Great Japan: A Study of National Efficiency |
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Page ix
... mind it is difficult to place any limit upon the future of such a thinking and educated power . For the first time a nation animated by it takes its place in the front rank of the world's Powers , and in so doing establishes new ...
... mind it is difficult to place any limit upon the future of such a thinking and educated power . For the first time a nation animated by it takes its place in the front rank of the world's Powers , and in so doing establishes new ...
Page x
... mind , there is an increasing necessity for its adoption by our own and other nations . No more illuminating ... minds , and sought to develop their country in the fullest and most perfect manner . " Thus convinced , it becomes my ...
... mind , there is an increasing necessity for its adoption by our own and other nations . No more illuminating ... minds , and sought to develop their country in the fullest and most perfect manner . " Thus convinced , it becomes my ...
Page 8
... mind , and that the voice of the latter may thus find access to Ourselves . It is hoped that all men may feel a due sense of the duties they owe to the State , and that the chief magistrates of the cities and provinces will maturely ...
... mind , and that the voice of the latter may thus find access to Ourselves . It is hoped that all men may feel a due sense of the duties they owe to the State , and that the chief magistrates of the cities and provinces will maturely ...
Page 14
... mind ; yet with regard to external matters , such as forms of worship and the mode of propagandism , certain ... minds of the Emperor and of his people . To the Japanese , nationalism has no narrow , no selfish meaning ; it is inherent ...
... mind ; yet with regard to external matters , such as forms of worship and the mode of propagandism , certain ... minds of the Emperor and of his people . To the Japanese , nationalism has no narrow , no selfish meaning ; it is inherent ...
Page 15
... mind which is the endow- ment of the people of temperate climes . . . . Still less are they to be considered an uncivilized Eastern race with a mere veneer of Western manners and culture . . . . They have a civilization of their own ...
... mind which is the endow- ment of the people of temperate climes . . . . Still less are they to be considered an uncivilized Eastern race with a mere veneer of Western manners and culture . . . . They have a civilization of their own ...
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Common terms and phrases
affairs agricultural ancestor-worship army and navy authorities Baron Buddhist Bushido China Chinese Christian civilization commercial Confucianism Count Okuma duty efficiency Emperor Emperor of Japan empire Empress encourage enemy established Europe European existence fact feeling force foreign Formosa future garden honour hospital humanity idea Imperial Ancestor important increase industrial interests island Japan Japanese language Japanese nation Kaisha Kaneko Kentaro labour land manufacture means ment merchants military Minister missionaries Monroe doctrine moral nature naval necessary Nippon Yusen Kaisha nurses Oda Nobunaga officers organization patriotism peace political Port Arthur possess practical prefectures present principles prisoners progress race Red Cross Society regard religion religious result Russian samurai says seppuku Shinto Shintoism ships social spirit subjects teaching things tion Tokyo trade trees vessels village Western whole women worship wounded Yellow Peril
Popular passages
Page 68 - Meiji, a fundamental law of State, to exhibit the principles, by which We are to be guided in Our conduct, and to point out to what Our descendants and Our subjects and their descendants are forever to conform.
Page 43 - to leave behind him the name of a fellow who never bullied a little boy or turned his back on a big one.
Page 127 - Elementary schools are designed to give children the rudiments of moral education specially adapted to make of them good members of the community, together with such general knowledge and skill as are necessary for the practical duties of life, due attention being paid to their bodily development.
Page 445 - If these self-evident truths are kept before us, and only if they are so kept before us, we shall have a clear idea of what our foreign policy in its larger aspects should be. It is our duty to remember that a nation has no more right to do injustice to another nation, strong or weak, than an individual has to do injustice to another individual; that the same moral law applies in one case as in the other. But we must also remember that it is as much the duty of the Nation to guard its own rights...
Page 9 - The rights of sovereignty of the State, We have inherited from Our Ancestors, and We shall bequeath them to Our descendants. Neither We nor they shall in future fail to wield them, in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution hereby granted.
Page 68 - Having, by virtue of the glories of Our Ancestors, ascended the throne of a lineal succession unbroken for ages eternal; desiring to promote the welfare of, and to give development to, the moral and intellectual faculties of Our beloved subjects, the very same that have been...
Page 67 - X. Upon the demise of the Emperor, the Imperial heir shall ascend the Throne and shall acquire the Divine Treasures of the Imperial Ancestors.
Page 10 - The sovereign power of reigning over and governing the State is inherited by the Emperor from his ancestors, and by him bequeathed to his posterity. All the different legislative as well as executive powers of State, by means of which he reigns over the country and governs the people, are united in the Most...
Page 446 - ... their own peoples, more responsive to the general sentiment of humane and civilized mankind; and on the other hand that it should keep prepared, while scrupulously avoiding wrongdoing itself, to repel any wrong, and in exceptional cases to take action which in a more advanced stage of international relations would come under the head of the exercise of the international police. A great free people owes it to itself and to all mankind not to sink into helplessness before the powers of evil.
Page 9 - We now declare to respect and protect the security of the rights and of the property of Our people, and to secure to them the complete enjoyment of the same, within the extent of the provisions of the present Constitution and of the law.