On this page
-
Text (2)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
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.
-
-
Transcript
-
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.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
to question . Economy , and still more reason and feeling , would very , soon demand a further change . To pay half a . million annually for a dull and senseless pageant would perhaps -seem a small thing to a rich nation . It would not seem a small thing that our 'political , religious , and social system should be made an organised lie . It would not seem a small thing that we should be continually 'praying to Grod to endow with wisdom to govern us those whom we will not and smallest in the
cannot suffer to take the part work of government . It would not seem a small thing that the sacred language of loyalty and love should be daily addressed to those towards whom we can feel no loyalty or love at all , and on whom , directly they try to be anything but a name at the head of the Court circular , the Tories themselves—the canters about " Patriot Bangs "—shower calumny and insult . It is , as we say , merely as the social apex of aristocracy that the hereditary hour in
monarchy can stand for an a country which is not utterly bereft of reason , nor utterly reckless of * veracity , nor - insanely prodigal of cash . We have spoken freely , and it is time that people should do so . The Times is trading , in its respectably-roguish fashion , on the feeling of the hour ; but it is far enough from honestly opening the whole question , and it would be ready enough to hang any man who should dare practically to do so . Ve have ¦ " drifted" into a war : let us not drift into a
revolution . Let us know what we are going to do , and do it firmly arid deliberately , like Englishmen and men . This will be better for all parties . " When nations drift into revolutions , a reign of Terror comes first and a Bonapaete follows . _ _
Untitled Article
THE IMPERIAL VISIT . No clear-sighted politician , on either side of the Channel , will misunderstand the circumstances of Lotus Napoleon ' s visit to England . The meaning of the Imperial trip is obvious , and obvious , also , will be the mean-? . Bg ^ J ' _ . * k © - _ B ' Mi c _ . re ( ?^ P ^ * ® u PP ^ ^ ky Queen Victobia ? s in ^ tatibn ^^ ifH ^' aT ' nTotive " for postponing his journey to the Crimea , the Fbenoh Emperob will supply to the English populace an object on which to vent their
explosive sentiments with reference to their " gallant allies . " From first to last , the proceeding will be essentially dramatic . The state actors are learning their parts , the choruses are rehearsing , the stage effects are already prepared . Thus far all is safe : there will be noise and glitter enough ; and those impatient Radicals who meditated a demonstration have been warned that any such attempt would be reprehensible and unavailing . The vast body of thoughtful men will not come to the rescue of these undisciplined
skirmishers , well knowing that it would be equally needless and useless to produce discord in a crowd by the utterance of that feeling with which polluted and lawless power inspires every honourable mind . No profound observer fears that the Imperial visit will be a triumph of arbitrary principles ; there is not even the pretence of a triumph ; there has been no victory , and , therefore , an exulting pageant would be simply ridiculous . Mobs will press along the thoroughfares j civic plate will clatter ; and aristocrats will pay their ceremonial homage to this tenant-at-will of a throne on which no
ruler has died during a century ; everything which constitutes a real ovation must be wanting . Personally , in fact , the French Empebor cannot but feel that he lias no genuine friends at the English Court . He must remember , that not long ago it was high policy at St .
net , " and it is impossible not to feel fothose whose situation forces them _ to receive any individuals whom , for public purr poses , it is thought desirable to conciliate The ancestral and hereditary house of England , however , is more politic than the Imperial house of Bussia , which rejected the advances of a parvenu .
James ' s to keep him in obscurity for the sake of that entente cordiale which was affected by Lopis Phiiippi :. The truth is , that our royal personages , in exchange for their social advantages , are compelled' to forego some of the rights of private life . State visitors , like state speeches , are " approved by the
Cabi-Nevertheless , a majority of those who welcome the Fbench Emperor , will not , even in secret , shrink from their guest . They form the light elements of society , and are without the balance of sustained convictions . " Good Society , " no doubt , regards him with grateful admiration . The citizen governors of London , it is equally certain , have said in their hearts that bis Majesty op Fbance is a mighty prince ; they seize the opportunity for a feast , for
flattery , and for self-glorification ; they would " wait upon" the Empebob or China , or the King- or Shoa , with no less humility ; . they rejoice in persuading the French public that they are the chief inhabitants of London . But to the intelligent circles of Paris it was evident , when the City Deputation arrived , if it had not been notorious before , that our civic functionaries form by no means the most respectable class of citizens . As an administrative body they are condemned , and have only been reprieved by the war from the consequences of reform .
Unquestionably , the most honourable of their fellow-citizens , the bankers and merchants , have repeatedly declined to consort with them , or partake of their dignities . But , so natural is the affinity between plush and purple , that these Falstafjfs of Guildhall , idolators of embroidery , revere that senate of dumb nominees , which wears silver lace , which registers the commands of its master , and which atones , in the opinion of some , for the age of corrlTpt ^ parliam ' entary ' inajorities- 'tinderLoiJ-ia-Philippe .
The more dignified classes of citizens will probably receive the guest of the Court with formal honours ; public events , perhaps , demand no less ; but they demand no more ; and , if we mistake not , there were protesting voices even in that civic court , which sat with closed doors , and agreed to hospitable resolutions . But no man is called on to provoke the mob by political interruptions any more than he is bound to join the riot of applause , or to aid in those orgies of adulation with which our stall-fed citizens will shake the plate on their tables .
So fhr , therefore , the reception of the FiiENOii Empebob will only in one sense have a political meaning . It will represent the bias of our statesmen to a French alliance , it will exhibit the uses of our Court , the complicity of our aristocracy , and the popular feeling for a union of Euroue against Russia . The Common Council , which all but suffocated M . Kossuth , and the populace which cheered him , would now receive with
an uproar of delight the " chivalric young Empebob op Austria , " were he to attempt the siege of Sebaatopol in concert with us . Of such elements is promiscuous popularity—under chandeliers and street-lamps—composed . If there bo others , they are the frenzy of excitement , which would be rousod as well by a donkey in a balloon , and some unexpected brilliancy added to the early London season , to give a sparkling finish to the follies of our Corinthian order .
But the display , however artificial , would not be complete without a salute from the press . Old Tory organs , of course , with Jacobite tenacity , worship any one who governs without law ; others only fulfil their mission when they fly like feathers in the wind ; but it was reserved for such as affect liberal traditions to make their obeisance awkwardly , as if half ashamed . "What adds
to the unreality of the whole transaction is the solicitude with which these journalists , who , at the time of the coup d ' etat , hunted to infamy the " one base exception" which approved it , try to fit on their new opinions , and to save themselves with the world by exercises of casuistry . Just so does a contented old servitor sophisticate with his conscience , and accommodate himself to his master ' s
friends ; but let it be noticed that not one of them ventures to write a line of welcome without an apology , a reserve , and an explanation . But is it necessary to " make things comfortable" at such a sacrifice ? "Were it not better to be excluded from scenic festivities which impose exactions so galling to self-respect ? The credit of
statesmanship is now confided to a few men , who are supposed to pray in earnest " God defend the right , " who appeal to honour and justice , and have lost much for conscience ' sake . May we put it to them once more ? Must they offer any other than official courtesies to a ruler who gained power and holds it by means which the entire machinery of British law has been invented to render im-¦
possible here r •• _ The Examiner — sleek umbra of "Whig tables— -offers to defend such men against their own conscience . High and-virtuous minds , it says , admired what was great in the Fibst NapoIiEON , and it calls over the muster-roll of hereditary Whigs . In the Fibst Napoleon ' s character there-wars a certain greatness ; at least he possessed genius , and had his arms been allied -with
ours , we might not now have carried on war for a year with nothing to show for it but a justification in the Moniteur . Chakles James Fox , however , would not have admired-linn forhis lawlessness alone ,. even had he possessed a face like a leaden mask , such as w as enjoyed by that solicitor who used to be retained , in spite of his dulness , to stare Ebskine out of countenance . But the First CoNsuii himself never won the best men of
France to his cause . He left France diminished in territory , disgraced by two invasions , depopulated , demoralised , though he stamped with his name some of the splendid civil projects of the Convention . Even he lived to be detested , to seek safely in the spirit of the Revolution he had betrayed , and to hanker for the friendship of those despots whom he had endeavoured to humble .
Hitherto , indeed , the French have not suffered in territory during the suspension of their liberties . But they have gained nothing in exchange for the inestimable rights thus violated and destroyed . They have a Government to which not ono illustrious name is attached , and scarcely ono unsullied ; their army , though it could cinulato Cossacks at home , has gained—the Times admits—not ono decisive victory ; the ablest
generals are proscribed , the ablest statosmen stand aloof . JFor it is not forced exile , nor imprisonment only , that deprives the nation ot its best public men . Those who aro not openly hostile , aro conspicuous in retreat , and with some , ubi libertas ibi patria , that they disdain the sojl which refuses to nourish political freedom . Thus has it come that Franco—injured and humiliated—makes war without kindling the enthusiasm of her people . The Nephew at the height of Jus
Untitled Article
¦ ¦ O-Q . THE LEADER . [ Saturday ,
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), April 14, 1855, page 348, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2086/page/12/
-