Speeches: Literary and Social by Charles Dickens

speech-making going about in various directions which might be

advantageously dispensed with. If I were free to act upon this

conviction, as president for the time being of the great

institution so numerously represented here, I should immediately

and at once subside into a golden silence, which would be of a

highly edifying, because of a very exemplary character. But I

happen to be the institution’s willing servant, not its imperious

master, and it exacts tribute of mere silver or copper speech – not

to say brazen – from whomsoever it exalts to my high office. Some

African tribes – not to draw the comparison disrespectfully – some

savage African tribes, when they make a king require him perhaps to

achieve an exhausting foot-race under the stimulus of considerable

popular prodding and goading, or perhaps to be severely and

experimentally knocked about the head by his Privy Council, or

perhaps to be dipped in a river full of crocodiles, or perhaps to

drink immense quantities of something nasty out of a calabash – at

all events, to undergo some purifying ordeal in presence of his

admiring subjects.

I must confess that I became rather alarmed when I was duly warned

by your constituted authorities that whatever I might happen to say

here to-night would be termed an inaugural address on the entrance

upon a new term of study by the members of your various classes;

for, besides that, the phrase is something high-sounding for my

taste, I avow that I do look forward to that blessed time when

every man shall inaugurate his own work for himself, and do it. I

believe that we shall then have inaugurated a new era indeed, and

one in which the Lord’s Prayer will become a fulfilled prophecy

upon this earth. Remembering, however, that you may call anything

by any name without in the least changing its nature – bethinking

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Dickens, Charles – Speeches, Literary & Social

myself that you may, if you be so minded, call a butterfly a

buffalo, without advancing a hair’s breadth towards making it one –

I became composed in my mind, and resolved to stick to the very

homely intention I had previously formed. This was merely to tell

you, the members, students, and friends of the Birmingham and

Midland Institute – firstly, what you cannot possibly want to know,

(this is a very popular oratorical theme); secondly, what your

institution has done; and, thirdly, what, in the poor opinion of

its President for the time being, remains for it to do and not to

do.

Now, first, as to what you cannot possibly want to know. You

cannot need from me any oratorical declamation concerning the

abstract advantages of knowledge or the beauties of selfimprovement.

If you had any such requirement you would not be

here. I conceive that you are here because you have become

thoroughly penetrated with such principles, either in your own

persons or in the persons of some striving fellow-creatures, on

whom you have looked with interest and sympathy. I conceive that

you are here because you feel the welfare of the great chiefly

adult educational establishment, whose doors stand really open to

all sorts and conditions of people, to be inseparable from the best

welfare of your great town and its neighbourhood. Nay, if I take a

much wider range than that, and say that we all – every one of us

here – perfectly well know that the benefits of such an

establishment must extend far beyond the limits of this midland

county – its fires and smoke, – and must comprehend, in some sort,

the whole community, I do not strain the truth. It was suggested

by Mr. Babbage, in his ninth “Bridgewater Treatise,” that a mere

spoken word – a single articulated syllable thrown into the air –

may go on reverberating through illimitable space for ever and for

ever, seeing that there is no rim against which it can strike – no

boundary at which it can possibly arrive. Similarly it may be said

– not as an ingenious speculation, but as a stedfast and absolute

fact – that human calculation cannot limit the influence of one

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