Volume One Jeremy Bentham
PREFACE
This book is a sequel to my History of English
Thought in the Eighteenth Century. The title
which I then ventured to use was more comprehensive
than the work itself deserved. I felt my
inability to write a continuation which should
at all correspond to a similar title for
the nineteenth century. I thought, however,
that by writing an account of the compact
and energetic school of English Utilitarians
I could thrown some light both upon them
and their contemporaries. I had the advantage
for this purpose of having been myself a
disciple of the school during its last period.
Many accidents have delayed my completion
of the task; and delayed also its publication
after it was written. Two books have been
published since that time, which partly cover
the same ground; and I must be content with
referring my readers to them for further
information. They are The English Radicals,
by Mr C. B. Roylance Kent; and English Political
Philosophy from Hobbes to Maine, by Professor
Graham.
INTRODUCTORY
The English Utilitarians of whom I am about
to give some account were a group of men
who for three generations had a conspicuous
influence upon English thought and political
action. Jeremy Bentham, James Mill and John
Stuart Mill, were successively their leaders;
and I shall speak of each in turn. It may
be well to premise a brief introduction of
the method which I have adopted. I have devoted
a much greater proportion of my work to biography
and to considerations of political and social
conditions than would be appropriate to the
history of philosophy. The reasons for such
a course are very obvious in this case, inasmuch
as the Utilitarian doctrines were worked
out with a constant reference to practical
applications. I think, indeed, that such
a reference is often equally present, though
not equally conspicuous, in other philosophical
schools. But in any case I wish to show how
I conceive the relation of my scheme to the
scheme more generally adopted by historians
of abstract speculation.
I am primarily concerned with the history
of a school or sect, not with the history
of the arguments by which it justifies itself
in the court of pure reason. I must therefore
consider the creed as it was actually embodied
in the dominant beliefs of the adherents
of the school, not as it was expounded in
lecture-rooms or treatises on first principles.
I deal not with philosophers meditating upon
Being and not-Being, but with men actively
engaged in framing political platforms and
carrying on popular agitations. The great
majority even of intelligent partisans are
either indifferent to the philosophic creed
of their leaders or take it for granted.
Its postulates are more or less implied in
the doctrines which guide them in practice,
but are not explicitly stated or deliberately
reasoned out. Not the less the doctrines
of a sect, political or religious, may be
dependent upon theories which for the greater
number remain latent or are recognised only
in their concrete application. Contemporary
members of any society, however widely they
differ as to results, are employed upon the
same problems and, to some extent, use the
same methods and make the same assumptions
in attempting solutions. There is a certain
unity even in the general thought of any
given period. Contradictory views imply some
common ground. But within this wider unity
we find a variety of sects, each of which
may be considered as more or less representing
a particular method of treating the general
problem: and therefore principles which,
whether clearly recognised or not, are virtually
implied in their party creed and give a certain
unity to their teaching.
One obvious principle of unity, or tacit
bond of sympathy which holds a sect together
depends upon the intellectual idiosyncrasy
of the individuals. Coleridge was aiming
at an important truth when he said that every
man was born an Aristotelian or a Platonist.(1*)
Nominalists and realists, intuitionists and
empiricists, idealists and materialists,
represent different forms of a fundamental
antithesis which appears to run through all
philosophy. Each thinker is apt to take the
postulates congenial to his own mind as the
plain dictates of reason. Controversies between
such opposites appear to be hopeless. They
have been aptly compared by Dr. Venn to the
erection of a snow-bank to dam a river. The
snow melts and swells the torrent which it
was intended to arrest. Each side reads admitted
truths into its own dialect, and infers that
its own dialect affords the only valid expression.
To regard such antitheses as final and insoluble
would be to admit complete scepticism. What
is true for one man would not therefore be
true -- or at least its truth would not be
demonstrable -- to another. We must trust
that reconciliation is achievable by showing
that the difference is really less vital
and corresponds to a difference of methods
or of the spheres within which each mode
of thought may be valid. To obtain the point
of view from which such a conciliation is
possible should be, I hold, one main end
of modern philosophising.
The effect of this profound intellectual
difference is complicated by other obvious
influences. There is, in the first place,
the difference of intellectual horizon. Each
man has a world of his own and sees a different
set of facts. Whether his horizon is that
which is visible from his parish steeple
or from St. Peter's at Rome, it is still
strictly limited: and the outside universe,
known vaguely and indirectly, does not affect
him like the facts actually present to his
perception. The most candid thinkers will
come to different conclusions when they are
really provided with different sets of fact.
In political and social problems every man's
opinions are moulded by his social station.
The artisan's view of the capitalist, and
the capitalist's view of the artisan, are
both imperfect, because each has a first-hand
knowledge of his own class alone: and, however
anxious to be fair, each will take a very
different view of the working of political
institutions. An apparent concord often covers
the widest divergence under the veil of a
common formula, because each man has his
private mode of interpreting general phrases
in terms of concrete fact.
This, of course, implies the further difference
arising from the passions which, however
illogically, go so far to determine opinions.
Here we have the most general source of difficultY
in considering the actual history of a creed.
We cannot limit ourselves to the purely logical
factor. All thought has to start from postulates.
Men have to act before they think: before,
at any rate, reasoning becomes distinct from
imagining or guessing. To explain in early
periods is to fancy and to take a fancy for
a perception. The world of the primitive
man is constructed not only from vague conjectures
and hasty analogies but from his hopes and
fears, and bears the impress of his emotional
nature. When progress takes place some of
his beliefs are confirmed, some disappear,
and others are transformed: and the whole
history of thought is a history of this gradual
process of verification. We begin, it is
said, by assuming: we proceed by verifying,
and we only end by demonstrating. The process
is comparatively simple in that part of knowledge
which ultimately corresponds to the physical
sciences. There must be a certain harmony
between beliefs and realities in regard to
knowledge of ordinary matters of fact, if
only because such harmony is essential to
the life of the race. Even an ape must distinguish
poisonous from wholesome food. Beliefs as
to physical facts require to be made articulate
and distinct; but we have only to recognise
as logical principles the laws of nature
which we have unconsciously obeyed and illustrated
-- to formulate dynamics long after we have
applied the science in throwing stones or
using bows and arrows. But what corresponds
to this in the case of the moral and religious
beliefs? What is the process of verification?
Men practically are satisfied with their
creed so long as they are satisfied with
the corresponding social order. The test
of truth so suggested is obviously inadequate:
for all great religions, however contradictory
to each other, have been able to satisfy
it for long periods. Particular doctrines
might be tested by experiment. The efficacy
of witchcraft might be investigated like
the efficacy of vaccination. But faith can
always make as many miracles as it wants:
and errors which originate in the fancy cannot
be at once extirpated by the reason. Their
form may be changed but not their substance.
To remove them requires not disproof of this
or that fact, but an intellectual discipline
which is rare even among the educated classes.
A religious creed survives, as poetry or
art survives, -- not so long as it contains
apparently true statements of fact but --
so long as it is congenial to the whole social
state. A philosophy indeed is a poetry stated
in terms of logic. Considering the natural
conservatism of mankind, the difficulty is
to account for progress, not for the persistence
of error. When the existing order ceases
to be satisfactory; when conquest or commerce
has welded nations together and brought conflicting
creeds into cohesion; when industrial development
has modified the old class relations; or
when the governing classes have ceased to
discharge their functions, new principles
are demanded and new prophets arise. The
philosopher may then become the mouthpiece
of the new order, and innocently take himself
to be its originator. His doctrines were
fruitless so long as the soil was not prepared
for the seed. A premature discovery if not
stamped out by fire and sword is stifled
by indifference. If Francis Bacon succeeded
where Roger Bacon failed, the difference
was due to the social conditions, not to
the men. The cause of the great religious
as well as of the great political revolutions
must be sought mainly in the social history.
New creeds spread when they satisfy the instincts
or the passions roused to activity by other
causes. The system has to be so far true
as to be credible at the time; but its vitality
depends upon its congeniality as a whole
to the aspirations of the mass of mankind.
The purely intellectual movement no doubt
represents the decisive factor. The love
of truth in the abstract is probably the
weakest of human passions; but truth when
attained ultimately gives the fulcrum for
a reconstruction of the world. When a solid
core of ascertained and verifiable truth
has once been formed and applied to practical
results it becomes the fixed pivot upon which
all beliefs must ultimately turn. The influence,
however, is often obscure and still indirect.
The more cultivated recognise the necessity
of bringing their whole doctrine into conformity
with the definitely organised and established
system; and, at the present day, even the
uneducated begin to have an inkling of possible
results. yet the desire for logical consistency
is not one which presses forcibly upon the
less cultivated intellects. They do not feel
the necessity of unifying knowledge or bringing
their various opinions into consistency and
into harmony with facts. There are easy methods
of avoiding any troublesome conflict of belief
The philosopher is ready to show them the
way. He, like other people, has to start
from postulates, and to see how they will
work. When he meets with a difficulty it
is perfectly legitimate that he should try
how far the old formula can be applied to
cover the new applications. He may be led
to a process of 'rationalising' or 'spiritualising'
which is dangerous to intellectual honesty.
The vagueness of the general conceptions
with which he is concerned facilitates the
adaptation; and his words slide into new
meanings by imperceptible gradations. His
error is in taking a legitimate tentative
process for a conclusive test; and inferring
that opinions are confirmed because a non-natural
interpretation can be forced upon them. This,
however, is only the vicious application
of the normal process through which new ideas
are diffused or slowly infiltrate the old
systems till the necessity of a thoroughgoing
reconstruction forces itself upon our attention.
Nor can it be denied that an opposite fallacy
is equally possible, especially in times
of revolutionary passion. The apparent irreconcilability
of some new doctrine with the old may lead
to the summary rejection of the implicit
truth, together with the error involved in
its imperfect recognition. Hence arises the
necessity for taking into account not only
a man's intellectual idiosyncrasies and the
special intellectual horizon, but all the
prepossessions due to his personal character,
his social environment, and his consequent
sympathies and antipathies. The philosopher
has his passions like other men. He does
not really live in the thin air of abstract
speculation. On the contrary, he starts generally,
and surely is right in starting, with keen
interest in the great religious, ethical,
and social problems of the time. He wishes
-- honestly and eagerly -- to try them by
the severest tests, and to hold fast only
what is clearly valid. The desire to apply
his principles in fact justifies his pursuit,
and redeems him from the charge that he is
delighting in barren intellectual subtleties.
But to an outsider his procedure may appear
in a different light. His real problem comes
to be: how the conclusions which are agreeable
to his emotions can be connected with the
postulates which are congenial to his intellect?
He may be absolutely honest and quite unconscious
that his conclusions were prearranged by
his sympathies. No philosophic creed of any
importance has ever been constructed, we
may well believe, without such sincerity
and without such plausibility as results
from its correspondence to at least some
aspects of the truth. But the result is sufficiently
shown by the perplexed controversies which
arise. Men agree in their conclusions, though
starting from opposite premises; or from
the same premises reach the most diverging
conclusions. The same code of practical morality,
it is often said, is accepted by thinkers
who deny each other's first principles; dogmatism
often appears to its opponents to be thorough-going
scepticism in disguise, and men establish
victoriously results which turn out in the
end to be really a stronghold for their antagonists.
Hence there is a distinction between such
a history of a sect as I contemplate and
a history of scientific inquiry or of pure
philosophy. A history of mathematical or
physical science would differ from a direct
exposition of the science, but only in so
far as it would state truths in the order
of discovery, not in the order most convenient
for displaying them as a system. It would
show what were the processes by which they
were originally found out, and how they have
been afterwards annexed or absorbed in some
wider generalisation. These facts might be
stated without any reference to the history
of the discoverers or of the society to which
they belonged. They would indeed suggest
very interesting topics to the general historian
or 'sociologist.' He might be led to inquire
under what conditions men came to inquire
scientifically at all; why they ceased for
centuries to care for science; why they took
up special departments of investigation;
and what was the effect of scientific discoveries
upon social relations in general. But the
two inquiries would be distinct for obvious
reasons. If men study mathematics they can
only come to one conclusion. They will find
out the same propositions of geometry if
they only think clearly enough and long enough,
as certainly as Columbus would discover America
if he only sailed far enough. America was
there, and so in a sense are the propositions.
We may therefore in this case entirely separate
the two questions: what leads men to think?
and what conclusions will they reach? The
reasons which guided the first discoverers
are just as valid now, though they can be
more systematically stated. But in the 'moral
sciences' this distinction is not equally
possible. The intellectual and the social
evolution are closely and intricately connected,
and each reacts upon the other. In the last
resort no doubt a definitive system of belief
once elaborated would repose upon universally
valid truths and determine, instead of being
determined by, the corresponding social order.
But in the concrete evolution which, we may
hope, is approximating towards this result,
the creeds current among mankind have been
determined by the social conditions as well
as helped to determine them. To give an account
of that process it is necessary to specify
the various circumstances which may lead
to the survival of error, and to the partial
views of truth taken by men of different
idiosyncrasies working upon different data
and moved by different passions and prepossessions.
A history written upon these terms would
show primarily what, as a fact, were the
dominant beliefs during a given period, and
state which survived, which disappeared,
and which were transformed or engrafted upon
other systems of thought. This would of course
raise the question of the truth or falsehood
of the doctrines as well as of their vitality:
for the truth is at least one essential condition
of permanent vitality. The difference would
be that the problem would be approached from
a different side. We should ask first what
beliefs have flourished, and afterwards ask
why they flourished, and how far their vitality
was due to their partial or complete truth.
To write such a history would perhaps require
an impartiality which few people possess
and which I do not venture to claim. I have
my own opinions for which other people may
account by prejudice, assumption, or downright
incapacity. I am quite aware that I shall
be implicitly criticising myself in criticising
others. All that I can profess is that by
taking the questions in this order, I shall
hope to fix attention upon one set of considerations
which are apt, as I fancy, to be unduly neglected.
The result of reading some histories is to
raise the question: how people on the other
side came to be such unmitigated fools? Why
were they imposed upon by such obvious fallacies?
That may be answered by considering more
fully the conditions under which the opinions
were actually adopted, and one result may
be to show that those opinions had a considerable
element of truth, and were held by men who
were the very opposite of fools. At any rate
I shall do what I can to write an account
of this phase of thought, so as to bring
out what were its real tenets; to what intellectual
type they were naturally congenial; what
were the limitations of view which affected
the Utilitarians' conception of the problems
to be solved; and what were the passions
and prepossessions due to the contemporary
state of society and to their own class position,
which to some degree unconsciously dictated
their conclusions. So far as I can do this
satisfactorily, I hope that I may throw some
light upon the intrinsic value of the creed,
and the place which it should occupy in a
definitive system.
NOTES:
1. Table Talk, 3 July 1830.
CHAPTER I
POLITICAL CONDITIONS
1. The British Constitution
The English Utilitarians represent one outcome
of the speculations current in England during
the later part of the eighteenth century.
For the reasons just assigned I shall begin
by briefly recalling some of the social conditions
which set the problems for the coming generation
and determined the mode of answering them.
I must put the main facts in evidence, though
they are even painfully familiar. The most
obvious starting-point is given by the political
situation. The supremacy of parliament had
been definitively established by the revolution
of 1688, and had been followed by the elaboration
of the system of party government. The centre
of gravity of the political world lay in
the House of Commons. No minister could hold
power unless he could command a majority
in this house. Jealousy of the royal power,
however, was still a ruling passion. The
party line between Whig and Tory turned ostensibly
upon this issue. The essential Whig doctrine
is indicated by Dunning's famous resolution
(6 April 1780) that 'the power of the crown
had increased, was increasing, and ought
to be diminished.' The resolution was in
one sense an anachronism. As in many other
cases, politicians seem to be elaborately
slaying the slain and guarding against the
attacks of extinct monsters. There was scarcely
more probability under George III than there
is under Victoria that the king would try
to raise taxes without consent of parliament.
George III, however, desired to be more than
a contrivance for fixing the great seal to
official documents. He had good reason for
thinking that the weakness of the executive
was an evil. The king could gain power not
by attacking the authority of parliament
but by gaining influence within its walls.
He might form a party of 'king's friends'
able to hold the balance between the connections
formed by the great families and so break
up the system of party government. Burke's
great speech (11 Feb. 1780) upon introducing
his plan 'for the better security of the
independence of parliament and the economical
reformation of the civil and other establishments'
explains the secret and reveals the state
of things which for the next half century
was to supply one main theme for the eloquence
of reformers. The king had at his disposal
a vast amount of patronage. There were relics
of ancient institutions: the principality
of Wales, the duchies of Lancaster and Cornwall,
and the earldom of Chester; each with its
revenue and establishment of superfluous
officials. The royal household was a complex
'body corporate' founded in the old days
of 'purveyance.' There was the mysterious
'Board of Green Cloth' formed by the great
officers and supposed to have judicial as
well as administrative functions. Cumbrous
medieval machinery thus remained which had
been formed in the time when the distinction
between a public trust and private property
was not definitely drawn or which had been
allowed to remain for the sake of patronage,
when its functions had been transferred to
officials of more modern type. Reform was
foiled, as Burke put it, because the turnspit
in the king's kitchen was a member of parliament.
Such sinecures and the pensions on the civil
list or the Irish establishment provided
the funds by which the king could build up
a personal influence, which was yet occult,
irresponsible, and corrupt. The measure passed
by Burke in
1782(1*) made a beginning in the removal
of such abuses.
Meanwhile the Whigs were conveniently blind
to another side of the question. If the king
could buy, it was because there were plenty
of people both able and willing to sell.
Bubb Dodington, a typical example of the
old system, had five or six seats at his
disposal: subject only to the necessity of
throwing a few pounds to the 'venal wretches'
who went through the form of voting, and
by dealing in what he calls this 'merchantable
ware' he managed by lifelong efforts to wriggle
into a peerage. The Dodingtons, that is,
sold because they bought. The 'venal wretches'
were the lucky franchise-holders in rotten
boroughs. The 'Friends of the People'(2*)
in 1793 made the often-repeated statement
that 154 individuals returned 307 members,
that is, a majority of the house. In Cornwall,
again, 21 boroughs with 453 electors controlled
by about 15 individuals returned 42 members,(3*)
or, with the two county members, only one
member less than Scotland; and the Scottish
members were elected by close corporations
in boroughs and by the great families in
counties. No wonder if the House of Commons
seemed at times to be little more than an
exchange for the traffic between the proprietors
of votes and the proprietors of offices and
pensions.
The demand for the reforms advocated by Burke
and Dunning was due to the catastrophe of
the American War. The scandal caused by the
famous coalition of 1783 showed that a diminution
of the royal influence might only make room
for selfish bargains among the proprietors
of parliamentary influence. The demand for
reform was taken up by Pitt. His plan was
significant. He proposed to disfranchise
a few rotten boroughs; but to soften this
measure he afterwards suggested that a million
should be set aside to buy such boroughs
as should voluntarily apply for disfranchisement.
The seats obtained were to be mainly added
to county representation; but the franchise
was to be extended so as to add about 99,000
voters in boroughs, and additional seats
were to be given to London and Westminster
and to Manchester, Leeds, Birmingham, and
Sheffield. The Yorkshire reformers, who led
the movement, were satisfied with this modest
scheme. The borough proprietors were obviously
too strong to be directly attacked, though
they might be induced to sell some of their
power.
Here was a mass of anomalies, sufficient
to supply topics of denunciation for two
generations of reformers, and, in time, to
excite fears of violent revolution. Without
undertaking the easy task of denouncing exploded
systems, we may ask what state of mind they
implied. Our ancestors were perfectly convinced
that their political system was of almost
unrivalled excellence: they held that they
were freemen entitled to look down upon foreigners
as the slaves of despots. Nor can we say
that their satisfaction was without solid
grounds. The boasting about English freedom
implied some misunderstanding. But it was
at least the boast of a vigorous race. Not
only were there individuals capable of patriotism
and public spirit, but the body politic was
capable of continuous energy. During the
eighteenth century the British empire spread
round the world. Under Chatham it had been
finally decided that the English race should
be the dominant element in the new world;
if the political connection had been severed
by the bungling of his successors, the unbroken
spirit of the nation had still been shown
in the struggle against France, Spain, and
the revolted colonies; and whatever may be
thought of the motives which produced the
great revolutionary wars, no one can deny
the qualities of indomitable self-reliance
and high courage to the men who led the country
through the twenty years of struggle against
France, and for a time against France with
the continent at its feet. If moralists or
political theorists find much to condemn
in the ends to which British policy was directed,
they must admit that the qualities displayed
were not such as can belong to a simply corrupt
and mean-spirited government.
One obvious remark is that, on the whole,
the system was a very good one -- as systems
go. It allowed free play to the effective
political forces. Down to the revolutionary
period, the nation as a whole was contented
with its institutions. The political machinery
provided a sufficient channel for the really
efficient force of public opinion. There
was as yet no large class which at once had
political aspirations and was unable to gain
a hearing. England was still in the main
an agricultural country: and the agricultural
labourer was fairly prosperous till the end
of the century, while his ignorance and isolation
made him indifferent to politics. There might
be a bad squire or parson, as there might
be a bad season; but squire and parson were
as much parts of the natural order of things
as the weather. The farmer or yeoman was
not much less stolid; and his politics meant
at most a choice between allegiance to one
or other of the county families. If in the
towns which were rapidly developing there
was growing up a discontented population,
its discontent was not yet directed into
political channels. An extended franchise
meant a larger expenditure on beer, not the
readier acceptance of popular aspirations.
To possess a vote was to have a claim to
an occasional bonus rather than a right to
influence legislation. Practically, therefore,
parliament might be taken to represent what
might be called 'public opinion,' for anything
that deserved to be called public opinion
was limited to the opinions of the gentry
and the more intelligent part of the middle
classes. There was no want of complaints
of corruption, proposals to exclude placemen
from parliament and the like; and in the
days of Wilkes, Chatham, and Junius, when
the first symptoms of democratic activity
began to affect the political movement, the
discontent made itself audible and alarming.
But a main characteristic of the English
reformers was the constant appeal to precedent,
even in their most excited moods. They do
not mention the rights of man; they invoke
the 'revolution principles' of 1688; they
insist upon the 'Bill of Rights' or Magna
Charta. When keenly roused they recall the
fate of Charles I; and their favourite toast
is the cause for which Hampden died on the
field and Sidney on the scaffold. They believe
in the jury as the 'palladium of our liberties';
and are convinced that the British Constitution
represents an unsurpassable though unfortunately
an ideal order of things, which must have
existed at some indefinite period. Chatham
in one of his most famous speeches, appeals,
for example, to the 'iron barons' who resisted
King John, and contrasts them with the silken
courtiers which now compete for place and
pensions. The political reformers of the
time, like religious reformers in most times,
conceive of themselves only as demanding
the restoration of the system to its original
purity, not as demanding its abrogation.
In other words, they propose to remedy abuses
but do not as yet even contemplate a really
revolutionary change. Wilkes was not a 'Wilkite,'
nor was any of his party, if Wilkite meant
anything like Jacobin.
II. The Ruling Class
Thus, however anomalous the constitution
of parliament, there was no thought of any
far-reaching revolution The great mass of
the population was too ignorant, too scattered
and too poor to have any real political opinions.
So long as certain prejudices were not aroused,
it was content to leave the management of
the state to the dominant class, which alone
was intelligent enough to take an interest
in public affairs and strong enough to make
its interest felt. This class consisted in
the first place of the great landed interest.
When Lord North opposed Pitt's reform in
1785 he said(4*) that the Constitution was
'the work of infinite wisdom... the most
beautiful fabric that had ever existed since
the beginning of time.' He added that 'the
bulk and weight' of the house ought to be
in 'the hands of the country-gentlemen, the
best and most respectable objects of the
confidence of the people.' The speech, though
intended to please an audience of country-gentlemen,
represented a genuine belief.(5*) The country-gentlemen
formed the class to which not only the constitutional
laws but the prevailing sentiment of the
country gave the lead in politics as in the
whole social system. Even reformers proposed
to improve the House of Commons chiefly by
increasing the number of county-members,
and a county-member was almost necessarily
a country-gentleman of an exalted kind. Although
the country-gentleman was very far from having
all things his own way, his ideals and prejudices
were in a great degree the mould to which
the other politically important class conformed.
There was indeed a growing jealousy between
the landholders and the 'monied-men.' Bolingbroke
had expressed this distrust at an earlier
part of the century. But the true representative
of the period was his successful rival, Walpole,
a thorough country-gentleman who had learned
to understand the mysteries of finance and
acquired the confidence of the city. The
great merchants of London and the rising
manufacturers in the country were rapidly
growing in wealth and influence. The monied-men
represented the most active, energetic, and
growing part of the body politic. Their interests
determined the direction of the national
policy. The great wars of the century were
undertaken in the interests of British trade.
The extension of the empire in India was
carried on through a great commercial company.
The growth of commerce supported the sea-power
which was the main factor in the development
of the empire. The new industrial organisation
which was arising was in later years to represent
a class distinctly opposed to the old aristocratic
order. At present it was in a comparatively
subordinate position. The squire was interested
in the land and the church; the merchant
thought more of commerce and was apt to be
a dissenter. But the merchant, in spite of
some little jealousies, admitted the claims
of the country-gentleman to be his social
superior and political leader. His highest
ambition was to be himself admitted to the
class or to secure the admission of his family.
As he became rich he bought a solid mansion
at Clapham or Wimbledon, and, if he made
a fortune, might become lord of manors in
the country. He could not as yet aspire to
become himself a peer, but he might be the
ancestor of peers. The son of Josiah Child,
the great merchant of the seventeenth century,
became Earl Tylney, and built at Wanstead
one of the noblest mansions in England. His
contemporary Sir Francis Child, Lord Mayor,
and a founder of the Bank of England, built
Osterley House, and was ancestor of the earls
of Jersey and Westmoreland. The daughter
of Sir John Barnard, the typical merchant
of Walpole's time, married the second Lord
Palmerston. Beckford, the famous Lord Mayor
of Chatham's day, was father of the author
of Vatheh, who married an earl's daughter
and became the father of a duchess. The Barings,
descendants of a German pastor, settled in
England early in the century and became country-gentlemen,
baronets, and peers. Cobbett, who saw them
rise, reviled the stockjobbers who were buying
out the old families. But the process had
begun long before his days, and meant that
the heads of the new industrial system were
being absorbed into the class of territorial
magnates. That class represented the framework
upon which both political and social power
was moulded.
This implies an essential characteristic
of the time. A familiar topic of the admirers
of the British Constitution was the absence
of the sharp lines of demarcation between
classes and of the exclusive aristocratic
privileges which, in France, provoked the
revolution. In England the ruling class was
not a 'survival'; it had not retained privileges
without discharging corresponding functions.
The essence of 'self-government,' says its
most learned commentator,(6*) is the organic
connection 'between State and society.' On
the Continent, that is, powers were intrusted
to a centralised administrative and judicial
hierarchy, which in England were left to
the class independently strong by its social
position. The landholder was powerful as
a product of the whole system of industrial
and agricultural development; and he was
bound in return to perform arduous and complicated
duties. How far he performed them well is
another question. At least, he did whatever
was done in the way of governing, and therefore
did not sink into a mere excrescence or superfluity.
I must try to point out certain results which
had a material effect upon English opinion
in general and, in particular, upon the Utilitarians.
III. Legislation and Administration
The country-gentlemen formed the bulk of
the lawmaking body, and the laws gave the
first point of assault of the Utilitarian
movement. One explanation is suggested by
a phrase attributed to Sir Josiah Child.(7*)
The laws, he said, were a heap of nonsense,
compiled by a few ignorant country-gentlemen,
who hardly knew how to make good laws for
the government of their own families, much
less for the regulation of companies and
foreign commerce. He meant that the parliamentary
legislation of the century was the work of
amateurs, not of specialists; of an assembly
of men more interested in immediate questions
of policy or personal intrigue than in general
principles, and not of such a centralised
body as would set a value upon symmetry and
scientific precision. The country-gentleman
had strong prejudices and enough common sense
to recognise his own ignorance. The product
of a traditional order, he clung to traditions,
and regarded the old maxims as sacred because
no obvious reason could be assigned for them.
He was suspicious of abstract theories, and
it did not even occur to him that any such
process as codification or radical alteration
of the laws was conceivable. For the law
itself he had the profound veneration which
is expressed by Blackstone. It represented
the 'wisdom of our ancestors'; the system
of first principles, On which the whole order
of things reposed, and which must be regarded
as an embodiment of right reason. The common
law was a tradition, not made by express
legislation, but somehow existing apart from
any definite embodiment, and revealed to
certain learned hierophants. Any changes,
required by the growth of new social conditions,
had to be made under pretence of applying
the old rules supposed to be already in existence.
Thus grew up the system of 'judge-made law,'
which was to become a special object of the
denunciations of Bentham. Child had noticed
the incompetence of the country-gentlemen
to understand the regulation of commercial
affairs. The gap was being filled up, without
express legislation, by judicial interpretations
of Mansfield and his fellows. This, indeed,
marks a characteristic of the whole system.
'Our constitution,' says Professor Dicey,(8*)
'is a judge-made constitution, and it bears
on its face all the features, good and bad,
of judge-made law.' The law of landed property,
meanwhile, was of vital and immediate interest
to the country-gentleman. But, feeling his
own incompetence, he had called in the aid
of the expert. The law had been developed
in medieval times, and bore in all its details
the marks of the long series of struggles
between king and nobles and parliaments.
One result had been the elaborate series
of legal fictions worked out in the conflict
between private interests and public policy,
by which lawyers had been able to adapt the
rules fitted for an ancient state of society
to another in which the very fundamental
conceptions were altered. A mysterious system
had thus grown up, which deterred any but
the most resolute students. Of Fearne's essay
upon 'Contingent remainders' (published in
1772) it was said that no work 'in any branch
of science could afford a more beautiful
instance of analysis.' Fearne had shown the
acuteness of 'a Newton or a Pascal.' Other
critics dispute this proposition; but in
any case the law was so perplexing that it
could only be fully understood by one who
united antiquarian knowledge to the subtlety
of a great logician. The 'vast and intricate
machine,' as Blackstone calls it, 'of a voluminous
family settlement' required for its explanation
the dialectical skill of an accomplished
schoolman. The poor country-gentleman could
not understand the terms on which he held
his own estate without calling in an expert
equal to such a task. The man who has acquired
skill so essential to his employer's interests
is not likely to undervalue it or to be over
anxious to simplify the labyrinth in which
he shone as a competent guide.
The lawyers who played so important a part
by their familiarity with the mysteries of
commercial law and landed property, naturally
enjoyed the respect of their clients, and
were rewarded by adoption into the class.
The English barrister aspired to success
by himself taking part in politics and legislation.
The only path to the highest positions really
open to a man of ability, not connected by
blood with the great families, was the path
which led to the woolsack or to the judge's
bench. A great merchant might be the father
or father-in-law of peers; a successful soldier
or sailor might himself become a peer, but
generally he began life as a member of the
ruling classes, and his promotion was affected
by parliamentary influence. But a successful
lawyer might fight his way from a humble
position to the House of Lords. Thurlow,
son of a country-gentleman; Dunning, son
of a country attorney; Ellenborough, son
of a bishop and defendant of a long line
of North-country 'statesmen'; Kenyon, son
of a farmer; Eldon, son of a Newcastle coal
merchant, represent the average career of
a successful barrister. Some of them rose
to be men of political importance, and Thurlow
and Eldon had the advantage of keeping George
III's conscience -- an unruly faculty which
had an unfortunately strong influence upon
affairs. The leaders of the legal profession,
therefore, and those who hoped to be leaders,
shared the prejudices, took a part in the
struggles, and were rewarded by the honours
of the dominant class.
The criminal law became a main topic of reformers.
There, as elsewhere, we have a striking example
of traditional modes of thought surviving
with singular persistence. The rough classification
of crimes into felony and misdemeanour, and
the strange technical rules about 'benefit
of clergy' dating back to the struggles of
Henry II and Becket, remained like ultimate
categories of thought. When the growth of
social conditions led to new temptations
or the appearance of a new criminal class,
and particular varieties of crime became
conspicuous, the only remedy was to declare
that some offence should be 'felony without
benefit of clergy,' and therefore punishable
by death. By unsystematic and spasmodic legislation
the criminal law became so savage as to shock
every man of common humanity. It was tempered
by the growth of technical rules, which gave
many chances of escape to the criminal; and
by practical revolt against its excesses,
which led to the remission of the great majority
of capital sentences.(9*) The legislators
were clumsy, not intentionally cruel; and
the laws, though sanguinary in reality, were
more sanguinary in theory than in practice.
Nothing, On the other hand, is more conspicuous
than the spirit of fair play to the criminal,
which struck foreign observers.(10*) It was
deeply rooted in the whole system. The English
judge was not an official agent of an inquisitorial
system, but an impartial arbitrator between
the prisoner and the prosecutor. In political
cases especially a marked change was brought
about by the revolution of 1688. If our ancestors
talked some nOnsense about trial by jury,
the system certainly insured that the persons
accused of libel or sedition should have
a fair trial, and very often something more.
Judges of the Jeffreys type had become inconceivable,
though impartiality might disappear in cases
where the prejudices of juries were actively
aroused. Englishmen might fairly boast of
their immunity from the arbitrary methods
of continental rulers; and their unhesitating
confidence in the fairness of the system
became so ingrained as to be taken as a matter
of course, and scarcely received due credit
from later critics of the system.
The country-gentleman, again, was not only
the legislator but a most important figure
in the judicial and administrative system.
As justice of the peace, he was the representative
of law and order to his country neighbours.
The preface of 1785 to the fifteenth edition
of Burn's Justice of the Peace, published
originally in 1755, mentions that in the
interval between these dates, some three
hundred statutes had been passed affecting
the duties of justices, while half as many
had been repealed or modified. The justice
was of course, as a rule, a superficial lawyer,
and had to be prompted by his clerk, the
two representing on a small scale the general
relation between the lawyers and the ruling
class. Burn tells the justice for his comfort
that the judges will take a lenient view
of any errors into which his ignorance may
have led him. The discharge of such duties
by an independent gentleman was thought to
be so desirable and so creditable to him
that his want of efficiency must be regarded
with consideration. Nor, though the justices
have been a favourite butt for satirists,
does it appear that the system worked badly.
When it became necessary to appoint paid
magistrates in London, and the pay, according
to the prevalent system, was provided by
fees, the new officials became known as 'trading
justices,' and their salaries, as Fielding
tells us, were some of the 'dirtiest money
upon earth.' The justices might perhaps be
hard upon a poacher (as, indeed, the game
laws became one of the great scandals of
the system), or liable to be misled by a
shrewd attorney; but they were on the whole
regarded as the natural and creditable representatives
of legal authority in the country.
The justices, again, discharged functions
which would elsewhere belong to an administrative
hierarchy. Gneist observes that the power
of the justices of the peace represents the
centre of gravity of the whole administrative
system.(11*) Their duties had become so multifarious
and perplexed that Burn could only arrange
them under alphabetical heads. Gneist works
out a systematic account, filling many pages
of elaborate detail, and showing how large
a part they played in the whole social structure.
An intense jealousy of central power was
one correlative characteristic. Blackstone
remarks in his more liberal humour that the
number of new offices held at pleasure had
greatly extended the influence of the crown.
This refers to the custom-house officers,
excise officers, stamp distributors and postmasters.
But if the tax-gatherer represented the state,
he represented also part of the patronage
at the disposal of politicians. A voter was
often in search of the place of a 'tidewaiter';
and, as we know, the greatest poet of the
day could only be rewarded by making him
an exciseman. Any extension of a system which
multiplied public offices was regarded with
suspicion. Walpole, the strongest minister
of the century, had been forced to an ignominious
retreat when he proposed to extend the excise.
The cry arose that he meant to enslave the
country and extend the influence of the crown
over all the corporations in England. The
country-gentleman had little reason to fear
that government would diminish his importance
by tampering with his functions. The justices
of the peace were called upon to take a great
and increasing share in the administration
of the poor-law. They were concerned in all
manner of financial details; they regulated
such police as existed; they looked after
the old laws by which the trades were still
restricted; and, in theory at least, could
fix the rate of wages. Parliament did not
override, but only gave the necessary sanction
to their activity. If we looked through the
journals of the House of Commons during the
American War, for example, we should get
the impression that the whole business of
the legislature was to arrange administrative
details. If a waste was to be enclosed, a
canal or a high-road to be constructed, there
was no public department to be consulted.
The gentry of the neighbourhood joined to
obtain a private act of parliament which
gave the necessary powers to the persons
interested. No general enclosure act could
be passed, though often suggested. It would
imply a central commission, which would only,
as was suggested, give rise to jobbery and
take power out of the natural hands. Parliament
was omnipotent; it could regulate the affairs
of the empire or of a parish; alter the most
essential laws or act as a court of justice;
settle the crown or arrange for a divorce
or for the alteration of a private estate.
But it objected to delegate authority even
to a subordinate body, which might tend to
become independent. Thus, if it was the central
power and source of all legal authority,
it might also be regarded as a kind of federal
league, representing the wills of a number
of partially independent persons. The gentry
could meet there and obtain the sanction
of their allies for any measure required
in their own little sphere of influence.
But they had an instinctive aversion to the
formation of any organised body representing
the state. The neighbourhood which wanted
a road got powers to make it, and would concur
in giving powers to others. But if the state
were to be intrusted to make roads, ministers
would have more places to give, and roads
might be made which they did not want. The
English roads had long been infamous, but
neither was money wasted, as in France, on
roads where there was no traffic.(12*) Thus
we have the combination of an absolute centralisation
of legislative power with an utter absence
of administrative centralisation. The units
meeting in parliament formed a supreme assembly;
but they did not sink their own individuality.
They only met to distribute the various functions
among themselves.
The English parish with its squire, its parson,
its lawyer and its labouring population was
a miniature of the British Constitution in
general. The squire's eldest son could succeed
to his position; a second son might become
a general or an admiral; a third would take
the family living; a fourth, perhaps, seek
his fortune at the bar. This implies a conception
of other political conditions which curiously
illustrate some contemporary conceptions.
IV. THE ARMY AND NAVY
We are often amused by the persistency of
the cry against a 'standing army' in England.
It did not fairly die out until the revolutionary
wars. Blackstone regards it as a singularly
fortunate circumstance 'that any branch of
the legislature might annually put an end
to the legal existence of the army by refusing
to concur in the continuance' of the mutiny
act. A standing army was obviously necessary;
but by making believe very hard, we could
shut our eyes to the facts, and pretend that
it was a merely temporary arrangement.(13*)
The doctrine had once had a very intelligible
meaning. If James II had possessed a disciplined
army of the continental pattern, with Marlborough
at its head, Marlborough would hardly have
been converted by the prince of Orange. But
loyal as the gentry had been at the restoration,
they had taken very good care that the Stuarts
should not have in their hand such a weapon
as had been possessed by Cromwell. When the
Puritan army was disbanded, they had proceeded
to regulate the militia. The officers were
appointed by the lords-lieutenants of counties,
and had to possess a property qualification;
the men raised by ballot in their own districts;
and their numbers and length of training
regulated by Act of Parliament. The old 'train-bands'
were suppressed, except in the city of London,
and thus the recognised military force of
the country was a body essentially dependent
upon the country gentry. The militia was
regarded with favour as the 'old constitutional
force' which could not be used to threaten
our liberties. It was remodelled during the
Seven Years' War and embodied during that
and all our later wars. It was, however,
ineffective by its very nature. An aristocracy
which chose to carry on wars must have a
professional army in fact, however careful
it might be to pretend that it was a provision
for a passing necessity. The pretence had
serious consequences. Since the army was
not to have interests separate from the people,
there was no reason for building barracks.
The men might be billeted on publicans, or
placed under canvas, while they were wanted.
When the great war came upon us, large sums
had to be spent to make up for the previous
neglect. Fox, on 22nd February 1793, protested
during a lively debate upon this subject
that sound constitutional principles condemned
barracks, because to mix the army with the
people was the 'best security against the
danger of a standing army.'(14*)
In fact a large part of the army was a mere
temporary force. In 1762, towards the end
of the Seven Years' War, we had about 100,000
men in pay; and after the peace, the force
was reduced to under 20,000. Similar changes
took place in every war. The ruling class
took advantage of the position. An army might
be hired from Germany for the occasion. New
regiments were generally raised by some great
man who gave commissions to his own relations
and dependants. When the Pretender was in
Scotland, for example, fifteen regiments
were raised by patriotic nobles, who gave
the commissions, and stipulated that although
they were to be employed only in suppressing
the rising, the officers should have permanent
rank.(15*) So, as was shown in Mrs Clarke's
case, a patent for raising a regiment might
be a source of profit to the undertaker,
who again might get it by bribing the mistress
of a royal duke. The officers had, according
to the generally prevalent system, a modified
property in their commissions; and the system
of sale was not abolished till our own days.
We may therefore say that the ruling class,
on the one hand, objected to a standing army,
and, on the other, since such an army was
a necessity, farmed it from the country and
were admitted to have a certain degree of
private property in the concern. The prejudice
against any permanent establishment made
it necessary to fill the ranks on occasion
by all manner of questionable expedients.
Bounties were offered to attract the vagrants
who hung loose upon society. Smugglers, poachers,
and the like were allowed to choose between
military service and transportation. The
general effect was to provide an army of
blackguards commanded by gentlemen. The army
no doubt had its merits as well as its defects.
The continental armies which it met were
collected by equally demoralising methods
until the French revolution led to a systematic
conscription. The bad side is suggested by
Napier's famous phrase, the 'cold shade of
our aristocracy'; while Napier gives facts
enough to prove both the brutality too often
shown by the private soldier and the dogged
courage which is taken to be characteristic
even of the English blackguard. By others,
-- by such men as the duke of Wellington
and Lord Palmerston, for example, types of
the true aristocrat -- the system was defended(16*)
as bringing men of good family into the army
and so providing it, as the duke thought,
with the best set of officers in Europe.
No doubt they and the royal dukes who commanded
them were apt to be grossly ignorant of their
business; but it may be admitted by a historian
that they often showed the qualities of which
Wellington was himself a type. The English
officer was a gentleman before he was a soldier,
and considered the military virtues to be
a part of his natural endowment. But it was
undoubtedly a part of his traditional code
of honour to do his duty manfully and to
do it rather as a manifestation of his own
spirit than from any desire for rewards or
decorations. The same quality is represented
more strikingly by the navy. The English
admiral represents the most attractive and
stirring type of heroism in our history.
Nelson and the 'band of brothers' who served
with him, the simple and high-minded sailors
who summed up the whole duty of man in doing
their best to crush the enemies of their
country, are among the finest examples of
single-souled devotion to the calls of patriotism.
The navy, indeed, had its ugly side no less
than the army. There was corruption at Greenwich(17*)
and in the dockyards, and parliamentary intrigue
was a road to professional success. Voltaire
notes the queer contrast between the English
boast of personal liberty and the practice
of filling up the crews by press gangs. The
discipline was often barbarous, and the wrongs
of the common sailor found sufficient expression
in the mutiny at the Nore. A grievance, however,
which pressed upon a single class was maintained
from the necessity of the case and the inertness
of the administrative system. The navy did
not excite the same jealousy as the army;
and the officers were more professionally
skilful than their brethren. The national
qualities come out, often in their highest
form, in the race of great seamen upon whom
the security of the island power essentially
depended.
V. THE CHURCH
I turn, however, to the profession which
was more directly connected with the intellectual
development of the country. The nature of
the church establishment gives the most obvious
illustration of the connection between the
intellectual position on the one hand and
the social and political order on the other,
though I do not presume to decide how far
either should be regarded as effect and the
other as cause.
What is the church of England? Some people
apparently believe that it is a body possessing
and transmitting certain supernatural powers.
This view was in abeyance for the time for
excellent reasons, and, true or false, is
no answer to the constitutional question.
It does not enable us to define what was
the actual body with which lawyers and politicians
have to deal. The best answer to such questions
in ordinary case would be given by describing
the organisation of the body concerned. We
could then say what is the authority which
speaks in its name; and what is the legislature
which makes its laws, alters its arrangements,
and defines the terms of membership. The
supreme legislature of the church of England
might appear to be parliament. It is the
Act of Uniformity which defines the profession
of belief exacted from the clergy; and no
alteration could be made in regard to the
rights and duties of the clergy except by
parliamentary authority. The church might
therefore be regarded as simply the religious
department of the state. Since 1688, however,
the theory and the practice of toleration
had introduced difficulties. Nonconformity
was not by itself punishable though it exposed
a man to certain disqualifications. The state,
therefore, recognised that many of its members
might legally belong to other churches, although
it had, as Warburton argued, formed an 'alliance'
with the dominant church. The spirit of toleration
was spreading throughout the century. The
old penal laws, due to the struggles of the
seventeenth century, were becoming obsolete
in practice and were gradually being repealed.
The Gordon riots of 1780 showed that a fanatical
spirit might still be aroused in a mob which
wanted an excuse for plunder; but the laws
were not explicitly defended by reasonable
persons and were being gradually removed
by legislation towards the end of the century.
Although, therefore, parliament was kept
free from papists, it could hardly regard
church and state as identical, or consider
itself as entitled to act as the representative
body of the church. No other body, indeed,
could change the laws of the church; but
parliament recognised its own incompetence
to deal with them. Towards the end of the
century, various attempts were made to relax
the terms of subscription. It was proposed,
for example, to substitute a profession of
belief in the Bible for a subscription to
the Thirty-Nine Articles. But the House of
Commons sensibly refused to expose itself
by venturing upon any theological innovations.
A body more ludicrously incompetent could
hardly have been invented.
Hence we must say that the church had either
nO supreme body which could speak in its
name and modify its creed, its ritual, its
discipline, or the details of its organisation;
or else, that the only body which had in
theory a right to interfere was doomed, by
sufficient considerations, to absolute inaction.
The church, from a secular point of view,
was not so much a department of the state
as an aggregate of offices, the functions
of which were prescribed by unalterable tradition.
It consisted of a number of bishops, deans
and chapters, rectors, vicars, curates, and
so forth, many of whom had certain proprietary
rights in their position, and who were bound
by law to discharge certain functions. But
the church, considered as a whole, could
hardly be called an organism at all, or,
if an organism, it was an organism with its
central organ in a permanent state of paralysis.
The church, again, in this state was essentially
dependent upon the ruling classes. A glance
at the position of the clergy shows their
professional position. At their head were
the bishops, some of them enjoying princely
revenues, while others were so poor as to
require that their incomes should be eked
out by deaneries or livings held in commendam.
The great sees, such as Canterbury, Durham,
Ely, and Winchester, were valued at between
£20,000 and £30,000 a year; while the smaller,
Llandaff, Bangor, Bristol, and Gloucester,
were worth less than £2000. The bishops had
patronage which enabled them to provide for
relatives or for deserving clergymen. The
average incomes of the parochial clergy,
meanwhile, were small. In 1809 they were
calculated to be worth £255, while nearly
four thousand livings were worth under £150;
and there were four or five thousand curates
with very small pay. The profession, therefore,
offered a great many blanks with a few enormous
prizes. How were those prizes generally obtained?
When the reformers published the Black Book
in 1820, they gave a list of the bishops
holding sees in the last year of George III;
and, as most of these gentlemen were on their
promotion at the end of the previous century.
I give the list in a note.(18*)
There were twenty-seven bishoprics including
Sodor and Man. Of these eleven were held
by members of noble families; fourteen were
held by men who had been tutors in, or in
other ways personally connected with the
royal family or the families of ministers
and great men; and of the remaining two,
one rested his claim upon political writing
in defence of Pitt, while the other seems
to have had the support of a great city company.
The system of translation enabled the government
to keep a hand upon the bishops. Their elevation
to the more valuable places or leave to hold
subsidiary preferments depended upon their
votes in the House of Lords. So far, then,
as secular motives operated, the tendency
of the system was clear. If Providence had
assigned to you a duke for a father or an
uncle, preferment would fall to you as of
right. A man of rank who takes orders should
be rewarded for his condescension. If that
qualification be not secured, You should
aim at being tutor in a great family, accompany
a lad on the grand tour, or write some pamphlet
on a great man's behalf. Paley gained credit
for independence at Cambridge, and spoke
with contempt of the practice of 'rooting,'
the cant phrase for patronage hunting. The
text which he facetiously suggested for a
sermon when Pitt visited Cambridge, 'There
is a young man here who has six loaves and
two fishes, but what are they among so many?'
hit off the spirit in which a minister was
regarded at the universities. The memoirs
of Bishop Watson illustrate the same sentiment.
He lived in his pleasant country house at
Windermere, never visiting his diocese, and
according to De Quincey, talking Socinianism
at his table. He felt himself to be a deeply
injured man, because ministers had never
found an opportunity for translating him
to a richer diocese, although he had written
against Paine and Gibbon. If they would not
reward their friends, he argued, why should
he take up their cause by defending Christianity?
The bishops were eminently respectable. They
did not lead immoral lives, and if they gave
a large share of preferment to their families,
that at least was a domestic virtue. Some
of them, Bishop Barrington of Durham, for
example, took a lead in philanthropic movements;
and, if considered simply as prosperous country
gentlemen, little fault could be found with
them. While, however, every commonplace motive
pointed so directly towards a career of subserviency
to the ruling class among the laity, it could
not be expected that they should take a lofty
view of their profession. The Anglican clergy
were not like the Irish priesthood, in close
sympathy with the peasantry, or like the
Scottish ministers, the organs of strong
convictions spreading through the great mass
of the middle and lower classes. A man of
energy, who took his faith seriously, was,
like the Evangelical clergy, out of the road
to preferment, or, like Wesley, might find
no room within the church at all. His colleagues
called him an 'enthusiast,' and disliked
him as a busybody if not a fanatic. They
were by birth and adoption themselves members
of the ruling class; many of them were the
younger sons of squires, and held their livings
in virtue of their birth. Advowsons are the
last offices to retain a proprietary character.
The church of that day owed such a representative
as Horne Tooke to the system which enabled
his father to provide for him by buying a
living. From the highest to the lowest ranks
of clergy, the church was as Matthew Arnold
could still call it, an 'appendage of the
barbarians.' The clergy, that is, as a whole,
were an integral but a subsidiary part of
the aristocracy or the great landed interest.
Their admirers urged that the system planted
a cultivated gentleman in every parish in
the country. Their opponents replied, like
John Sterling, that he was a 'black dragoon
with horse meat and man's meat' -- part of
the garrison distributed through the country
to support the cause of property and order.
In any case the instinctive prepossessions,
the tastes and favourite pursuits of the
profession were essentially those of the
class with which it was so intimately connected.
Arthur Young,(19*) speaking of the French
clergy, observes that at least they are not
poachers and foxhunters, who divide their
time between hunting, drinking, and preaching.
You do not in France find such advertisements
as he had heard of in England, 'Wanted a
curacy in a good sporting country, where
the duty is light and the neighbourhood convivial.'
The proper exercise for a country clergyman,
he rather quaintly observes, is agriculture.
The ideal parson, that is, should be a squire
in canonical dress. The clergy of the eighteenth
century probably varied between the extremes
represented by Trulliber and the Vicar of
Wakefield. Many of them were excellent people,
with a mild taste for literature, contributing
to the Gentleman's Magazine, investigating
the antiquities of their county, occasionally
confuting a deist, exerting a sound judgment
in cultivating their glebes or improving
the breed of cattle, and respected both by
squire and farmers. The 'Squarson,' in Sydney
Smith's facetious phrase, was the ideal clergyman.
The purely sacerdotal qualities, good or
bad, were at a minimum. Crabbe, himself a
type of the class, has left admirable portraits
of his fellows. Profound veneration for his
noble patrons and hearty dislike for intrusive
dissenters were combined in his own case
with a pure domestic life, a keen insight
into the uglier realities of country life
and a good sound working morality. Miss Austen,
who said that she could have been Crabbe's
wife, has given more delicate pictures of
the clergyman as he appeared at the tea-tables
of the time. He varies according to her from
the squire's excellent younger brother, who
is simply a squire in a white neckcloth,
to the silly but still respectable sycophant,
who firmly believes his lady patroness to
be a kind of local deity. Many of the real
memoirs of the day give pleasant examples
of the quiet and amiable lives of the less
ambitious clergy. There is the charming Gilbert
White (1720-1793) placidly studying the ways
of tortoises, and unconsciously composing
a book which breathes an undying charm from
its atmosphere of peaceful repose; William
Gilpin (1724-1804) founding and endowing
parish schools, teaching the catechism, and
describing his vacation tours in narratives
which helped to spread a love of natural
scenery; and thomas Gisborne (1758-1846),
squire and clergyman, a famous preacher among
the evangelicals and a poet after the fashion
of Cowper, who loved his native Needwood
Forest as White loved Selborne and Gilpin
loved the woods of Boldre; and Cowper himself
(1731-1800) who, though not a clergyman,
lived in a clerical atmosphere, and whose
gentle and playful enjoyment of quiet country
life relieves the painfully deep pathos of
his disordered imagination; and the excellent
W. L. Bowles
(1762-1850), whose sonnets first woke Coleridge's
imagination, who spent eighty-eight years
in an amiable and blameless life, and was
country-gentleman, magistrate, antiquary,
clergyman, and poet.(20*) Such names are
enough to recall a type which has not quite
vanished, and which has gathered a new charm
in more stirring and fretful times. These
most excellent people, however, were not
likely to be prominent in movements destined
to break up the placid environment of their
lives nor, in truth, to be sources of any
great intellectual stir.
VI. THE UNIVERSITIES
The effect of these conditions is perhaps
best marked in the state of the universities.
Universities have at different periods been
great centres of intellectual life. The English
universities of the eighteenth century are
generally noted only as embodiments of sloth
and prejudice. The judgments of Wesley and
Gibbon and Adam Smith and Bentham coincide
in regard to Oxford; and Johnson's love of
his university is an equivocal testimony
to its intellectual merits. We generally
think of it as of a sleepy hollow, in which
portly fellows of colleges, like the convivial
Warton, imbibed port wine and sneered at
Methodists, though few indeed rivalled Warton's
services to literature. The universities
in fact had become, as they long continued
to be, high schools chiefly for the use of
the clergy, and if they still aimed at some
wider intellectual training, were sinking
to be institutions where the pupils of the
public schools might, if they pleased, put
a little extra polish upon their classical
and mathematical knowledge. The colleges
preserved their mediaeval constitution; and
no serious changes of their statutes were
made until the middle of the present century.
The clergy had an almost exclusive part in
the management, and dissenters were excluded
even from entering Oxford as students.(21*)
But the clergyman did not as a rule devote
himself to a life of study. He could not
marry as a fellow, but he made no vows of
celibacy. The college, therefore, was merely
a stepping-stone on the way to the usual
course of preferment. A fellow looked forwards
to settling in a college living, or if he
had the luck to act as tutor to a nobleman,
he might soar to a deanery or a bishopric.
The fellows who stayed in their colleges
were probably those who had least ambition,
or who had a taste for an easy bachelor's
life. The universities, therefore, did not
form bodies of learned men interested in
intellectual pursuits; but at most, helped
such men in their start upon a more prosperous
career. The studies flagged in sympathy.
Gray's letters sufficiently reveal the dulness
which was felt by a man of cultivation confined
within the narrow society of college dons
of the day. The scholastic philosophy which
had once found enthusiastic cultivators in
the great universities had more or less held
its own through the seventeenth century,
though repudiated by all the rising thinkers.
Since the days of Locke and Berkeley, it
had fallen utterly out of credit. The bright
common sense of the polished society of the
day looked upon the old doctrine with a contempt,
which, if not justified by familiarity, was
an implicit judgment of the tree by its fruits.
Nobody could suppose the divines of the day
to be the depositaries of an esoteric wisdom
which the vulgar were not worthy to criticise.
They were themselves chiefly anxious to prove
that their sacred mysteries were really not
at all mysterious, but merely one way of
expressing plain common sense. At Oxford,
indeed, the lads were still crammed with
Aldrich, and learned the technical terms
of a philosophy which had ceased to have
any real life in it. At Cambridge, ardent
young radicals spoke with contempt of this
'horrid jargon -- fit only to be chattered
by monkies in a wilderness.'(22*) Even at
Cambridge, they still had disputations On
the old form, but they argued theses from
Locke's essay, and thought that their mathematical
studies were a check upon metaphysical 'jargon.'
It is indeed characteristic of the respect
for tradition that at Cambridge even mathematics
long suffered from a mistaken patriotism
which resented any improvement upon the methods
of Newton. There were some signs of reviving
activity. The fellowships were being distributed
with less regard to private interest. The
mathematical tripos founded at Cambridge
in the middle of the century became the prototype
of all competitive examinations; and half
a century later Oxford followed the precedent
by the Examination Statute of 1800. A certain
number of professorships of such modern studies
as anatomy, history, botany, and geology
were founded during the eighteenth century,
and show a certain sense of a need of broader
views. The lectures upon which Blackstone
founded his commentaries were the product
of the foundation of the Vinerian professorship
in 1751; and the most recent of the Cambridge
colleges, Downing College, shows by its constitution
that a professoriate was now considered to
be desirable. Cambridge in the last years
of the century might have had a body of very
eminent professors. Watson, second wrangler
of 1759, had delivered lectures upon chemistry,
of which it was said by Davy that hardly
any conceivable change in the science could
make them obsolete.(23*) Paley, senior wrangler
in 1763, was an almost unrivalled master
of lucid exposition, and one of his works
is still a textbook at Cambridge. Isaac Milner,
senior wrangler in 1774, afterwards held
the professorships of mathematics and natural
philosophy, and was famous as a sort of ecclesiastical
Dr Johnson. Gilbert Wakefield, second wrangler
in 1776, published an edition of Lucretius,
and was a man of great ability and energy.
Herbert Marsh, second wrangler in 1779, was
divinity professor from 18O7, and was the
first English writer to introduce some knowledge
of the early stages of German criticism.
Porson, the greatest Greek scholar of his
time, became professor in 1790; Malthus,
ninth wrangler in
1788, who was to make a permanent mark upon
political economy, became fellow of Jesus
College in 1793. Waring, senior wrangler
in 1757, Vince, senior wrangler in
1775, and Wollaston, senior wrangler in 1783,
were also professors and mathematicians of
reputation. Towards the end of the century
ten professors were lecturing.(24*) A large
number were not lecturing, though Milner
was good enough to be 'accessible to students.'
Paley and Watson had been led off into the
path of ecclesiastical preferment. Marsh
too became a bishop in 1816. There was no
place for such talents as those of Malthus,
who ultimately became professor at Haileybury.
Wakefield had the misfortune of not being
able to cover his heterodoxy with the conventional
formula. Porson suffered from the same cause,
and from less respectable weaknesses; but
it seems that the university had no demand
for services of the great scholar, and he
did nothing for his £40 a year. Milner was
occupied in managing the university in the
interests of Pitt and Protestantism, and
in waging war against Jacobins and intruders.
There was no lack of ability; but there was
no inducement to any intellectual activity
for its own sake; and there were abundant
temptations for any man of energy to diverge
to the career which offered more intelligible
rewards.
The universities in fact supplied the demand
which was actually operative. They provided
the average clergyman with a degree; they
expected the son of the country-gentleman
or successful lawyer to acquire the traditional
culture of his class, and to spend three
or four years pleasantly, or even, if he
chose, industriously. But there was no such
thing as a learned society, interested in
the cultivation of knowledge for its own
sake, and applauding the devotion of life
to its extension or discussion. The men of
the time who contributed to the progress
of science owed little or nothing to the
universities, and were rather volunteers
from without, impelled by their own idiosyncrasies.
Among the scientific leaders, for example,
Joseph Black (1728-1799) was a Scottish professor.
Priestley (1733-1804) a dissenting minister;
Cavendish
(1731-1810) an aristocratic recluse, who,
though he studied at Cambridge, never graduated;
Watt (1736-1819) a practical mechanician;
and Dalton (1766-1844) a Quaker schoolmaster.
John Hunter (1728-1793) was one of the energetic
Scots who forced their way to fame without
help from English universities. The cultivation
of the natural sciences was only beginning
to take root; and the soil, which it found
congenial, was not that of the great learned
institutions, which held to their old traditional
studies.
I may, then, sum up the result in a few words.
The church had once claimed to be an entirely
independent body, possessing a supernatural
authority, with an organisation sanctioned
by supernatural powers, and entitled to lay
down the doctrines which gave the final theory
of life. Theology was the queen of the sciences
and theologians the interpreters of the first
principles of all knowledge and conduct.
The church of England, on the other hand,
at our period had entirely ceased to be independent:
it was bound hand and foot by acts of parliament:
there was no ecclesiastical organ capable
of shaking in its name, altering its laws
or defining its tenets: it was an aggregate
of offices the appointment to which was in
the hands either of the political ministers
or of the lay members of the ruling class.
It was in reality simply a part of the ruling
class told off to perform divine services:
to maintain order and respectability and
the traditional morality. It had no distinctive
philosophy or theology, for the articles
of belief represented simply a compromise;
an attempt to retain as much of the old as
was practicable and yet to admit as much
of the new as was made desirable by political
considerations. It was the boast of its more
liberal members that they were not tied down
to any definite dogmatic system; but could
have a free hand so long as they did not
wantonly come into conflict with some of
the legal formulae laid down in a previous
generation. The actual teaching showed the
effects of the system. It had been easy to
introduce a considerable leaven of the rationalism
which suited the lay mind; to explain away
the mysterious doctrines upon which an independent
church had insisted as manifestations of
its spiritual privileges, but which were
regarded with indifference or contempt by
the educated laity now become independent.
The priest had been disarmed and had to suit
his teaching to the taste of his patrons
and congregations. The divines of the eighteenth
century had, as they boasted, confuted the
deists; but it was mainly by showing that
they could be deists in all but the name.
The dissenters, less hampered by legal formulae,
had drifted towards Unitarianism. The position
of such divines as Paley, Watson, and Hey
was not so much that the Unitarians were
wrong, as that the mysterious doctrines were
mere sets of words, over which it was superfluous
to quarrel. The doctrine was essentially
traditional; for it was impossible to represent
the doctrines of the church of England as
deductions from any abstract philosophy.
But the traditions were not regarded as having
any mysterious authority. Abstract philosophy
might lead to deism or infidelity. Paley
and his like rejected such philosophy in
the spirit of Locke or even Hume. But it
was always possible to treat a tradition
like any other statement of fact. It could
be proved by appropriate evidence. The truth
of Christianity was therefore merely a question
of facts like the truth of any other passages
of history. It was easy enough to make out
a case for the Christian miracles, and then
the mysteries, after it had been sufficiently
explained that they really meant next to
nothing, could be rested upon the authority
of the miracles. In other words, the accepted
doctrines, like the whole constitution of
the church, could be so modified as to suit
the prejudices and modes of thought of the
laity. The church, it may be said, was thoroughly
secularised. The priest was no longer a wielder
of threats and an interpreter of oracles,
but an entirely respectable gentleman, who
fully sympathised with the prejudices of
his patron and practically admitted that
he had very little to reveal, beyond explaining
that his dogmas were perfectly harmless and
eminently convenient. He preached, however,
a sound common-sense morality, and was not
divided from his neighbours by setting up
the claims characteristic of a sacerdotal
caste. Whether he has become On the whole
better or worse by subsequent changes is
a question not to be asked here; but perhaps
not quite so easily answered as is sometimes
supposed.
The condition of the English church and universities
may be contrasted with that of their Scottish
rivals. The Scottish church and universities
had no great prizes to offer and no elaborate
hierarchy. But the church was a national
institution in a sense different from the
English. The General Assembly was a powerful
body, not overshadowed by a great political
rival. To rise to be a minister was the great
ambition of poor sOns of farmers and tradesmen.
They had to study at the universities in
the intervals, perhaps, of agricultural labour;
and if the learning was slight and the scholarship
below the English standard, the young aspirant
had at least to learn to preach and to acquire
such philosophy as would enable him to argue
upon grace and freewill with some hard-headed
Davie Deans. It Was doubtless owing in part
to these conditions that the Scottish universities
produced many distinguished teachers throughout
the century. Professors had to teach something
which might at least pass for philosophy,
though they were more or less restrained
by the necessity of respecting orthodox prejudices.
At the end of the century, the only schools
of philosophy in the island were to be found
in Scotland, where Reid (1710-1796) and Adam
Smith (1723-1790) had found intelligent disciples,
and where Dugald Stewart, of whom I shall
speak presently, had become the recognised
philosophical authority,
VII. THEORY
What theory corresponds to this practical
order? It implies, in the first place, a
constant reference to tradition. The system
has grown up without any reference to abstract
principles or symmetrical plan. The legal
order supposes a traditional common law,
as the ecclesiastical order a traditional
creed, and the organisation is explicable
only by historical causes. The system represents
a series of compromises, not the elaboration
of a theory. If the squire undertook by way
of supererogation to justify his position
he appealed to tradition and experience.
He invoked the 'wisdom of our ancestors,'
the system of 'checks and balances' which
made our Constitution an unrivalled mixture
of monarchy, aristocracy, and democracy deserving
the 'dread and envy of the world.' The prescription
for compounding that mixture could obviously
be learned by nothing but experiment. Traditional
means empirical. By instinct, rather than
conscious reasoning, Englishmen had felt
their way to establishing the 'palladia of
our liberties': trial by jury, the 'Habeas
Corpus' Act, and the substitution of a militia
for a standing army. The institutions were
cherished because they had been developed
by long struggles and were often cherished
when their real justification had disappeared.
The Constitution had not been 'made' but
had 'grown'; or, in other words, the one
rule had been the rule of thumb. That is
an excellent rule in its way, and very superior
to an abstract rule which neglects or overrides
experience. The 'logic of facts,' moreover,
may be trusted to produce a certain harmony:
and general principles, though not consciously
invoked, tacitly govern the development of
institutions worked out under uniform conditions.
The simple reluctance to pay money without
getting money's worth might generate the
important principle that representation should
go with taxation, without embodying any theory
of a 'social contract' such as was offered
by an afterthought to give a philosophical
sanction. Englishmen, it is said, had bought
their liberties step by step, because at
each step they were in a position to bargain
with their rulers. What they had bought they
were determined to keep and considered to
be their inalienable property. One result
is conspicuous. In England the ruling classes
did not so much consider their privileges
to be something granted by the state, as
the power of the state to be something derived
from their concessions. Though the lord-lieutenant
and the justices of the peace were nominated
by the crown, their authority came in fact
as an almost spontaneous consequence of their
birthright or their acquired position in
the country. They shone by their own light
and were really the ultimate sources of authority.
Seats in parliament, preferments in the church,
commissions in the army belonged to them
like their estates; and they seemed to be
qualified by nature, rather than by appointment,
to act in judicial and administrative capacities.
The system of 'self-government' embodies
this view. The functions of government were
assigned to men already powerful by their
social position. The absence of the centralised
hierarchy of officials gave to Englishmen
the sense of personal liberty which compelled
the admiration of Voltaire and his countrymen
in the eighteenth century. In England were
no lettres de cachet, and no Bastille. A
man could say what he thought and act without
fear of arbitrary rule. There was no such
system as that which, in France, puts the
agents of the central power above the ordinary
law of the land. This implies what has been
called the 'rule of the law' in England.
'With us every official from the prime minister
down to a constable or a collector of taxes'
(as Professor Dicey explains the principle)
'is under the same responsibility for every
act done without legal justification as any
other citizen.'(25*) The early centralisation
of the English monarchy had made the law
supreme, and instead of generating a new
structure had combined and regulated the
existing social forces. The sovereign power
was thus farmed to the aristocracy instead
of forming an organ of its own. Instead of
resigning power they were forced to exercise
it on condition of thorough responsibility
to the central judiciary. Their privileges
were not destroyed but were combined with
the discharge of corresponding duties. Whatever
their shortcomings, they were preserved from
the decay which is the inevitable consequence
of a divorce of duties from privileges.
Another aspect of the case is equally clear.
If the privilege is associated with a duty,
the duty may also be regarded as a privilege.
The doctrine seems to mark a natural stage
in the evolution of the conception of duty
to the state. The power which is left to
a member of the ruling class is also part
of his dignity. Thus we have an amalgamation
between the conceptions of private property
and public trust. 'In so far as the ideal
of feudalism is perfectly realised,' it has
been said,(26*) 'all that we can call public
law is merged in private law; jurisdiction
is property; office is property; the kingship
itself is property.' This feudal ideal was
still preserved with many of the institutions
descended from feudalism. The king's right
to his throne was regarded as of the same
kind as the right to a private estate. His
rights as king were also his rights as the
owner of the land.(27*) Subordinate landowners
had similar rights, and as the royal power
diminished greater powers fell to the aggregate
of constitutional kinglets who governed the
country. Each of them was from one point
of view an official, but each also regarded
his office as part of his property. The country
belonged to him and his class rather than
he to the country. We occasionally find the
quaint theory which deduced political rights
from property in land. The freeholders were
the owners of the soil and might give notice
to quit to the rest of the population.(28*)
They had therefore a natural right to carry
on government in their own interests. The
ruling classes, however, were not marked
off from others by any deep line of demarcation;
they could sell their own share in the government
to anybody who was rich enough to buy it,
and there was a constant influx of new blood.
Moreover, they did in fact improve their
estate with very great energy, and discharged
roughly, but in many ways efficiently, the
duties which were also part of their property.
The nobleman or even the squire was more
than an individual; as head of a family he
was a life tenant of estates which he desired
to transmit to his descendants. He was a
'corporation sole' and had some of the spirit
of a corporation. A college or a hospital
is founded to discharge a particular function;
its members continue perhaps to recognise
their duty; but they resent any interference
from outside as sacrilege or confiscation.
It is for them alone to judge how they can
best carry out, and whether they are actually
carrying out, the aims of the corporate life.
In the same way the great noble took his
part in legislation, church preferment, the
command of the army, and so forth, and fully
admitted that he was bound in honour to play
his part effectively; but he was equally
convinced that he was subject to nothing
outside of his sense of honour. His duties
were also his rights. The naïf expression
of this doctrine by a great borough proprietor,
'May I not do what I like with my own?' was
to become proverbial.(29*)
This, finally, suggests that a doctrine of
'individualism' is implied throughout. The
individual rights are the antecedent and
the rights of the state a consequent or corollary.
Every man has certain sacred rights accruing
to him in virtue of 'prescription' or tradition,
through his inherited position in the social
organism. The 'rule of law' secures that
he shall exercise them without infringing
the privileges of his neighbour. He may moreover
be compelled by the law to discharge them
on due occasion. But, as there is no supreme
body which can sufficiently superintend,
stimulate, promote, or dismiss, the active
impulse must come chiefly from his own sense
of the fitness of things. The efficiency
therefore depends upon his being in such
a position that his duty may coincide with
his personal interest. The political machinery
can only work efficiently on the assumption
of a spontaneous activity of the ruling classes,
prompted by public spirit or a sense of personal
dignity. Meanwhile, 'individualism' in a
different sense was represented by the forces
which made for progress rather than order,
and to them I must now turn.
NOTES:
1. 22 George III. c. 82.
2. Parl. Hist. xxx, 787.
3. State Trials, xxiv, 382.
4. Parl. Hist. xxv, 472.
5. The country-gentlemen, said Wilberforce
in 1800, are the 'very nerves and ligatures
of the body politic.' -- Correspondence,
i. 219.
6. Gneist's Self-Government, (3rd edition,
1871), p. 879.
7. See Dictionary of National Biography.
8. The Law of the Constitution, p 209.
9. See Sir J. F. Stephen's History of the
Criminal Law (1883), i. 470. He quotes Blackstone's
famous statement that there were 160 felonies
without benefit of clergy, and shows that
this gives a very uncertain measure of the
severity of the law. A single act making
larceny in general punishable by death would
be more severe than fifty separate acts,
making fifty different varieties of larceny
punishable by death. He adds, however, that
the scheme of punishment was 'severe to the
highest degree, and destitute of every sort
of principle or system.' The number of executions
in the early part of this century varied
apparently from a fifth to a ninth of tbe
capital sentences passed. See table in Porter's
Progress of the Nation (1851), p. 635.
10. See the references to Cottu's report
of 1822 in Stephen's History, i. 429, 439,
451. Cottu's book was translated by Blanco
White.
11. Gneist's Self-Government (1871), p. 194.
It is characteristic that J. S. Mill, in
his Representative Government, remarks that
the 'Quarter Sessions' are formed in the
'most anomalous' way; that they represent
the old feudal principle, and are at variance
with the fundamental principles of representative
government (Rep. Gov. (1867), p. 113). The
mainspring of the old system had become a
simple anomaly to the new radicalism.
12. See Arthur Young, passim. there was,
however, an improvement even in the first
half of the century. See Cunningham's Growth
of English Industry, etc. (Modern Times),
p. 378.
13. See Military Forces of the Crown, by
Charles M. Clode (1869), for a full account
of the facts.
14. Parl. Hist. xxx. 490. Clode states (i.
222) that £9,000,000 was spent upon barracks
by 1804, and, it seems, without proper authority.
15. Debate in Parl. Hist. xiii. 1382, etc.,
and see Walpole's Correspondence, i. 400,
for some characteristic comments.
16. Clode, ii. 86.
17. See the famous case in 1778 in which
Erskine made his first appearance, in State
Trials, xxi. Lord St. Vincent's struggle
against the corruption of his time is described
by Prof Laughton in the Dictionary of National
Biography, (s. v. Sir John Jervis). In 1801
half a million a year was stolen, besides
all the waste due to corruption and general
muddling.
18. The list, checked from other sources
of information, is as follows: -- Manners
Sutton, archbishop of Canterbury, was grandson
of the third duke of Rutland; Edward Vernon,
archbishop of York, was son of the first
Lord Vernon and cousin of the third Lord
Harcourt, whose estates he inherited; Shute
Barrington, bishop of Durham, was son of
the first and brother of the second Viscount
Barrington; Brownlow North, bishop of Winchester,
was uncle to the earl of Guildford; James
Cornwallis, bishop of Lichfield, was uncle
to the second marquis, whose peerage he inherited;
George Pelham, bishop of Exeter, was brother
of the earl of Chichester; Henry Bathurst,
bishop of Norwich, was nephew of the first
earl; George Henry Law, bishop of Chester,
was brother of the first Lord Ellenborough;
Edward Legge, bishop of Oxford, was son of
the second earl of Dartmouth; Henry Ryder,
bishop of Gloucester, was brother to the
earl of Harrowby; George Murray, bishop of
Sodor and Man, was nephew. in. law to the
duke of Athol and brother-in-law to the earl
of Kinnoul. Of the fourteen tutors, etc.,
mentioned above, William Howley, bishop of
London, had been tutor to the prince of Orange
at Oxford; George Pretyman Tomline, bishop
of Lincoln, had been Pitt's tutor at Cambridge;
Richard Beadon, bishop of Bath and Wells,
had been tutor to the duke of Gloucester
at Cambridge; Folliott Cornewall, bishop
of Worcester, had been made chaplain to the
House of Commons by the influence of his
cousin, the Speaker; John Buckner, bishop
of Chichester, had been tutor to the duke
of Richmond; Henry William Majendie, bishop
of Bangor, was the son of Queen Charlotte's
English master, and had been tutor to William
IV, George Isaac Huntingford, bishop of Hereford,
had been tutor to Addington, prime minister,
Thomas Burgess, bishop of St. David's, was
a personal friend of Addington, John Fisher,
bishop of Salisbury, had been tutor to the
duke of Kent; John Luxmoore, bishop of St.
Asaph, had been tutor to the duke of Buccleugh,
Samuel Goodenough, bishop of Carlisle, had
been tutor to the sons of the third duke
of Portland and was connected with Addington;
William Lort Mansel, bishop of Bristol, had
been tutor to Perceval at Cambridge, and
owed to Perceval the mastership of trinity,
Walter King, bishop of Rochester, had been
secretary to the duke of Portland, and Bowyer
Edward Sparke, bishop of Ely, had been tutor
to the duke of Rutland. the two remaining
bishops were Herbert Marsh, bishop of Peterborough,
who had established a claim by defending
Pitt's financial measures in an important
pamphlet, and William Van Mildert, bishop
of Llandaff, who had been chaplain to the
Grocers' Company and became known as a preacher
in London.
19. Travels in France (1892), p. 327.
20. See A Country Clergyman of the Eighteenth
Century (Thomas Twining), 1882, for a pleasant
picture of the class.
21. At Cambridge subscription was abolished
for undergradutes in 1775; and bachelors
of arts had only to declare themselves 'bona-fide
members of the church of England.'
22. Gilbert Wakefield's Memoirs, ii. 149.
23. De Quincey, Works (1863), ii. 106.
24. Wordsworth's University Life, etc. (1874),
83-87.
25. Professor Dicey's Lectures on the Law
of the Constitution (1885), p. 278. Professor
Dicey gives an admirable exposition of the
'rule of law.'
26. Pollock and Maitland's History of English
Laws, i, 208.
27. A characteristic consequence is that
Hale and Blackstone make no distinction between
public and private law. Austin (Jurisprudence
(1869), 773-76) applauds them for this peculiarity,
which he regards as a proof of originality,
though it would rather seem to be an acceptance
of the traditional view. Austin, however,
retorts the charge of Verwirrung upon German
critics.
28. This is the theory of Defoe in his Original
Power of the People of England (Works by
Hazlitt, vol. iii. See especially p. 57).
29. The fourth duke of Newcastle in the House
of Lords, 3 Dec. 1830.
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