I Say As Being In Danger; Not That I Mean To Hint
That Such Want Of Purity Has Been Shown,
Or that I wish it to be
believed that judges with itching palms do sit upon the American
bench; but
Because the present political tendency of the State
arrangements threatens to produce such danger. We in England trust
implicitly in our judges - not because they are Englishmen, but
because they are Englishmen carefully selected for their high
positions. We should soon distrust them if they were elected by
universal suffrage from all the barristers and attorneys practicing
in the different courts; and so elected only for a period of years,
as is the case with reference to many of the State judges in
America. Such a mode of appointment would, in our estimation, at
once rob them of their prestige. And our distrust would not be
diminished if the pay accorded to the work were so small that no
lawyer in good practice could afford to accept the situation. When
we look at a judge in court, venerable beneath his wig and adorned
with his ermine, we do not admit to ourselves that that high officer
is honest because he is placed above temptation by the magnitude of
his salary. We do not suspect that he, as an individual, would
accept bribes and favor suitors if he were in want of money. But,
still, we know as a fact that an honest man, like any other good
article, must be paid for at a high price.
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