<p class="gutsumm">A further account of the academy. The
author proposes some improvements, which are honourably
received.</p>
<p>In the school of political projectors, I was but ill
entertained; the professors appearing, in my judgment, wholly out
of their senses, which is a scene that never fails to make me
melancholy. These unhappy people were proposing schemes for
persuading monarchs to choose favourites upon the score of their
wisdom, capacity, and virtue; of teaching ministers to consult
the public good; of rewarding merit, great abilities, eminent
services; of instructing princes to know their true interest, by
placing it on the same foundation with that of their people; of
choosing for employments persons qualified to exercise them, with
many other wild, impossible chimeras, that never entered before
into the heart of man to conceive; and confirmed in me the old
observation, “that there is nothing so extravagant and
irrational, which some philosophers have not maintained for
truth.”</p>
<p>But, however, I shall so far do justice to this part of the
Academy, as to acknowledge that all of them were not so
visionary. There was a most ingenious doctor, who seemed to
be perfectly versed in the whole nature and system of
government. This illustrious person had very usefully
employed his studies, in finding out effectual remedies for all
diseases and corruptions to which the several kinds of public
administration are subject, by the vices or infirmities of those
who govern, as well as by the licentiousness of those who are to
obey. For instance: whereas all writers and reasoners have
agreed, that there is a strict universal resemblance between the
natural and the political body; can there be any thing more
evident, than that the health of both must be preserved, and the
diseases cured, by the same prescriptions? It is allowed,
that senates and great councils are often troubled with
redundant, ebullient, and other peccant humours; with many
diseases of the head, and more of the heart; with strong
convulsions, with grievous contractions of the nerves and sinews
in both hands, but especially the right; with spleen, flatus,
vertigos, and deliriums; with scrofulous tumours, full of fetid
purulent matter; with sour frothy ructations: with canine
appetites, and crudeness of digestion, besides many others,
needless to mention. This doctor therefore proposed,
“that upon the meeting of the senate, certain physicians
should attend it the three first days of their sitting, and at
the close of each day’s debate feel the pulses of every
senator; after which, having maturely considered and consulted
upon the nature of the several maladies, and the methods of cure,
they should on the fourth day return to the senate house,
attended by their apothecaries stored with proper medicines; and
before the members sat, administer to each of them lenitives,
aperitives, abstersives, corrosives, restringents, palliatives,
laxatives, cephalalgics, icterics, apophlegmatics, acoustics, as
their several cases required; and, according as these medicines
should operate, repeat, alter, or omit them, at the next
meeting.”</p>
<p>This project could not be of any great expense to the public;
and might in my poor opinion, be of much use for the despatch of
business, in those countries where senates have any share in the
legislative power; beget unanimity, shorten debates, open a few
mouths which are now closed, and close many more which are now
open; curb the petulancy of the young, and correct the
positiveness of the old; rouse the stupid, and damp the pert.</p>
<p>Again: because it is a general complaint, that the favourites
of princes are troubled with short and weak memories; the same
doctor proposed, “that whoever attended a first minister,
after having told his business, with the utmost brevity and in
the plainest words, should, at his departure, give the said
minister a tweak by the nose, or a kick in the belly, or tread on
his corns, or lug him thrice by both ears, or run a pin into his
breech; or pinch his arm black and blue, to prevent
forgetfulness; and at every levee day, repeat the same operation,
till the business were done, or absolutely refused.”</p>
<p>He likewise directed, “that every senator in the great
council of a nation, after he had delivered his opinion, and
argued in the defence of it, should be obliged to give his vote
directly contrary; because if that were done, the result would
infallibly terminate in the good of the public.”</p>
<p>When parties in a state are violent, he offered a wonderful
contrivance to reconcile them. The method is this: You take
a hundred leaders of each party; you dispose them into couples of
such whose heads are nearest of a size; then let two nice
operators saw off the occiput of each couple at the same time, in
such a manner that the brain may be equally divided. Let
the occiputs, thus cut off, be interchanged, applying each to the
head of his opposite party-man. It seems indeed to be a
work that requires some exactness, but the professor assured us,
“that if it were dexterously performed, the cure would be
infallible.” For he argued thus: “that the two
half brains being left to debate the matter between themselves
within the space of one skull, would soon come to a good
understanding, and produce that moderation, as well as regularity
of thinking, so much to be wished for in the heads of those, who
imagine they come into the world only to watch and govern its
motion: and as to the difference of brains, in quantity or
quality, among those who are directors in faction, the doctor
assured us, from his own knowledge, that “it was a perfect
trifle.”</p>
<p>I heard a very warm debate between two professors, about the
most commodious and effectual ways and means of raising money,
without grieving the subject. The first affirmed,
“the justest method would be, to lay a certain tax upon
vices and folly; and the sum fixed upon every man to be rated,
after the fairest manner, by a jury of his
neighbours.” The second was of an opinion directly
contrary; “to tax those qualities of body and mind, for
which men chiefly value themselves; the rate to be more or less,
according to the degrees of excelling; the decision whereof
should be left entirely to their own breast.” The
highest tax was upon men who are the greatest favourites of the
other sex, and the assessments, according to the number and
nature of the favours they have received; for which, they are
allowed to be their own vouchers. Wit, valour, and
politeness, were likewise proposed to be largely taxed, and
collected in the same manner, by every person’s giving his
own word for the quantum of what he possessed. But as to
honour, justice, wisdom, and learning, they should not be taxed
at all; because they are qualifications of so singular a kind,
that no man will either allow them in his neighbour or value them
in himself.</p>
<p>The women were proposed to be taxed according to their beauty
and skill in dressing, wherein they had the same privilege with
the men, to be determined by their own judgment. But
constancy, chastity, good sense, and good nature, were not rated,
because they would not bear the charge of collecting.</p>
<p>To keep senators in the interest of the crown, it was proposed
that the members should raffle for employment; every man first
taking an oath, and giving security, that he would vote for the
court, whether he won or not; after which, the losers had, in
their turn, the liberty of raffling upon the next vacancy.
Thus, hope and expectation would be kept alive; none would
complain of broken promises, but impute their disappointments
wholly to fortune, whose shoulders are broader and stronger than
those of a ministry.</p>
<p>Another professor showed me a large paper of instructions for
discovering plots and conspiracies against the government.
He advised great statesmen to examine into the diet of all
suspected persons; their times of eating; upon which side they
lay in bed; with which hand they wipe their posteriors; take a
strict view of their excrements, and, from the colour, the odour,
the taste, the consistence, the crudeness or maturity of
digestion, form a judgment of their thoughts and designs; because
men are never so serious, thoughtful, and intent, as when they
are at stool, which he found by frequent experiment; for, in such
conjunctures, when he used, merely as a trial, to consider which
was the best way of murdering the king, his ordure would have a
tincture of green; but quite different, when he thought only of
raising an insurrection, or burning the metropolis.</p>
<p>The whole discourse was written with great acuteness,
containing many observations, both curious and useful for
politicians; but, as I conceived, not altogether complete.
This I ventured to tell the author, and offered, if he pleased,
to supply him with some additions. He received my
proposition with more compliance than is usual among writers,
especially those of the projecting species, professing “he
would be glad to receive further information.”</p>
<p>I told him, “that in the kingdom of Tribnia, <SPAN name="citation454a"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote454a" class="citation">[454a]</SPAN> by the natives called Langdon, <SPAN name="citation454b"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote454b" class="citation">[454b]</SPAN> where I had sojourned some time in my
travels, the bulk of the people consist in a manner wholly of
discoverers, witnesses, informers, accusers, prosecutors,
evidences, swearers, together with their several subservient and
subaltern instruments, all under the colours, the conduct, and
the pay of ministers of state, and their deputies. The
plots, in that kingdom, are usually the workmanship of those
persons who desire to raise their own characters of profound
politicians; to restore new vigour to a crazy administration; to
stifle or divert general discontents; to fill their coffers with
forfeitures; and raise, or sink the opinion of public credit, as
either shall best answer their private advantage. It is
first agreed and settled among them, what suspected persons shall
be accused of a plot; then, effectual care is taken to secure all
their letters and papers, and put the owners in chains.
These papers are delivered to a set of artists, very dexterous in
finding out the mysterious meanings of words, syllables, and
letters: for instance, they can discover a close stool, to
signify a privy council; a flock of geese, a senate; a lame dog,
an invader; the plague, a standing army; a buzzard, a prime
minister; the gout, a high priest; a gibbet, a secretary of
state; a chamber pot, a committee of grandees; a sieve, a court
lady; a broom, a revolution; a mouse-trap, an employment; a
bottomless pit, a treasury; a sink, a court; a cap and bells, a
favourite; a broken reed, a court of justice; an empty tun, a
general; a running sore, the administration. <SPAN name="citation455"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote455" class="citation">[455]</SPAN></p>
<p>“When this method fails, they have two others more
effectual, which the learned among them call acrostics and
anagrams. First, they can decipher all initial letters into
political meanings. Thus <i>N</i>, shall signify a plot;
<i>B</i>, a regiment of horse; <i>L</i>, a fleet at sea; or,
secondly, by transposing the letters of the alphabet in any
suspected paper, they can lay open the deepest designs of a
discontented party. So, for example, if I should say, in a
letter to a friend, ‘Our brother Tom has just got the
piles,’ a skilful decipherer would discover, that the same
letters which compose that sentence, may be analysed into the
following words, ‘Resist ---, a plot is brought
home—The tour.’ And this is the anagrammatic
method.”</p>
<p>The professor made me great acknowledgments for communicating
these observations, and promised to make honourable mention of me
in his treatise.</p>
<p>I saw nothing in this country that could invite me to a longer
continuance, and began to think of returning home to England.</p>
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