Publication information |
Source: Literary Digest Source type: magazine Document type: article Document title: “The Press of the Antipodes on President McKinley” Author(s): anonymous Date of publication: 26 October 1901 Volume number: 23 Issue number: 17 Pagination: 506-07 |
Citation |
“The Press of the Antipodes on President McKinley.” Literary Digest 26 Oct. 1901 v23n17: pp. 506-07. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
McKinley assassination (international response); William McKinley (quotations about). |
Named persons |
Abraham Lincoln; William McKinley. |
Notes |
In the original publication the final sentence of this article concludes with a quotation mark (omitted below) yet contains no opening quotation mark paired with it. The final sentence is therefore either, at least in part, a quotation or, as given below, a complete paraphrase. |
Document |
The Press of the Antipodes on President McKinley
THE journals of China, Japan, and Australia contain very sympathetic comments on the death and character of the late President McKinley. In every act of life, says The Japan Weekly Mail (Yokohama), published in English, McKinley the man “showed an example of clean-living, broad-thinking, and clear straightforwardness of purpose as beautiful as any found in Anglo-Saxon annals.” The Herald (Kobe), also published in English, asks why it is that fate seems to single out for untimely death the American Presidents “in whom the nobler types of manhood have been most signally exemplified.” Comparing the work of Lincoln and McKinley, The Herald continues:
“The work of the conspicuously honorable, broad-minded man whose tragic death the whole republic to-day mourns, would have been impossible but for the consolidation determinedly wrought out by the iron mind and will of Lincoln; but who shall set a limit to the consequences of that act, which we still regard as current history, so recent is it, which drew within reach of the principles of the American Constitution the non-Aryan peoples of the Philippines, Hawaii, Cuba, and Porto Rico?”
It concludes by calling the President’s life an example to be followed:
“His remark that ‘the need of the nation is that those to whom it looks for influence upon national action shall never permit themselves to be carried away by a tempest of feeling,’ deserves to be inscribed over the lintel of every foreign chancellery. In his conception of the sacredness of the trust reposed in him by his fellow countrymen, in unaltering allegiance to duty, in his unassuming faith, in his faithfulness to the people on whose decision the national policy in the final resort, depends, in his humanity and honesty, Mr. McKinley has left an example which can not fail to uplift and ennoble many an American youth.”
Japan and America, of this
city, edited by a Japanese, declares that the late President’s speech at Buffalo
in favor of more friendly trade intercourse has especially endeared him to Japan.
“No other people in the world, outside of the people of his own country, more
sincerely deplore the death of William McKinley that the people of Japan.” The
native Japanese journal, the Jimmin (Tokyo), also refers to Mr. McKinley’s
“broad-minded” commercial policy, and remarks that the Japanese mourn his loss
as one of the best chief magistrates of the country which deserves so much honor
for helping Japan to enter the [506][507] comity
of nations. The Jimmin prints its notice of the death surrounded by heavy
mourning bands. Other native journals manifest the same sympathetic feeling.
Japan, declares the Asahi Shimbun (Tokyo), had cause to object to President
McKinley’s policy, particularly in Hawaii and the Philippines; but, nevertheless,
she approved and applauded him especially in his attitude toward the Chinese
complication. The Yomiuri and the Chihuo Shimbun (Tokyo) also
declare that Japan has forgotten Hawaii and the high tariff in view of the sterling
personal qualities of the man and his statesmanlike speech at Buffalo. The Kokumin
Shimbun (Tokyo) is the only native journal (according to The Japan Weekly
Mail) which “departs a little from the general tone of appreciation.” The
Kokumin declares that Mr. McKinley was “not a great originator in any
sense; his strength lay in reading the signs of the times and in obeying them
shrewdly.” This, however, it confesses, is a great gift.
The Argus (Melbourne) says that history
has furnished many examples of the “inability to understand the fiber of the
world’s best men by half-crazed fanatics who confound a thirst for blood with
a love of liberty.” Perhaps no other public man in history, continues this Australian
journal, compelled the world to so radically correct its early judgment during
his lifetime.