登陆注册
37741800000015

第15章 Chapter I(15)

Under these conditions Mill's position is characteristic.He wrote much and forcibly.Some of his articles of this period in the Westminster are collected in the first volume of the dissertations.He omitted others which refer to matters of more ephemeral interest.They show great power,but they also indicate the real difficulty.Mill writes as a philosopher and an expounder of general ideas.But he also writes as a partisan --insisting,for example,upon the ballot of which he afterwards came to disapprove --and it is always a very difficult matter to reconcile the requirements imposed by these different points of view.Mill was scarcely immersed enough in the current of political agitation to plant telling personal blows;and,on the other hand,his theories seem to be cramped by the necessity of supporting a platform.He aimed,he says,at two points.He tried,and,he thinks,with partial success,to supply a philosophy of Radicalism,wider than Bentham's,and yet including what was permanently valuable in Bentham.He tried also,and this aim was,from the first chimerical,'to rouse the Radicals to the formation of a powerful party.The articles upon Durham were partly prompted by this purpose;and,though unsuccessful in that respect,he spoke,he thinks,the 'word in season,'which at a critical moment directed public opinion towards the concession of self-government to the Colonies.(29)The articles in the Westminster show,now that we can see later developments,how clearly he saw the real difficulty,and yet how far he was from estimating its full significance.They are of essential importance to an understanding of his whole career.(30)In the article which was his farewell to politics for the time,he elaborately states the problem.He considers what are a man's,natural,politics.He claims more than the usual faith in the influence of reason and virtue over men's minds;but then it is in the influence 'of the reason and virtue upon their own side of the question.'A man is made a Liberal or a Conservative on the average by his position;he is made a Liberal or a Conservative of a particular kind by his 'intellect and heart.'In other words,parties,in the main,represent classes;and the fundamental opposition is between the,privileged,and the,disqualified,classes.The line,then,as with the old Radicals,is drawn between the privileged,who are chiefly the landowners and their adherents,clerical,legal,and military,and the,disqualified,'who are chiefly the lower middle classes and the working classes.Now,the Radical party ought to combine the whole strength of the disqualified against the privileged.Why do they not?Among the superficial reasons is that want of a leader,which Mill hoped to supply by Durham.

Another personal reason is that,as he complains rather bitterly,(31)the Radicals never spoke so as to secure the sympathy of the working classes.This points to the real difficulty.There was a gulf between the middle and the working classes,as well as between the,privileged,and the 'disqualified.'The real aim of Mill's articles is to show how this gulf could be surmounted.All the,disqualified,might be brought into line if only the philosophical Radicals could be got to attract the working classes,and the working classes to follow the Radicals.Mill therefore endeavours to prove that the Radical measures were in fact intended for the benefit of the working classes,and might consequently be made attractive.The position was in fact precisely this.The Chartist agitation was becoming conspicuous,and the Chartists had broken off from the Radicals.

Mill had to persuade them that they did not know their true friends.His sincerity and the warmth of his sympathy are unmistakable,but so is the difficulty of the task.

In the first place,he repudiates universal suffrage (one of the six points).He thinks it bad in point of policy,because to propose it would alienate the whole middle class at once,who would see in it a direct attack upon property.But universal suffrage was also bad in itself,because the mass of the very lowest class was ignorant,degraded,and utterly unfit for power.

The intelligent working man ought to recognise the fact,and therefore not to grant the suffrage to the lowest class.What,then,was to be done?The answer,given emphatically in his last article,is that we should govern for the working classes by means of the middle classes.That,he says,should be the motto of every Radical.The ideal is a government which should adopt such a policy as would be adopted under universal suffrage in a country where the masses were educated so as to be fit for it.In other words,the great aim of Radicals should be to redress practical grievances.

Did,then,the Radical platform aim at such redress?Mill's proof that it did is significant.The Radicals were unanimous against the Corn-laws;and the Corn-laws,as he argues,(32)injure the poor man because they lower the rate of profit,and are ruining the small capitalist and destroying our trade.The philosophical Radicals were supporters of the new Poor-law.It had often been said that the sinecurists were in fact rich paupers living on other men's labours.Mill inverts the argument by saying that the paupers under the old system were poor sinecurists,equally living upon other men's labours.To say nothing of some smaller grievances,such as taxes on articles consumed by the poor,logging in the army,and enclosure of commons,which were attacked by the Radicals,the Radicals also wished to discharge,one of the highest duties of government,by setting up a system of national education.It is now easy to see why these proposals failed to satisfy the class to whom the Radicals were to appeal.A great part of them,he says,were,Owenites,or,in other words,inclined to Socialism.They had,as Mill regretfully admits,crude views upon political economy.

同类推荐
  • 医门补要

    医门补要

    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。
  • 黄宗羲梨洲文

    黄宗羲梨洲文

    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。
  • 夷氛闻记

    夷氛闻记

    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。
  • 吴逆始末记

    吴逆始末记

    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。
  • 兵经百言

    兵经百言

    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
  • 浮梦终究一场空

    浮梦终究一场空

    她一出生便被巫婆占卜为凰命,是九重天上未来的天后娘娘。她不喜欢穿白衣,却因为他的一句好看,穿了三万多年…可到头来,却被那传说中的六界第一美人儿抢了夫君…本以为就这么潇洒的云游四方,度过一生…不过,那说死也要跟在她身后的魔君又到底是怎么一回事?
  • 杀手绝色倾城妖孽不要跑

    杀手绝色倾城妖孽不要跑

    你们见过11岁就是博士学历的吗?我见过!你们见过11岁就是世界第一杀手特工吗?我见过!你们见过有异能的少女吗?我见过!你们见过年仅11岁就倾国倾城的少女吗?我见过!你们见过11岁就是世界首富的少女吗?我见过!好不容易重生一世,当上杀手,放假还有任务!什么?!让我去杀和我并排第一的杀手?简单一个异能干掉!什么?!既然也有异能?还是和我一样的全职属性!虽然我没有他的控制术……看过电影都可以冤家路窄的碰上!一次意外,夺初夜,初吻不翼而飞!你给我等着!我一定会让你生不如死!却不知她终究斗不过他,好不容易破镜重圆,什么?!什么世界主宰我不要!我就要他!刚开始男主虐女主后面女主加倍虐男主~
  • 神奇宝贝之希

    神奇宝贝之希

    本文吐槽向,抽风向,更新不定期,完全看心情!以上~
  • 晋江当代旅外文化名人辑要

    晋江当代旅外文化名人辑要

    当代晋江,旅居晋江域外的文化工作者、文艺家灿若星群。本书撷取其中与母土保持较密切联系的、对家乡建设有较大贡献的,在该文化艺术领域、旅居区域有相当影响的33位,以编选的形式,分别介绍他们的生活工作经历、文化艺术成就,摘录、引用专家文章、观点,突出专家对他们的评述、评介,同时也突出他们在晋江的活动痕迹。入选者包括文学方面的陈明玉、庄之明、李君哲、许谋清、洪辉煌、颜纯钩,影视方面的颜纯钧、洪群、李国兴、洪雷、许言,书画方面的王维宝、黄鸿仪、黄达德、丁明镜、李德谦、施子清、许晴野、蔡健如,戏剧方面的黄奇石、庄长江,摄影方面的洪礼艺等。
  • 灵点

    灵点

    点滴成溪,溪成河,河成江,江成海,人有几性,人性,神性,魔性......冲冠一怒为知己,红颜知己,先知己而后红颜天地将乱,谁主乾坤?万物生灵,谁是主宰?一个少年从南村走出,一切由灵开始,从灵点开始......
  • 叶之秋

    叶之秋

    何时最简单?一叶知秋。叶先生"一片叶子的深情你可懂?"陶小姐"是懂非懂,懂又不懂。"叶先生一个人在心里默念,叶子的深情在于它对秋的等待,只有秋来了,它才愿意凋零。那秋风萧瑟,落叶凋零,凄美又遗憾。
  • 超时空之最强大脑

    超时空之最强大脑

    N多年后的地球,战争的形态发生了巨大的变化,机缘巧合之下,一位正在执行特殊任务的特战尖兵,通过时光裂缝来到了2280年后地球。面对不一样的时空维度,他是默默无闻,还是异军突出,创就他最强超级大脑的传奇之旅,战异形,打星战,救盟友,一步步塑造属于他的传奇,未来他又会创造怎样的奇迹!
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 烛龙骨

    烛龙骨

    上古先天神祇烛龙的一缕残魂融入了少年叶痕体内,并道出了千年前神魔大战的往事,叶痕继承神祇血脉,肩负灭族之仇,这烛龙骨就是修炼之始。仙道弟子叶痕深知羽化之路漫漫,修炼之道,唯坚不破,唯觉方明。故心有所愿,不舍星辰。古来神佛皆咏歌,谁予凡夫载功德。谁说凡人就该平庸度日,谁说神佛都是与生俱来,谁说蜉蝣撼不动大树,谁说蝴蝶飞不过沧海!
  • 苦中乐

    苦中乐

    当一个年轻睿智,内心有远大抱负发财不要命敢碰瓷大货的会拉二胡的乞丐,一个被股市玩弄至倾家荡产的的年轻商人,一个在地铁站独自唱歌干三分监工的女画家,还有一个痴迷于尸体解剖总把眼珠这个词挂在嘴边的实习法医一起生活会是怎样一幅景象?爱捉弄人的命运拿起毛衣针她想用阴差阳错的故事把这四个年轻人聚集在一起,看看他们的生活相遇时究竟会碰撞出怎样的火花。