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June 13, 1857.J THE LEADER. 566
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the plan is only tried partially, and in...
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< i ( BELGIAN POLITICS. Ooji estimate of...
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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The Licensing System. No Case Ever Reste...
wine hot , and his house not well conducted ? he enjoys the privileges , while he undergoes the penalties , of restricted trade . Throw the trade open , let a house be set up in the same street , free to compete in the freshness of its beer , the strength of its spirits , the flavour and lightness of its wines , and the respectable conduct of the house , and the neighbours will certainly give the preference to the new shop . The better man will maintain his fround and the occupant of the ill-conucted shop will be obliged to give up . There is nothing like freedom of trade for teaching men how to serve the community in the way the community best likes . All respectable neighbourhoods desire to have wellsupplied and well-conducted public-houses . If in other neighbourhoods there are houses that are ill-conducted , let the police look to them . The best auxiliary both of police order and of revenue is complete freedom of trade . If Sir George Gbet desires to render his promised bill effectual for bis purposes , and thoroughly in harmony with the facts ascertained by experience and by committees of the House of Commons , he will introduce into it that free-trade element .
June 13, 1857.J The Leader. 566
June 13 , 1857 . J THE LEADER . 566
The Plan Is Only Tried Partially, And In...
the plan is only tried partially , and in an underhand way . Some head of a department gives away a junior clerkship of 901 . a year to be competed for , and mentions the matter privately to a dozen masters of some of our third-rate schools . The ' good boy' the school is sent up to fche competition , and the situation is given to the boy who has crammed into bis poor brain a greater amount of knowledge than the other boys . If one boy knows algebra , French , geography , Italian , German , and the use of the globes , and if another boy knows all these , and knows logarithms in addition , the lucky connoisseur in logarithms obtains the prize , and for the remainder of his life copies or writes routine official letters —something a little above printed circulars in variety or individual interest . This is but the natural result of a competitive examination as to the scholastic knowledge of boys . You must give the place to the best boy , and the best boy is he who knows most . The partial underhand manner of the present competitive examinations makes them the more absurd . A boy that will be beaten in the January trial when pitted against five or six first-rate boys , niay be far . superior to some third-rate boy "who wins at the February examination because his opponents are ail dunces . The nominations to the examinations and the competitions themselves are timed by chance , and . thus there is no general competition . ^~ l ^ l- » -v ** / -I * rv-n- » r » 4- / ic » / " \ t f * r \ r \ " \ Ti O" 4 " 14 * l \ T £ ^ I lfovnvir OtO . m Vi !
* j , uc tbu . V UvtlUyiJ KJX . . Vv / lli l /^ *• * * * - * ¦*•¦/* - ¦*« a . y v ^ j ^ . m * minations as tests for Civil Service situations forget one consideration not altogether unimportant . Are the best literary men the best Civil Servants ? The work of the Civil Service involves various duties and demands some very special qualifications . In some offices there is a daily discharge of routine ivnrl li ^ ffw- rliit-. ips Tprmirina- crr & nt nntienne and Jfc *^ ^ — ^ ^ —— — — — —— — ——
^ V ** V ^ » - * X ^ V V T ^* - ***¦ " ^ * ' ^~ * " ^ " ^ * 1 »~ -- ~ ~ " - ™ p ^ £ ^ ~ y - ~ - " - unrelaxing attention , qualities in which many very clever and well-informed men , capable of passing any examination , are signally de- ficient . The duties of a bookeeper require not alone a clear head , an unfailing habit of < order , and a thorougli knowledge of accounts , i but an almost infallible talent for not making 1 mistakes—a talent proved only by years of i exactitude . Other offices connected with our diplomacy and foreign politics require a most honourable reticence of secrets that < could be sold for ten . times the amount of > any clerk ' s salary . Now , official patieuce , < punctual exactitude , and gentlemanlike ho- i nour , cannot be ascertained by any literary j-fo- ^ t ¦» - * - * -I ••» r * 4 * ^ v » - \ ¦ r » i-i / -I oo 4 *^ i i \ li / a lof fan n 11 o I f \ r Turr * ^ i // jw 4 /\ v «»»»» mj
i i UAiUlJLUtlUlV 'U y tllAll « - * O vw » A . » uvv' - ^ j ti \^ would sooner trust to one hundred men < nominated by members of parliament than ' to one hundred men appointed because they < were clever fellows . 13 ut even * clover fellows' 1 are not the men who come best out of the ] competitive examinations . The pupils of J clever tutors sometimes succeed ; a man who can retain in his memory a mass of facts crammed into it for tho previous month is < almost sure to succeed—and we have heard u i very sensible , intelligent candidate say that ho (
owed his success not to his quickness in composition , nor to his kuowledgo of languages , but simply that ho hud luckily learned by heart the day before a chronological table of two hundred dates of tho principal events of the world . If the examinations wore constructod so as to bo testa of general literary ability there might bo a pardonable pride- in considering that wo aro outstripping our enemies the Chinese in official honours to lifnnnmr 1111 * 11 llllil fcllrt fiVfiminfttiollS tll'O
COMPETITIVE EXAMINATION FOB / THE CIVIL SERVICE . Some members of Parliament are enamoured of competitive examination as if it were the panacea for all the defects of the Civil Service . Others denounce political patronage as if it were answerable for all the shortcomings that characterized the official conduct of the war . A third party- —the 'ignorant public '—hearing that competitive examinations are already introduced , but that patronage is retained , are hopelessly unable to understand the question—a state of mind rather happy than otherwise . For of all the public topics of the day we know of none like this of the Civil Service on which all writers and who
ail speakers ^ irom moae jucvcj . - b ** w a > government office to those who once wrote a letter to a chief clerk ) consider themselves competent to express a decided opinion . The old political patronage may have been a bad thing regarded as a means of corrupting constituencies or degrading representatives , but it supplied a vexy fair raw material for the Civil Service . The young men were nomi nated through political influence . Now , political influence in town or country is not generally possessed by men without character or property . The man who by property , or by force of character , or command ten
by political cleverness , can or twenty votes in a borough , may not be a perfect person nor a very refined character , but he is a very good representative of the average Englishman , of the men whose industry and craft supply tho staple of our prosperity . These were the men who obtained appointments for their sons and nephews . The official qualities required in those young men were attention , obeclienco , trustworthiness , and readiness for work , aud there was nothing in their antecedents or in , tho social position of their families to make it unlikely that those qualities would show themselves if properly called forth . The two damning
deieots , however , in the system were , nrstiy , that no proper means were taken to prevent very stupid or very silly boys from getting ' in ; and , secondly , that the service wus utterly without an organisation calculated to make the best use of the raw material provided by political patronage . The first of those evils hos been removed by the examinations of the Civil Seryjce Commissioners ; but the second evil—^ -the want of organisation in the service itself—remains unremoved , The examinations have been extended to competitive trials between nominoos ; but
mainly as to the dry facts of history , geography , or soienco—kuowledgo in which , perchance , some of our boat literary men may or may not bo very deficient . At the risk of being accused of assorting a mere truism , we must say that tho object of
appointing a man to a civil situation is to get the special service of the post well done . We * have not appointed him to reward him for being a good boy at school , or to encourage literature—two very good objects , but not so great that we must sacrifice the efficiency of the Civil . Service to promote them . If we examine the candidates , we should then examine them as to their Jltness for the situation —not as to their fitness for the editorship of a magazine or the conduct of a village school . If the candidate thoroughly knows the duties of the post , why reject him because he is ignorant of decimal fractions ? And yet such rejections have taken place ; in one instance , a lad who wrote a fine engrossing hand and who had a useful knowledge of legal details , was rejected for a situation in a solicitor ' s office in one of the G ovemment departments simply because he did not know decimal fractions—an ignorance that would never incapacitate him for any possible duty he should ever have to discharge . In another case , a gentleman of our acquaintance was examined for the post of interpreter , to be sent out to the East during the war ; he knew several Eastern languages , and was a smart , fine young fellow . The examiner , who barely knew the Turkish alphabet , asked the candidate where was the island of Sbcotra , and the candidate confessed ignorance . He was turned away , and but for the influence of a friend of the family would have been finally
: The faults of the present practice are twofold . 1 . The nominations are departmental . For instance , the political chief of the Foreign-office nominates his friends to that office ; but his friends may possess not a single peculiar qualification , whilst for other departments of the service they may be signally fitted . He cannot interfere , however , with other departments . His friends ' cram ' for the examination—not competitive—and pass it , or are rejected . But while they are rejected there are passed for the Customs or the Waroffice young men far below them in qualifica-Kinna wlin hn . vfi hfifm subiected to a much
: ¦ lower test . Thus we have not the best man in the best place , but a chance medley of men in the places which patrons can give , and winch cramming can secure . 2 . The second ovil is , that the examination is in knowledge , and not in ability ; in , literature , and not in official talent ; in general qualifications , and not in fitness for the particular situation . The qualifications of a good Civil Servant are varied aud high enough to form the subject o £ a severe examination , but somo influential men , bent on encouraging literature , think otherwise , and think that any man who knows about the second Punic war and the [) osition of the island of Socofcro , must bo ible to do official work .
< I ( Belgian Politics. Ooji Estimate Of...
BELGIAN POLITICS . Ooji estimate of tho character of tho movement in Belgium appears to have been the correct one . Despite somo excesses and certain unjustifiable acts of violence—provoked partly , as at Jeinmappes , by local causes of irritation—tho Liberal party may bo said to have acquitted itself very creditably . There was nothing , at any rate , in their conduct to justify tho absurd ravings of the Bonapartist Parisian journals , which insiwt , in tho cut-and-dry rhetoric that came into fashion with tho Empire , that ' tho hydra of niun
aiiareiiy huh ruiauu ito nuiui , unu x . mliamentary government hos received a mortal blow in Belgium . Parliamentary government ia not quite so delicate a creature as that . It U accustomed tp . and dosorvoa a little rough treatment at timoa ; and , indeed , could never live in the fulso atmosphere which Continental politicians would throw round it . A
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), June 13, 1857, page 13, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_13061857/page/13/
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