登陆注册
18990400000017

第17章

But when they came to shape the model, Not one could fit the other's noddle.--BUTLER.

Meanwhile, the last course, and the dessert, passed by. When the ladies had withdrawn, young Crotchet addressed the company.

MR. CROTCHET, JUN. There is one point in which philosophers of all classes seem to be agreed: that they only want money to regenerate the world.

MR. MAC QUEDY. No doubt of it. Nothing is so easy as to lay down the outlines of perfect society. There wants nothing but money to set it going. I will explain myself clearly and fully by reading a paper. (Producing a large scroll.) "In the infancy of society--"

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. Pray, Mr. Mac Quedy, how is it that all gentlemen of your nation begin everything they write with the "infancy of society?"

MR. MAC QUEDY. Eh, sir, it is the simplest way to begin at the beginning. "In the infancy of society, when government was invented to save a percentage; say two and a half per cent.--"

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. I will not say any such thing.

MR. MAC QUEDY. Well, say any percentage you please.

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. I will not say any percentage at all.

MR. MAC QUEDY. "On the principle of the division of labour--"

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. Government was invented to spend a percentage.

MR. MAC QUEDY. To save a percentage.

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. No, sir, to spend a percentage; and a good deal more than two and a half percent. Two hundred and fifty per cent.: that is intelligible.

MR. MAC QUEDY.--"In the infancy of society--"

MR. TOOGOOD.--Never mind the infancy of society. The question is of society in its maturity. Here is what it should be. (Producing a paper.) I have laid it down in a diagram.

MR. SKIONAR. Before we proceed to the question of government, we must nicely discriminate the boundaries of sense, understanding, and reason. Sense is a receptivity -

MR. CROTCHET, JUN. We are proceeding too fast. Money being all that is wanted to regenerate society, I will put into the hands of this company a large sum for the purpose. Now let us see how to dispose of it.

MR. MAC QUEDY. We will begin by taking a committee-room in London, where we will dine together once a week, to deliberate.

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. If the money is to go in deliberative dinners, you may set me down for a committee man and honorary caterer.

MR. MAC QUEDY. Next, you must all learn political economy, which I will teach you, very compendiously, in lectures over the bottle.

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. I hate lectures over the bottle. But pray, sir, what is political economy?

MR. MAC QUEDY. Political economy is to the state what domestic economy is to the family.

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. No such thing, sir. In the family there is a paterfamilias, who regulates the distribution, and takes care that there shall be no such thing in the household as one dying of hunger, while another dies of surfeit. In the state it is all hunger at one end, and all surfeit at the other. Matchless claret, Mr. Crotchet.

MR. CROTCHET. Vintage of fifteen, Doctor.

MR. MAC QUEDY. The family consumes, and so does the state.

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. Consumes, air! Yes: but the mode, the proportions: there is the essential difference between the state and the family. Sir, I hate false analogies.

MR. MAC QUEDY. Well, sir, the analogy is not essential.

Distribution will come under its proper head.

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. Come where it will, the distribution of the state is in no respect analogous to the distribution of the family.

The paterfamilias, sir: the paterfamilias.

MR. MAC QUEDY. Well, sir, let that pass. The family consumes, and in order to consume, it must have supply.

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. Well, sir, Adam and Eve knew that, when they delved and span.

MR. MAC QUEDY. Very true, sir (reproducing his scroll). "In the infancy of society--"

MR. TOOGOOD. The reverend gentleman has hit the nail on the head.

It is the distribution that must be looked to; it is the paterfamilias that is wanting in the State. Now here I have provided him. (Reproducing his diagram.)

MR. TRILLO. Apply the money, sir, to building and endowing an opera house, where the ancient altar of Bacchus may flourish, and justice may be done to sublime compositions. (Producing a part of a manuscript opera.)

MR. SKIONAR. No, sir, build sacella for transcendental oracles to teach the world how to see through a glass darkly. (Producing a scroll.)

MR. TRILLO. See through an opera-glass brightly.

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. See through a wine-glass full of claret; then you see both darkly and brightly. But, gentlemen, if you are all in the humour for reading papers, I will read you the first half of my next Sunday's sermon. (Producing a paper.)

OMNES. No sermon! No sermon!

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. Then I move that our respective papers be committed to our respective pockets.

MR. MAC QUEDY. Political economy is divided into two great branches, production and consumption.

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. Yes, sir; there are two great classes of men: those who produce much and consume little; and those who consume much and produce nothing. The fruges consumere nati have the best of it. Eh, Captain! You remember the characteristics of a great man according to Aristophanes: [Greek text]. Ha! ha! ha! Well, Captain, even in these tight-laced days, the obscurity of a learned language allows a little pleasantry.

CAPTAIN FITZCHROME. Very true, sir; the pleasantry and the obscurity go together; they are all one, as it were--to me at any rate (aside).

MR. MAC QUEDY. Now, sir -

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. Pray, sir, let your science alone, or you will put me under the painful necessity of demolishing it bit by bit, as I have done your exordium. I will undertake it any morning; but it is too hard exercise after dinner.

MR. MAC QUEDY. Well, sir, in the meantime I hold my science established.

REV. DR. FOLLIOTT. And I hold it demolished.

MR. CROTCHET, JUN. Pray, gentlemen, pocket your manuscripts, fill your glasses, and consider what we shall do with our money.

MR. MAC QUEDY. Build lecture-rooms, and schools for all.

MR. TRILLO. Revive the Athenian theatre; regenerate the lyrical drama.

同类推荐
  • 黄檗山断际禅师传心法要

    黄檗山断际禅师传心法要

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 十地论义疏卷第一

    十地论义疏卷第一

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 庄子

    庄子

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • THE HOLY WAR

    THE HOLY WAR

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 重修福建台湾府志

    重修福建台湾府志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 傀儡帝君

    傀儡帝君

    傀儡有五阶,一阶一天地。世人不知天道至理,无法揣测傀儡威能。生、幼、盛、衰、亡,万物不可超脱,唯傀儡不入轮回。燕国皇裔齐羽流落人间,自习阴阳傀儡术,在武者为尊、战乱纷纷的大陆上,一步步走上帝皇巅峰。
  • 我的女朋友是个小傻子

    我的女朋友是个小傻子

    世界应有爱,一些简单的感悟。我的女朋友是个小傻子!用心感受,大爱。
  • 科学大探险:世界之地大冒险

    科学大探险:世界之地大冒险

    布瓜博士的伟大发明——时空飞碟。它可以带着主人到任何想去的时间和地点。乐乐淘和小猴搭乘着时空飞碟来到上个世纪初的埃及,见识到了金字塔的神秘力量、法老咒语的威力和木乃伊的诡异;接着他们又通过时空穿梭机来到秦皇陵、莫高窟、进入恐龙时代,解密百慕大三角……
  • 凌鼎年游记

    凌鼎年游记

    《当代中国散文名家典藏:凌鼎年游记》由中国作协会员、世界华文微型小说研究会秘书长凌鼎年先生著。凌鼎年信奉“读万卷书,行万里路”,偏爱游山玩水,又是走到哪儿写到哪儿的,从八十年代到现在,有幸走遍了全国所有的省市,还去了欧洲、美洲、大洋洲、东南亚等20多个国家与地区,游历之余,留下了不少的游记散文,大部分都发表过,这本《当代中国散文名家典藏:凌鼎年游记》收入了其中的一部分。
  • 彼岸唯一

    彼岸唯一

    如果这世间真的有神,那么神给我最大的恩赐是许冕森,可是给予我的最大的惩罚也是许冕森。因为我是许唯一,和许冕森拥有着同一个姓氏,和许冕森身上流着相同的血液的许唯一。“你不觉得那是犯罪吗?你难道没有负罪感吗?!”“我爱他。”“他可是你亲哥哥!”“可是,我爱他呀。”我悲哀地说。哥,为了爱你,我已经与世界为敌,你呢,可不可以抛下一切和我走?如果,不能上天堂,那,我们就一起堕落地狱吧!
  • 光影四年

    光影四年

    愿我们四年友谊、恋情如同这本书,从这里开始,永远走不到尽头。
  • 梦想使命

    梦想使命

    人类已经经历了两次劫难。第一次,神降下魔物,惩罚人类的贪婪;第二次,魔族与人类大战;如今的世界是人类第三纪元。奇路是被吴家收养的孩子,可是14岁的他却发现他拥有学习魔法的能力。他被带到了魔法界,却被众人厌弃。在一次任务出行的时候,他却发现自己和毁灭第二纪元的七使者有着千丝万缕的联系……
  • 校园赠言

    校园赠言

    歌德说:“名言集和格言集是社会上最大的财宝——只要懂得在适当的场合把前者带进会话里,在适当的时间唤起对后者的记忆。”我们人类社会那些出类拔萃的名家巨人,在推动人类社会向前不断发展的同时,也给我们留下了宝贵的物质财富。他们通过自身的体验和观察研究,还给我们留下了许多有益的经验和感悟,他们将其付诸语言表达出来,被称之为名言或格言,其中蕴含并闪耀着智慧的光芒,成为世人宝贵的精神财富。人们将之作为座右铭,产生着无限的灵感、启发、智慧和力量,从而成为人生的航灯,照耀着成功的彼岸。
  • 异世君皇

    异世君皇

    一个修真界的无名小子,来到这个剑与魔法的世界,唤醒沉睡的百族,揭穿黑暗年代的真相,诸神黄昏大战,注定我为君皇!
  • 舞姿翩翩之回眸一笑倾国妃

    舞姿翩翩之回眸一笑倾国妃

    这是一次意外的穿越,而她却让身边的人屡屡出事她隐姓埋名,只为报仇白殷,我不允许你再软儒弱,这世上,你只能靠自己而当她与儿时的他再次相遇,她又当如何?红衣飘飘,紫衣配他,半身江湖,半世朝堂。后来才道,虽是命中相遇,却是三生有幸