登陆注册
38545100000106

第106章

Now, there is not merely an analogy--there is in many respects an identity of relation between master and pupil or parent and child on the one hand, and an uncivilized race and its civilized rulers on the other. We know (or think we know) that the education and industry, and the common usages of civilized man, are superior to those of savage life; and, as he becomes acquainted with them, the savage himself admits this. He admires the superior acquirements of the civilized man, and it is with pride that he will adopt such usages as do not interfere too much with his sloth, his passions, or his prejudices. But as the willful child or the idle schoolboy, who was never taught obedience, and never made to do anything which of his own free will he was not inclined to do, would in most cases obtain neither education nor manners; so it is much more unlikely that the savage, with all the confirmed habits of manhood and the traditional prejudices of race, should ever do more than copy a few of the least beneficial customs of civilization, without some stronger stimulus than precept, very imperfectly backed by example.

If we are satisfied that we are right in assuming the government over a savage race, and occupying their country, and if we further consider it our duty to do what we can to improve our rude subjects and raise them up towards our own level, we must not be too much afraid of the cry of "despotism" and "slavery,"but must use the authority we possess to induce them to do work which they may not altogether like, but which we know to be an indispensable step in their moral and physical advancement. The Dutch have shown much good policy in the means by which they have done this. They have in most cases upheld and strengthened the authority of the native chiefs, to whom the people have been accustomed to render a voluntary obedience; and by acting on the intelligence and self-interest of these chiefs, have brought about changes in the manners and customs of the people, which would have excited ill-feeling and perhaps revolt, had they been directly enforced by foreigners.

In carrying out such a system, much depends upon the character of the people; and the system which succeeds admirably in one place could only be very partially worked out in another. In Minahasa the natural docility and intelligence of the race have made their progress rapid; and how important this is, is well illustrated by the fact, that in the immediate vicinity of the town of Menado are a tribe called Banteks, of a much less tractable disposition, who have hitherto resisted all efforts of the Dutch Government to induce them to adopt any systematic cultivation. These remain in a ruder condition, but engage themselves willingly as occasional porters and labourers, for which their greater strength and activity well adapt them.

No doubt the system here sketched seems open to serious objection. It is to a certain extent despotic, and interferes with free trade, free labour, and free communication. A native cannot leave his village without a pass, and cannot engage himself to any merchant or captain without a Government permit.

The coffee has all to be sold to Government, at less than half the price that the local merchant would give for it, and he consequently cries out loudly against "monopoly" and "oppression."He forgets, how ever, that the coffee plantations were established by the Government at great outlay of capital and skill; that it gives free education to the people, and that the monopoly is in lieu of taxation. He forgets that the product he wants to purchase and make a profit by, is the creation of the Government, without whom the people would still be savages. He knows very well that free trade would, as its first result, lead to the importation of whole cargoes of arrack, which would be carried over the country and exchanged for coffee. That drunkenness and poverty would spread over the land; that the public coffee plantations would not be kept up;that the quality and quantity of the coffee would soon deteriorate;that traders and merchants would get rich, but that the people would relapse into poverty and barbarism. That such is invariably is the result of free trade with any savage tribes who possess a valuable product, native or cultivated, is well known to those who have visited such people; but we might even anticipate from general principles that evil results would happen.

If there is one thing rather than another to which the grand law of continuity or development will apply, it is to human progress.

There are certain stages through which society must pass in its onward march from barbarism to civilization. Now one of these stages has always been some form or other of despotism, such as feudalism or servitude, or a despotic paternal government; and we have every reason to believe that it is not possible for humanity to leap over this transition epoch, and pass at once from pure savagery to free civilization. The Dutch system attempts to supply this missing link, and to bring the people on by gradual steps to that higher civilization, which we (the English) try to force upon them at once. Our system has always failed. We demoralize and we extirpate, but we never really civilize. Whether the Dutch system can permanently succeed is but doubtful, since it may not be possible to compress the work of ten centuries into one; but at all events it takes nature as a guide, and is therefore, more deserving of success, and more likely to succeed, than ours.

There is one point connected with this question which I think the Missionaries might take up with great physical and moral results.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 现代心理学原理与应用

    现代心理学原理与应用

    本书主要适用于高校非心理学专业的学生,介绍了个体的心理过程与心理特征、社会团体中存在的心理现象,以及应用心理学的一些主要分支科学。
  • 噩梦都市

    噩梦都市

    当异界之门打开时,怪物们破坏着原本属于人类的一切。一名少年为了生存却背负上了拯救整个人类和斩断幕后之手的命运。
  • 不良丫头

    不良丫头

    穿越!不当后、不做妃,更不会撇家舍业去做女霸王!一个字,累,两个字,累惨了!她欧若琳才不会做这种傻了叭叽的事呢,既然老天给了她小姐的身子丫头的命。哈哈哈,三声狂笑过后,她就要将丫头的行当彻底坐穿,不做则已要做就做一个前无古人后无来者,念天地之悠悠的超级无敌好吃懒做、行为不良、扶软欺硬、骗天骗地、骗男骗女、美得冒泡、媚得酥骨的不良丫头。
  • 赘婿修真在都市

    赘婿修真在都市

    聂天,因为一纸婚约成为林家的上门女婿。本以为是一个无能的窝囊废,但没想到却是一头纵横九天的神龙。他打破重重险阻,登临绝巅。
  • 超凡掌控

    超凡掌控

    李然从小父母双亡,与唯一的妹妹相依为命,本是一个十分平凡的人,但因一场意外,产生了一个存在于虚幻与现实之间的心灵空间,从此获得了一个无限超脱的机会,开始构建自己的空间,‘你想要摆脱现在的处境吗,想要力量吗,想要改变的能力吗,想要的话,就和我签订契约吧,只要你能活下来,你就能得到一切。’
  • 自俗

    自俗

    回忆录,记载生活琐事,理在故事,故事在里
  • 谁说女生不能当首富

    谁说女生不能当首富

    扫把星叶梓在“穷困潦倒”之下偶然得到了一个系统,系统告诉她做什么都可以得到money,还能提升她的运气值,作为一名时刻幻想暴富的女孩纸,这简直就是为她量身定制!
  • 全民武装

    全民武装

    虫族入侵?不怕,将它们打回去。家族迫害?不怕,咱有高人相助。面对阴谋?不怕,实力是硬道理。美女陷阱?不怕,对爱忠贞不渝。一个小人物自强不息的奋斗史,看主角张仁凭借自身的努力,闯过一道道难关,拆穿一个个阴谋,就算面对虫族的灾难,也无所畏惧。最后站在世界之巅,兑现佳人的承诺。命运的齿轮,从这一刻开始。新人新书,求收藏,求推荐,求支持。本书可能有点慢热,耐心看下去,一定会给你惊喜。
  • 追篮球男友之旅

    追篮球男友之旅

    大学一次观看篮球比赛的机会,女主遇见作为M大学的校草兼篮球主力,开始了她的追草之旅,到最后会怎样呢?……
  • 寻梦彩虹人生

    寻梦彩虹人生

    本书选取作者博客中的文章,分为“红日初升”、“橙色年华”、“黄柏之言”、“绿色梦想”、“青云直上”、“蓝宇强鹰”和“紫气东来”七个章节,主要介绍作者在大学生培养模式和教育思想的探索,并为其他思想教育工作者提供参考。同时通过博客,作者与学生进行了思想交流,共同成长。