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WILLIAM BLACKWOOD, no. 17, PRINCE'S STREET, EDINBURGH;

AND T. CADELL AND W. DAVIES, STRAND, LONDON;

To whom Communications (post paid) may be addressed.

SOLD ALSO BY ALL THE BOOKSELLERS OF THE UNITED KINGDOM.

JAMES BALLANTYNE & CO. PRINTERS, EDINBURGH.

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BLACKWOOD'S

EDINBURGH MAGAZINE.

No. XLVII.

FEBRUARY 1821.

VOL. VIII.

THOUGHTS ON THE PRESENT POLITICAL ASPECT OF THE TIMES.

HISTORY, says Bolingbroke, borrowing his observation from the Greek, is Philosophy teaching by example. This is, perhaps, rather what History ought to be, than what it is; for, however mankind may profit in their individual capacities from the lessons of experience, it would seem to be otherwise in the case of nations. The great body of a people, indeed, can seldom act in concert to the accomplishment of any good end. "Every thing for the people, and nothing by the people," is an axiom in politics, of which it is impossible not to admit the truth. Unfortunately, however, this incapacity of the people to act for themselves, does not always dispose their rulers to undertake the task of assisting them; for, while the spirit of innovation and improvement is so busily at work in every other department of art and science, the art of government seems too often to stand still. In vain does the page of history point out the consequences of misrule. It is not that the statesmen of the present day are blind to the mistakes of their predecessors, but, while they perceive the effects of former errors, they persist themselves in the same fatal neglect of the signs of the times; and their misconduct will be again recorded in history, to be alike derided and disregarded by their

successors.

There is a passage in the Memoirs of the great Sully, that is often quoted, and which well deserves the attention of all VOL. VIII.

those who are entrusted with the administration of public affairs. "Les Révolutions qui arrivent dans les grands états ne sont point un effet du hazard ni du caprice des peuples. Rien ne revolte les grands d'un Royaume comme un gouvernment foible et derangé. Pour la populace ce n'est jamais par envie d'attaquer qu'elle se soulève, mais par impatience de souffrir." At the present moment, when growing discontent pervades so large a portion of Europe, it may be well worth the while to consider, whether this maxim will not explain the cause of those general and almost simultaneous efforts which have been made by the people of so many different states, to effect a change in the form of their governments.

When the Emperor Napoleon was advancing with rapid strides to the completion of his purpose, in the conquest of the world, the dread of his power, and the detestation of his tyranny, roused a spirit of resistance in the hearts of the people of Europe, which effected in two campaigns, what the hired coalitions of confederated sovereigns had in vain attempted to perform during a war of twenty years. But the people were not incited by their fears alone. A more generous principle of action was supplied by the hopes they entertained for themselves; hopes founded on the promises of their respective rulers, which encouraged them to expect, that the destruction of the Corsican stratocracy should be suc3 P

ceeded by the general establishment of free constitutions and representativegovernments. How these promises were fulfilled, is too well known to need a long recital. The downfal of Bonaparte was scarcely achieved, when the allied sovereigns conspired together to put down and extinguish that very spirit to which they had been indebted for all their triumphs, and thus lost an opportunity, such as may probably never recur,of establishing their thrones in the hearts of their subjects, and securing the cause of monarchy for centuries to come, by associating the title of King with every generous and glorious recollection. As it is, they have acted as if they wished to destroy for ever that ancient feeling, which has hitherto been expressed by the word loyalty; and it will require almost superhuman skill to efface the impressions of the last five years. Conciliation and concession, applied with judgment, and applied in time, might yet do much; but such remedies are too often neglected, till the season is past when they might be applied with advantage. It is too late to conciliate, when the bayonet has been used, and perhaps used in vain, to intimidate. It is true, force may prevail for a time, but it is the people who win the game at last; and all that is really left to the option of their governors is, to decide whether they will, by quietly consenting to such reforms as the progress of information demands, prevent the horrors and confusion which must attend upon a revolution. Who does not see that all the great revolutions upon record may be traced to that obstinate and inflexible resistance to innovation and improvement, which is so generally the characteristic of those in power; and "which at last so irritates common sense and right moral feeling, as to make them pass their proper bounds, and accomplish that reform by force, which ought to be the quiet result of following nature through the gradual stages of human improvement." Thus, the peace of Christendom might have been preserved, and the separation of the Protestants prevented, but for the obstinate pertinacity with which the Catholic Church defended even the abuses of her establishment.

Again: Humanity would have been spared the disgrace which the frightful excesses of the French revolution have stamped upon it, if the rulers of that

people, instead of continuing a mons strous system of feudal oppression, down to a period when all the habits and feelings of society were in opposi tion to it, had from time to time act commodated their constitution to the altered state of the world, by the silent introduction of such changes as would have satisfied the growing appetite for improvement. Lastly-Ferdinand might be now reigning in Spain the limited monarch of a united people, if, at his first restoration, he had put himself at the head of the Liberales, and been content with directing that re forming spirit, which could not be any longer restrained. By the voluntary grant of a part, at a time when it would have been accepted with gratitude, he would have avoided the necessity of yielding all, a necessity to which he has been reduced by delaying the mo ment of compliance till he had no longer the power to deny. For, as it is, his conduct has been such as to for feit irrevocably the confidence of his subjects, and the consequence of his conduct has been a reaction, which has produced correspondent excesses on their side, in the formation of ca constitution, which must give rise to worse evils than those it is intended to prevent.

"What seems its head, The likeness of a kingly crown has on

but Ferdinand has little more than the name of King; he is not only deprived of the power of doing harm, but debarred from the privilege of doing good; his title is a sarcasm, and his crown a mockery. The people too will find, that in their anxiety to secure the ascendancy of democracy, they have been destroying the bulwarks of liberty, and it is to be feared that the whole constitution will tumble to pieces, and furnish another instance of failure, to be noted down and quoted by the enemies of popular government. Let us hope, however, that it may rather induce both rulers and people to cultivate a good understanding with each other, by teaching them that they must co-operate together in order to accomplish any real and lasting benefit to their country. Above all, it will help 'to demonstrate, that the current of public opinion is every day becoming more irresistible. The attempt to oppose it altogether is about as practicable as it would be to ob

to stamp the age in which they live

struct the course of a river. For, though this might perhaps be done with the impress of their own character,

for a time, near the source, in the full vigour of the stream it is impossible. If from a superabundant supply there should be reason to apprehend an overflowing of the banks, it is surely wiser to provide additional water-courses, than to attempt the construction of a dam to arrest its progress;-a protection that must give way to the first flood, and expose the whole country, far and wide, to the danger of being deluged and destroyed by the overwhelming force of the inundation. The application of this illustration is obvious. In the other states of Europe, none will deny that it is l'impatience de souffrir, and not l'envie d'attaquer, which has been the cause of their insurrection; and every Englishman, who has one genuine drop of the crimson sap of freedom circulating in his veins, must sympathise with the efforts of his continental brethren, and wish them success in their just and rightful efforts to ameliorate their political condition.

Let us now turn our eyes nearer home, and examine whether the clamours of discontent which here too assail us on all sides, will admit of the same explanation. Here the question between the governors and the people becomes a more complicated one. In reading the passage of Sully which has been quoted above, it must be remembered, that in his time there was no such thing as the liberty of the press. Had he lived in our days, it is possible, that he might have in some degree qualified his maxim; for, though we agree with him that l'envie d'attaquer is never the motive of an insurrection when the people are left to themselves, yet we doubt whether the same doctrine will apply to a people, whose passions are inflamed by daily and weekly doses of the most stimulating quality, administered to them under every form and shape by the agenhey of the press. There is a period in the history of a country when the universal diffusion of knowledge creates a general sentiment of equality, which is productive of consequences not wholly dissimilar to what might be expected to result from a state of anarchy. In such a stage of society, it is of the utmost importance that there should be a constant supply of those MASTER SPIRITS, whose privilege it is

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and who, by the splendour of their talents, and the integrity of their principles, command at once the deference and the confidence of the people; and, while they preside at the helm of the state, keep the course of the vessel even and steady. Without this constant supply, the people, especially if long accustomed to submit to such guidance, are like a crew who have been suddenly deprived of their commander; and a general spirit of insubordination succeeds. The principle of democracy," says Montesquieu, corrupted, not only when the spirit of equality is extinct, but likewise when the people fall into a spirit of extreme equality; and when every citizen wants to be on a level with those he has chosen to command him. Then the people, incapable of bearing the very power they have entrusted, want to do every thing for themselves;-to debate for the senate-to decide for the judges to execute for the magistrate. It may be well to consider whether England, at the present moment, be not much in the state that is here supposed.

When, indeed, we observe the direction which the public complaints have taken, we cannot help thinking that l'envie d'attaquer has been a more powerful motive than l'impatience de souffrir, at least with the agitators of these complaints. At a period when we have so many real difficulties to struggle with, and so many evils to endure which come home to the bosoms of us all, the cries of the discontented have been confined to two points;the Queen, and Parliamentary Reform. Let us examine how far the real interests of the people are connected with either of these topics;-and first for the Queen, If the investigation have proved nothing else, it must, we think, at least have satisfied every impartial man in the kingdom, that the ministers, with such charges before them, would have deserted their duty if they had not submitted the case to the consideration of parliament. The expediency of passing the bill is other question; and while we regret the moral effect of the late trial, we must at the same time remember that every possible effort was made to avoid the necessity of a public inquiry. The pious care of those wise and worthy

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