登陆注册
14811500000002

第2章

To me, somewhat hopelessly revolving these things, the undelayable year has rolled round, and I find myself called upon to say something in this place, where so many wiser men have spoken before me. Precluded, in my quality of national guest, by motives of taste and discretion, from dealing with any question of immediate and domestic concern, it seemed to me wisest, or at any rate most prudent, to choose a topic of comparatively abstract interest, and to ask your indulgence for a few somewhat generalized remarks on a matter concerning which I had some experimental knowledge, derived from the use of such eyes and ears as Nature had been pleased to endow me withal, and such report as I had been able to win from them. The subject which most readily suggested itself was the spirit and the working of those conceptions of life and polity which are lumped together, whether for reproach or commendation, under the name of Democracy. By temperament and education of a conservative turn, I saw the last years of that quaint Arcadia which French travellers saw with delighted amazement a century ago, and have watched the change (to me a sad one) from an agricultural to a proletary population. The testimony of Balaam should carry some conviction.

I have grown to manhood and am now growing old with the growth of this system of government in my native land, have watched its advances, or what some would call its encroachments, gradual and irresistible as those of a glacier, have been an ear - witness to the forebodings of wise and good and timid men and have lived to see those forebodings belied by the course of events, which is apt to show itself humorously careless of the reputation of prophets. I recollect hearing a sagacious old gentleman say in 1840 that the doing away with the property qualification for suffrage twenty years before had been the ruin of the State of Massachusetts; that it had put public credit and private estate alike at the mercy of demagogues. I lived to see that Commonwealth twenty odd years later paying the interest on her bonds in gold, though it cost her sometimes nearly three for one to keep her faith, and that while suffering an unparalleled drain of men and treasure in helping to sustain the unity and self - respect of the nation.

If universal suffrage has worked ill in our larger cities, as it certainly has, this has been mainly because the hands that wielded it were untrained to its use.

There the election of a majority of the trustees of the public money is controlled by the most ignorant and vicious of a population which has come to us from abroad, wholly unpractised in self - government and incapable of assimilation by American habits and methods. But the finances of our towns, where the native tradition is still dominant and whose affairs are discussed and settled in a public assembly of the people, have been in general honestly and prudently administered. Even in manufacturing towns, where a majority of the voters live by their daily wages, it is not so often the recklessness as the moderation of public expenditure that surprises an old fashioned observer.

"The beggar is in the saddle at last," cries Proverbial Wisdom. "Why, in the name of all former experience, doesn't he ride to the Devil?" Because in the very act of mounting he ceased to be a beggar and became part owner of the piece of property he bestrides. The last thing we need be anxious about is property. It always has friends or the means of making them. If riches have wings to fly away from their owner, they have wings also to escape danger.

I hear America sometimes playfully accused of sending you all your storms, and am in the habit of parrying the charge by alleging that we are enabled to do this because, in virtue of our protective system, we can afford to make better bad weather than anybody else. And what wiser use could we make of it than to export it in return for the paupers which some European countries are good enough to send over to us who have not attained to the same skill in the manufacture of them? But bad weather is not the worst thing that is laid at our door. A French gentleman, not long ago, forgetting Burke's monition of how unwise it is to draw an indictment against a whole people, has charged us with the responsibility of whatever he finds disagreeable in the morals or manners of his countrymen. If M. Zola or some other competent witness would only go into the box and tell us what those morals and manners were before our example corrupted them! But I confess that I find little to interest and less to edify me in these international bandyings of "You're another."

I shall address myself to a single point only in the long list of offences of which we are more or less gravely accused, because that really includes all the rest.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 玉衡大陆

    玉衡大陆

    平静已久的玉衡大陆迎来了一个新的种族——巫族!我们的故事也从这里开始!!!(ps:小牛好凄凉啊,作为老读者的小牛也知道,本书的好坏先不说,字数实在是太少,估计不少看到本书的读者一看字数就直接把本书给pass了,小牛不要求其他的,假如这本书的内容对您还有些吸引的话,读者大大们可以先收藏,等这本书肥肥的了大伙在开宰。小牛保证这本书一定会写下去。各位读者大大们都给点数据吧!!!)
  • 兽性总裁鹿晗

    兽性总裁鹿晗

    介绍:一场车祸,受害者竟然变成了被告,明明是他撞伤了她,却要她赔一千万的豪车损失费,为了这一千万,她与他斗智斗勇,彼此沦陷,只欢不爱的缠绵游戏,他与她在欲望和理智之间拉扯。这场游戏,谁先认真,谁就输了。当她的身心渐渐沦陷,却发现,他对她的宠爱,只因为那双原本不属于她的眼睛和那莫名的熟悉感……
  • 东京叛逆者

    东京叛逆者

    异能版:百年前,中土神州仙魔大战,高手陨落无数,海外瀛洲一脉趁机引西方魔界倒攻中土,掀起无边杀戮;百年后,中土元气渐复,昆仑玉虚宫掌教玉清仙子遣座下十二弟子转生日本,欲祸乱瀛洲。辰龙,作为玉清一脉最小却最强的弟子,没人知道等待他的会是什么。都市版:他是当世最耀眼的明星,诗词、小说、音乐、绘画······在艺术的领域,没有人能取得和与他并肩的成就,他屹立在绝顶之上,俯瞰众生,然而在那万众瞩目的光华背后,却没人知道他最渴望的却是平淡的生活,是种种意外将他引到了今天这个地方。PS:平行空间,引入一些相似的历史、文化背景,与现实无关。
  • 英雄联盟之女神战队

    英雄联盟之女神战队

    陈洛穿越了,穿越到一个地球平行世界!在这个世界,电子竞技空前的发展,甚至彻底取代了足球,成为了世界第一运动,亚运会、奥运会,各种国际比赛中都出现了电子竞技项目!英雄联盟,作为国际公认的电子竞技唯一指定比赛项目,火爆程度难以相信。小到各地的网吧联赛,大到一年一度的欧亚杯,四年一度的世界杯,在各种赛场上,都可以看到选手们专注的比赛,神奇的操作,引爆无数观众的火热!
  • 致命魔术师

    致命魔术师

    邪恶的魔术师邪恶的魔术在你梦醒的那一瞬间
  • 补天之传

    补天之传

    黑暗之地,起源之山。黑暗与光明并生。浩劫至,天地崩,大道灭,规则尽,黑暗起,时光倒流,轮回逆转,万物凋零,诸神谢幕,动天乱地。所谓九死必有一生,无数修士纷纷踏天而行,只为争那一线生机……少年辰空,秉天地之意而生,身怀黑暗,手持混沌,自始界出,战神伐仙,登天平乱,逆乱阴阳,化黑暗为炉,以光明为火,熔炼天地,重铸规则,缔造一个补天的传说……
  • 极界武神

    极界武神

    九转轮回,风云再起!神秘少年掀起一场惊世浪潮!
  • 魔职天下

    魔职天下

    雄伟血燕独子回,纤弱暗伤以入悲。”它们已经不可能回来了,纤弱死了雄伟的心恐怕也只有报仇和怨恨我当年放在它们家中的两只年幼的麻雀吧。
  • 人生如赌局,成功是信仰

    人生如赌局,成功是信仰

    苏秦、韩信、慕容垂、武则天、努尔哈赤、俾斯麦、洛克菲勒……每一种成功,都有它自己独特的道路,但这些奋斗故事告诉我们一个共通的道理:如果不是得天独厚,那就要对自己狠一点!
  • 入骨戏:江山如画

    入骨戏:江山如画

    他们都是天生的戏子,难辨真心。他执着她的手,给她至高无上的尊荣,却盛极荣宠,只为让她跌下来摔得粉身碎骨;她绾着他的发,给他无尽温柔缠绵,却步步为营,想得到他的命……他们渐渐无法看清自己的内心……她精心策划的一场大火焚尽了一池梦。他将她关进大牢,亲手赐下一杯毒酒……当一切阴谋散尽,她站在最高处含笑看着他。他恍然发现原来自己苦苦追寻的根本不是什么凰图霸业,而是只为寻找一个人。“若再次相见,那时,我容颜不复,江山不在,你可还愿陪我坐看暮雨潇潇?”