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latter-day pamphlets-第23部分

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ing water in upon the place; and say as with a fiat; 〃Here shall be truth; and real work; and talent to do it henceforth; I will seek for able men to work here; as for the elixir of life to this poor place and me:〃what might not one such man effect there!

Nay one such is not to be dispensed with anywhere。  in the affairs of men。 In every ship; I say; there must be a _seeing_ pilot; not a mere hearing one!  It is evident you can never get your ship steered through the difficult straits by persons standing ashore; on this bank and that; and shouting _their_ confused directions to you:  〃'Ware that Colonial Sandbank!Starboard now; the Nigger Question!Larboard; _larboard_; the Suffrage Movement!  Financial Reform; your Clothing…Colonels overboard! The Qualification Movement; 'Ware…re…re!Helm…a…lee!  Bear a hand there; will you!  Hr…r…r; lubbers; imbeciles; fitter for a tailor's shopboard than a helm of Government; Hr…r…r!〃And so the ship wriggles and tumbles; and; on the whole; goes as wind and current drive。  No ship was ever steered except to destruction in that manner。  I deliberately say so:  no ship of a State either。  If you cannot get a real pilot on board; and put the helm into his hands; your ship is as good as a wreck。  One real pilot on board may save you; all the bellowing from the banks that ever was; will not; and by the nature of things cannot。  Nay your pilot will have to succeed; if he do succeed; very much in spite of said bellowing; he will hear all that; and regard very little of it;in a patient mild…spoken wise manner; will regard all of it as what it is。  And I never doubt but there is in Parliament itself; in spite of its vague palaverings which fill us with despair in these times; a dumb instinct of inarticulate sense and stubborn practical English insight and veracity; that would manfully support a Statesman who could take command with really manful notions of Reform; and as one deserving to be obeyed。  Oh for one such; even one!  More precious to us than all the bullion in the Bank; or perhaps that ever was in it; just now!

For it is Wisdom alone that can recognize wisdom:  Folly or Imbecility never can; and that is the fatalest ban it labors under; dooming it to perpetual failure in all things。  Failure which; in Downing Street and places of _command_ is especially accursed; cursing not one but hundreds of millions!  Who is there that can recognize real intellect; and do reverence to it; and discriminate it well from sham intellect; which is so much more abundant; and deserves the reverse of reverence?  He that himself has it!One really human Intellect; invested with command; and charged to reform Downing Street for us; would continually attract real intellect to those regions; and with a divine magnetism search it out from the modest corners where it lies hid。  And every new accession of intellect to Downing Street would bring to it benefit only; and would increase such divine attraction in it; the parent of all benefit there and elsewhere!


〃What method; then; by what method?〃 ask many。  Method; alas!  To secure an increased supply of Human Intellect to Downing Street; there will evidently be no quite effectual 〃method〃 but that of increasing the supply of Human Intellect; otherwise definable as Human Worth; in Society generally; increasing the supply of sacred reverence for it; of loyalty to it; and of life…and…death desire and pursuit of it; among all classes;if we but knew such a 〃method〃!  Alas; that were simply the method of making all classes Servants of Heaven; and except it be devout prayer to Heaven; I have never heard of any method!  To increase the reverence for Human Intellect or God's Light; and the detestation of Human Stupidity or the Devil's Darkness; what method is there?  No method;except even this; that we should each of us 〃pray〃 for it; instead of praying for mere scrip and the like; that Heaven would please to vouchsafe us each a little of it; one by one!  As perhaps Heaven; in its infinite bounty; by stern methods; gradually will?  Perhaps Heaven has mercy too in these sore plagues that are oppressing us; and means to teach us reverence for Heroism and Human Intellect; by such baleful experience of what issue Imbecility and Parliamentary Eloquence lead to?  Such reverence; I do hope; and even discover and observe; is silently yet extensively going on among us even in these sad years。  In which small salutary fact there burns for us; in this black coil of universal baseness fast becoming universal wretchedness; an inextinguishable hope; far…off but sure; a divine 〃pillar of fire by night。〃  Courage; courage!

Meanwhile; that our one reforming Statesman may have free command of what Intellect there is among us; and room to try all means for awakening and inviting ever more of it; there has one small Project of Improvement been suggested; which finds a certain degree of favor wherever I hear it talked of; and which seems to merit much more consideration than it has yet received。  Practical men themselves approve of it hitherto; so far as it goes; the one objection being that the world is not yet prepared to insist on it;which of course the world can never be; till once the world consider it; and in the first place hear tell of it!  I have; for my own part; a good opinion of this project。  The old unreformed Parliament of rotten boroughs _had_ one advantage; but that is hereby; in a far more fruitful and effectual manner; secured to the new。

The Proposal is; That Secretaries under and upper; that all manner of changeable or permanent servants in the Government Offices shall be selected without reference to their power of getting into Parliament;that; in short; the Queen shall have power of nominating the half…dozen or half…score Officers of the Administration; whose presence is thought necessary in Parliament; to official seats there; without reference to any constituency but her own only; which of course will mean her Prime Minister's。  A very small encroachment on the present constitution of Parliament; offering the minimum of change in present methods; and I almost think a maximum in results to be derived therefrom。The Queen nominates John Thomas (the fittest man she; much inquiring; can hear tell of in her three kingdoms) President of the Poor…Law Board; Under Secretary of the Colonies; Under; or perhaps even Upper Secretary of what she and her Premier find suitablest for a working head so eminent; a talent so precious; and grants him; by her direct authority; seat and vote in Parliament so long as he holds that office。  Upper Secretaries; having more to do in Parliament; and being so bound to be in favor there; would; I suppose; at least till new times and habits come; be expected to be chosen from among the _People's_ Members as at present。  But whether the Prime Minister himself is; in all times; bound to be first a People's Member; and which; or how many; of his Secretaries and subordinates he might be allowed to take as _Queen's_ Members; my authority does not say;perhaps has not himself settled; the project being yet in mere outline or foreshadow; the practical embodiment in all details to be fixed by authorities much more competent than he。  The soul of his project is; That the Crown also have power to elect a few members to Parliament。

From which project; however wisely it were embodied; there could probably; at first or all at once; no great 〃accession of intellect〃 to the Government Offices ensue; though a little might; even at first; and a little is always precious:  but in its ulterior operation; were that faithfully developed; and wisely presided over; I fancy an immense accession of intellect might ensue;nay a natural ingress might thereby be opened to all manner of accessions; and the actual flower of whatever intellect the British Nation had might be attracted towards Downing Street; and continue flowing steadily thither!  For; let us see a little what effects this simple change carries in it the possibilities of。  Here are beneficent germs; which the presence of one truly wise man as Chief Minister; steadily fostering them for even a few years; with the sacred fidelity and vigilance that would beseem him; might ripen into living practices and habitual facts; invaluable to us all。

What it is that Secretaries of State; Managers of Colonial Establishments; of Home and Foreign Government interests; have really and truly to do in Parliament; might admit of various estimate in these times。  An apt debater in Parliament is by no means certain to be an able administrator of Colonies; of Home or Foreign Affairs; nay; rather quite the contrary is to be presumed of him; for in order to become a 〃brilliant speaker;〃 if that is his character; considerable portions of his natural internal endowment must have gone to the surface; in order to make a shining figure there; and precisely so much the less (few men in these days know how much less!) must remain available in the internal silent state; or as faculty for thinking; for devising and acting; which latter and which alone is the function essential for him in his Secretaryship。  Not to tell a good story for himself 〃in Parliament and to the twenty…seven millions; many of them fools;〃 not that; but to do good administration; to know with sure eye; and decide with just and resolute heart; what is what in the _things_ committed to his charge:  this and not that is the service which poor England; whatever it may think and maunder; does require and want of the Official Man in Downing Street。  Given a good Official Man or Secretary; he really ought; as far as it is possible; to be left working in the silent state。 No mortal can both work; and do good talking in Parliament; or out of it: the feat is impossible as that of serving two hostile masters。

Nor would I; if it could be helped; much trouble my good Secretary with addressing Parliament:  needful explanations; yes; in a free country; surely;but not to every frivolous and vexatious person; in or out of Parliament; who chooses to apply for them。  There should be demands for explanation too which were reckoned frivolous and vexatious; and censured as such。  These; I should say; are the not needful explanations:  and if my poor Secretary is to be called out from his worksho

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