Gems of Chinese Literature/Yüan Shih-k‘ai-A Broken Oath

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Yüan Shih-k‘ai1524322Gems of Chinese Literature — A Broken Oath1922Herbert Allen Giles

[From a Photograph.]

IHEREBY make oath and say:

With reference to the establishment of government by the people and the various administrative measures to be drawn up, I am most anxious to exert my utmost strength in spreading and supporting the republican spirit; to scour out the flaws and filth of autocratic rule; to observe the constitutional laws in accordance with the will of the people; and to associate our State with peaceable and powerful countries, so that the five great members[1] of our nation may one and all derive happiness and profit therefrom. All these aims I swear to follow up without change; and so soon as the National Assembly has been called together and a President[2] has been duly elected for the first term of this office, I will resign my position and will reverently adhere with all sincerity to the oath which I now swear to my countrymen.

(Signed) YUAN SHIH-K‘AI.


  1. Chinese, Manchus, Mongols, Mussulmans, and Tibetans.
  2. He himself was elected, with the consent of Sun Yat-sen, Provisional President in the south.