XII THE CASE OF MARY PAK
Her name wasn’t Mary Pak at all, but
decency demands a certain disguise.
However, her first name was Western,
and Mary may very well stand for it. Her family
name was, of course, Korean. For some months
she was a fellow lodger of mine. We talked
fi’equendy together, having common interests
but divergent opinions. Which makes for con-
versation more abundantly than agreement.
She was so vital a personality that it seems
unfair to make of her a “ case.” Yet she was a
case. Expressed at its simplest her case was
this : educated in America from the age of
seven she returned to Korea at twenty-one, both
in manner and at heart an alien, yet was expected
by her people to resume her place in the family
exactly like a Korean woman. This would have
been difficult enough as a mere change of habits ;
for instance, long skirts, a strange diet, sitting and
sleepily; on the floor. But it demanded more
than this ; it demanded a change of psychology*
140
THE CASE OF MARY PAK 141
which was impossible. The girl didn’t know two
words of her native tongue. When she visited
her people they conversed in English. This was
a barrier in itself. Surmountable, of course, if
considered simply as a question of language. But
it was a question of adjustment to life, of back-
ground, of equipment, of attitude. Her outlook
was that of an American girl.
Then there were other complications. She
had been taken to America by missionaries —
to be exact, by my hosts, which accounts for our
lodging in the same household. Yet she was
outspokenly hostile to missions. If she had been
politic enough to conceal her hostility many
excellent appointments would have offered them-
selves for her selection. But she refused to bow
her head in the House of Rimmon. Which
further incensed her people, staunchly Christian.
Her father, one of the wealthiest men in Korea,
and probably quite the cleverest, stopped all
supplies, leaving the girl the alternatives of
returning to home duties, living on charity, or
cutting herself adrift from family and friends and
making such way for herself as she could. The
last, you must understand, no easy matter for
an Eastern woman. Yet it was eventually this
course that she chose.
How we first came to cross swords I can’t quite
142 KOREA OF THE JAPANESE
remember. What I do remember is that I
found myself committed to a most astonishing
attitude. I became an ardent champion of
imperialism, of strong and ruthless Government,
of “ the white man’s burden,” of the duty of the
powerful to rule the weak for their own good.
I was driven into this position as into the last
stronghold of an invaded land by Mary Pak’s
pugnacious advocacy of Freedom. By which she
meant the right of the individual to follow his
particular crazes in utter disregard of the opinion
of his fellows, the demands of custom, the good of
his country, or the uplift of the world.
“ What do you mean,” she asked me, “ by
the uplift of the world ? ”
Well, after all, what did I mean ? The words
sounded simple enough, but they defied me to
expound them. And she found it quite easy —
I should have found it quite easy myself— to
dismiss my specific examples of uplift as mere
tinkerings and patchings of doubtful benefit
if not of definite harm. It was intolerable to
be obliged to defend myself against the very
cynicisms which 1 delighted in pitting against
others. But it was an amusing exercise in
dialectics, and I came to enjoy it.
The burden of her complaint was that life
demanded liberty, but that custom enclosed the
THE CASE OF MARY PAK 143
individual within limiting prohibitions. She was
responsible to herself, wasn’t she? Then why
shouldn’t she satisfy her tastes, her impulses, her
needs ? Of course I entirely sympathized with
her. If she had been more beautiful she might
have been a dangerous opponent. But her
rather screwed-up face and shrill voice fortified
a man’s resistance. I was cruel enough to tell
her to satisfy her needs and see what came of it.
She grew angry, which made her less attractive
than ever. Couldn’t I see ? That was just the
point. The world had conspired against the
individual. And I was part of the world. I was
too timid to rebel. Which was probably quite
true. But I gave such fiice of wisdom as I could
to my timidity.
“ You must remember,” I said, " that the
test of conduct is not its application to one but its
application to all,” which, though I hated the
priggishness of it, was also quite true.
But I could understand well enough her fierce
individualism. She was cut off from her country-
men by her Western upbringing, and from her
Western upbringing by her Eastern blood.
Moreover, she was a woman. For a man with
her training, and incidentally with her brains,
life would have been easy. Whatever career he
had chosen, he would have possessed an enormous
144 KOREA OF THE JAPANESE
advantage over his fellows. And marriage would
have offered no difficulty, the Easterner, however
westernized, requiring little more than a woman
in the background to order his house and
provide him with sons. But for Mary Pak
marriage to a Korean was unthinkable, to a
foreigner impossible. Which drove her to the
emphatic declaration, unnecessarily repetitive,
that marriage was slavery. She would never
marry ; she needed to be free. She was forced
to her individualistic creed ; she was so absolutely
alone.
It was more to the point when the debate
turned on Korea.
Here I had an unexpected ally, as my brother
came over from China, his mind somewhat
bitterly occupied with the disastrous results there
of the gospel of liberty and the subversion of
government. It was natural that Mary Pak
should see in her people a magnified example of
her own case. The Japanese imposed their laws
on the Koreans without the Koreans’ consent.
Her country was justified in its resentment, would
be justified, if it had the power, in resistance.
Indeed, the girl manifested sufficient “ dangerous
thought ” to lodge her in jail, I should imagine,
for the rest of her life. At this time I knew little
enough of the benefits of the Japanese Irule, and
THE CASE OF MARY PAK 145
wasn’t qualified to reply, but my brother could
quote China. Liberty under the Chinese
nationalists meant liberty for the idle to rob the
industrious, for the strong to rob the weak. It
was simply that the Government had been
removed and bandits sprang up like weeds.
But then, Mary Pak countered, shrilly ironical,
we were English ; of course we defended the
Japanese, because we were doing exactly the
same in India as the Japanese were doing in
Korea. But what right had we in India ?
What right had we to impose our regulations on
the Indians against their will ? We had made
them a nation of slaves.
“ Certainly,” my brother said, “ we don’t let
them burn their widows.”
Of course the debates — they were innumerable,
blazing up at the least provocation — resulted in
no conclusion. But they clarified for me the
tangled problem of dominance and subserviency.
Not that they solved the problem — ^I don’t
believe that there is a solution — but they estab-
lished certain abstract and universal principles on
which any theory of Government must be based.
Principles which are commonplaces in the West,
but not in the East. As, for instance, that
without order there can be no liberty ; that
liberty is not the birth of a moment, but of the
L
146 KOREA OF THE JAPANESE
labour of generations. Commonplaces, I repeat ;
yet to the Korean mind paradoxes and contra-
dictions. Even to Mary Pak ; intellectually of
the West, but emotionally of the East. To her,
liberty and order (which she called restriction)
were fundamentally opposed ; and being a gift
of nature, like the sun and the open air, liberty
needed no cultivation, no preparation. Simply
one behaved as one pleased, and one was firee.
And perhaps it is that spirit, rather than national
resentment, that is thwarting the work of the
Japanese Government in Korea.
One admits the red tape, of course. One
admits the petty officiousness, even the
favouritism and the injustice. But the fact
remains that Japan found Korea in a state of
apathetic exhaustion due partly at least, and
many will declare entirely, to the misrule of the
native Korean Court, and from this apathetic
exhaustion Japan is striving, with all her resources
of ingenuity and power, to lift the country to the
level of a modern nation. She has created roads,
railways, postal and telegraph services, universal
electric lighting, sanitation. Whether these
things are benefits or not, they are now there.
She has distributed wholesale, and free, the
best breeds of fowls, so that the Korean egg is no
longer a meagre thing hardly worth the shelling
THE CASE OF MARY PAK 147
for the meat within, but has both quality and
size. She has planted fruit-trees on the hill-sides
where rice cannot grow. She has set aside spaces
for experimental farms. She has irrigated waste
land, is rapidly damming the rivers and building
cisterns to obviate both flood and drought. She
is afforesting the hills, which, left to themselves,
the Koreans completely denuded except in the
grounds of palaces and temples and royal tombs.
But all the Korean sees is that whereas water was
free he must now pay three yen (six shillings) a
year, and that he may only chop such wood for
his house and his Are as the authorities permit.
And it is useless to tell him that for six shillings a
year he has perhaps a doubled rice-crop, and is
completely relieved of the menace of famine ;
and that, although wood-cutting is restricted, at
least he has wood to cut, whereas before he had
nothing but the yearly shrub that sprouted on the
mountains.
Well, what can you do with such a people?
One can sympathize with the Japanese irritation ;
indeed, one wonders why they do not retire and
leave the Koreans to themselves. The obvious
answer to that is that Korea is strategically
necessary and commercially profitable. But
there is another answer, a more fundamental
one ; the answer which Japan, sincerely or not.
148 KOREA OF THE JAPANESE
prefers to make. The answer, indeed, which the
British make when questioned concerning India.
Left to themselves the Koreans would rot, which
would affect not Korea alone but the whole
world. Not that Korea is very vast or very vital.
To allow India to rot, for instance, would be
a much more serious proposition. But the
principle is the same. Eventually all policy
must become, as it is becoming, world-wide.
No nation, however insignificant, however mean
its contribution to mankind, can be allowed to
fall into neglect and decay. And this is the
essential justification of the Japanese rule in
Korea.
Whether Japan has set herself as a remote aim
the training of Korea for self-government I don’t
know. If she has, she is very optimistic. The
Koreans are a delightful people, extremely
approachable and full of laughter, but they show
not the least aptitude for organized control.
They show, indeed, a positive aversion to it,
undermining whoever may be in power, whether
he be a State official or the pastor of a church,
enduring no one to be set over them — ^in spite
of their nationalist gesturing — ^unless he be a
foreigner. And this attitude is not only a
negative legacy firom centuries of misrule.
Chronic bad government is not an inevitable
THE CASE OF MARY PAK 149
misfortune like a chronic drought. A corrupt
and tyrannous Court persisting from generation
to generation is a sure sign of national debility.
If a people continues to be badly governed it is
because they have it in them to be badly
governed. Actively or passively they must be
held responsible, and not weakly pitied as
innocent victims of an evil beyond their power.
And the Koreans are such a people. One is
tempted to couple with them the Chinese,
possibly the Russians, and to formulate a theory
that certain races, like certain individuals, are
lacking simply in the qualities necessary for
rule, just as certain countries may be lacking
in the qualities necessary for industry. And in
either case such a lack can be made good from
outside. Brains for organization can be im-
ported like coal and steel. And not merely
brains for organization, but that peculiar gift
for judicial rectitude and political honesty
which is the portion in some measure of all
the Western nations, but in the East of the
Japanese alone.
Yet it might be difficult to persuade the
Koreans to regard the Japanese merely as a
particular kind of import necessary to make
good a chance national deficiency. It would be
difficult even if you changed the figure, and
150 KOREA OF THE JAPANESE
suggested that Korea was the employer and
Japan the employee, a business manager, as it
were, for the landed gentleman living at ease on
his estate. And the Japanese might not like it
either. Yet for the life of me I can’t see that
imperialism means anything other than that.
We seem to have wandered from Mary Pak.
Her father held a high position under the Korean
Emperor, but, although invited to serve in the
Japanese Government, he refused all office. The
missionaries declared that this was interpreted
as an insult, and that later, when he was thrown
into prison for three years in connection with
some plot against the Governor, it was simply the
Japanese taking a deliberate and spiteful revenge.
Possibly ; possibly not. At any rate my hostess
used to tell me of her visits to the dear man in
prison, enlarging indignantly on his hardships,
clothed as he was summer and winter in a single
thickness of cotton, kept in an unheated cell,
and submitted to a daily baptism of cold water.
But even in prison he contrived to keep a shrewd
eye on the matrimonial affairs of his family, and
did not lose the art of playing the Eastern
despot over his daughter. Yet he was an amusing
old man, entertaining the missionaries with
stories about the Japanese. He was just that
THE CASE OF MARY PAK 151
cute.” But as far as I could make out he lived
on the labour of his tenant farmers like any other
landlord, extorting annually his full fifty per
cent, of the produce.
As for Mary, she had many talents. She was
also “just that cute,” though where she got
“ such notions ” from, my hostess even, who
knew her from childhood, couldn’t imagine.
She had made a brilliant college career. She was
an admirable debater. She could write choice
English. She could play the violin. Her
teacher, a Czecho-Slovakian and a very excellent
friend of mine, told me that she had “ so goot
feeling for the museek and play so naice ” but
only “ she vill not practees.” But I never heard
her perform. She seemed to me to prefer gramo-
phone records of the eukalele and the saxophone.
But she had one unique qualification. She was
a graphologist. She was insatiable in her
demands for hand-writing to be analysed, and her
analyses were astonishing. I forget most of
what she revealed to me about my own character,
but I remember I was logical and sensitive. So
sensitive ! So sensitive ! She gave me to believe
that she had never met any one else quite so
superlatively sensitive. I didn’t know whether
to feel flattered or rebuked. But, being logical,
she couldn’t understand my obtuseness in not
152 KOREA OF THE JAPANESE
seeing through the pretences of convention ;
and, being sensitive, she couldn’t understand my
passive acceptance of its tyranny. I was born
to be a rebel, but I was a slave.
Yes, in her presence I was a slave. Possibly
because I rebelled against her rebellion. Yet
away from her I found myself mocking in a
manner humiliatingly reminiscent of her own.
But with this difference : that being detached
from her peculiar perplexities my logic obliged
me to include her in my mockery, though being
sensitive I sympathized with her with all my
heart.
It’s a cursed combination, you will find.
But her grapholo^ stood her in good stead.
She is analysing hand-writing for an Anglo-
Eastern paper. She wrote to me when she
received the commission.
“ Now I command the attention,” she said,
” of the great British public.”
She seemed hilarious with her success. Her
fortune was assured.
Well, she has at least achieved independence.
For instance, she needn’t kneel to her father cm
New Year’s Day and knock her head three times
upon the floor. And for a Korean girl that is
emancipation beyond the flight of dreams.
BEVOM) THE CITY
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