登陆注册
5988300000070

第70章 BENTHAM'S LIFE(14)

The end of this period,moreover,was bringing him into closer contact with English political life.Bentham,as we have seen,rejected the whole Jacobin doctrine of abstract rights.So long as English politics meant either the acceptance of a theory which,for whatever reason,gathered round it no solid body of support,or,on the other hand,the acceptance of an obstructive and purely conservative principle,to which all reform was radically opposed,Bentham was necessarily in an isolated position.He had 'nothing particular to say'to Fox.He was neither a Tory nor a Jacobin,and cared little for the paralysed Whigs.He allied himself therefore,so far as he was allied with any one,with the philanthropic agitators who stood,like him,outside the lines of party.The improvement of prisons was not a party question.

A marked change --not always,I think,sufficiently emphasised by historians --had followed the second war.The party-divisions began to take the form which was to become more marked as time went on.The old issues between Jacobin and Anti-Jacobin no longer existed.Napoleon had become the heir of the revolution.

The great struggle was beginning in which England commanded the ocean,while the Continent was at the feet of the empire.For a time the question was whether England,too,should be invaded.After Trafalgar invasion became hopeless.The Napoleonic victories threatened to exclude English trade from the Continent:while England retorted by declaring that the Continent should trade with nobody else.Upon one side the war was now appealing to higher feelings.It was no longer a crusade against theories,but a struggle for national existence and for the existence of other nations threatened by a gigantic despotism.Men like Wordsworth and Coleridge,who could not be Anti-Jacobins,had been first shocked by the Jacobin treatment of Switzerland,and now threw themselves enthusiastically into the cause which meant the rescue of Spain and Germany from foreign oppression.The generous feeling which had resented the attempt to forbid Frenchmen to break their own bonds,now resented the attempts of Frenchmen to impose bonds upon others.The patriotism which prompted to a crusade had seemed unworthy,but the patriotism which was now allied with the patriotism of Spain and Germany involved no sacrifice of other sentiment.

Many men had sympathised with the early revolution,not so much from any strong sentiment of evils at home as from a belief that the French movement was but a fuller development of the very principles which were partially embodied in the British Constitution.They had no longer to choose between sympathising with the enemies of England and sympathising with the suppressors of the old English liberties.

But,on the other hand,an opposite change took place.The disappearance of the Jacobin movement allowed the Radicalism of home growth to display itself more fully.English Whigs of all shades had opposed the war with certain misgivings.They had been nervously anxious not to identify themselves with the sentiments of the Jacobins.They desired peace with the French,but had to protest that it was not for love of French principles.That difficulty was removed.There was no longer a vision --such as Gillray had embodied in his caricatures --of a guillotine in St.James's Street:or of a Committee of Public Safety formed by Fox,Paine,and Horne Tooke.Meanwhile Whig prophecies of the failure of the war were not disproved by its results.Though the English navy had been victorious,English interference on the Continent had been futile.Millions of money had been wasted:and millions were flowing freely.

Even now we stand astonished at the reckless profusion of the financiers of the time.And what was there to show for it?The French empire,so far from being destroyed,had been consolidated.If we escaped for the time,could we permanently resist the whole power of Europe?When the Peninsular War began we had been fighting,except for the short truce of Amiens,for sixteen years;and there seemed no reason to believe that the expedition to Portugal in 1808would succeed better than previous efforts.The Walcheren expedition of 1809was a fresh proof of our capacity for blundering.Pauperism was still increasing rapidly,and forebodings of a war with America beginning to trouble men interested in commerce.The English Opposition had ample texts for discourses;and a demand for change began to spring up which was no longer a refection of foreign sympathies.An article in the Edinburgh of January 1808,which professed to demonstrate the hopelessness of the Peninsular War,roused the wrath of the Tories.The Quarterly Review was started by Canning and Scott,and the Edinburgh,in return,took a more decidedly Whig colour.

The Radicals now showed themselves behind the Whigs.Cobbett,who had been the most vigorous of John Bull Anti-Jacobins,was driven by his hatred of the tax-gatherer and the misery of the agricultural labourers into the opposite camp,and his Register became the most effective organ of Radicalism.demands for reform began again to make themselves heard in parliament.Sir Francis Burdett,who had sat at the feet of Horne Tooke,and whose return with Cochrane for Westminster in 1807was the first parliamentary triumph of the reformers,proposed a motion on 15th June 1809,which was,of course,rejected,but which was the first of a series,and marked the revival of a serious agitation not to cease till the triumph of 1832.

Meanwhile Bentham,meditating profoundly upon the Panopticoin,had at last found out that he had begun at the wrong end.His reasoning had been thrown away upon the huge dead weight of official indifference,or worse than indifference.Why did they not accept the means for producing the greatest happiness of the greatest number?Because statesmen did not desire the end.

同类推荐
  • 艮岳记

    艮岳记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 楹联丛话全编

    楹联丛话全编

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 後鑒錄

    後鑒錄

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Merchant of Venice

    Merchant of Venice

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 中论

    中论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 竹相日记

    竹相日记

    这部小说其实主要就是写写沙雕作者周围发生的小事情啦,希望给大家带去开心哟。
  • 逆命朔天

    逆命朔天

    一界废材,机缘巧合踏上修仙之路。偶然得一逆天仙宝,从此改变了人生。长路漫漫,他用自己的努力踏上了巅峰。他的事迹,令得后人们广为传颂。人们送给他一个代名词——逆命朔天!
  • 文明之原始时代

    文明之原始时代

    从水下的第一个生命的萌芽开始,到石器时代的巨型野兽,人类已经历许多。现在,带领您的族人,开始伟大的征程吧!【成功制作捕鱼笼,解锁新标签:捕鱼达人】【成功制作投矛器,解锁新标签:投矛手】【成功制作藤甲,解锁新标签:藤甲兵】……穿越原始时代,获得文明系统,靠不断解锁新的标签,才能壮大部落,才能在这个危机重重的世界活下去,并征服它!
  • 北海道物语

    北海道物语

    来自一流商贸公司的塔野将妻子和孩子留在东京,独自赴北海道札幌出任分公司经理。本以为短暂的单身赴任生活会在平淡中结束,却不期与二十岁的女大学生绘梨子相遇。绘梨子的爱自由而奔放,塔野深陷其中无法自拔。眼看返回东京的调令即将下达,面对不可多得的晋升良机和从未有过的炽烈爱情,塔野该何去何从……
  • 全职仙探

    全职仙探

    大唐公元六四八年,在未来号称大唐第一神探的青年狄仁杰莫名穿越到了一个修仙世界,为了破开各种发生在此地的离奇案件,他必须要懂得丹道、术道、炼器之道、五行之道、符道、阵法之道等等,由此踏上了全职修仙之路。诡异的吊尸人,离奇的现世客,万魂路尽头哭泣的虫师,天下太平的风雨歌师,大金傀的上山师,河神,先灵异体等等诡异莫测的人物事件一一出现,背后的阴谋与人性又是几何?而作为一个儒门学子的狄仁杰,却誓要在此地走出一个神断修仙为苍生申冤的仙侠之路。
  • 美人款款昔如歌

    美人款款昔如歌

    如果前世没有遇见你,今生便不会相遇;如果前世没有负了你,今生也不会分离;如果前世没有记得你,今生也无需交集;我只道是前世欠了你,今生要来偿还。却不曾想过,不止前世今生,而是生生世世,你中了我的蛊,我入了情的毒,我们都无药可救。
  • 寻魔斩之

    寻魔斩之

    “我要的力量是究极的力量,是能够凌驾于一切力量之上的力量。”“有一个男人,他的人生很失败,因为他在死的那一秒才听到原本属于他的那声‘爸爸’。”“死是什么,是一片黑暗,是没有了思想,是无法拥有感情,是不可逾越的距离,是含着泪的遗憾最终也不会拥有……还是永远听不到的我爱你,和无法穿越时空的对不起。”“我说过,我是个认真不起来的神经病,可是我还说过,当一个人让我认真起来了,那他要么要享福了,要么,他就快死了!”
  • 离树祫殇

    离树祫殇

    当我坠入深海时,有一个人紧握住我的手,我看着他正努力的将我救上岸,可海水好汹涌,刹时,我放弃了自己,最后沉入深海,、、、、、、璟惜爱你,但不能告诉你,因为还有他
  • 韶华与卿皆不负

    韶华与卿皆不负

    新书已发《恰逢三月恰逢你》她在雨里看见重病的他。在院子里看见昏迷的他。被人重伤。。这一世顾念寒骑着马儿走在花轿前面。轿子里是他爱了两世的女人。十里红妆,前来娶她。这一次前世有因无果,今生,韶华与卿皆不负,不负韶华不负卿……「古风现代微小说,不喜勿进」
  • 原始崛起之文明与帝王

    原始崛起之文明与帝王

    一个类似文明6的系统,让林远怎么在原始时代里叱咤风云?开局就有马,旁边又有铜,不远处还有自然奇观,传奇开局,林远大笑:这把怎么输?看林远用铁器收服原始部落,用火炮火枪打退殖民者的入侵,用高大威猛的战舰轰开失落帝国大门,甚至建造一个个辉煌的奇观,闻名世界。