登陆注册
18989900000121

第121章

Had this plan, with some modifications, been tried at an earlier period, in a more composed state of the public mind, and by a better sovereign, we are by no means certain that it might not have effected the purpose for which it was designed. The restraint imposed on the King by the Council of thirty, whom he had himself chosen, would have been feeble indeed when compared with the restraint imposed by Parliament. But it would have been more constant. It would have acted every year, and all the year round; and before the Revolution the sessions of Parliament were short and the recesses long. The advice of the Council would probably have prevented any very monstrous and scandalous measures; and would consequently have prevented the discontents which follow such measures, and the salutary laws which are the fruit of such discontents. We believe, for example, that the second Dutch war would never have been approved by such a Council as that which Temple proposed. We are quite certain that the shutting up of the Exchequer would never even have been mentioned in such a Council. The people, pleased to think that Lord Russell, Lord Cavendish, and Mr. Powle, unplaced and unpensioned, were daily representing their grievances and defending their rights in the Royal presence, would not have pined quite so much for the meeting of Parliaments. The Parliament, when it met, would have found fewer and less glaring abuses to attack. There would have been less misgovernment and less reform. We should not have been cursed with the Cabal, or blessed with the Habeas Corpus Act. In the mean time the Council, considered as an executive Council, would, unless some at least of its powers had been delegated to a smaller body, have been feeble, dilatory, divided, unfit for everything that requires secrecy and despatch, and peculiarly unfit for the administration of war.

The Revolution put an end, in a very different way, to the long contest between the King and the Parliament. From that time, the House of Commons has been predominant in the State. The Cabinet has really been, from that time, a committee nominated by the Crown out of the prevailing party in Parliament. Though the minority in the Commons are Constantly proposing to condemn executive measures, or to call for papers which may enable the House to sit in judgment on such measures, these propositions are scarcely ever carried; and, if a proposition of this kind is carried against the Government, a change of Ministry almost necessarily follows. Growing and struggling power always gives more annoyance and is more unmanageable than established power.

The House of Commons gave infinitely more trouble to the Ministers of Charles the Second than to any Ministers of later times; for, in the time of Charles the Second, the House was checking Ministers in whom it did not confide. Now that its ascendency is fully established, it either confides in Ministers or turns them out. This is undoubtedly a far better state of things than that which Temple wished to introduce. The modern Cabinet is a far better Executive Council than his. The worst House of Commons that has sate since the Revolution was a far more efficient check on misgovernment than his fifteen independent counsellors would have been. Yet, everything considered, it seems to us that his plan was the work of an observant, ingenious, and fertile mind.

On this occasion, as on every occasion on which he came prominently forward, Temple had the rare good fortune to please the public as well as the Sovereign. The general exultation was great when it was known that the old Council, made up of the most odious tools of power, was dismissed, that small interior committees, rendered odious by the recent memory of the Cabal, were to be disused, and that the King would adopt no measure till it had been discussed and approved by a body, of which one half consisted of independent gentlemen and noblemen, and in which such persons as Russell, Cavendish, and Temple himself had seats.

Town and country were in a ferment of joy. The bells were rung; bonfires were lighted; and the acclamations of England were echoed by the Dutch, who considered the influence obtained by Temple as a certain omen of good for Europe. It is, indeed, much to the honour of his sagacity that every one of his great measures should, in such times, have pleased every party which he had any interest in pleasing. This was the case with the Triple Alliance, with the treaty which concluded the second Dutch war, with the marriage of the Prince of Orange, and, finally, with the institution of this new Council.

The only people who grumbled were those popular leaders of the House of Commons who were not among the Thirty; and, if our view of the measure be correct, they were precisely the people who had good reason to grumble. They were precisely the people whose activity and whose influence the new Council was intended to destroy.

But there was very soon an end of the bright hopes and loud applauses with which the publication of this scheme had been hailed. The perfidious levity of the King and the ambition of the chiefs of parties produced the instant, entire, and irremediable failure of a plan which nothing but firmness, public spirit, and self-denial on the part of all concerned in it could conduct to a happy issue. Even before the project was divulged, its author had already found reason to apprehend that it would fail.

Considerable difficulty was experienced in framing the list of counsellors. There were two men in particular about whom the King and Temple could not agree, two men deeply tainted with the vices common to the English statesman of that age, but unrivalled in talents, address, and influence. These were the Earl of Shaftesbury, and George Savile Viscount Halifax.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 我的另类人生

    我的另类人生

    我是一名狱警,女监里的狱警。我曾以为最爱的林芬在我尚未离开大学校园的时候就已踏上异国他乡的土地,这也让我清楚认知了人性的悲凉和劣根性。当我带着这种情绪来到沙山女监后,泼辣公安大女学生程瑶馨,狱政科一把手科长陈倩,买醉时偶遇的富豪少妇燕然以及绝世容颜的副监狱长岚监,还有如郝姐、小琴这些普通管教同仁,却让我感受到人间,哪怕在女监这种地方仍然有着真感情...当然,这一切必须有个前提,我不是废物!我自己首先要成为能够通过奋斗,懂得充分利用资源崛起的新时期好管教,好青年,好人!
  • 寻找被遗忘的王朝

    寻找被遗忘的王朝

    本书包括敦煌三探、黑城一瞥、俄邦二度、塞垣六记、王朝遗梦和寻寻觅觅补新篇六部分。
  • 名门挚爱,总裁不二婚

    名门挚爱,总裁不二婚

    唐娩vs厉天擎当男人利刃般的目光,凌迟在她身上的时候。她咬着牙当着众人,宽衣解带,直到剩下贴身衣物“现在,我可以走了吗?”他是凌驾众人之上的大人物,而她只是个辍学的女大生,为了重病的母亲,四处奔波赚取生活费。她从没想过,会再与这个男人有所交集。然而,第二次,当她从他床笫间醒来,身上布满淤痕,男人冰冷的捏起她的下颔,冷笑着说“唐娩,你这个诱饵,我收下了。”
  • 婚从天降:老婆签字生效

    婚从天降:老婆签字生效

    相恋五年的男友和妹妹勾搭在一起,就是为了她外公的公司。继母上位害死她母亲,继妹抢了她男友,亲生父亲霸占外公公司!忍!不是她的风格,她失去的她要一一讨回来!醉酒莫名和一个男人睡觉,醒来时才发现那人竟然是万星集团总裁,想逃,逃不掉。男人邪魅勾唇,寒凉的眸子紧逼着她,将她狠狠压在桌上,凛冽的声音喷薄在她鼻息处,“和我结婚,我帮你夺回公司。”她冷笑,抬手绕住他的脖颈,“就这一点对于万兴总裁来说是不是太吝啬了?”男人眸色一身,微凉的指尖挑起她的下颚,“那再加上帮你报仇如何?”她愉悦勾唇,“成交。”"
  • 无上神魔

    无上神魔

    王辰,一个被遗落在人间界的少年。当他一次意外发现火云戒的秘密时,他慢慢的解开了自己真正身世。读者QQ群:185290843感谢腾讯文学书评团提供书评支持![两更:12:00/20:00][三更:12:00/20:00/00:00]
  • 猎捕爱情猫

    猎捕爱情猫

    十岁时他遇见了她,决定把她作为自己最宝贵的珍宝,她却只把他当做霸占她领地的敌人。十五岁时他为了治好她的病励志成为医生力她赴美留学,她认为他抛弃她不要她决定不要他这个号朋友。二十三岁时他成功的为她做了心脏移植手术,她只当自己走运逃过死神的追捕。二十九岁他回来了决定逮捕这只迟钝的小猫。
  • 无敌空间

    无敌空间

    罗冠穿越了!穿越怎么可以没有金手指!罗冠带着一个有着无限可能的空间,穿越附体在一个小贵族身上,在自己的那片小领地上,罗冠过起了种田升级的悠然生活。且看罗冠如何利用空间,发展成为无敌的存在。(新人新书,无存稿,更新较慢,建议养肥再杀)
  • 我是诅咒

    我是诅咒

    诅咒之源,时隔万年再临世间,掀起血雨腥风。不老不死的少女,为了追随恩人的脚步,走进了大唐。是受人感化?还是在沉默中爆发,毁灭世界?
  • 昭雪情侠传

    昭雪情侠传

    “马蹄南去人北望,人北望草青黄尘飞扬!”大宋时代,风生水起!一曲江湖恩仇录,且看昭雪情侠传!
  • 壁花女的进化史

    壁花女的进化史

    风雨中,一望无际的悬崖上,一朵壁花坚强地生长着,悬崖上的片片生机在讽刺它的同时也是诱引它生长下去的勇气,只是不知何时风才会静,雨才会停,彩虹才会出现。