WALTER BAGEHOT QUOTES XIV

English economist and political analyst (1826-1877)

If anybody could have any doubt about the liveliness of Shakespeare, let them consider the character of Falstaff. When a man has created that without a capacity for laughter, then a blind man may succeed in describing colors. Intense animal spirits are the single sentiment (if they be a sentiment) of the entire character. If most men were to save up all the gaiety of their whole lives, it would come about to the gaiety of one speech in Falstaff.

WALTER BAGEHOT

Literary Studies

Tags: character


Probably we pursue an insoluble problem in seeking a suitable education for a morbidly melancholy mind.

WALTER BAGEHOT

Literary Studies

Tags: education


The world knows what you seem; it does not know what you are.

WALTER BAGEHOT

The English Constitution


Theodora never married. Love did not, however, kill her—at least, if it did, it was a long time at the task, as she survived these events more than sixty years. She never, seemingly, forgot the past.

WALTER BAGEHOT

Literary Studies

Tags: love


A great deal of the reticence of diplomacy had, I think history shows, much better be spoken out.

WALTER BAGEHOT

The English Constitution

Tags: diplomacy


The essence of a civilised age is, that administration requires the continued aid of legislation.

WALTER BAGEHOT

The English Constitution

Tags: age


The soul ties its shoe; the mind washes its hands in a basin. All is incongruous.

WALTER BAGEHOT

Literary Studies

Tags: mind


We have voluntary show enough already in London; we do not wish to have it encouraged and intensified, but quieted and mitigated.

WALTER BAGEHOT

The English Constitution


But in all cases it must be remembered that a political combination of the lower classes, as such and for their own objects, is an evil of the first magnitude; that a permanent combination of them would make them (now that so many of them have the suffrage) supreme in the country; and that their supremacy, in the state they now are, means the supremacy of ignorance over instruction and of numbers over knowledge.

WALTER BAGEHOT

The English Constitution

Tags: evil


Failure is ever impending.

WALTER BAGEHOT

Estimates of Some Englishmen and Scotchmen

Tags: failure


Free government is self-government. A government of the people by the people. The best government of this sort is that which the people think best.

WALTER BAGEHOT

The English Constitution

Tags: government


If A kills B before B kills A, then A survives, and the human race is a race of A's.

WALTER BAGEHOT

Physics and Politics


It should be observed, too, in fairness to the unroyal species of Cabinet government, that it is exempt from one of the greatest and most characteristic defects of the royal species. Where there is no Court there can be no evil influence from a Court.

WALTER BAGEHOT

The English Constitution

Tags: evil


The condition of the primitive man, if we conceive of him rightly, is, in several respects, different from any we know. We unconsciously assume around us the existence of a great miscellaneous social machine working to our hands, and not only supplying our wants, but even telling and deciding when those wants shall come. No one can now without difficulty conceive how people got on before there were clocks and watches; as Sir G. Lewis said, 'it takes a vigorous effort of the imagination' to realize a period when it was a serious difficulty to know the hour of day. And much more is it difficult to fancy the unstable minds of such men as neither knew nature, which is the clock-work of material civilization, nor possessed a polity, which is a kind of clock-work to moral civilization. They never could have known what to expect; the whole habit of steady but varied anticipation, which makes our minds what they are, must have been wholly foreign to theirs.

WALTER BAGEHOT

Physics and Politics

Tags: civilization


The mode of governing the country, according to the existing laws, is mostly worn into a rut, and most administrations move in it because it is easier to move there than anywhere else.

WALTER BAGEHOT

The English Constitution


The sort of taxation tried in America, that of taxing everything, and seeing what every thing would yield, could not have been tried under a Government delicately and quickly sensitive to public opinion.

WALTER BAGEHOT

The English Constitution

Tags: America


The wind bloweth where it listeth; but it is scarcely more partial, more quick, more unaccountable, than the glow of an emotion excited by a supernatural and unseen object.

WALTER BAGEHOT

Literary Studies

Tags: emotion


A settled and practical people are distinctly in favor of heavy relaxations, placid prolixities, slow comforts.

WALTER BAGEHOT

Literary Studies


But how far are the strongest nations really the best nations? how far is excellence in war a criterion of other excellence? I cannot answer this now fully, but three or four considerations are very plain. War, as I have said, nourishes the 'preliminary' virtues, and this is almost as much as to say that there are virtues which it does not nourish. All which may be called 'grace' as well as virtue it does not nourish; humanity, charity, a nice sense of the rights of others, it certainly does not foster. The insensibility to human suffering, which is so striking a fact in the world as it stood when history first reveals it, is doubtless due to the warlike origin of the old civilization. Bred in war, and nursed in war, it could not revolt from the things of war, and one of the principal of these is human pain. Since war has ceased to be the moving force in the world, men have become more tender one to another, and shrink from what they used to inflict without caring; and this not so much because men are improved (which may or may not be in various cases), but because they have no longer the daily habit of war—have no longer formed their notions upon war, and therefore are guided by thoughts and feelings which soldiers as such—soldiers educated simply by their trade—are too hard to understand.

WALTER BAGEHOT

Physics and Politics

Tags: war


Doubtless, if all subjects of the same Government only thought of what was useful to them, and if they all thought the same thing useful, and all thought that same thing could be attained in the same way, the efficient members of a constitution would suffice, and no impressive adjuncts would be needed. But the world in which we live is organised far otherwise.

WALTER BAGEHOT

The English Constitution

Tags: thought