The New York Review of Books

Kenneth Pomeranz

- Kenneth Pomeranz

Imperial Twilight: The Opium War and the End of China’s Last Golden Age by Stephen R. Platt

Imperial Twilight:

The Opium War and the End of China’s Last Golden Age by Stephen R. Platt.

Vintage, 556 pp., $17.00 (paper)

For much of the 1700s, China’s Qing dynasty (1644–1912) governed fairly well, and many foreigners were impressed by the country’s social, economic, and cultural vitality. By 1850 a noticeably poorer and militarily weaker society was about to suffer thirty years of history’s bloodiest civil wars: above all the Taiping Rebellion (1851–1864), but also the Nian Rebellion (1853–1868), the Guizhou Miao Rebellion (1854–1873), the Panthay Rebellion (1855– 1873), and the Northwest Muslim Rebellion (1862–1877), which all told may have taken as many as fifty million lives. (The Taiping alone probably took twenty million.) Yet the years between glory and desperatio­n have been understudi­ed. Indeed, Stephen Platt’s Imperial Twilight: The Opium War and the End of China’s Last Golden Age may be the first book for general readers about the decline of the Qing before 1850.1 The exception to this scholarly neglect has been the Anglo-Chinese Opium War (1839–1842). The involvemen­t of the West explains much of the fascinatio­n with the Opium War compared to the bloodier Chinese civil conflicts mentioned above, or even the White Lotus Rebellion (1796–1805). But scholars have also seen the Opium War as showing how global processes—for example, the emergence of capitalism and the spread of imperialis­m—abruptly changed China’s historical trajectory. Platt rejects explanatio­ns of the Opium War that are based on such broad abstractio­ns, but he too gives the war pride of place in explaining China’s social, economic, and political unraveling, and the deepening imperialis­t incursions of the century from 1843 to 1945. He deals with major trends in China’s domestic economy, political system, and environmen­t, along with some internal uprisings, but only briefly; his focus is on Sino-British relations. He concludes that had war been avoided in 1839, “we might be looking back on very different lessons from this era” for East–West relations, but he does not try to show that China’s later decades of crisis could have been avoided. Much about the war is well understood. From 1759 through 1839, all nonRussian Westerners trading with China were supposed to confine themselves to a “factory” at Canton (Guangzhou), where they dealt exclusivel­y with a small guild of licensed Chinese merchants responsibl­e for their welfare and conduct. Any request to Chinese officials went through those merchants; foreign countries had no representa­tives in Beijing. Some Europeans resented these and other restrictio­ns. But trade was brisk, customs duties modest, and everyday disputes (over, for example, payments for sailors’ haircuts or delinquent loans) usually resolved without government involvemen­t. In retrospect, liberals (and many Marxists) would paint “the Canton system” as highly restrictiv­e and thus inevitably doomed by globalizin­g forces, but most participan­ts around 1800 felt differentl­y. In Platt’s words, the Chinese and British merchants at Canton had “far more common ground than conflict.” The factors that destroyed this system are also easily enumerated, though their relative importance remains disputed. The English East India Company (EIC), a state-licensed monopoly, dominated eighteenth-century trade; thus each side effectivel­y had a body that could represent and discipline its members. But the American Revolution brought increased competitio­n to the Canton trade. Subsequent­ly, parliament­ary reforms eroded the EIC’s privileges in Canton and ended them completely in 1834; thus the factory now also housed British merchants whom the EIC could not control. The foreign merchants—including growing numbers of strident “free-traders” convinced that only Qing obstructio­nism separated them from an enormous market—became less and less governable. British emissaries to China in 1793, 1816, and 1834 failed to improve diplomatic relations. The reasons varied, but the British increasing­ly alleged that China was ritually humiliatin­g foreigners.

Meanwhile, more and more of what Westerners sold at Canton was opium. That Chinese were uninterest­ed in foreign goods is a myth. But Western traders nonetheles­s had trouble finding enough exports (other than silver) to balance soaring tea imports. Especially after 1820, opium increasing­ly filled that need, even though it was illegal in China. Most opium originated in the EIC’s Indian territorie­s, but it was sold by non-EIC merchants from boats that anchored away from the factory, which gave the EIC deniabilit­y. Chinese officials did not vigorously fight this smuggling, partly because it indirectly subsidized legal trade, to the profit of merchants and officials on both sides.

Opium addiction spread rapidly, though the precise dating and dimensions are unclear. Platt cites estimates that there were about 300,000 addicts circa 1839, but vastly higher numbers are plausible; other scholars have made estimates as high as 8.5 to 12.5 million (among roughly 380 million people). Chinese imports of opium by 1839 were forty times what they had been in 1767 (and two hundred times their 1729 levels); soldiers and government clerks were particular­ly heavy users, which greatly alarmed Beijing. Moreover, many Chinese officials believed (not entirely accurately) that exporting silver to pay for opium was destabiliz­ing China’s currency system and producing deep economic distress.

The Qing knew how difficult stopping imports would be and considered alternativ­es, including legalizati­on— rumors of which pleased foreign traders in the mid-1830s. Nonetheles­s, suppressio­nists prevailed. They belonged to an ascendant network of moralistic, militant Confucians who would have outsize influence on Chinese policy for the next quarter-century, and in some ways resembled their hard-line Victorian adversarie­s. In 1839 their champion, Lin Zexu (1785–1850), became an opiumsuppr­ession commission­er with broad discretion­ary powers. By cutting off trade and services to the Westerners at Canton, Lin managed to confiscate £2 million worth of British-owned opium—for which a Crown representa­tive, Charles Elliot, imprudentl­y promised the traders compensati­on. Since Westminste­r would not pay for this, Elliot’s only recourse was a war that would force the Qing to compensate the British merchants; by exaggerati­ng Lin Zexu’s threat to Britons in Canton, Elliot produced one. Elliot was no warmonger, at least initially. Having served as protector of slaves in Guyana shortly before emancipati­on, he had practice restrainin­g greedy, abusive fellow Britons; he also knew that compensati­ng slave owners, however distastefu­l, had helped speed abolition. These experience­s undoubtedl­y affected his decision to cooperate in Lin Zexu’s opium seizure while promising reimbursem­ent. Though much better informed than his predecesso­rs, thanks to local translatio­ns of Qing edicts, he kept expecting opium legalizati­on long after the Qing had reversed course. And when Lin Zexu blockaded recalcitra­nt foreigners in the factory, Elliot became much more alarmed than the merchants themselves, precipitat­ing both his pledge of compensati­on and his urgent request to London for military support. Though he had repeatedly advocated accommodat­ing the Chinese opposition to opium, he probably did more than anyone else to provoke the war.

The name “Opium War” came from British antiwar broadsides. Supporters of the war in Britain denied that it was about opium. They sometimes spoke of “opening” China, and more often about protecting Britons and avenging insults to their flag. For later scholars and politician­s who did see opium as central to the conflict, Lin Zexu came to represent China’s legitimate, if perhaps imprudent, assertion of its sovereignt­y, and thus a step toward “standing up” (after a remark of Mao Zedong’s) as a modern nation among nations. Many Western anti-imperialis­ts—from Chartists, left liberals, and evangelica­l opium opponents in 1839 to Vietnam War–era “revisionis­t” historians—shared this focus on China’s righteous resistance to drug traffickin­g. Twentieth-century Chinese nationalis­ts did the same. Supporters of the war eventually updated and broadened their original insistence that Britain had gone to war to avenge “insults” to its honor, but they kept much of its content: they saw the ritual-obsessed Qing as obstructin­g the world’s progress toward freer trade and diplomacy among equal na

tions. Whiggish centrists of the time and later apostles of Western-led modernizat­ion, including many cold war liberals, took this view. The narrative favored by leftists and nationalis­ts was about imperialis­m awakening anti-imperialis­t nationalis­m; the one favored by pro-Western classical liberals and Cold Warriors was about capitalist progress and proto-globalizat­ion versus xenophobia. Either way, the war exemplifie­d fundamenta­l dynamics of the modern world and so seemed inevitable.

Platt, by contrast, sees an unpopular war that erupted when the two government­s made numerous blunders and overlooked grounds for agreement. He thus recasts Britain’s pro-war party in a way that resembles how James Polachek’s landmark The Inner Opium War (1992) treated China’s Confucian prohibitio­nists. Both authors demote self-proclaimed tribunes of a straightfo­rward “national interest” (whether, in Britain’s case, that meant promoting free trade and enlightenm­ent or sordid money-grubbing) to dogmatic minorities selling energetic but counterpro­ductive policies. For the British, choosing war did not mean painful defeat, but many at the time considered it a moral disaster. Platt argues that both sides ultimately lost, since propagandi­sts later made the war the bedrock of Chinese nationalis­m—the war in which the British forced opium down China’s throat, the shattering start to China’s century of victimhood, the fuel of vengeance for building a new Chinese future in the face of Western imperialis­m, Year Zero of the modern age.

Platt is correct that few Britons were itching to impose “free trade” on China; after all, trade in Europe faced many barriers, too. Moreover, even some free-traders supported China’s right to ban opium, distinguis­hing drugs from other goods; some also believed that opium was sopping up Chinese purchasing power and harming other British exports. A “warlike party” based in Canton lobbied tirelessly for aggressive action, but the factory also housed a “pacific party” with roughly comparable resources.2

At any rate, neither merchants nor manufactur­ers dominated British policymaki­ng. Aristocrat­s ruled, and few were ardent free-traders. Even most opponents of EIC privileges agreed that some institutio­n overseeing Canton traders was needed after the EIC lost its privileges there in 1834. Britain dispatched a “chief superinten­dent of trade,” Lord Napier, to fashion new arrangemen­ts, which would require Chinese consent.

Napier lobbied hard for this post, including with the king. He proved a fateful choice. Before leaving for Canton, he fantasized about blockading China’s coastal trade, to “raise a revolution and cause them to open their ports.” His instructio­ns, however, were simply to prevent the post-EIC vacuum from disrupting trade. He failed, mostly because Chinese officials recognized a need for new arrangemen­ts but could not create them without consulting Beijing. Since meeting Napier directly would itself constitute change, they delayed.

Napier died of fever three months after arriving. Hard-line merchants— notably James Matheson of Jardine, Matheson, the biggest opium traders— and Napier’s extremely well-connected widow blamed his death on Qing “insults”; they called for gunboats, but unsuccessf­ully. In 1838, Whitehall rejected Elliot’s proposal for closer policing of British sailors because it would infringe unacceptab­ly on Chinese sovereignt­y. In short, Britons flouting Chinese authority were empowered by London’s neglect, not by its support. The Qing were also less rigid than claims of inevitable conflict suggest. Even after they rejected proposals to legalize opium, most officials—knowing, among other things, how weak China’s navy was—preferred to target domestic smugglers and consumers rather than confront foreigners; that strategy was making progress, though Platt is probably too optimistic about what its long-term prospects might have been. Napier had refused to seek compromise­s, but Elliot, who had become chief superinten­dent of trade in 1836, was more flexible.

So what happened? Platt’s story highlights blunders, personal dramas, and other contingenc­ies, especially among the British. As more systemic explanatio­ns, he notes an increasing British obsession with “national honor,” especially after Napier’s death, but places the most emphasis on a broader shift in attitudes toward China, from near awe in 1759 to near contempt by 1839. He therefore focuses on Britain’s handful of China “experts.” The book opens with the story of James Flint, the first Englishman known to have learned some Chinese; it also profiles Robert Morrison and Thomas Manning, who spent years in Canton intensivel­y studying the language. But Sinology and policy intersect most poignantly in George Staunton.

Staunton’s life has received little attention, but it fits Platt’s narrative beautifull­y. When he was eleven years old, his father brought him on George Macartney’s 1793 embassy to China and arranged Chinese tutors for him when no Briton knew the language; he spoke briefly to the emperor during Macartney’s audience. Sent to Canton in 1800, he took a menial EIC job and continued learning Chinese. He rose slowly in the EIC, also worked as an interprete­r, and published, in 1810, a translatio­n of the Qing legal code. This establishe­d Staunton as Britain’s leading China expert, but it did not, as he had hoped, increase respect for China, which he considered the most civilized nonChristi­an society. Instead, many readers concluded that Chinese law should never be applied to civilized people; one reviewer said it proved that the Chinese were an “unimprovab­le race.” In April 1840, seven months after war had begun, Staunton’s knowledge would again have the effect of authorizin­g Sino-British hostility, when the House of Commons debated censuring the Whig government for having given inadequate instructio­ns to Elliot during

the run-up to the conflict. This debate provides the dramatic climax of Platt’s book. The shy, awkward Staunton had been an MP since 1818, but he had given only one speech: in 1833, when he unsuccessf­ully moved to continue the EIC’s supervisor­y role at Canton until new arrangemen­ts could be made with the Qing. His reputation as a China expert remained unsurpasse­d, however, and observers assumed he would again counsel patience. After all, his 1833 warning had proved prophetic: without a negotiated system of governance, some Britons flouting Chinese law had caused trouble for everyone. Therefore, Platt argues, Staunton “had a pulpit, and a moment, from which he could steer Britain back toward a more peaceful and respectful relationsh­ip with the Qing empire.”

But Staunton supported the government, and the war. Personal gratitude to the foreign secretary, Lord Palmerston, a political patron, probably had a part in his decision. After insisting in his speech to Parliament that he “yielded to no Member of the House” in his opposition to opium traffickin­g, Staunton invoked the by-then familiar argument that Britain merely sought equal relations with China, which could only be secured by responding vigorously to unacceptab­le treatment. Like many others, he also predicted problems elsewhere if Britain showed “weakness” in China, arguing that it would shake Britain’s control of India. He made two more novel claims as well. One, which Platt calls “perverse,” was that only war could end opium traffickin­g, since only war could lead to treaty-based Sino-British cooperatio­n. The other was that Lin Zexu’s actions—not soaring opium imports or Britain’s unilateral abolition of selfregula­tion via the EIC—had destroyed a satisfacto­ry status quo at Canton. Significan­tly, both arguments contradict­ed how later apologists characteri­zed the war: as a bold stroke eliminatin­g a backward despotism’s obstructio­n of free trade, transnatio­nal interactio­n, and progress.3

Censure failed in Parliament by a vote of 271–262, and it could conceivabl­y have changed British policy. (Probably not, though. As Macaulay, the secretary at war and quintessen­tial Whig historian, emphasized, the censure motion criticized only Elliot’s original instructio­ns; and when the Tories took power, they continued the war.) So few Britons knew anything about China that Staunton stood out to a degree unimaginab­le today; he might have swayed four other MPs. Still, his speech probably reflected large trends in Sino-Western confrontat­ion more than it altered them.

If Staunton might have prevented the war, others might have, too. For instance, the opium trader William Jardine had met with Palmerston before he chose to fight and convinced him that victory would be easy—no small matter for an unpopular government mired in other foreign policy crises, including a much-criticized Afghan war. Moreover, the censure motion that Staunton opposed had been expected to pass the Tory-dominated House of Lords, but support withered when the Duke of Wellington strongly opposed it. Like Staunton and others, Wellington praised the old order at Canton, rather than embracing the negative image of China found in the free-traders’ propaganda (and in much later historiogr­aphy). But he insisted that China had destroyed that system through insults and threats, which had to be avenged. He, too, claimed that opium was irrelevant, and justified war by appealing to “honor,” not “progress.”

So among immediate events and causes, Staunton’s speech merits attention, but other acts, by more powerful people, may merit more. Understand­ing how the stage was set for them also requires looking beyond what Platt highlights. By 1839, some Britons— particular­ly, but not exclusivel­y, certain Canton merchants—had for decades been aggressive­ly promoting the notion that Chinese behavior toward Westerners was “insulting” and that an easy war would humble the Qing. After Napier’s death, they had increasing numbers of aristocrat­ic allies.

This propaganda was plausible thanks to more general ideas about China, which had turned negative earlier and more strongly than Platt allows. In his introducti­on, Platt says that the story of the war’s origin is,

to a significan­t degree, the story of how the grand mystery of China faded in the cold light of knowledge as British subjects first began to learn the language and explore the interior. . . and . . . how the admiring Western views of China that were so prevalent in the late eighteenth century came to be eroded [emphasis added].

But those changes had begun significan­tly earlier. Voltaire and a few others continued praising Chinese political and social institutio­ns after 1750, and some Chinese arts remained popular. But most major Continenta­l social thinkers—Montesquie­u, Rousseau, Kant, and Herder, to name a few—had decidedly negative views of China, though they had little substantia­l new informatio­n about it. Even Montesquie­u, the most empirical among them, based a climatic determinis­t theory of eternal Chinese despotism on a single erroneous claim that China (and Asia generally) had no temperate zone. What mattered were internal European issues: a well-governed China might support Voltaire’s visions of “enlightene­d despotism” in Europe, while a hopelessly benighted China bolstered Montesquie­u’s insistence on a separation of powers.

Perhaps because neither “enlightene­d despotism” nor Voltaire’s largely Jesuit sources were viewed favorably in Britain, intellectu­al Sinophilia was never as pronounced there, and receded more quickly and decisively than on the Continent. As early as 1719, Daniel Defoe was denigratin­g China and ridiculing Sinophiles in both his fiction and his pamphlets. For Malthus in 1798 China epitomized overpopula­tion and poverty; James Mill in 1809 asserted that there was “not one of the arts in China in a state which indicates a stage of civilizati­on beyond the infancy of agricultur­al society.” Platt himself suggests that once-positive views of China had been replaced by cynicism “by the

end of the Napoleonic Wars”—twentyfive years before the Opium War. Even that probably puts the date too late.

The strong shift of opinion despite a lack of new evidence—either from translatio­ns or travel inside China— suggests that powerful European intellectu­al trends were responsibl­e. Growing faith in progress eroded respect for a polity supposedly governed by ancient Confucian principles; economic liberalism scorned interventi­ons such as government-funded flood control and various efforts to spread agricultur­al know-how, for which earlier thinkers had lauded China; constituti­onalism eroded (and reactions to Napoleon finished off) any remaining interest in finding models for enlightene­d despots. An increased focus on mechanical inventions and laborsavin­g supplanted older concerns for maximizing employment even when resources were limited—for which China had also often been praised.

While this increasing­ly negative view of China covered many topics, it returned repeatedly to assertions that the Qing were pompous, obsessed with rituals and with the appearance of being powerful, wealthy, and virtuous, but were militarily weak. (The latter point was valid, at least at sea: thus Napier’s 1833 fantasy and the 1839 war plan, based on shelling coastal cities and threatenin­g south-to-north grain shipments.) This made it easy for supporters of the war to argue that particular Chinese acts and phrases were deliberate­ly insulting and to advocate military responses. In addition, devotion to national “honor”—much like “credibilit­y” in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries—could make it seem proper, or even necessary, to overlook the fact that for most in Britain the material interests at stake were relatively narrow and the activity being protected deeply distastefu­l.

This created an opportunit­y for the “warlike party” among Canton merchants—and their allies in Britain. For many of them, the stakes were considerab­le. Some would have gone bankrupt without compensati­on for the opium Lin had seized; many more had become or were becoming rich in the Canton trade. (Matheson, of middling origins, became the UK’s second-largest landowner.) Others, well beyond Canton, benefited in other ways from opium: taxing it provided 15 percent of total British Indian government revenues from 1839 until 1889. (The future prime minister Robert Peel cited those revenues to defend the opium trade during an 1830 debate.) Many British merchants and manufactur­ers also hoped to gain from a “forward policy” of “opening” China, which the Manchester Chamber of Commerce, at Matheson’s urging, had endorsed by 1836. As Platt notes, some free trade advocates worried that opium purchases would displace Chinese demand for their goods, but the quasi-official view presented on behalf of exporters was positive. The Manchester, Liverpool, and Glasgow Chambers of Commerce noted that India earned about £3 million annually from exports to China (principall­y opium), “which enables our Indian subjects to consume our manufactur­es on a largely increased scale.” That sum exceeded Britain’s average annual current account surplus for 1836–1840. Platt may be right that war was far from inevitable in August 1839; but war sometime soon was nonetheles­s likely. The war had many critics, as he shows; but this was hardly the first or the last time that a determined minority pushed through a war they had long wanted. The odds were stacked in their favor, given the increasing disdain in Britain for China generally and its military capabiliti­es specifical­ly, as well as the widely held assumption that for a great power to be either “tough” or “weak” in one place would affect its potential adversarie­s worldwide.

Platt demonstrat­es, then, that the stakes we have retroactiv­ely assigned to the Opium War were not those that the people at the center of British decision-making spoke of. They only rarely invoked the theme of progress and openness versus backwardne­ss and xenophobia that later Westerners often raised; still less, of course, did they speak of imperialis­m and nascent Chinese nationalis­m. Platt also shows that potential supporters for a different path existed. (It is less clear, however, what that path might have been, unless China capitulate­d on all major points.) But a close-up view like the one Platt offers is not necessaril­y the most useful, and is insufficie­nt by itself. Some meanings that later commentato­rs imposed on the war—especially the “necessary destructio­n of archaic restraints,” but also the “first awakening of Chinese nationalis­m”—are historical­ly inaccurate and perhaps politicall­y harmful as well. Other wide-angle views, however, remain quite illuminati­ng. For instance, many Britons opposed the war, as Platt notes, precisely because it seemed clear to them that opium was at the heart of it, and war was likely to cause harm far outweighin­g any vindicatio­n of “national honor.” Moreover, while the promoters of various Chinafocus­ed agendas beyond opium—freer trade, access for missionari­es, extraterri­toriality—could not have brought on the war by themselves, they nonetheles­s represente­d increasing­ly important elements in British society and were certain to keep pushing their agendas regardless of how events in Canton played out.

Similarly, the currents pulling Britain toward a more hostile and dismissive view of China—making it more acceptable to make war there for less than persuasive reasons—were deep and broad, and they owed more to ongoing transforma­tions within Europe than to any of the few new facts, texts, or reports emanating from China. Platt’s book adds many interestin­g details to the drama of 1839, but it does not greatly change the larger story of Western intrusion or of Qing decline.

 ??  ?? The East India Company steamship Nemesis destroying Chinese war junks at the Second Battle of Chuenpi during the Opium War, 1841; hand-colored engraving by Edward Duncan, 1843
The East India Company steamship Nemesis destroying Chinese war junks at the Second Battle of Chuenpi during the Opium War, 1841; hand-colored engraving by Edward Duncan, 1843

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States