| PART II.  A VOYAGE TO BROBDINGNAG.
6. CHAPTER VI.
 (continued)Upon what I said in relation to our courts of justice, his majesty
 desired to be satisfied in several points:  and this I was the
 better able to do, having been formerly almost ruined by a long
 suit in chancery, which was decreed for me with costs.  He asked,
 "What time was usually spent in determining between right and
 wrong, and what degree of expense?  Whether advocates and orators
 had liberty to plead in causes manifestly known to be unjust,
 vexatious, or oppressive?  Whether party, in religion or politics,
 were observed to be of any weight in the scale of justice?  Whether
 those pleading orators were persons educated in the general
 knowledge of equity, or only in provincial, national, and other
 local customs?  Whether they or their judges had any part in
 penning those laws, which they assumed the liberty of interpreting,
 and glossing upon at their pleasure?  Whether they had ever, at
 different times, pleaded for and against the same cause, and cited
 precedents to prove contrary opinions?  Whether they were a rich or
 a poor corporation?  Whether they received any pecuniary reward for
 pleading, or delivering their opinions?  And particularly, whether
 they were ever admitted as members in the lower senate?" He fell next upon the management of our treasury; and said, "he
 thought my memory had failed me, because I computed our taxes at
 about five or six millions a-year, and when I came to mention the
 issues, he found they sometimes amounted to more than double; for
 the notes he had taken were very particular in this point, because
 he hoped, as he told me, that the knowledge of our conduct might be
 useful to him, and he could not be deceived in his calculations.
 But, if what I told him were true, he was still at a loss how a
 kingdom could run out of its estate, like a private person."  He
 asked me, "who were our creditors; and where we found money to pay
 them?"  He wondered to hear me talk of such chargeable and
 expensive wars; "that certainly we must be a quarrelsome people, or
 live among very bad neighbours, and that our generals must needs be
 richer than our kings."  He asked, what business we had out of our
 own islands, unless upon the score of trade, or treaty, or to
 defend the coasts with our fleet?"  Above all, he was amazed to
 hear me talk of a mercenary standing army, in the midst of peace,
 and among a free people.  He said, "if we were governed by our own
 consent, in the persons of our representatives, he could not
 imagine of whom we were afraid, or against whom we were to fight;
 and would hear my opinion, whether a private man's house might not
 be better defended by himself, his children, and family, than by
 half-a-dozen rascals, picked up at a venture in the streets for
 small wages, who might get a hundred times more by cutting their
 throats?" |