| PART IV--A VOYAGE TO THE COUNTRY OF THE HOUYHNHNMS.
6. CHAPTER VI.
 (continued)"The palace of a chief minister is a seminary to breed up others in
 his own trade:  the pages, lackeys, and porters, by imitating their
 master, become ministers of state in their several districts, and
 learn to excel in the three principal ingredients, of insolence,
 lying, and bribery.  Accordingly, they have a subaltern court paid
 to them by persons of the best rank; and sometimes by the force of
 dexterity and impudence, arrive, through several gradations, to be
 successors to their lord. "He is usually governed by a decayed wench, or favourite footman,
 who are the tunnels through which all graces are conveyed, and may
 properly be called, in the last resort, the governors of the
 kingdom." One day, in discourse, my master, having heard me mention the
 nobility of my country, was pleased to make me a compliment which I
 could not pretend to deserve:  "that he was sure I must have been
 born of some noble family, because I far exceeded in shape, colour,
 and cleanliness, all the Yahoos of his nation, although I seemed to
 fail in strength and agility, which must be imputed to my different
 way of living from those other brutes; and besides I was not only
 endowed with the faculty of speech, but likewise with some
 rudiments of reason, to a degree that, with all his acquaintance, I
 passed for a prodigy." He made me observe, "that among the Houyhnhnms, the white, the
 sorrel, and the iron-gray, were not so exactly shaped as the bay,
 the dapple-gray, and the black; nor born with equal talents of
 mind, or a capacity to improve them; and therefore continued always
 in the condition of servants, without ever aspiring to match out of
 their own race, which in that country would be reckoned monstrous
 and unnatural." |