III. LAST STAGE OF EDUCATION
AND FIRST OF SELF-EDUCATION.
For the first year or two after my visit to France,
I continued my old studies, with the addition of some new ones. When I
returned, my father was just finishing for the press his "Elements
of Political Economy," and he made me perform an exercise on the
manuscript, which Mr Bentham practised on all his own writings, making
what he called, "marginal contents"; a short abstract of every
paragraph, to enable the writer more easily to judge of, and improve,
the order of the ideas, and the general character of the exposition.
Soon after, my father put into my hands Condillac's Trait des
Sensations, and the logical and metaphysical volumes of his Cours
d'Etudes; the first (notwithstanding the superficial resemblance between
Condillac's Psychological system and my father's) quite as much for a
warning as for an example. I am not sure whether it was in this winter
or the next that I first read a history of the French Revolution. I
learnt with astonishment, that the principles of democracy, then
apparently in so insignificant and hopeless a minority everywhere in
Europe, had borne all before them in France thirty years earlier, and
had been the creed of the nation. As may be supposed from this, I had
previously a very vague idea of that great commotion. I knew only that
the French had thrown off the absolute monarchy of Louis XIV and XV, had
put the King and Queen to death, guillotined many persons, one of whom
was Lavoisier, and had ultimately fallen under the despotism of
Bonaparte. From this time, as was natural, the subject took an immense
hold of my feelings. It allied itself with all my juvenile aspirations
to the character of a democratic champion. What had happened so lately,
seemed as if it might easily happen again: and the most transcendant
glory I was capable of conceiving, was that of figuring, successful or
unsuccessful, as a Girondist in an English Convention.
During the winter of 1821-2, Mr John Austin, with
whom at the time of my visit to France my father had but lately become
acquainted, kindly allowed me to read Roman law with him. My father,
notwithstanding his abhorrence of the chaos of barbarism called English
Law, had turned his thoughts towards the bar as on the whole less
ineligible for me than any other profession: and these readings with Mr
Austin, who had made Bentham's best ideas his own, and added much to
them from other sources and from his own mind, were not only a valuable
introduction to legal studies, but an important portion of general
education. With Mr Austin I read Heineccius on the Institutes, his Roman
Antiquities, and part of his exposition of the Pandects; to which was
added a considerable portion of Blackstone. It was at the commencement
of these studies that my Gather, as a needful accompaniment to them, put
into my hands Bentham's principal speculations, as interpreted to the
Continent, and indeed to all the world, by Dumont, in the Trait de L
gislation. The reading of this book was an epoch in my life; one of the
turning points in my mental history.
My previous education had been, in a certain sense,
already a course of Benthamism. The Benthamic standard of "the
greatest happiness" was that which I had always been taught to
apply; I was even familiar with an abstract discussion of it, forming an
episode in an unpublished dialogue on Government, written by my father
on the Platonic model. Yet in the first pages of Bentham it burst upon
me with all the force of novelty. What thus impressed me was the chapter
in which Bentham passed judgment on the common modes of reasoning in
morals and legislation, deduced from phrases like "law of nature,"
"right reason," "the moral sense," "natural
rectitude," and the like, and characterized them as dogmatism in
disguise, imposing its sentiments upon others under cover of sounding
expressions which convey no reason for the sentiment, but set up the
sentiment as its own reason. It had not struck me before, that Bentham's
principle put an end to all this. The feeling rushed upon me, that all
previous moralists were superseded, and that here indeed was the
commencement of a new era in thought. This impression was strengthened
by the manner in which Bentham put into scientific form the application
of the happiness principle to the morality of actions, by analysing the
various classes and orders of their consequences. But what struck me at
the time most of all, was the Classification of Offences, which is much
more clear, compact and imposing in Dumont's r daction than in the
original work of Bentham from which it was taken. Logic and the
dialectics of Plato, which had formed so large a part of my previous
training, had given me a strong relish for accurate classification. This
taste had been strengthened and enlightened by the study of botany, on
the principles of what is called the Natural Method, which I had taken
up with great zeal, though only as an amusement, during my stay in
France; and when I found scientific classification applied to the great
and complex subject of Punishable Acts, under the guidance of the
ethical principle of Pleasurable and Painful Consequences, followed out
in the method of detail introduced into these subjects by Bentham, I
felt taken up to an eminence from which I could survey a vast mental
domain, and see stretching out into the distance intellectual results
beyond all computation. As I proceeded further, there seemed to be added
to this intellectual clearness, the most inspiring prospects of
practical improvements in human affairs. To Bentham's general view of
the construction of a body of law I was not altogether a stranger,
having read with attention that admirable compendium, my father's
article "Jurisprudence": but I had read it with little profit
and scarcely any interest, no doubt from its extremely general and
abstract character, and also because it concerned the form more than the
substance of the corpus juris, the logic rather than the ethics of law.
But Bentham's subject was Legislation, of which Jurisprudence is only
the formal part: and at every page he seemed to open a clearer and
broader conception of what human opinions and institutions ought to be,
how they might be made what they ought to be, and how far removed from
it they now are. When I laid down the last volume of the Trait , I had
become a different being. The "principle of utility"
understood as Bentham understood it, and applied in the manner in which
he applied it through these three volumes, fell exactly into its place
as the keystone which held together the detached and fragmentary
component parts of my knowledge and beliefs. It gave unity to my
conceptions of things. I now had opinions; a creed, a doctrine, a
philosophy; in one among the best senses of the word, a religion; the
inculcation and diffusion of which could be made the principal outward
purpose of a life. And I had a grand conception laid before me of
changes to be effected in the condition of mankind through that
doctrine. The Trait de L gislation wound up with what was to me a most
impressive picture of human life as it would be made by such opinions
and such laws as were recommended in the treatise. The anticipations of
practicable improvement were studiously moderate, deprecating and
discountenancing as reveries of vague enthusiasm many things which will
one day seem so natural to human beings, that injustice will probably be
done to those who once thought them chimerical. But, in my state of
mind, this appearance of superiority to illusion added to the effect
which Bentham's doctrines produced on me, by heightening the impression
of mental power, and the vista of improvement which he did open was
sufficiently large and brilliant to light up my life, as well as to give
a definite shape to my aspirations.
After this I read, from time to time, the most
important of the other works of Bentham which had then seen the light,
either as written by himself or as edited by Dumont. This was my private
reading: while, under my father's direction, my studies were carried
into the higher branches of analytic psychology. I now read Locke's
Essay, and wrote out an account of it, consisting of a complete abstract
of every chapter, with such remarks as occurred to me: which was read
by, or (I think) to, my father, and discussed throughout. I performed
the same process with Helvetius De l'Esprit, which I read of my own
choice. This preparation of abstracts, subject to my father's
censorship, was of great service to me, by competing precision in
conceiving and expressing psychological doctrines, whether accepted as
truths or only regarded as the opinion of others. After Helvetius, my
father made me study what he deemed the really master-production in the
philosophy of mind, Hartley's Observations on Man. This book, though it
did not, like the Trait de L gislation, give a new colour to my
existence, made a very similar impression on me in regard to its
immediate subject. Hartley's explanation, incomplete as in many points
it is, of the more complex mental phenomena by the law of association,
commended itself to me at once as a real analysis, and made me feel by
contrast the insufficiency of the merely verbal generalizations of
Condillac, and even of the instructive gropings and feelings about for
psychological explanations, of Locke. It was at this very time that my
father commenced writing his Analysis of the Mind, which carried
Hartley's mode of explaining the mental phenomena to so much greater
length and depth. He could only command the concentration of thought
necessary for this work, during the complete leisure of his holiday of a
month or six weeks annually: and he commenced it in the summer of 1822,
in the first holiday he passed at Dorking; in which neighbourhood, from
that time to the end of his life, with the exception of two years, he
lived, as far as his official duties permitted, for six months of every
year. He worked at the Analysis during several successive vacations, up
to the year 1829 when it was published, and allowed me to read the
manuscript, portion by portion, as it advanced. The other principal
English writers on mental philosophy I read as I felt inclined,
particularly Berkeley, Hume's Essays, Reid, Dugald Stewart and Brown on
Cause and Effect. Brown's Lectures I did not read until two or three
years later, nor at that time had my father himself read them.
Among the works read in the course of this year,
which contributed materially to my development, I ought to mention a
book (written on the foundation of some of Bentham's manuscripts and
published under the pseudonyme of Philip Beauchamp) entitled "Analysis
of the Influence of Natural Religion on the Temporal Happiness of
Mankind." This was an examination not of the truth, but of the
usefulness of religious belief, in the most general sense, apart from
the peculiarities of any special Revelation; which, of all the parts of
the discussion concerning religion, is the most important in this age,
in which real belief in any religious doctrine is feeble and precarious,
but the opinion of its necessity for moral and social purposes almost
universal; and when those who reject revelation, very generally take
refuge in an optimistic Deism, a worship of the order of Nature, and the
supposed course of Providence, at least as full of contradictions, and
perverting to the moral sentiments, as any of the forms of Christianity,
if only it is as completely realized. Yet, very little, with any claim
to a philosophical character, has been written by sceptics against the
usefulness of this form of belief. The volume bearing the name of Philip
Beauchamp had this for its special object. Having been shown to my
father in manuscript, it was put into my hands by him, and I made a
marginal analysis of it as I had done of the Elements of Political
Economy. Next to the Trait de L gislation, it was one of the books which
by the searching character of its analysis produced the greatest effect
upon me. On reading it lately after an interval of many years, I find it
to have some of the defects as well as the merits of the Benthamic modes
of thought, and to contain, as I now think, many weak arguments, but
with a great overbalance of sound ones, and much good material for a
more completely philosophic and conclusive treatment of the subject.
I have now, I believe, mentioned all the books
which had any considerable effect on my early mental development. From
this point I began to carry on my intellectual cultivation by writing
still more than by reading. In the summer of 1822 I wrote my first
argumentative essay. I remember very little about it, except that it was
an attack on what I regarded as the aristocratic prejudice, that the
rich were, or were likely to be, superior in moral qualities to the
poor. My performance was entirely argumentative, without any of the
declamation which the subject would admit of, and might be expected to
suggest to a young writer. In that department however I was, and
remained, very inapt. Dry argument was the only thing I could manage, or
willingly attempted; though passively I was very susceptible to the
effect of all composition, whether in the form of poetry or oratory,
which appealed to the feelings on any basis of reason. My father, who
knew nothing of this essay until it was finished, was well satisfied,
and as I learnt from others, even pleased with it; but, perhaps from a
desire to promote the exercise of other mental faculties than the purely
logical, he advised me to make my next exercise in composition one of
the oratorical kind: on which suggestion, availing myself of my
familiarity with Greek history and ideas and with the Athenian orators,
I wrote two speeches, one an accusation, the other a defence of
Pericles, on a supposed impeachment for not marching out to fight the
Lacedaemonians on their invasion of Attica. After this I continued to
write papers on subjects often very much beyond my capacity, but with
great benefit both from the exercise itself, and from the discussions
which it led to with my father. I had now also begun to converse, on
general subjects, with the instructed men with whom I came in contact:
and the opportunities of such contact naturally became more numerous.
The two friends of my father from whom I derived most, and with whom I
most associated, were Mr Grote and Mr John Austin. The acquaintance of
both with my father was recent, but had ripened rapidly into intimacy.
Mr Grote was introduced to my father by Mr Ricardo, I think in 1819,
(being then about twenty-five years old), and sought assiduously his
society and conversation. Already a highly instructed man, he was yet,
by the side of my father, a tyro on the great subjects of human opinion;
but he rapidly seized on my father's best ideas; and in the department
of political opinion he made himself known as early as 1820, by a
pamphlet in defence of Radical Reform, in reply to a celebrated article
by Sir James Mackintosh, then lately published in the Edinburgh Review.
Mr Grote's father, the banker, was, I believe, a thorough Tory, and his
mother intensely Evangelical; so that for his liberal opinions he was in
no way indebted to home influences. But, unlike most persons who have
the prospect of being rich by inheritance, he had, though actively
engaged in the business of banking, devoted a great portion of time to
philosophic studies; and his intimacy with my father did much to decide
the character of the next stage in his mental progress. Him I often
visited, and my conversations with him on political, moral, and
philosophical subjects gave me, in addition to much valuable
instruction, all the pleasure and benefit of sympathetic communion with
a man of the high intellectual and moral eminence which his life and
writings have since manifested to the world.
Mr Austin, who was four or five years older than Mr
Grote, was the eldest son of a retired miller in Suffolk, who had made
money by contracts during the war, and who must have been a man of
remarkable qualities, as I infer from the fact that all his sons were of
more than common ability and all eminently gentlemen. The one with whom
we are now concerned, and whose writings on jurisprudence have made him
celebrated, was for some time in the army, and served in Sicily under
Lord William Bentinck. After the peace he sold his commission and
studied for the bar, to which he had been called for some time before my
father knew him. He was not, like Mr Grote, to any extent a pupil of my
father, but he had attained, by reading and thought, a considerable
number of the same opinions, modified by his own very decided
individuality of character. He was a man of great intellectual powers
which in conversation appeared at their very best; from the vigour and
richness of expression with which, under the excitement of discussion,
he was accustomed to maintain some view or other of most general
subjects; and from an appearance of not only strong, but deliberate and
collected will; mixed with a certain bitterness, partly derived from
temperament, and partly from the general cast of his feelings and
reflexions. The dissatisfaction with life and the world, felt more or
less in the present state of society and intellect by every discerning
and highly conscientious mind, gave in his case a rather melancholy
tinge to the character, very natural to those whose passive moral
susceptibilities are more than proportioned to their active energies.
For it must be said, that the strength of will of which his manner
seemed to give such strong assurance, expended itself principally in
manner. With great zeal for human improvement, a strong sense of duty
and capacities and acquirements the extent of which is proved by the
writings he has left, he hardly ever completed any intellectual task of
magnitude. He had so high a standard of what ought to be done, so
exaggerated a sense of deficiencies in his own performances, and was so
unable to content himself with the amount of elaboration sufficient for
the occasion and the purpose, that he not only spoilt much of his work
for ordinary use by over-labouring it, but spent so much time and
exertion in superfluous study and thought, that when his task ought to
have been completed, he had generally worked himself into an illness,
without having half finished what he undertook. From this mental
infirmity (of which he is not the sole example among the accomplished
and able men whom I have known), combined with liability to frequent
attacks of disabling though not dangerous ill-health, he accomplished,
through life, little in comparison with what he seemed capable of; but
what he did produce is held in the very highest estimation by the most
competent judges; and, like Coleridge, he might plead as a set-off that
he had been to many persons, through his conversation, a source not only
of much instruction but of great elevation of character. On me his
influence was most salutary. It was moral in the best sense. He took a
sincere and kind interest in me, far beyond what could have been
expected towards a mere youth from a man of his age, standing, and what
seemed austerity of character. There was in his conversation and
demeanour a tone of high-mindedness which did not show itself so much,
if the quality existed as much, in any of the other persons with whom at
that time I associated. My intercourse with him was the more beneficial,
owing to his being of a different mental type from all other
intellectual men whom I frequented, and he from the first set himself
decidedly against the prejudices and narrownesses which are almost sure
to be found in a young man formed by a particular mode of thought or a
particular social circle.
His younger brother, Charles Austin, of whom at
this time and for the next year or two I saw much, had also a great
effect on me, though of a very different description. He was but a few
years older than myself, and had then just left the University, where he
had shone with great clat as a man of intellect and a brilliant orator
and converser. The effect he produced on his Cambridge contemporaries
deserves to be accounted an historical event; for to it may in part be
traced the tendency towards Liberalism in general, and the Benthamic and
politico-economic form of it in particular, which showed itself in a
portion of the more active-minded young men of the higher classes from
this time to 1830. The Union Debating Society at that time at the height
of its reputation, was an arena where what were then thought extreme
opinions, in politics and philosophy, were weekly asserted, face to face
with their opposites, before audiences consisting of the lite of the
Cambridge youth: and though many persons afterwards of more or less
note, (of whom Lord Macaulay is the most celebrated), gained their first
oratorical laurels in those debates, the really influential mind among
these intellectual gladiators was Charles Austin. He continued, after
leaving the University, to be, by his conversation and personal
ascendancy, a leader among the same class of young men who had been his
associates there; and he attached me among others to his car. Through
him I became acquainted with Macaulay, Hyde and Charles Villiers, Strutt
(now Lord Belper), Romilly (now Lord Romilly and Master of the Rolls),
and various others who subsequently figured in literature or politics,
and among whom I heard discussions on many topics, as yet to a certain
degree new to me. The influence of Charles Austin over me differed from
that of the persons I have hitherto mentioned, in being not the
influence of a man over a boy, but that of an elder contemporary. It was
through him that I first felt myself, not a pupil under teachers, but a
man among men. He was the first person of intellect whom I met on a
ground of equality, though as yet much his inferior on that common
ground. He was a man who never failed to impress greatly those with whom
he came in contact, even when their opinions were the very reverse of
his. The impression he gave was that of boundless strength, together
with talents which, combined with such apparent force of will and
character, seemed capable of dominating the world. Those who knew him,
whether friendly to him or not, always anticipated that he would play a
conspicuous part in public life. It is seldom that men produce so great
an immediate effect by speech, unless they, in some degree, lay
themselves out for it; and he did this in no ordinary degree. He loved
to strike, and even to startle. He knew that decision is the greatest
element of effect, and he uttered his opinions with all the decision he
could throw into them, never so well pleased as when he astonished any
one by their audacity. Very unlike his brother, who made war against the
narrower interpretations and applications of the principles they both
professed, he, on the contrary, presented the Benthamic doctrines in the
most startling form of which they were susceptible, exaggerating
everything in them which tended to consequences offensive to any one's
preconceived feelings. All which, he defended with such verve and
vivacity, and carried off by a manner so agreeable as well as forcible,
that he always either came off victor, or divided the honours of the
field. It is my belief that much of the notion popularly entertained of
the tenets and sentiments of what are called Benthamites or Utilitarians
had its origin in paradoxes thrown out by Charles Austin. It must be
said, however, that his example was followed, haud passibus aequis, by
younger proselytes, and that to outrer whatever was by anybody
considered offensive in the doctrines and maims of Benthanism, became at
one time the badge of a small coterie of youths. All of these who had
anything in them, myself among others, quickly outgrew this boyish
vanity; and those who had not, became tired of differing from other
people, and gave up both the good and the bad part of the heterodox
opinions they had for some time professed.
It was in the winter of 1822-3 that I formed the
plan of a little society, to be composed of young men agreeing in
fundamental principles -- acknowledging Utility as their standard in
ethics and politics, and a certain number of the principal corollaries
drawn from it in the philosophy I had accepted -- and meeting once a
fortnight to read essays and discuss questions conformably to the
premises thus agreed on. The fact would hardly be worth mentioning, but
for the circumstance, that the name I gave to the society I had planned
was the Utilitarian Society. It was the first time that any one had
taken the title of Utilitarian; and the term made its way into the
language from this humble source. I did not invent the word, but found
it in one of Galt's novels, the "Annals of the Parish," in
which the Scotch clergyman, of whom the book is a supposed
autobiography, is represented as warning his parishioners not to leave
the Gospel and become utilitarians. With a boy's fondness for a name and
a banner I seized on the word, and for some years called myself and
others by it as a sectarian appellation; and it came to be occasionally
used by some others holding the opinions which it was intended to
designate. As those opinions attracted more notice, the term was
repeated by strangers and opponents, and got into rather common use just
about the time when those who had originally assumed it, laid down that
along with other sectarian characteristics. The Society so called
consisted at first of no more than three members, one of whom, being Mr
Bentham's amanuensis, obtained for us permission to hold our meetings in
his house. The number never, I think, reached ten, and the society was
broken up in 1826. It had thus an existence of about three years and a
half. The chief effect of it as regards myself, over and above the
benefit of practice in oral discussion, was that of bringing me in
contact with several young men at that time less advanced than myself,
among whom, as they professed the same opinions, I was for some time a
sort of leader, and had considerable influence on their mental progress.
Any young man of education who fell in my way, and whose opinions were
not incompatible with those of the Society, I endeavoured to press into
its service; and some others I probably should never have known, had
they not joined it. Those of the members who became my intimate
companions -- no one of whom was in any sense of the word a disciple,
but all of them independent thinkers on their own basis -- were William
Eyton Tooke, son of the eminent political economist, a young man of
singular worth both moral and intellectual, lost to the world by an
early death; his friend William Ellis, an original thinker in the field
of political economy, now honourably known by his apostolic exertions
for the improvement of education; George Graham, afterwards an official
assignee of the Bankruptcy Court, a thinker of originality and power on
almost all abstract subjects; and (from the time when he came first to
England to study for the bar in 1824 or 1825) a man who has made
considerably more noise in the world than any of these, John Arthur
Roebuck.
In May, 1823, my professional occupation and status
for the next thirty-five years of my life, were decided by my father's
obtaining for me an appointment from the East India Company, in the
office of the Examiner of india Correspondence, immediately under
himself. I was appointed in the usual manner, at the bottom of the list
of clerks, to rise, at least in the first instance, by seniority; but
with the understanding that I should be employed from the beginning in
preparing drafts of despatches, and be thus trained up as a successor to
those who then filled the higher departments of the office. My drafts of
course required, for some time, much revision from my immediate
superiors, but I soon became well acquainted with the business, and by
my father's instructions and the general growth of my own powers, I was
in a few years qualified to be, and practically was, the chief conductor
of the correspondence with India in one of the leading departments, that
of the Native States. This continued to be my official duty until I was
appointed Examiner, only two years before the time when the abolition of
the East India Company as a political body determined my retirement. I
do not know any one of the occupations by which a subsistence can now be
gained, more suitable than such as this to any one who, not being in
independent circumstances, desires to devote a part of the twenty-four
hours to private intellectual pursuits. Writing for the press, cannot be
recommended as a permanent resource to any one qualified to accomplish
anything in the higher departments of literature or thought: not only on
account of the uncertainty of this means of livelihood, especially if
the writer has a conscience, and will not consent to serve any opinions
except his own; but also because the writings by which one can live, are
not the writings which themselves live, and are never those in which the
writer does his best. Books destined to form future thinkers take too
much time to write, and when written come, in general, too slowly into
notice and repute, to be relied on for subsistence. Those who have to
support themselves by their pen must depend on literary drudgery, or at
best on writings addressed to the multitude; and can employ in the
pursuits of their own choice, only such time as they can spare from
those of necessity; which is generally less than the leisure allowed by
office occupations, while the effect on the mind is far more enervating
and fatiguing. For my own part I have, through life, found office duties
an actual rest from the other mental occupations which I have carried on
simultaneously with them. They were sufficiently intellectual not to be
a distasteful drudgery, without being such as to cause any strain upon
the mental powers of a person used to abstract thought, or to the labour
of careful literary composition. The drawbacks, for every mode of life
has its drawbacks, were not, however, unfelt by me. I cared little for
the loss of the chances of riches and honours held out by some of the
professions, particularly the bar, which had been, as I have already
said, the profession thought of for me. But I was not indifferent to
exclusion from Parliament, and public life: and I felt very sensibly the
more immediate unpleasantness of confinement to London; the holiday
allowed by India-house practice not exceeding a month in the year, while
my taste was strong for a country life, and my sojourn in France had
left behind it an ardent desire of travelling. But though these tastes
could not be freely indulged, they were at no time entirely sacrificed.
I passed most Sundays, throughout the year, in the country, taking long
rural walks on that day even when residing in London. The month's
holiday was, for a few years, passed at my father's house in the
country. afterwards a part or the whole was spent in tours, chiefly
pedestrian, with some one or more of the young men who were my chosen
companions; and, at a later period, in longer journeys or excursions,
alone or with other friends. France, Belgium, and Rhenish Germany were
within easy reach of the annual holiday: and two longer absences, one of
three, the other of six months, under medical advice, added Switzerland,
the Tyrol, and Italy to my list. Fortunately, also, both these journeys
occurred rather early, so as to give the benefit and charm of the
remembrance to a large portion of life.
I am disposed to agree with what has been surmised
by others, that the opportunity which my official position gave me of
learning by personal observation the necessary conditions of the
practical conduct of public affairs, has been of considerable value to
me as a theoretical reformer of the opinions and institutions of my
time. Not, indeed, that public business transacted on paper, to take
effect on the other side of the globe, was of itself calculated to give
much practical knowledge of life. But the occupation accustomed me to
see and hear the difficulties of every course, and the means of
obviating them, stated and discussed deliberately with a view to
execution; it gave me opportunities of perceiving when public measures,
and other political facts, did not produce the effects which had been
expected of them, and from what causes; above all, it was valuable to me
by making me, in this portion of my activity, merely one wheel in a
machine, the whole of which had to work together. As a speculative
writer, I should have had no one to consult but myself, and should have
encountered in my speculations none of the obstacles which would have
started up whenever they came to be applied to practice. But as a
Secretary conducting political correspondence, I could not issue an
order or express an opinion, without satisfying various persons very
unlike myself, that the thing was fit to be done. I was thus in a good
position for finding out by practice the mode of putting a thought which
gives it easiest admittance into minds not prepared for it by habit;
while I became practically conversant with the difficulties of moving
bodies of men, the necessities of compromise, the art of sacrificing the
non-essential to preserve the essential. I learnt how to obtain the best
I could, when I could not obtain everything; instead of being indignant
or dispirited because I could not have entirely my own way, to be
pleased and encouraged when I could have the smallest part of it; and
when even that could not be, to bear with complete equanimity the being
overruled altogether. I have found, through life, these acquisitions to
be of the greatest possible importance for personal happiness, and they
are also a very necessary condition for enabling any one, either as
theorist or as practical man, to effect the greatest amount of good
compatible with his opportunities.
IV. YOUTHFUL PROPAGANDISM. THE
WESTMINSTER REVIEW.
The occupation of so much of my time by office work
did not relax my attention to my own pursuits, which were never carried
on more vigorously. It was about this time that I began to write in
newspapers. The first writings of mine which got into print were two
letters published towards the end of 1822, in the Traveller evening
newspaper. The Traveller (which afterwards grew into the "Globe and
Traveller," by the purchase and incorporation of the Globe) was
then the property of the well-known political economist, Colonel
Torrens, and under the editorship of an able man, Mr Walter Coulson
(who, after being an amanuensis of Mr Bentham, became a reporter, then
an editor, next a barrister and conveyancer, and died Counsel to the
Home Office), it had become one of the most important newspaper organs
of liberal politics. Col. Torrens himself wrote much of the political
economy of his paper; and had at this time made an attack upon some
opinion of Ricardo and my father, to which, at my father's instigation,
I attempted an answer, and Coulson, out of consideration for my father
and goodwill to me, inserted it. There was a reply by Torrens, to which
I again rejoined. I soon after attempted something considerably more
ambitious. The prosecutions of Richard Carlile and his wife and sister
for publications hostile to Christianity, were then exciting much
attention, and nowhere more than among the people I frequented. Freedom
of discussion even in politics, much more in religion, was at that time
far from being, even in theory, the conceded point which it at least
seems to be now; and the holders of obnoxious opinions had to be always
ready to argue and re-argue for the liberty of expressing them. I wrote
a series of five letters, under the signature of Wickliffe, going over
the whole length and breadth of the question of free publication of all
opinions on religion, and offered them to the Morning Chronicle. Three
of them were published in January and February 1823; the other two,
containing things too outspoken for that journal, never appeared at all.
But a paper which I wrote soon after on the same subject, propos of a
debate in the House of Commons, was inserted as a leading article; and
during the whole of this year, 1823, a considerable number of my
contributions were printed in the Chronicle and Traveller: sometimes
notices of books but oftener letters, commenting on some nonsense talked
in Parliament, or some defect of the law or misdoings of the magistracy
or the courts of justice. In this last department the Chronicle was now
rendering signal service. After the death of Mr Perry, the editorship
and management of the paper had devolved on Mr John Black, long a
reporter on its establishment; a man of most extensive reading and
information, great honesty and simplicity of mind; a Particular friend
of my father, imbued with many of his and Bentham's ideas, which he
reproduced in his articles, among other valuable thoughts, with great
facility and skill. From this time the Chronicle ceased to be the merely
Whig organ it waS before, and during the next ten years became to a
considerable extent a vehicle of the opinions of the Utilitarian
radicals. This was mainly by what Black himself wrote, with some
assistance from Fonblanque, who first showed his eminent qualities as a
writer by articles and jeux d'esprit in the Chronicle. The defects of
the law, and of the administration of justice, were the subject on which
that paper rendered most service to improvement. Up to that time hardly
a word had been said, except by Bentham and my father, against that most
peccant part of English institutions and of their administration. It was
the almost universal creed of Englishmen, that the law of England, the
judicature of England, the unpaid magistracy of England, were models of
excellence. I do not go beyond the mark in saying, that after Bentham,
who supplied the principal materials, the greatest share of the merit of
breaking down this wretched superstition belongs to Black, as editor of
the Morning Chronicle. He kept up an incessant fire against it, exposing
the absurdities and vices of the law and the courts of justice, paid and
unpaid, until he forced some sense of them into people's minds. On many
other questions he became the organ of opinions much in advance of any
which had ever before found regular advocacy in the newspaper press.
Black was a frequent visitor of my father, and Mr Grote used to say that
he always knew by the Monday morning's article, whether Black had been
with my father on the Sunday. Black was one of the most influential of
the many channels through which my father's conversation and personal
influence made his opinions tell on the world; cooperating with the
effect of his writings in making him a power in the country, such as it
has rarely been the lot of an individual in a private station to be,
through the mere force of intellect and character: and a power which was
often acting the most efficiently where it was least seen and suspected.
I have already noticed how much of what was done by Ricardo, Hume, and
Grote, was the result, in part, of his prompting and persuasion. He was
the good genius by the side of Brougham in most of what he did for the
public, either on education, law reform, or any other subject. And his
influence flowed in minor streams too numerous to be specified. This
influence was now about to receive a great extension by the foundation
of the Westminster Review.
Contrary to what may have been supposed, my father
was in no degree a party to setting up the Westminster Review. The need
of a Radical organ to make head against the Edinburgh and Quarterly
(then in the period of their greatest reputation and influence), had
been a topic of conversation between him and Mr Bentham many years
earlier, and it had been a part of their ch teau en Espagne that my
father should be the editor; but the idea had never assumed any
practical shape. In 1823, however, Mr Bentham determined to establish
the review at his own cost, and offered the editorship to my father, who
declined it as incompatible with his india House appointment. It was
then entrusted to Mr (now Sir John) Bowring, at that time a merchant in
the City. Mr Bowring had been for two or three years previous an
assiduous frequenter of Mr Bentham, to whom he was recommended by many
personal good qualities, by an ardent admiration for Bentham, a zealous
adoption of many, though not all, of his opinions, and, not least, by an
extensive acquaintanceship and correspondence with Liberals of all
countries, which seemed to qualify him for being a powerful agent in
spreading Bentham's fame and doctrines through all quarters of the
world. My father had seen little of Bowring, but knew enough of him to
have formed a strong opinion, that he was a man of an entirely different
type from what my father considered suitable for conducting a political
and philosophical review: and he augured so ill of the enterprise that
he regretted it altogether, feeling persuaded not only that Mr Bentham
would lose his money, but that discredit would probably be brought upon
radical principles. He could not, however, desert Mr Bentham, and he
consented to write an article for the first number. As it had been a
favourite portion of the scheme formerly talked of, that part of the
work should be devoted to reviewing the other Reviews, this article of
my father's was to be a general criticism of the Edinburgh Review from
its commencement. Before writing it he made me read through all the
volumes of the Review, or as much of each as seemed of any importance
(which was not so arduous a task in 1823 as it would be now), and make
notes for him of the articles which I thought he would wish to examine,
either on account of their good or their bad qualities. This paper of my
father's was the chief cause of the sensation which the Westminster
Review produced at its first appearance, and is, both in conception and
in execution, one of the most striking of all his writings. He began by
an analysis of the tendencies of periodical literature in general;
pointing out, that it cannot, like books, wait for success, but must
succeed immediately, or not at all, and is hence almost certain to
profess and inculcate the opinions already held by the public to which
it addresses itself, instead of attempting to rectify or improve those
opinions. He next, to characterize the position of the Edinburgh Review
as a political organ, entered into a complete analysis, from the Radical
point of view, of the British Constitution. He held up to notice its
thoroughly aristocratic character: the nomination of a majority of the
House of Commons by a few hundred families; the entire identification of
the more independent portion, the county members, with the great
landholders; the different classes whom this narrow oligarchy was
induced, for convenience, to admit to a share of power; and finally,
what he called its two props, the Church, and the legal profession. He
pointed out the natural tendency of an aristocratic body of this
composition, to group itself into two parties, one of them in possession
of the executive, the other endeavouring to supplant the former and
become the predominant section by the aid of public opinion, without any
essential sacrifice of the aristocratic predominance. He described the
course likely to be pursued, and the political ground occupied, by an
aristocratic party in opposition, coquetting with popular principles for
the sake of popular support. He showed how this idea was realized in the
conduct of the Whig party, and of the Edinburgh Review as its chief
literary organ. He described, as their main characteristic, what he
termed " seesaw;" writing alternately on both sides of every
question which touched the power or interest of the governing classes;
sometimes in different articles, sometimes in different parts of the
same article: and illustrated his position by copious specimens. So
formidable an attack on the Whig party and policy had never before been
made; nor had so great a blow been ever struck, in this country, for
radicalism; nor was there, I believe, any living person capable of
writing that article, except my father.(2*)
In the meantime the nascent review had formed a
junction with another project, of a purely literary periodical, to be
edited by Mr Henry Southern, afterwards a diplomatist, then a literary
man by profession. The two editors agreed to unite their corps, and
divide the editorship, Bowring taking the political, Southern the
literary department. Southern's review was to have been published by
Longman, and that firm, though part proprietors of the Edinburgh, were
willing to be the publishers of the new journal. But when all the
arrangements had been made, and the prospectuses sent out, the Longmans
saw my father's attack on the Edinburgh, and drew back. My father was
now appealed to for his interest with his own publisher, Baldwin, which
was exerted with a successful result. And so, in April, 1824, amidst
anything but hope on my father's part, and that of most of those who
afterwards aided in carrying on the review, the first number made its
appearance.
That number was an agreeable surprise to most of
us. The average of the articles was of much better quality than had been
expected. The literary and artistic department had rested chiefly on Mr
Bingham, a barrister (subsequently a Police Magistrate), who had been
for some years a frequenter of Bentham, was a friend of both the
Austins, and had adopted with great ardour Mr Bentham's philosophical
opinions. Partly from accident, there were in the first number as many
as five articles by Bingham; and we were extremely pleased with them. I
well remember the mixed feeling I myself had about the Review; the joy
at finding, what we did not at all expect, that it was sufficiently good
to be capable of being made a creditable organ of those who held the
opinions it professed; and extreme vexation, since it was so good on the
whole, at what we thought the blemishes of it. When, however, in
addition to our generally favourable opinion of it, we learned that it
had an extraordinarily large sale for a first number, and found that the
appearance of a Radical review, with pretensions equal to those of the
established organs of parties, had excited much attention, there could
be no room for hesitation, and we all became eager in doing everything
we could to strengthen and improve it.
My father continued to write occasional articles.
The Quarterly Review received its exposure, as a sequel to that of the
Edinburgh. Of his other contributions, the most important were an attack
on Southey's Book of the Church, in the fifth number, and a political
article in the twelfth. Mr Austin only contributed one paper, but one of
great merit, an argument against primogeniture, in reply to an article
then lately published in the Edinburgh Review by McCulloch. Grote also
was a contributor only once; all the time he could spare being already
taken up with his History of Greece. The article he wrote was on his own
subject, and was a very complete exposure and castigation of Mitford.
Bingham and Charles Austin continued to write for some time; Fonblanque
was a frequent contributor from the third number. Of my particular
associates, Ellis was a regular writer up to the ninth number; and about
the time when he left off, others of the set began; Eyton Tooke, Graham,
and Roebuck. I was myself the most frequent writer of all, having
contributed, from the second number to the eighteenth, thirteen
articles; reviews of books on history and political economy, or
discussions on special political topics, as corn laws, game laws, laws
of libel. Occasional articles of merit came in from other acquaintances
of my father's, and, in time, of mine; and some of Mr Bowring's writers
turned out well. On the whole, however, the conduct of the Review was
never satisfactory to any of the persons strongly interested in its
principles, with whom I came in contact. Hardly ever did a number come
out without containing several things extremely offensive to us, either
in point of opinion, of taste, or by mere want of ability. The
unfavourable judgments passed by my father, Grote, the two Austins, and
others, were re-echoed with exaggeration by us younger people; and as
our youthful zeal tendered us by no means backward in making complaints,
we led the two editors a sad life. From my knowledge of what I then was,
I have no doubt that we were at least as often wrong as right; and I am
very certain that if the Review had been carried on according to our
notions (I mean those of the juniors), it would have been no better,
perhaps not even so good as it was. But it is worth noting as a fact in
the history of Benthanism, that the periodical organ, by which it was
best known, was from the first extremely unsatisfactory to those whose
opinions on all subjects it was supposed specially to represent.
Meanwhile, however, the Review made considerable
noise in the world, and gave a recognised status, in the arena of
opinion and discussion, to the Benthamic type of radicalism, out of all
proportion to the number of its adherents, and to the personal merits
and abilities, at that time, of most of those who could be reckoned
among them. It was a time, as is known, of rapidly rising Liberalism.
When the fears and animosities accompanying the war with France had been
brought to an end, and people had once more a place in their thoughts
for home politics, the tide began to set towards reform. The renewed
oppression of the Continent by the old reigning families, the
countenance apparently given by the English Government to the conspiracy
against liberty called the Holy Alliance, and the enormous weight of the
national debt and taxation occasioned by so long and costly a war,
tendered the government and parliament very unpopular. Radicalism, under
the leadership of the Burdetts and Cobbetts, had assumed a character and
importance which seriously alarmed the Administration: and their alarm
had scarcely been temporarily assuaged by the celebrated Six Acts, when
the trial of Queen Caroline roused a still wider and deeper feeling of
hatred. Though the outward signs of this hatred passed away with its
exciting cause, there arose on all sides a spirit which had never shown
itself before, of opposition to abuses in detail. Mr Hume's persevering
scrutiny of the public expenditure, forcing the House of Commons to a
division on every objectionable item in the estimates, had begun to tell
with great force on public opinion, and had extorted many minor
retrenchments from an unwilling administration. Political economy had
asserted itself with great vigour in public affairs, by the Petition of
the Merchants of London for Free Trade, drawn up in 1820 by Mr Tooke and
presented by Mr Alexander Baring; and by the noble exertions of Ricardo
during the few years of his parliamentary life. His writings, following
up the impulse given by the Bullion controversy, and followed up in
their turn by the expositions and comments of my father and McCulloch
(whose writings in the Edinburgh Review during those years were most
valuable), had drawn general attention to the subject, making at least
partial converts in the Cabinet itself; and Huskisson, supported by
Canning, had commenced that gradual demolition of the protective system,
which one of their colleagues virtually completed in 1846, though the
last vestiges were only swept away by Mr Gladstone in 1860. Mr Peel,
then Home Secretary, was entering cautiously into the untrodden and
peculiarly Benthamic path of Law Reform. At this period, when Liberalism
seemed to be becoming the tone of the time, when improvement of
institutions was preached from the highest places, and a complete change
of the constitution of Parliament was loudly demanded in the lowest, it
is not strange that attention should have been roused by the regular
appearance in controversy of what seemed a new school of writers,
claiming to be the legislators and theorists of this new tendency. The
air of strong conviction with which they wrote, when scarcely any one
else seemed to have an equally strong faith in as definite a creed: the
boldness with which they tilted against the very front of both the
existing political Parties; their uncompromising profession of
opposition to many of the generally received opinions, and the suspicion
they lay under of holding others still more heterodox than they
professed; the talent and verve of at least my father's articles, and
the appearance of a corps behind him sufficient to carry on a review;
and finally, the fact that the review was bought and read, made the
so-called Bentham school in philosophy and politics fill a greater place
in the public mind than it had held before, or has ever again held since
other equally earnest schools of thought have arisen in England. As I
was in the headquarters of it, knew of what it was composed, and as one
of the most active of its very small number, might say without undue
assumption, quorum pars magna fui, it belongs to me more than to most
others, to give some account of it.
This supposed school, then, had no other existence
than what was constituted by the fact, that my father's writings and
conversation drew round him a certain number of young men who had
already imbibed, or who imbibed from him, a greater or smaller portion
of his very decided political and philosophical opinions. The notion
that Bentham was surrounded by a band of disciples who received their
opinions from his lips, is a fable to which my father did justice in his
"Fragment on Mackintosh," and which, to all who knew Mr
Bentham's habits of life.
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