Remarkable discussions and fierce enmities, for instance,
marked the final decision not to make the Confucian
cult the State Religion; but there is not the slightest
doubt that in formally registering this veritable
revolution in the secret stronghold of Chinese political
thought, a Bastille has been overthrown and the ground
left clear for the development of individualism and
personal responsibility in a way which was impossible
under the leaden formulae of the greatest of the Chinese
sages. In defining the relationship which must
exist between the Central Government and the provinces
even more formidable difficulties have been encountered,
the apostles of decentralization and the advocates
of centralization refusing for many months to agree
on the so-called Provincial system, and then fighting
a battle A outrance on the question of whether
this body of law should form a chapter in the Constitution
or be simply an annexure to the main instrument.
The agreement which was finally arrived at—to
make it part and parcel of the Constitution—was
masterly in that it has secured that the sovereignty
of the people will not tend to be expressed in the
provincial dietines which have now been re-erected
(after having been summarily destroyed by Yuan Shih-kai)
the Central Parliament being left the absolute master.
This for a number of years will no doubt be more of
a theory than a practice; but there is every indication
that parliamentary government will within a limited
period be more successful in China than in some European
countries; and that the Chinese with their love of
well-established procedure and cautious action, will
select open debate as the best method of sifting the
grain from the chaff and deciding every important
matter by the vote of the majority. Already in
the period of 1916-1917 Parliament has more than justified
its re-convocation by becoming a National Watch Committee.
Interpellations on every conceivable subject have been
constant and frequent; fierce verbal assaults are delivered
on Cabinet Ministers; and slowly but inexorably a
real sense of Ministerial responsibility is being
created, the fear of having to run the gauntlet of
Parliament abating, if it has not yet entirely destroyed,
many malpractices. In the opinion of the writer
in less than ten years Parliament will have succeeded
in coalescing the country into an organic whole, and
will have placed the Cabinet in such close daily relations
with it that something very similar to the Anglo-Saxon
theory of government will be impregnably entrenched
in Peking. That such a miracle should be possible
in extreme Eastern Asia is one more proof that there
are no victories beyond the capacity of the human
mind.