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Beijing
George Morrison's vanished Beijing libraryPosted by Jeremy Goldkorn, April 3, 2008 5:49 PM
The online journal China Heritage Quarterly has a new issue out. The theme is the studio: "zhai, shuzhai, shufang—the scholar-writer’s place of creative engagement with the written word, or artistic practice. The issue includes an article by Claire Roberts: George E. Morrison's Studio and Library. Excerpt:
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Comments on George Morrison's vanished Beijing library
I'm amazed that the building survived until last year. Where was it more precisely? Even more I would like to know what the building was used as in the early 80s when I was a journalist in Beijing...
Michael
Were you aware that Morrison never learned Chinese, and that he had great personal contempt for the country about which he wrote? That is, if you can call what he wrote of any significance, since he had a close collaboration with Edmund Backhouse.
perhaps Ms. Roberts' Oz Pride has overlooked some of his less glorious aspects.
Anonymous
I don't think Ms Roberts' article was intended to boost Oz pride: Morrison's library and house were a fascinating but sadly disappeared piece of the history of Beijing.
That is is the only justification needed for publishing an article about it.
The fact that Morrison did not speak Chinese is widely known.
"Anonymous" is confusing Morrison with his Times of London colleague J.O.P. Bland, who was Shanghai correspondent. He was the one who had a connection with Edmund Backhouse.
In a May 21, 1912 letter to a friend, Morrison wrote:
"My prospects at present are these. I have a little cottage in the country near Peking. This I will retain if I can sell my library. My library I am trying to sell at the present time. You know I have the finest library of its kind in the world, and I am hoping to receive for it a fancy price. It has taken me some 18 years to put together. It has run curious vicissitudes, for it went through the siege of Peking with the loss of only one book which I was able to subsequently replace.... The price I am asking for it is forty thousand pounds. At any rate for a few days I have been building castles in Spain with this money. I
The library was eventually sold to Baron Isawaki for 35,000 pounds, and shipped to Tokyo. For a while it had its own premises, but now is part of the library of the Tokyo Institute of Oriental Studies, according to Cyril Pearl's book "Morrison of Peking".