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0251 India and Tibet : vol.1
インドとチベット : vol.1
India and Tibet : vol.1 / 251 ページ(カラー画像)

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doi: 10.20676/00000295
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INTERVIEW WITH TONGSA PENLOP 205

a negotiator before that date. Would not I, therefore,

show patience up to then ?

I asked him whether he himself would be inclined to

be patient if he had been attacked four times at night

after waiting eleven months for negotiators to come. He

admitted that he would not, and would feel more inclined

to go about killing people ; but he said I was the repre-

sentative of a great Government, and ought to be more

patient than he would be. I said I had named June 25

as the date up to which I would receive negotiators, but

since then I had been again attacked at Kangma, and I

could not answer for it that the Viceroy would still allow

me to receive negotiators.

I said no Englishman liked killing villagers who were

forced from their homes to fight us. We knew they did

not want to fight, and we had no quarrel with them. But,

unfortunately, it seemed impossible to get at the real

instigators of the opposition to us except by fighting, in

which the innocent peasant-soldiers, and not the authors

of the trouble, suffered most. If these latter would only

lead their men I would be better pleased, for then they

would appreciate what opposition to the British Govern-

ment really meant. The 'T'ongsa Penlop was much

amused at the suggestion, but said the leaders always

remained a march behind when any fighting was likely to

take place.

Continuing, I said that, though I had little hope that

any settlement would be arrived at without fighting, yet,

fighting or no fighting, I had to make a settlement some

time, and one that would last another hundred years. If

the Tibetans had only been as sensible as the Bhutanese,

and come and talked matters over with me, we could

easily have arrived at a settlement long ago. All we

desired was to be on friendly and neighbourly terms with

States like Bhutan and Tibet lying on our frontier. War,

though it could have but one result, gave us much trouble,

which we had no wish unnecessarily to incur. We, there-

fore, much preferred peace. I sent my respects to the

Dharm Raja, and asked the 'T'ongsa Penlop to write to

me often and give me advice regarding the settlement