On this page
-
Text (2)
-
Untitled Article
-
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
enactmctntei U ^ tKite iMn ^ fivi * ita < l ^ &a ^ a separate * tu £ y or j ) Poi fe ** i <* v bitt Imve conskterWl if to be a btrfiri ^* wbk * frimght 4 ^ -pte ^ c&w ^ frmti jxmuita ' reqmrihg rn tense efx ^ ftiofi v' Ha * memt ^» m of the supre me aase rnb Lf m » other ^ ccup ^ ti ^ nf ^ o ' attend'to , Weshdold no longer see the absurd jitoc * tiee of meetirig to legislate for the country at those hours , vben the
vigour and perspicacity and soundness of the mind are at the lowest point . No one who had any acquaintance with the mental and physical constitution of men could expect the best possible laws from nocturnal legislators , already exhausted by the occupations of the day , and frequently obliged to resort to some sort of stimulants to keep up the capacity of attending to what is before them/—pp . 182—188 .
* In carrying such a disqualification into effect ( and of the judiciousness of doing it by law we would be understood to speak with some diffidence , from a dread of superfluous legislation ) the range of selection left to the constituent body would doubtless be narrowed ; but it if < rf little avail to have the power of choosing public servants who foave f ) krt time to perform their duties ; and the range of choice might be expanded agaifvbydie obvious expedient of annexing a salary to the office of
representative . In truth , this expedient seems to be required at art t events ; in order to give the greatest intensity to the motives which ^ fmpei ^ cK * mind of the legislator to apply itself to the difficulties of thciauk , ' 'M well as to enhance the vigilance of the constituent body , by tetfchhvg ^ tiiem the value * of hie services , and of their own suffrages , in a fanyr ; wW * h the * Ju H « estf amongst them can understand . Under such an ftTrto rtg *^ ment , tr « n of energetic and comprehensive minds , trained to vig& 4 "OUi personal And ihental exertion , but who are obliged to devote thenfsg | V «*
to pursuits yielding a profitable return , and are conveniently at j ^ resOnt eitlier exsfoftied from the legislature , or are mere ciphers- in it , U * otrM be , vrith all their faculties , at the command of the public . Wen of thin description , so gifted , and so placed above private cards , wottid 1 * 3 faw 1 liable : for instead of giving that lazy gentlemanly attention lo pu&fce questions , which , in their own apprehension at lea-rt is all tltat can fa reasonably expected from unpaid representatives living in luxurious oJhh lence ; or that casual , and intermitting , and brief attendance ^ m fheir
duties , which is all that professional practitioners can boafow ^ thcj ^ d make their legislative functions the business of their lives . Starefrtittos intellectual exenion , except in the case of a few extraordinary fftiodft t t * which it is a pleasure , as severe corporeal exercise is to n mah ^ f gr ^ at muscular strength , is irksome , and seldom habitually undertaken ^ ithoift a powerful external motive . It is surely polrcy in a nation to- httiMh this motive for due application to national affair * . "•
* To set against these advantages , there appears to be nothing but the expense . On the most liberal calculation , less than hull' a million sterling would effect the object ; and every one must own that this would to mere dusk in the balance , when placed against the benefits to he derived frtim'Stktaifaitmg masterly legislation for the deplorable work wfrfofc htn tOG 44 % &n tMtosftd under that imme . '—pp « 19 * 2—194
Qil tYie vr 6 hert y qualification , the author observes Ihya : fi t ? J »( HiMW T lflL *|® P . fl $ yi , ° f . m ^ &g ??** % MSaWMSI specnTea amount or property cannot always be exactly ascertained , and
Untitled Article
No . 101 . 2 B
Untitled Article
T ^ RMtani ^ ayVi ^^ 3 ft *
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), May 2, 1835, page 325, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2645/page/33/
-