While fully aware of the necessity for some change in policy since the coming of the Americans to Uraga, it is entirely against the interest of the country and a shame to the sacred dignity of the land to open commercial relations, to admit foreigners... Rare Days in Japan - Page 267by George Trumbull Ladd - 1910 - 341 pagesFull view - About this book
| Saburō Shimada - 1896 - 208 pages
...The substance of the principal paper was as follows : — " While fully aware of the necessity for some change in policy since the coming of the Americans...of their evil religion, Christianity, and to allow the three Ministers to reside in the land. Under the excuse of keeping the peace, too much compromise... | |
| Henry Satoh - Japan - 1896 - 212 pages
...The substance of the principal paper was as follows : — " While fully aware of the necessity for some change in policy since the coming of the Americans...of their evil religion, Christianity, and to allow the three Ministers to reside in the land. Under the excuse of keeping the peace, too much compromise... | |
| Payson Jackson Treat - Japan - 1917 - 482 pages
...indictment against the Tairo signalled out his foreign policy. While fully aware of the necessity for some change in policy since the coming of the Americans...of their evil religion, Christianity, and to allow the three Ministers to reside in the land. Under the excuse of keeping the peace, too much compromise... | |
| Payson Jackson Treat - Japan - 1917 - 478 pages
...Tairo signalled out his foreign policy. While fully aware of the necessity for some change in policy jl since the coming of the Americans to Uraga, it is...of their evil religion, Christianity, and to allow the three Ministers to reside in the land. Under the excuse of keeping the peace, too much compromise... | |
| James Murdoch, Isoh Yamagata - Japan - 1926 - 860 pages
...admit foreigners into the Castle, to conclude treaties with them, to abolish the established practice of trampling on the picture of Christ, to permit foreigners to build places of worship for the evil religion, and to allow the three foreign Ministers to reside in the land. Under the excuse... | |
| Japan - 1920 - 82 pages
...'* Agitated Japan " (pp. 1 37-140), is as follows : While [we are] fully aware of the necessity for some change in policy since the coming of the Americans...of their evil religion, Christianity, and to allow the three Ministers* to reside in the land. Under the excuse of keeping * American, British and French.... | |
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