TRAVELS.
PART IV.
A VOYAGE TO THE COUNTRY OF THE HOUYHNHNMS.
CHAPTER V.
The Author at his Master's Commands informs him of the State of England. The Causes of War among the Princes of Europe. The Author begins to explain the English Constitiution.
HE READER may please to observe, that the following Extract of many Conversations I had with my Master, contains a Summary of the most
material Points, which were discoursed at several times for above two
Years; his Honour often desiring fuller Satisfaction as I farther
improved in the Houyhnhnm Tongue. I laid before him, as well as I
could, the whole State of Europe; I Discoursed of Trade and
Manufactures, of Arts and Sciences; and the Answers I gave to all
the Questions he made, as they arose upon several Subjects, were a
Fund of Conversation not to be exhausted. But I shall here only set
down the Substance of what passed between us concerning my own
Country, reducing it into Order as well as I can, without any Regard
to Time or other Circumstances, while I strictly adhere to Truth. My
only Concern is, that I shall hardly be able to do Justice to my
Master's Arguments and Expressions, which must needs suffer by my want
of Capacity, as well as by a Translation into our barbarous English.
In Obedience therefore to his Honour's Commands, I related to him the
Revolution under the Prince of Orange; the long War with France
entered into by the said Prince, and renewed by his Successor the
present Queen; wherein the greatest Powers of Christendom were
engaged, and which still continued: I computed at his Request, that
about a Million of Yahoos might have been killed in the whole Progress
of it, and perhaps a Hundred or more Cities taken, and thrice as
many Ships burnt or sunk.
He asked me what were the usual Causes or Motives that made one
Country go to War with another. I answered they were innumerable,
but I should only mention a few of the chief. Sometimes the Ambition
of Princes, who never think they have Land or People enough to govern:
Sometimes the Corruption of Ministers, who engage their Master in a
War in order to stifle or divert the Clamour of the Subjects against
their Evil Administration. Difference in Opinions hath cost many
Millions of Lives: For instance, whether Flesh be Bread, or Bread be Flesh; whether the Juice of a certain Berry be Blood or Wine;
whether Whistling be Vice or a Virtue; whether it be better to kiss
a post, or throw it into the Fire; what is the best Colour for a
Coat, whether Black, White, Red, or Gray; and whether it should be
long or short, narrow or wide, dirty or clean; with many more. Neither
are any Wars so furious and Bloody, or of so long Continuance, as
those occasioned by Difference in Opinion, especially if it be in
Things indifferent.
Sometimes the Quarrel between two Princes is to which of them
shall dispossess a third of his Dominions, where neither of them
pretend to any Right. Sometimes one Prince quarreleth with another,
for Fear the other should quarrel with him. Sometimes a War is entered
upon, because the Enemy is too strong, and sometimes because he is too
weak. Sometimes our Neighbours want the Things which we have, or have the Things which we want; and we both fight, till they take ours or give us theirs. It is a very justifiable Cause of War to invade a
Country after the People have been wasted by Famine, destroyed by
Pestilence, or embroiled by Factions among themselves. It is
justifiable to enter into War against our nearest Ally, when one of
his Towns lies convenient for us, or a Territory of Land, that would
render our Dominions round and compleat. If a Prince sends Forces into
a Nation where the People are poor and ignorant, he may lawfully put
half of them to Death, and make Slaves of the rest, in order to
civilize and reduce them from their barbarous Way of Living. It is a
very kingly, honourable, and frequent Practice, when one Prince desires
the Assistance of another to secure him against an Invasion, that
the Assistant, when he hath driven out the Invader, should seize on the
Dominions himself, and kill, imprison or banish the Prince he came
to relieve. Alliance by Blood or Marriage, is a frequent Cause of War
between Princes; and the nearer the Kindred is, the greater is their
Disposition to quarrel: Poor Nations are hungry, and rich Nations
are proud; and Pride and Hunger will ever be at variance. For those
Reasons, the Trade of a Soldier is held the most honourable of all
others: Because a Soldier is a Yahoo hired to kill in cold Blood as
many of his own Species, who have never offended him, as possibly he
can.
There is likewise a Kind of beggarly Princes* in Europe, not able to make War by themselves, who hire out their Troops to richer Nations, for so much a Day to each Man; of which they keep three fourths to themselves, and it is the best Part of their
Maintenance; such are those in Germany* and other Northern Parts of
Europe.
What you have told me, (said my Master) upon the Subject of War, does indeed discover most admirably the Effects of that Reason you
pretend to: However, it is happy that the Shame is greater than the
Danger; and that Nature has left you utterly uncapable of doing much
Mischief.
For your Mouths lying flat with your Faces, you can hardly bite each
other to any Purpose, unless by Consent. Then as to the Claws upon
your Feet before and behind, they are so short and tender that one of
our Yahoos would drive a Dozen of yours before him. And therefore in
recounting the Numbers of those who have been killed in Battle, I
cannot but think that you have said the Thing which is not.
I could not forbear shaking my Head and smiling a little at his
Ignorance. And being no Stranger to the Art of War, I gave him a
Description of Cannons, culverins, Muskets, Carabines, Pistols,
Bullets, Powder, Swords, Bayonets, Battles, Sieges, Retreats, Attacks,
Undermines, Countermines, Bombardments, Sea-fights; Ships sunk with
a Thousand Men, Twenty thousand killed on each Side; dying Groans,
Limbs flying in the Air, Smoak, Noise, Confusion, trampling to Death
under Horses Feet; Flight, Pursuit, Victory; Fields strewed with
Carcases left for Food to Dogs, and Wolves, and Birds of Prey;
Plundering, Stripping, Ravishing, Burning, and Destroying. And to
set forth the Valour of my own dear Countrymen, I assured him, that I
had seen them blow up a Hundred Enemies at once in a Siege, and as
many in a Ship, and beheld the dead Bodies come down in pieces from
the Clouds, to the great Diversion of the Spectators.
I was going on to more Particulars, when my Master commanded me
Silence. He said, Whoever understood the Nature of Yahoos might
easily believe it possible for so vile an Animal to be capable of
every Action I had named, if their Strength and Cunning equalled their
Malice. But as my Discourse had increased his Abhorrence of the
whole Species, so he found it gave him a Disturbance in his Mind, to
which he was wholly a Stranger before. He thought his Ears being
used to such abominable Words, might by Degrees admit them with less
Detestation. That although he hated the Yahoos of this Country, yet he
no more blamed them for their odious Qualities, than he did a Gnnayh
(a Bird of Prey) for its Cruelty, or a sharp Stone for cutting his
Hoof. But when a Creature pretending to Reason, could be capable of
such Enormities, he dreaded lest the Corruption of that Faculty
might be worse than Brutality itself. He seemed therefore confident,
that instead of Reason, we were only possessed of some Quality
fitted to increase our natural Vices; as the Reflection from a
troubled Stream returns the Image of an ill-shapen Body, not only
larger, but more distorted.
He added, That he had heard too much upon the Subject of War, both
in this, and some former Discourses. There was another Point which a
little perplexed him at Present. I had informed him, that some of
our Crew left their Country on account of being ruined by Law; that
I had already explained the Meaning of the Word; but he was at a
Loss how it should come to pass, that the Law which was intended for
every Man's Preservation, should be any Man's Ruin. Therefore he
desired to be further satisfied what I meant by Law, and what sort of
Dispensers thereof it could be by whose Practices the Property of any Person could be lost, instead of being preserved. He added, he saw not what great Occasion there could for this thing called Law, since all the Intentions and Purposes of it may be fully answered by following the Dictates of Nature and Reason, which are sufficient Guides for a Reasonable Animal, as we pretended to be, in shewing us what we ought to do, and what to avoid.
I assured his Honour, that Law was a Science wherein I had not much conversed, further than by employing Advocates, in vain, upon some
Injustices that had been done me: however, I would give him all the
Satisfaction I was able.
I said there was a Society of Men among us, bred up from their Youth
in the Art of proving by Words multiplied for the Pleasure, that
White is Black, and Black is White, according as they are paid. To this Society all the rest of the People are Slaves.
For Example, if my Neighbour hath a Mind to my Cow, he hires a Lawyer to prove that he ought to have my Cow from me. I must then hire another to defend my
Right, it being against all Rules of Law that any Man should be
allowed to speak for himself. Now in this Case, I who am the right
Owner lie under two great Disadvantages. First, my Lawyer being
practiced almost from his Cradle in defending Falshood; is quite
out of his Element when he would be an Advocate for Justice, which
as an Office unnatural, he always attempts with great Awkwardness if
not with Ill-will. The second Disadvantage is, that my Lawyer must
proceed with great Caution: Or else he will be reprimanded by the
Judges, and abhorred by his Brethren, as one that would lessen the
Practice of the Law. And therefore I have but two Methods to
preserve my Cow. The first is, to gain over my Adversary's Lawyer
with a double Fee; who will then betray his Client by insinuating that
he hath Justice on his Side. The second way is for my Lawyer to make my
Cause appear as unjust as he can; by the Cow to belong to my Adversary;
and this, if it be skilfully done, will certainly bespeak the Favour of
the Bench.
Now, your Honour is to know that these Judges are Persons appointed to decide all Controversies of Property, as well as for the Tryal of
Criminals; and picked out from the most dextrous Lawyers who are
grown old or lazy: And having been byassed all their Lives against
Truth and Equity, are under such a fatal Necessity of favouring
Fraud, Perjury, and Oppression; that I have known some of them
refuse a large Bribe from the Side where Justice lay, rather than
injure the Faculty, by doing any thing unbecoming their Nature or
their Office.
It is a Maxim among these Lawyers, that whatever hath been done
before, may legally be done again: And therefore they take special Care
to record all the Decisions formerly made against common Justice and
the general Reason of Mankind. These, under the Name of Precedents,
they produce as Authorities to justify the most iniquitous
Opinions; and the Judges never fail of decreeing accordingly.
In pleading, they studiously avoid entering into the Merits of the
Cause; but are loud, violent, and tedious in dwelling upon all
Circumstances which are not to the Purpose. For Instance, in the
Case already mentioned: They never desire to know what Claim or
Title my Adversary hath to my Cow; but whether the said Cow were Red or
Black; her Horns long or short; whether the Field I graze her in be
round or square; whether she was milked at home or abroad; what
Diseases she is subject to, and the like. After which they consult
Precedents, adjourn the Cause from Time to Time, and in Ten, Twenty,
or Thirty Years, come to an Issue.
It is likewise to be observed, that this Society has a peculiar Cant
and Jargon of their own, that no other Mortal can understand, and
wherein all their Laws are written, which they take special Care to
multiply; whereby they have gone near to confound the very Essence of
Truth and Falsehood, of Right and Wrong; so that it may take Thirty
Years to decide whether the Field, left me by my Ancestors for Six
Generations, belongs to me, or to a Stranger three hundred Miles off.
In the Tryal of Persons accused for Crimes against the State the
Method is much more short and commendable: The Judge first sends to
sound the Disposition of those in Power; after which he can easily
hang or save the Criminal, strictly preserving all due Forms of Law.
Here my Master interposing, said it was a Pity that Creatures
endowed with such prodigious Abilities of Mind as these Lawyers, by
the Description I gave of them, must certainly be, were not rather
encouraged to be Instructors of others in Wisdom and Knowledge. In
Answer to which, I assured his Honour, that in all Points out of their
own Trade, they were usually the most Ignorant and stupid Generation
among us, the most despicable in common Conversation, avowed Enemies
to all Knowledge and Learning; and equally to pervert the general
Reason of Mankind in every other Subject of Discourse, as in that of
their own Profession.
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compiled by Lee Jaffe
updated: 13 September 1999
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