登陆注册
20694900000040

第40章 Political Theory(18)

To Cobbett,as to Paine,it seemed that English banknotes were going the way of French assignats and the provincial currency of the Americans.This became one main topic of his tirades,and represented,as he said,the 'Alpha and Omega'of English politics.The theory was simple.The whole borough-mongering system depended upon the inflated currency.Prick that bubble and the whole would collapse.It was absolutely impossible,he said,that the nation should return to cash payments and continue to pay interest on the debt.Should such a thing happen,he declared,he would 'give his poor body up to be broiled on one of Castlereagh's widest-ribbed gridirons.'109The 'gridiron prophecy'became famous;a gridiron was for long a frontispiece to the Register;and Cobbett,far from retracting,went on proving,in the teeth of facts,that it had been fulfilled.His inference was,not that paper should be preserved,but that the debt should be treated with a 'sponge.'

Cobbett,therefore,was an awkward ally of political economists,whose great triumph was the resumption of cash payments,and who regarded repudiation as the deadly sin.The burthen of the debt,meanwhile,was so great that repudiation was well within the limits of possibility.110Cobbett,in their eyes,was an advocate of the grossest dishonesty,and using the basest incentives.Cobbett fully retorted their scorn.The economists belonged to the very class whom he most hated.He was never tired of denouncing Scottish 'feelosophers';he sneers at Adam Smith,111and Ricardo was to him the incarnation of the stock-jobbing interest.Cobbett sympathised instinctively with the doctrine of the French economists that agriculture was the real source of all wealth.He nearly accepts a phrase,erroneously attributed to Windham,'Perish Commerce,'and he argues that commerce was,in fact,of little use,and its monstrous extension at the bottom of all our worst evils.112Nobody could be more heartily opposed to the spirit which animated the political economists and the whole class represented by them.At times he spoke the language of modern Socialists.He defines Capital as 'money taken from the labouring classes,which,being given to army tailors and suchlike,enables them to keep foxhounds and trace their descent from the Normans.'113The most characteristic point of his speculations is his view of the poor-laws.Nobody could speak with more good sense and feeling of the demoralisation which they were actually producing,of the sapping of the spirit of independence,and of all the devices by which the agricultural labourer was losing the happiness enjoyed in early years,But Cobbett's deduction from his principles is peculiar.

'Parson Malthus'is perhaps the favourite object of his most virulent abuse.

'I have hated many men,'he says,'but never any one so much as you.''Icall you parson,'he explains,'because that word includes "boroughmonger"among other meanings,though no single word could be sufficient.'114Cobbett rages against the phrase 'redundant population.'There would be plenty for all if the boroughmongers and stockjobbers could be annihilated,taxes abolished,and the debt repudiated.The ordinary palliatives suggested were little to the taste of this remarkable Radical.The man who approved bull-fighting and supported the slave-trade naturally sneered at 'heddekashun,'and thought savings-banks a mean device to interest the poor in the keeping up of the funds.His remedy was always a sponge applied to the debt,and the abolition of taxes.

This leads,however,to one remarkable conclusion.Cobbett's attack upon the church establishment probably did more to cause alarm than any writings of the day,For Paine's attacks upon its creed he cared little enough.'Your religion,'said a parson to him,'seems to be altogether political.'It might well be,was Cobbett's retort,since his creed was made for him by act of parliament.115In fact,he cared nothing for theology,though he called himself a member of the church of England,and retained an intense dislike for Unitarians,dissenters in general,'saints'as he called the Evangelical party,Scottish Presbyterians,and generally for all religious sects.He looked at church questions solely from one point of view.He had learned,it seems,from a passage in Ruggles's History of the Poor,116that the tithes had been originally intended to support the poor as well as the church.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 罗健夫的故事(英雄人物时代楷模丛书)

    罗健夫的故事(英雄人物时代楷模丛书)

    我国新民主主义革命的胜利,是全国各族人民在中国共产党领导下,前仆后继,长期英勇奋斗的结果。在艰苦卓绝的战争年代。在伟大的社会主义建设中,无数的革命先烈、无数杰出的英雄模范人物奉献了他们宝贵的青春和生命,他们作出了巨大的贡献,产生了巨大的影响,为后人留下了十分珍贵的精神财富。他们的革命斗志和英雄气概,在新的历史时期,在当今我们努力建设社会主义和谐社会中,仍需要这种强大的革命精神,把人们感奋起来,凝聚起来,尤其是广大青少年朋友,应该以英雄模范人物为榜样,把自己锻炼成为有理想、有道德、有文化、有纪律的新人,为把我国建设成为繁荣富强的社会主义现代化强国,努力学习、奋发向上。
  • 御剑神女

    御剑神女

    如果没有那场招灵游戏,她做她的当红少女偶像,他做他的掩神传人。这两人相隔了两千年,命运本不该有所交集。但是,只是如果,三年前她是冰魄神女,他是掩神谷未来的传人,他与她共处了三年,要是没有那一剑,他们会像童话里一样有个完美的结局,但是,只是要是,两年后她是风隐教主,他则成了与风隐对立‘无魂’主人,再见时,剑拔弩张,似乎相爱相杀的结局已注定。(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 玫瑰墓园

    玫瑰墓园

    死亡并不可怕,可怕的是生不如死的恐惧折磨;死亡并不绝望,绝望的是明知徒劳的奋力挣扎;对生的渴望并不可耻,可耻的是要用别人的死亡来换取自己的苟延残喘;母女、兄弟、姐妹、夫妻、恋人,人性善恶在这里被彻底颠覆……是像人一样死去,还是像鬼魁一样苟活,到哪里寻找生命与人性的救赎?百年一现的冥府契约即将出现。这是除了……以外,逃离玫瑰墓园的途径无人可知。为了活下去!猪脚夜轩轶承受着良心的啃噬、恐惧的侵袭,在无边无际的黑暗中,夺命狂奔……
  • 扶摇直上

    扶摇直上

    偶然的受伤,使刚入社会的他拥有了制造幻觉的能力,本来只想平淡过一生,却因此陷入一场又一场的风暴漩涡之中。官场、职场、情场,且看他如何一路扶摇直上?
  • 热血之王

    热血之王

    热血之王,万人王,众人王。即便是仙也要跪下尊我为王。一代妖孽为救所爱之人下闯九幽地府,为证大道上灭永生仙门。我之道即我爱之人,毁我道者灭众生为之陪葬。是魔是神,皆在我一念之间,看一代豪门公子如何蜕变,化茧成蝶,成为一个独一无二的王者。
  • 一口气读懂中国文化史

    一口气读懂中国文化史

    本书内容分为十六章,包括:中国·世界、自然·疆域、人物·掌故、思想·智慧、典章·制度、文学·音乐、书法·绘画、图书·博物、风俗·节日、教育·学校等。
  • 异世大舞台

    异世大舞台

    讲述一个三流歌手重生到平行空间里继续去追求星光舞台的奋斗史:
  • 一起走过的流年

    一起走过的流年

    每个人都有青春年华,爱情与理想似乎是这段时光亘古不变的主题,可二者在现实的面前又是显得多么的苟延残喘与弱不禁风呢?但青春的懵懂与冲动岂会让我们在现实面前服服贴贴地妥协?所以,我们张开双臂,舒展身心,追求着,理想!还有,爱情!至于结果,那是未知!我们享受的是过程!所以,请抽点时间,心平气和地,一页一页翻下去,体会那些五味杂陈,而又一起走过的流年!
  • TFBOYS之对你爱不完

    TFBOYS之对你爱不完

    烽烟起,寻爱似浪淘沙:遇见她,如春映梨花。遇见你,一件倾心。爱,到底是盛凌在荆棘上的花朵,还是隐藏在花朵中的荆棘?明明回头就可以看见你,为什么我还要这样傻?现在我回头了,你还爱我吗?
  • 汐殇

    汐殇

    写的不好看,还是不要随便看了。如果想看的话,记得每时每刻都忍住呕吐的情绪,大人要抱着小孩,老人要搀扶着拐杖,谢谢。