The Napoleon of Notting Hill by G. K. Chesterton (pdf e book reader TXT) ๐
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The Napoleon of Notting Hill, like so many Chesterton novels, deftly straddles the fence between humor and philosophy. The place is London, in the far-future year of 1984. Inexplicably, not too much has changed since the turn of the centuryโexcept that the king is chosen at random. Things quickly take a turn for the worse when the people randomly select an imbecile who only cares about a good joke.
With the new prankster king in place, the novel continues on with surprisingly action-packed breeziness, exploring themes of identity, patriotism, politics, and government.
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- Author: G. K. Chesterton
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โThe Seรฑor will forgive me,โ said the President. โMay I ask the Seรฑor how, under ordinary circumstances, he catches a wild horse?โ
โI never catch a wild horse,โ replied Barker, with dignity.
โPrecisely,โ said the other; โand there ends your absorption of the talents. That is what I complain of your cosmopolitanism. When you say you want all peoples to unite, you really mean that you want all peoples to unite to learn the tricks of your people. If the Bedouin Arab does not know how to read, some English missionary or schoolmaster must be sent to teach him to read, but no one ever says, โThis schoolmaster does not know how to ride on a camel; let us pay a Bedouin to teach him.โ You say your civilisation will include all talents. Will it? Do you really mean to say that at the moment when the Eskimo has learnt to vote for a County Council, you will have learnt to spear a walrus? I recur to the example I gave. In Nicaragua we had a way of catching wild horsesโ โby lassooing the fore feetโ โwhich was supposed to be the best in South America. If you are going to include all the talents, go and do it. If not, permit me to say what I have always said, that something went from the world when Nicaragua was civilised.โ
โSomething, perhaps,โ replied Barker, โbut that something a mere barbarian dexterity. I do not know that I could chip flints as well as a primeval man, but I know that civilisation can make these knives which are better, and I trust to civilisation.โ
โYou have good authority,โ answered the Nicaraguan. โMany clever men like you have trusted to civilisation. Many clever Babylonians, many clever Egyptians, many clever men at the end of Rome. Can you tell me, in a world that is flagrant with the failures of civilisation, what there is particularly immortal about yours?โ
โI think you do not quite understand, President, what ours is,โ answered Barker. โYou judge it rather as if England was still a poor and pugnacious island; you have been long out of Europe. Many things have happened.โ
โAnd what,โ asked the other, โwould you call the summary of those things?โ
โThe summary of those things,โ answered Barker, with great animation, โis that we are rid of the superstitions, and in becoming so we have not merely become rid of the superstitions which have been most frequently and most enthusiastically so described. The superstition of big nationalities is bad, but the superstition of small nationalities is worse. The superstition of reverencing our own country is bad, but the superstition of reverencing other peopleโs countries is worse. It is so everywhere, and in a hundred ways. The superstition of monarchy is bad, and the superstition of aristocracy is bad, but the superstition of democracy is the worst of all.โ
The old gentleman opened his eyes with some surprise.
โAre you, then,โ he said, โno longer a democracy in England?โ
Barker laughed.
โThe situation invites paradox,โ he said. โWe are, in a sense, the purest democracy. We have become a despotism. Have you not noticed how continually in history democracy becomes despotism? People call it the decay of democracy. It is simply its fulfilment. Why take the trouble to number and register and enfranchise all the innumerable John Robinsons, when you can take one John Robinson with the same intellect or lack of intellect as all the rest, and have done with it? The old idealistic republicans used to found democracy on the idea that all men were equally intelligent. Believe me, the sane and enduring democracy is founded on the fact that all men are equally idiotic. Why should we not choose out of them one as much as another. All that we want for government is a man not criminal and insane, who can rapidly look over some petitions and sign some proclamations. To think what time was wasted in arguing about the House of Lords, Tories saying it ought to be preserved because it was clever, and Radicals saying it ought to be destroyed because it was stupid, and all the time no one saw that it was right because it was stupid, because that chance mob of ordinary men thrown there by accident of blood, were a great democratic protest against the Lower House, against the eternal insolence of the aristocracy of talents. We have established now in England, the thing towards which all systems have dimly groped, the dull popular despotism without illusions. We want one man at the head of our State, not because he is brilliant or virtuous, but because he is one man and not a chattering crowd. To avoid the possible chance of hereditary diseases or such things, we have abandoned hereditary monarchy. The King of England is chosen like a juryman upon an official rotation list. Beyond that the whole system is quietly despotic, and we have not found it raise a murmur.โ
โDo you really mean,โ asked the President, incredulously, โthat you choose any ordinary man that comes to hand and make him despotโ โthat you trust to the chance of some alphabetical list.โ โโ โฆโ
โAnd why not?โ cried Barker. โDid not half the historical nations trust to the chance of the eldest sons of eldest sons, and did
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