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THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL.

(From the Dnnedin Evening Star, Sept. 11.) .. It la a pity that the Attorney-General cannot manage occasionally to drop his very unfortunate habit of “special pleading" upon every possible subject, and under all manner of circumstances, opportune or otherwise. Nobody expects that a lawyer, in arguing his case, should set forth the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. If he is in the wrong, it is essentially his business to bamboozle the Court or jury if he can; and if he Is in the right, the least said the better. The object is narrowed down to the fine point of obtaining a judgment—a verdict in his favor; complete ingenuousness would stamp him as unfit for his business. Gentlemen of the Bar, however, are not wont to carry their professional consciences into social or public life; and although politicians are allowed great license it is expected that they shall be truthful according to their lights. They may distort theories, but they must not misrepresent facts; they may consistently break their promises, but with regard to the past they should be particular in not allowing imagination to supersede memory op record. The Hon. Robert Stout, especially since he has been distinguished by that prefix so obnoxious In the eyes of his great chief, seems to have found it impossible to make a plain straightforward statement on any subject. If he interviews a deputation he beats about the bush, and, so to say, dodges the questions. When he makes a great speech he envelopes his subjects iu such a web of subtle sophistry that one does not know where to have him or what he is at. His manner is pleasing when he chooses, and the words fall not nnmelodiously from his lips, so that at the time of utterance he pleases the crowd ; but when an attempt is made to analyse his meaning and put together what he has been pleased to'tell his audience, it is found, as notably at the Queen’s Theatre meeting before the session, that nobody is the wiser with regard to what the Government really intend, and that as regards the speaker himself ho may be written down as a constitutional conservative democratic radical—a hybrid of his own creation, whose political proclivities are sufficiently uncertain to be dangerous. It must not be supposed for a moment - that Mr, Stout is not thoroughly in earnest he is so in maintaining himself and his party in power; and, it Is indeed to this purpose he devotes his rare intellectual powers and the practical skill which has deservedly won him eminence at the bar. More homely powers, we conceive, would win him greater eminence in public life. A character for diaingenuousuess will gradually, if he docs not care to shake it off, eat out the very heart of his popularity and prestige ; and the absence of generosity so notably 1 displayed on late occasions towards political opponents will do much to weaken his present waning influence in and out of Parliament. The banquet on Saturday was made the occasion for Mr. Stout to deliver himself in his very worst style. No doubt both himself and his colleague were naturally irritated to find that they were not iu the position of “ first fiddles, ** and especially at the enthusiasm, with which the name of Sir Julius Vogel ''was received, This is no excuse, "however, for the exceedingly bad taste displayed, and the almost vicious attempt to detract from the very obvious merits of the initiator of the Public Works scheme, which characterised both Ministers. Mr, Fisher certainly was only au imperfect telephonic refrain of his colleague. His tinfoil was not so perfect as if it had been of brass. He did his best, but broke down. There was great method and ingenuity in the way the AttorneyGeneral put his case, contriving as he did that a delicate compliment to Mr. F. J. Moss, a new and red-hot supporter. Provincial, Separationist, and Liberal, should glance off the weapon with a back-banded sweep of which he sought to annihilate the fame of Sir Julma: — “ This evening I amused myself by looking np some old volumes of the Votes Proceedings of the Provincial Council, and if one were to go through them he wouM that some of tho men now lauded for their railway , enterprise were once deadly opposed to railway construction. But, sir, thero is a time for everything, and I am glad that there is here to-night a gentleman who moved in our Provincial Council the first practical resolution on the subject of railway enterprise in Otago, I mean Mr. Frederick Moss, It was he, who, in 1863, moved for a commission of inquiry into the necessity of two lines of railway—one from Dunedin to the Clutba, and. the other (from Dunedin to Port Chalmers. At a subsequent session be insisted that for the opening up of this country properly we should, construct light railways into tho interior. It is

now fourteen years since that scheme was agitated, and this Ministry has gone on proposing that that scheme should be carried out. I mention this to show you that, after all, Ministers can only register what I might term the resolutions which public opinion has come to before they have taken office/’ This brief extract conveys really the venom of the speech. “ Some of the men now lauded for their railway enterprise were once deadly opposed to railway construction.” The impression intended to be conveyed is that Sir Julius was one of those “ deadly opponents.” Now we have taken the trouble to consult the Provincial Council bluebooks, and wo find that Mr. Stout has stated what to some extent is true, but by no means the whole truth. In the session of 1562, before Mr. Moss had a seat in the Council, the committee on Engineer, and Road Departments,’ of which Mr? J. L. Gillies wan chairman, recommended in the report that “ a thoroughly competent civil engineer ” should be sent for from Britain for the special service of laying down main trunk lines of communication throughout the province ; and in 1863 the same committee, In their report brought up on September 8, and adopted on the motion of Mr. Gillies two days later, especially raised the question of “ railway communication,” suggesting “ that the time had arrived when it should be considered.” Mr, Hardy, on September 0, moved a resolution to the effect that the civil engineer selected in Great Britain should be instructed to commence his work of laying off the permanent lines of communication, so that the Go-vernment-might “at once reserve from sale such lands as may be required for railways and ferry reserves.” This was negatived upon a division ; and, oddly enough for Mr. Stout’s argument, we find amongst the ayes the name of Mr. Vogel, and amongst the noes those of Mr. Moss, Mr. Macandrew, and Mr. Reynolds. Nearly a fortnight afterwards Mr, Moss certainly did move two strings of resolutions relative to railway construction, but it was understood that ho did so rather as a member of the select committee upon “Roads and their construction” than in his individual capacity. He may possibly, however, have been laying the foundation, which he afterwards established, of that influence with the country party which be afterwards used for party purposes. At all events, during his long career of office we heard no more of railways to the Wakatipu, or of “ the commission” upon the subject of interior railway communication generally, Mr. Moss is an excellent citizen, and has borne his part in the labor of the early days ; but he did not directly orindirectly originate the Public Works scheme, and no one knows this better than Mr, Stout, “ Honor to whom honor is due!” Such paltry attempts at depreciation only reflect upon those who condescend to use them. Julius Vogel wifi, we predict, be a name in the history of New Zealand when even the mischief done by the “Liberal” Ministry is forgotten, and the names of its members are as if they had never been.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZTIM18780921.2.23.4

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

New Zealand Times, Volume XXXIII, Issue 5456, 21 September 1878, Page 1 (Supplement)

Word count
Tapeke kupu
1,348

THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL. New Zealand Times, Volume XXXIII, Issue 5456, 21 September 1878, Page 1 (Supplement)

THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL. New Zealand Times, Volume XXXIII, Issue 5456, 21 September 1878, Page 1 (Supplement)

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