[The Crimes of England by G.K. Chesterton]@TWC D-Link book
The Crimes of England

CHAPTER X
133/206

His irritation would have increased if the Art Master had promised him a sea-piece and had brought him a piece of the sea; or if, during the decoration of his house, the same aesthetic humourist had undertaken to procure some Indian Red and had produced a Red Indian.
The Englishman would not see that if there was only a verbal difference between the French Emperor and the Emperor of the French, so, if it came to that, it was a verbal difference between the Emperor and the Republic, or even between a Parliament and no Parliament.

For him an Emperor meant merely despotism; he had not yet learned that a Parliament may mean merely oligarchy.

He did not know that the English people would soon be made impotent, not by the disfranchising of their constituents, but simply by the silencing of their members; and that the governing class of England did not now depend upon rotten boroughs, but upon rotten representatives.

Therefore he did not understand Bonapartism.

He did not understand that French democracy became more democratic, not less, when it turned all France into one constituency which elected one member.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books