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Constitution puts in a compendious form the extreme doctrine as it can alone be properly stated in legal textbooks:

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I said in this book that it would very much sur'prise people if they were told how many things the 'Queen could do without consulting Parliament, and it certainly has so proved, for when the Queen abolished purchase in the Army by an act of prerogative (after the Lords had rejected the Bill for doing so,) there was 'a great and general astonishment. But this is nothing to what the Queen can by law do without consulting 'Parliament. Not to mention other things, she could ' disband the army (by law she cannot engage more than 'a certain number of men, but she is not obliged to 'engage any men ;) she could dismiss all the officers, from the General Commanding-in-Chief downwards; she could dismiss all the sailors too; she could sell off 'all our ships of war and all our naval stores; she could 'make a peace by the sacrifice of Cornwall, and begin a war for the conquest of Brittany. She could make every citizen in the United Kingdom, male or female, 'a peer; she could make every parish in the United "Kingdom a "university;" she could dismiss most of the civil servants; she could pardon all offenders. In a word, the Queen could by prerogative upset all the 'action of civil government within the realm, could disgrace the nation by a bad war or peace, and could, by disbanding our forces, whether land or sea, leave 'us defenceless against foreign nations."1

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It may be well to append to this extract another from Mr. Erskine May's 'Constitutional History,' in which

The English Constitution. By Walter Bagehot. Introduction to the 2nd edition, p. xxxvi.

Added Powers of the Crown.

361 he, in his edition of 1871, takes a sanguine view of the real political influence of the Crown, while he attributes the advantages of this influence rather to the active. vigilance of Parliament than to the extension of the influence itself.

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As the influence of the Crown constitutionally 'exercised has ceased to be regarded with jealousy, its 'continued enlargement has been watched by Parlia'ment without any of those efforts to restrain it which 'marked the Parliamentary history of the eighteenth ' century. On the contrary, Parliament has met the ⚫ increasing demands of a community rapidly advancing ' in population and wealth, by constant additions to the power and patronage of the Crown. The judicial ' establishments of the country have been extended by 'the appointment of more Judges in the superior 'Courts, by a large staff of County Court Judges, ' with local jurisdiction, and by numerous stipendiary 'magistrates. Offices and commissions have been mul'tiplied, for various public purposes; and all these appointments proceed from the same high source of patronage and preferment. Parliament has wisely • excluded all these officers, with a few necessary exceptions, from the privilege of sitting in the House of 'Commons; but otherwise these extensive means of 'influence have been entrusted to the executive Govern'ment, without any apprehension that they will be perverted to uses injurious to the freedom or public. interests of the country."1

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It is evident, then, that by the letter of the law the Government of the day has, in almost every region of

May's Constitutional History, vol. i. p. 164.

affairs, enormous opportunities of independent action, under the cloak of exercising one or other of the prerogatives of the Crown. When it is said that a sufficient constitutional check is provided against abuse by the responsibility of Ministers to Parliament, it must be borne in mind that Ministers are for the moment only responsible to the Parliament as it is composed at the time, and that, as was said above, a servile majority might succeed in giving substantial reality to practices and doctrines condemned by the undoubted genius and traditions of the Constitution. The remedial action available in such a case is threefold. In the first place, there is the hopeful possibility that the next Parliament will abandon the wayward courses, unpatriotic subserviency, or flickering indifference of purpose, which gave a temporary lustre to what were in truth the miasmatic products of decay and not the natural signs of healthy life. In the second place, there is the persistent appeal, within the Houses themselves, on the part of the minority, however small, to the bestestablished constitutional principles, even in moments when those principles are being most signally set at nought. It is much, that at least the truth should be heard; and it is the usual result of uttering truth that it is re-echoed again and again in unexpected quarters, finding a response among, it may be, only a few here or a few there, but nevertheless by its inherent value and by its consistency finally supplanting everywhere the weakness, the selfishness, and the essential worthlessness of error. Even a generation is not too long a time to hope and wait for the resurrection of great constitutional truths, buried for a time beneath the load of political selfishness or apathy. But principles

Parliamentary Control of Foreign Policy. 363

cannot rise again unless they are really sown, although it be in weakness. It is, then, the paramount duty of every statesman and every party, however insignificant, who suspect the minutest infringement of the Constitution by the Government, and who see that infringement in the way to be erected into a principle by the acclamations of an intolerant and tyrannical majority, to cry aloud in the streets, and in distinct tones to alarm the country. The country may not listen to the alarm then and there, but it must listen, hear, and obey sooner or later, if it is to live. In the third place, there is the process of formulating with ever-increasing precision the exact duties which the Government owes to the House in respect of making it acquainted, at the earliest possible moment, with all executive measures to which the Royal prerogative properly extends, and affording it the fullest opportunity of acting freely, deliberately, and decisively in all those matters for which the concert of the House with the Crown, at some stage or other of the proceedings, will be imperatively required. The leading topics on which such punctilious precision seems, by recent experience, to be most urgently demanded are, (1), Foreign Affairs; (2), Financial Affairs; (3), the management of the Army and Navy; and (4), Colonial administration.

(1.) Foreign Affairs. There are several causes which have concurred to bring about the fact that it is only within a very few years that the House of Commons has roused itself from the apathy in respect of foreign affairs into which it had sunk since the conclusion of the wars with the French Empire in 1815. For the first fifteen years or so after the date of the Treaty of

Vienna, a pause, partly of exhaustion, and partly of natural repose from labours accomplished, ensued, and all foreign policy was gathered up in the general desire of the leading European States to sustain the complicated and fragile settlement brought about by the Treaty, in the stability of which so many States, great and small, had a direct and private concern. From about the year 1829 to 1846, English attention was distracted and absorbed by the unprecedentedly active legislation in which, under such leaders as Sir Robert Peel and Lord John Russell, the country was engaged. To this period belong the Emancipation of the Roman Catholics, the Reform of Parliament, the re-adjustment of public Corporations and Endowments, the establishment of Railways, the Bank Charter Act, and the culmination of the successful struggle for the abolition of protective duties on corn. Between 1846 and 1848, the invasion of the newly-constituted Republic of Cracow by Russia, and the apprehensions of an increase of French influence in Spain by the possible marriage of a French Prince to the Queen,' were events which seemed to arouse the House of Commons, and, through the discussion of them, to prepare the way for a new era of foreign policy, which dates from the European revolutions in 1848. It became now quite impossible for England, or for the House of Commons, to be indifferent to what was going on abroad, or to forbear from adopting some distinct line of policy. A number of circumstances,-among which the peculiar temperament of Lord Palmerston at

An interesting account of the Spanish marriage question from the point of view of M. Guizot, who was personally concerned in the negotiations, together with a defence of his conduct and the French policy, will be found in the sixteenth chapter of his Memoirs of Sir Robert Peel.

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