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Commons Chamber

Volume 166: debated on Tuesday 1 April 1862

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House Of Commons

Tuesday, April 1, 1862.

MINUTES.]—PUBLIC BILLS.—1a Industrial and Provident Societies; Charitable Uses Act (1861) Amendment.

Superannuation To Workhouse Officers In Ireland

Question

said, he wished to ask the Chief Secretary for Ireland, Whether he intends, during the present session, to take steps to carry out the recommendation of the Select Committee of last Session on Irish Poor Laws, with reference to granting Superannuation to Workhouse Officers?

replied, that it was perfectly true that the Select Committee of last year had made a recommendation for granting superannuation allowances to Workhouse Officers—a Bill had been prepared upon the subject, but he was unable at present to state at what period it would be introduced.

Lunacy Regulation Bill

Question

said, he would beg to ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, When he intends to introduce the Lunacy Regulation Bill, and whether such Bill will contain any provision for the purpose of facilitating the building of a Lunatic Asylum by counties united for that purpose?

said, he must repeat the answer he had already given, that a Bill had been prepared on the subject, founded on a Report of a Committee of that House, but he could not say when it would be introduced, as he had received from the Lunacy Commissioners several suggestions relating to it of an important character, which must be submitted to the Poor Law Board. The Bill did contain a provision embodying the object referred to in the hon. Gentleman's question.

The Armstrong Gun

Question

said, he rose to ask the Secretary of State for War, Whether, adverting to the probability that guns of much greater calibre must now be placed on our Seaboard Forts and Iron-plated Ships, Sir William Armstrong is to have the exclusive manufacture of such guns, or is their construction to be thrown open to competition and of what calibre is the largest gun completed as intended for practical service as yet made for Government by Sir William Armstrong, and proved without accident to the breech or bursting?

said, the War Office had no contract with Sir William Armstrong, but that it had one with the Elswick Iron Company, which was printed in the index to the Report of the Committee on Military Organization. If that contract were referred to, it would be seen, that if the War Department ceased altogether to employ the Elswick Company for the manufacture of ordnance, they would be bound to compensate for the loss of profit on its plant to the extent of, £85,000. In reply to the second question of the hon. Gentleman, he would, as the subject was one of some interest—of temporary interest, at all events—read to the House a statement as to the largest guns which were at present in use, or in course of trial—

"110-pounder Service Gun.—The 110-pounder Armstrong gun is the largest as yet actually introduced into the service. Large numbers have been supplied to Her Majesty's ships and the batteries at home and abroad. Experimental Guns.—A 140-pounder gun, rifled on Sir William Armstrong's shunt principle, and loaded at the muzzle, fires a solid shot of 140 lb. weight, with a charge of 20 lb. of powder. The experiments with this gun hare been highly satisfactory. 200-pounder.—A gun on Sir William Armstrong's principle is now in course of manufacture, and expected to be ready in about a month. 300-pounder.—A 300-pounder rifled gun is now undergoing a course of preliminary experiments as a smooth-bore gun, and has been fired with a spherical shot of 156 lb. weight, and a charge of 40 lb. of powder. And a proposal has this day been brought forward by the Director General of Ordnance for the manufacture of a gun capable of firing, as a smooth-bore gun, a shot of 300 lb. weight, or, as a rifled gun, a shot of 600 lb. In addition to these guns one 120 lb. gun of Mr. Whitworth's, and a 200 lb. gun of Mr. Lynall Thomas, are in course of construction."

Retiring Allowances To Prison Officers In Ireland—Question

said, he wished to ask the Chief Secretary for Ireland, If he intends introducing any measure this Session for the improvement of the retiring allowances of prison officers?

said, that the prison officers alluded to in the hon. and learned Baronet's question were at present placed under the Act of 1834, which was not so favourable as the subsequent Act of [1859, under which they consequently desired to be placed. It was not the intention of the Government, so far as he was advised, to introduce any Bill for the purpose of improving the condition of prison officers, who Were in a very different condition from that of the officers alluded to by the hon. Member for Waterford (Mr Blake). He would add that no representation had been received by the Government from the Grand Juries of counties urging an increase of the retiring allowances to these officers, and as any such increase would have to be paid out of the local rates, and not out of Imperial funds, he did not think it desirable that the Government should take the initiative in this: matter.

Holyhead Harbour—Question

said, he wished to ask the Secretary to the Admiralty, When the accomodation and protection promised to be provided for the Mail Packets and for passengers landing on the wooden jetty at Holyhead will be provided, in compliance with the agreement made between the Admiralty and the London and North Western and Chester and Holyhead Steam-boat Company?

said, a sum had been taken in the Estimates for Holy-head Harbour—and the Vote would, he hoped, come on for discussion on Thursday next—with the view of making the present packet pier convenient for passengers, and also improving the railroad communication with the pier. The Treasury and the Admiralty were in communication with the London and North Western Company and the Dublin Steam Packet Company on the subject of the hon. Gentleman's question, and some satisfactory arrangement with respect to it would, he; trusted, be arrived at.

Advances And Repayments

Question

said, he wished to ask the Secretary to the Treasury, When the Account of Advances and Repayments ordered 17th February will be laid on the table?

said, the account would be presented as soon as possible. It had been delayed in order that it might be rendered more complete.

Poor Relief (Ireland)—Question

said, he would beg to ask the Chief Secretary for Ireland, Whether he means to proceed with the Committee on the Poor Relief (Ireland) Bill before the Easter Recess; and whether he means to proceed with the other Irish measures before the Easter Recess?

said, he much regretted that he had not been able to make greater progress with the measure. It would, he feared, be impossible to proceed with it in Committee before Easter, but he should lose no opportunity of pressing it forward.

Hartlepool Railway And Dock Bill—Explanation

Sir, in rising to call the attention of the House to what I conceive to be a breach of privilege, and to a question in which my own personal honour is concerned, I feel assured I shall not in vain ask hon. Members to allow me to trespass for a short time upon their attention while I state the position in which I find myself placed. It will be in the recollection of the House that a few evenings ago a Motion was brought forward by an independent Member of this House, the hon. and learned Member for Sheffield (Mr. Roebuck), with the view to obtain a Select Committee to inquire into certain allegations contained in a petition which he had been requested to present, and to the charges contained in which I thought it my duty to reply in opposition to the Motion of the hon. and learned Gentleman. It is, I think, scarcely necessary for me to recapitulate the statements which I made on that occasion. They were twofold, and were based upon printed documents which had been placed in my hand on the morning of the day on which the Motion was made, and which I had every reason to believe were accurate. It was, therefore, with some surprise that two days afterwards I read in the morning papers a letter from the petitioner, Mr. Benjamin Coleman, in which he stated that I had been deceived, and that the statements I had made were incorrect. If the matter had been allowed to remain there, I should not have thought it necessary to take any further steps in it. There was nothing particularly uncourteous in the letter of Mr. Coleman. It contained a mere assertion that I had been deceived, and I should have been contented to take no further notice of it. But, my statements having been impeached, I considered it my duty to institute inquiries, and the result of those inquiries has been such as to satisfy me that Mr. Coleman, when he wrote his letter, must have himself forgotten the part he had taken in the matter on a previous occasion, otherwise he would not have thought it necessary to dispute what I had said. The matter, however, did not terminate there. Yesterday morning I received a newspaper from the north of England, in a paragraph of which are contained imputations of so grave a character that, as an English gentleman, I cannot retain my seat here without bringing them under the notice of the House. I think, when I read those statements, which with your permission, Sir, I shall now proceed to do, it will be the unanimous opinion of the House, that could I have been guilty of the offence laid to my charge, I should be utterly unworthy to occupy a seat in the Imperial Parliament, or to associate with English gentlemen. The passage to which I beg the earnest and patient attention of every hon. Member is taken from a paper called the Stockton Gazette and Middlesborough Times. It is to the following effect:—

"It is true that pending the proceedings in Chancery the House of Commons has declined to enter upon the consideration of this gigantic fraud."
Let the House notice what follows:—
"And that Mr. Farrer has endeavoured to repay to Mr. Jackson some of his political obligations by promulgating a statement which we are in a position to designate as a deliberate lie, and by which he endeavoured to make it appear that Mr. Coleman was to be bought for £6,000, and his evidence thus suppressed."
With respect to the first part of the paragraph, I may say, that as most hon. Members of this House have the confidence, the influence, and the support of their friends afforded to them, so I am under similar obligations to Mr. Jackson. His political principles and my own happen to agree, and I have had his support; but, if it is intended to insinuate that from unworthy motives I have endeavoured to palm upon the House and the country an incorrect statement, I think the House, while I believe it will be disposed to acquit me of any possible participation in such a disgraceful transaction, will feel that I am not only justified in bringing the matter under its consideration, but that in so doing I am only discharging a bounden duty. I have no desire to act in any manner that may appear vindictive. I have every reason to suppose that the person who has, in my individual instance, assailed the privileges of this House, has probably done so in ignorance. I am well aware, that if I were to move that he should be brought to the bar of this House, my Motion would be at once agreed to; but I do not know that such a course would be in accordance with my own wishes. I have considered it my duty to lay the matter before the House. I place myself in the hands of the House, and I think that, at all events, hon. Members will be of opinion, that while I have not hesitated to defend my own honour, I have not been backward in my endeavours to assert the privileges of this House.

Sir, as the hon. Member has not concluded his speech with a Motion, I do not know that I am in order in rising to make an observation. It was certainly to be expected that the hon. Gentleman should feel indignant at the gross charge which has been made against him, but the high character which he maintains is of itself sufficient vindication, and it was altogether unnecessary for him to rebut a charge which carries on the face of it its own refutation.

The Easter Recess—Question

Has the noble Lord at the head of the Government fixed upon the day when the Easter vacation is to commence, and will the noble Lord state for what time it is to last?

I am not able to reply at once to the right hon. Gentleman's question, but on Thursday next I shall hope to be in a position to state on what day it is proposed to rise for the vacation.

Civil Service Examinations

Resolution

said, he rose to move the Resolution of which he had given notice on the subject of the examinations for the Civil Service. The history of these examinations might be summed up in a few sentences. In 1852, when the right hon. Gentleman the Member for Buckinghamshire (Mr. Disraeli) was leader of that House, a Royal Commission was appointed to inquire into the organization of the Civil Service. That Commission reported in 1858, in favour of open competition. In 1855 an Order in Council was published providing that an examination should take place for all junior appointments under the Crown, and in the same year the Indian Civil Service was thrown open to public competition. Since 1855 various Resolutions on the subject had been moved in that House. Those Resolutions had been sometimes carried, and sometimes had been met with the Previous Question. In 1860 a Select Committee was appointed to inquire into the system of examining und nominating candidates for the Civil Service. That Committee was presided over by the noble Lord the Member for Lynn (Lord Stanley), and two patronage Secretaries of the Treasury—the hon. Baronet the Member for Wells (Sir W. Hayter) and the hon. Baronet the Member for Petersfield (Sir W. Jolliffe)—were members of it. It consisted also of some of the most zealous opponents of the system of open competition who had seats in that House. The Committee sent in their Report in July, 1860, and described the present system as a delusion on the public and a fertile source of abuse. It was clear, they said, that while such a system prevailed any Minister, who might be so disposed, had it in his power to retain virtually his right of nomination as before, at the same time diminishing his responsibility for the appointments he made. The Committee remarked that thus the: advantages of both the old system and the new one were lost, inasmuch as responsibility ceased and competition was not created; and they recommended one of two alternatives—either that there should be a system of open competition, or that a preliminary test or examination should be established in the numerous departments of the Civil Service before a competitive examination. Within the last few weeks, however, the Report of the Civil Service: Commissioners had been laid on the table of the House, and in that Report the Commissioners stated that, in spite of the recommendations of the Committee of 1860, the delusion on the public and the fertile source of abuse still existed in every department of the civil service except the Treasury. He would not delay the House by dwelling upon the advantages of open competition for appointments in the Civil Service. Administrative reformers were told, five or six year ago, that, in future, political patronage would not be administered as in the olden time. That was per- fectly true: but the present system was, if possible, still more objectionable. The patronage Secretary of the Treasury disposed wholesale of nominations to the Members of the House, who gave them to the free and independent electors. So far, therefore, from political patronage having decreased, it had greatly increased. Formerly, when a vacancy occurred, the patronage Secretary of the Treasury could give it to one Member only; but now he could give nominations to three or four Members for each vacancy, or he could give them all, if he chose, to a single Member, to be distributed amongst those persons who had supported him. So far as the efficiency of the Civil Service was concerned, the Report of the Commissioners went to prove that matters were in a worse position than before. The time, he thought, had therefore come when the House might fairly be called on to express a special opinion on the subject, and in doing so he ventured to quote the language of the Committee's Report. The first part of the Resolution expressed an abstract opinion as to the best method of filling up the junior clerkships in the Civil Service. This was taken verbatim from the Report of the Committee. The second part of his Resolution was also taken from that Report. He earnestly besought the attention of those hon. Members who might think he: was proceeding too hastily to this fact. The second part of his Resolution was in these words—

"That, with a view of establishing such a system of open competition, it is desirable that the experiment first tried at the India House in 1859 be repeated from time to time in the other Departments of the Civil Service,"
The House was so familiar with the whole subject that he did not think it necessary to enter into further discussion. He would only state his own conviction, that if the Resolution were affirmed, something would be done to destroy a system alike discreditable to the Government and to every Member of that House who took part in it—a system of political patronage which was damaging to the spirit of the country and injurious to her Majesty's Civil Service.

Motion made, and Question proposed,

"That this House is of opinion that the best mode of procuring competent persons to fill the Junior Clerkships in the Civil Service would be through a system of Competitive Examination, open to all Subjects of the Queen who fulfil certain definite conditions as to age, health, and character; and that, with a view of establishing such a system of open competition, it is desirable that the experiment first tried at the India House in 1859 be repeated from time to time in the other Departments of the Civil Service."

said, he begged to second the Motion of the hon. Member for the King's County (Mr. Hennessy), and in doing so he would confine his observations to that part of it which related to the Indian Civil Service. It appeared that only so. recently as the last year the Governor General of India cabled upon the Lieutenant Governors and other district officers in Bengal, the North Western Provinces, Oude, and the Punjab, to state their opinions as to the comparative efficiency of the gentlemen who had entered the Civil Service under the old and new systems. Having had an opportunity of perusing those opinions, he thought it would not be uninteresting or profitless were he to state them to the House in a condensed form. Although the opinions of some fifty or sixty gentlemen had been given, it would be sufficient for his purpose to give those of four of them to enable hon. Members to form a very fair idea of the working of the competitive system in that country. Mr. Edmondstone, the Lieutenant Governor of the Forth Western Provinces, might be said to represent the opinions of the majority in the following extract from his able minute:—

"There can be no question that as a class the civilians who have entered the service by competition are men of higher scholastic attainments and of better mental training than those who used to be received from Haileybury. For the secretariat and judicial appointments they will generally be found better fitted than their predecessors, but from the absence of an esprit de corps and of physical activity, Mr. Edmondstone did not think that the efficiency of the Civil Service generally | will be improved, or that its character and reputation will be raised by the competitive system."
Mr. Gubbins, Commissioner of Benares, on the other hand, representing the opinions of the minority, expressed his conviction—
"That the competitioners as a body do not come up to the same standard of perfection as was attained by the Haileybury men; that they are generally wanting in tone and manners of gentlemen—a point which is of great importance among quick-sighted people like the natives of India, and which imperatively requires to be attended to in a governing class; and that they are also wanting in that energy and bodily activity which is so essential to a district officer."
Among the whole number Mr. Gubbins had met with but two who could ride. He would now quote the opinions of two other gentlemen, one as taking a very practical view of this interesting question, and the other an equally impartial view. Mr. Shore, Commissioner of Cuttack, a grandson of the late Lord Teignmouth, who was raised to the peerage for his eminent services when Governor General of India in 1793, said—
"If I wanted a well-written report, or a clear, well-considered judgment on a difficult case, I should expect to find the work best done by a competitioner. If I wanted a civilian to accompany troops, to ride 20 or 30 miles to suppress a disturbance, or to make an inquiry into losses sustained by calamities of season, I should be inclined to make my selection from men who had been educated at Haileybury."
Colonel Clarke, Commissioner of Khyrabad, a military man, quite free from bias and prejudice one way or the other "considered the want of esprit de corps the weak point of the system, and he recommended that the competitive class should pass a year or a year and a half at a college or hall in England after the first examination." Under these circumstances, he thought it must be admitted that, the competitive system was not answering its purpose in every point in respect to India. On the contrary, having regard to the peculiar nature of the duties to be performed, a bookworm contrasted unfavourably in that country with one who possessed a more genial temperament and more active habits. Should it, therefore, be determined to maintain the competitive system in India, he would strongly recommend the right hon. Baronet the Secretary of State for India to adopt Colonel Clarke's suggestion. By so doing he would only carry out still further the system which was being pursued in this country with regard to the military cadets passing through Sandhurst College. Now, with regard to the Motion of the hon. Member for the King's County (Mr. Hennessy), he did not think that these objections could be made to apply to the Civil Service in England. Deprecating as he did all intention of speaking disrespectfully, he must say that it appeared to him that the duties of the clerks referred to in the Motion of the hon. Member were purely mechanical. They were mere copyists. They did not incur any of that grave responsibility which devolved upon a civilian in India. They were not intrusted with the government of a district the size of Middlesex or Yorkshire; nor were they called upon at a moment's notice to jump on horseback and gallop some twenty or thirty miles to suppress a disturbance or to apprehend a gang of Dacoits. It also seemed to him rather an invidious and unjust proceeding to throw open the nomina- tion to the Indian Civil Service to free and unreserved competition, while, on the other hand, all the nominations for even permission to compete for the public offices in the Civil Service in this country—however trifling the emoluments of some of them might be—were kept strictly close,; and formed the exclusive property of the Government of the day. It had, moreover, this objectionable appearance, that the Government of the day, from the moment of their accession to office, took advantage of this power in order to exercise Parliamentary influence by the distribution of these nominations among their followers and supporters, for it was impossible to disguise the fact that a competition which was dependent upon favour and patronage was no competition at all. Entertaining these views, he had no hesitation in supporting the Motion of the hon. Member.

observed, that the arguments of the hon. Member who had brought forward this Motion were as unfortunate as his selection of a seconder, for a stronger speech against the whole system of competitive examination than that just made by the hon. Member for Windsor (Mr. Vansittart) he had never heard. It had not been his intention to bring the subject again before the House, as it was by no means an agreeable duty to address the House year after year upon the same topic. He was strengthened in that resolution by the fact that the Committee which sat last year upon the subject had stated that it would be better to give the present system time to work, to: gain further experience of its results. Nevertheless, as the question had been brought forward by the hon. Member for the King's County he thought it his duty; to express his opinions upon it. When the hon. and learned Gentleman thought proper to quote extracts from the Report of the Committee, he should have been glad if he had read the whole of the Report of the Committee. By a singular omission, the hon. and learned Gentleman did not, think it necessary to quote the last sentence of the Report, which was as follows:—"The Committee are not prepared to advise the immediate adoption of a plan for giving effect to these views." He could scarcely comprehend how the hon. and learned Gentleman could found his Motion on the Report of the Committee. The hon. and learned Gentleman, it would seem, intended much more than the Committee had ever thought of, inasmuch as he had originally given notice of a Motion with the view of throwing open every post in the United Kingdom to public competition. The hon. and learned Gentleman, however, thought proper to withdraw that Motion, and to substitute for it that under consideration. Well, hon. Members were all agreed on one point—namely, that for the interest of the public service there ought to be a test examination. The question upon which they joined issue was this—those who concurred in opinion with him maintained that a test examination would sufficiently prove whether a person nominated for office was duly qualified for such office or not; and they further maintained that to introduce into this country a system of competitive examination would be to break through the habits of the people, and to establish a principle in connection with the public service which was never applied to any private establishment in the United Kingdom. What was the meaning of a competitive examination? It would be scarcely believed by the public that the existing system had been introduced on the report of two gentlemen, both, no doubt, possessed of the greatest abilities and the highest literary attainments. One of those gentlemen was the hon. Baronet sitting below him (Sir S. North-cote). The other was Sir Charles Trevelyan. That system was introduced upon the recommendation of those two gentlemen, and was placed under the control of two examiners to carry into effect That system involved the throwing open of 105,000 offices to public competition. In reference to that system, Lord Brougham said, at the time it was first announced, that it was so monstrous and preposterous as to cause the people to hold up their hands in the public streets in perfect astonishment. He was not going to find fault with the manner in which the Civil Service Commissioners performed their duties. Sir Edward Ryan was a gentleman of the highest position, and had displayed pre-eminent ability in the public service in various parts of the world. The other Commissioner was Sir John Shaw Lefevre, a name which would be ever held dear by the House of Commons. This, however, was not a question of individual reform—it was a question of principle. It was a question whether the House intended to give to two irresponsible officers—however eminent and honourable as individuals—the control of the whole patron- age of the Civil Service appointments in the United Kingdom, amounting altogether to 105,000. He knew how distasteful those details were, and he should therefore, in deference to the wish of the House, refrain from making references to a blue-book. But he had beside him papers containing extracts from the evidence given before the Committee of last year, which he believed to have so important a bearing on the subject as to justify him in submitting them to the consideration of the House. Out of twenty-five witnesses who were examined six were examiners, whose evidence he would omit to notice. Eleven witnesses were unfavourable to the system of competitive examination, and seven only were favourable to it. He had no intention, in the slightest degree, to cast any reflection upon the Committee, which was presided over by the noble Lord the Member for King's Lynn (Lord Stanley). At the same time he could not help observing that, looking at the Report of that Committee, and studying carefully the evidence that had been produced before it, he could not understand how it was possible for the Committee to draw up such a Report in the face of such evidence. There was one most important point connected with the question which had not been touched upon at all—that was the mode in which they were about to treat the sons of old and meritorious officers. It would be found that in all the great establishments of the kingdom, from the Bank of England downwards, an interest was manifested for the sons of old and meritorious officers. In the Bank of England, for example, about one-sixth of the whole number of the clerks were the sons of old and meritorious officers. The evidence given before the Committee was so strong on that point that he could not avoid bringing it under the notice of the House. There was not a single witness, except Sir Edward Ryan and Sir John Shaw Lefevre, who did not express the deepest regret that any system should be established which did not give some special advantage to the sons of old and meritorious officers. Mr. Arbuthnot, Auditor of the Civil List, gave the following evidence:—

"Is it within your experience that the sons of meritorious officers in the Treasury or the other departments have been occasionally appointed to vacancies?—Yes.
"Have those sons turned out, as far as your experience goes, to be a class inferior or superior to the others?—I think that, generally speaking, they have proved a very good class of officers.
"Do you see any evil resulting from the fact of recognising the services of meritorious officers by appointing their sons, or giving their sons an opportunity of competing?—No, on the contrary, I think it is one of the most graceful tributes to faithful service that can be rendered to a deserving officer.
"The effect of open competition would be to exclude all such power of rewarding?—Yes.
"You think that would be an objection?—I think it would; I think that not only have the sons of old officers generally proved a good class of persons, but they preserve an element in the office of traditional knowledge which, to a limited extent, it is desirable to maintain; they carry on some of their fathers' knowledge and information."
Sir Benjamin Hawes—
"I do not mean without examination; but do you see any injury or benefit to be derived from the fact of a meritorious officer having his son placed upon the list of temporary clerks, after he has proved by examination that he is competent?—Certainly not. I think that it is quite right that there should be such an appointment; and as he obtains it by passing the ordeal of examination, I see no objection to it.
"Would not such an appointment to a temporary clerkship be considered rather as a reward to a meritorious servant?—It can hardly be called a reward where, of course, the reward is not certain, because he must pass an examination."
Mr. Trevor, Comptroller of the Legacy and Succession Duties—
"I have often sent to the Secretary of the Treasury an application from a meritorious clerk in the office for an appointment for his son.
"Has that request been ordinarily complied with by the Treasury?—I think I have had two or three instances that occur to my mind in which the Secretary to the Treasury has nominated the son of a clerk in my office, at my suggestion.
"That suggestion being that he was the son of an able and a meritorious officer?—That he was the son of an old clerk in the office, who, I thought, deserved well of the Government.
"You thought that not an unfair or improper mode of rewarding the father for his services?—It occurred to me as a very proper mode of showing him how his own services had been appreciated.
"Do you think that it is a graceful recognition of the father's services?—Yes; I think it is a graceful recognition of the father's services, his son having subsequently to pass the proper examination, that he should have the nomination.
"Have you found any instances of those who have been so appointed being inferior to those who have been otherwise nominated?—No, certainly not.
"Do you see any objection that exists to the occasional nomination of the sons of meritorious officers?—No; on the contrary, I think that it tends very much to the advantage of the public service, because it shows the father that he may have a chance of getting that nomination if his own services are meritorious."
Sir Thomas Freemantle—
"Have you been in the habit, or has it ever occurred to you to recommend for the junior posi- tions in the Customs, the sons of any well-deserving and well-conducted officers of the establishment?—Yes. I have frequently made such recommendations to the Treasury; and I am happy to say that almost in every case the applications that I have made have been complied with; and it has been a very great gratification to me to see that: the son of a deserving officer, who may have lost his life in the service, has been provided for by the kindness of the Government in the same department in which his father served so meritoriously. The Secretary of the Treasury has, in most cases, generously conferred clerkships on the sons of deserving officers under such circumstances.
"Do you think that that has had a beneficial effect upon the service generally?—Yes, I think it has.
"Is it considered a graceful reward for the long and meritorious services of the father that his son should have an opportunity, providing that he is competent, of being placed in such a position as a clerk of the Customs?—I think that it does much good."
Mr. Trollope, of the Post Office—
"I think also it is very desirable that the Postmaster General should be able to appoint the sons of officers in the department.
"Is the appointment of the sons or members of the families of officers of the department, practised to any great extent?—Not to any great extent as regards the clerks, but to a considerable extent to the letter-carriers. In the last year seventy letter-carriers were appointed who were the sons of other letter-carriers.
"Out of what total number?—About 300."
Mr. Tilley, of the Post Office—
"You stated, I think, that in the Post Office department the claims of meritorious and deserving old officers are considered?—They are.
"And that consideration is given by occasionally presenting the sons of such officers for examination to the Civil Service Commissioners?—It is so.
"Have you found, as a general rule, that that is calculated to give content, and to be received with gratitude by those officers whose sons are so selected?—I believe very much so.
"Do you think that the entire absence of those appointments would be injurious to the service?—I think it would, because such an appointment acts in two ways: it does good to the men whose sons are appointed, and the sons generally are very useful and good officers.
"Of course, if there was to be an open competition, the merits of the father, however great, would never be taken into consideration; it would depend merely upon the intellectual ability of the son?—Just so.
"Therefore that element, if it is an element for good, would be entirely excluded from the appointments in the Civil Service?—It would."
Mr. Corbell, Inland Revenue—
"Should you regret to have it done away with? I should indeed. The Board laid down restrictions that a man must have attained a certain rank, and have a certain number in family; he must, it least, have been a division officer. The object of that was, that he should have shown some interest in desiring to get forward in the service.
"It was in the nature of a reward to the meritorious servants?—Exactly.
"It has given general satisfaction, and you would be very sorry, would you not, to see it repealed?—Very sorry."
Sir Richard Bromley—
"It has been given in evidence that it is usual both in the Inland Revenue and in the Customs for recommendations to be made by the chief of the department in favour of the sons of old and meritorious officer?, and that those recommendations have been uniformly observed, and that those nominees have been so appointed; I understand you to say that you see no objection to such a course in a limited degree, provided that those persons were examined by a limited competition? Certainly; I think that great good would arise from the mixture of the sons of old and confidential officers with persons taken from the public at large.
"You think it would be a recognition of their services, and make the officers themselves more zealous and more satisfied with their positions, or tend to make them so?—Yes; I think it would make them more contented with the limited career before them.
"I think you stated that the principle does prevail in some other great establishments, such as the Bank of England?—Yes; I can speak confidently that it does."
Not only was it a graceful recognition of the past services of the fathers, to appoint their sons, but it acted as a stimulus to fidelity and zeal; while the preferment of such young men—who, generally speaking, proved an excellent class of officers—tended to preserve in the departments an element of traditional knowledge which it was desirable to some extent to maintain. It might, however, be said that the two objects were not incompatible—that they might have a system of competitive examination, and, as it was proposed by the right hon. Gentleman the Minister for War, at the same time the Government could retain twenty nominations in their own hands fur the sons of old and meritorious officers. But, according to the evidence of Sir Edward Ryan and Sir John Shaw Lefevre, such a system was wholly incompatible. Sir Edward Ryan—
"Will you state to the Committee whether you think that the evil of rewarding meritorious officers by appointing their sons is so great that, without any exception, such persons should never be introduced into the service under any circumstances?—I do not think that you can carry on both systems together, the competitive system and the nominative system, even though the latter should be checked by a pass examination. There would be very invidious comparisons made between the clerks who came in under one system and those who came in under the other. If your object is to obtain the best clerks, I should not, à priori, have thought that you would get them by selecting the sons of meritorious officers; and if your object is to reward and encourage the service, there are other modes in which that may be done."
Sir John Lefevre—
"You have given your opinion as to the advisability of reserving a certain number of appointments as rewards for the sons of meritorious public servants; does it appear to you that if a considerable number of clerks in any office had gained their situations on competitive examination, and if the remaining part of them had come in as being sons of old officers, that would give rise to jealousy and ill-feeling in the office?—I have already stated, in answer to a question put to me by another hon. Member, that I think it Would be most objectionable, and that it would lead to great difficulties in the government and management of the office."
And Sir Thomas Fremantle gave it as his opinion that under the competitive system, no favour could be shown to the sons of old officers. Last year he had quoted to the House some of the extraordinary questions put to candidates by the examiners. He could not adopt the same course this year, because, strange to say, the examiners had declined to give the questions put to candidates for the English service, although in the case of the Indian service they were given. He must say he did not see the least improvement in the modus opwandi of those examinations. Now, let the House observe what the subjects of examination were which were applied to young boys, dockyard apprentices, and engine boys in factories. Those subjects were reading, writing, and arithmetic, English grammar, English composition, geography, mathematics, Euclid, algebra, as far as quadratic equations, and arithmetical and geometrical progression; while for junior clerkships in the Colonial Department the preliminary examination comprehended a knowledge of arithmetic, geography, of four different languages besides English—namely, Latin, Greek, Trench, and Italian, the language and literature of Greece and Rome, English composition, accounts, book-keeping, and several other things. What was a boy of seventeen to say to all this? Then, as to the constabulary. No man was to be appointed unless he could write well, understand arithmetic as far as vulgar and decimal fractions, and English composition. He should have thought the first qualification for a good constable was strength; but he would proceed with the list. "English composition and geography, especially that of Ireland." How little control was left to those in authority over these Commissioners! The Commissioners appeared to rule with a rod of iron. Ministers of the highest position implored them to modify their views. The Secretary to the Admiralty wrote to the Commissioners, inquiring, on the part of the Lords of the Admiralty, whether a school master, who already had a certificate from the inspectors of schools, would be granted another certificate without a fresh examination; and the Commissioners replied, that inasmuch as difficulties would arise from the introduction of distinctions in the modes of examination, they had found it necessary to refuse the recognition of any certificate of examination not conducted under their own direction; that to this course they must adhere; and they Were therefore compelled to reply to the request in the negative. And the Lords of the Admiralty gave way. He came next to another curious examination which had been introduced into this country—he meant that for clerks in the Customs. A great deal was said last year on the subject of the moral and physical qualities of candidates, which it was alleged could not be tested by any examination. This year, in accordance perhaps with an opinion then expressed, that moral certificates were not worth the paper on which they were written, the moral qualification had been withdrawn, but full attention had been paid to the physical qualification. Beside all the branches of study which he had quoted, the candidate for a clerkship in the Customs had now to pass a medical examination—a very odd requirement indeed for a Customs clerk. One question was, "Has the candidate any swelling or varicose veins in his legs?" "Are his sight and hearing good?" "Is his pronunciation distinct?" "Is his respiration natural?" "Are the respiratory sounds and the resonance of the chest normal?" "Are the pulsations of the heart natural in rhythm and force; and are its sounds those of health?" "Are the marks of vaccination satisfactory?" "Has he had the smallpox?" "Is the frame and muscular system well developed?" No doubt all these things would be of great advantage to the candidate. No doubt it was desirable that the clerks of the Customs should be able to pass these tests; but he maintained that a man might be a very good clerk, even with some defects in his breathing, and without the marks of vaccination or small-pox. Still, as he said, the Commissioners were quite independent of control, and the Ministers of the Crown had to give way to their decisions. After the discussion which took place the other night on the subject of Education he had no doubt that many hon. Gentlemen opposite would support his Amendment. It was evident that the right hon. Gentleman the author of the Revised Code was of opinion that the standard of Education had been too high. This was a view held by a majority of gentlemen in the country—namely, that we were over-educating the people, not that we were educating too many, but that we were educating them in branches of knowledge not likely to be useful to them. The Duke of Wellington, speaking of the army, said, "Give us discipline, not learning;" and Nelson had expressed a similar opinion in different words. Observing a midshipman deep in the study of manœuvres, he said, "Never mind your manœuvres, go at them." The best place in which to conduct an examination for the army would be the midst of a stiff hunting country. As a friend of his had remarked the other night, "Of what use to a cornet would be his mathematics and his classics if he were not a good rider?" He hoped the House would not, then, consent to the further extension of the system. He had no hostility to the system of competitive examination, but he believed that it was not conducive to the public interest. With regard to diplomacy, what said the Earl of Malmesbury? He said, "he had lost several attachés pre-eminently qualified for the diplomatic service, in consequence of this system of competitive examination." And Earl Russell, when examined before the Diplomatic Committee last year, pointed out the inconveniences of these examinations as applied to the diplomatic service. Mr. Elliot, who was examined before the Committee, said the man best fitted for society was the man best fitted for diplomacy. In the case of the army, he had inquired of officers over and over again what had been the effect of the competitive examination upon the interests of the service, and their reply was that they were getting in some regiments a far inferior class of officers. Now the whole spirit of the army depended on its officers. It was very different in the continental service. The officers in the English army would lose a great deal of authority if they were not gentlemen and did not possess those qualifications to which the soldiers could look up. He regretted to say he believed the army was falling off very much. Before he sat down he wished to read an extract from a most able article, in which the whole argument was admirably condensed. The writer said—
"The truth is, and it is one we are in danger of permanently forgetting, that the higher kinds of culture have often an enervating effect. There are minds, and those amongst the most valuable, which much learning tends only to enfeeble. The polish is only obtained by planing away the Wood. There is a rough strength, a determined energy, which seems to be the attribute only of the half-educated. Men of great culture are apt to give their imaginations too much play, to desire harmonious impossibilities, to foresee the difficulties so clearly that action is foregone. They have put microscopes to their eyes, and cannot drink for fear of the animalcules. Mr. Gladstone, for example, we do not hesitate to affirm, would be the most capable administrator in Europe if he could only forget one-half of his cultivation. As it is, he worries England and delights his foes by theories too harmonious to be of the slightest use, and an insight too keen to suffer him to take one long step in advance. How often has the rough intellect of the Premier enabled him to cut straight to the core of a matter of which his colleague could only nibble at the rind? It is only natural that it should be so, for the work of the world is done by qualities over which culture has no power. Courage is not developed by mathematics. Creative power is not increased by literary training. In sight is an instinct, not a product of education. That strange faculty of dominance which Begins to stand apart from the other powers of the mind, which enables races as stupid as the Turk to subjugate races as subtle as the Greek, is not increased by polished cultivation. Every day we see the scholar distanced in the race of life by the adventurer who can barely spell—the polished scion of a cultivated race defeated hopelessly by an orator innocent of Greek. Force, the true motive power of events, rests in the character, not the intellect, and it is only the latter that high cultivation can improve."
[Cries of Name !] "Well, the extract was from The Spectator. He maintained this, that men might be too highly educated and yet not be fit for the practical duties of a public department. He also maintained that there were certain qualities which could not be tested by any examination; and on that account, he begged to move the Amendment which he had placed on the paper.

Amendment proposed,

To leave out from the words "opinion that" to the end of the Question, in order to add the words "many of the qualities constituting a good; public officer—good principles, good habits, sound judgment, general intelligence, and energy—cannot be tested by any plan of public competition; the introduction, therefore, of such a system into all the departments of the Public Service would be very injurious to their efficiency "

—instead thereof.

said, he had much pleasure in seconding the Amendment, for, in his opinion, there were other qualifications necessary for a public servant besides those of being able to answer some not very intelligible examination papers. The humblest clerks in some of the public departments were necessarily intrusted with secrets of state, the divulgence of which at times might be a national calamity. Was the country, then, he would ask, ready and willing to throw open posts of such importance to the first comer, simply because he had made the best Greek iambics, or proved himself the greatest master of the binomial theorem? A large preponderance of the evidence given before the competitive examination Committee was against the system. The Report of the Committee was one way, but the weight of evidence the other—only one witness thoroughly in its favour. One of the most striking characteristics of the youth of England was, that unlike the youths of other countries, it was taught not to look forward to eat the bread of comparative dependence in a public office, but to maintain itself in after life by its own energy and its own exertions; but by throwing open to competition twenty thousand places under the Crown this spirit would be destroyed, and discontent would be introduced into the public offices. A youth who had passed a competitive examination, and who had attained the object of his aspirations, would find the moment of entering on his official duties the moment of his disappointment. Youths from ' the Universities of Glasgow and London' and Dublin would be cast on the streets of London, without friends, without relatives; and would those youths, flushed with their recent victory, sit down to the drudgery and monotony of a public office; or would they think that their profound knowledge of Greek or mathematics was adequately rewarded by the modest competence of £90 a year? Sir Thomas Fremantle, Mr. Tilley, and Mr. Arbuthnot, when examined before the Committee, stated that such a spirit of discontent had already manifested itself in the public departments. Much good had been done by subjecting the examination papers to Parliamentary criticism, for any hon. Gentleman who had compared the earlier papers with those of more recent date, could not have failed to remark that the latter were more intelligible, and better adapted to the intellects of ordinary men than the former. But the matter was capable of a further improvement in the same direction. He held in his hand an examination paper for the past year. It was on the English language, and he would read the first question—

"'Languages, so long as they are living and not dead, are always in a state of change and progression. Changes of position to other races by conquest or emigration, mutual relations, such as trade or alliance—all changes, in fact, in the position of a nation itself, will produce corresponding alterations in a greater or less degree in its speech; but besides all these accidental causes there inheres in all languages an instinct of progression and simplification which in the course of centuries will inevitably produce mighty changes.' Apply this statement to the English language by tracing rapidly its origin and development out of the various elements which enter into its composition."
He did not wish to take the questions unfairly; and having given the first he would now give the last—
"The nightingale's thrilling note."
"The soldiers are at drill."
"The carpenter's drill."
"The negroes are clothed in drill."
"The horse's nostril."
"The lassie thirled at the pin."
"Have the words marked in italics in each of these groups of passages any etymological connection with one another. If so, explain it."
Could any hon. Gentleman in that House explain it? Could the hon. Member for the King's County (Mr. Hennessy), or the hon. Member for "Windsor (Mr. Vansittart), both of whom had been in the Civil Service, answer the question? Could even the right hon. Gentleman himself, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, who was the champion of competitive examination, explain it? [The Chancellor of the Exchequer shook his head.] He was glad of that admission. [The CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER: I did not hear the question.] Then he would repeat it. [The hon. Member accordingly read the question again.] If the right hon. Gentleman could not answer it, surely it was rather hard to demand from the humblest clerk in the service a test which was unnecessary for a Chancellor of the Exchequer. There were seven of these questions on the English language, and three hours were allowed to answer them, but it would really take three hours to understand them. Here were some questions taken from the papers laid before the House this year—
"What is the title of Chaucer's principal poem, and why was it so called? Which of his poems have been paraphrased by two celebrated poets of a later age? By whom has he been called 'a well of English undeflled?' Wharton compares Chaucer to a premature day in spring. What is the fact which Wharton intended to illustrate, and how do you account for it? Which poet of the period is considered to rank next to Chaucer? Name the titles of his poems."
Then, again—
"What are the titles of the poems written l>y the author known as Piers Plowman, and what are their peculiarities?"
And here was another—
"Who was the author of the 'Polyolbion,' and what is the nature of the work?"
To answer such pedantic questions as these a man must have had a pedantic education, which might make a prig, but he did not think it would make a useful servant of the Crown. And that the system was mischievous, had been admitted by the Secretary of State for War, who, when questioned as to the large number of supernumerary clerks in his department, spoke of the difficulty of transferring them to the permanent staff on account of their inability to pass the competitive examination, although they had all discharged the duties required of them in a most satisfactory manner. Upon the whole, he thought that the evidence taken before the Committee went to prove one fact—that under the old system the public had been ably served, and that there then existed among our civil servants an esprit de eorps which could never be surpassed, if indeed it was ever equalled. There was not a single instance on record in which a public secret had been disclosed, or any information obtained in a public department sold. His hon. Friend (Mr. Vansittart) had called upon the House to try the principle of; competitive examination in England apparently because it had broken down in India.

said, he wished to explain that what he had said was, that having thrown open the Indian service, it; would be unjust to preserve a close nomination to the Civil Service of this country.

said, his hon. Friend had admitted that there was no esprit de corps among the civil servants now appointed in India; and that was likely enough, for persons appointed under the present system would naturally think that gratitude was more due from the country to them than from them to the country. He admitted that some individual cases of incompetency existed under the old system, but they were exceptional cases, and afforded no reason why a system which was proved to have worked well as a whole should be entirely subverted. The better plan was to meet these exceptional cases; and to do so he would suggest a responsible system of nomination in conjunction with a pass examination of a very high order and a minimum standard of marks. At present there was no minimum standard, but he thought that every clerk admitted into the public departments should show that at all events he was up to a certain standard of knowledge. They were often told how much better private affairs were managed than those of the public; but would any merchant, who did not wish his name soon. to appear in the Gazette, select his clerks by open competition? No, he chose men of whose antecedents he knew something, whom he believed honest, and those who were most likely, in his opinion, to acquit themselves creditably. This system, which worked well for private affairs, he wished to introduce into public affairs, and he believed that, under a responsible system of nomination in conjunction with an effective system of pass-examination, there would be an effectual check upon favouritism and jobbery, and that by these they would obtain at once an honourable and efficient class of public servants.

Sir, having been Chairman of the Committee that sat a year ago on this subject, I hope the House will indulge me for a few minutes, as I wish to make some observations in reference to it. The Report of that Committee was agreed to after full and careful consideration of the evidence adduced; and I do not think that either the objections made last year to the system of competition, or those that have been stated in the course of the present debate have been of a very formidable nature. It seemed to me, while listening to the speech of my hon. Friend, that I was hearing over again the discussion that took place last Session on the same question. In the first place, he made a complaint that I have often heard in former years, that by the system of competitive examination we get a test of intellectual qualifications only, and that moral and physical qualifications are left unregarded. Now, I think my hon. Friend, in his anxiety to throw ridicule on the Civil Service Commissioners, went out of the way to answer his own argument, because he read a list of the physical qualifications required in the candidates, with a list of the questions put to them on that point, showing that great care is actually exercised in ascertaining their physical fitness to discharge such duty as is likely to devolve upon them. It seemed to me that the fact of such inquiries into the health of the candidates being made, answered the objection taken on this point by my hon. Friend. As to the absence of a test of the candidates' moral fitness, my answer is this—I do not attach very great importance to mere written testimonials as to character. Every one knows how loosely and carelessly such testimonials are given. But whatever may be the Value of such tests as to moral qualifications as you had under the old system of appointment, those tests you have still. The question is argued as though a Minister were in the habit of appointing young men to official situations from among his own personal acquaintance; but the fact is, as we all know, that in nine cases out of ten the appointment in his gift is conferred on some young man whom he has never seen, and whose character and general fitness are vouched for by his own—the candidate's—family or friends. As to the moral qualifications of candidates, therefore, you have exactly the same kind of test you had before; but with this test in addition to it—that generally speaking the young man who takes a high place in a competitive examination is a man of more than an ordinary amount of industry and perseverance. And if you take the kind of man who succeeds in such an examination, though I do not affirm that in moral qualifications he will necessarily be superior to others, yet it is probable he will be superior. Then, my hon. Friend complains that there is no control over the examiners with regard to the kind of questions they put to the candidates under examination. But this objection also I think the hon. Gentleman answered by his own argument. We have frequently heard discussions in this House on the propriety or impropriety of the questions put in the examination papers, and as to whether they really are of a character to test the abilities of the candidates examined. What are those discussions but a control exercised over the examiners? If it is meant that in respect of each individual case there is no appeal from the decision of the examiners, but that it is final, why, the power of final decision must rest somewhere. I do not suppose it will be pretended that a Committee of this House, or any other tribunal you could create, could undertake to re-examine all those candidates who had failed to pass their examination. Another complaint made by my hon. Friend is that the Civil Service Commissioners do not recognise examinations conducted by any other educational body. I do not think that can be made a matter of complaint against them. The Commissioners, he thinks, might accept a high degree taken at Oxford or Cambridge, or some other recognised place of education, as being in itself a sufficient test. I do not deny that it would be so: but it is obvious that by resorting to that expedient we should be establishing an invidious distinction between these places of education and others. The Commissioners, or this House, would have to resist a continual pressure from other institutions to be allowed to give degrees conferring the right of appointment without examination. The distinction originally proposed could not be maintained, and the end would be that the plan would fail. Then, my hon. Friend says it is very hard that the sons of distinguished officers should not be allowed to enter the public service without submitting to the same tests as other young men. But I do not admit that an officer who has performed valuable services to his country, and for such services has received adequate reward, has any superior claims over others in favour of his son. To admit such a superiority of claim would end in establishing a kind of hereditary official caste, holding a perpetual monopoly of public employment. Then my hon. Friend says, look what a power you are creating; you are giving the Commissioners absolute command and control over more than 100,000 offices. In that respect, my hon. Friend has, quite unintentionally no doubt, but enormously, exaggerated the number of offices to which the system of examination applies. I do not think the largest number of places in the Civil Service to which even the ordinary examination test applies exceeds 15,000. There are about 100,000 persons engaged in the various duties of the Civil Service, but the bulk of them have to perform merely mechanical duties. And in the next place, the power which the Commissioners exercise over these 15,000 appointments is, as has been repeatedly shown before, of a judicial character only. They do not dispose of them at their pleasure, they adjudge them according to fixed and known rules. My hon. Friend also says that the examination system cannot possibly work well, since no merchant, banker, or men having large establishments of their own, have adopted or are likely to adopt it. My answer is, the moment you have shown me that the Ministers who have the power of appointing to public offices have the same direct personal interest in the efficient discharge of the duties of those offices as the merchant, banker, and manufacturer have in the efficiency and ability of the persons they employ, I will admit we are in the wrong in requiring this previous examination. My hon. Friend who spoke last objects to the system, that it destroys the self-reliance of the candidates. I think this is the very last fault that should be found. It is clear that the young man who goes into an entirely open competition, and comes out; successful, must have his self-reliance raised; he must feel that he is not indebted to any one but himself for what he has obtained. As to the criticisms which we have heard of some questions put to the candidates, it may be worth while to remind the House that it is judging the examiners very unfairly to assume that the questions on the examination papers are questions that every candidate is expected to answer. Young men come up very differently educated, from different places, and the object of the examination is to test their acquirements as widely as possible, to give every one a chance of showing what he has learnt. If the same questions were repeated year after year, it would be very inconvenient. The candidates would almost know beforehand what the questions would be. These questions necessarily have a very wide range. I do not stand up for the perfect wisdom and propriety of every single question. The; examiners may make mistakes like other men. But it is much more easy to criticise these examination papers than to conduct the examinations, month after month, under the express condition that the papers shall not be the same. With regard to the competitive examinations for the Indian Civil Service, that is a matter which does not now come before us. I have not seen the paper to which an hon. Gentleman alluded with regard to the merits of those who have come into the service by competitive examination, and I own I could have wished to have heard a little more or a little less of that report, because we were told by the hon. Gentleman that a considerable number of persons officially employed in India, had been desired to express their opinion on the subject, and he only gave us the opinions of two indi- viduals. I do not think we can form a satisfactory judgment on the merits of an entire service by simply hearing the opinions given by two individuals, however well qualified they may be to form them, especially as in the great majority of instances they cannot have had any personal knowledge of those of whom they were speaking. I do not wish to say anything at all disparaging of the two gentlemen who have been quoted; still we must remember that in India this experiment of opening the Civil Service was viewed with considerable suspicion by the older officers, and their evidence, therefore, is probably that of persons not disposed to take a favourable view of the results of that experiment. I am confirmed in this view by observing that the principal fault which they find with the younger members of the service is that they are said to be wanting in that esprit de corps which ought to characterize the members of an official body. Now, esprit de corps may be a good thing or not, according to the manner in which it is displayed: in India the display of it has been often a matter of complaint; and until the precise nature of the fault complained of is more clearly explained, I should decline to attach much weight to it. My hon. Friend in the course of his speech referred to two services which really do not come before us under this Motion at all—the army and the diplomatic service. As regards the army, it cannot be said, in reference to the Line at least, that any system of competition whatever has been tried. For my own part, I think that is quite a different question from that of the Civil Service, and I should not be inclined to extend the operation of the competitive system to the army—excluding, of course, the scientific branches—without some further experience. The diplomatic service, again, is entirely apart from the Motion before us. The Motion simply refers to the mode of entrance into the permanent Civil Service. It does not even seek to lay down a principle, it only asks the House to try by repeated experiments a question which never can be decided by theory alone. I claim such a trial as matter of right: by its results I am willing that we should abide; and I say on the one part, as, I think, my hon. Friend would say on the other, that if the experiment fails to bear out—which I am confident it will not—the opinions for which I have contended, I shall be glad to admit that I have been in the wrong.

There is scarcely any law or institution in this country as to which differences of opinion do not prevail, and which is not disapproved by a minority to a greater or lesser extent; but when a subject like this has once been established by the consent of Parliament, and when a regulation has been in force for a certain number of years and has been the subject of repeated debates and inquiries, there is in general a truce to further discussion, and the minority are content, for a time at least, to acquiesce in the continuance of the regulation without reviving discussions on the subject. I much regret that the subject of Civil Service examinations has not been allowed to have the benefit of this system of forbearance, but that in every successive Session there have been Motions renewed in regard to it. There is one set of gentlemen who propose unlimited competition for admission into the Civil Service, and another set who object even to a test examination. The system which is now in force was introduced about seven years ago. It merely provided a test examination for introduction into the Civil Service; but it did not introduce any mode of competition. Since that time, by the practice of the Government, in consequence of discussions which have taken place in this House, competition to a limited extent and for a considerable number of offices has been introduced; but that competition has not been made unlimited. What the hon. Gentleman proposes is that we should agree to an abstract general Resolution, declaring that it is expedient that all offices in the public service should be filled by competitive examination open to all Her Majesty's subjects. He places no limit on the generality of that proposal, and he says nothing as to postponing the introduction of it; but, as I understand him, if we were to agree to that Resolution, it would be the duty of the Government at once to introduce the system which he describes. He did not allege in his speech that the present system had been found to fail, nor that it did not give sufficient security to the public with regard to first appointments in the Civil Service. Nor did he allege that it was not an improvement on the system which it had superseded, nor has he been able to show that there has been any recent investigation in which the plan which he recommends has been laid down. It is important that the House should bear in mind the recommendations of the Com- mittee over which the noble Lord who has just spoken with so much clearness and so much ability presided, and that there should be no mistake as to their nature, because I think they have not been fairly laid before the House. In the first place, then—

"They think that an important step in advance will have been taken if for the system now generally prevailing, of simple nomination, there be substituted one of limited, but of real competition; and they recommend accordingly that from henceforth every vacancy occurring among clerks in the Civil Service be competed for by not less than three candidates, to be nominated as at present, each of whom, in the first instance, shall have passed the preliminary test examination, except in the case of a single vacancy, which shall not be competed for by less than five."
That is the proposal which is now in force in all the superior offices. The head of the department nominates a limited number of candidates for competition. They are examined by the Civil Service Commissioners, and the candidate who obtains the greatest number of marks upon that competition receives the vacant office. The Committee then go on to say—
"It appears expedient that whenever the convenience of the public service allows, several vacancies should be competed for at once. It is obvious that a competition between 30 candidates for 10 vacancies is more likely to result in the appointment of young men of talent and industry than if each place were competed for by three candidates separately."
If the number of candidates be sufficient, there is no doubt practical competition; but it may happen that some of the persons nominated do not come up to the standard of examination, and there the practical competition fails. That, probably, may be the case in some instances, but in general the number of candidates is sufficient to secure effectual competition, and the Treasury have, since that Report was presented, made a regulation that with regard to the very large number of persons subject to their nomination there shall be a preliminary test examination, in order that it may be ascertained that all the persons who compete for the vacant office are at least qualified to pass a test examination. In that manner the recommendation of the Committee has been complied with. The Committee then go on—
"Your Committee, while declaring their opinion that the best mode of procuring competent persons to fill the junior clerkships in the Civil Service would be through a system of competitive examination open to all 'subjects of the Queen' who fulfil certain definite conditions as to age, health, and character, are not prepared to advise the immediate adoption of a plan for giving effect to those views."
That is, they concur in general terms with the hon. Member, but they are not prepared to advise the immediate adoption of a plan to give effect to those views. Therefore, practically, the Committee reported against the immediate adoption of the principle of the hon. Member, though they had recommended the adoption of a plan which is now practically in operation. Under these circumstances I cannot think that, either looking to the allegations of the hon. Gentleman with regard to the operation of the system now in force, or to any authority of a Committee or any other body which he can cite, there is the least ground to induce the House to assent to the Motion he has made. I cannot think that there is the least ground for the immediate adoption of the recommendation of the hon. Gentleman; and if it were in my power so to do, I would move the Previous Question upon his Resolution, and ask the House to pass it over without expressing any decided opinion upon it. But it is not competent for me to do so, because I believe, that an Amendment having been moved, so long as that Amendment is before us the forms of the House will; not allow me to move the Previous Question. I will, then, for a moment revert to the hon. Gentleman who spoke third in the debate, and who represents the other side of this question. His arguments, although he qualifies them in words, practically go to this, that there ought to be no examination, even to ascertain the qualifications of candidates.

I commenced by stating distinctly that I was in favour of a test examination.

I am quite: aware that the hon. Gentleman made a verbal concession to the principle, but I contend that his arguments are inconsistent with his concession. His arguments go against the propriety of testing the qualifications of candidates by examination. Not only upon this but upon previous occasions, it has been sought to cover with ridicule the system of examination in the only manner in which that system can be exercised. I have the honour of the acquaintance of the two gentlemen who have filled the very difficult and very thankless office of Civil Service Examiners. I believe that two more honourable or more capable public officers the service of the Crown does not contain. I regret that one of them is about to retire from his office; and I feel satisfied, from my acquaintance with them, that it is impossible the difficult duty which they have to discharge can be discharged, upon the whole, in a more considerate or more discreet manner. But if any set of questions for examination are to be submitted to the mode of criticism which is practised upon them in this House, I will venture to say that it is utterly impossible that any should pass through such an ordeal without being open to ridicule. I just ask hon. Gentlemen to take the examinations which are published at the end of the Cambridge University Calendar. They are models of examination upon difficult subjects. What can be easier than to raise a laugh by selecting a particular question of some difficulty or out of the way in its character? But it is always to be remembered, that if you make the questions in examination so easy that a great majority of the candidates can answer them, you do not accomplish your object, which is to sift the candidates, and to distinguish between the best and the worst. It is absolutely necessary that there should be some questions so difficult that the least advanced candidates should be unable to answer them, in order to accomplish your object of discriminating between superior and inferior men. But if this argument is to be conducted after the manner which we have so often heard followed in this House, at all events let the statements made be accurate. One hon. Gentleman said how monstrously absurd it was to subject the constabulary to examination, and to examine the police, whom you wanted to be strong men only, in literary and scientific matters, or in mathematics. I have looked through the last Report of the Civil Service Examiners. I cannot find that any of the police are subject to any examination, competitive or otherwise, and I do not believe that it can be proved that they are subject to such examination. I presume the hon. Gentleman referred to page 101 of the Report, where a constabulary cadetship in the Irish police is mentioned. [Mr. BAILLIE COCHRANE: Look at page 40.] I see at page 40 "Dublin Metropolitan Police Clerks in the Commissioners' Office, and Clerks in the Receiver's Office." No doubt clerks in the police-office are treated like clerks in any other office; but nothing is said about police officers themselves being subject to examination.

I beg the right hon. Gentleman's pardon. Let him look at page 40, and he will see "cadets in constabulary."

I was referring to those cadets; and if the hon. Gentleman will look at page 101, he will see the subjects upon which they were examined, and the number of marks which they obtained. There are only a few cadetships in the course of the year, and they are very different offices from those of policemen. The assertion of the hon. Gentleman is utterly unsupported by any evidence which he did produce or can produce, and I should have thought it was a matter of notoriety that neither the Metropolitan nor the County Police are subject to any literary or scientific examination whatever. Another hon. Gentleman quoted some other examples of very difficult examinations as illustrative of the questions proposed to junior clerks entering the Civil Service, and, in order to enforce his argument, he quoted some questions from some paper submitted to candidates for the Indian Civil Service.

What I said was, that the hon. Member for King's County proposed to subject all clerks to the same system as the civil servants in India were subjected to, and therefore I quoted from examination papers for the Indian Civil Service.

If that is the argument of the hon. Gentleman, it is an entire perversion of the meaning of the hon. Member for King's County. The hon. Member for King's County did not mean to say that junior clerks of the Civil Service were to be examined with questions as difficult as candidates for the Civil Service in India, among whom there may he sometimes senior wranglers and persons of a high degree of education. What he meant to say was, that the competition was to be open to the whole world, which is a totally different question. The questions in the Indian examinations may be difficult for the purpose to which they are applied. That is a subject upon which we are not now called upon to enter, and the argument and illustration, therefore, of the hon. Member for Maldon (Mr. Peacocke) are totally inapplicable to the purpose for which they were used. After having subjected this question to its annual examination, I trust the House will come to the conclusion that the course which the Government has taken is, as the Committee has described it, the most advanced step of which the present state of things will admit. They have established, with regard to those clerks whose duties are merely mechanical, a simple standard of examination. For those of whom more intellectual activity is required, they have established competitive examinations founded upon limited competition. But they are not prepared either to go back to the system of simple nomination, without either a test or competitive examination; nor, on the other hand, are they prepared to admit a system of indiscriminate and open examination, under which the heads of offices would be wholly irresponsible for the character and moral conduct of the persons whom they select. If the hon. Gentleman will not press his Amendment to a division, I shall then move the Previous Question.

Sir, perhaps I have some right to say a few words upon this question, because I have on former occasions taken a strong part in opposition to my noble Friend. I fully agree with my noble Friend, and with the right hon. Baronet who has just sat down, that a great question such as this is not to be decided upon the absurdity or excellence of any examination papers, and I think that it ought not to depend upon the character of the examiners themselves. It is a question which stretches far beyond such points as those, and I trust that the House will never come to a resolution that these offices shall be submitted to general competition, without having given it their most serious attention. I say this because the grounds upon which on this occasion I oppose, and on other occasions I have opposed measures of this kind, do not rest upon any notion that men can be over-educated for any purpose whatever, but upon the conviction that if you were to make the competition open, you would do the people of this country a great moral and political injury. If the minds of the young men of the country generally were diverted to the object of becoming Government stipendiaries, it would go far to destroy the independent spirit of the nation and that limited action of the Government which all wish to see still more limited than at present. This is a political incidence of our times, but it is one which any man who wishes to be assumed to belong to the party of progress should not for a moment neglect. If the youth of this country were bred up, like the youth of Germany, to look forward to a Government office as the highest aim of their lives, it would very much injure our national independence and damage our national spirit. At the same time, let me call attention to a point which has not to-night, and, indeed, has never been brought prominently before the House—namely, that you do not initiate a system of open competition. It is neither open, nor in any degree a general competition. For a very high order of merit examinations of a very high intellectual character will always command the best men, because the best men will enter for the prize and obtain it. But a competition of an ordinary character such as this, will be limited and regulated by the class of persons who choose to avail themselves of it. The competition is not of a high class, the qualifications are not of a high order. The result of such a system will therefore be, that you will secure only the intellectual attainments of a certain class of society; and that the competition will be determined by the means which the candidates respectively possess of getting "crammed." It will become simply a question of money. The poor man will be utterly excluded from the contest, whatever his talents or efficiency, if the system which has been advocated to-night is ever adopted. Such a system must assume a more or less mechanical character, and success will be attained by more or less mechanical means—that is to say, the men who get themselves "crammed" by those persons who are known as "coaches" will almost invariably win. These competitions must not be compared with examinations at the universities or even at the public schools, because there you have a general variety of intellect with which the "coach" is incapable of dealing. But in the case of which I am speaking the class of intellect will be as ordinary and limited as the range of subjects, and the "coach" will be quite able to command both. Hence, any man of moderate capacity, if he can. only afford to pay for a tutor, will be almost certain of succeeding. Now, whatever were the faults of the old plan of nominations, it had at least this recommendation, that it scattered offices among men in all parts of the country. Every Member of Parliament, at one time or other, had one or two nominations; and if he was a very active and useful member, probably ho got more. Accordingly, the places were disseminated over the length and breadth of the land, without any distinction of class; and, on the whole, the body of men thus obtained worked well, with integrity and efficiency. But the practical effect of the system now proposed would be to limit the candidates to one class of the people—those in large towns, who have the opportunity of preparing for the examination at the cheapest rate. I know that to a certain extent that has already happened. Therefore, I hope that people will open their eyes to the fact that the system of open competition, which appears to benefit the public at large by throwing the service open to them, really tends to convert it into the appanage of a small and particular class, with whom the bulk of the community are by their circumstances prevented from competing. When once this question is thoroughly examined and understood, I am satisfied that there will be a change of opinion as to the value of open competition. The people of this country ought not generally to be encouraged to look to the public offices as a means of livelihood. At first the system of competition was, no doubt, serviceable as an indirect agent in promoting national education; but education is now making such advances, that I do not think we need continue to resort to a stimulus of this kind. In the recent debates we were warned of the danger of banding the schoolmasters into an army of stipendiaries; but what an army of stipendiaries would be created under the system which my hon. Friend proposes. If you wish to sap the independence of the English people, I do not believe you can do so more effectually than by carrying out the principle of open competition.

said, he was somewhat surprised that the noble Lord (Lord Stanley) had objected that the arguments against the present system advanced this year were the same as those advanced last year. That was a singular objection. It might be convenient for hon. Members who sat on the front bench to change their opinions every twelvemonth, but the repetition of the arguments in this case only showed that they were confirmed by the experience of another year. Then the noble Lord had said he did not think any of those arguments were of a formidable character, but he had failed to deal with any one of them. The noble Lord had compared the competitive system to a judicial tribunal, forgetting that no judicial tribunal claimed total immunity from responsibility, or carried on its proceedings with closed doors, as did the Civil Service Commissioners. Then the noble Lord had said it was not the practice to ask all the questions on the examination paper. If hat were so, it would open the door to favouritism of a very objectionable character.

explained, that he had merely said that no candidate was expected to answer every question on the paper.

But the argument of the right hon. Gentleman the Secretary for War (Sir George Lewis) was, that there must be these difficult questions for the purpose of excluding a great number of candidates; and therefore the right hon. Gentleman defended the examination upon totally different grounds to those occupied by the noble Lord. The right hon. Gentleman (Sir George Lewis) had complained that attempts had been made to cover the subject with ridicule. But such attempts were quite unnecessary, for he would defy any hon. Gentleman to add to the amount of absurdity already involved in it. It was an absurdity to allow the Civil Service Commissioners to frame all the examinations of all the public departments for which they had to examine candidates. Was it possible they could be better judges than the heads of the various departments as to the requirements of the candidates for employment in the departments themselves? But a still greater absurdity was the fact, that by the operation of the present system a great many of the best men that could be obtained were excluded from a great many of the departments. It had been well and wisely said in a past debate that, "If that system had prevailed a few years ago, the Duke of Wellington would not have been a soldier, and Watt would not have been an engineer." That was summing up in the most conclusive manner the real objections to the system. By it a great many young men might be obtained, but what was wanted were young men of personal energy and activity. He did not mean to argue against those persons called bookworms, but there were many men who would prove of real service and value to the Crown, but who were unable to pass through these examinations. But the greatest objection to the whole system was, that it was at variance with what had always been the policy of the Government of this country. The Civil Service Commissioners enjoyed great irresponsibility, and monopolized all the patronage of the country. He had, himself, brought before the House last year a case, as to which all he asked was, that the House should be allowed to know on what grounds the Commissioners had rejected a particular candidate who, he thought, had not been fairly dealt with. In reply to his request, the Commissioners had answered not only "We refuse to give any explanation or afford any information as to the mode of conducting any of our examinations, but we are of opinion, that if such an inquiry were to be permitted, our public utility would be impaired." The ground on which he asked the House to refuse its assent to the Resolution was, that it was conducted on a system utterly at variance with every other existing institution in the country.

remarked, that some inconvenience might arise from the adoption of the Resolution of the hon. Member for King's County (Mr. Hennessy); but, so far as it affirmed the abstract proposition that the patronage of the Government ought not to be exercised from political considerations, he entirely concurred in it. As a very young Member of the House, he was hardly competent to speak of the practical working of a system of Government patronage; but the impression which prevailed out of doors was, that there was not much chance of a person being nominated for an appointment who was not friendly to those who sat on that (the Government) side of the House. He had not such a poor opinion of those constituencies which were so ill-judged as to return hon. Members sitting opposite to him, as to suppose that there were not among them persons of integrity and ability sufficient to afford valuable public service; and he would remind those who were most in favour of the system of Government patronage, that a time might come when their friends would be out of office, and when, probably, their opinions as to its expediency or propriety would undergo a change. As for heads of departments being made responsible for the subordinate employés, he did not see how that could be done, any more than the Postmaster General could be responsible for the honesty of the letter-carriers. He therefore thought, that if the present system of patronage were given up, and any other adopted, they would not lose so far as the efficiency and honesty of the public service was concerned. But he believed a change in the system might easily be devised without any cumbrous machinery, which would remove from Government patronage those objections so often urged against it. There was, however, a more important bearing on the question. Looking to the future, he could not help thinking that in that democratic age, it was of great importance that those electors who had to vote for Members of that House should understand that deep responsibility rested upon them in giving their votes, and that they should not in giving their votes be influenced by any but public motives. But he believed the present system of giving nominations for Government situations for purely political considerations was productive of serious evils in many constituencies. At the same time he believed that the Government endeavoured to administer their patronage as purely as possible, and he could bear testimony that, at all events, they had given up jobbing in the dockyards. But he could not help looking to the future. And he believed the question which must sooner or later come before the House was that of admitting the lower classes to the exercise of the franchise. He did not wish to discuss the question of Reform; but one objection which was raised against it was that it would lower the character of the representatives of the people who were sent to that House. His belief was, that if a Reform Bill passed, there would be no sudden change, but that the operation, whether for good or evil, would be most gradual. But he could not help thinking that any means which could be devised of diminishing the power of individual Members in the way of pushing themselves or their friends into office would be very judicious. He did not mean to assert that what had occurred in America must occur here; but it was not without interest to observe that the first six Presidents of America had only discharged seventy-throe persons from public situations in forty-four years, and their public servants were good and faithful. But as soon as General Jackson was chosen President, he inaugurated a new system by which those who had in any way opposed his election were dismissed from office. The result was that in one year he dismissed nearly 2,000 men out of their situations. From that time he believed the same principle had been followed in the United States, and, in his opinion, from its adoption could be traced a rapid decline of the morality of the nation and the character of its public men He should not like such a thing to happen to this country, and he very much wished that we could get rid of the greatest reproach of our present constitution, that the party in power did strengthen its position by the expenditure of public money and by giving situations to persons on account of their political opinions and without reference either to their merits or to their power of serving the country.

Sir, I will not detain the House for more than a few minutes, as I do not rise with the intention of entering upon the general question. But there is one part of this system which seems to me to be open to serious objection, and of which I desire to have some explanation from those who are competent to give it. With regard to the general question, I entirely concur in the tribute which the right hon. Baronet the Secretary of State for War has paid to the existing Civil Service Commissioners. I have long had the honour of the acquaintance of both those Gentlemen, and I believe that no difficult public duty was ever discharged with more perfect fairness than theirs has been. I have never heard of even the slightest suspicion of unfairness; but if the competitive system were extended as my hon. Friend desires, I cannot help fearing that considerable difficulty might be experienced in carrying on the examinations in such a manner as to avoid the perpetration of great injustice. The particular point to which I wish to call attention is the practice which did prevail, and, I believe, still prevails, of compelling young men who have held the position of temporary clerks in our great offices to undergo a competitive examination, and run the risk of having certificates refused to them, before permitting them to be placed on the permanent establishment of clerks. Nothing can be more completely objectionable or unjust than such a system. When I was at the Admiralty a case of this kind came before me. A young man held the office of temporary clerk in one of the dockyards, and conducted himself extremely well. After remaining there some time he was transferred to the Admiralty offices at Whitehall, and attached to the shipbuilding department, under Sir Baldwin Walker. His conduct was so good that Sir Baldwin Walker made a special application that he might be appointed permanent clerk and attached to that department. I at once acceded to the request, feeling that Sir Baldwin Walker was entitled to the assistance of a man whom he had found to be practically valuable. I was then told it was essential to the completion of the appointment that this young man, who had been five or six years in the public service, should pass through, a competitive examination in order to have his fitness tested. I refused to comply with such an extremely unreasonable requirement, and I requested a conference with the Commissioners on the subject. I put this question to them—"Suppose this young man fail in his examination before you, are you prepared to refuse his certificate? because if you do, and the circumstances are brought to the knowledge of Parliament, I cannot conceive anything more calculated to cast discredit on the whole system." What are these competitive examinations intended to do? To test the fitness of applicants for an office. It will be acknowledged, I think, that at best they are an imperfect test. They may be the best test that can be devised for an untried man, but nobody will ever tell me that competitive examinations are to be compared to actual experience, and to the proof of fitness afforded by actual service. The very fact of the time which this young man spent in the public service, where by his conduct he entitled himself to promotion, may have unfitted him for passing an examination. How could anything be more intolerant or unjust than to refuse a certificate under such circumstances? And I said to the Commissioners, "If you are not at liberty to refuse a certificate, why is the examination to be gone through?" I do not know what Member of the Government is supposed to be responsible for this system, but I appeal to the Government at large whether, in cases such as that to which I have referred, young men ought to be exposed to the absurd risk of having their Certificates refused. I shall be glad to hear that the system has been altered, if such be the case; but, if it still prevails, I appeal to the common sense of the House whether it is not high time that these unfair trials should be given up.

Sir, perhaps I can best answer the question of the right hon. Gentleman, having had some recent experience of the nature he has referred to in my own department. The difficulty is greater than he has stated, inasmuch as it is felt not only with regard to competitive examinations, but all the ordinary test examinations of the Commissioners. It arises in this way. The Superannuation Act declares that no clerk shall be entitled to superannuation allowance unless he has received the certificate of the Civil Service Commissioners; and therefore, without that certificate, he would not be entitled to a superannuation allowance on leaving the service. Temporary clerks were, prior to the establishment of the Civil Service Commission, generally appointed without any preliminary examination; and the question then is, whether they can be transferred to the permanent branch of the department without an examination. If they are so transferred, they are clearly not entitled to any superannuation allowance. There were a great many temporary clerks in the War Office, and, as the result of inquiries instituted by a Committee, it was recommended that a number of these should be transferred from the temporary to the permanent branch of the establishment. That change has been recently effected in the appointments to the Accountant General's Department, and then arose the difficulty which my right hon. Friend has just pointed out—namely, the injustice of subjecting to competitive examination clerks who, having been for some time in the public service, may be supposed to hare forgotten whatever literary attainments they possessed when they left school; or, at all events, who, if their attainments when young were not very extensive, have shown by their conduct in office their fitness for the position of public servants. It appeared to me, as it did to my right hon. Friend, that there was considerable hardship in subjecting those persons to a competitive examination, and, therefore, I decided, after conferring with the Civil Service Commissioners, that such temporary clerks should be subjected to a qualifying examination only if they had not previously qualified for the establishment. The Civil Service Commissioners admitted the justice of that view, and made arrangements by which they agreed to grant a certificate upon the candidates passing a qualifying examination.

said, that he was anxious to refute a libel quoted by the hon. Member for Windsor (Mr. Vansittart), to the effect that the candidates for competitive examination who came from the Universities of Oxford, Cambridge, and Dublin had neither the manners of gentlemen nor the physical capacity enabling them to ride or perform other duties entailed by the public service. He believed such a charge to be entirely unfounded. The qualities attributed by the hon. Member for Honiton (Mr. Cochrane) to a good public officer—namely, good principles, good habits, good judgment, general intelligence, and energy—reminded him of the story of a gentleman who, when asked by a lady to select for her a governess possessing every virtue under the sun, replied that he had long been looking for such a piece of perfection to make her his wife. Those qualities could only be developed by; long experience and discovered by long acquaintance. He believed that competitive examinations had been of the greatest use in this country; they had not only kept out incompetent persons from public situations, but they promoted and elevated the standard of education among the middle classes. If he might use the expression, it had "brushed up" persons uncommonly when they found that mere political interest would not obtain for them an appointment. But, like all good things, a hobby might be ridden too far. An educational test was an excellent thing for all, situations where education formed the main requirement, but where education had little or no part in the duties to be fulfilled, such a test was not only unnecessary but often ludicrous. In his own district examinations were insisted upon in the case of post carriers, who had to walk twenty miles a day for the magnificent remuneration of 12s. a week; but it was found that those persons whose heads enabled them to pass the examination had not legs sufficiently strong to carry them through their work, while those whose legs were good enough for the purpose had not brains sufficient to undergo a stiff examination. In fact, the office was commonly confined to those who could only read and write. A test was likewise insisted upon in the case of boatmen for the Customs Department. Some time since he; was speaking to an officer high in that department, formerly a Member of that House, and, observing that he seemed in rather low spirits, he asked whether he was not satisfied with the couple of boat-men who had just been appointed after a preliminary examination. "Why, no," was the reply, "not exactly; they are a brace of schoolmasters who come from a midland county in England; they had never seen a boat in their lives before, and whenever a breeze gets up I am always afraid that we shall go to Davy's locker." Every morning ho read with interest, and some little uneasiness, the columns of The Times, to see whether some fatal accident had not occurred. For the Indian appointments he believed a better course could not be adopted than that of competitive examination. He was glad to find that the hon. Member for Honiton (Mr. Cochrane) did not adopt the argument of the hon. Member for Windsor (Mr. Vansittart), that good principles and sound judgment were incompatible with general intelligence and energy. He trusted the hon. Member for Windsor was not a disciple of the school founded by Ensign Northerton when he exclaimed "D—Homo!" He could assure the House that he was not acquainted with any one who had failed to pass an examination; but having looked through the papers used in the examination for the Indian Civil Service, he thought it would be servicable to the cause of competitive examination to have some of the questions brought under the notice of the House. When he read one of the papers drawn up by Mr. Knight Watson, it occured to him that some of the questions in it might very appropriately be published in that periodical which devoted itself to the elucidation of curious points of literature. He felt himself quite at sea in respect to some questions; but, not wishing to be written down that which Mr. Dogberry was so anxious to have himself written down, ha thought he would ask his right hon. Friend the Member for Sutherland (Sir D. Dundas) what he thought of the paper. That right hon. Gentleman was one of the most accomplished scholars in the House; but, in reply to an inquiry as to the character of the questions in that paper, he said, "I could not answer them, and there is not another man in the House who could answer them." He should like to hear what the right hon. Gentleman the Secretary for War thought of those questions. He had a high opinion of the ability and acquirements of the right hon. Gentleman, whose work on the Astronomy of the Ancients he had recently read with great pleasure, but he believed that he would be unable to answer those questions, and he ventured to think that the same might be said of the right hon. Gentleman the Member for Buckinghamshire (Mr. Disraeli), notwithstanding his brilliant literary talents and historical acumen. He had to observe also that some of the works which it would be necessary to consult, in order to answer questions given by Mr. Watson, might be found in the Library of the British Museum, the Bodleian, or other such libraries, but they were totally unknown to ordinary literature. Some of the papers used in the examination for the Civil Service of India were excellent; but there were questions put by Mr. Knight Watson which referred only to some theory or crotchet of the examiner himself. For instance—"What is your conception of the character of Hamlet? Do you consider that any one of the dramatis personæ was introduced as a foil to Hamlet?" He had read, he believed all the Shakspearian commentators, and his opinion was that the crotchet displayed in that question was Mr. Knight Watson's. In the life of Turner, the great artist, lately published, it was stated that, in answer to, a question as to whether he had read Mr. Ruskin's praise of him, Turner replied that he was obliged to him; for all the civil things that he had said, but he had given him credit for so many things which had never entered his head that he would never read his books any more. He believed that Mr. Knight Watson was inclined to attribute to Shakspeare more than had ever entered into the poet's head. He did not wish to do the examiner any injustice, and he should therefore mention that at the head of Mr. Knight Watson's paper on English literature there was this note—"You are not expected to answer the whole of this paper. A wide range has been taken to suit the reading, necessarily, various, of different candidates." Mr. Knight Watson was a man of great learning and vast knowledge, and he did not wish it to be supposed that he meant to say anything unkind of him, but he must express his opinion, that if that learned examiner wrote a book explaining his own papers, he would produce as amusing a volume as that written by the Dean of Westminster, and one as interesting to the antiquary as any which Sir Francis Palgrave had produced. He would ask hon. Members to read those papers as a whole; and if when they had done so, they decided that they were such as ought to be set before young men leaving the Universities, he was content to suffer the censure of the House. He did not desire to decry the system of examination of candidates for the Civil Service; his wish was to render that system more satisfactory, by curbing some of the examiners in what he considered to be an anxiety for an unnecessary display of learning.

said, that while he admitted that there ought to be a discriminating judgment exercised in respect of the nature of the examination to which a particular class of candidates were to be subjected, he could not understand the argument sometimes used, that a young man who had been distinguished in college for industry and attainments must become good for nothing when he entered the Civil Service. In every branch of the Civil Service he knew young men who had been successful and remarkable for their good conduct during their University career, and who were equally so in the discharge of their official duties. It appeared to him that that was just what might be expected in most canes.

said, that on looking to the result of the civil service examination at Woolwich, he found that scarcely any boy who had been at an English university or public school had received an appointment. It was very desirable that young men educated at those universities and schools should have an opportunity of entering the public service; and he suggested that at the examination they should have given to them, at starting, a certain number of marks.

observed; that the Motion of the hon. Gentleman the Member for King's County as explained by the right hon. Baronet the Secretary for War, was a very different thing from the same Motion as explained by the noble Lord the Member for King's Lynn. The House would remember that for some ten or fifteen clerkships in the India House there had been a very large number of competitors. That showed that a competitive examination was not only beneficial to the successful candidates, but also to the many whom it stimulated to study the subjects required. He trusted that the Amendment would be withdrawn; and he might have been inclined to vote with the right hon. Gentleman who intimated his wish to move the Previous Question, were it not that he observed that the arguments proceeding from the Treasury bench were the same stereotyped arguments which had been used on former occasions. The present limited system of competition was a delusion, and he hoped that the House, by supporting the original Motion, would to some extent encourage the system of open competition, which would prove a great stimulus to education among the working and lower middle classes. In reference to some observations which had fallen from the hon. Member for West Norfolk (Mr. Bentinck) he begged to say that in communicating with the Commissioners he experienced the greatest courtesy, and found them willing to enter into a discussion relative to the nature of the examination papers, and to give such general information as they thought they might do, consistently with justice to others.

said, he must deny that the training necessary for success in competitive examinations un-suited persons for the active and vigorous pursuits of life. He observed that a great number of the cricketers belonging to Trinity College, Dublin, obtained honours at the University; and he believed that the hon. and learned Member for Cambridge University (Mr. Walpole), who was so distinguished for his acquirements, offered while at college to pull a boat, together with his three brothers, against any other for brothers in the kingdom. If anything placed people in the outlying districts on a level with those living near head quarters, it was the system of competitive examination. He therefore concurred in the principle of the Motion proposed by the hon. Member for King's County, but he doubted whether it was not rather prematurely pressed forward at present, and he hoped it would be withdrawn.

said, the question as to the desirability or non-desirability of examinations did not at all apply, because, as ho understood the right hon. Gentleman the Secretary for War to state, it was the intention of the Government to carry out that portion of the report of the Commissioners which stated that in all cases there should be a limited bonâ fide competition for all appointments to the Civil Service, by which he meant, that the three persons who competed should each have passed a previous test examination. It had been said that the Government ought to act on the same principle in making these appointments that private establishments went upon in appointing their clerks, and who ever heard of competitive examinations for appointments in private establishments? But ministers were not in the position of masters of private establishments. They themselves were but servants of the Crown, though of a higher class, and the tenure of their servitude was but precarious; and to suppose that they had no other inducements in making appointments except to promote the efficiency of the public service was what no one could believe. He believed that the great dislike to open competition arose from its being thought it would introduce a different class of men into the service. No doubt there was a great deal to be said against that, if it were so. It was said that there was no instance under the exist- ing system of the secrets of the Service haying ever been betrayed. But that was not the fact, for he remembered that when Sir W. Young went out as High Commissioner to Corfu, a private, despatch from him appeared in a newspaper. [The CHANCELLOR of the EXCHEQUER: It was stolen.] He was of opinion that if a high standard of examination were fixed, and the competition were open, as in the case of the Indian Civil Service, the persons so appointed would be pretty nearly of the same class as those who now occupied that position. He believed that the notion that open competition would introduce a new class of persons was not justified by analogous experience. The Motion of his hon. Friend was of the greatest possible importance, as carrying out the report of the Civil Service Committee on which he sat, that there should be always a bonâ fide competition between three or five candidates for each appointment, and that occasional experiments of free and open competition for admission to junior clerkships should from time to time be made. They were not asking that the whole Civil Service should be thrown open, but that step by step they should endeavour to net as much talent from every part of the United Kingdom as they could, and that the various systems of nomination should gradually disappear.

said, he had been anxious to say a few words on this subject, because it happened that during the recess he had heard a great deal with reference to it. He believed that the common sense of this country (no very slight element of strength) was rapidly approaching the conclusions expressed in the Amendment of the hon. Member for Honiton. There were two or three matters which had almost become axiomatic. One was that useful education and instruction preparatory for these competitive examinations were two very different things. Another axiom was that the examiners were rapidly acquiring the title of the Secret Service Examiners. The House was perfectly aware, when public thought became expressed in this terse manner, it had been matured. Another feeling was, that the Government of this country was finding this system a means of evading responsibility while really exercising patronage. That was important, for, however obnoxious the system of public patronage for political purposes might be, it had this merit, that it entailed responsibility, which was exacted in the House. The system of political patronage created not one half the mistrust which he saw growing up under this system. If the hon. Member for Honiton (Mr. Baillie Cochrane) thought fit to divide, he should vote with him; at the same time, he did not think that by taking a division they would hasten the progress of public opinion on this question, but that in the course of two or three years these views would become more general.

, in reply to the remark made by the hon. Member for Honiton, to the effect that the officers of the army had deteriorated since the system of public competition had been introduced, contended that the statement was erroneous, observing that the whole of the scientific corps were introduced into the service through the medium of competition. He felt quite sure, he might add, that his right hon. Friend the Secretary for India would not say that the system as introduced by the noble Lord the Member for King's Lynn into the scientific corps in India had not answered its purpose. For his own part, he could bear testimony to the fact, that having been public examiner at the time, the candidates who presented themselves were far superior to those put forward by nomination. Indeed, so far as conduct and science went, it was undeniable that those officers who had been introduced by means of open competition were most meritorious. Now, it had been stated by the hon. Member for Norfolk (Mr. Bentinck) that the heads of departments gave no information to the examiners as to the nature of the duties to be performed by candidates, if admitted. The fact was, however, that the most explicit information was given on that head, while it was also a mistake to suppose that a large amount of patronage was thrown into the hands of the Commissioners. They based their decision on the report of the examiners, whose examination papers, in their turn, the Commissioners duly investigated.

said, he understood it to be convenient to the House that he should withdraw his Amendment, and that a division should be taken on the Motion of the hon. Member for the King's County (Mr. Hennessy). That being so, he was prepared to withdraw his Motion, but of course the House would un- derstand the reason for his adopting that course, and would bear in mind the circumstances under which they were called upon to divide.

said, he should have great pleasure in, supporting the Resolution pure and simple, and he had more confidence in doing so, because he felt that they were treading on no untried or unexplored ground; for the question was not now between patronage on the one hand and competition on the other, but between open competition and limited competition: and having read with attention the Report on this subject, and the evidence appended to it, he was not surprised to find that the present system of limited competition had very few friends indeed. It had been stated by high authority that it was useless to the Government. To Members of Parliament it was inconvenient and irksome; for nominations to compete were in the great majority of cases nominations to failure and disappointment. That such patronage was exceedingly distasteful to them he was as thoroughly convinced as he could be of any truth of which, he had no personal experience. It was now too late in the day to say that open competition would not work well. It had been successful in the scientific branches of the army, and in the Indian Civil Service. In the course of the discussion on the opening of that service to public competition, Lord Ellenborough, himself an advocate for the principle, is reported to have said, "I feel the vanity of examination when applied to the discovery of abilities for administering an empire." But the Legislature did so apply it, with what success they had heard. If they did not shrink from the experiment in that service whose appointments were beyond their immediate control, why should they hesitate here where in case of any temporary failure the statesmen were at home and ready to apply the remedy. In the preceding Session, and in this, they had heard with pleasure a voice from the Horse Guards in favour of the system; and last, not least, they had the authority of the House of Commons; which, on the 24th of April, 1856, passed a Resolution in favour of open competition. He did not agree that the recent controversy on education afforded an argument against the Resolution. The object of the controversy was to obtain a maximum of education for a minimum, of expenditure. The object of the Resolution was to obtain a maximum of education without any expenditure at all, for it would give a stimulus to education. And how much better it was to impress on the young men of this country that they must gain their advancement by the industrious cultivation of their intellect, rather than by wasting their time in the antechamber of a Minister, or by following the fortunes of a Member of Parliament, or courting too assiduously the dispensers, for the time being, of patronage and preferment.

said, that if the hon. Member for Honiton would allow his Amendment to be negatived without opposition, the House would then have an opportunity of dividing upon the Previous Question.

Question, "That the words proposed to be left out stand part of the Question," put, and agreed to.

Original Question again proposed.

Previous Question put, "That that Question be now put."

The House divided:—Ayes 66; Noes 87: Majority 21.

Fire Insurance—Leave

begged to move for leave to introduce a Bill to reduce the duty on Fire Insurance. He intended to confine himself to a simple statement involving the leading arguments on the question, and rely on them for the support of his Motion. The proposal he now had to make differed materially from those which he had had the honour of submitting on former occasions. He now proposed to reduce the duty from 3s. to 2s., and at the expiration of five years to reduce the duty another shilling, so that ultimately 2s. would be taken off the 3s. duty now chargeable on Fire Insurance. The duty at present collected was in round numbers £1,500,000. His proposition would affect only premiums below 6s. per cent. He calculated that insurances above 6s. per cent amounted to one-third of the sum at present received—namely £500,000. He had to deal then with the remaining £1,000,000, on which the reduction of 1s. from the 3s. duty would be one-third of a million, or £330,000. Supposing that proposition adopted, the Chancellor of the Exchequer would have in his hands the whole of the present revenue except £330,000. In addition to that sum he would have a certain amount which would represent the annual increase which took ! place in the tax. In 1859 the revenue received was £1,300,000, and in 1860 it: was £1,500,000, showing an increase of £200,000. The duty must increase with the increase of the national property. The increase derivable from that source might be fairly estimated at £100,000. The relaxation of the duty would also let loose a large amount of insurance which did not now find its way to insurance offices. This mightbeestimatedat£50,000. There would thus be £150,000 to be deducted from the: estimated loss of £330,000 of the present revenue. Taking these figures as the basis of his proposition, he calculated that the loss to the revenue the first year would be £180,000—no more; and if the £50,000 of increase on which he calculated should not accrue to the revenue, the loss would be £230,000. His second proposition was that on the expiration of five years a farther reduction of 1s. should take place. Now, if his calculations were worth anything—and if the returns made to the House could be relied on, they were entitled some consideration—in the course of five years the Chancellor of the Exchequer would have received £750,000 towards the deficiency which would then be made by the second reduction. But the House would have a better chance of understanding the character of the measure he now submitted if the right hon. Gentleman would permit the Bill to be introduced and printed, so that it might be fairly and quietly considered. This would be but a small concession, he thought, to the views: which had been expressed in so many petitions from all parts of the country. His argument was that the reductions would be made up. The duty was an increasing one, even under the present disadvantageous circumstances. He did not depend entirely upon his own opinion. This was the opinion of the fire insurance companies. He cited a passage from the journal of the Statistical Society, which set out in full the petitions of the fire insurance companies urging the reduction of the duty, and showing that the present high rates operated as a bounty to leave property uninsured. This was also the opinion of the merchants and others connected with the city of London who had petitioned the House on the subject. They stated that three-fifths of the property of the country was unprotected by insurance, chiefly owing to the high. duty. Mr. Samuel Browne, the well-known actuary of the Guardian Office, was of the same opinion. Another eminent authority on the subject, Mr. Leone Levi, said that the present high rate of duty encouraged the practice of not insuring at all, and that that practice appeared to be gaining ground. The agents of insurance companies had promoted petitions against the duty, and he had a number of letters from agents, showing the result of the duty in preventing parties insuring. He had it on the authority of the agent of an extensive fire insurance office in Dublin, that many persons had actually agreed to effect insurances for large amounts, and lodged deposits, who, when they subsequently came to understand that besides the Is. stamp on each policy the Government exacted a duty of 3s. per. cent, a sum much exceeding the amount of the premiums themselves, preferred to forfeit their deposits to paying a rate of duty which they considered disproportionate and excessive. Instances of a similar nature were of daily occurrence, and many such could be found in support of his Motion. Many persons, owing to the present high rate of duty, became their own insurers, and formed a joint stock fund, out of which they were paid their losses. He might cite the petitions of numerous corporate bodies and chambers of commerce in all parts of the kingdom to show the excessive rate of the duty and its strong claims to reduction. The Times newspaper in an article published in 1860, had summed up the question in a very effective way, pointing out the discouragement given to prudence by this impost, and the other objectionable qualities which sufficed so thoroughly to condemn it. Mr. Newmarch, a very high authority, stated, as a proof of its injurious operation, that 80 per cent of the insurable property in the metropolis alone was uninsured. Mr. Porter, in his Progress of the Nation, spoke of its influence in checking the practice of insurance; and Mr. Risborough Sharman, in his pamphlets, bore similar testimony. In making his Motion last year he was met by the assertion that his calculations were merely speculative; but calculations supported by such evidence as he could adduce ceased to be speculative, and ought, to a certain extent, to command the confidence of the House. The right hon. Gentleman the Chancellor of the Exchequer last year said that this measure was favoured by wealthy and powerfully or- ganized companies. Now, the truth was the fire insurance companies had no direct interest in the remission of this duty; on the contrary, they had a direct interest in its retention, because they now received a large sum of money, amounting to between four and five per cent, upon the million and a half sterling per annum which they were the instruments of collecting for the public Exchequer. Their percentage, upon that million and a half Was sufficient to pay a very large proportion of their expenditure. The statement, therefore, that these companies had exhibited any great anxiety upon this subject was by no means correct. It was only last year that they began to petition for this change, and he was glad to find that they had renewed their petitions this year. That fact proved that they believed their business would be increased by the reduction of the duty in a ratio that would compensate them for the immediate loss upon their percentage. Unless the reduction of the duty was followed by such an increase of their business, they must suffer by the change; and if their business increased, the public Exchequer would also be repaid for its temporary sacrifice. A noble Lord on the Treasury bench last year asked how they knew, that if the tax were reduced, a great part of it would not go into the pockets of these companies? That noble Lord must have meant by that the companies would raise their premiums. But such an argument was too ridiculous to need serious refutation. Why, after the great fire in Tooley Street, when some of the leading insurance offices intimated an intention to raise their premiums on that class of risks, three or four new companies were immediately started, as if by magic, and four or five millions of money were subscribed with the greatest ease by the public. If such was the result of a mere threat on the part of the old companies to raise the rates of insurances, surely competition might equally be trusted to check any similar attempt consequent on the relaxation of this duty. The agents of the fire insurance companies, who were in the best position for judging as to the exact opinions of the people, had borne uniform testimony to the fact that many persons refused to insure their goods in consequence of the duty. He contended that there was a great probability of an increase in the receipts from the duty if it were reduced in amount. There were other grounds why this oppressive tax should be relaxed in its severity. He had been told by some of his hon. Friends that he ought to have brought in his present Motion after the Budget. But test year, when he was asked by a Member of the Government to postpone a similar Motion until after the Budget, he was told when he brought it on that he was too late, and that the Government could not, at the request of an independent Member, alter their financial arrangements.

said, that it was Mr. Brand who asked him to postpone his Motion.

I did not ask the hon. Member who wished him to postpone his Motion, but what Member of the Government told him the Government could not alter their arrangements for an independent Member?

said, he might be out of order in referring to that conversation. He had been urged by an hon. Member whom he believed to be connected with the Government to postpone his Motion until after the Budget, and he inferred that if he did so he should stand a better chance of success, but he found he took very little by his Motion. He did not wish the House to imagine that he was asking for the repeal of the whole tax. The sum by which the revenue would suffer was, indeed, so very small that the sale of a few old stores at Woolwich, or the refusal to alter some ship, would make up the amount, and the £250,000 would cease to be a deficiency in a few hours. What was this tax? If it were a property tax, why not levy it on all insurable property? Was it a tax on prudence? Was it right for a man to insure his property? If the Government replied in the affirmative, he asked "Why, then, do you punish him for the exercise of a virtue of which you approve?" One man insured his property and his next door neighbour did not. The Government fined the former, why, then, should they not also fine the latter? He might be told that there were other taxes equally oppressive, but he called upon those hon. Members who held that opinion to show him a single tax so false in its incidence, and so unjust and unequal in its operation. Suppose a rich man having £5,000 worth of property and insuring to the extent of £3,000. For that insurance he paid £4 10s. to the Government and Is. for the stamp in excess of the sum charged by the fire office as an equivalent for the risk. Then, suppose five tradesmen who insured in five different offices £1,000 each. They paid 5s. for their policy stamps and £7 10s. for duty. But suppose two hundred workmen insuring for £30 each. They paid £10 stamp duty, where the rich man only paid 1s. in addition to the three per cent duty. The next case he would suppose would be that of an agriculturist, the tenant of the rich man. Did he pay £4 11s. like the rich man, or £7 15s. like the tradesmen, or £15 like the poor men? No, the Chancellor of the Exchequer told him—"We will charge you 1s. for insuring your £5,000, and that is only for your stamp." Why should not the Chancellor of the Exchequer place an ad valorem stamp on all policies of insurance instead of charging a uniform rate? He believed that the Chancellor of the Exchequer would get the whole amount he now raised by a more equitable assessment of the duty. Last year the right hon. Gentleman asked upon what ground of justice, reason, or policy this tax was to be taken out of the category of other imposts. He would put it to the House whether it was just to tax one class and not another. The products of industry arising from commerce were as important as those arising from agriculture, and deserved equal consideration. It was not surprising that the country protested against this tax, especially when it was in the power of the Chancellor of the Exchequer to remedy the evil and at the same time to open fresh, sources of revenue that would speedily make up any deficiency that might temporarily ensue. It was not prudent to inflict a fine upon a man for making cautious provision against loss. As a question of policy the present state of the tax was not defensible. Property lost to an individual was lost to the State; and if property was allowed to be destroyed without being replaced, it diminished the sources of national revenue, which were collected mainly upon the security of that property. He thought he had shown that upon the grounds of justice, of reason, and of policy, this tax ought to be removed, and certainly that it ought, at least, to be modified. The question was, however, met by the Chancellor of the Exchequer as one of expediency, and the reply was always "Wait until we have a surplus." There had been a sur- plus on many occasions since 1815, when the tax was last increased, but no reduction had ever been made. No hope even of reduction had been held out, and the only chance was the exercise of a little gentle pressure upon the Chancellor of the Exchequer, which he hoped the House would be willing to exercise upon the present occasion. He would conclude by moving for leave to introduce a Bill to reduce the duty on fire insurances.

I was in hopes that those hon. Members who intend to support the views of the hon. Gentleman would have taken an opportunity of stating their opinions, because it is obviously more convenient that the person whose duty it is to speak on behalf of the Government should hear what can be said by the advocates of a Motion which it is his duty to oppose. I must, therefore, come to the conclusion that hon. Gentlemen think that this subject has—in a great degree, I am bound to say, through the ingenuity, talent, and knowledge of the hon. Member—been exhausted in former years. I shall act upon that principle, but it would not be consistent with respect entirely to pass over the matter of the hon. Gentleman's speech. He began by asserting that the proper course for the Government to pursue was to allow his Bill to be introduced. I cannot admit that view, upon consideration either of precedent or of principle. I am not aware of any instance in which the Government has been a voluntary party to the introduction of a Bill affecting taxation unless it was prepared to assent to the mode of dealing with taxation which it proposed. I hope the House will meet this proposition at once, not only because such a course will be in accordance with precedent, but also because of the obvious mischief that would arise from the Parliament and the Government playing with questions of taxation, and admitting a preliminary step which they are not prepared to follow to its consequences. We should not allow expectations to be raised and hopes to be flattered out of doors with the conviction on our minds that these hopes and expectations must ultimately be disappointed. The hon. Gentleman says he is now proposing a gross reduction of £330,000. I demur to that proposition, as I do not think the reduction would be so small. He next says, that inasmuch as the fire insurance duty is increasing at the rate of £100,000 a year he is entitled to deduct that £100,000 a year from the gross loss, which would thus be reduced to £230,000. Again I demur to his proposition. Having to make the financial statement on Thursday, it has been my duty to receive estimates of the revenue for the coming year, and whatever they are we have taken credit on them for the increase that may fairly be expected from the insurance duties. Upon what principle does the hon. Gentleman venture in this cavalier method to appraise facts connected with revenue, and to assume an increase from year to year of £100,000 on these duties? I have a table of the produce of the duty for the last fourteen years.

The hon. Gentleman has given me no reference to documents to enable me to test his assertions.

I said the duty in 1859 was £1,300,000, and in 1861, £1,500,000, or thereabouts.

But the hon. Gentleman gives me no means of reference to verify his facts. There are considerable variations in the amount of these duties, and you cannot argue from a particular year that the increase on that year will continue in the following and all future years. As I have said, I have had no opportunity of testing the hon. Gentleman's figures. But in an account extending from 1842 to 1856–1842 being the year from which dates the great spring of this country in wealth and prosperity—I find that during those fourteen years, instead of an annual increment of £100,000 a year, the increase of the duty is only £25,000 a year, and the hon. Member, therefore, ought only to deduct that amount instead of £100,000. However, whether the effect of the hon. Gentleman's Motion is to take away £300,000 or £500,000 from the Exchequer, my conclusion must be the same. He refers to data said to have been before supplied as to the value of the property which, in his glowing pictures, he believes will all be insured against fire if the duty is only reduced. But he is entirely wrong in assuming that those data are unquestioned. One of his allegations was, that there are 22,000,000 tons of shipping in this country, valued at £13 a ton, and in that way he made out a sum of close upon £300,000,000, which also formed a part of his brilliant prospect. But I find that that fact was questioned by me on a previous occasion, and I then pointed out that, instead of 22,000,000 tons of shipping, we have not in this country, according to official returns, more than 4,600,000 tons. The hon. Gentleman says there is an identity of interest between the Treasury and the fire insurance companies. That, I must confess, is an extraordinary statement. The fire insurance companies are interested in the premiums—the Treasury in the duty. Says the hon. Gentleman, "Reduce the duty, and then you will have a common interest." I say "No ! If you want an identity of interest, the companies must reduce the premiums in the same proportion as we reduce the duty." Then your argument becomes intelligible, and you may assert that there will be a recovery of the amount sacrificed in the one ease as in the other; but there can be no common interest when the companies run no risk, and the entire risk is run by the Treasury. I know that the companies will gain by an increase of business, and the Treasury by the consequent increase of duty; but the Treasury will only gain after having made an immense sacrifice, while the companies will gain without having made any sacrifice at all. The hon. Gentleman gives us a multitude of speculative opinions, and tells us of persons who he believes would insure if it were not for the high duty. Well, of course I am not denying that a reduction of the duty would bring about an increase of insurance. That is no disputable proposition. This is in the nature of an indirect tax upon consumption, and it is hardly possible to reduce such a tax without creating an increased consumption. But the whole question of prudence and policy depends, in the first place, upon the means which you have at your command, and in the second place upon the amount of reviving and recovering power which you will bring into play by reduction. Now, we have only the bare assertion of the hon. Gentleman as to this recuperative power; but our national debt, with its annual charge, our army and navy and other public services, have very ravenous appetites, and require to be fed with very solid food, and will not be satisfied with any dreamy speculations that the property assured will be multiplied three or four fold by the reduction now demanded. Let us, then, look about us for something like facts and experimental evidence. The hon. Gentleman, referring to what he calls the unjust exemption of farming stock, advises us not to remove the exemption, but to abolish the tax. Now, I do not think it is easy to defend this exemption, upon its own merits; but it is surely a singular doctrine to urge that wherever, in the case of a tax contributing a large sum to the public necessities, there is some partial exemption which is not to be defended upon its merits, we should not remove the exemption, but abolish the tax. Upon that principle the assessed taxes would disappear at once, with I do not know how many other taxes, and such a course would be destructive to the credit of our finance. But this exemption, applied to farming stock, affords the most conclusive piece of evidence which we can bring to bear upon the present question. The hon. Gentleman assumes that there will be a large increase of insurance if the duty is reduced by 33 per cent. Well, we have the means of ascertaining pretty nearly what increase there would be if the duty were abolished altogether, and one scruple, one pennyweight of evidence of this nature, outweighs all the loose and irresponsible evidence of other kinds which can be swept together. In 1834 the value of farming stock insured was £37,250,000. The duty upon farming stock was then entirely abolished, and in 1856 the value insured had risen to £62,250,000, the increase in 22 years being 67 l.5th per cent. But the question is not whether there was an increase in the amount of property insured. The question is, how much faster it increased as compared with the property liable to duty. Now, in 1842, the property which remained liable to the full duty paid was £483,000,000, and in 1856 it was insured to the amount of £802,000,000 showing an increase during the same 22 years of 65 5–6ths per cent, so that there was only a difference of about 1½ per cent in the rate of increase between the two kinds of property, though in the case of farming stock there was not a paltry reduction of 33 per cent but the entire abolition of the duty. Now, I want the hon. Member, when next he brings forward this question, to dispose of this fact, instead of indulging in mere speculation. The hon. Gentleman is an excellent painter. Most taxes are odious things, and he has presented us with as repulsive a picture of this tax as the most skilful artist could have drawn. "If it be right," he says, "to insure, why punish the insurer?" Then the doctrine of the hon. Gentleman is, that no tax ought to be raised except from the sins and crimes of the community; that none of the operations of life ought to be subjected to taxation if they are consonant with the dictates of prudence. This moving appeal may be made on everything subjected to taxation. Can anything be more proper than that the artisan should be able to purchase sugar for his family? Then why do you punish him by making him pay a duty on it? Why do you make him pay a duty of 12s. 8d., 13s. 10d., 16s., and 18s. 4d. per cwt. on his sugar, according to the quality? Why, this doctrine with regard to taxation is one of the most alarming ever proffered to the House; and I trust the hon. Gentleman, before he deals again with this explosive and inflammatory material, will consider to what length his doctrine is likely to be accepted, and what consequences it may produce. The hon. Gentleman says we give nothing whatever in return for the duty on fire insurances. I should like to know what we give in return for any tax or duty. With the exception of the postal service, we give nothing in return for any specific tax or duty but the general protection of the law and the institutions of civilized society. That is my answer to the hon. Gentleman when he says we do nothing in return for the duty on fire insurance. The hon. Gentleman is urgent on another subject. He complains of the manner in which he has been used, and is very likely to be used again, with regard to the time at which he has brought on his Motion. On this, too, he has appealed to the feeling of his auditory. In a former year, he says, he was applied to by a Member of the Government to put off his Motion, which he intended to bring on before the Budget was proposed. My feelings were so much moved that I was very desirous to know who this Member of the Government might be, that I might visit his conduct with marked disapproval. But my efforts have failed; that Member of the Government has "melted into thin air," and no trace of him is to be found. The fact is this—it is the duty of every Government, a duty always acted on, to object to any individual and isolated proposals for the repeal of taxes before the House has within its view the general state of the revenue and charges of the country. That is a ruling principle, and one not in opposition to any popular principle, on the part of the Government; on the contrary, the popular principle of government, and the control of it by the House of Commons, depend on nothing so much as this—that it should narrow into a single measure the financial operations of the year. If the Government were asked continually to repeal this tax and that tax, the consequence would be that the House of Commons would never know what it was about, and would be unable to discharge its duty to the country. I say, therefore, that the hon. Gentleman is too soon with his Motion. On Thursday night, or within forty-eight hours, the hon. Gentleman will be wiser—at least, he will know more—I do not mean it in any other sense—of the state of the revenue than he does now. That is the reason the hon. Gentleman ought not to have brought on his Motion this evening. He says, that had he brought it forward after the Budget, he would have been told that he was too late. I assure the hon. Gentleman that it is not so. He says that no Government, and no Parliament, have thought proper to apply a surplus, even when there was a surplus, to the reduction of the duty on fire insurances. This may prove either that the Parliament or the Government were too stupid to perceive its necessity, or that cases for reduction of duty were made out still stronger than that of insurances. If the hon. Gentleman will take this into his consideration it may modify his enthusiasm for the reduction of this duty. But I will show that his assumption is not correct, that the door is shut for the repeal of a duty after the Budget is proposed. On a former occasion I opposed a Motion of the hon. Member for Ashton (Mr. Milner Gibson) for the abolition of the advertisement duty. I believe the hon. Gentleman beat us before the Budget was proposed; but after it was brought forward the House of Commons adhered to its opinion that it was a case on its own merits for abolition, and the Government was compelled to accept it. Why does not the hon. Gentleman do the same? Why does he insist on proceeding in the dark? Why does he ask us to commit ourselves at once in favour of this claim, in preference to all others, without waiting till the House is in possession of full information as to the state of the revenue? The truth in, this question must be judged like all other questions of finance. The hon. Gentleman save I keep a very tight hold of the keys of the public chest, and that nothing but absolute necessity will make me relax my grasp. It is refreshing to hear such a charge made in this House, because too great a readiness to part with taxes has been the most frequent charge against me. But no one is justified in voting for the hon. Gentleman's Motion unless he is ready either to reduce this duty, whether the public income can afford the reduction or not, or to reduce it in preference to every other claim that may be advanced. A vote for the Motion means no less than an assertion of these two propositions. To both these propositions I wish to obtain from the House a negative. I must lay-down what appears to be an elementary truth in such a case. The first condition for the repeal of a duty is that there will be a surplus of revenue. I am sure I shall not be asked at this time of night to anticipate the statement that I must make before forty-eight hours have elapsed. Before we can treat the proposal of the hon. Gentleman fairly, it is essential that we should ascertain whether we shall have a surplus of income. Therefore, if the hon. Gentleman chooses to press his Motion before the Budget is produced, he compels me to record my negative to it. The second proposition is, that if there should be a surplus, the fire insurance duty has a claim for reduction in preference to all others. That seems to me a very grave matter—a question that it is not easy for the House to decide without having the whole case before it. Considering that in a time of peace we are maintaining some taxes more or less associated with war—I do not refer to any minor cases, of which some are very strong indeed, but speaking of the major cases—I do not think any prudent men will be disposed to tie their hands behind their backs by going into the lobby with the hon. Gentleman. The reduction or abolition of a tax is a very excellent thing; but it is useless to indulge in vague declarations of financial benevolence. Our means and our obligations must keep pace with each other, and we must give away nothing till we are sure we have got it to give away. And when we do give it away, we ought to take care that the first case, on its merits, is placed first in order, and that what is less urgent shall be made secondary. I therefore hope that the House will divide against the hon. Gentleman's Motion.

said, the Motion of the hon. Member for Dudley (Mr. H. B. Sheridan) was only for leave to bring in a Bill, and nothing, he thought would be likely to occur between that evening and Thursday that could in the slightest degree prejudice the position of the right hon. Gentleman. He was so fully alive to the necessity of maintaining the public credit, that if the right hon. Gentleman could show on Thursday night that at present we could not afford to part with any of our revenue, he was sure that all who supported the repeal of the tax on fire, insurances would at once be ready to drop all further progress with the Bill for that year at least. The tax itself was so inexpedient, so enormous in amount, and so utterly opposed to all principles of true finance, that he was surprised to hear the right hon. Gentleman hold out so little hope of its extinction. Proceeding on a principle, however, which the right hon. Gentleman had always been the first to uphold, he felt bound to support the Motion. If there was a principle which the right hon. Gentleman had inculcated more often than another, it was this—that reduction of taxation always led to increased consumption. When the House heard the arguments of the right hon. Gentleman, let them remember that he was the same Chancellor of the Exchequer who came down last year, and urged upon them the abolition of the paper duties. Did the right hon. Gentleman mean now to negative the principle he then laid down? The right hon. Gentleman then assured the House that carriages, draining pipes, and he (Mr. Malins) knew not what besides, would be made out of paper, merely because the duty was to be taken off. By what argument, then, could he justify a principle upon which the insurer paid 3s. to the Government for every insurance he effected, and the Government gave nothing in exchange? The right hon. Gentleman could hardly have been serious when he intimated that he wished the office and the Government should be joint parties in those transactions; for it would be impossible that they could go hand in hand while one of them incurred all the liability and the other merely pocketed a portion of the money. There was universal willingness to pay any amount of taxation which was necessary for the secure protection of the country, but it ought to be so parcelled out that no particular class should be burdened more than another, and more particularly ought it so to be arranged as not to prevent acts of prudence like insurance. The right hon. Gentleman had argued with respect to postage, to newspapers, and to wines, that if they lowered the duty, they would increase the production; and even with respect to receipt Stamps he said, lower the stamp to a penny and the country will suffer no loss. He (Mr. Malins) believed that the right hon. Gentleman was right, for no man now evaded the stamp, and he, for one, always demanded a stamp, because he thought that every man should pay his quota to the revenue of the country. But was it not a notorious fact that the amount of the tax compelled many people to under-insure themselves. He could answer for himself, and he would ask the right hon. Gentleman, if he had then to propose a tax on fire insurance, whether he would have the hardihood to advocate a rate of 200 per cent? If that were true, why then was it unreasonable to propose that it should be given up? There was no desire to interfere with the arrangements of the Chancellor of the Exchequer for the present year; all that was wished was to obtain a declaration from the House, as in the case of the paper duty, that the tax was one which at the earliest possible moment ought to be repealed or reduced. He hoped the House, by its vote, would give the right hon. Gentleman a lesson in taxation, and would teach him that he was not at liberty to run away from the principles which he professed when he had a favourite tax, like the paper duty, which for some political object he wished to repeal. He could not by any means agree with the right hon. Gentleman in the deduction, that because the agricultural fire insurances, on which the duty was reduced, had only increased 67 per cent, while the house insurances had increased 65 per cent, therefore reduction did not lead to an increase in insurances. Agricultural property had remained stationary; and if the insurances on it had increased 67 per cent, how much more than 65 per cent would the house insurances have increased if the duty had been reduced? He had hoped to hear the right hon. Gentleman hold out some hope of the abolition or reduction of the duty; but, as he had refused to do so, he hoped the House would take the matter into its own hands.

said, he thought the Chancellor of the Exchequer would find out by the division the fallacy of his assumption that because no hon. Member rose immediately after the hon. Member for Dudley (Mr. Sheridan), that therefore no one intended to support the proposition of the hon. Gentleman. There were a great many Members who agreed with the views of the hon. Gentleman, and they would, no doubt, support his Motion. At the same time he confessed that he was not prepared to say that under any circumstances he should vote for the second reading of the Bill, or that because he voted with the hon. Member to-night he should feel bound to do so. He concurred with many statesmen in the opinion, that if that was not the worst possible tax, it was a very objectionable tax, and that at the earliest moment it ought to be reduced. He did not admit the argument of the Chancellor of the Exchequer that it was unjust in the same way as every other duty. Undoubtedly all taxes were objectionable, and it would be very desirable to live without any taxation. But that tax was not levied upon equitable principles. Mr. Newmarch, who was some authority upon the subject, estimated the value of the insurable property within six miles of London at £900,000,000. The representatives of £300,000,000 only insured; and they, being prudent people, paid the whole tax, while the representatives of the £600,000,000 went scot-free. If the tax were levied on the owners of the whole £900,000,000 of property, Is. per cent would yield the same amount of revenue, and all would bear their due proportion. For these reasons he should go into the lobby with the hon. Member.

said, that the returns given in the most recent statistical abstract for the United Kingdom, showed that the Chancellor of the Exchequer's argument with regard to the insurance of agricultural produce was fallacious. The value of agricultural produce had been nearly stationary since the repeal of the fire insurance duty upon it. During the same time, however, judging by the exports of the country, all other insurable property had enormously increased, and therefore it was not a fair argument of the Chancellor of the Exchequer to say, that as the agricultural produce insured, after it was freed from the duty, only increased 67 per cent, while during the same time the property that was taxed increased 65½ per cent, therefore a reduction of the duty was not likely to produce an increased; amount of insurances. The extracts he would quote from the official document which he held in his hand were conclusive upon that point. In 1846 the quantity of corn sold in the markets of England and Wales was 5,958,963 quarters, while in 1860 the quantity was only 4,623,257. In 1846 the declared value of the total exports from the United Kingdom was £57,786,876, while in 1860 it had risen to £135,842,817, being an in crease of more than 100 per cent, the corn and farm produce having at the same time decreased. In the morning papers of this very day Members had seen the anticipated returns of the state of the revenue, which showed, that although there had been a large remission of taxes last year, the income of the country had not thereby suffered. Acting, therefore, upon his own principles, he thought the Chancelor of the Exchequer ought not to object to the moderate proposition of the lion, Member for Dudley.

said, he would suggest that the question of the introduction of the Bill should be deferred till Thursday. There were in that House a number of Gentlemen who thought the hop duty a grievous burden; there were others in favour of the repeal of the duties on tea and sugar; and others again who sympathized with those who paid income-tax upon small and precarious incomes; and all these would vote against the hon. Member for Dudley if he pressed his Motion to a division that night. He submitted, therefore, that the Bill would have a better prospect of success if postponed till after the House was in possession of the financial propositions of the Chancellor of the Exchequer.

Sir, before the hon. Member replies, I wish to submit one or two observations to the House. The main argument that has been used in support of the Motion of my hon. Friend has been that this tax is objectionable. I should like any hon. Member to have the kindness to mention a tax to which some objection or other cannot be applied, such as that it is offensive to those who pay, that it is not sufficiently general in its scope, or that it applies to some particular article affecting some particular class of the community. No doubt it would be an exceedingly agreeable thing if the country could go on without taxation at all. If the array would be good enough to serve without pay, if the Civil Departments could be carried on and justice administered without expense, and if ships' guns and the services of seamen were gratuitously given, it would, no doubt, be exceedingly convenient for those who have to pay taxes. But, unfortunately, such a happy relief is not possible in human affairs. The country requires certain arrangements for the protection of property, for the maintenance of our Constitution, for the administration of justice, and the preservation of social order; and the expense of those arrangements must be provided for by taxation. Every tax is open to some objection or other, but the nation must submit to imposts which are inconvenient in order to obtain the inestimable advantage of having the order of society properly maintained. There are many gentlemen who could show you other taxes which, in their opinion, are still more objectionable than the one under consideration, and if the House were to be polled on the question which is most worthy of repeal I doubt whether this particular tax would obtain a majority of the suffrages. But that is a question which may be decided at any time. My great objection to the Motion of the hon. Member relates to the time at which it is brought forward. I hold that it is a principle of our constitutional system that the Chancellor of the Exchequer, as the organ of the Government of the day, should have left to him the discretion of proposing to Parliament those financial arrangements for the year which, upon full consideration, he deems best adapted to the public interest. It is for the House to deal with his plan as they think fit. If the House should think that the Chancellor of the Exchequer proposes too great a change one way or the other, it is, no doubt, competent, and has often been the case, for hon. Members to state their objections, and propose alterations in the arrangements which the right hon. Gentleman may suggest; but there can be nothing so inconvenient as, before the Budget is proposed, and when the Chancellor of the Exchequer has made his arrangements for the year, and is on the eve of submitting them to Parliament, for the House to pick out some particular tax for reduction without knowing to what degree they may by so doing totally disarrange the arrangements which the responsible Minister of the Crown may have intended to propose, and disarrange them, perhaps, also in a manner injurious to the public interest. The hon. and learned Member for Wallingford (Mr. Malins) gives the strangest of reasons for voting in favour of the Motion of the hon. Member. He says that he votes for it not at all intending to pledge himself to support it finally. He says—

"I vote for the introduction; but if I find, upon the statement of the Chancellor of the Exchequer, that the repeal of this particular duty will interfere with other arrangements which I should prefer, I should object to the second reading."
The hon. and learned Member is therefore prepared to give his vote for the introduction of the Bill, which, upon his own showing, may be a nullity, and which he may be prepared next week to refuse to read a second time. I hold that the natural course for this House to pursue is to allow the Government to propose their financial arrangements for the year, and to deal with those arrangements in the manner they may think best for the public interest; but not blindfold to interpose a particular arrangement which may or may not conflict with a better arrangement which the Government may have to propose. If the Vote for the introduction of the Bill would be a Resolution that the House would deem binding, it might be exceedingly inconvenient on some future occasion to have that Vote on record. If it is not to be binding—if it is to be a mere nullity—then I humbly suggest to the House that they would do much better to dispense with this Motion, and allow my right hon. Friend on Thursday next to state, unfettered by any previous Resolution, the arrangements which, upon the whole, the Government may think fit to propose.

said, he would not at that hour detain the House by a reply, although he possessed ample means of confuting both Mr. Coode's facts and the right hon. Gentleman's arguments.

Motion made and Question put,

"That leave be given to bring in a Bill to reduce the Duty on Fire Insurance."

The House divided:—Ayes 127; Noes 116: Majority 11.

Bill ordered to be brought in by Mr. HENRY B. SHERIDAN and Mr. LINDSAY.

Debentures On Land (Ireland)

Leave

said, he rose to move for leave to introduce a Bill to au- thorize the issue of debentures on land in. Ireland, in connection with sales made by the Landed Estates Court. The object of the measure was to remove some of the difficulties which now beset the proprietors of land in Ireland who wanted to borrow money, and to make them the masters of the situation, so that they should not be dependent to the extent which they now were upon the country attorney or the lender of money. Its principal provisions were, that when a person had purchased an estate out of the Landed Estates Court, or had cleared his title in that Court, the Court should have power to authorize him to issue debentures to the extent of one-half the value of the estate. These debentures might be of any amount from £200 to £1,000. A notice of their issue would be endorsed on. the conveyance, and there would be in the office of the Court a book in which their counterfoils would be contained. From the moment at which the Court gave permission for their being issued they would take precedence of any other encumbrance which might be created upon the estate, and the owner would be able to issue them at any time at which he required money. The debenture would be equally as secure as a railway debenture, and, like a railway debenture, would require a stamp, the amount of which the Chancellor of the Exchequer must fix. On being transferred the debenture would also require to be stamped and registered. When first he heard a paper on the subject read by Judge Long field, he felt inclined to be sceptical; but, on looking into the scheme, be found not only that it was practical and safe, but that it was difficult to meet it with valid objections. The Judges of the Landed Estates Court were unanimously of opinion that the plan could be safely worked, and without leaving a door open for fraud; and the Bill only carried to its legitimate conclusion the principle upon which the Landed Estates Court was established, that of giving landed proprietors in Ireland the enjoyment of the full value of their own property. It was not till within the last twenty-four hours he learnt that his hon. and learned Friend the Member for the county of Cork, who many years ago wrote a paper on this subject, had also brought in a Bill dealing with the same subject. Bearing in mind, however, the weight of authority attracted by the measure he now ventured to propose, he hoped the House would not refuse its assent to the introduction of the Bill.

I do not rise to oppose the Motion for leave to bring in the Bill, but I think the House ought seriously to consider the effects of the measure proposed by the lion, and learned Gentleman. He has told us that it would be safe, as not being liable to open a door for frond, and that it would be advantageous to the landed interests of Ireland. I have no doubt, with the arrangements stated by the hon. and learned Gentleman, it would be safe as far as the; holders of the debentures are concerned; though whether they would be altogether safe in regard to the payment of interest is a question between them and the owners of the land. But I submit that we have gone hitherto on principles diametrically opposed to those on which the Bill is founded. Experience showed that great public and private inconvenience arose from the fact that estates in Ireland were greatly encumbered, and that the nominal proprietor was frequently not the actual owner. No improvements, however desirable, could be made, and it was to correct this state of things that the Encumbered Estates Court was established, by which persons having estates deeply affected by mortgages were enabled to sell them without much expense, and to transfer them to new proprietors possessed of capital, who were therefore more advantageous for the public interest. But the tendency of this Bill is to encourage landowners to revert to that system of embarrassment from which the Landed Estates Court was intended to rescue them. The right hon. and learned Gentleman says, when a man buys an estate worth£40,000, he is to be allowed to create debentures to the extent of£20,000, bearing interest, I suppose, at 5 per cent. When he has paid interest on half the value of his estate, what will remain to him for the purpose of keeping up and cultivating the property? Everybody knows that the nominal rental of a landed estate is liable to very great drawbacks, amounting possibly to a fourth or a third, according to circumstances. I think the landowner would soon find that he had reduced him self very much to the condition of those proprietors whom it was thought expedient to relieve from the nominal ownership of their estates. Unlike the case of a mortgage, in which usually a single holder comes periodically for the interest of the money he has lent, there will be twenty or thirty holders of debentures, whose names, perhaps, the owner will hardly know, for these debentures are to become a species of currency, transferable from hand to hand. In the case of a mortgage persons can foreclose, but I should like to know what is to be the remedy of the holder of these debentures.

He will have the power of sale peremptorily in the Landed Estates Court.

In the case of several debentures, some of which are paid regularly and some of which are not, what are the persona to do? Are they to apply for an immediate sale of the whale estate or of portions, and what portions?

No difficulty ! Very well. But if there be no difficulty attendant on the process, I imagine the facility will lie rather in the rapidity with which nominal owners will be; dispossessed of their estates, and that in reality it will be properties and not debentures which will be made transferable from hand to hand.

expressed his opinion, that the principle of the measure was a sound one. The noble Lord at the head of the Government was taking too good care of the landed proprietors of Ireland, who might very well be intrusted with the management of their own affairs. The hon and learned Member for Cork (Mr. Scully) was in reality the originator of this measure, and deserved the credit of the Bill. The Bill was calculated to make property more valuable.

said, that the noble Lord at the head of the Government had paid the landed proprietors of Ireland a very bad compliment. The noble Lord's speech amounted to this, that those proprietors were spendthrifts, and that their credit ought to be curtailed. He did not think that that general accusation was well founded, and he ventured to submit that the provident ought not to be punished for the faults of the improvident. The principle of land debentures was not new. It had been in operation for a great number of years in Prussia and other countries.

said, he would ask permission to trouble the House for a few minutes on the subject, because but for it he never should have troubled them at all. He never should have come into Parliament only for that question. When Sir John Romilly introduced his Security of Advances Bill, he brought the subject under the notice of the Irish people, and in 1853 it was incorporated in the larger scheme for the registration of titles, which he laid before the House last year. He remembered the time when the matter was treated with ridicule; but it had now been taken up by the right hon. Gentleman who had filled the office of Attorney General for Ireland under the Earl of Derby's last Government, and who was the incoming Attorney General tinder the next Administration. The plan of land debentures was brought under the notice of a Royal Commission some years ago The Commissioners stated in their Report that the system was not within the range of the inquiry submitted to them; but they further observed that there might be facilities for trying it in Ireland, where strong opinions had been expressed in its favour. Among the eminent authorities who had given evidence in favour of the principle were Mr. Commissioner Long field and Mr. Commissioner Hargreave, both Judges of the Landed Estates Court. He felt sure, that if the noble Lord the First Minister applied his common sense to the question, he would adopt the views entertained by those who were in favour of those debentures. Instead of the proposal tending, as the noble Lord stated, to re-establish the system of encumbered estates, it would have exactly the opposite effect, because it was proposed that the value of the debentures should not exceed one moiety of the value of the land, and thus a check would be imposed on the borrowing of money.

said, he was bound to say he could see no practical difficulty whatever in carrying out the measure. If there were an Encumbered Estates Court in England, the measure could be applied to this country with advantage. The debentures were to be issued under the authority of the court, and only to half the value of the land. Under such a system the lender would not want to sell the land; but if he wanted his money, he could sell his debenture for the full amount. The Bill propounded a new and important principle for the landed interest, as it enabled landowners to borrow at the lowest interest, and at small expense.

observed, that in the case of raising money by debentures upon land in England it was necessary to satisfy the Enclosure Commissioners that the money was to be spent in improving the estate, and if there were such a provision in the Bill, it would get rid of much objection to the measure.

said, that in reply to the observations of the noble Lord, he wished to observe that according to the doctrines of political economy you could not teach a man prudence by legislation. In reference to the question under discussion, they must consider the people whom it was proposed to legislate for as men who wanted money. By the Bill it would be in the power of the court to issue debentures on a portion of the estate and the remainder would be perfectly free; whereas now the whole land became mortgaged and the owner embarrassed by the appointment of a receiver. By the Bill the money could be easily obtained, while the estate would be improved and expense saved.

Leave given.

Bill to authorize the issue of Debentures chargeable on Land in Ireland in connection with Sales made by the Landed Estates Court, ordered to be brought in by Mr. WHITESIDE and Mr. LONGFIELD.

Parliamentary Proceedings

Motion For Select Committee

, in moving that a Select Committee be appointed to consider whether it is practicable to provide a Compendious Record of Parliamentary Proceedings for the use of Members, said, that there were at present, practically, two records of those proceedings—the Votes, which were circulated from day to day, and the Journals, forming that ancient constitutional Code, if he might so term it, which, was made up at the end of the Session from the Votes, and which furnished the legal Record of the Proceedings of the House of Commons. With respect to the Votes, he might observe that it was not until comparatively recent times they were regularly received by the Members of the House; it was to Speaker Abbott, he believed, that hon. Members were indebted for the punctuality in their delivery, which caused them to be laid now, and for some years past, as regularly on their breakfast tables as The Times newspaper. Of the Journals of the House he was not disposed to say anything in disparagement. They were the great storehouses in which information was to be sought with reference to the practice and privileges of the Lower Branch of the Legislature. In any case of difficulty or doubt which arose with regard to the practice or those privileges, they were consulted; nor was it by any means the object of his Motion to depreciate their value. It must, however, be admitted that as books of reference they were inconvenient, cumbrous, and for some purposes incomplete. They consisted, he believed, of 116 volumes, and, practically speaking, it would be impossible for Members to have' those Records in their own mansions. It was very right that a record should be kept of everything the House did; but it could not be denied that a vast amount of the business which was set down on the Journals was of a character wholly unimportant. They contained, for instance, a large mass of entries connected with Private Business and of unopposed Returns. Every Return presented to the House in obedience to its order was entered in the Journals; indeed, the substantial portion of the entries related to such business as he had just mentioned, while a very small portion of them indeed had reference to those proceedings of the House which were the subject of general interest. He had taken the entries made at haphazard, and he found that on the Journal of last year there were for the 22nd of March 69 separate entries, 27 of which related to Private Business, 21 to Returns presented. 11 to Returns ordered; so that, out of the 69, 10 only were devoted to public business. He also found that on the 25th of April in last year only 8 out of 46 entries had reference to business of general interest. It was clear, therefore, he thought, that those records formed a very cumbrous mass. But beyond that they were, as he had said before, incomplete. They furnished, for example, no account of the proceedings of the other House of Parliament; so that Members of the House of Commons had no means through the medium of any record of their own of ascertaining how the business went on which was sent up to the other branch of the Legislature, The House of Lords, it was true, also kept Journals, and they were to be found in the library; but, as a matter of fact, the volumes for the last two years had not been printed; so the account of their proceedings was in arrear—the consequence being, that if any hon. Member wished to inform himself as to the progress of business in that House during those two years, he must take the trouble of wading through the Minutes, which corresponded with the Votes of the House of Commons. That being so, he thought he was justified in maintaining that the Journals of the House were inconvenient as books of reference; that they were stuffed with a large amount of matter which was of little importance, and that they were, moreover, incomplete. Now, what was required under those circumstances was some "Handy Book," which would enable Members to refer to the business of past Sessions, and ascertain without trouble its progress in both Houses of Parliament. The present was the age of "Handy Books," to the compilation of which no less a person than Lord St. Leonards—not to speak of many other distinguished men—had turned his attention. It was said that there was no Royal road to learning; but a book of that description dealing with the subject of Parliamentary Proceedings would, he had no doubt, tend very much to facilitate the transaction of the business of the House. He did not say that we did many things better than our forefathers, but there could be no question that we did things more quickly, and that we had more things to do. It was therefore desirable that we should have as many short cuts to knowledge as possible. He believed that the great majority of hon. Members were furnished with a book entitled "The Parliamentary Record for 1861," which supplied, to a very great extent, the want to which he rose to call attention. That book in a very small compass afforded information as to the various stages of important business in the other House of Parliament, and contained an excellent index. There were also all the material proceedings in this House last Session, with a good index, enabling every hon. Member who might be so disposed to trace the course of public business. He might cite the entries relative to the Qualification for Offices Bill, which was passed through the House last Session, but was lost in another place. On consulting the Journals of the House, he found in the index references to a great number of pages. To look up those pages, and then to run down the long columns as to what was done, would be a work of some time and difficulty. In the index of the publication to which he had alluded all the proceedings on the same Bill were entered as follows:—

"Qualification for Offices Bill.—Ordered to be brought in by Mr. Hadfield, Sir M. Peto, Mr. Kershaw, and Mr. Baines, and presented and read 1° 6 Feb. On Motion, for fid reading, amendment by Mr. Newdegate to read it 2°'this day six months;' debate thereon; House divides:—Ayes 80, noes 93, Majority 13; Bill read second time, 20th of February. Committed and reported without amendment, 6 March. Read 3° 7 March."
That was a clear and brief summary of what was done with respect to the Qualification for Offices Bill in that House, and told one in half a second what on wanted to know, without making numerous references to the pages of the Journals. The Journals, moreover, told nothing of the proceedings on the Bill in the House of Lords; whereas the new publication, by two short references, gave the whole history of the measure in both Houses. It was said that all the necessary information might be got in Hansard; but every hon. Member: knew that the index in Hansard, like the index in the Journals, merely consisted of a; mass of references to the different volumes and pages. He did not ask the House to, pledge itself to any decision on the, subject, which, however, was one that ought to be carefully considered by a Select Committee. The duty of preparing such a record as he had indicated could not well be discharged by the officers of that House, inasmuch as it necessarily embraced in its purview the Proceedings of the House of Lords, and it would not be consistent with the position of the Commons relatively to the Lords that they should send their officers to pick up information for them in the other House. He would not now state, how he thought the thing could be done, but he trusted the House would send the matter to a Select Committee; and if the scheme should turn out to be impracticable, they would at least have the satisfaction of knowing that they had attempted to obtain a simple and compendious record of their proceedings. The right hon. Gentleman concluded by moving for "A Select Committee to consider whether it is practicable to provide a compendious record of Parliamentary Proceedings for the use of Members."

objected to the proposition of the right hon. Gentleman the Member for Kilmarnock on two grounds. One was, that though not directly or in distinct terms, vet virtually it infringed a rule which had always hitherto been observed—namely, that whatever was printed bearing reference to the Proceedings of the House should emanate only from the authority of the Speaker. The other was, that it might be drawn into a precedent for giving encouragement to something like a job in favour of some particular publisher or some particular author. If it were not for the high opinion which he entertained for the Mover and Seconder of the Motion, he should take the liberty of proposing that the matter should be postponed; but since the proposition came from a right hon. Gentleman who had long occupied a position inferior only to that of the Speaker, and was approved by another whose authority all would readily acknowledge, he would not press his objection further on the present occasion. He hoped, however, that the Committee about to be appointed would look cautiously into the matter; and not give their sanction to any proposition such as that indicated by the right hon. Gentleman the Member for Kilmarnock unless they were satisfied, first, that the scheme would, not interfere with the privileges and prerogatives of the Speaker; and, secondly, that it was not likely to be drawn into a precedent which might be prejudicial to the conduct of the proceedings of the House.

admitted, that if they were to have a Select Committee, it was most proper that the two points to which his right hon. Friend had directed his observations should be carefully considered. The grounds upon which he was anxious that the matter should be inquired into might be briefly stated. He thought it was expedient that they should have a compendium of their Proceedings independently of those larger collections which were contained in the Journals. Those who were accustomed to consult the Journals would agree with him that there could not be a more unwelcome task than that of taking down folio volume after folio volume in order to discover a reference upon which they wished to act. He did not regard the proposed publication as a substitute for the Journals, for the Votes, or for Hansard, but as something intermediate. It was a manual which every gentleman might have on his table, and in which he might find on one page, if the work were well indexed, a reference to all the proceedings with respect to which he desired to inform himself. If he wanted fuller information, he could go to Hansard. The importance of the observations which his right hon. Friend had addressed to the House could not be doubted. If the proposition contained anything which could possibly interfere with the authority of the Speaker, he should be the last to give it his support; but he was persuaded, that if the Committee were well selected, which he had no doubt it would be, it would not allow anything to be done in the way of interference with the authority of the Chair. He believed that proper checks and guards could easily be devised to prevent any such interference: and if that were so, the proposed publication would be so valuable and convenient that he thought it ought to receive every encouragement. So, with respect to the second objection of his right hon. Friend. Care should be taken to avoid the perpetration of a job; but he believed there was nothing of the kind to be apprehended in the present instance. What the Committee would have to consider was, whether they could really get a valuable compendium which it would be worth while for the House to sanction. He was convinced that the publication would materially assist all who took part in the proceedings of the House; and, speaking for himself, he entertained the hope that it would save him many a half-hour which would otherwise be spent in a laborious and tiresome search of the Journals.

suggested, that "desirable" should be substituted for "practicable" in the Motion, or that both should be inserted, making the words run "practicable and desirable." As to a compendious record, he thought they had a very excellent compendium already in The Parliamentary Record, referred to by the right hon. Gentleman. What they wanted was accurate and authorized reports of the debates and proceedings of the House.

said, that the House had never adopted such a course as that proposed. They were indebted to Mr. Hansard for a valuable enterprise; but during the whole time of its existence the House had never assisted that gentleman with a single shilling. He thought the day would come when they must have reports of their own, and he could not conceive that anything better could be done than to place a Parliamentary corps under the superintendence of Mr. Hansard. The Parliamentary Remembrancer of Mr. Toulmin Smith, however, was a work to which he had subscribed for the last three years, and he had found it to be of very great assistance; and he thought that to adopt the book referred to by the right hon. Member would be to give anundue preference and favour to one particular author. As he understood it, the work now in contemplation would give parts of speeches and portions of debates: what security, he asked, could there be that these selections would be made with fairness and impartiality? He saw some grave objections to the course proposed, lest there might be any invasion of the privileges of the House or lest it might be unjust to Mr. Hansard. The best security which they could have for an accurate record of their proceedings was that of the admission generally of the public press; and every production of this kind might well rest on its own merits. However, if the right hon. Gentleman (Mr. Sotheron Estcourt) would consent to the Motion, he should not oppose it.

I have no objection to make to the proposal of my right hon. Friend. I have no doubt, if there could be afforded to Members of the two Houses a condensed compendium of the proceedings of each Session, it might be exceedingly useful. It is quite true that we have very accurate records already; but it is also true that those records are in a shape which makes them not very easy of reference. In the first place, with regard to the Journals, any one who refers to them must go to the libraries of one or the other House; whereas, in such a record as that now in contemplation, he would have the book to which he wanted to refer in his own possession. Therefore, I think the object is one well deserving the consideration of the Committee. On the other hand, there are, no doubt, circumstances which show that the proposal is one which ought to be maturely considered before it is: adopted. I think this is exactly the case in which the appointment of a Committee is a proper step to be taken; and if my right hon. Friend makes a good selection, of Members, I have no doubt that full consideration will be given to what the convenience of hon. Gentlemen may require, and what the privileges of the House may demand. If I. understand the matter rightly, I do not think that what is suggested will in way interfere with the publication of Hansard, which is a most wonderfully accurate record of what passes in debate—word for word very often. That which I understand my right hon. Friend to have in contemplation is a short statement or general outline of what Members may have said and of the proceedings of the House. I think, therefore, the proposal is one which may be properly adopted by the House on the grounds which I have stated.

Motion agreed to.

Industrial And Provident Societies Bill

Leave First Reading

said, he rose to move for leave to introduce a Bill to consolidate and amend the laws relating to industrial and; provident societies. He believed there would be no objection to the Bill, and on a future occasion he hoped he should have a better opportunity to explain the details of the measure.

Leave given.

Bill to consolidate and amend the Laws relating to Industrial and Provident Societies, ordered to be brought in by Mr. SOTHERON ESCOURT and Mr. SLANEY.

Bill presented, and read l°; to be read 2° on Wednesday, 30th April, and to be printed [Bill 68].

House adjourned at One o'clock.