the men who in the House of Commons had risen to eminence
in the country before the Reform Bill, there was scarcely
one who had not owed his introduction to Parliament
to the patron of one of those boroughs which were
now wholly or partially disfranchised; while on one
or two occasions these “rotten boroughs,”
as, since Lord Chatham’s time, they were often
derisively called, had proved equally useful in providing
seats for distinguished statesmen who, for some reason
or other, had lost the confidence of their former
constituents. So, when Bristol had disgraced
itself by the rejection of Burke, Malton had averted
the loss with which Parliament and the country were
threatened by again, through the influence of Lord
Rockingham, returning the great statesman as their
representative. So, to take a later instance,
Westbury, under the influence of Sir Manasseh Lopes,
had provided a refuge for Sir Robert Peel, when the
course which he had taken on Catholic Emancipation
had cost him his seat for Oxford. And these practical
uses of these small boroughs—anomalies in
a representative system, as they were called in the
debates on the subject, and as they must be confessed
to have been—were so important, that some
even of those who felt compelled by their principles
to vote for their parliamentary extinction have, nevertheless,
confessed a regret for the sacrifice, lamenting especially
that it has, in a great degree, closed the doors of
the House of Commons against a class whose admission
to it is on every account most desirable, the promising
young men of both parties.
In one point of great importance the framers of the
Reform Bill of 1832 proved to be mistaken. They
justified the very comprehensive or sweeping range
which they had given it by their wish to make it a
final settlement of the question, and by the expression
of their conviction that the completeness with which
it had satisfied all reasonable expectations had effectually
prevented any necessity for ever re-opening the question.
Their anticipations on this head were not shared by
their opponents, who, on the contrary, foretold that
the very greatness of the changes now effected would
only whet the appetite for a farther extension of
them; nor by a growing party, now beginning to own
the title of Radicals, which till very recently had
only been regarded as a reproach, and who, even before
the bill passed,[223] expressed their discontent that
it did not go farther, but accepted it as an instalment
of what was required, and as an instrument for securing
“a more complete improvement.” And
their expectations have been verified by subsequent
events. Indeed, it may easily be seen that the
principles on which one portion of the bill—that
which enfranchised new classes of voters—was
framed were such as, in shrewd hands, might easily
be adduced as arguments in favor of the necessity
of reconsideration of the question from time to time.
So long as the right of voting was confined to owners