Excerpt from The Imperial Agricultural College of Sapporo, Japan
The War of Restoration over, the Japanese Government turned its attention to more peaceful pursuits. It began to divert the overflowing energies of the warrior class and the superabundant strength of the oppressed peasantry into new channels of industrial warfare and conquest. A field well suited for enterprises of this kind was not wanting. For some years preceding the Restoration (1868) foreign relations had been forced upon Japan; and the contact with Russia in diplomacy brought vividly to mind the fact that the northern extremity of our Empire touched one end of the Czar's vast dominion. The northern islands of Japan, vaguely called Yezo, were for centuries a terra incognita among the people: all that was told about, and unfortunately most readily accepted by them was that the region was the abode of a barbarian folk known as the Ainu, and that it was a dreary waste of snow and ice, altogether unfit for inhabitation by a race of higher culture.
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