whatever their individual defects, be citizens of more
than average enterprise, resource, and resolution.
They are elected for a period that may last five years.
Many of them are ambitious; some uncompromising;
not a few enthusiastically eager to do something for
their country; filled with designs and aspirations
for national or social betterment, with which the
masses, sunk in the immediate pursuits of life, can
in the nature of things have little sympathy.
And yet we find these men licensed to pour forth
at pleasure, before mixed audiences, checked only
by Common Law and Common Sense political utterances
which may have the gravest, the most terrific consequences;
utterances which may at any moment let loose revolution,
or plunge the country into war; which often, as a
fact, excite an utter detestation, terror, and mistrust;
or shock the most sacred domestic and proprietary convictions
in the breasts of vast majorities of their fellow-countrymen!
And we incur this appalling risk for the want of
a single, or at the most, a handful of Censors, invested
with a simple but limitless discretion to excise or
to suppress entirely such political utterances as may
seem to their private judgments calculated to cause
pain or moral disturbance in the average man.
The masses, it is true, have their protection and
remedy against injudicious or inflammatory politicians
in the Law and the so-called democratic process of
election; but we have seen that theatre audiences
have also the protection of the Law, and the remedy
of boycott, and that in their case, this protection
and this remedy are not deemed enough. What,
then, shall we say of the case of Politics, where the
dangers attending inflammatory or subversive utterance
are greater a million fold, and the remedy a thousand
times less expeditious?
Our Legislators have laid down Censorship as the basic
principle of Justice underlying the civic rights of
dramatists. Then, let “Censorship for
all” be their motto, and this country no longer
be ridden and destroyed by free Institutions!
Let them not only establish forthwith Censorships
of Literature, Art, Science, and Religion, but also
place themselves beneath the regimen with which they
have calmly fettered Dramatic Authors. They
cannot deem it becoming to their regard for justice,
to their honour; to their sense of humour, to recoil
from a restriction which, in a parallel case they
have imposed on others. It is an old and homely
saying that good officers never place their men in
positions they would not themselves be willing to fill.
And we are not entitled to believe that our Legislators,
having set Dramatic Authors where they have been set,
will—now that their duty is made plain—for
a moment hesitate to step down and stand alongside.