On this page
-
Text (1)
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
jurious to ite own as to the public interest . Whatever may be the merits and demerits of the * Times / there can be no question of its being by far the most potent organ of the Movement ; which , at the same time , it does not blindly hurry on , but is incessantly pointing out to Ministers , and to the influential classes , the means by which , while yielding to the
tide of change , they may rationally hope to temper its violence . The * Times' is without doubt one of the gTeat powers in the State . It would not be so , if either Ministers or Opposition had the energy , the strength of will , or the knowledge of the world , by which that journal has acquired the ascendancy naturally given by those qualities in an age which , without much of the exaggeration of a satirist , may be termed the age of cowards and fribbles .
13 th May . Lord Brougham * * Defence of the Church EttablUhment . —The Lord Chancellor is curiously destitute of consistency . We do not mean by consistency , the Tory virtue of being always wrong because you have been once wrong ; we mean that quality of the intellect and of the moral perceptions , which prevents a person from holding two conflicting
opinions at once . It was but the other day that L * ord Brougham declared himself against a National Education , because it would put an end to voluntary contributions . And now , without owning , any change of opinion , he maintains that voluntary contributions are good for nothing , and that the State must do all . 4 There were some wants which the
animal instincts of nature left safely to encumber us , since they were sure of being provided for ; because hunger and thirst and other purely animal necessities , would of themselves compel us to take means to relieve ourselves of their pressure , and the more we felt them the more sure we were to endeavour to provide for them ; but it was not so with wants of a more refined , and he might say nobler kind , —it was not so
with respect to education ; he did not mean religious , but common secular education . On the contrary , the more ignorant we were , the less we knew of the use of learning , and the less we should bestir ourselves and take means to ensure the advantages to be derived from its acquirement . This was to prove -that the State ought to provide an endowed ecclesiastical establishment : and of course , we presume , ought to fiirniih common secular education also .
We subscribe to Lord Brougham ' s premises , and strongly recommend them to his own consideration . He shall hear of them again if he ever repeat his declaration against a national provision for elementary instruction . But adopting his principles , we differ altogether from the conclusion he draws from them , in favour of a Church Establishment , taking that term in its received meaning . What he said last year in favour of the voluntary principle , and what he says this year against the voluntary
principle , are at complete variance , and we hold him to be most felicitously wrong in both . 4 $ Ve hold , with L . ord Brougham and all other rational persons , that the only objects fit to be undertaken by the State , which derives the principal part of its pecuniary resources from compulsory taxation , are . those which either cannot be accomplished at all . or not so well , by the voluntary principle . Instruction , meaning b y that term the systematic culture of the intellectual faculties , we hold to be one of these ; . and to be a most proper subject for a State provision ^ We < k > not flQBeept r « J *
Untitled Article
Lord Brougham ' * Defence of the Church Establishment . 441
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 2, 1834, page 441, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2634/page/59/
-