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+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #68493 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68493)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Promoting good citizenship, by James
-Bryce
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Promoting good citizenship
-
-Author: James Bryce
-
-Release Date: July 10, 2022 [eBook #68493]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Charlie Howard and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
- at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PROMOTING GOOD
-CITIZENSHIP ***
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Note: Italic text is enclosed in _underscores_;
-boldface text is enclosed in =equals signs=.
-
-
-
-
- RIVERSIDE ESSAYS
-
- EDITED BY
- ADA L. F. SNELL
-
- ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH
- MOUNT HOLYOKE COLLEGE
-
-
-
-
-Riverside Essays
-
-Edited by Ada L. F. Snell
-
-
- =THE AMERICAN MIND AND AMERICAN IDEALISM.= By Bliss Perry. 35
- cents.
-
- =UNIVERSITY SUBJECTS.= By John Henry Newman. 35 cents.
-
- =STUDIES IN NATURE AND LITERATURE.= By John Burroughs. 35 cents.
-
- =PROMOTING GOOD CITIZENSHIP.= By James Bryce. 35 cents.
-
- _Prices are net, postpaid_
- _Other titles in preparation_
-
- HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
- BOSTON NEW YORK CHICAGO
-
-
-
-
- The Riverside Literature Series
-
- PROMOTING
- GOOD CITIZENSHIP
-
- BY
- JAMES BRYCE
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- BOSTON NEW YORK CHICAGO
- HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
- The Riverside Press Cambridge
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1909, BY YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS
- COPYRIGHT, 1913, BY ADA L. F. SNELL
-
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
-
- R. L. S. 227
-
-
- The Riverside Press
- CAMBRIDGE . MASSACHUSETTS
- U . S . A
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- INTRODUCTION vii
-
- INDOLENCE 1
-
- HOW TO OVERCOME THE OBSTACLES TO GOOD
- CITIZENSHIP 26
-
- The two essays by Mr. James Bryce included in this volume are
- reprinted by permission of Yale University from Mr. Bryce’s
- lectures on the Dodge Foundation, published in book form by the
- Yale University Press under the title of _The Hindrances to Good
- Citizenship_.
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-
-Mr. Bryce has for a long time been a man of international prominence.
-His wide influence is undoubtedly due to many causes, but it may, in
-general, be traced to two characteristics: Mr. Bryce is a humanist
-who sympathetically watches the progress of nations and the guiding
-of governments; he is also a historian. In his biographical study of
-John Richard Green he has skillfully analyzed the aptitudes of the
-historian, and in so doing has pointedly, if unwittingly, described
-himself. Accuracy, he says,--a desire for the exact truth,--keen
-observation, sound judgment, imagination, and, following inevitably
-from these, command of literary exposition, are the powers which a
-historian needs. Each of these qualities Mr. Bryce himself possesses
-in large measure. It is his historical power, enabling him to observe
-and record the significant phases and events of human life, plus his
-sympathetic interest in its present-day manifestations which explain,
-in some degree, his singularly eminent position as an authority on
-matters pertaining to human institutions in various countries.
-
-Mr. Bryce was born in northern Ireland in 1838, of Scotch-Irish
-parents; and he combines in his nature the stalwart intellectual
-propensities of the Scot and the artistic attributes of the Celt. He
-was educated at the University of Glasgow, and later went to Oxford
-where he won many honors. After finishing his collegiate work he was
-admitted to the bar and practiced law in London until 1882. At the
-age of thirty-two he was appointed Regius Professor of Civil Law at
-Oxford. Up to this point his life had been almost exclusively that of
-a student and a scholar; and already at this time he was recognized as
-a man of remarkable historical ability. The year 1880 marked a change
-in his life. He presented himself to the workingmen of Tower Hamlets,
-London, as a candidate for a seat in the House of Commons. Mr. Stead
-tells us that Mr. Bryce, in this first campaign, addressed his open-air
-audiences somewhat after the manner of a professor lecturing in a
-classroom; he succeeded, nevertheless, in getting himself elected,
-and for over twenty-five years thereafter was a member of Parliament.
-During these years he held various responsible offices having to do
-with home and foreign administrative work. The practical results of his
-political influence were advancement in public education, the securing
-of more extensive parks and open country spaces for the pleasure of the
-poorer classes, and the furtherance of international peace. In 1907,
-Mr. Bryce was appointed ambassador to the United States, which office
-he resigned in 1913 to carry on literary work.
-
-Mr. Bryce’s knowledge is the result not only of university training and
-experience in public life, but also of varied reading. He has read art,
-science, history, and has always been an interested student of poetry.
-In speaking once to Americans of Swinburne, he suddenly paused and
-asked, “Who are writing your songs and stirring your heart,--or isn’t
-your heart being stirred? Nothing is more important than that each
-generation and each land should have its poets. Each oncoming tide of
-life, each age, requires and needs men of lofty thought who shall dream
-and sing for it, who shall gather up its tendencies and formulate its
-ideals and voice its spirit, proclaiming its duties and awakening its
-enthusiasm, through the high authority of the poet and the art of his
-verse.” How extensively Mr. Bryce has read the poets, both ancient and
-modern, one perceives from the references and allusions in his _Studies
-in Contemporary Biography_.
-
-The most important source of Mr. Bryce’s knowledge, the one which
-has furnished the material for nearly all his books, has been his
-first-hand observation and study of many countries. When still a
-young man he wandered alone over Mount Ararat, since the native
-guides refused to follow him to the unknown wilds of that lonely
-peak. He visited the Ottoman Empire in 1876, and, as a result of his
-investigations there, became an advocate of the Bulgarian cause; in
-fact it was his speeches on the Eastern Question which first made him
-prominent politically. Mr. Bryce has traveled also in Iceland; he was
-in Africa just previous to the Boer War; he has been all over South
-America; and he knows the United States as few Americans know it. He
-has studied these countries with great faithfulness, observing keenly
-every phase of the political and social life. An interesting sample of
-his method of gathering information is found in the chapter on “The
-Position of Women” in _The American Commonwealth_. When traveling in
-the West he noticed that all of the women seemed so very well dressed
-that apparently none could be the wife or daughter of a workingman;
-but close observation dispelled this illusion. Idling in a bookstore
-one day in Oregon, he noticed a woman who was asking for a certain
-magazine. After her departure he asked the salesman who she was, and
-found that she was the wife of a workman, and the magazine a Paris
-fashion journal. “This,” says Mr. Bryce, “set me to observing female
-dress more closely, and it turned out to be perfectly true that the
-women in these little towns were following the Parisian fashions very
-closely, and were, in fact, ahead of the majority of English ladies
-belonging to the professional and mercantile classes.” Thus no detail,
-however trivial, escapes him; the pleasant and unpleasant phases of
-our American life, our manners, clothes, scenery have all been noted
-and reckoned with in the statement of tendencies and conclusions.
-
-As a parliamentarian Mr. Bryce is said to have been direct, honest,
-and always illuminating. His ability to command attention was due not
-to any great oratorical gift, but rather to his scholarly view of any
-matter under debate. Mr. Justin McCarthy reports that the members
-of the House who might be dining, smoking, or reading in the rooms
-assigned for these purposes, would, when the news was passed around
-that Mr. Bryce was speaking, leave these pleasant diversions, and
-betake themselves with great speed to the debating chamber. “I have
-many a time,” he says, “heard Conservative members murmur, in tones
-not altogether expressing absolute satisfaction at the disturbing
-information, ‘Bryce is up--I must go in and hear what he has to say.’
-... Everybody knows that when he speaks it is because he has something
-to say which ought to be spoken and therefore ought to be heard.” Mr.
-Bryce was able to command attention also because of his reputation as
-a courageous nonpartisan. He never advocated a measure or policy for
-mere party reasons or for personal aggrandizement. Not infrequently
-he has fought bravely with the minority of his own party, and has at
-times suffered bitter attacks, as when he remained resolutely pro-Boer
-during the rampant jingoism of the South African War. But however
-widely political enemies might differ from him, they respected his
-sincerity and his luminous view of governmental problems. It is further
-characteristic of Mr. Bryce’s public life that he never, in his desire
-for the welfare of his own country, lost sight of what is due other
-nations. In practice as well as in precept he upheld the doctrine that
-“patriotism consists not in waving a flag, but in striving that our
-country shall be righteous as well as strong.”
-
-Mr. Bryce’s books deal, for the most part, with historical subjects and
-present-day governments. _The Holy Roman Empire_, written when he was
-only twenty-four years old, is still regarded by able historians as
-an accurate and authoritative work; and, in the judgment of literary
-critics, it is written with so much charm of style that it is destined
-to become an English classic. All of the books which have to do with
-foreign nations are characterized by a tactful, faithful, and above all
-a truthful, handling. It was _The American Commonwealth_ which made
-the citizens of the United States regard Mr. Bryce as a friend of the
-Republic; but he is not so regarded because he has always stroked the
-gleaming pinions of the American eagle. Although he does seem to share
-the hope universally cherished by Americans that we shall, in spite
-of grave national defects, “win out” in the end, he has nevertheless,
-in direct and unadorned statements, pointed out our faults. As an
-example of his characteristic straightforwardness of speech, take the
-following sentence: “America has little occasion to think of foreign
-affairs, but some of her domestic difficulties are such as to demand
-that careful observation and unbroken reflection which neither her
-executive magistrates, nor her legislatures, nor any leading class
-among her people now give.” Mr. Bryce has never ceased to insist that
-America suffers from lack of honest, courageous leadership in dealing
-with such problems as municipal evils and the insidious influence of
-“vested interests.” Our heedlessness and indifference to public matters
-is our national sin, but Mr. Bryce foresees a cure for our defects
-in the increasing zeal with which the younger generation is assuming
-the public burden; but how great must be its zeal and how steady its
-purpose if anything is to be accomplished, one is made poignantly
-aware by reading the account of the Tammany Ring in _The American
-Commonwealth_.
-
-When a man of Mr. Bryce’s ability and experience points out definitely
-the chief obstacles to good citizenship and furthermore indicates
-the means by which these may be overcome, one may be as sure that he
-will say something which should be heeded as were the members of the
-House when he was a parliamentarian. In 1909, Mr. Bryce gave at Yale
-University a series of lectures which were later published by the Yale
-University Press under the title _Hindrances to Good Citizenship_. The
-main obstacles to good citizenship are defined as indolence, private
-self-interest, and party spirit.
-
-The first lecture, “Indolence,” brings to mind the chapter in _The
-American Commonwealth_ on “The War Against Bossdom,” with its vigorous
-concluding words, “In America, as everywhere else in the world, the
-commonwealth suffers more often from apathy or shortsightedness in the
-upper classes, who ought to lead, than from ignorance or recklessness
-in the humbler classes, who generally are ready to follow when wisely
-led.”
-
-In the second lecture, “Private Self-Interest,” Mr. Bryce states the
-causes which produce a body of citizens who care more about their own
-advancement than about the welfare of the country. The most important
-of these causes are tariff issues, appropriations of public money for
-local interests, governmental contracts, public officeholding,--all
-representing “the insidious power of money which knows how to play upon
-the self-interest of voters and legislators, polluting at its source
-the spring of Civic Duty.”
-
-The third lecture considers party spirit as a hindrance to
-citizenship. Mr. Bryce acknowledges the practical necessity for parties
-in the management of popular governments, and also the perplexing
-difficulties of a party leader who must decide between conscience and
-party. There is nevertheless but one course open to him: he must follow
-his conscience; only he must carefully distinguish between conscience
-and angular independence which is lacking in common sense and in
-willingness to defer to others in unimportant matters. For the average
-man the question is a simple one; relieved of the burdens of party
-leadership, he should follow his intelligence rather than his party. A
-large number of independent voters secures most effectively the right
-administration of public business.
-
-The last lecture in the series, “How to Overcome the Obstacles to Good
-Citizenship,” suggests various means by which a more satisfactory
-body of citizens may be secured. In method and style this lecture is
-illustrative of the author’s peculiar strength in exposition.
-
-Mr. Bryce’s writings are remarkable for the lucid organization of a
-wealth of detail into significant principles and sound conclusions; for
-vividness in the presentation of whatever pertains to humanity, and
-for gracious, winning English. One finds always in his work simplicity
-in the unfolding of material which has been carefully gathered and
-calmly judged. There is perfect clarity in the handling of a mass of
-detail, and such skillful subordination of it and masterly emphasis of
-important principles that the reader easily catches the bearing on the
-central thought of every illustration or description. There is also in
-the writing a solidity and firmness, a bracing stalwartness--qualities
-which are the result of the writer’s own sturdy nature. But this is
-not all. The author’s almost novelistic power of seeing persons and
-things makes his writing as vivid as a story; even his most abstract
-propositions are tangible and real. And the material is, moreover, so
-sympathetically and earnestly treated that it is at times lifted above
-mere pedestrian exposition and becomes warm with the feeling of the
-writer. The everyday words and unadorned sentences, infused with the
-spirit of the one who writes, become potent to stir slumbering ideals.
-Suddenly over the level way of mere intellectual matters falls a dreamy
-light, a Celtic graciousness of manner; and the reader no longer
-journeys along a mere brown path, but sees the familiar scenes of the
-way idealized by the touch of poetry. The value of skillful exposition
-as an asset for leadership, or for the accomplishment of any other
-purpose, Mr. Bryce fully appreciates. A command of language is a power
-possessed by nearly every one of the men, eminent in the nineteenth
-century, whom Mr. Bryce describes in his _Studies in Contemporary
-Biography_. By means of it Mr. John Richard Green wrote the most
-brilliant history of modern times; through the stirring editorials of
-the _Nation_, Mr. Godkin was able to arouse an indifferent American
-public to a more earnest consideration of the national welfare; and
-it was Mr. Gladstone’s gift of “noble utterance” which more than any
-other talent enabled him for many years to hold an authoritative
-political position. Mr. Bryce’s own rare power as a writer of vigorous,
-persuasive English is one of the qualities which has made him in
-a certain sense a citizen of the world with an almost world-wide
-influence.
-
-However helpful Mr. Bryce’s method may be for the student who is
-attempting to understand and master the technique of successful
-English, it is the subject-matter which is primarily of importance.
-It is valuable for the student since it may serve to stimulate the
-investigation and expression of certain questions connected with the
-administration of public matters in his own town or city; and it may
-also suggest the explanation and judgment of measures proposed to
-secure better government, such as the Referendum. But the essential
-worth of the material lies in the fact that it is a tonic for relaxed
-vigilance in public affairs. It would be well to require every
-citizen of the United States to read in school days _The American
-Commonwealth_; one ventures to say that there would be, as a result,
-a steady advancement in the right understanding and fulfillment of
-civic duties; but even a limited acquaintance with Mr. Bryce should
-serve to define in clearer terms the elements of a sane and effective
-patriotism. And Mr. Bryce’s own life, unfalteringly and resolutely
-devoted to a just administration of governments, together with its
-unfailing graciousness in the most trying situations, furnishes an
-invigorating example of the truly successful statesman.
-
- ADA L. F. SNELL.
-
-
-
-
-Promoting Good Citizenship
-
-
-
-
-INDOLENCE
-
-
-Dr. Samuel Johnson, being once asked how he came to have made a blunder
-in his famous English Dictionary, is reported to have answered,
-“Ignorance, Sir, sheer ignorance.” Whoever has grown old enough to look
-back over the wasted opportunities of life--and we all of us waste
-more opportunities than we use--will be apt to ascribe most of his
-blunders to sheer indolence. Sometimes one has omitted to learn what
-it was needful to learn in order to proceed to action; sometimes one
-has shrunk from the painful effort required to reflect and decide on
-one’s course, leaving it to Fortune to settle what Will ought to have
-settled; sometimes one has, from mere self-indulgent sluggishness, let
-the happy moment slip.
-
-The difference between men who succeed and men who fail is not so much
-as we commonly suppose due to differences in intellectual capacity.
-The difference which counts for most is that between activity and
-slackness; between the man who, observing alertly and reflecting
-incessantly, anticipates contingencies before they occur, and the
-lazy, easy-going, slowly-moving man who is roused with difficulty,
-will not trouble himself to look ahead, and so being taken unprepared
-loses or misuses the opportunities that lead to fortune. If it be true
-that everywhere, though perhaps less here than in European countries,
-energy is the exception rather than the rule, we need not wonder that
-men show in the discharge of civic duty the defects which they show in
-their own affairs. No doubt public affairs demand only a small part
-of their time. But the spring of self-interest is not strong where
-public affairs are concerned. The need for activity is not continuously
-present. A duty shared with many others seems less of a personal duty.
-If a hundred, a thousand, ten thousand other citizens are as much bound
-to speak, vote, or act as each one of us is, the sense of obligation
-becomes to each of us weak. Still weaker does it become when one
-perceives the neglect of others to do their duty. The need for the
-good citizen’s action, no doubt, becomes then all the greater. But
-it is only the best sort of citizen that feels it to be greater. The
-Average Man judges himself by the average standard and does not see why
-he should take more trouble than his neighbours. Thus we arrive at a
-result summed up in the terrible dictum, which reveals the basic fault
-of democracy, “What is Everybody’s business is Nobody’s business.”
-
-Of indolence, indifference, apathy, in general, no more need be said.
-It is a sin that easily besets us all. We might suppose that where
-public affairs are concerned it would decrease under the influence of
-education and the press. But several general causes have tended to
-increase it in our own generation, despite the increasing strength of
-the appeal which civic duty makes to men who are, or if they cared
-might be, better informed about public affairs than were their fathers.
-
-The first of these causes is that manners have grown gentler and
-passions less angry. A chief duty of the good citizen is to be angry
-when anger is called for, and to express his anger by deeds, to
-attack the bad citizen in office, or otherwise in power, to expose his
-dishonesty, to eject him from office, to brand him with an ignominy
-which will prevent his returning to any post of trust. In former
-days indignation flamed higher, and there was little tenderness for
-offenders. Jehu smote the prophets of Baal. Bad ministers--and no
-doubt sometimes good ministers also--were in England beheaded on Tower
-Hill. Everywhere punishment came quicker and was more severe, though
-to be sure it was often too harsh. Nowadays the arm of justice is
-often arrested by an indulgence which forgets that the true aim of
-punishment is the protection of the community. The very safeguards
-with which our slower and more careful procedure has surrounded trials
-and investigations, proper as such safeguards are for the security of
-the innocent, have often so delayed the march of justice that when
-a conviction has at last been obtained, the offence has begun to be
-forgotten and the offender escapes with a trifling penalty, or with
-none. This is an illustration of the principle that as righteous
-indignation is a valuable motive power in politics, the decline in it
-means a decline either in the standard of virtue or in the standard of
-zeal, possibly in both.
-
-Another cause may be found in the fact that the enormous growth of
-modern states has made the share in government of the individual
-citizen seem infinitesimally small. In an average Greek republic,
-he was one of from two to ten thousand voters. In England or France
-to-day he is one of many millions. The chance that his vote will make
-any difference to the result is so slender that it appears to him
-negligible. We are proud, and justly proud, of having adapted free
-government to areas far vaster than were formerly thought capable of
-receiving free institutions. It was hoped that the patriotism of the
-citizen would expand with the magnitude of the State. But this did not
-happen in Rome, the greatest of ancient republics. Can we say that it
-has happened in the modern world? Few of us realize that though our own
-share may be smaller our responsibility increases with the power our
-State exerts. The late Professor Henry Sidgwick once travelled from
-Davos in the easternmost corner of Switzerland to the town of Cambridge
-in England and back again to deliver his vote against Home Rule at the
-general election of 1886, though he knew that his own side would have a
-majority in the constituency. Those who knew applauded, his opponents
-included, but I fear that few of us followed this shining example of
-civic virtue.
-
-Thirdly, the highest, because the most difficult, duty of a citizen
-is to fight valiantly for his convictions when he is in a minority.
-The smaller the minority, and the more unpopular it is, and the more
-violent are the attacks upon it, so much the louder is the call of
-duty to defend one’s opinions. To withstand the “ardor civium prava
-iubentium”--to face “the multitude hasting to do evil”--this is the
-note and the test of genuine virtue and courage. Now this is, or seems
-to be, a more formidable task the vaster the community becomes. It is
-harder to make your voice heard against the roar of ocean than against
-the whistling squall that sweeps down over a mountain lake.
-
-Lastly, there has been within the last century a great accession to our
-knowledge of nature, a more widely diffused and developed interest in
-literature and art as well as in science. This development, in itself
-fraught with laudable means of enjoyment, has had the unforeseen yet
-natural result of reducing the interest in public affairs among the
-educated classes, while the ardour with which competitions in physical
-strength and skill are followed has in like manner diverted the
-thoughts and attention of the less educated--and indeed, not of them
-alone but of many also in a class from whom better things might have
-been expected. Politics, in fact, have nowadays to strive against more
-rival subjects attracting men’s eyes and minds than they had before
-scientific discovery and art, and above all, athletic sports, came to
-fill newspapers and magazines.
-
-But so far from being less important than they were, politics are
-growing in every country more important the wider the sphere of
-governmental action becomes. Nevertheless, even in England, which is
-perhaps slightly less addicted to this new passion for looking on at
-and reading about athletic competitions than are North America and
-Australia, a cricket or football match or a horse-race seems, if one
-may judge by the eager throngs that snatch the evening newspapers, to
-excite more interest in the middle as well as in the richer and in the
-upper section of the poorer classes than does any political event.
-
-How to overcome these adverse tendencies is a question which I reserve
-till the last of these lectures. Meantime, let us look at some of the
-forms in which indifference to the obligations of citizenship reveals
-itself.
-
-The first duty of the citizen used to be to fight, and to fight
-not merely against foes from another State, but against those also
-who, within his own State, were trying to overturn the Constitution
-or resist the laws. It is a duty still incumbent on us all, though
-the existence of soldiers and a police force calls us to it less
-frequently. The omission to take up arms in a civil strife was a grave
-offence in the republics of antiquity, where revolutions were frequent,
-as they are to-day in some of the states of Latin America. When
-respectable people stayed at home instead of taking sword and spear to
-drive out the adherents of an adventurer trying to make himself Tyrant,
-they gave the adventurer his chance: and in any case their abstention
-tended to prolong a civil war which would end sooner when it was seen
-which way the bulk of the people inclined. There was accordingly a
-law in some of the Greek republics that every citizen must take one
-side or the other in an insurrection. If he did not, he was liable
-to punishment. I have not heard of any one being indicted in England
-or the United States for failing to discharge his legal duty to join
-in the hue and cry after a thief, or to rally to the sheriff when he
-calls upon the _posse comitatus_ to support him in maintaining law and
-order. But possibly an indictment would still lie; and in England we
-have within recent times enrolled bodies of special constables from the
-civil population to aid in maintaining public tranquillity.
-
-More peaceful times have substituted for the duty of fighting the
-duty of voting. But even in small communities the latter duty has
-been often neglected. In Athens the magistrates used to send round
-the Scythian bowmen, who acted as their police, to scour the streets
-with a rope coloured with vermilion, and drag towards the Pnyx (the
-place of assembly), citizens who preferred to lounge or to mind what
-they called their own business, as if ruling the State was not their
-business. So in modern Switzerland some cantons have enacted laws
-fining those who, without reasonable excuse, neglect to vote.[1] This
-is the more remarkable because the Swiss have a good record in the
-matter of voting, better, I think, than any other European people. Such
-a law witnesses not to exceptional negligence but to an exceptionally
-high standard of duty. In Britain we sometimes bring to the polls at a
-parliamentary election eighty, or even more than eighty, per cent of
-our registered electors, which is pretty good when it is remembered
-that the register may have been made up eleven months earlier, so
-that many electors are sure to have moved elsewhere. At elections for
-local authorities a much smaller proportion vote; and I fancy, though
-I have no figures at hand, that in France, Belgium, and still more
-in Italy the percentage voting at all sorts of elections is less than
-in Switzerland or in Britain. The number who vote does not perfectly
-measure the personal sense of duty among electors, because an efficient
-party organization may, like the Scythian bowmen, sweep voters who
-do not care but who can be either driven to the polls or paid to go.
-Unless it is money that takes the voters there, it is well that they
-should go; for it helps to form the habit.
-
- [1] This example has, I believe, been followed in Belgium.
-
-Another form of civic apathy is the reluctance to undertake civic
-functions. In England this is not discoverable in any want of
-candidates for Parliament. They abound, though sometimes the fittest
-men prefer ease or business success to public life. But seats upon
-local authorities and especially upon municipal councils and district
-councils, seldom attract the best ability of the local community. In
-English and Scottish cities the leading commercial, financial, and
-professional men do not often appear as candidates, leaving the work
-to persons who are not indeed incompetent, being usually intelligent
-business men, but whose education and talents are sometimes below the
-level of the functions which these bodies discharge. No great harm
-has followed, because our city councillors are almost always honest.
-Local public opinion is vigilant and exacting, so a high standard of
-probity is maintained. But municipalities have latterly embarked on so
-many kinds of new work, and the revenues of the greater cities have so
-grown, that not merely business capacity and experience, but a large
-grasp of economic principles is required. This is no less true here in
-America, yet I gather that here it is found even more difficult than in
-Europe to secure the presence of able administrators in city councils.
-
-A man engaged in a large business who takes up municipal work may
-doubtless find that he is making a pecuniary sacrifice. But if he has
-already an income sufficient for his comfort, may it not be his best
-way of serving his fellow-men?
-
-Many such men do serve as governors or trustees of educational or other
-public institutions which make nearly as great a demand on their time
-as the membership of a public body would. Others, in Europe, if less
-frequently here, give to amusement much more of their leisure than the
-needs of recreation and health require. This is often due rather to
-thoughtlessness than to a conscious indifference to the call of duty.
-
-Some of your political reformers have dwelt on the difficulties which
-party organizations, specially powerful in the United States, place in
-the way of educated and public-spirited men seeking to enter politics.
-There may be truth in this as regards the lower districts of the larger
-cities, but one can scarcely think it generally true even of the
-cities. More frequently it is alleged that the work of local politics
-is disagreeable, bringing a man into contact with vulgar people and
-exposing him to misrepresentation and abuse.
-
-This is an excuse for abstention which ought never to be heard in a
-democratic country. If politics are anywhere vulgar, they ought not
-to be suffered to remain vulgar, as they will remain if the better
-educated citizens keep aloof. They involve the highest interests
-of the nation or the city. The way in which they are handled is a
-lesson to the people either in honesty or in knavery. The best element
-in a community cannot afford to let its interests be the sport of
-self-seekers or rogues. Moreover, the loss by maladministration or
-robbery, large as it may sometimes be, is a less serious evil than is
-the damage to public morals. If those who have the manners and speak
-the language of educated men refuse to enter practical politics, they
-must cease to complain of a want of refinement in politics. In reality,
-good manners are the best way in which to meet rudeness; and he who
-is too thin-skinned to disregard abuse confesses his own want of
-manliness. The mass of the people, even those who are neither educated
-nor fastidious, know honesty when they see it, and discount such abuse.
-When a man is firm and upright, nothing better braces him up and fits
-him to serve his country than to be attacked on the platform or in the
-press for faults he has not committed. It puts him on his mettle. It
-toughens his fibre. It gives him self-control and teaches him how to
-do right in the way which is least exposed to misrepresentation. It
-nerves his courage for the far more difficult trials which come when
-friends as well as opponents censure him because honour and obedience
-to his conscience have required him to take an unpopular line and speak
-unwelcome truths. A little persecution for righteousness’ sake is a
-wholesome thing.
-
-The deficient sense of civic duty, though most frequently noted in the
-form of a neglect to vote, is really more general and serious in the
-neglect to think. Were it possible to have statistics to show what
-percentage of those who vote reflect upon the vote they have to give,
-there would in no country be found a large percentage. Yet what is the
-worth of a vote except as the expression of a considered opinion? The
-act of marking a ballot is nothing unless the mark carries with it a
-judgment, the preference of a good candidate to a bad one, the approval
-of one policy offered the people, the rejection of another. The
-citizen owes it to the community to inform himself about the questions
-submitted for his decision, and weigh the arguments on each side; or if
-the issue be one rather of persons than of policies, to learn all he
-can regarding the merits of the candidates offered to his choice.
-
-How many voters really trouble themselves to do this? One in five? One
-in ten? One in twenty?
-
-It may be asked, How can they do it? What means have they of studying
-public questions and reaching just conclusions? If the means are
-wanting, can we blame them if they do not think? If they feel they
-do not understand, can we blame them if they do not vote? In every
-free country the suffrage is now so wide that the great majority of
-the voters have to labour for their daily bread. In most European
-countries many are imperfectly educated. In the rural districts they
-read with difficulty, see either no newspaper or one which helps them
-but little, lead isolated lives in which there are scanty opportunities
-for learning what passes, so that the best they can do seems to be to
-ask advice from the priest, or the village schoolmaster, or take advice
-from their landlord or their employer. In the northern parts of the
-United States and also in Canada, the native population has indeed
-received a fair instruction, and reads newspapers; but the mass of
-voters is swelled by a crowd of recent immigrants, most of whom cannot
-read English and know nothing of your institutions.
-
-Broadly speaking, in modern countries ruled by universal suffrage
-the Average Citizen has not the means of adequately discharging
-the function which the constitution throws upon him of following,
-examining, and judging those problems of statesmanship which the
-ever-growing range of government administration and the ever-increasing
-complexity of our civilization set before him as a voter to whom issues
-of policy are submitted.
-
-As things stand, he votes, when he votes, not from knowledge, but as
-his party or his favourite newspaper bids him, or according to his
-predilection for some particular leader. Unless it be held that every
-man has a natural and indefeasible right to a share in the government
-of the country in which he resides, the ground for giving that share
-would seem to be the competence of the recipient and the belief that
-his sharing will promote the general welfare. So one may almost say
-that the theory of universal suffrage assumes that the Average Citizen
-is an active, instructed, intelligent ruler of his country.[2] The
-facts contradict this assumption.
-
- [2] It may no doubt be argued that even if he is not competent,
- it is better he should be within than without the voting
- class. But this was not the ground generally taken by those
- who brought in universal suffrage.
-
-Does this mean that widely extended suffrage is a failure, and that the
-Average Man is not a competent citizen in a democracy?
-
-This question brings us to reflect on another branch of civic duty not
-yet mentioned. Besides the civic duties already described of Fighting,
-Voting, and Thinking, there is another duty. It is the duty of Mutual
-Help, the duty incumbent on those who possess, through their knowledge
-and intelligence, the capacity of Instruction and Persuasion to advise
-and to guide their less competent fellow-citizens. No sensible man
-ought ever to have supposed that under such conditions as large modern
-communities present, the bulk of the citizens could vote wisely from
-their own private knowledge and intelligence. Even in small cities,
-such as was Sicyon in the days of Aratus, or Boston in the days of
-James Otis, the Average Man needed the help of his more educated and
-wiser neighbours. While communities remained small, it was easy to
-get this help. But now the swift and vast growth of states and cities
-has changed everything. Private talk counts for less when the richer
-citizens dwell apart from the poorer; their opportunities of meeting
-are fewer, and there is less friendliness, if also less dependence, in
-the relation of the employed to the employer. Public meetings do not
-give nearly all that the Average Man needs, not to add that being got
-together to present one set of facts and arguments and deliberately
-to ignore the other, they do not put him in a fair position to judge.
-Besides, the men who most need instruction are usually those who least
-come to meetings to receive it.
-
-To fill this void the newspapers have arisen,--organs purporting to
-supply the materials required for the formation of political opinion.
-Whatever the services of the newspaper in other respects, it has the
-inevitable defect of superseding, with most of those who read it, the
-exercise of independent thought. The newspaper--I speak generally, for
-there are some brilliant exceptions--is, in Europe even more than here,
-almost always partisan in its views, often partisan in its selection
-of facts or at least in its way of stating them. Presenting one side
-of a case, addressing chiefly those who are already adherents of that
-side, putting a colour on the events it reports,--it serves up to the
-reader ideas, perhaps only mere phrases or catchwords, which confirm
-him in his prepossessions, and by its daily iteration makes him take
-them for truths. Seldom has he the leisure, still more seldom the
-impulse or the patience, to scrutinize these ideas for himself and
-form his own judgment. He is glad to be relieved of the necessity for
-thinking, because thinking is hard work. Indolence again! The habit of
-mind that is formed by hasty reading, and especially by the reading of
-newspapers and magazines in which the matter, excellent as parts of it
-often are, is so multifarious that one topic diverts attention from the
-others, tends to a general dissipation and distraction of thought. It
-is a habit which tells upon us all and makes continuous reflection and
-a critical or logical treatment of the subjects deserving reflection
-more irksome to us in the full sunlight of to-day than it was to those
-whom we call our benighted ancestors.
-
-This is only one form of that supersession of the practice of thinking
-by the vice commonly called “the reading habit” which is profoundly
-affecting the intellectual life of our time. Yet as steady thinking
-was never really common even among the educated, the difference from
-earlier days is not so correctly described by saying that people think
-less than formerly, as by noting that while people read more, and
-while far more people read, the ratio of thinking to reading does not
-increase either in the individual or in the mass, and may possibly be
-decreasing. Intelligence and independence of thought have not grown in
-proportion to the diffusion of knowledge. The number of persons who
-both read and vote is in England and France more than twenty times as
-great as it was seventy years ago. The percentage of those who reflect
-before they vote has not kept pace either with popular education or
-with the extension of the suffrage.
-
-The persons who constitute that percentage are, and must for the
-reasons already given continue for some time to be, only a fraction,
-in some countries a small fraction, of the voting population. But the
-fraction might be made much larger than it is. The citizens who stand
-above their fellows in knowledge and mental power ought to set an
-example, not only by themselves thinking more and thinking harder about
-public affairs than most of them do, but also by exerting themselves to
-stimulate and aid their less instructed or more listless neighbours.
-The voter, it is said, should be independent. Yes. But independence
-does not mean isolation. He must not commit his personal responsibility
-to the keeping of another. Yes. But personal responsibility does not
-mean the vain conceit of knowledge and judgment where knowledge is
-wanting and judgment is untrained.
-
-Just as his religion throws upon every Christian the duty of loving
-his neighbour and giving practical expression to his love by helping
-his neighbour, succouring him in the hour of need, trying to rescue
-him from sin, seeking to guide his steps into the way of peace, so
-civic duty requires each of us to raise the level of citizenship not
-merely by ourselves voting and bearing a share in political agitation,
-but by trying to diffuse among our fellow-citizens whose opportunities
-have been less favourable, the knowledge and the fairness of mind and
-the habit of grappling with political questions which a democratic
-government must demand even from the Average Man. Democracy, they say,
-is based on Equality. But in no form of government is leadership so
-essential. A multitude without intelligent, responsible leaders whom
-it respects and follows is a crowd ready to become the prey of any
-self-seeking knave. Nor is it true that because men value equality they
-reject eminence. They are always glad to be led if some one, eschewing
-pretension and condescension, speaking to them with respect, but also
-with that authority which knowledge and capacity imply, will point
-out the path and give them the lead for which they are looking. To do
-this has now, in our great cities, become more difficult than it used
-to be, because men of different classes and different occupations do
-not know one another as well as they once did, and economic conflicts
-have made workingmen suspicious. But there are those in our English and
-Scottish cities who do it successfully, and I have never heard that
-it is resented. It is largely a matter of tact, and of knowing how to
-express that genuine sense of human fellowship which is commoner in the
-richer class than the constraint and shyness that are supposed to beset
-Englishmen sometimes allow to appear.
-
-If you and we, both here and in Britain, are less active than we should
-be in this and other forms of civic work, the fault lies in our not
-caring enough for our country. It is easy to wave a flag, to cheer
-an eminent statesman, to exult in some achievement by land or sea.
-But our imaginations are too dull to realize either the grandeur of
-the State in its splendid opportunities for promoting the welfare of
-the masses, or the fact that the nobility of the State lies in its
-being the true child, the true exponent, of the enlightened will of a
-right-minded and law-abiding people. Absorbed in business or pleasure,
-we think too little of what our membership in a free nation means for
-the happiness of our poorer fellow-citizens. The eloquent voice of a
-patriotic reformer sometimes breaks our slumber. But the daily round
-of business and pleasure soon again fills the mind, and public duty
-fades into the background of life. This dulness of imagination and the
-mere indolence which makes us neglect to stop and think, are a chief
-cause of that indifference which chokes the growth of civic duty. It is
-because a great University like this is the place where the imagination
-of young men may best be quickened by the divine fire, because the
-sons of a great University are those who may best carry with them into
-after life the inspiration which history and philosophy and poetry have
-kindled within its venerable walls, that I have ventured to dwell here
-on the special duty which those who enjoy these privileges owe to their
-brethren, partners in the citizenship of a great republic.
-
-
-
-
-HOW TO OVERCOME THE OBSTACLES TO GOOD CITIZENSHIP
-
-
-In the preceding three lectures[3] the chief hindrances to the
-discharge of civic duty have been considered. Let us now go on to
-inquire what can be done to remove these hindrances by grappling with
-those faults or weaknesses in the citizen to which they are due. When
-symptoms have been examined, one looks about for remedies.
-
- [3] The two lectures reprinted in this volume are the first
- and last of a series of four given by Mr. Bryce at Yale
- University.
-
-We have seen that of the three causes assigned, Indolence, Selfish
-Personal Interest, and Party Spirit, the first is the most common, the
-second the most noxious, the third the most excusable, yet also the
-most subtle, and perhaps the most likely to affect the class which
-takes the lead in politics and is incessantly employed upon its daily
-work. Whether the influence of these causes, or of any of them, is
-increasing with that more complete democratization of government which
-we see going on in Europe, is a question that cannot yet be answered.
-Fifty years may be needed before it can be answered, for new tendencies
-both for good and for evil are constantly emerging and affecting one
-another in unpredictable ways.
-
-The remedies that may be applied to any defects in the working of
-governments are some of them Mechanical, some of them Ethical. By
-Mechanical remedies I understand those which consist in improving the
-structure or the customs and working devices of government, i. e.,
-the laws and the institutions or political methods, by Ethical those
-which affect the character and spirit of the people. If you want to
-get more work and better work done in any industry, you may either
-improve the machinery, or the implements, by which the work is done, or
-else improve the strength and skill of the men who run the machinery
-and use the tools. In doing the former, you sometimes do the latter
-also, for when the workman has finer tools, he is led on to attempt
-more difficult work, and thus not only does his own skill become more
-perfect, but his interest in the work is likely to be increased.
-
-Although in politics by far the most real and lasting progress may be
-expected from raising the intelligence and virtue of the citizens,
-still improvements in the machinery of government must not be
-undervalued. To take away from bad men the means and opportunities
-by which they may work evil, to furnish good men with means and
-opportunities which make it easier for them to prevent or overcome
-evil, is to render a great service. And as laws which breathe a high
-spirit help to educate the whole community, so does the presence of
-opportunities for reform stimulate and invigorate the best citizens in
-their efforts after better things.
-
-I will enumerate briefly some of the remedies that may be classed as
-Mechanical because they consist in alterations of institutions or
-methods.
-
-Two of these need only a few passing words, because they are so
-sweeping as to involve the whole fabric of government, and therefore
-too large to be discussed here.
-
-One is propounded by those thinkers whom, to distinguish them from the
-persons who announce themselves as enemies of all society, we may call
-the Philosophical Anarchists, thinkers who are entitled to respectful
-consideration because their doctrine represents a protest that needs
-to be made against the conception of an all-engulfing State in which
-individual initiative and self-guided development might be merged and
-lost. They desire to get rid of the defects of government by getting
-rid of government itself; that is to say, by leaving men entirely
-alone without any coercive control, trusting to their natural good
-impulses to restrain them from harming one another. In such a state
-of things there would be no Citizenship, properly so called, but only
-the isolation of families, or perhaps of individuals--for it is not
-quite clear how far the family is expected to remain in the Anarchist
-paradise--an isolation more or less qualified by brotherly love. We are
-so far at present from a prospect of reaching the conditions needed for
-such an amelioration that it is enough to note this view and pass on.
-
-A second and diametrically opposite cure for the evils of existing
-society comes from those who are commonly termed Socialists or
-Collectivists. It consists in so widely enlarging the functions of
-government as to commit to it not merely all the work it now performs
-of defending the country, maintaining order, enacting laws, and
-enforcing justice between man and man, but also the further work of
-producing and distributing all commodities, allotting to each man his
-proper labour and proper remuneration, or possibly, instead of giving
-any pecuniary remuneration, providing each man with what he needs for
-life. Under this régime two of the hindrances to good citizenship would
-be much reduced. There ought to be less indifference to politics when
-everybody’s interest in the management of public concerns had been
-immensely increased by the fact that he found himself dependent on
-the public officials for everything. Nobody could plead that he was
-occupied by his own private business, because his private business
-would have vanished. So also selfish personal interest in making gains
-out of government must needs disappear when private property itself
-had ceased to exist. Whether, however, self-interest might not still
-find means of influencing public administration in ways beneficial to
-individual cupidity, and whether personal selfishness might not be even
-more dangerous, under such conditions, in proportion to the extended
-range and power of government,--this is another question which cannot
-be discussed till some definite scheme for the allotment of work and of
-remuneration (if any) shall have been propounded. Party Spirit would
-evidently, in a Collectivistic State, pass into new forms. It might,
-however, become more potent than ever before. But that again would
-depend on the kind of scheme for the reshaping of economic society that
-had been adopted.
-
-We may pass from these suggestions for the extinction, or
-reconstruction on new lines, of the existing social and political
-system to certain minor devices for improving the structure and methods
-of government which have been put forward as likely to help the citizen
-to discharge his duties more efficiently.
-
-One of these is the system of Proportional Representation. It is argued
-that if electoral areas were created with more than two members
-each, and if each elector was either allowed to vote for a number
-of candidates less than the number to be chosen, or was allowed to
-concentrate all his votes upon one candidate, or more, according to the
-number to be chosen, two good results would follow. The will of the
-electors would be more adequately and exactly expressed, because the
-minority, or possibly more than one minority, as well as the majority,
-would have everywhere its representative. The zeal of the electors
-would be stimulated, because in each district a section of opinion not
-large enough to have a chance of winning an election, if there were
-but one member, and accordingly now apathetic, because without hope,
-would then be roused to organize itself and to take a warmer interest
-in public affairs. The Proportional system is, therefore, advocated
-as one of those improvements in machinery which would react upon the
-people by quickening the pulses of public life. Some experiments have
-already been made in this direction. Those tried in England did not
-win general approval and have been dropped. That which is still in
-operation in the State of Illinois has not, if my informants are right,
-given much satisfaction. But the plan is said to work well both in
-Belgium and in some of the cantons of Switzerland; so one may hope that
-further experiments will be attempted. It deserves your careful study,
-but it is too complicated and opens too many side issues to be further
-discussed now and here.[4]
-
- [4] Since the above was written a Royal Commission has been
- appointed in Britain to examine divers questions relating
- to elections, and is investigating this, among other plans.
-
-Attempts have been made in some places to overcome the indifference of
-citizens to their duty by fining those who, without sufficient excuse,
-fail to vote. This plan of Obligatory Voting, as it is called, finds
-favour in some Swiss cantons and in Belgium, but is too uncongenial to
-the habits of England or of the United States to be worth considering
-as a practical measure in either country. Moreover, the neglect to vote
-is no very serious evil in either country, at least as regards the more
-important elections. Swiss legislation on the subject is evidence not
-so much of indifference among the citizens of that country as of the
-high standard of public duty they are expected to reach.
-
-When we come to the proposals made both here and in England for the
-reference of proposals to a direct popular vote, we come to a question
-of real practical importance. I wish that I had time to state to
-you and to examine the arguments both for and against this mode of
-legislation, which has been practised for many years in Switzerland
-with a virtually unanimous approval, and has been applied pretty freely
-in some of your States. It has taken two forms. One is the so-called
-Initiative, under which a section of the electors (being a number,
-or a proportion, prescribed by law) may propose a law upon which the
-people vote. This is being tried in Switzerland, but so far as I have
-been able to gather, has not yet proved its utility. The balance of
-skilled opinion seems to incline against it. The other is called the
-Referendum, and consists in the submission to popular vote of measures
-already passed by the legislative body. In this form the reference of
-laws to the people undoubtedly sharpens the interest of the ordinary
-citizen in the conduct of public affairs. The Swiss voters, at any
-rate, take pains to inform themselves on the merits of the measures
-submitted to them. These are widely and acutely canvassed at public
-meetings, and in the press. A large vote is usually cast, and all,
-whether or no they approve the result, agree that it is an intelligent,
-not a heedless, vote. The Swiss do not seem to think that the power and
-dignity of the legislature is weakened, as some might expect it to be,
-when their final voice is thus superseded by that of the people. All I
-need now ask you to note and remember is that the practice of bringing
-political issues directly before the people, whatever its drawbacks,
-does tend to diminish both that indolence and indifference which is
-pretty common among European voters. It requires every citizen to think
-for himself and deliver his vote upon all the more important measures,
-and it also reduces the power of that Party Spirit which everywhere
-distracts men’s minds from the real merits of the questions before
-the country. When a law is submitted to the Swiss people for their
-judgment, their decision nowise affects either the Executive or the
-Legislature. The law may be rejected by the people, but the officials
-who drafted the law continue to hold office. The party which brought it
-in and carried it through the Legislature is not deemed to have been
-censured or weakened by the fact of its ultimate rejection. That party
-spirit is less strong in Switzerland than in any other free country
-(except perhaps Norway) may be largely attributed to this disjunction
-of the deciding voice in legislation from those governmental organs
-which every political party seeks to control. The Swiss voter is to-day
-an exceptionally intelligent and patriotic citizen, fitter to exercise
-the function of direct legislation than perhaps any other citizen in
-Europe, and the practice of directly legislating has doubtless helped
-to train him for the function.
-
-It must, however, be admitted that the circumstances of that little
-republic and its cantons are too peculiar to make it safe to draw
-inferences from Swiss experience to large countries like Britain and
-France, the political life of which is highly centralized. The States
-of your Union may appear to offer a better field, and the results
-of the various experiments which some of them (such as Oklahoma) are
-trying will be watched with interest by Europeans.
-
-In considering the harm done to civic duty by selfish personal
-interests we were led to observe that the fewer points of contact
-between government and the pecuniary interests of private citizens,
-the better both for the purity of government and for the conscience of
-the private citizen. How far government ought to include within its
-functions schemes for increasing national wealth, otherwise than by
-such means (being means which a government alone can employ because
-to be effective they must be done on a great scale) as the improving
-of education, the diffusing of knowledge, the providing means of
-transportation, the conservation of natural resources, and so forth,
-may be matter for debate. But at any rate government ought to avoid
-measures tending to enrich any one person or group of persons at the
-expense of the citizens generally. Common justice requires that.
-Accordingly, all contracts should be made on the terms best for the
-public, and if possible by open bidding. Franchises, if not reserved
-by the public authority for itself, should be granted only for limited
-times and so as to secure the interests of the community, whether by
-way of a rent payable to the city or county treasury or otherwise.
-Public employees should not be made into a privileged class, to
-which there is given larger pay than other workers of the same class
-and capacity receive. All bills promoted by a private person, firm,
-or company looking to his or their pecuniary advantage ought to be
-closely scrutinized by some responsible public authority. In England
-we draw a sharp distinction between such bills and general public
-legislation, and we submit the former to a quasi-judicial examination
-by a Parliamentary committee in order to avoid possible jobs or
-scandals or losses to the public. As respects general legislation,
-i. e., that which is not in its terms local or personal, it may be
-difficult or impossible to prevent a law from incidentally benefiting
-one group or class of men and injuring another. But everything that
-can be done ought to be done to prevent any set of men from abusing
-legislation to serve their own interest. If there be truth in what
-one hears about the groups which in France, Belgium, and Germany have,
-through political pressure, obtained by law bounties benefiting their
-industries, or tariffs specially favourable to their own commercial
-enterprises, the danger that the general taxpayer, or the consumer, may
-be sacrificed to these private interests, is a real danger. To remove
-the occasion and the opportunities for the exercise of such pressure,
-which is likely to be often exerted in a covert way and to warp or
-pervert the legislator’s mind, is to diminish a temptation and to
-remove a stumbling block that lies in the path of civic duty. Whether
-a man be in theory a Protectionist or a Free Trader, whether or not he
-desires to nationalize public utilities, he must recognize the dangers
-incident to the passing of laws which influential groups of wealthy
-men may have a personal interest in promoting or resisting, because
-they offer a prospect of gain sufficiently large to make it worth while
-to “get at” legislatures and officials. Such dangers arise in all
-governments. That which makes them formidable in democracies is the
-fact that the interest of each individual citizen in protecting himself
-and the public against the selfish groups may be so small an interest
-that everybody neglects it, and the groups get their way.
-
-As we have been considering improvements in the machinery of
-government, this would be a fitting place for a discussion of what you
-call Primary Election Laws, which are intended both to reduce the power
-of party organizations and to stimulate the personal zeal of the voter
-by making it easier for him to influence the selection of a candidate.
-We have, however, in Europe, nothing corresponding to the Primary
-Laws of American States, nothing which recognizes a political party
-as a concrete body, nothing which deals with the mode of selecting
-candidates; and many of you doubtless know better than I do what has
-been the effect of these American enactments and whether they have
-really roused the ordinary citizen to bestir himself and to assert
-his independence of such party organizations as may have heretofore
-interfered with it. Europeans do not take kindly to the notion of
-giving statutory recognition to a Party, and they doubt whether the
-astuteness of those whom you call “machine politicians” may not succeed
-in getting hold of the new statutory Primaries as they did of the old
-ones. Be the merits of the new legislation what they may, one must hope
-that its existence will not induce the friends of reform to relax their
-efforts to reduce in other ways the power of political “Machines.”
-
-One obvious expedient to which good citizens may resort for keeping
-other citizens up to the mark is to be found in the enactment and
-enforcement of stringent laws against breaches of public trust. I
-took occasion, in referring to the practices of bribery and treating
-at elections, to note the wholesome effect of the statute passed in
-England in 1883 for repressing those offences. Although St. Paul has
-told us that he who is under grace does not need to be under the
-law, Christianity has not yet gone far enough to enable any of us to
-dispense with the moral force law can exert, both directly through
-the penalties it imposes and indirectly through the type of conduct
-which it exhorts the community to maintain. Laws may do much to raise
-and sustain the tone of all the persons engaged in public affairs as
-officials or as legislators, not only by appealing to their conscience,
-but by giving them a quick and easy reply to those who seek improper
-favours from them. A statute may express the best conscience of the
-whole people and set the standard they approve, even where the practice
-of most individuals falls short of the standard. If the prosecuting
-authorities and the courts do their duty unflinchingly, without regard
-to the social position of the offender, a statute may bring the
-practice of ordinary men up to the level of that collective conscience
-of the nation which it embodies.
-
-In every walk of life a class of persons constantly subject to a
-particular set of temptations is apt to form habits, due to the
-pressure of those temptations, which are below what the conscience
-of the better men in the community approves. The aim of legislation,
-as expressing that best conscience of the whole community, ought to
-be to correct or extirpate those habits and make each particular
-class understand that it is not to be excused because it has special
-temptations and thinks its own sins venial. Even the men who yield
-to the temptations peculiar to their own class are willing to join
-in condemning those who yield to some other kind of temptation. Thus
-the “better conscience” may succeed in screwing up one class after
-another to a higher level. But the enactment of a law is not enough.
-It must be strictly enforced. Procedure must be prompt. Juries must
-be firm. Technicalities must not be suffered to obstruct the march of
-justice. Sentences must be carried out, else the statute will become,
-as statutes often have become, a record of aspiration rather than of
-accomplishment.
-
-To contrive plans by which the interest of the citizen in public
-affairs shall be aroused and sustained, is far easier than to induce
-the citizen to use and to go on using, year in and year out, the
-contrivances and opportunities provided for his benefit. Yet it is
-from the heart and will of the citizen that all real and lasting
-improvements must proceed. In the words of the Gospel, it is the inside
-of the cup and platter that must be made clean. The central problem of
-civic duty is the ethical problem. Indifference, selfish interests, the
-excesses of party spirit, will all begin to disappear as civic life is
-lifted on to a higher plane, and as the number of those who, standing
-on that higher plane, will apply a strict test to their own conduct and
-to that of their leaders, realizing and striving to discharge their
-responsibilities, goes on steadily increasing until they come to form
-the majority of the people. What we have called “the better conscience”
-must be grafted on to the “wild stock” of the natural Average Man.
-
-How is this to be done? The difficulty is the same as that which meets
-the social reformer or the preacher of religion.
-
-One must try to reach the Will through the Soul. The most obvious way
-to begin is through the education of those who are to be citizens,
-moral education combined with and made the foundation for instruction
-in civic duty. This is a task which the Swiss alone among European
-nations seem to have seriously undertaken. Here in America it has
-become doubly important through the recent entrance into your
-community of a vast mass of immigrants, most of them ignorant of our
-language, still more of them ignorant, not only of your institutions,
-but of the general principles and habits of free government. Most of
-them doubtless belong to races of high natural intelligence, and many
-of them have the simple virtues of the peasant. You are providing
-for all of them good schools, and their children will soon become
-Americans in speech and habits, quite patriotic enough so far as
-flag-waving goes. But they will not so soon or so completely acquire
-your intellectual and moral standard, or imbibe your historical and
-religious traditions. There is no fear but what they will quickly learn
-to vote. To some Europeans you seem to have been overconfident in
-intrusting them with a power which most of them cannot yet have learned
-to use wisely. That however you have done, and as you hold that it
-cannot now be undone, your task must now be to teach them, if you can,
-to understand your institutions, to think about the vote they have to
-give, and to realize the responsibilities which the suffrage implies
-as these were realized by your New England forefathers when they
-planted free commonwealths in the wilderness nearly three centuries ago.
-
-Valuable as instruction may be in fitting the citizen to comprehend and
-judge upon the issues which his vote determines, there must also be the
-will to apply his knowledge for the public good. What appeal shall be
-made to him?
-
-We--I say “we” because this is our task in Europe no less than it is
-yours here--we may appeal to his enlightened self-interest, making
-self-interest so enlightened that it loses its selfish quality. We can
-remind him of all the useful work which governments may accomplish when
-they are conducted by the right men in the right spirit. Take, for
-instance, the work to be performed in those cities wherein so large and
-increasing a part of the population now dwell. How much remains to be
-done to make cities healthier, to secure better dwellings for the poor,
-to root out nests of crime, to remove the temptations to intemperance
-and gambling, to bring within the reach of the poorest all possible
-facilities both for intellectual progress and for enjoying the
-pleasures of art and music! How much may we do so to adorn the city
-with parks and public buildings as to make its external aspect instil
-the sense of beauty into its inhabitants and give them a fine pride
-in it! These are some of the tasks which cannot safely be intrusted
-to a municipality unless its government is above suspicion, unless
-men of probity and capacity are placed in power, unless the whole
-community extends its sympathy to the work and keeps a vigilant eye
-upon all the officials. Municipal governments cannot be encouraged to
-own public utilities so long as there is a risk that somebody may own
-municipal governments. Have we not here a strong motive for securing
-purity and efficiency in city administration? Is it not the personal
-interest of every one of us that the city we dwell in should be such
-as I have sought to describe? Nothing makes more for happiness than to
-see others around one happy. The rich residents need not grudge--nor
-indeed would your rich residents grudge, for there is less grumbling
-among the rich tax payers here than in Europe--taxation which they
-could see was being honestly spent for the benefit of the city. The
-interest each one of us has as a member of a city or a nation in seeing
-our fellow-citizens healthy, peaceful, and happy is a greater interest,
-if it be measured in terms of our own real enjoyment of life, than is
-that interest, of which we so constantly are reminded, which we have
-in making the State either wealthy by the development of trade, or
-formidable to foreign countries by its armaments.
-
-We may also appeal to every citizen’s sense of dignity and
-self-respect. We may bid him recollect that he is the heir of rights
-and privileges which you and our ancestors fought for, and which
-place him, whatever his birth or fortune, among the rulers of his
-country. He is unworthy of himself, unmindful of what he owes to the
-Constitution that has given him these functions, if he does not try to
-discharge them worthily. These considerations are no doubt familiar to
-us Englishmen and Americans, though we may not always feel their force
-as deeply as we ought. To the new immigrants of whom I have already
-spoken they are unfamiliar; yet to the best among these also they have
-sometimes powerfully appealed. You had, in the last generation, no more
-high-minded and patriotic citizen than the German exile of 1849, the
-late Mr. Carl Schurz.
-
-When every motive has been invoked, and every expedient applied that
-can stimulate the sense of civic duty, one never can feel sure that
-the desired result will follow. The moral reformer and the preacher
-of religion have the same experience. The ebbs and flows of ethical
-life are beyond the reach of scientific prediction. There are times
-of awakening, “times of refreshing from the presence of the Lord,” as
-your Puritan ancestors said, but we do not know when they will come nor
-can we explain why they come just when they do. Every man can recall
-moments in his own life when the sky seemed to open above him, and when
-his vision was so quickened that all things stood transfigured in a
-purer and brighter radiance, when duty, and even toil done for the sake
-of duty, seemed beautiful and full of joy.
-
-You remember Wordsworth’s lines--
-
- “Hence, in a season of fair weather,
- Though inland far we be,
- Our souls have sight of that celestial sea
- That brought us hither.”
-
-If we survey the wide field of European history, we shall find that
-something like this happens with nations also. They, too, have moments
-of exaltation, moments of depression. Their ideals rise and fall. They
-are for a time filled with a spirit which seeks truth, which loves
-honour, which is ready for self-sacrifice; and after a time the light
-begins to fade from the hills and this spirit lingers only among the
-best souls.
-
-Such a spirit is sometimes evoked by a great national crisis which
-thrills all hearts. This happened to England or at least to a large
-part of the people of England, in the seventeenth century. It happened
-to Germany in the days of the War of Liberation, and to Italy when
-she was striving to expel the Austrians and the petty princes who
-ruled by Austria’s help. You here felt it during the War of Secession.
-Sometimes, and usually at one of these crises, a great man stands out
-who helps to raise the feeling of his people and inspire them with his
-own lofty thoughts and aims. Such a man was Mazzini, seventy years
-ago in Italy. Such were Washington and Lincoln, the former more by his
-example than by his words, the latter by both, yet most by the quiet
-patience, dignity, and hopefulness which he showed in the darkest
-hours. Nations respond to the appeal which such a man makes to their
-best instincts. He typifies for the moment whatever is highest in them.
-
-Unhappily, with nations as with individuals, there is apt to be a
-relapse from these loftier moods into the old common ways when selfish
-interest and trivial pleasures resume their sway. There comes a sort
-of reaction from the stress of virtue and strenuous high-soaring
-effort. Everything looks gray and dull. The divine light has died out
-of the sky. This, too, is an oft-repeated lesson of European history.
-Yet the reaction and decline are not inevitable. When an individual
-man has been raised above himself by some spiritual impulse, he is
-sometimes able to hold the ground he has won. His will may have been
-strengthened. He has learnt to control the meaner desires. The impulse
-that stirred him is not wholly spent, because the nobler thoughts and
-acts which it prompted have become a habit with him. So, too, with
-a nation. What habits are to the individual man, that, to a nation,
-are its Traditions. They are the memories of the Past turned into
-the standards of the Present. High traditions go to form a code of
-honour, which speaks with authority to the sense of honour. Whoever
-transgresses that code is felt to be unworthy of the nation, unfit to
-hold that place in its respect and confidence which the great ones
-of the days of old have held. Pride in the glorious foretime of the
-race and in its heroes sustains in the individual man who is called
-to public duty, the personal pride which makes him feel that all his
-affections and all his emotions stand rooted in the sense of honour,
-which is, for the man and for the nation, the foundation of all virtue.
-
-We have seen in our own time, in the people of Japan, a striking
-example of what the passionate attachment to a national ideal can do
-in war to intensify the sense of duty and self-sacrifice. A similar
-example is held up to us by those who have recorded the earlier annals
-of Rome. The deepest moral they teach is the splendid power which the
-love of Rome and the idea of what her children owed to her exercised
-over her great citizens, enabling them to set shining examples of
-devotion to the city which the world has admired ever since. Each
-example evoked later examples in later generations, till at last in
-a changed community, its upper class demoralized by wealth and power
-even more than it was torn by discord, its lower classes corrupted
-by the upper and looking on their suffrage as a means of gain, the
-ancient traditions died out. Whoever, studying the conditions of modern
-European democracies, sees the infinite fatalities which popular
-government in large countries full of rich men and of opportunities for
-acquiring riches, offers for the perversion of government to private
-selfish ends, will often feel that those European States which have
-maintained the highest standard of civic purity have done it in respect
-of their Traditions. Were these to be weakened, the fabric might
-crumble into dust.
-
-Every new generation as it comes up can make the traditions which it
-finds better or worse. If its imagination is touched and its emotions
-stirred by all that is finest in the history of its country, it learns
-to live up to the ideals set before it, and thus it strengthens the
-best standards of conduct it has inherited and prolongs the reverence
-felt for them.
-
-The responsibility for forming ideals and fixing standards does not
-belong to statesmen alone. It belongs, and now perhaps more largely
-than ever before, to the intellectual leaders of the nation, and
-especially to those who address the people in the universities and
-through the press. Teachers, writers, journalists, are forming the
-mind of modern nations to an extent previously unknown. Here they
-have opportunities such as have existed never before, nor in any
-other country, for trying to inspire the nation with a love of truth
-and honour, with a sense of the high obligations of citizenship, and
-especially of those who hold public office.
-
-Of the power which the daily press exerts upon the thought and the
-tastes of the people through the matter it scatters among them, and
-of the grave import of the choice it has always and everywhere to make
-between the serious treatment of public issues and that cheap cynicism
-which so many readers find amusing, there is no need to speak here. You
-know better than I do how far those who direct the press realize and
-try to discharge the responsibilities which attach to their power.
-
-The observer who seeks to discern and estimate the forces working for
-good or evil that mark the spirit and tendencies of an age, finds it
-easiest to do this by noting the changes which have occurred within
-his own memory. To-day everyone seems to dwell upon the growth not
-only of luxury, but of the passion for amusement, and most of those
-who can look back thirty or forty years find in this growth grounds
-for discouragement. I deny neither the fact nor the significance of
-the auguries that it suggests. But let us also note a hopeful sign
-manifest during the last twenty years both here and in England. It
-is the diffusion among the educated and richer classes of a warmer
-feeling of sympathy and a stronger feeling of responsibility for the
-less fortunate sections of the community. There is more of a sense
-of brotherhood, more of a desire to help, more of a discontent with
-those arrangements of society which press hardly on the common man
-than there was forty years ago. This altruistic spirit which is now
-everywhere visible in the field of private philanthropic work, seems
-likely to spread into the field of civic action also, and may there
-become a new motive power. It has already become a more efficient force
-in legislation than it ever was before. We may well hope that it will
-draw more and more of those who love and seek to help their fellow-men
-into that legislative and administrative work whose opportunities for
-grappling with economic and social problems become every day greater.
-
-Here in America I am told in nearly every city I visit that the young
-men are more and more caring for and bestirring themselves to discharge
-their civic duties. That is the best news one can hear. Surely no
-country makes so clear a call upon her citizens to work for her as
-yours does. Think of the wide-spreading results which good solid work
-produces on so vast a community, where everything achieved for good
-in one place is quickly known and may be quickly imitated in another.
-Think of the advantages for the development of the highest civilization
-which the boundless resources of your territory provide. Think of that
-principle of the Sovereignty of the People which you have carried
-further than it was ever carried before and which requires and inspires
-and, indeed, compels you to endeavour to make the whole people fit to
-bear a weight and discharge a task such as no other multitude of men
-ever yet undertook. Think of the sense of fraternity, also without
-precedent in any other great nation, which binds all Americans together
-and makes it easier here than elsewhere for each citizen to meet every
-other citizen as an equal upon a common ground. One who, coming from
-the Old World, remembers the greater difficulties the Old World has
-to face, rejoices to think how much, with all these advantages, the
-youth of America, such youth as I see here to-night in this venerable
-university, may accomplish for the future of your country. Nature
-has done her best to provide a foundation whereon the fabric of an
-enlightened and steadily advancing civilization may be reared. It is
-for you to build upon that foundation. Free from many of the dangers
-that surround the States of Europe, you have unequalled opportunities
-for showing what a high spirit of citizenship--zealous, intelligent,
-disinterested--may do for the happiness and dignity of a mighty nation,
-enabling it to become what its founders hoped it might be--a model for
-other peoples more lately emerged into the sunlight of freedom.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Note
-
-
-Page 48: “Americans” was printed as “Ameritans”, and changed here,
-presuming it was a typographical error.
-
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Promoting good citizenship, by James Bryce</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Promoting good citizenship</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: James Bryce</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: July 10, 2022 [eBook #68493]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Charlie Howard and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PROMOTING GOOD CITIZENSHIP ***</div>
-
-<p class="p4 center vspace wspace"><span class="larger">RIVERSIDE ESSAYS</span><br />
-
-EDITED BY<br />
-<span class="larger">ADA L. F. SNELL</span><br />
-
-<span class="small">ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH<br />
-MOUNT HOLYOKE COLLEGE</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter"><div class="bbox center">
-<p class="bold">Riverside Essays<br />
-
-Edited by Ada L. F. Snell</p>
-
-<hr class="narrow" />
-
-<div class="blockquot hang">
-
-<p><b class="sans">THE AMERICAN MIND AND AMERICAN IDEALISM.</b> By
-Bliss Perry. 35 cents.</p>
-
-<p><b class="sans">UNIVERSITY SUBJECTS.</b> By John Henry Newman. 35
-cents.</p>
-
-<p><b class="sans">STUDIES IN NATURE AND LITERATURE.</b> By John Burroughs.
-35 cents.</p>
-
-<p><b class="sans">PROMOTING GOOD CITIZENSHIP.</b> By James Bryce. 35
-cents.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p1">
-<i>Prices are net, postpaid</i><br />
-<i>Other titles in preparation</i></p>
-
-<p class="p1">HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY<br />
-<span class="smaller"><span class="smcap">Boston</span> <span class="in2"><span class="smcap">New York</span></span> <span class="in2"><span class="smcap">Chicago</span></span></span>
-</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<div class="chapter center vspace wspace larger">
-<p class="bold">The Riverside Literature Series</p>
-
-<hr class="narrow" />
-
-<h1>PROMOTING<br />
-GOOD CITIZENSHIP</h1>
-
-<p class="p2"><span class="smaller">BY</span><br />
-<span class="larger">JAMES BRYCE</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="max-width: 6em;">
- <img src="images/logo.png" width="200" height="260" alt="logo" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2 smaller">BOSTON <span class="in1">NEW YORK</span> <span class="in1">CHICAGO</span><br />
-<span class="larger">HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY</span><br />
-<span class="bold">The Riverside Press Cambridge</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter vspace wspace center smaller">
-
-<p class="p4">
-COPYRIGHT, 1909, BY YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS<br />
-COPYRIGHT, 1913, BY ADA L. F. SNELL<br /><br />
-
-ALL RIGHTS RESERVED</p>
-
-<p class="p2 smaller">R. L. S. 227</p>
-
-<p class="p2"><span class="bold">The Riverside Press</span><br />
-CAMBRIDGE . MASSACHUSETTS<br />
-U . S . A
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table id="toc">
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Introduction</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_vii">vii</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Indolence</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_1">1</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">How to overcome the Obstacles to Good Citizenship</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_26">26</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The two essays by Mr. James Bryce included in this volume are
-reprinted by permission of Yale University from Mr. Bryce’s lectures
-on the Dodge Foundation, published in book form by the Yale University
-Press under the title of <cite>The Hindrances to Good Citizenship</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_vii" class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="INTRODUCTION">INTRODUCTION</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="firstword">Mr. Bryce</span> has for a long time been a man of
-international prominence. His wide influence
-is undoubtedly due to many causes, but it may,
-in general, be traced to two characteristics:
-Mr. Bryce is a humanist who sympathetically
-watches the progress of nations and the guiding
-of governments; he is also a historian. In his
-biographical study of John Richard Green he
-has skillfully analyzed the aptitudes of the
-historian, and in so doing has pointedly, if
-unwittingly, described himself. Accuracy, he
-says,—a desire for the exact truth,—keen
-observation, sound judgment, imagination,
-and, following inevitably from these, command
-of literary exposition, are the powers which a
-historian needs. Each of these qualities Mr.
-Bryce himself possesses in large measure. It is
-his historical power, enabling him to observe
-and record the significant phases and events of
-human life, plus his sympathetic interest in its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">viii</span>
-present-day manifestations which explain, in
-some degree, his singularly eminent position
-as an authority on matters pertaining to human
-institutions in various countries.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Bryce was born in northern Ireland in
-1838, of Scotch-Irish parents; and he combines
-in his nature the stalwart intellectual propensities
-of the Scot and the artistic attributes of
-the Celt. He was educated at the University
-of Glasgow, and later went to Oxford where
-he won many honors. After finishing his collegiate
-work he was admitted to the bar and
-practiced law in London until 1882. At the
-age of thirty-two he was appointed Regius
-Professor of Civil Law at Oxford. Up to this
-point his life had been almost exclusively that
-of a student and a scholar; and already at this
-time he was recognized as a man of remarkable
-historical ability. The year 1880 marked a
-change in his life. He presented himself to the
-workingmen of Tower Hamlets, London, as a
-candidate for a seat in the House of Commons.
-Mr. Stead tells us that Mr. Bryce, in this first
-campaign, addressed his open-air audiences
-somewhat after the manner of a professor lecturing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">ix</span>
-in a classroom; he succeeded, nevertheless,
-in getting himself elected, and for over
-twenty-five years thereafter was a member of
-Parliament. During these years he held various
-responsible offices having to do with home
-and foreign administrative work. The practical
-results of his political influence were
-advancement in public education, the securing
-of more extensive parks and open country
-spaces for the pleasure of the poorer classes,
-and the furtherance of international peace. In
-1907, Mr. Bryce was appointed ambassador
-to the United States, which office he resigned
-in 1913 to carry on literary work.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Bryce’s knowledge is the result not only
-of university training and experience in public
-life, but also of varied reading. He has read
-art, science, history, and has always been an
-interested student of poetry. In speaking once
-to Americans of Swinburne, he suddenly
-paused and asked, “Who are writing your
-songs and stirring your heart,—or isn’t your
-heart being stirred? Nothing is more important
-than that each generation and each land
-should have its poets. Each oncoming tide of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_x">x</span>
-life, each age, requires and needs men of lofty
-thought who shall dream and sing for it, who
-shall gather up its tendencies and formulate
-its ideals and voice its spirit, proclaiming its
-duties and awakening its enthusiasm, through
-the high authority of the poet and the art of his
-verse.” How extensively Mr. Bryce has read
-the poets, both ancient and modern, one perceives
-from the references and allusions in his
-<cite>Studies in Contemporary Biography</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>The most important source of Mr. Bryce’s
-knowledge, the one which has furnished the
-material for nearly all his books, has been his
-first-hand observation and study of many
-countries. When still a young man he wandered
-alone over Mount Ararat, since the native
-guides refused to follow him to the unknown
-wilds of that lonely peak. He visited the
-Ottoman Empire in 1876, and, as a result of
-his investigations there, became an advocate
-of the Bulgarian cause; in fact it was his
-speeches on the Eastern Question which first
-made him prominent politically. Mr. Bryce
-has traveled also in Iceland; he was in Africa
-just previous to the Boer War; he has been all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xi">xi</span>
-over South America; and he knows the United
-States as few Americans know it. He has
-studied these countries with great faithfulness,
-observing keenly every phase of the political
-and social life. An interesting sample of his
-method of gathering information is found in
-the chapter on “The Position of Women” in
-<cite>The American Commonwealth</cite>. When traveling
-in the West he noticed that all of the women
-seemed so very well dressed that apparently
-none could be the wife or daughter of a workingman;
-but close observation dispelled this
-illusion. Idling in a bookstore one day in
-Oregon, he noticed a woman who was asking
-for a certain magazine. After her departure
-he asked the salesman who she was, and found
-that she was the wife of a workman, and the
-magazine a Paris fashion journal. “This,” says
-Mr. Bryce, “set me to observing female dress
-more closely, and it turned out to be perfectly
-true that the women in these little towns were
-following the Parisian fashions very closely,
-and were, in fact, ahead of the majority of
-English ladies belonging to the professional
-and mercantile classes.” Thus no detail, however<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xii">xii</span>
-trivial, escapes him; the pleasant and
-unpleasant phases of our American life, our
-manners, clothes, scenery have all been noted
-and reckoned with in the statement of tendencies
-and conclusions.</p>
-
-<p>As a parliamentarian Mr. Bryce is said to
-have been direct, honest, and always illuminating.
-His ability to command attention was
-due not to any great oratorical gift, but rather
-to his scholarly view of any matter under
-debate. Mr. Justin McCarthy reports that the
-members of the House who might be dining,
-smoking, or reading in the rooms assigned for
-these purposes, would, when the news was
-passed around that Mr. Bryce was speaking,
-leave these pleasant diversions, and betake
-themselves with great speed to the debating
-chamber. “I have many a time,” he says,
-“heard Conservative members murmur, in
-tones not altogether expressing absolute satisfaction
-at the disturbing information, ‘Bryce
-is up—I must go in and hear what he has to
-say.’ ... Everybody knows that when he
-speaks it is because he has something to say
-which ought to be spoken and therefore ought<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiii">xiii</span>
-to be heard.” Mr. Bryce was able to command
-attention also because of his reputation as a
-courageous nonpartisan. He never advocated
-a measure or policy for mere party reasons or
-for personal aggrandizement. Not infrequently
-he has fought bravely with the minority of his
-own party, and has at times suffered bitter
-attacks, as when he remained resolutely pro-Boer
-during the rampant jingoism of the
-South African War. But however widely political
-enemies might differ from him, they respected
-his sincerity and his luminous view of
-governmental problems. It is further characteristic
-of Mr. Bryce’s public life that he never,
-in his desire for the welfare of his own country,
-lost sight of what is due other nations. In
-practice as well as in precept he upheld the
-doctrine that “patriotism consists not in
-waving a flag, but in striving that our country
-shall be righteous as well as strong.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Bryce’s books deal, for the most part,
-with historical subjects and present-day governments.
-<cite>The Holy Roman Empire</cite>, written when
-he was only twenty-four years old, is still
-regarded by able historians as an accurate and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiv">xiv</span>
-authoritative work; and, in the judgment of
-literary critics, it is written with so much
-charm of style that it is destined to become an
-English classic. All of the books which have
-to do with foreign nations are characterized by
-a tactful, faithful, and above all a truthful,
-handling. It was <cite>The American Commonwealth</cite>
-which made the citizens of the United States
-regard Mr. Bryce as a friend of the Republic;
-but he is not so regarded because he has always
-stroked the gleaming pinions of the American
-eagle. Although he does seem to share the hope
-universally cherished by Americans that we
-shall, in spite of grave national defects, “win
-out” in the end, he has nevertheless, in direct
-and unadorned statements, pointed out our
-faults. As an example of his characteristic
-straightforwardness of speech, take the following
-sentence: “America has little occasion to
-think of foreign affairs, but some of her domestic
-difficulties are such as to demand that careful
-observation and unbroken reflection which
-neither her executive magistrates, nor her
-legislatures, nor any leading class among her
-people now give.” Mr. Bryce has never ceased<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xv">xv</span>
-to insist that America suffers from lack of
-honest, courageous leadership in dealing with
-such problems as municipal evils and the insidious
-influence of “vested interests.” Our heedlessness
-and indifference to public matters is
-our national sin, but Mr. Bryce foresees a cure
-for our defects in the increasing zeal with
-which the younger generation is assuming the
-public burden; but how great must be its zeal
-and how steady its purpose if anything is to be
-accomplished, one is made poignantly aware
-by reading the account of the Tammany Ring
-in <cite>The American Commonwealth</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>When a man of Mr. Bryce’s ability and
-experience points out definitely the chief
-obstacles to good citizenship and furthermore
-indicates the means by which these may be
-overcome, one may be as sure that he will say
-something which should be heeded as were the
-members of the House when he was a parliamentarian.
-In 1909, Mr. Bryce gave at Yale
-University a series of lectures which were later
-published by the Yale University Press under
-the title <cite>Hindrances to Good Citizenship</cite>. The
-main obstacles to good citizenship are defined<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xvi">xvi</span>
-as indolence, private self-interest, and party
-spirit.</p>
-
-<p>The first lecture, “Indolence,” brings to mind
-the chapter in <cite>The American Commonwealth</cite>
-on “The War Against Bossdom,” with its
-vigorous concluding words, “In America, as
-everywhere else in the world, the commonwealth
-suffers more often from apathy or
-shortsightedness in the upper classes, who
-ought to lead, than from ignorance or recklessness
-in the humbler classes, who generally are
-ready to follow when wisely led.”</p>
-
-<p>In the second lecture, “Private Self-Interest,”
-Mr. Bryce states the causes which produce
-a body of citizens who care more about
-their own advancement than about the welfare
-of the country. The most important of
-these causes are tariff issues, appropriations
-of public money for local interests, governmental
-contracts, public officeholding,—all
-representing “the insidious power of money
-which knows how to play upon the self-interest
-of voters and legislators, polluting at its source
-the spring of Civic Duty.”</p>
-
-<p>The third lecture considers party spirit as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xvii">xvii</span>
-a hindrance to citizenship. Mr. Bryce acknowledges
-the practical necessity for parties in
-the management of popular governments, and
-also the perplexing difficulties of a party
-leader who must decide between conscience
-and party. There is nevertheless but one
-course open to him: he must follow his conscience;
-only he must carefully distinguish between
-conscience and angular independence
-which is lacking in common sense and in willingness
-to defer to others in unimportant matters.
-For the average man the question is a
-simple one; relieved of the burdens of party
-leadership, he should follow his intelligence
-rather than his party. A large number of independent
-voters secures most effectively the
-right administration of public business.</p>
-
-<p>The last lecture in the series, “How to
-Overcome the Obstacles to Good Citizenship,”
-suggests various means by which a more satisfactory
-body of citizens may be secured. In
-method and style this lecture is illustrative
-of the author’s peculiar strength in exposition.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Bryce’s writings are remarkable for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xviii">xviii</span>
-lucid organization of a wealth of detail into
-significant principles and sound conclusions;
-for vividness in the presentation of whatever
-pertains to humanity, and for gracious, winning
-English. One finds always in his work
-simplicity in the unfolding of material which
-has been carefully gathered and calmly judged.
-There is perfect clarity in the handling of a
-mass of detail, and such skillful subordination
-of it and masterly emphasis of important principles
-that the reader easily catches the bearing
-on the central thought of every illustration or
-description. There is also in the writing a
-solidity and firmness, a bracing stalwartness—qualities
-which are the result of the writer’s
-own sturdy nature. But this is not all. The
-author’s almost novelistic power of seeing persons
-and things makes his writing as vivid as
-a story; even his most abstract propositions are
-tangible and real. And the material is, moreover,
-so sympathetically and earnestly treated
-that it is at times lifted above mere pedestrian
-exposition and becomes warm with the feeling
-of the writer. The everyday words and unadorned
-sentences, infused with the spirit of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xix">xix</span>
-the one who writes, become potent to stir
-slumbering ideals. Suddenly over the level
-way of mere intellectual matters falls a dreamy
-light, a Celtic graciousness of manner; and the
-reader no longer journeys along a mere brown
-path, but sees the familiar scenes of the way
-idealized by the touch of poetry. The value of
-skillful exposition as an asset for leadership,
-or for the accomplishment of any other purpose,
-Mr. Bryce fully appreciates. A command
-of language is a power possessed by nearly
-every one of the men, eminent in the nineteenth
-century, whom Mr. Bryce describes in
-his <cite>Studies in Contemporary Biography</cite>. By
-means of it Mr. John Richard Green wrote the
-most brilliant history of modern times; through
-the stirring editorials of the <cite>Nation</cite>, Mr.
-Godkin was able to arouse an indifferent
-American public to a more earnest consideration
-of the national welfare; and it was Mr.
-Gladstone’s gift of “noble utterance” which
-more than any other talent enabled him for
-many years to hold an authoritative political
-position. Mr. Bryce’s own rare power as a
-writer of vigorous, persuasive English is one of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xx">xx</span>
-the qualities which has made him in a certain
-sense a citizen of the world with an almost
-world-wide influence.</p>
-
-<p>However helpful Mr. Bryce’s method may
-be for the student who is attempting to understand
-and master the technique of successful
-English, it is the subject-matter which is primarily
-of importance. It is valuable for the
-student since it may serve to stimulate the
-investigation and expression of certain questions
-connected with the administration of
-public matters in his own town or city; and it
-may also suggest the explanation and judgment
-of measures proposed to secure better government,
-such as the Referendum. But the essential
-worth of the material lies in the fact that it
-is a tonic for relaxed vigilance in public affairs.
-It would be well to require every citizen of
-the United States to read in school days <cite>The
-American Commonwealth</cite>; one ventures to say
-that there would be, as a result, a steady advancement
-in the right understanding and fulfillment
-of civic duties; but even a limited
-acquaintance with Mr. Bryce should serve to
-define in clearer terms the elements of a sane<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxi">xii</span>
-and effective patriotism. And Mr. Bryce’s own
-life, unfalteringly and resolutely devoted to a
-just administration of governments, together
-with its unfailing graciousness in the most trying
-situations, furnishes an invigorating example
-of the truly successful statesman.</p>
-
-<p class="sigright">
-<span class="smcap">Ada L. F. Snell.</span>
-</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_1" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">1</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Promoting_Good_Citizenship"><span class="larger">Promoting Good Citizenship</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="INDOLENCE">INDOLENCE</h2>
-
-<p><span class="firstword">Dr. Samuel Johnson</span>, being once asked how
-he came to have made a blunder in his famous
-English Dictionary, is reported to have
-answered, “Ignorance, Sir, sheer ignorance.”
-Whoever has grown old enough to look back
-over the wasted opportunities of life—and we
-all of us waste more opportunities than we use—will
-be apt to ascribe most of his blunders to
-sheer indolence. Sometimes one has omitted
-to learn what it was needful to learn in order to
-proceed to action; sometimes one has shrunk
-from the painful effort required to reflect and
-decide on one’s course, leaving it to Fortune to
-settle what Will ought to have settled; sometimes
-one has, from mere self-indulgent sluggishness,
-let the happy moment slip.</p>
-
-<p>The difference between men who succeed
-and men who fail is not so much as we commonly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">2</span>
-suppose due to differences in intellectual
-capacity. The difference which counts for
-most is that between activity and slackness;
-between the man who, observing alertly and
-reflecting incessantly, anticipates contingencies
-before they occur, and the lazy, easy-going,
-slowly-moving man who is roused with difficulty,
-will not trouble himself to look ahead,
-and so being taken unprepared loses or misuses
-the opportunities that lead to fortune. If it be
-true that everywhere, though perhaps less here
-than in European countries, energy is the exception
-rather than the rule, we need not wonder
-that men show in the discharge of civic duty the
-defects which they show in their own affairs.
-No doubt public affairs demand only a small
-part of their time. But the spring of self-interest
-is not strong where public affairs are
-concerned. The need for activity is not continuously
-present. A duty shared with many others
-seems less of a personal duty. If a hundred, a
-thousand, ten thousand other citizens are as
-much bound to speak, vote, or act as each one
-of us is, the sense of obligation becomes to each
-of us weak. Still weaker does it become when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">3</span>
-one perceives the neglect of others to do their
-duty. The need for the good citizen’s action,
-no doubt, becomes then all the greater. But
-it is only the best sort of citizen that feels it to
-be greater. The Average Man judges himself
-by the average standard and does not see why
-he should take more trouble than his neighbours.
-Thus we arrive at a result summed up
-in the terrible dictum, which reveals the basic
-fault of democracy, “What is Everybody’s
-business is Nobody’s business.”</p>
-
-<p>Of indolence, indifference, apathy, in general,
-no more need be said. It is a sin that easily
-besets us all. We might suppose that where
-public affairs are concerned it would decrease
-under the influence of education and the press.
-But several general causes have tended to increase
-it in our own generation, despite the
-increasing strength of the appeal which civic
-duty makes to men who are, or if they cared
-might be, better informed about public affairs
-than were their fathers.</p>
-
-<p>The first of these causes is that manners have
-grown gentler and passions less angry. A chief
-duty of the good citizen is to be angry when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">4</span>
-anger is called for, and to express his anger by
-deeds, to attack the bad citizen in office, or
-otherwise in power, to expose his dishonesty, to
-eject him from office, to brand him with an
-ignominy which will prevent his returning to
-any post of trust. In former days indignation
-flamed higher, and there was little tenderness
-for offenders. Jehu smote the prophets of Baal.
-Bad ministers—and no doubt sometimes good
-ministers also—were in England beheaded
-on Tower Hill. Everywhere punishment came
-quicker and was more severe, though to be
-sure it was often too harsh. Nowadays the
-arm of justice is often arrested by an indulgence
-which forgets that the true aim of punishment
-is the protection of the community. The very
-safeguards with which our slower and more
-careful procedure has surrounded trials and
-investigations, proper as such safeguards are
-for the security of the innocent, have often so
-delayed the march of justice that when a conviction
-has at last been obtained, the offence
-has begun to be forgotten and the offender
-escapes with a trifling penalty, or with none.
-This is an illustration of the principle that as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">5</span>
-righteous indignation is a valuable motive
-power in politics, the decline in it means a
-decline either in the standard of virtue or in the
-standard of zeal, possibly in both.</p>
-
-<p>Another cause may be found in the fact that
-the enormous growth of modern states has
-made the share in government of the individual
-citizen seem infinitesimally small. In an average
-Greek republic, he was one of from two
-to ten thousand voters. In England or France
-to-day he is one of many millions. The chance
-that his vote will make any difference to the
-result is so slender that it appears to him
-negligible. We are proud, and justly proud, of
-having adapted free government to areas far
-vaster than were formerly thought capable of
-receiving free institutions. It was hoped that
-the patriotism of the citizen would expand
-with the magnitude of the State. But this did
-not happen in Rome, the greatest of ancient
-republics. Can we say that it has happened in
-the modern world? Few of us realize that
-though our own share may be smaller our
-responsibility increases with the power our
-State exerts. The late Professor Henry Sidgwick<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">6</span>
-once travelled from Davos in the easternmost
-corner of Switzerland to the town of
-Cambridge in England and back again to
-deliver his vote against Home Rule at the
-general election of 1886, though he knew that
-his own side would have a majority in the constituency.
-Those who knew applauded, his
-opponents included, but I fear that few of us
-followed this shining example of civic virtue.</p>
-
-<p>Thirdly, the highest, because the most difficult,
-duty of a citizen is to fight valiantly for
-his convictions when he is in a minority. The
-smaller the minority, and the more unpopular
-it is, and the more violent are the attacks upon
-it, so much the louder is the call of duty to defend
-one’s opinions. To withstand the “ardor
-civium prava iubentium”—to face “the
-multitude hasting to do evil”—this is the
-note and the test of genuine virtue and courage.
-Now this is, or seems to be, a more formidable
-task the vaster the community becomes.
-It is harder to make your voice heard
-against the roar of ocean than against the
-whistling squall that sweeps down over a
-mountain lake.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">7</span></p>
-
-<p>Lastly, there has been within the last century
-a great accession to our knowledge of
-nature, a more widely diffused and developed
-interest in literature and art as well as in
-science. This development, in itself fraught
-with laudable means of enjoyment, has had
-the unforeseen yet natural result of reducing
-the interest in public affairs among the educated
-classes, while the ardour with which
-competitions in physical strength and skill are
-followed has in like manner diverted the
-thoughts and attention of the less educated—and
-indeed, not of them alone but of many also
-in a class from whom better things might have
-been expected. Politics, in fact, have nowadays
-to strive against more rival subjects attracting
-men’s eyes and minds than they had before
-scientific discovery and art, and above all,
-athletic sports, came to fill newspapers and
-magazines.</p>
-
-<p>But so far from being less important than
-they were, politics are growing in every country
-more important the wider the sphere of
-governmental action becomes. Nevertheless,
-even in England, which is perhaps slightly less<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">8</span>
-addicted to this new passion for looking on at
-and reading about athletic competitions than
-are North America and Australia, a cricket or
-football match or a horse-race seems, if one
-may judge by the eager throngs that snatch the
-evening newspapers, to excite more interest in
-the middle as well as in the richer and in the
-upper section of the poorer classes than does
-any political event.</p>
-
-<p>How to overcome these adverse tendencies is
-a question which I reserve till the last of these
-lectures. Meantime, let us look at some of the
-forms in which indifference to the obligations
-of citizenship reveals itself.</p>
-
-<p>The first duty of the citizen used to be to
-fight, and to fight not merely against foes from
-another State, but against those also who,
-within his own State, were trying to overturn
-the Constitution or resist the laws. It is a
-duty still incumbent on us all, though the
-existence of soldiers and a police force calls us
-to it less frequently. The omission to take up
-arms in a civil strife was a grave offence in the
-republics of antiquity, where revolutions were
-frequent, as they are to-day in some of the states<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">9</span>
-of Latin America. When respectable people
-stayed at home instead of taking sword and
-spear to drive out the adherents of an adventurer
-trying to make himself Tyrant, they gave
-the adventurer his chance: and in any case
-their abstention tended to prolong a civil war
-which would end sooner when it was seen which
-way the bulk of the people inclined. There was
-accordingly a law in some of the Greek republics
-that every citizen must take one side or the
-other in an insurrection. If he did not, he was
-liable to punishment. I have not heard of any
-one being indicted in England or the United
-States for failing to discharge his legal duty to
-join in the hue and cry after a thief, or to rally
-to the sheriff when he calls upon the <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">posse comitatus</i>
-to support him in maintaining law and
-order. But possibly an indictment would still
-lie; and in England we have within recent
-times enrolled bodies of special constables from
-the civil population to aid in maintaining public
-tranquillity.</p>
-
-<p>More peaceful times have substituted for the
-duty of fighting the duty of voting. But even
-in small communities the latter duty has been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">10</span>
-often neglected. In Athens the magistrates
-used to send round the Scythian bowmen, who
-acted as their police, to scour the streets with a
-rope coloured with vermilion, and drag towards
-the Pnyx (the place of assembly), citizens who
-preferred to lounge or to mind what they called
-their own business, as if ruling the State was
-not their business. So in modern Switzerland
-some cantons have enacted laws fining those
-who, without reasonable excuse, neglect to
-vote.<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">1</a> This is the more remarkable because the
-Swiss have a good record in the matter of voting,
-better, I think, than any other European
-people. Such a law witnesses not to exceptional
-negligence but to an exceptionally high standard
-of duty. In Britain we sometimes bring to
-the polls at a parliamentary election eighty,
-or even more than eighty, per cent of our registered
-electors, which is pretty good when it is
-remembered that the register may have been
-made up eleven months earlier, so that many
-electors are sure to have moved elsewhere. At
-elections for local authorities a much smaller
-proportion vote; and I fancy, though I have no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">11</span>
-figures at hand, that in France, Belgium, and
-still more in Italy the percentage voting at all
-sorts of elections is less than in Switzerland or
-in Britain. The number who vote does not
-perfectly measure the personal sense of duty
-among electors, because an efficient party organization
-may, like the Scythian bowmen,
-sweep voters who do not care but who can be
-either driven to the polls or paid to go. Unless
-it is money that takes the voters there, it is well
-that they should go; for it helps to form the
-habit.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="fnanchor">1</a> This example has, I believe, been followed in Belgium.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Another form of civic apathy is the reluctance
-to undertake civic functions. In England
-this is not discoverable in any want of candidates
-for Parliament. They abound, though
-sometimes the fittest men prefer ease or business
-success to public life. But seats upon local
-authorities and especially upon municipal
-councils and district councils, seldom attract
-the best ability of the local community. In
-English and Scottish cities the leading commercial,
-financial, and professional men do not
-often appear as candidates, leaving the work to
-persons who are not indeed incompetent, being<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">12</span>
-usually intelligent business men, but whose
-education and talents are sometimes below the
-level of the functions which these bodies discharge.
-No great harm has followed, because
-our city councillors are almost always honest.
-Local public opinion is vigilant and exacting,
-so a high standard of probity is maintained.
-But municipalities have latterly embarked on
-so many kinds of new work, and the revenues
-of the greater cities have so grown, that not
-merely business capacity and experience, but a
-large grasp of economic principles is required.
-This is no less true here in America, yet I gather
-that here it is found even more difficult than in
-Europe to secure the presence of able administrators
-in city councils.</p>
-
-<p>A man engaged in a large business who takes
-up municipal work may doubtless find that he
-is making a pecuniary sacrifice. But if he has
-already an income sufficient for his comfort,
-may it not be his best way of serving his fellow-men?</p>
-
-<p>Many such men do serve as governors or
-trustees of educational or other public institutions
-which make nearly as great a demand on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span>
-their time as the membership of a public body
-would. Others, in Europe, if less frequently
-here, give to amusement much more of their
-leisure than the needs of recreation and health
-require. This is often due rather to thoughtlessness
-than to a conscious indifference to the
-call of duty.</p>
-
-<p>Some of your political reformers have dwelt
-on the difficulties which party organizations,
-specially powerful in the United States, place
-in the way of educated and public-spirited men
-seeking to enter politics. There may be truth
-in this as regards the lower districts of the
-larger cities, but one can scarcely think it generally
-true even of the cities. More frequently
-it is alleged that the work of local politics is
-disagreeable, bringing a man into contact with
-vulgar people and exposing him to misrepresentation
-and abuse.</p>
-
-<p>This is an excuse for abstention which ought
-never to be heard in a democratic country. If
-politics are anywhere vulgar, they ought not
-to be suffered to remain vulgar, as they will
-remain if the better educated citizens keep
-aloof. They involve the highest interests of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span>
-nation or the city. The way in which they are
-handled is a lesson to the people either in honesty
-or in knavery. The best element in a
-community cannot afford to let its interests be
-the sport of self-seekers or rogues. Moreover,
-the loss by maladministration or robbery,
-large as it may sometimes be, is a less serious
-evil than is the damage to public morals. If
-those who have the manners and speak the
-language of educated men refuse to enter
-practical politics, they must cease to complain
-of a want of refinement in politics. In reality,
-good manners are the best way in which to
-meet rudeness; and he who is too thin-skinned
-to disregard abuse confesses his own want of
-manliness. The mass of the people, even those
-who are neither educated nor fastidious, know
-honesty when they see it, and discount such
-abuse. When a man is firm and upright,
-nothing better braces him up and fits him to
-serve his country than to be attacked on the
-platform or in the press for faults he has not
-committed. It puts him on his mettle. It
-toughens his fibre. It gives him self-control
-and teaches him how to do right in the way<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">15</span>
-which is least exposed to misrepresentation. It
-nerves his courage for the far more difficult
-trials which come when friends as well as opponents
-censure him because honour and obedience
-to his conscience have required him to
-take an unpopular line and speak unwelcome
-truths. A little persecution for righteousness’
-sake is a wholesome thing.</p>
-
-<p>The deficient sense of civic duty, though
-most frequently noted in the form of a neglect
-to vote, is really more general and serious in the
-neglect to think. Were it possible to have statistics
-to show what percentage of those who
-vote reflect upon the vote they have to give,
-there would in no country be found a large
-percentage. Yet what is the worth of a vote
-except as the expression of a considered opinion?
-The act of marking a ballot is nothing
-unless the mark carries with it a judgment, the
-preference of a good candidate to a bad one,
-the approval of one policy offered the people,
-the rejection of another. The citizen owes it
-to the community to inform himself about the
-questions submitted for his decision, and weigh
-the arguments on each side; or if the issue be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">16</span>
-one rather of persons than of policies, to learn
-all he can regarding the merits of the candidates
-offered to his choice.</p>
-
-<p>How many voters really trouble themselves
-to do this? One in five? One in ten? One in
-twenty?</p>
-
-<p>It may be asked, How can they do it? What
-means have they of studying public questions
-and reaching just conclusions? If the means are
-wanting, can we blame them if they do not
-think? If they feel they do not understand,
-can we blame them if they do not vote? In
-every free country the suffrage is now so wide
-that the great majority of the voters have to
-labour for their daily bread. In most European
-countries many are imperfectly educated. In
-the rural districts they read with difficulty,
-see either no newspaper or one which helps
-them but little, lead isolated lives in which
-there are scanty opportunities for learning what
-passes, so that the best they can do seems to
-be to ask advice from the priest, or the village
-schoolmaster, or take advice from their landlord
-or their employer. In the northern parts
-of the United States and also in Canada, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span>
-native population has indeed received a fair
-instruction, and reads newspapers; but the
-mass of voters is swelled by a crowd of recent
-immigrants, most of whom cannot read English
-and know nothing of your institutions.</p>
-
-<p>Broadly speaking, in modern countries ruled
-by universal suffrage the Average Citizen has
-not the means of adequately discharging the
-function which the constitution throws upon
-him of following, examining, and judging
-those problems of statesmanship which the
-ever-growing range of government administration
-and the ever-increasing complexity of
-our civilization set before him as a voter to
-whom issues of policy are submitted.</p>
-
-<p>As things stand, he votes, when he votes, not
-from knowledge, but as his party or his favourite
-newspaper bids him, or according to his
-predilection for some particular leader. Unless
-it be held that every man has a natural and
-indefeasible right to a share in the government
-of the country in which he resides, the ground
-for giving that share would seem to be the competence
-of the recipient and the belief that his
-sharing will promote the general welfare. So<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span>
-one may almost say that the theory of universal
-suffrage assumes that the Average Citizen is an
-active, instructed, intelligent ruler of his country.<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">2</a>
-The facts contradict this assumption.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="fnanchor">2</a> It may no doubt be argued that even if he is not competent,
-it is better he should be within than without the voting class.
-But this was not the ground generally taken by those who brought
-in universal suffrage.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Does this mean that widely extended suffrage
-is a failure, and that the Average Man is not a
-competent citizen in a democracy?</p>
-
-<p>This question brings us to reflect on another
-branch of civic duty not yet mentioned. Besides
-the civic duties already described of
-Fighting, Voting, and Thinking, there is another
-duty. It is the duty of Mutual Help, the
-duty incumbent on those who possess, through
-their knowledge and intelligence, the capacity
-of Instruction and Persuasion to advise and to
-guide their less competent fellow-citizens. No
-sensible man ought ever to have supposed that
-under such conditions as large modern communities
-present, the bulk of the citizens could
-vote wisely from their own private knowledge
-and intelligence. Even in small cities, such as
-was Sicyon in the days of Aratus, or Boston in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span>
-the days of James Otis, the Average Man
-needed the help of his more educated and
-wiser neighbours. While communities remained
-small, it was easy to get this help. But now the
-swift and vast growth of states and cities has
-changed everything. Private talk counts for
-less when the richer citizens dwell apart from
-the poorer; their opportunities of meeting are
-fewer, and there is less friendliness, if also less
-dependence, in the relation of the employed to
-the employer. Public meetings do not give
-nearly all that the Average Man needs, not
-to add that being got together to present one
-set of facts and arguments and deliberately to
-ignore the other, they do not put him in a fair
-position to judge. Besides, the men who most
-need instruction are usually those who least
-come to meetings to receive it.</p>
-
-<p>To fill this void the newspapers have arisen,—organs
-purporting to supply the materials
-required for the formation of political opinion.
-Whatever the services of the newspaper in
-other respects, it has the inevitable defect of
-superseding, with most of those who read it,
-the exercise of independent thought. The newspaper—I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span>
-speak generally, for there are some
-brilliant exceptions—is, in Europe even more
-than here, almost always partisan in its views,
-often partisan in its selection of facts or at least
-in its way of stating them. Presenting one side
-of a case, addressing chiefly those who are
-already adherents of that side, putting a
-colour on the events it reports,—it serves up
-to the reader ideas, perhaps only mere phrases
-or catchwords, which confirm him in his prepossessions,
-and by its daily iteration makes
-him take them for truths. Seldom has he the
-leisure, still more seldom the impulse or the
-patience, to scrutinize these ideas for himself
-and form his own judgment. He is glad to be
-relieved of the necessity for thinking, because
-thinking is hard work. Indolence again! The
-habit of mind that is formed by hasty reading,
-and especially by the reading of newspapers
-and magazines in which the matter, excellent
-as parts of it often are, is so multifarious that
-one topic diverts attention from the others,
-tends to a general dissipation and distraction
-of thought. It is a habit which tells upon us all
-and makes continuous reflection and a critical<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span>
-or logical treatment of the subjects deserving
-reflection more irksome to us in the full sunlight
-of to-day than it was to those whom we call our
-benighted ancestors.</p>
-
-<p>This is only one form of that supersession of
-the practice of thinking by the vice commonly
-called “the reading habit” which is profoundly
-affecting the intellectual life of our time. Yet
-as steady thinking was never really common
-even among the educated, the difference from
-earlier days is not so correctly described by
-saying that people think less than formerly, as
-by noting that while people read more, and
-while far more people read, the ratio of thinking
-to reading does not increase either in the
-individual or in the mass, and may possibly
-be decreasing. Intelligence and independence
-of thought have not grown in proportion to the
-diffusion of knowledge. The number of persons
-who both read and vote is in England and
-France more than twenty times as great as it
-was seventy years ago. The percentage of those
-who reflect before they vote has not kept pace
-either with popular education or with the
-extension of the suffrage.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span></p>
-
-<p>The persons who constitute that percentage
-are, and must for the reasons already given
-continue for some time to be, only a fraction,
-in some countries a small fraction, of the voting
-population. But the fraction might be made
-much larger than it is. The citizens who stand
-above their fellows in knowledge and mental
-power ought to set an example, not only by
-themselves thinking more and thinking harder
-about public affairs than most of them do, but
-also by exerting themselves to stimulate and aid
-their less instructed or more listless neighbours.
-The voter, it is said, should be independent.
-Yes. But independence does not mean isolation.
-He must not commit his personal responsibility
-to the keeping of another. Yes. But
-personal responsibility does not mean the vain
-conceit of knowledge and judgment where
-knowledge is wanting and judgment is untrained.</p>
-
-<p>Just as his religion throws upon every Christian
-the duty of loving his neighbour and giving
-practical expression to his love by helping
-his neighbour, succouring him in the hour of
-need, trying to rescue him from sin, seeking to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span>
-guide his steps into the way of peace, so civic
-duty requires each of us to raise the level of
-citizenship not merely by ourselves voting and
-bearing a share in political agitation, but by
-trying to diffuse among our fellow-citizens
-whose opportunities have been less favourable,
-the knowledge and the fairness of mind and the
-habit of grappling with political questions
-which a democratic government must demand
-even from the Average Man. Democracy, they
-say, is based on Equality. But in no form of
-government is leadership so essential. A multitude
-without intelligent, responsible leaders
-whom it respects and follows is a crowd ready
-to become the prey of any self-seeking knave.
-Nor is it true that because men value equality
-they reject eminence. They are always glad
-to be led if some one, eschewing pretension and
-condescension, speaking to them with respect,
-but also with that authority which knowledge
-and capacity imply, will point out the path and
-give them the lead for which they are looking.
-To do this has now, in our great cities, become
-more difficult than it used to be, because men
-of different classes and different occupations<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span>
-do not know one another as well as they once
-did, and economic conflicts have made workingmen
-suspicious. But there are those in our
-English and Scottish cities who do it successfully,
-and I have never heard that it is resented.
-It is largely a matter of tact, and of knowing
-how to express that genuine sense of human
-fellowship which is commoner in the richer
-class than the constraint and shyness that are
-supposed to beset Englishmen sometimes allow
-to appear.</p>
-
-<p>If you and we, both here and in Britain, are
-less active than we should be in this and other
-forms of civic work, the fault lies in our not
-caring enough for our country. It is easy to
-wave a flag, to cheer an eminent statesman, to
-exult in some achievement by land or sea. But
-our imaginations are too dull to realize either
-the grandeur of the State in its splendid opportunities
-for promoting the welfare of the masses,
-or the fact that the nobility of the State lies
-in its being the true child, the true exponent,
-of the enlightened will of a right-minded and
-law-abiding people. Absorbed in business or
-pleasure, we think too little of what our membership<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span>
-in a free nation means for the happiness
-of our poorer fellow-citizens. The eloquent
-voice of a patriotic reformer sometimes breaks
-our slumber. But the daily round of business
-and pleasure soon again fills the mind, and
-public duty fades into the background of life.
-This dulness of imagination and the mere
-indolence which makes us neglect to stop and
-think, are a chief cause of that indifference
-which chokes the growth of civic duty. It is
-because a great University like this is the place
-where the imagination of young men may best
-be quickened by the divine fire, because the
-sons of a great University are those who may
-best carry with them into after life the inspiration
-which history and philosophy and poetry
-have kindled within its venerable walls, that
-I have ventured to dwell here on the special
-duty which those who enjoy these privileges
-owe to their brethren, partners in the citizenship
-of a great republic.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div id="toclink_26" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="HOW_TO_OVERCOME_THE_OBSTACLES_TO_GOOD_CITIZENSHIP">HOW TO OVERCOME THE OBSTACLES TO GOOD CITIZENSHIP</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="firstword">In</span> the preceding three lectures<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">3</a> the chief
-hindrances to the discharge of civic duty have
-been considered. Let us now go on to inquire
-what can be done to remove these hindrances
-by grappling with those faults or weaknesses
-in the citizen to which they are due. When
-symptoms have been examined, one looks about
-for remedies.</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="fnanchor">3</a> The two lectures reprinted in this volume are the first and
-last of a series of four given by Mr. Bryce at Yale University.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>We have seen that of the three causes assigned,
-Indolence, Selfish Personal Interest,
-and Party Spirit, the first is the most common,
-the second the most noxious, the third the most
-excusable, yet also the most subtle, and perhaps
-the most likely to affect the class which
-takes the lead in politics and is incessantly
-employed upon its daily work. Whether the
-influence of these causes, or of any of them, is
-increasing with that more complete democratization<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span>
-of government which we see going on in
-Europe, is a question that cannot yet be answered.
-Fifty years may be needed before
-it can be answered, for new tendencies both
-for good and for evil are constantly emerging
-and affecting one another in unpredictable
-ways.</p>
-
-<p>The remedies that may be applied to any
-defects in the working of governments are
-some of them Mechanical, some of them Ethical.
-By Mechanical remedies I understand
-those which consist in improving the structure
-or the customs and working devices of government,
-i. e., the laws and the institutions or
-political methods, by Ethical those which
-affect the character and spirit of the people.
-If you want to get more work and better work
-done in any industry, you may either improve
-the machinery, or the implements, by which
-the work is done, or else improve the strength
-and skill of the men who run the machinery
-and use the tools. In doing the former, you
-sometimes do the latter also, for when the
-workman has finer tools, he is led on to attempt
-more difficult work, and thus not only does his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span>
-own skill become more perfect, but his interest
-in the work is likely to be increased.</p>
-
-<p>Although in politics by far the most real and
-lasting progress may be expected from raising
-the intelligence and virtue of the citizens, still
-improvements in the machinery of government
-must not be undervalued. To take away from
-bad men the means and opportunities by which
-they may work evil, to furnish good men with
-means and opportunities which make it easier
-for them to prevent or overcome evil, is to
-render a great service. And as laws which
-breathe a high spirit help to educate the whole
-community, so does the presence of opportunities
-for reform stimulate and invigorate the
-best citizens in their efforts after better things.</p>
-
-<p>I will enumerate briefly some of the remedies
-that may be classed as Mechanical because
-they consist in alterations of institutions or
-methods.</p>
-
-<p>Two of these need only a few passing words,
-because they are so sweeping as to involve the
-whole fabric of government, and therefore too
-large to be discussed here.</p>
-
-<p>One is propounded by those thinkers whom,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span>
-to distinguish them from the persons who
-announce themselves as enemies of all society,
-we may call the Philosophical Anarchists,
-thinkers who are entitled to respectful consideration
-because their doctrine represents a
-protest that needs to be made against the conception
-of an all-engulfing State in which individual
-initiative and self-guided development
-might be merged and lost. They desire to get
-rid of the defects of government by getting rid
-of government itself; that is to say, by leaving
-men entirely alone without any coercive control,
-trusting to their natural good impulses to
-restrain them from harming one another. In
-such a state of things there would be no Citizenship,
-properly so called, but only the isolation
-of families, or perhaps of individuals—for
-it is not quite clear how far the family is
-expected to remain in the Anarchist paradise—an
-isolation more or less qualified by brotherly
-love. We are so far at present from a
-prospect of reaching the conditions needed for
-such an amelioration that it is enough to note
-this view and pass on.</p>
-
-<p>A second and diametrically opposite cure for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span>
-the evils of existing society comes from those
-who are commonly termed Socialists or Collectivists.
-It consists in so widely enlarging the
-functions of government as to commit to it not
-merely all the work it now performs of defending
-the country, maintaining order, enacting
-laws, and enforcing justice between man and
-man, but also the further work of producing
-and distributing all commodities, allotting to
-each man his proper labour and proper remuneration,
-or possibly, instead of giving any
-pecuniary remuneration, providing each man
-with what he needs for life. Under this régime
-two of the hindrances to good citizenship would
-be much reduced. There ought to be less indifference
-to politics when everybody’s interest
-in the management of public concerns had been
-immensely increased by the fact that he found
-himself dependent on the public officials for
-everything. Nobody could plead that he was
-occupied by his own private business, because
-his private business would have vanished. So
-also selfish personal interest in making gains
-out of government must needs disappear when
-private property itself had ceased to exist.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span>
-Whether, however, self-interest might not still
-find means of influencing public administration
-in ways beneficial to individual cupidity, and
-whether personal selfishness might not be even
-more dangerous, under such conditions, in
-proportion to the extended range and power of
-government,—this is another question which
-cannot be discussed till some definite scheme
-for the allotment of work and of remuneration
-(if any) shall have been propounded. Party
-Spirit would evidently, in a Collectivistic
-State, pass into new forms. It might, however,
-become more potent than ever before. But
-that again would depend on the kind of scheme
-for the reshaping of economic society that had
-been adopted.</p>
-
-<p>We may pass from these suggestions for the
-extinction, or reconstruction on new lines, of
-the existing social and political system to certain
-minor devices for improving the structure
-and methods of government which have been
-put forward as likely to help the citizen to discharge
-his duties more efficiently.</p>
-
-<p>One of these is the system of Proportional
-Representation. It is argued that if electoral<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span>
-areas were created with more than two members
-each, and if each elector was either allowed
-to vote for a number of candidates less than
-the number to be chosen, or was allowed to
-concentrate all his votes upon one candidate,
-or more, according to the number to be chosen,
-two good results would follow. The will of the
-electors would be more adequately and exactly
-expressed, because the minority, or possibly
-more than one minority, as well as the majority,
-would have everywhere its representative.
-The zeal of the electors would be stimulated,
-because in each district a section of opinion
-not large enough to have a chance of winning
-an election, if there were but one member, and
-accordingly now apathetic, because without
-hope, would then be roused to organize itself
-and to take a warmer interest in public affairs.
-The Proportional system is, therefore, advocated
-as one of those improvements in machinery
-which would react upon the people by
-quickening the pulses of public life. Some
-experiments have already been made in this
-direction. Those tried in England did not win
-general approval and have been dropped. That<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span>
-which is still in operation in the State of Illinois
-has not, if my informants are right, given much
-satisfaction. But the plan is said to work well
-both in Belgium and in some of the cantons
-of Switzerland; so one may hope that further
-experiments will be attempted. It deserves
-your careful study, but it is too complicated
-and opens too many side issues to be further
-discussed now and here.<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">4</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="fnanchor">4</a> Since the above was written a Royal Commission has been
-appointed in Britain to examine divers questions relating to
-elections, and is investigating this, among other plans.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Attempts have been made in some places to
-overcome the indifference of citizens to their
-duty by fining those who, without sufficient
-excuse, fail to vote. This plan of Obligatory
-Voting, as it is called, finds favour in some
-Swiss cantons and in Belgium, but is too
-uncongenial to the habits of England or of the
-United States to be worth considering as a
-practical measure in either country. Moreover,
-the neglect to vote is no very serious evil in
-either country, at least as regards the more
-important elections. Swiss legislation on the
-subject is evidence not so much of indifference<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span>
-among the citizens of that country as of the
-high standard of public duty they are expected
-to reach.</p>
-
-<p>When we come to the proposals made both
-here and in England for the reference of proposals
-to a direct popular vote, we come to a
-question of real practical importance. I wish
-that I had time to state to you and to examine
-the arguments both for and against this mode
-of legislation, which has been practised for
-many years in Switzerland with a virtually
-unanimous approval, and has been applied
-pretty freely in some of your States. It has
-taken two forms. One is the so-called Initiative,
-under which a section of the electors (being a
-number, or a proportion, prescribed by law)
-may propose a law upon which the people vote.
-This is being tried in Switzerland, but so far as
-I have been able to gather, has not yet proved
-its utility. The balance of skilled opinion
-seems to incline against it. The other is called
-the Referendum, and consists in the submission
-to popular vote of measures already passed by
-the legislative body. In this form the reference
-of laws to the people undoubtedly sharpens the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span>
-interest of the ordinary citizen in the conduct
-of public affairs. The Swiss voters, at any rate,
-take pains to inform themselves on the merits
-of the measures submitted to them. These are
-widely and acutely canvassed at public meetings,
-and in the press. A large vote is usually
-cast, and all, whether or no they approve the
-result, agree that it is an intelligent, not a
-heedless, vote. The Swiss do not seem to think
-that the power and dignity of the legislature is
-weakened, as some might expect it to be, when
-their final voice is thus superseded by that of
-the people. All I need now ask you to note and
-remember is that the practice of bringing political
-issues directly before the people, whatever
-its drawbacks, does tend to diminish both that
-indolence and indifference which is pretty common
-among European voters. It requires every
-citizen to think for himself and deliver his vote
-upon all the more important measures, and it
-also reduces the power of that Party Spirit
-which everywhere distracts men’s minds from
-the real merits of the questions before the
-country. When a law is submitted to the Swiss
-people for their judgment, their decision nowise<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span>
-affects either the Executive or the Legislature.
-The law may be rejected by the people, but the
-officials who drafted the law continue to hold
-office. The party which brought it in and carried
-it through the Legislature is not deemed
-to have been censured or weakened by the fact
-of its ultimate rejection. That party spirit is
-less strong in Switzerland than in any other
-free country (except perhaps Norway) may be
-largely attributed to this disjunction of the
-deciding voice in legislation from those governmental
-organs which every political party
-seeks to control. The Swiss voter is to-day an
-exceptionally intelligent and patriotic citizen,
-fitter to exercise the function of direct legislation
-than perhaps any other citizen in Europe,
-and the practice of directly legislating has
-doubtless helped to train him for the function.</p>
-
-<p>It must, however, be admitted that the circumstances
-of that little republic and its cantons
-are too peculiar to make it safe to draw
-inferences from Swiss experience to large countries
-like Britain and France, the political life
-of which is highly centralized. The States of
-your Union may appear to offer a better field,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span>
-and the results of the various experiments
-which some of them (such as Oklahoma) are
-trying will be watched with interest by Europeans.</p>
-
-<p>In considering the harm done to civic duty by
-selfish personal interests we were led to observe
-that the fewer points of contact between government
-and the pecuniary interests of private
-citizens, the better both for the purity of government
-and for the conscience of the private
-citizen. How far government ought to include
-within its functions schemes for increasing
-national wealth, otherwise than by such
-means (being means which a government alone
-can employ because to be effective they must
-be done on a great scale) as the improving of
-education, the diffusing of knowledge, the providing
-means of transportation, the conservation
-of natural resources, and so forth, may be
-matter for debate. But at any rate government
-ought to avoid measures tending to enrich any
-one person or group of persons at the expense
-of the citizens generally. Common justice
-requires that. Accordingly, all contracts should
-be made on the terms best for the public, and if<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span>
-possible by open bidding. Franchises, if not
-reserved by the public authority for itself,
-should be granted only for limited times and so
-as to secure the interests of the community,
-whether by way of a rent payable to the city or
-county treasury or otherwise. Public employees
-should not be made into a privileged class,
-to which there is given larger pay than other
-workers of the same class and capacity receive.
-All bills promoted by a private person, firm,
-or company looking to his or their pecuniary
-advantage ought to be closely scrutinized by
-some responsible public authority. In England
-we draw a sharp distinction between such bills
-and general public legislation, and we submit
-the former to a quasi-judicial examination by
-a Parliamentary committee in order to avoid
-possible jobs or scandals or losses to the public.
-As respects general legislation, i. e., that which
-is not in its terms local or personal, it may be
-difficult or impossible to prevent a law from
-incidentally benefiting one group or class of
-men and injuring another. But everything that
-can be done ought to be done to prevent any
-set of men from abusing legislation to serve<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span>
-their own interest. If there be truth in what
-one hears about the groups which in France,
-Belgium, and Germany have, through political
-pressure, obtained by law bounties benefiting
-their industries, or tariffs specially favourable
-to their own commercial enterprises, the danger
-that the general taxpayer, or the consumer,
-may be sacrificed to these private interests, is a
-real danger. To remove the occasion and the
-opportunities for the exercise of such pressure,
-which is likely to be often exerted in a covert
-way and to warp or pervert the legislator’s
-mind, is to diminish a temptation and to remove
-a stumbling block that lies in the path
-of civic duty. Whether a man be in theory a
-Protectionist or a Free Trader, whether or not
-he desires to nationalize public utilities, he
-must recognize the dangers incident to the
-passing of laws which influential groups of
-wealthy men may have a personal interest in
-promoting or resisting, because they offer a
-prospect of gain sufficiently large to make it
-worth while to “get at” legislatures and officials.
-Such dangers arise in all governments.
-That which makes them formidable in democracies<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">40</span>
-is the fact that the interest of each individual
-citizen in protecting himself and the
-public against the selfish groups may be so
-small an interest that everybody neglects it,
-and the groups get their way.</p>
-
-<p>As we have been considering improvements
-in the machinery of government, this would be
-a fitting place for a discussion of what you call
-Primary Election Laws, which are intended
-both to reduce the power of party organizations
-and to stimulate the personal zeal of the
-voter by making it easier for him to influence
-the selection of a candidate. We have, however,
-in Europe, nothing corresponding to the
-Primary Laws of American States, nothing
-which recognizes a political party as a concrete
-body, nothing which deals with the mode of
-selecting candidates; and many of you doubtless
-know better than I do what has been
-the effect of these American enactments and
-whether they have really roused the ordinary
-citizen to bestir himself and to assert his independence
-of such party organizations as may
-have heretofore interfered with it. Europeans
-do not take kindly to the notion of giving<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span>
-statutory recognition to a Party, and they
-doubt whether the astuteness of those whom
-you call “machine politicians” may not succeed
-in getting hold of the new statutory Primaries
-as they did of the old ones. Be the merits
-of the new legislation what they may, one must
-hope that its existence will not induce the
-friends of reform to relax their efforts to reduce
-in other ways the power of political “Machines.”</p>
-
-<p>One obvious expedient to which good citizens
-may resort for keeping other citizens up to the
-mark is to be found in the enactment and
-enforcement of stringent laws against breaches
-of public trust. I took occasion, in referring to
-the practices of bribery and treating at elections,
-to note the wholesome effect of the statute
-passed in England in 1883 for repressing those
-offences. Although St. Paul has told us that he
-who is under grace does not need to be under
-the law, Christianity has not yet gone far
-enough to enable any of us to dispense with the
-moral force law can exert, both directly through
-the penalties it imposes and indirectly through
-the type of conduct which it exhorts the community<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span>
-to maintain. Laws may do much to
-raise and sustain the tone of all the persons
-engaged in public affairs as officials or as legislators,
-not only by appealing to their conscience,
-but by giving them a quick and easy reply to
-those who seek improper favours from them.
-A statute may express the best conscience of
-the whole people and set the standard they
-approve, even where the practice of most individuals
-falls short of the standard. If the
-prosecuting authorities and the courts do their
-duty unflinchingly, without regard to the
-social position of the offender, a statute may
-bring the practice of ordinary men up to the
-level of that collective conscience of the nation
-which it embodies.</p>
-
-<p>In every walk of life a class of persons constantly
-subject to a particular set of temptations
-is apt to form habits, due to the pressure
-of those temptations, which are below what
-the conscience of the better men in the community
-approves. The aim of legislation, as
-expressing that best conscience of the whole
-community, ought to be to correct or extirpate
-those habits and make each particular class<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span>
-understand that it is not to be excused because
-it has special temptations and thinks its own
-sins venial. Even the men who yield to the
-temptations peculiar to their own class are
-willing to join in condemning those who yield
-to some other kind of temptation. Thus the
-“better conscience” may succeed in screwing
-up one class after another to a higher level.
-But the enactment of a law is not enough. It
-must be strictly enforced. Procedure must be
-prompt. Juries must be firm. Technicalities
-must not be suffered to obstruct the march of
-justice. Sentences must be carried out, else the
-statute will become, as statutes often have
-become, a record of aspiration rather than of
-accomplishment.</p>
-
-<p>To contrive plans by which the interest of
-the citizen in public affairs shall be aroused and
-sustained, is far easier than to induce the
-citizen to use and to go on using, year in and
-year out, the contrivances and opportunities
-provided for his benefit. Yet it is from the
-heart and will of the citizen that all real and
-lasting improvements must proceed. In the
-words of the Gospel, it is the inside of the cup<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span>
-and platter that must be made clean. The central
-problem of civic duty is the ethical problem.
-Indifference, selfish interests, the excesses
-of party spirit, will all begin to disappear as
-civic life is lifted on to a higher plane, and
-as the number of those who, standing on that
-higher plane, will apply a strict test to their
-own conduct and to that of their leaders, realizing
-and striving to discharge their responsibilities,
-goes on steadily increasing until they
-come to form the majority of the people. What
-we have called “the better conscience” must
-be grafted on to the “wild stock” of the natural
-Average Man.</p>
-
-<p>How is this to be done? The difficulty is the
-same as that which meets the social reformer
-or the preacher of religion.</p>
-
-<p>One must try to reach the Will through the
-Soul. The most obvious way to begin is through
-the education of those who are to be citizens,
-moral education combined with and made the
-foundation for instruction in civic duty. This
-is a task which the Swiss alone among European
-nations seem to have seriously undertaken.
-Here in America it has become doubly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">45</span>
-important through the recent entrance into
-your community of a vast mass of immigrants,
-most of them ignorant of our language, still
-more of them ignorant, not only of your institutions,
-but of the general principles and habits
-of free government. Most of them doubtless
-belong to races of high natural intelligence, and
-many of them have the simple virtues of the
-peasant. You are providing for all of them
-good schools, and their children will soon become
-Americans in speech and habits, quite
-patriotic enough so far as flag-waving goes.
-But they will not so soon or so completely
-acquire your intellectual and moral standard,
-or imbibe your historical and religious traditions.
-There is no fear but what they will
-quickly learn to vote. To some Europeans you
-seem to have been overconfident in intrusting
-them with a power which most of them cannot
-yet have learned to use wisely. That however
-you have done, and as you hold that it cannot
-now be undone, your task must now be to teach
-them, if you can, to understand your institutions,
-to think about the vote they have to
-give, and to realize the responsibilities which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span>
-the suffrage implies as these were realized
-by your New England forefathers when they
-planted free commonwealths in the wilderness
-nearly three centuries ago.</p>
-
-<p>Valuable as instruction may be in fitting the
-citizen to comprehend and judge upon the
-issues which his vote determines, there must
-also be the will to apply his knowledge for the
-public good. What appeal shall be made to
-him?</p>
-
-<p>We—I say “we” because this is our task in
-Europe no less than it is yours here—we may
-appeal to his enlightened self-interest, making
-self-interest so enlightened that it loses its
-selfish quality. We can remind him of all the
-useful work which governments may accomplish
-when they are conducted by the right men
-in the right spirit. Take, for instance, the work
-to be performed in those cities wherein so large
-and increasing a part of the population now
-dwell. How much remains to be done to make
-cities healthier, to secure better dwellings for
-the poor, to root out nests of crime, to remove
-the temptations to intemperance and gambling,
-to bring within the reach of the poorest all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span>
-possible facilities both for intellectual progress
-and for enjoying the pleasures of art and music!
-How much may we do so to adorn the city
-with parks and public buildings as to make its
-external aspect instil the sense of beauty into
-its inhabitants and give them a fine pride in it!
-These are some of the tasks which cannot safely
-be intrusted to a municipality unless its government
-is above suspicion, unless men of probity
-and capacity are placed in power, unless the
-whole community extends its sympathy to the
-work and keeps a vigilant eye upon all the
-officials. Municipal governments cannot be
-encouraged to own public utilities so long as
-there is a risk that somebody may own municipal
-governments. Have we not here a strong
-motive for securing purity and efficiency in city
-administration? Is it not the personal interest
-of every one of us that the city we dwell in
-should be such as I have sought to describe?
-Nothing makes more for happiness than to see
-others around one happy. The rich residents
-need not grudge—nor indeed would your rich
-residents grudge, for there is less grumbling
-among the rich tax payers here than in Europe—taxation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span>
-which they could see was being
-honestly spent for the benefit of the city. The
-interest each one of us has as a member of
-a city or a nation in seeing our fellow-citizens
-healthy, peaceful, and happy is a greater interest,
-if it be measured in terms of our own
-real enjoyment of life, than is that interest, of
-which we so constantly are reminded, which we
-have in making the State either wealthy by the
-development of trade, or formidable to foreign
-countries by its armaments.</p>
-
-<p>We may also appeal to every citizen’s sense
-of dignity and self-respect. We may bid him
-recollect that he is the heir of rights and privileges
-which you and our ancestors fought for,
-and which place him, whatever his birth or
-fortune, among the rulers of his country. He
-is unworthy of himself, unmindful of what he
-owes to the Constitution that has given him
-these functions, if he does not try to discharge
-them worthily. These considerations are no
-doubt familiar to us Englishmen and Americans,
-though we may not always feel their force
-as deeply as we ought. To the new immigrants
-of whom I have already spoken they are unfamiliar;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">49</span>
-yet to the best among these also they
-have sometimes powerfully appealed. You had,
-in the last generation, no more high-minded
-and patriotic citizen than the German exile of
-1849, the late Mr. Carl Schurz.</p>
-
-<p>When every motive has been invoked, and
-every expedient applied that can stimulate the
-sense of civic duty, one never can feel sure
-that the desired result will follow. The moral
-reformer and the preacher of religion have the
-same experience. The ebbs and flows of ethical
-life are beyond the reach of scientific prediction.
-There are times of awakening, “times of
-refreshing from the presence of the Lord,” as
-your Puritan ancestors said, but we do not
-know when they will come nor can we explain
-why they come just when they do. Every man
-can recall moments in his own life when
-the sky seemed to open above him, and when
-his vision was so quickened that all things
-stood transfigured in a purer and brighter radiance,
-when duty, and even toil done for the
-sake of duty, seemed beautiful and full of
-joy.</p>
-
-<p>You remember Wordsworth’s <span class="locked">lines—</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indentq">“Hence, in a season of fair weather,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Though inland far we be,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Our souls have sight of that celestial sea</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That brought us hither.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>If we survey the wide field of European history,
-we shall find that something like this
-happens with nations also. They, too, have
-moments of exaltation, moments of depression.
-Their ideals rise and fall. They are for a time
-filled with a spirit which seeks truth, which
-loves honour, which is ready for self-sacrifice;
-and after a time the light begins to fade from
-the hills and this spirit lingers only among the
-best souls.</p>
-
-<p>Such a spirit is sometimes evoked by a great
-national crisis which thrills all hearts. This
-happened to England or at least to a large part
-of the people of England, in the seventeenth
-century. It happened to Germany in the days
-of the War of Liberation, and to Italy when she
-was striving to expel the Austrians and the
-petty princes who ruled by Austria’s help. You
-here felt it during the War of Secession. Sometimes,
-and usually at one of these crises, a great
-man stands out who helps to raise the feeling
-of his people and inspire them with his own lofty<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span>
-thoughts and aims. Such a man was Mazzini,
-seventy years ago in Italy. Such were Washington
-and Lincoln, the former more by his
-example than by his words, the latter by both,
-yet most by the quiet patience, dignity, and
-hopefulness which he showed in the darkest
-hours. Nations respond to the appeal which
-such a man makes to their best instincts. He
-typifies for the moment whatever is highest in
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Unhappily, with nations as with individuals,
-there is apt to be a relapse from these loftier
-moods into the old common ways when selfish
-interest and trivial pleasures resume their sway.
-There comes a sort of reaction from the stress
-of virtue and strenuous high-soaring effort.
-Everything looks gray and dull. The divine
-light has died out of the sky. This, too, is an
-oft-repeated lesson of European history. Yet
-the reaction and decline are not inevitable.
-When an individual man has been raised above
-himself by some spiritual impulse, he is sometimes
-able to hold the ground he has won. His
-will may have been strengthened. He has
-learnt to control the meaner desires. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">52</span>
-impulse that stirred him is not wholly spent,
-because the nobler thoughts and acts which it
-prompted have become a habit with him. So,
-too, with a nation. What habits are to the
-individual man, that, to a nation, are its Traditions.
-They are the memories of the Past
-turned into the standards of the Present. High
-traditions go to form a code of honour, which
-speaks with authority to the sense of honour.
-Whoever transgresses that code is felt to be
-unworthy of the nation, unfit to hold that place
-in its respect and confidence which the great
-ones of the days of old have held. Pride in the
-glorious foretime of the race and in its heroes
-sustains in the individual man who is called
-to public duty, the personal pride which makes
-him feel that all his affections and all his emotions
-stand rooted in the sense of honour, which
-is, for the man and for the nation, the foundation
-of all virtue.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen in our own time, in the people
-of Japan, a striking example of what the passionate
-attachment to a national ideal can do
-in war to intensify the sense of duty and self-sacrifice.
-A similar example is held up to us<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span>
-by those who have recorded the earlier annals
-of Rome. The deepest moral they teach is the
-splendid power which the love of Rome and the
-idea of what her children owed to her exercised
-over her great citizens, enabling them to set
-shining examples of devotion to the city which
-the world has admired ever since. Each example
-evoked later examples in later generations,
-till at last in a changed community, its upper
-class demoralized by wealth and power even
-more than it was torn by discord, its lower
-classes corrupted by the upper and looking on
-their suffrage as a means of gain, the ancient
-traditions died out. Whoever, studying the
-conditions of modern European democracies,
-sees the infinite fatalities which popular government
-in large countries full of rich men and of
-opportunities for acquiring riches, offers for
-the perversion of government to private selfish
-ends, will often feel that those European States
-which have maintained the highest standard
-of civic purity have done it in respect of their
-Traditions. Were these to be weakened, the
-fabric might crumble into dust.</p>
-
-<p>Every new generation as it comes up can<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span>
-make the traditions which it finds better or
-worse. If its imagination is touched and its
-emotions stirred by all that is finest in the history
-of its country, it learns to live up to the
-ideals set before it, and thus it strengthens the
-best standards of conduct it has inherited and
-prolongs the reverence felt for them.</p>
-
-<p>The responsibility for forming ideals and
-fixing standards does not belong to statesmen
-alone. It belongs, and now perhaps more
-largely than ever before, to the intellectual
-leaders of the nation, and especially to those
-who address the people in the universities and
-through the press. Teachers, writers, journalists,
-are forming the mind of modern nations
-to an extent previously unknown. Here they
-have opportunities such as have existed never
-before, nor in any other country, for trying to
-inspire the nation with a love of truth and
-honour, with a sense of the high obligations
-of citizenship, and especially of those who hold
-public office.</p>
-
-<p>Of the power which the daily press exerts
-upon the thought and the tastes of the people
-through the matter it scatters among them,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span>
-and of the grave import of the choice it has
-always and everywhere to make between the
-serious treatment of public issues and that
-cheap cynicism which so many readers find
-amusing, there is no need to speak here. You
-know better than I do how far those who direct
-the press realize and try to discharge the
-responsibilities which attach to their power.</p>
-
-<p>The observer who seeks to discern and estimate
-the forces working for good or evil that
-mark the spirit and tendencies of an age, finds
-it easiest to do this by noting the changes which
-have occurred within his own memory. To-day
-everyone seems to dwell upon the growth not
-only of luxury, but of the passion for amusement,
-and most of those who can look back
-thirty or forty years find in this growth grounds
-for discouragement. I deny neither the fact nor
-the significance of the auguries that it suggests.
-But let us also note a hopeful sign manifest
-during the last twenty years both here and in
-England. It is the diffusion among the educated
-and richer classes of a warmer feeling of
-sympathy and a stronger feeling of responsibility
-for the less fortunate sections of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span>
-community. There is more of a sense of brotherhood,
-more of a desire to help, more of a
-discontent with those arrangements of society
-which press hardly on the common man than
-there was forty years ago. This altruistic spirit
-which is now everywhere visible in the field
-of private philanthropic work, seems likely to
-spread into the field of civic action also, and
-may there become a new motive power. It has
-already become a more efficient force in legislation
-than it ever was before. We may well hope
-that it will draw more and more of those who
-love and seek to help their fellow-men into
-that legislative and administrative work whose
-opportunities for grappling with economic and
-social problems become every day greater.</p>
-
-<p>Here in America I am told in nearly every
-city I visit that the young men are more and
-more caring for and bestirring themselves to
-discharge their civic duties. That is the best
-news one can hear. Surely no country makes so
-clear a call upon her citizens to work for her as
-yours does. Think of the wide-spreading results
-which good solid work produces on so vast
-a community, where everything achieved for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span>
-good in one place is quickly known and may
-be quickly imitated in another. Think of the
-advantages for the development of the highest
-civilization which the boundless resources of
-your territory provide. Think of that principle
-of the Sovereignty of the People which you
-have carried further than it was ever carried
-before and which requires and inspires and,
-indeed, compels you to endeavour to make the
-whole people fit to bear a weight and discharge
-a task such as no other multitude of men ever
-yet undertook. Think of the sense of fraternity,
-also without precedent in any other great
-nation, which binds all Americans together and
-makes it easier here than elsewhere for each
-citizen to meet every other citizen as an equal
-upon a common ground. One who, coming
-from the Old World, remembers the greater
-difficulties the Old World has to face, rejoices
-to think how much, with all these advantages,
-the youth of America, such youth as I see
-here to-night in this venerable university, may
-accomplish for the future of your country.
-Nature has done her best to provide a foundation
-whereon the fabric of an enlightened and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span>
-steadily advancing civilization may be reared.
-It is for you to build upon that foundation.
-Free from many of the dangers that surround
-the States of Europe, you have unequalled
-opportunities for showing what a high spirit of
-citizenship—zealous, intelligent, disinterested—may
-do for the happiness and dignity of
-a mighty nation, enabling it to become what
-its founders hoped it might be—a model
-for other peoples more lately emerged into the
-sunlight of freedom.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter"><div class="transnote">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Transcribers_Note">Transcriber’s Note</h2>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_48">Page 48</a>: “Americans” was printed as “Ameritans”, and
-changed here, presuming it was a typographical error.</p>
-</div></div>
-
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