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What is accounted so great an advantage in the case of the English system of government at home has been its misfortune in India—that it grew up of itself, not from preconceived design, but by successive expedients, and by the adaptation of machinery originally created for a different purpose. As the country on which its maintenance depended was not the one out of whose necessities it grew, its practical benefits did not come home to the mind of that country, and it would have required theoretic recommendations to render it acceptable. Unfortunately, these were exactly what it seemed to be destitute of; and undoubtedly the common theories of government did not furnish it with such, framed as those theories have been for states of circumstances differing in all the most important features from the case concerned. But in government as in other departments of human agency, almost all principles which have been durable were first suggested by observation of some particular case, in which the general laws of nature acted in some new or previously unnoticed combination of circumstances. The institutions of Great Britain, and those of the United States, have the distinction of suggesting most of the theories of government which, through good and evil fortune, are now, in the course of generations, reawakening political life in the nations of Europe. It has been the destiny of the government of the East India Company to suggest the true theory of the government of a semi-barbarous dependency by a civilized country, and after having done this, to perish. It would be a singular fortune if, at the end of two or three more generations, this speculative result should be the only remaining fruit of our ascendancy in India; if posterity should say of us that, having stumbled accidentally upon better arrangements than our wisdom would ever have devised, the first use we made of our awakened reason was to destroy them, and allow the good which had been in course of being realized to fall through and be lost from ignorance of the principles on which it depended. D meliora; but if a fate so disgraceful to England and to civilization can be averted, it must be through far wider political conceptions than merely English or European practice can supply, and through a much more profound study of Indian experience and of the conditions of Indian government than either English politicians, or those who supply the English public with opinions, have hitherto shown any willingness to undertake.
The End
1 (return)
[ I limit the expression to
past time, because I would say nothing derogatory of a great, and now at
last a free, people, who are entering into the general movement of
European progress with a vigor which bids fair to make up rapidly the
ground they have lost. No one can doubt what Spanish intellect and energy
are capable of; and their faults as a people are chiefly those for which
freedom and industrial ardor are a real specific.]
2 (return)
[ Italy, which alone can be
quoted as an exception, is only so in regard to the final stage of its
transformation. The more difficult previous advance from the city
isolation of Florence, Pisa, or Milan, to the provincial unity of Tuscany
or Lombardy, took place in the usual manner.]
3 (return)
[ This blunder of Mr.
Disraeli (from which, greatly to his credit, Sir John Pakington took an
opportunity soon after of separating himself) is a speaking instance,
among many, how little the Conservative leaders understand Conservative
principles. Without presuming to require from political parties such an
amount of virtue and discernment as that they should comprehend, and know
when to apply, the principles of their opponents, we may yet say that it
would be a great improvement if each party understood and acted upon its
own. Well would it be for England if Conservatives voted consistently for
every thing conservative, and Liberals for every thing liberal. We should
not then have to wait long for things which, like the present and many
other great measures, are eminently both the one and the other. The
Conservatives, as being by the law of their existence the stupidest party,
have much the greatest sins of this description to answer for; and it is a
melancholy truth, that if any measure were proposed on any subject truly,
largely, and far-sightedly conservative, even if Liberals were willing to
vote for it, the great bulk of the Conservative party would rush blindly
in and prevent it from being carried.]
4 (return)
[ "Thoughts on Parliamentary
Reform," 2nd ed. p. 32-36.]
5 (return)
[ "This expedient has been
recommended both on the score of saving expense and on that of obtaining
the votes of many electors who otherwise would not vote, and who are
regarded by the advocates of the plan as a particularly desirable class of
voters. The scheme has been carried into practice in the election of
poor-law guardians, and its success in that instance is appealed to in
favor of adopting it in the more important case of voting for a member of
the Legislature. But the two cases appear to me to differ in the point on
which the benefits of the expedient depend. In a local election for a
special kind of administrative business, which consists mainly in the
dispensation of a public fund, it is an object to prevent the choice from
being exclusively in the hands of those who actively concern themselves
about it; for the public interest which attaches to the election being of
a limited kind, and in most cases not very great in degree, the
disposition to make themselves busy in the matter is apt to be in a great
measure confined to persons who hope to turn their activity to their own
private advantage; and it may be very desirable to render the intervention
of other people as little onerous to them as possible, if only for the
purpose of swamping these private interests. But when the matter in hand
is the great business of national government, in which every one must take
an interest who cares for any thing out of himself, or who cares even for
himself intelligently, it is much rather an object to prevent those from
voting who are indifferent to the subject, than to induce them to vote by
any other means than that of awakening their dormant minds. The voter who
does not care enough about the election to go to the poll is the very man
who, if he can vote without that small trouble, will give his vote to the
first person who asks for it, or on the most trifling or frivolous
inducement. A man who does not care whether he votes is not likely to care
much which way he votes; and he who is in that state of mind has no moral
right to vote at all; since, if he does so, a vote which is not the
expression of a conviction, counts for as much, and goes as far in
determining the result as one which represents the thoughts and purposes
of a life."—Thoughts, etc., p. 39.]