登陆注册
19463900000011

第11章 Impressions of London(5)

This is not so. Anybody connected with the government values the House of Commons in a high degree. One of the leading newspaper proprietors of London himself told me that he has always felt that if he had the House of Commons on his side he had a very valuable ally.

Many of the labour leaders are inclined to regard the House of Commons as of great utility, while the leading women's organizations, now that women are admitted as members, may be said to regard the House as one of themselves.

Looking around to find just where the natural service of the House of Commons comes in, I am inclined to think that it must be in the practice of "asking questions" in the House. Whenever anything goes wrong a member rises and asks a question. He gets up, for example, with a little paper in his hand, and asks the government if ministers are aware that the Khedive of Egypt was seen yesterday wearing a Turkish Tarbosh. Ministers say very humbly that they hadn't known it, and a thrill runs through the whole country. The members can apparently ask any questions they like. In the repeated visits which I made to the gallery of the House of Commons I was unable to find any particular sense or meaning in the questions asked, though no doubt they had an intimate bearing on English politics not clear to an outsider like myself. I heard one member ask the government whether they were aware that herrings were being imported from Hamburg to Harwich. The government said no. Another member rose and asked the government whether they considered Shakespere or Moliere the greater dramatic artist. The government answered that ministers were taking this under their earnest consideration and that a report would be submitted to Parliament.

Another member asked the government if they knew who won the Queen's Plate this season at Toronto. They did,--in fact this member got in wrong, as this is the very thing that the government do know.

Towards the close of the evening a member rose and asked the government if they knew what time it was. The Speaker, however, ruled this question out of order on the ground that it had been answered before.

The Parliament Buildings are so vast that it is not possible to state with certainty what they do, or do not, contain. But it is generally said that somewhere in the building is the House of Lords.

When they meet they are said to come together very quietly shortly before the dinner hour, take a glass of dry sherry and a biscuit (they are all abstemious men), reject whatever bills may be before them at the moment, take another dry sherry and then adjourn for two years.

The public are no longer allowed unrestricted access to the Houses of Parliament; its approaches are now strictly guarded by policemen.

In order to obtain admission it is necessary either to (A) communicate in writing with the Speaker of the House, enclosing certificates of naturalization and proof of identity, or (B) give the policeman five shillings. Method B is the one usually adopted. On great nights, however, when the House of Commons is sitting and is about to do something important, such as ratifying a Home Rule Bill or cheering, or welcoming a new lady member, it is not possible to enter by merely bribing the policeman with five shillings; it takes a pound. The English people complain bitterly of the rich Americans who have in this way corrupted the London public. Before they were corrupted they would do anything for sixpence.

This peculiar vein of corruption by the Americans runs like a thread, I may say, through all the texture of English life. Among those who have been principally exposed to it are the servants,--especially butlers and chauffeurs, hotel porters, bell-boys, railway porters and guards, all taxi-drivers, pew-openers, curates, bishops, and a large part of the peerage.

The terrible ravages that have been made by the Americans on English morality are witnessed on every hand. Whole classes of society are hopelessly damaged. I have it in the evidence of the English themselves and there seems to be no doubt of the fact. Till the Americans came to England the people were an honest, law-abiding race, respecting their superiors and despising those below them.

They had never been corrupted by money and their employers extended to them in this regard their tenderest solicitude. Then the Americans came. Servants ceased to be what they were; butlers were hopelessly damaged; hotel porters became a wreck; taxi-drivers turned out thieves; curates could no longer be trusted to handle money;

peers sold their daughters at a million dollars a piece or three for two. In fact the whole kingdom began to deteriorate till it got where it is now. At present after a rich American has stayed in any English country house, its owners find that they can do nothing with the butler; a wildness has come over the man. There is a restlessness in his demeanour and a strange wistful look in his eye as if seeking for something. In many cases, so I understand, after an American has stayed in a country house the butler goes insane. He is found in his pantry counting over the sixpence given to him by a Duke, and laughing to himself. He has to be taken in charge by the police. With him generally go the chauffeur, whose mind has broken down from driving a rich American twenty miles; and the gardener, who is found tearing up raspberry bushes by the roots to see if there is any money under them; and the local curate whose brain has collapsed or expanded, I forget which, when a rich American gave him fifty dollars for his soup kitchen.

There are, it is true, a few classes that have escaped this contagion, shepherds living in the hills, drovers, sailors, fishermen and such like. I remember the first time I went into the English country-side being struck with the clean, honest look in the people's faces. I

realised exactly where they got it: they had never seen any Americans.

同类推荐
  • 佛说造像量度经

    佛说造像量度经

    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。
  • 画品

    画品

    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。
  • 金刚顶瑜伽三十七尊礼

    金刚顶瑜伽三十七尊礼

    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。
  • My Mark Twain

    My Mark Twain

    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。
  • 要略

    要略

    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
  • 终极狂兵

    终极狂兵

    他是国之利刃,更是军中王者,但他却有一个丑女未婚妻,为此,他不得不踏上退婚的路,可谁知这一去,居然引起了腥风血雨,无奈之下,他只能选择在嬉笑怒骂中一路高歌猛进,纵横都市,横扫一切。
  • 请珍惜时间和爱你的人

    请珍惜时间和爱你的人

    只能怪自己没有在她还在的时候好好珍惜她,如今想起来真的是自己错过了她,可惜时间就是这么无情,已经无法回到从前了.....
  • 纵横捭合的外交家(4)

    纵横捭合的外交家(4)

    本书精选荟萃了古今中外各行各业具有代表性的有关名人,其中有政治家、外交家、军事家、谋略家、思想家、文学家、艺术家、教育家、科学家、发明家、探险家、经济学家、企业家等,阅读这些名人的成长故事,能够领略他们的人生追求与思想力量,使我们受到启迪和教益,使我们能够很好地把握人生的关健时点,指导我们走好人生道路,取得事业发展。
  • 至尊法则

    至尊法则

    机缘巧合下得到楚霸王自刎时所形成的霸王血珠,从此霉运不断的沈斌居然走上了康庄大道,不时的扮猪吃老虎,生活中穿插着众多红颜。偶尔高调跋扈,带着一种纨绔游离在生活百事中,深厚的背景,全新的生活,让他在仕途和黑道中纵横,权力永远都是强者至尊手中的法则
  • 兽霸九天

    兽霸九天

    兽控天下,雷御九州,一杆枪,一个人,足以傲视群雄!我为兽皇,一声号令,万兽齐嘶鸣!这里是一个令人热血沸腾的世界,充满了杀戮,充满了灾难,同样也充满了机遇!潇战便是这个世界的王......
  • 穿书女配泪沾襟

    穿书女配泪沾襟

    付瑶溪,意外穿越成自己看的NP小说里面那个凄惨的女配,男主们的小师妹,为了女配的命运不发生在自己身上,付瑶溪决定,远离女主和女主的男人们。于是她在某个月黑风高之夜逃离门派,下山闯荡江湖,然后悲催的发现自己的身体里竟然还有一个灵魂,那就是原身的灵魂。于是,付瑶溪带着两个灵魂闯荡江湖去鸟,心情好时捣捣乱,被欺负时就拉武功高强的原身出来遛一遛,顺带当当小红娘。
  • 风流特工在都市

    风流特工在都市

    一位20岁便已经历许多人无法想像的事情的青年,夏宇,在一次因缘巧合遇到了已故父亲的老友,告知许多令夏宇感到错愕的消息,他的女儿是夏宇的未婚妻,在这年代竟然还发生指腹为婚的狗血事情,他竟然有一位20岁却已经当上总裁的未婚妻?夏宇每每都不忿的向准岳父抱怨著,〝为什么未婚妻我还要自己去把,那么麻烦的事我才懒得干,退货给不给啊?〞准岳父瞬间面露沈痛的表情〝这是你父亲生前最大的心愿啊...难道你连你父亲的心愿都不肯成全了?〞夏宇咬牙切齿的道〝唉!好啦好啦!每次都是这招,不退就是不退就是。〞且看夏宇如何在各式美眉还有未婚妻中周旋,写出一个快乐搞笑中夹杂著悲伤温馨的故事。
  • 妖怪农庄

    妖怪农庄

    意外获得妖怪手机,看杨铭一步步逆袭成功,攀登上人生巅峰,阅美无数。没有钱,没有房子车子,在这里都不是事。只有不努力的人,没有赚不到的雪花银。日落西山,风流事,坐看云起梦中人。我是杨铭,这就是属于我的人生。
  • 月下夜想曲

    月下夜想曲

    一只狼人,一个吸血鬼和人类的混血儿组成了世界上最强大的吸血鬼猎人组合。在寻找着自己失去的亲人,朋友和梦想的道路上前进着。-------------------------------------------结束了,虽然结尾很草,还有很多没有表达出来的东西,可是我尽力了。-------------------------------------
  • 戏子歌前

    戏子歌前

    一场游戏,一具尸体,一场爱情。我对你只有温柔与维护,对于工作我只有严肃。无论你要我等多少个明日,我都会得到你。这个世界我唯一留恋的,只有你。