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latter-day pamphlets-第44章

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re。  It cannot at once; or completely at all; be read off in words; for it is written in abstruse facts; of endowment; position; desire; opportunity; granted to the man;interprets itself in presentiments; vague struggles; passionate endeavors and is only legible in whole when his work is _done_。  Not by the noble monitions of Nature; but by the ignoble; is a man much tempted to publish the secret of his soul in words。  Words; if he have a secret; will be forever inadequate to it。  Words do but disturb the real answer of fact which could be given to it; disturb; obstruct; and will in the end abolish; and render impossible; said answer。  No grand Doer in this world can be a copious speaker about his doings。  William the Silent spoke himself best in a country liberated; Oliver Cromwell did not shine in rhetoric; Goethe; when he had but a book in view; found that he must say nothing even of that; if it was to succeed with him。

Then as to politeness; and breeding to business。  An official man must be bred to business; of course he must:  and not for essence only; but even for the manners of office he requires breeding。  Besides his intrinsic faculty; whatever that may be; he must be cautious; vigilant; discreet;above all things; he must be reticent; patient; polite。  Certain of these qualities are by nature imposed upon men of station; and they are trained from birth to some exercise of them:  this constitutes their one intrinsic qualification for office;this is their one advantage in the New Downing Street projected for this New Era; and it will not go for much in that Institution。  One advantage; or temporary advantage; against which there are so many counterbalances。  It is the indispensable preliminary for office; but by no means the complete outfit;a miserable outfit where there is nothing farther。

Will your Lordship give me leave to say that; practically; the intrinsic qualities will presuppose these preliminaries too; but by no means _vice versa_。  That; on the whole; if you have got the intrinsic qualities; you have got everything; and the preliminaries will prove attainable; but that if you have got only the preliminaries; you have yet got nothing。  A man of real dignity will not find it impossible to bear himself in a dignified manner; a man of real understanding and insight will get to know; as the fruit of his very first study; what the laws of his situation are; and will conform to these。  Rough old Samuel Johnson; blustering Boreas and rugged Arctic Bear as he often was; defined himself; justly withal; as a polite man:  a noble manful attitude of soul is his; a clear; true and loyal sense of what others are; and what he himself is; shines through the rugged coating of him; comes out as grave deep rhythmus when his King honors him; and he will not 〃bandy compliments with his King;〃is traceable too in his indignant trampling down of the Chesterfield patronages; tailor…made insolences; and contradictions of sinners; which may be called his _revolutionary_ movements; hard and peremptory by the law of them; these could not be soft like his _constitutional_ ones; when men and kings took him for somewhat like the thing he was。  Given a noble man; I think your Lordship may expect by and by a polite man。  No 〃politer〃 man was to be found in Britain than the rustic Robert Burns:  high duchesses were captivated with the chivalrous ways of the man; recognized that here was the true chivalry; and divine nobleness of bearing;as indeed they well might; now when the Peasant God and Norse Thor had come down among them again!  Chivalry this; if not as they do chivalry in Drury Lane or West…End drawing…rooms; yet as they do it in Valhalla and the General Assembly of the Gods。

For indeed; who _invented_ chivalry; politeness; or anything that is noble and melodious and beautiful among us; except precisely the like of Johnson and of Burns?  The select few who in the generations of this world were wise and valiant; they; in spite of all the tremendous majority of blockheads and slothful belly…worshippers; and noisy ugly persons; have devised whatsoever is noble in the manners of man to man。  I expect they will learn to be polite; your Lordship; when you give them a chance!Nor is it as a school of human culture; for this or for any other grace or gift; that Parliament will be found first…rate or indispensable。  As experience in the river is indispensable to the ferryman; so is knowledge of his Parliament to the British Peel or Chatham;so was knowledge of the OEil…de…Boeuf to the French Choiseul。  Where and how said river; whether Parliament with Wilkeses; or OEil…de…Boeuf with Pompadours; can be waded; boated; swum; how the miscellaneous cargoes; 〃measures〃 so called; can be got across it; according to their kinds; and landed alive on the hither side as facts:we have all of us our _ferries_ in this world; and must know the river and its ways; or get drowned some day!  In that sense; practice in Parliament is indispensable to the British Statesman; but not in any other sense。

A school; too; of manners and of several other things; the Parliament will doubtless be to the aspirant Statesman; a school better or worse;as the OEil…de…Boeuf likewise was; and as all scenes where men work or live are sure to be。  Especially where many men work together; the very rubbing against one another will grind and polish off their angularities into roundness; into 〃politeness〃 after a sort; and the official man; place him how you may; will never want for schooling; of extremely various kinds。  A first…rate school one cannot call this Parliament for him;I fear to say what rate at present!  In so far as it teaches him vigilance; patience; courage; toughness of lungs or of soul; and skill in any kind of swimming; it is a good school。  In so far as it forces him to speak where Nature orders silence; and even; lest all the world should learn his secret (which often enough would kill his secret; and little profit the world); forces him to speak falsities; vague ambiguities; and the froth…dialect usual in Parliaments in these times; it may be considered one of the worst schools ever devised by man; and; I think; may almost challenge the OEil…de…Boeuf to match it in badness。

Parliament will train your men to the manners required of a statesman; but in a much less degree to the intrinsic functions of one。  To these latter; it is capable of mistraining as nothing else can。  Parliament will train you to talk; and above all things to hear; with patience; unlimited quantities of foolish talk。  To tell a good story for yourself; and to make it _appear_ that you have done your work:  this; especially in constitutional countries; is something;and yet in all countries; constitutional ones too; it is intrinsically nothing; probably even less。 For it is not the function of any mortal; in Downing Street or elsewhere here below; to wag the tongue of him; and make it appear that he has done work; but to wag some quite other organs of him; and to do work; there is no danger of his work's appearing by and by。  Such an accomplishment; even in constitutional countries; I grieve to say; may become much less than nothing。  Have you at all computed how much less?  The human creature who has once given way to satisfying himself with 〃appearances;〃 to seeking his salvation in 〃appearances;〃 the moral life of such human creature is rapidly bleeding out of him。  Depend upon it; Beelzebub; Satan; or however you may name the too authentic Genius of Eternal Death; has got that human creature in his claws。  By and by you will have a dead parliamentary bagpipe; and your living man fled away without return!

Such parliamentary bagpipes I myself have heard play tunes; much to the satisfaction of the people。  Every tune lies within their compass; and their mind (for they still call it _mind_) is ready as a hurdy…gurdy on turning of the handle:  〃My Lords; this question now before the House〃Ye Heavens; O ye divine Silences; was there in the womb of Chaos; then; such a product; liable to be evoked by human art; as that same?  While the galleries were all applausive of heart; and the Fourth Estate looked with eyes enlightened; as if you had touched its lips with a staff dipped in honey;I have sat with reflections too ghastly to be uttered。  A poor human creature and learned friend; once possessed of many fine gifts; possessed of intellect; veracity; and manful conviction on a variety of objects; has he now lost all that;converted all that into a glistering phosphorescence which can show itself on the outside; while within; all is dead; chaotic; dark; a painted sepulchre full of dead…men's bones! Discernment; knowledge; intellect; in the human sense of the words; this man has now none。  His opinion you do not ask on any matter:  on the _matter_ he has no opinion; judgment; or insight; only on what may be said about the matter; how it may be argued of; what tune may be played upon it to enlighten the eyes of the Fourth Estate。

Such a soul; though to the eye he still keeps tumbling about in the Parliamentary element; and makes 〃motions;〃 and passes bills; for aught I know;are we to define him as a _living_ one; or as a dead?  Partridge the Almanac…Maker; whose 〃Publications〃 still regularly appear; 
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