Judgments in Vacation
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Edward Abbott Sir Parry. Judgments in Vacation
Judgments in Vacation
Table of Contents
PREFACE
‘THE BOX OFFICE.’
THE DISADVANTAGES OF EDUCATION
COOKERY BOOK TALK
A DAY OF MY LIFE IN THE COUNTY COURT
DOROTHY OSBORNE
THE DEBTOR OF TO-DAY
THE FOLK-LORE OF THE COUNTY COURT
CONCERNING DAUGHTERS
THE FUTURE OF THE COUNTY COURT
THE PREVALENCE OF PODSNAP
AN ELIZABETHAN RECORDER
THE FUNNIEST THING I EVER SAW
THE PLAYWRIGHT
ADVICE TO YOUNG ADVOCATES
THE INSOLVENT POOR
WHY BE AN AUTHOR?
WHICH WAY IS THE TIDE?
KISSING THE BOOK.[4]
A WELSH RECTOR OF THE LAST CENTURY
Footnote
Отрывок из книги
Edward Abbott Sir Parry
Published by Good Press, 2021
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This recognition by Mr. Gladstone of the Box Office as supreme comes with especial interest when you consider that his education and instinct made it peculiarly difficult for him to appreciate the truth. Disraeli jumped at it more easily, as one might expect from a man of Hebrew descent, for that great race have always held the soundest views on questions of the Box Office. As a novelist, the novels he wrote were no doubt the best he was capable of, but whatever may be their merits or demerits, they were written with an eye to the Box Office and the Box Office responded. His first appearance upon the political stage was not a success. The pit and gallery howled at him. But this did not lead him to pretend that he despised his audience, and that they were a mob whose approval was unworthy of winning; on the contrary, he told them to their faces that ‘the time would come when they would be obliged to listen.’ A smaller man would have shrunk with ready excuse from conquering such a Box Office, but Disraeli knew that it was a condition precedent to greatness, and he intended to be great. He had no visionary ideas about the political game. As he said to a fellow-politician: ‘Look at it as you will, it is a beastly career.’ Much the same may be said in moments of despondency of any career. The only thing that ultimately sweetens the labour necessary to success is the Box Office returns, not by any means solely because of their value in money—though a man honest with himself does not despise money—but because every shilling paid into the Box Office is a straight testimonial from a fellow-citizen who believes in your work. Disraeli’s Box Office returns were colossal and deservedly so—for he had worked hard for them.
When you come to think of it seriously, the Box Office principle in the drama of politics is the right for that drama’s patrons to make its laws, a thing that this nation has contended for through the centuries. Indeed, there are only two possible methods of right choice open: either to listen to the voice of public opinion—the Box Office principle—or to leave affairs entirely to the arbitrament of chance. With sturdy English common sense we have embodied both these principles in an excellent but eccentric constitution. We allow public opinion to choose the members of the House of Commons, and leave the choice of members of the House of Lords entirely to chance. To an outside observer both methods seem to give equally satisfactory results.
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