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15篇文章贯通六级词汇MP3(字幕版)Unit14-Part1

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UNIT14

Dr. Sun Yat-sen: Father of the Chinese Revolution

Dr. Sun Yat-sen held official political office

for a total of only a few months in China,

yet he had an impact so profound

that it earned him the designation

of Father of the Chinese Revolution.

He was a man

who is still much revered in China.

His portrait can be seen in Tiananmen Square in Beijing.

Sun was born in 1866 in Guangdong Province.

His ancestors were clans

of farmers and shepherds.

During his adolescent years,

he attended school in Honolulu and Hong Kong.

In the latter city,

he studied medicine, receiving an “A”

in every subject in the program,

an unprecedented feat at Hong Kong Medical College

(later, the University of Hong Kong).

While in Hong Kong,

Sun undertook conversion to Roman Catholicism.

Early in life, Sun developed contempt

for the corruption of the Qing (Manchu) Dynasty.

He was also vocal

in denouncing foreign intrusions

and aggression against China

during the 19th century.

The opium war of 1839 to 1842

was a major testimony to China's inability 

to defend itself against outside aggression.

By this period,

Britain had developed a strong monopoly

in the trade of many goods,

including tea, salt, opium,

and other commodities.

This monopoly was exercised mostly

through the British East India Company.

Britain had been importing much from China,

but was exporting little.

This resulted in a yearly balance

of payments deficit with China.

To correct this imbalance in trade,

and the fact that opium was a highly addictive drug,

the arrogant British forced

the export of opium on China,

even though opium was declared illegal

by the latter. China's attempt

to resist these aggressive trade practices

precipitated the bloody Opium War of 1839 to 1842.

Thousands were massacred

as China lost miserably against superior forces.

The Treaty of Nanking in 1842

dictated that China pay huge compensation

to Britain and it forced China

to open five of its ports to British trade.

Britain also demanded and received immunity

from Chinese laws,

therefore gaining British sovereignty

over small parts of a foreign land.

Hong Kong was ceded to Britain as well.

The Chinese endured repression

and humiliation for many decades.

In 1896, the United States,

relative newcomers to the club

of world imperialists,

declared an Open Door policy

for trading with China.

No foreign country was to have a monopoly

of trade with China.

During the 19th century,

many foreign countries successfully

carved out pieces of China for themselves.

Geographically, by 1911,

China was a significantly smaller country

than it was in 1800.

In the middle of the 19th century,

China was also going through

some very grim times, economically.

There were famines, floods, and droughts.

There was much suffering and deprivation,

especially in the southern areas of China.

The Qing dynasty did very little

to relieve the people of their plight.

These conditions, along with

the humiliating concessions being forced

on them by foreign powers,

culminated in a mass of violent eruptions

and disturbances against the Qing Dynasty,

which became known as

the Taiping Rebellion from 1851 to 1864.

The Opium Wars, the Taiping Rebellion,

and later, in 1900,

the Boxer Rebellion,

were constant reminders of government corruption

and China's weakness against foreign intrusion

and manipulation.

With these tragic misfortunes

in recent modern Chinese history on his mind,

Sun came to the conclusion that

the only way that China could truly

become a strong unified country once again,

was by fullscale revolution.

This should begin

with capturing the Qing throne,

terminating millennia of imperial rule in China.

He also realized that

a more militant approach was needed

if he was going to achieve his goals.

Blundering in the first attempt

to overthrow the Manchus in 1895,

Sun fled from China and embarked upon

an unexpected 16 years of world travel

and refection.

This period proved instrumental

in Sun's development of revolutionary strategy and theory.

He enrolled support from Chinese people

living in other countries.

He visited Hawaii, the United States,

Britain, and Japan.

He elicited help wherever he could.

He read some of works of Karl Marx

and those of Henry George.

George was an American economist

and social philosopher

who saw the injustice of land policy

during the building of railroads

into the American west in the second half

of the 19th century.

George observed that

most people who moved west

remained poor or got poorer,

while the relatively few land developers

got richer and richer.

The advertisement

“Go west young man and prosper” meant,

in reality, that only a very few would prosper.

George suggested, without success,

that a heavy land tax be levied

to tap some of this wealth

in order to develop a solid infrastructure

from which all people in the west,

not just the rich, could benefit.

Sun also had the opportunity

to study republican forms of government

such as that of the United States.

He became even more convinced that

China had to break away from

the millenniaold imperial government system,

concluding that a republican system

was the answer for China.

He was impressed with Montesquieu's principle

of the separation of government powers.

This theory stated that

the three branches of government,

the executive, legislative, and judicial,

function separately.

He saw this in practice,

particularly in the United States.

He later concluded that for China,

two additional separated powers,

examination and censorial would be necessary.

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