiation of the never-ratified Alcock Convention in 1868, the same Wen Hsiang one... | |
| Hosea Ballou Morse - 1918 - 558 sivua
...people .... 236 § 1. PRINCE KUNG declared to Sir R. Alcock on his departure from Peking in 1869 — " Take away your opium and your missionaries, and you will be welcome." At about the same time, Wensiang said to him — " Do away with your extraterritoriality clause, and... | |
| 1924 - 970 sivua
...early treaty days Prince Kung, then head of the Chinese Foreign Office, said to the British Minister, "Take away your opium and your missionaries and you will be welcome."' It is probably true that neither the Chinese nor the foreign negotiators realized the extent to which... | |
| Wenzao Wu - 1928 - 196 sivua
...missionaries in China. Prince Kung's remark to the British Minister in private conversation (1869), "Take away your opium and your missionaries and you will be welcome," 84 merits more than cursory consideration here. To the Chinese, Christianity and opium "came together,... | |
| Francis Lister Hawks Pott - 1928 - 372 sivua
...the missionary. Prince Kung declared to Sir Rutherford Alcock on his departure from Peking in 1869, "Take away your opium and your missionaries, and you will be welcome!" At the same time Wen-siang, another high official, said to him, "Do away with your extraterritorial... | |
| Kathleen L. Lodwick - 240 sivua
...Christian Missions, 457-58. 13. Prince Kung was reported to have told Sir Rutherford Alcock in 1869, "Take away your opium and your missionaries, and you will be welcome." See Morse, International Relations, 2:220. 14. "Farewell to Archdeacon Moule," FC 23 (Jan. 1903), 8.... | |
| Foster Stockwell - 2015 - 232 sivua
...toward the end of the nineteenth century, when he declared in an exchange with American officials, "Take away your opium and your missionaries and you will be welcome." The unequal treaties made Christianity in China a hated "foreign religion," and gave rise to a series... | |
| Frank Brinkley - 1902 - 370 sivua
...to composing brochures of the grossest and most injurious character. These were scattered broadcast, their author, Chou Han, sparing no expense to manufacture...passionately reject the apodosis. 1 See Appendix, note zo. For, it may be here remarked in parenthesis, opium had now come to stay. No clause in any treaty... | |
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