登陆注册
15302500000006

第6章 PARLIAMENTARIAN(3)

Those who discussed politics with him were scarcely more struck by the range of his vision and his power of correlating principles and details than by his unwillingness to commit himself on matters whose decision he could postpone.Reticence and caution were sometimes carried too far, not merely because they exposed him to misconstruction, but because they withheld from his party the guidance it needed.This was true in all the three instances just mentioned; and in the last of them his reticence probably contributed to the separation from him of some of his former colleagues.Nor did he always rightly divine the popular mind.

Absorbed in his own financial views, he omitted to note the change that had been in progress between 1862 and 1874, and thus his proposal in the latter year to extinguish the income tax fell completely flat.He often failed to perceive how much the credit of his party was suffering from the belief, quite groundless so far as he personally was concerned, that his government was indifferent to what are called Imperial interests, the interests of England outside England.But he always thought for himself, and never stooped to flatter the prejudices or inflame the passions of any class in the community.

Though the power of reading the signs of the times and moving the mind of the nation as a whole may be now more essential to an English statesman than the skill which manages a legislature or holds together a cabinet, that skill counts for much, and must continue to do so while the House of Commons remains the supreme governing authority of the country.A man can hardly reach high place, and certainly cannot retain high place, without possessing this kind of art.Mr.Gladstone was at one time thought to want it.

In 1864, when Lord Palmerston's end was evidently near and Mr.

Gladstone had shown himself the most brilliant and capable man among the Liberal ministers in the House of Common's, people speculated about the succession to the headship of the party; and the wiseacres of the day were never tired of repeating that Mr.Gladstone could not possibly lead the House of Commons.He wanted tact (they said), he was too excitable, too impulsive, too much absorbed in his own ideas, too unversed in the arts by which individuals are conciliated.But when, after twenty-five years of his unquestioned reign, the time for his own departure drew nigh, men asked how the Liberal party in the House of Commons would ever hold together after it had lost a leader of such consummate capacity.Seldom has a prediction been more utterly falsified than that of the Whig critics of 1864.They had grown so accustomed to Palmerston's way of handling the House as to forget that a man might succeed by quite different methods.And they forgot also that a man may have many defects and yet in spite of them be incomparably the fittest for a great place.

Mr.Gladstone had the defects that were ascribed to him.His impulsiveness sometimes betrayed him into declarations which a cooler man would have abstained from.The second reading of the Irish Home-Rule Bill of 1886 would probably have been carried had he not been goaded by his opponents into words which seemed to recall or modify the concessions he had announced at a meeting of the Liberal party held just before.More than once precious time was wasted in useless debates because his antagonists, knowing his excitable temper, brought on discussions with the sole object of annoying him and drawing from him some hasty deliverance.Nor was he an adept, like Disraeli and Sir John A.Macdonald, in the management of individuals.He had a contempt for the meaner side of human nature which made him refuse to play upon it.He had comparatively little sympathy with many of the pursuits which attract ordinary men; and he was too constantly engrossed by the subjects of enterprises which specially appealed to him to have leisure for the lighter but often very important devices of political strategy.A trifling anecdote, which was told in London about twenty-five years ago, may illustrate this characteristic.

Mr.Delane, then editor of the "Times," had been invited to meet the prime minister at a moment when the support of the "Times" would have been specially valuable to the Liberal government.Instead of using the opportunity to set forth his policy and invite an opinion on it, Mr.Gladstone talked the whole time of dinner upon the question of the exhaustion of the English coal-beds, to the surprise of the company and the unconcealed annoyance of the powerful guest.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 璀璨结晶

    璀璨结晶

    文学版:不死鸟从未不死,因为生命与死亡正如硬币的两面,当你在追求生命的荣光时,死亡的阴影也会伴随着你的左右。平凡的蝴蝶亦会破茧,不死的鸟儿亦会凋谢。破茧亦或是凋谢,这是个问题。通俗版:坏人甲:小子,不作死不会死。主角君:果断作死。总之,是一个平凡的小子和一群值得信任的伙伴,在一个风起云涌的时代,果断作死的故事。(这是一本披着西幻皮的轻小说┑( ̄▽ ̄)┍)
  • 龙山太古情

    龙山太古情

    不管是不是真的,我们始终愿意相信,尘世之中有一处不为人知的净土,那里有我们所有现实中无法实现的情感体验。与龙玄为伴,揭开故事的谜底,和他一起踏上旅程。
  • 我的同居女鬼

    我的同居女鬼

    自从有了你,小爷我是腰也酸,腿也痛,就连小命都快木有了。解惑道术疑云,还原真实诡事,尽在《我的同居女鬼》。
  • 女配逆袭:荆棘仙路

    女配逆袭:荆棘仙路

    穿越了?白暖发现自己穿成修仙文恶毒女配,结局凄惨。也罢,既来之则安之,她便不信,她还修不成个仙,嗯哼,咱的征程是星辰大海!原女主伪圣母伪白莲,一路收货忠犬师兄,勾搭师尊,捡妖王,一路机遇不断,走上人生巅峰。白暖淡定的无视,一步一步,改变命运,踏出属于她的锦绣仙路。只是……那个冰山美男,我可是要努力修炼,早日成仙的人啊,喂喂别过来,嗷,你的爪子放在哪里?“娘子,听闻双修有益增进修为,娘子不是要早日成仙么,为夫这便来满足你……”“你妹!说好的冰山美男呢?”本文为修仙升级爽文,男女主身心干净,1v1男主强大,宠妻无下限,欢迎入坑!
  • 相思谋:妃常难娶

    相思谋:妃常难娶

    某日某王府张灯结彩,婚礼进行时,突然不知从哪冒出来一个小孩,对着新郎道:“爹爹,今天您的大婚之喜,娘亲让我来还一样东西。”说完提着手中的玉佩在新郎面前晃悠。此话一出,一府宾客哗然,然当大家看清这小孩与新郎如一个模子刻出来的面容时,顿时石化。此时某屋顶,一个绝色女子不耐烦的声音响起:“儿子,事情办完了我们走,别在那磨矶,耽误时间。”新郎一看屋顶上的女子,当下怒火攻心,扔下新娘就往女子所在的方向扑去,吼道:“女人,你给本王站住。”一场爱与被爱的追逐正式开始、、、、、、、
  • 魔灵幻舞

    魔灵幻舞

    神奇的一天,魔灵降临,看少年如何登上魔灵巅峰..........
  • 玄幻之一统三国

    玄幻之一统三国

    这是一个充满热血的时代,横刀立马,驰骋沙场。这同样是一个人才辈出的时代,名将如云,谋士似雨。呵呵,这还是一个美女云集的时代,貂蝉文姬,二乔尚香。最后、最后这绝对是一个能够颠覆你们想象的时代。。。。。。
  • 邪王的当家毒妃

    邪王的当家毒妃

    她为他的皇位,不惜送出自己的身子,杀尽天下人,却换来粉身碎骨重生,她杀尽天下负她之人,撕了姐姐的美人皮,毁了他的皇位,他被天下人称为邪王,为了她,不惜单身一人,杀入敌军营地,灭了皇帝,为她独守一生。只要她做他的妻。却不妙,一场误会,她离家出走,招来一大帮狂风舞蝶他该怎样守住这个毒妃?
  • 复仇之牙

    复仇之牙

    有些仇恨,必须用血来清洗。很久以前写的中短篇,后续,有兴趣的话会继续写的。
  • 鬼王的妖妃

    鬼王的妖妃

    东风夜放花千树,更吹落,星如雨。宝马雕车香满路,凤萧声动,玉壶光转,一夜鱼龙舞。蛾儿雪柳黄金缕,笑语盈盈暗香去。众里寻他千百度,蓦然回首,那人却在,灯火阑珊处。