登陆注册
5590800000030

第30章 Political Theory(8)

Both Mill and Macaulay profess unbounded confidence in the virtue and wisdom of the middle,that is,of their own class.Macaulay hopes for a reform bill which will make the votes of the House of Commons,the express image of the opinion of the middle orders of Britain.'44Mill holds that the middle class will retain this moral authority,however widely the franchise be extended;while Macaulay fears that they will be swamped by its extension to the masses.The reform bill which they joined in supporting was regarded by the Radicals as a payment on account;while the Whig hoped that it would be a full and final discharge.The Radical held that no barriers against democracy were needed;he took for granted that a democracy would find its natural leaders in the educated and intelligent.The Whig,to whom such confidence appeared to be altogether misplaced,had to find some justification for the 'checks'and 'balances'which he thought essential.

II.WHIGGISM

I have spoken of Macaulay's articles because they represent the most pointed conflict between the Utilitarian and the Whig,Macaulay belongs properly to the next generation,but he appeared as the mouthpiece of the earlier group of writers who in Mill's time delivered through the Edinburgh Review the true oracles of the Whig faith.Upon that ground Mill had assailed them in his article.

Their creed,he said,was a 'see-saw.'The Whigs were aristocrats as much as the Tories.They were simply the 'outs'who hoped to be the 'ins.'They trimmed their sails to catch public opinion,but were careful not to drift into the true popular currents.They had no desire to limit the power which they hoped one day to possess.They would attack abuses --the slave-trade or the penal laws --to gain credit for liberality and enlightenment,when the abuses were such as could be removed without injuring the power of the aristocracy.They could use 'vague generalities'about liberty and so forth,but only to evade definite applications.When any measure was proposed which really threatened the power of the privileged classes,they could bring out a contradictory set of fine phrases about Jacobinism and democracy.Their whole argument was a shuffle and they themselves mere selfish trimmers.45To this Jeffrey replied (in December 1826)by accepting the position.46He pleaded guilty to a love of 'trimming,'which meant a love of the British Constitution.The constitution was a compromise --a balance of opposing forces --and the only question could be whether they were properly balanced.The answer was fair enough.

Mill was imputing motives too easily,and assuming that the Review ers saw the abuses in the same light as he did,and were truckling to public robbers in hopes of sharing the plunder.He was breaking a butterfly upon a wheel.The Edinburgh Review ers were not missionaries of a creed.They were a set of brilliant young men,to whom the Review was at first a mere pastime,occupying such leisure as was allowed by their professional pursuits.They were indeed men of liberal sympathies,intelligent and independent enough to hold by a party which was out of power.They had read Hume and Voltaire and Rousseau;they had sat at the feet of Dugald Stewart;and were in sympathy with intellectual liberalism.But they were men who meant to become judges,members of parliament,or even bishops.

Nothing in their social atmosphere had stimulated the deep resentment against social injustice which makes the fanatic or the enthusiast.We may take as their interpreter the Whig philosopher James Mackintosh (1765-1832),a man of wide reading,both in history and philosophy,an eloquent orator,and a very able writer.Mackintosh,said Coleridge,47is the 'king of the men of talent';by which was intimated that,as a man of talent,he was not,like some people,a man of genius.Mackintosh,that is,was a man to accept plausible formulae and to make them more plausible;not a man to pierce to the heart of things,or reveal fruitful germs of thought.

His intellect was judicial;given to compromises,affecting a judicious via media,and endeavouring to reconcile antagonistic tendencies.Thoroughgoing or one-sided thinkers,and Mill in particular,regarded him with excessive antipathy as a typical representative of the opposite intellectual tendencies.

Mackintosh's political attitude is instructive.At the outbreak of the French revolution he was a struggling young Scot,seeking his fortune in London,just turning from medicine to the bar,and supporting himself partly by journalism.He became secretary to the Society of the 'Friends of the People,'the Whig rival of the revolutionary clubs,and in April 1791sprang into fame by his Vindiciae Gallicae .The Whigs had not yet lost the fervour with which they had welcomed the downfall of the Bastille.

Burke's Reflections,the work of a great thinker in a state of irritation bordering upon frenzy,had sounded the note of alarm.The revolution,as Burke maintained,was in fact the avatar of a diabolic power.It meant an attack upon the very organic principles of society.It therefore implied a complete breach of historical continuity,and a war against the reverence for 'prescription'and tradition which is essential to all healthy development.

同类推荐
  • 新民公案

    新民公案

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 寄永道士

    寄永道士

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 国蓄

    国蓄

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Grandfather'  s Chair

    Grandfather' s Chair

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 中观论疏

    中观论疏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 剑三:乱世歌

    剑三:乱世歌

    十五之所以叫十五这种随意的名字,是因为她被师父捡回万花谷的时候是正月十五。云鬓花颜下,春从春游时,都说太平盛世河清海晏,暗流涌动谁人知。
  • 婚途末路:总裁老公太危险

    婚途末路:总裁老公太危险

    那年春寒,她被陌生男人蒙住眼睛,绑在阴冷地下室。数月后,丈夫找到她,看着她隆起的肚子,厌恶地问:“那个男人是谁?”容城第一家族蔺家大少蔺瑾谦坐拥亿万资产,却吃斋念佛,无人知道他隐婚多年,都说蔺先生心里住着一个女人,岁月深埋,无可取代。穆黎不禁冷笑,时隔五年,她依然忘不了分娩那天,蔺先生抱了一个女婴对她说:“是个死婴,正好,也省了我亲手掐死这个孽种。”为了完成母亲遗愿,她不得不重回婚姻的坟墓,却发现他身边多了一个可爱粉嫩的女孩儿。那小姑娘一见到她便伸手要抱抱,“妈妈,你来看我了?”蔺瑾谦却说:“她不是你妈妈,你会有新的妈妈。”一场绑架揭开了真相,过往千疮百孔,不忍直视……
  • 明伦汇编宫闱典宫女部

    明伦汇编宫闱典宫女部

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 爱在穿行中沉淀

    爱在穿行中沉淀

    出身农村、家境贫寒的袁励武,通过努力终于考上一所军事院校,农家子弟的朴实性格在军校的锤炼中,更添了一份坚韧。凭着优异的成绩和才华横溢的文笔,袁励武毕业后被分配到一所高校,登上讲台成为一名被人羡慕的大学老师。工作期间,袁励武被借调到一家工厂,帮助工厂开展宣传工作,并在这里认识了他的妻子舒琴。漂亮能干的舒琴,身边不乏追求者,袁励武和舒琴从相识到相恋,习惯投机钻营的岳奉秦从中百般阻挠、使绊子,两人历经误会和波折,总算终成眷属。时代在变,人也在变。曾经的工友们,有的下海经商,有的削尖脑袋往上挤,三尺讲台上的袁励武却渐渐成为被人漠视的“穷酸文人”,与妻子舒琴之间的感情也发生着微妙的变化……
  • 北京路纪事

    北京路纪事

    30年来,一些无所事事的人,一直为一个叫梁晓斌的人找一把钥匙。这是一群纯粹的人一群脱离了低级趣味的人,他们的头上都系着一块红布。
  • 陈账

    陈账

    马民庆是高考恢复后的第二届师院本科生,上大学时,他二十三岁,已经在西马村做了七年农民。村里人对他种了八年庄稼又能考上大学更多的是惊讶与羡慕,他对自己能离开农村更多的是逃离虎口般的庆幸与解脱。每次暑假回到村里,望着钻进玉米地挥汗如雨的村人,再看他们憔悴的面容和僵硬的表情,马民庆都有一种噩梦般的感觉。心想,多亏考上了。1981年的西马村还是生产队,正式名称叫桑泉公社莲村大队第四生产队。三年前,马民庆是这个生产队的一员,每天要随钟声上工,去地里干活。暑假第二天,马民庆又是被上工的钟声惊醒的,三年来每次放假在家都是如此。
  • 那夜琳琅如玉

    那夜琳琅如玉

    你说,我是独特的,你说,要守护我一辈子,你说.....你还保留着我清晰的模样......如果那一年的夏天,没有那一板砖,也许我们不会相识……那一年高一的夏天,炎热让林阆的脾气变得格外暴躁。那是一个月黑风高的夜晚,胡同里昏黄的灯,一闪一闪,时不时发出“噗呲噗呲”的电击声混合嘈杂的蝉鸣,“嘭!嘎!”忽然穿插的两声很突兀,那是板砖与头骨碰撞在掉落到地上的声音……
  • 忠介烬余集

    忠介烬余集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 生理:人体不是永动机(青少年科学探索营)

    生理:人体不是永动机(青少年科学探索营)

    本书介绍了不可缺少的头发、头发变白的原因、人体毛发的功能、皮肤的主要作用、人类皮肤的颜色、人体皱纹的来历、人体的骨骼系统、人体经络的功能、血液的颜色和功能、人体衰老的时间、人越长越高的原因、错觉是怎样产生的等内容。
  • 丑女来让祸水爱

    丑女来让祸水爱

    玩弄人于股掌之中,是他的兴趣,慵懒的笑容,是他的面具,而潇洒过人生则就是他奉为宗旨的人生哲理了。所以,迄今为止,风度翩翩,拥有“祸水”容颜的他依然是快乐的单身贵族一个,而且纯洁如昔!容颜被毁,家遭惨变,寄人篱下,总之所有的倒霉事都让她遇见了。就在她的日子过得凄惨无比时,她遇见了他。这、这拥有天人般容颜的男人在朝她笑?当即以为他在嘲弄自己的她,转身撒腿就跑了!咦?他、他干嘛追着自己不放,难道他的眼睛被糊住,没看见她长得什么样吗?这赖在她身边,笑得傻呆呆的他,竟然出得厅堂,入得厨房,把她当宝宠,她是在做梦吗?天上竟然掉下这么好的事!?难不成老天在补偿她,给她这个丑女送来一位权高位重的“大祸水”?