As possessed of L1000 in Government funds ditto.
As publicly selected for honour by the Queen ditto.
As mayor of such a city ditto.
As President of the Royal Society ditto.
As President of the Royal Academy ditto.
&c. &c. &c.
Heavy penalties should attach to false claimants, who would be readily found by their own signatures.
All these surplus votes, openly avowed, of course, and not kept secret as the single one in the ballot-box, would be counted up in the scores of the several candidates.
The surplus-voting papers should be applied for, be supplied, and be returned when filled up—by post, and so all such voting be accomplished on paper, as in the elections for Oxford University, &c. It is a barbarism and anachronism at this time of day to insist on the great cost and inconvenience of a personal appearance, in many cases impossible.
If our people in every class, and our legislators of whatever party, are dissatisfied with the present system of representation as by no means showing the nation at its best, and thus practically a mistake, let them consider this suggestion; one made long ago by the writer as proved by his published works.
The Voter’s Motto.
I.
For Church and State! our
father’s honoured toast;
Dear England’s ancient
bulwark and her boast:
Must we now cease to build
and man the wall
At base Sanballat’s
and Tobiah’s call?
Shall Atheistic scorn and
Jesuit guile
Make Nehemiah quit his work
awhile,
That their Arabian host may
tear all down,
And trample in the dust our
Zion’s crown?
May God avert it! No
surrender! No!
We will not yield the battle
to the foe,
Nor shall the children of
our fathers thus
Betray the heritage they left
to us!
II.
For Church and State!
While so we dread no storm,
Let no man shrink from wise
and just Reform;
But with a firm and faithful,
yet kind, hand,
Prune cankers and corruptions
from the land:
Humble the pride of priestcraft!
we are each
Brother to him who doth Christ’s
gospel preach,
And—though a trivial
shibboleth offend—
One who serves God and man
shall be my friend:
Ay, and some loaves and fishes
should be given
By the rich state to Ministers
of Heaven!
So shall both Church and State
survive this strife,
And dwell at peace with all,
as man and wife.
III.
For Church and State!—Yea:
though the King of Heaven
As bridegroom to the Church
Himself was given,
Yet is He symbolled in this
earth-bound sphere
By the throned presence of
our Sovereign here;


