登陆注册
15709400000249

第249章

THE GOVERNMENT.

In speaking of the American Constitution I have said so much of the American form of government that but little more is left to me to say under that heading. Nevertheless, I should hardly go through the work which I have laid out for myself if I did not endeavor to explain more continuously, and perhaps more graphically, than Ifound myself able to do in the last chapter, the system on which public affairs are managed in the United States.

And here I must beg my readers again to bear in mind how moderate is the amount of governing which has fallen to the lot of the government of the United States; how moderate, as compared with the amount which has to be done by the Queen's officers of state for Great Britain, or by the Emperor, with such assistance as he may please to accept from his officers of state, for France. That this is so must be attributed to more than one cause; but the chief cause is undoubtedly to be found in the very nature of a federal government. The States are individually sovereign, and govern themselves as to all internal matters. All the judges in England are appointed by the Crown; but in the United States only a small proportion of the judges are nominated by the President. The greater number are servants of the different States. The execution of the ordinary laws for the protection of men and property does not fall on the government of the United States, but on the executives of the individual States--unless in some special matters, which will be defined in the next chapter. Trade, education, roads, religion, the passing of new measures for the internal or domestic comfort of the people,--all these things are more or less matters of care to our government. In the States they are matters of care to the governments of each individual State, but are not so to the central government at Washington.

But there are other causes which operate in the same direction, and which have hitherto enabled the Presidents of the United States, with their ministers, to maintain their positions without much knowledge of statecraft, or the necessity for that education in state matters which is so essential to our public men. In the first place, the United States have hitherto kept their hands out of foreign politics. If they have not done so altogether, they have so greatly abstained from meddling in them that none of that thorough knowledge of the affairs of other nations has been necessary to them which is so essential with us, and which seems to be regarded as the one thing needed in the cabinets of other European nations. This has been a great blessing to the United States, but it has not been an unmixed blessing. It has been a blessing because the absence of such care has saved the country from trouble and from expense. But such a state of things was too good to last; and the blessing has not been unmixed, seeing that now, when that absence of concern in foreign matters has been no longer possible, the knowledge necessary for taking a dignified part in foreign discussions has been found wanting. Mr. Seward is now the Minister for Foreign Affairs in the States, and it is hardly too much to say that he has made himself a laughing-stock among the diplomatists of Europe, by the mixture of his ignorance and his arrogance. His reports to his own ministers during the single year of his office, as published by himself apparently with great satisfaction, are a monument not so much of his incapacity as of his want of training for such work. We all know his long state-papers on the "Trent" affair. What are we to think of a statesman who acknowledges the action of his country's servant to have been wrong, and in the same breath declares that he would have held by that wrong, had the material welfare of his country been thereby improved? The United States have now created a great army and a great debt. They will soon also have created a great navy. Affairs of other nations will press upon them, and they will press against the affairs of other nations. In this way statecraft will become necessary to them; and by degrees their ministers will become habile, graceful, adroit, and perhaps crafty, as are the ministers of other nations.

And, moreover, the United States have had no outlying colonies or dependencies, such as an India and Canada are to us, as Cuba is and Mexico was to Spain, and as were the provinces of the Roman empire.

Territories she has had, but by the peculiar beneficence of her political arrangements, these Territories have assumed the guise of sovereign States, and been admitted into federal partnership on equal terms, with a rapidity which has hardly left to the central government the reality of any dominion of its own. We are inclined to suppose that these new States have been allowed to assume their equal privileges and State rights because they have been contiguous to the old States, as though it were merely an extension of frontier. But this has not been so. California and Oregon have been very much farther from Washington than the Canadas are from London. Indeed they are still farther, and I hardly know whether they can be brought much nearer than Canada is to us, even with the assistance of railways. But nevertheless California and Oregon were admitted as States, the former as quickly and the latter much more quickly than its population would seem to justify Congress in doing, according to the received ratio of population. A preference in this way has been always given by the United States to a young population over one that was older. Oregon with its 60,000 inhabitants has one Representative. New York with 4,000,000 inhabitants has thirty-three. But in order to be equal with Oregon, New York should have sixty-six. In this way the outlying populations have been encouraged to take upon themselves their own governance, and the governing power of the President and his cabinet has been kept within moderate limits.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 妃本无意恋上君

    妃本无意恋上君

    她,一个现代女花痴,因为气愤找一二货算账。也许是命中注定,一次意外实现了她的愿望,她穿越了。他,一场火灾后,说是毁容了。是在外人眼中掌握重权的丑王爷,一张面具下又有着怎样的面貌。第一次见面,她嫌弃他长得丑,一个丑八怪竟然还故意给她找茬,"就让你看看老娘的厉害。”“古代美男果然多。”她又该如何选择。
  • 大军头

    大军头

    海外岛屿发现新矿石,武器发生革命,大时代悄无声息的到来。陆中元自小就是贫穷小镇上的乞丐流氓,脾气暴躁,性格偏激,惹上权贵,出逃至罪恶城邦。怀揣着出人头地的梦,削尖脑袋在等级森严的混乱之地向上攀爬……
  • 璘光园

    璘光园

    胡闹的命运,胡闹的城市,光怪陆离的事件接踵而至,三教九流的怪人层出不穷,在破碎的新世界中,少年最终发现一切都和那家糕点店紧密相关。
  • 娇妻难训

    娇妻难训

    一个是利用完后被无情抛弃的外来人。一个是赫赫有名的豪门大少白九爷。从认识相爱到分开直至再次相遇,他们不是互相伤害,就是互相安慰,有些话,就在嘴边,却说不出来,造就误会却又无可奈何。“你不是我三叔!”“你从来都不相信我!”手牵手,情定三生,他们做好准备一辈子在一起,可某人却不甘心,将她绑走。为救她,他一身戎装,和战友一起,出发……身处满是炸药的小岛小岛上,惊天秘密被揭晓,原来他和他,,身份互调。秘密,还未完全揭开……
  • 小心:恶魔在身边

    小心:恶魔在身边

    (合集版)恐怖故事,有你意想不到的,我是鬼妹,如果有你喜欢的类型,可以给我留言,爱你~~
  • 王俊凯你伤害了我

    王俊凯你伤害了我

    王俊凯,你已经伤害了我一次,你还要再伤我一次吗?
  • 纵横捭阖:俄罗斯外交新战略

    纵横捭阖:俄罗斯外交新战略

    20世纪90年代以来俄罗斯的对外战略表现出一条清晰可见的发展主线,即90年代初的维护到90年代中期的发挥再到新世纪的争取其在国际舞台上的大国地位。俄罗斯的对外战略体现了一种逐渐成熟的趋势,这与俄罗斯的社会转型,与俄罗斯国内基本发展道路选择是同步而行的。其最大的特点在于清醒地估价自己的实力和优势所在,不慕大国虚荣,稳健、务实、灵活地追求俄罗斯国家的最大利益。
  • 雪无季

    雪无季

    他们在一次庙会上因为发生小意外而相遇。从此他俩的爱情坎坷......历经1000多年的穿越与轮回,能否继续原本属于他们的爱恋......雪无季无季变虚幻漫天雪花残落地了无声雪碎魂尽散问花雨断崖是谁堪破尘乱剑舞葬花孤浪迹天涯
  • 我的灵你的命

    我的灵你的命

    灵魂轮回千年,三世人生,纠葛不断。你这一世生在民国......
  • 辣鸡大魔王

    辣鸡大魔王

    人死之后会是什么样子?重生之后又会是何人?不求大富大贵,但为什么会被人暴虐成狗?想我堂堂一代。。咳咳,一代幽魂,自带功法,转世成人,岂容尔等放肆。任人欺凌。看我从人到神,执剑而行。若这苍天负我。我便捅破这天,颠覆乾坤什么?颜值不爆表泡不到妞?肤浅。哥是靠气质取胜!光有气质还不够?那你等着,哥要出绝招了。怎么样,香不香?想不想来一口?跟哥走,管够!