登陆注册
18989900000035

第35章

The churchmen, at the time of the Revolution, justified their conduct by all those profligate sophisms which are called Jesuitical, and which are commonly reckoned among the peculiar sins of Popery, but which, in fact, are everywhere the anodynes employed by minds rather subtle than strong, to quiet those internal twinges which they cannot but feel and which they will not obey. As the oath taken by the clergy was in the teeth of their principles, so was their conduct in the teeth of their oath. Their constant machinations against the Government to which they had sworn fidelity brought a reproach on their order and on Christianity itself. A distinguished prelate has not scrupled to say that the rapid increase of infidelity at that time was principally produced by the disgust which the faithless conduct of his brethren excited in men not sufficiently candid or judicious to discern the beauties of the system amidst the vices of its ministers.

But the reproach was not confined to the Church. In every political party in the Cabinet itself, duplicity and perfidy abounded. The very men whom William loaded with benefits and in whom he reposed most confidence, with his seals of office in their hands, kept up a correspondence with the exiled family.

Orford, Leeds, and Shrewsbury were guilty of this odious treachery. Even Devonshire is not altogether free from suspicion.

It may well be conceived that, at such a time, such a nature as that of Marlborough would riot in the very luxury of baseness.

His former treason, thoroughly furnished with all that makes infamy exquisite, placed him under the disadvantage which attends every artist from the time that he produces a masterpiece. Yet his second great stroke may excite wonder, even in those who appreciate all the merit of the first. Lest his admirers should be able to say that at the time of the Revolution he had betrayed his King from any other than selfish motives, he proceeded to betray his country. He sent intelligence to the French Court of a secret expedition intended to attack Brest. The consequence was that the expedition failed, and that eight hundred British soldiers lost their lives from the abandoned villainy of a British general. Yet this man has been canonized by so many eminent writers that to speak of him as he deserves may seem scarcely decent.

The reign of William the Third, as Mr. Hallam happily says, was the Nadir of the national prosperity. It was also the Nadir of the national character. It was the time when the rank harvest of vices sown during thirty years of licentiousness and confusion was gathered in; but it was also the seed-time of great virtues.

The press was emancipated from the censorship soon after the Revolution; and the Government immediately fell under the censorship of the press. Statesmen had a scrutiny to endure which was every day becoming more and more severe. The extreme violence of opinions abated. The Whigs learned moderation in office; the Tories learned the principles of liberty in opposition. The parties almost constantly approximated, often met, sometimes, crossed each other. There were occasional bursts of violence; but, from the time of the Revolution, those bursts were constantly becoming less and less terrible. The severity with which the Tories, at the close of the reign of Anne, treated some of those who had directed the public affairs during the war of the Grand Alliance, and the retaliatory measures of the Whigs, after the accession of the House of Hanover, cannot be justified; but they were by no means in the style of the infuriated parties, whose alternate murders had disgraced our history towards the close of the reign of Charles the Second. At the fall of Walpole far greater moderation was displayed. And from that time it has been the practice, a practice not strictly according to the theory of our Constitution, but still most salutary, to consider the loss of office, and the public disapprobation, as punishments sufficient for errors in the administration not imputable to personal corruption. Nothing, we believe, has contributed more than this lenity to raise the character of public men. Ambition is of itself a game sufficiently hazardous and sufficiently deep to inflame the passions without adding property, life, and liberty to the stake. Where the play runs so desperately high as in the seventeenth century, honour is at an end. Statesmen instead of being, as they should be, at once mild and steady, are at once ferocious and inconsistent. The axe is for ever before their eyes. A popular outcry sometimes unnerves them, and sometimes makes them desperate; it drives them to unworthy compliances, or to measures of vengeance as cruel as those which they have reason to expect. A Minister in our times need not fear either to be firm or to be merciful. Our old policy in this respect was as absurd as that of the king in the Eastern tale who proclaimed that any physician who pleased might come to court and prescribe for his diseases, but that if the remedies failed the adventurer should lose his head. It is easy to conceive how many able men would refuse to undertake the cure on such conditions; how much the sense of extreme danger would confuse the perceptions, and cloud the intellect of the practitioner, at the very crisis which most called for self-possession, and how strong his temptation would be, if he found that he had committed a blunder, to escape the consequences of it by poisoning his patient.

But in fact it would have been impossible, since the Revolution, to punish any Minister for the general course of his policy, with the slightest semblance of justice; for since that time no Minister has been able to pursue any general course of policy without the approbation of the Parliament. The most important effects of that great change were, as Mr. Hallam has most truly said, and most ably shown, those which it indirectly produced.

同类推荐
  • 大唐西域记

    大唐西域记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 水石闲谈

    水石闲谈

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 素问六气玄珠密语

    素问六气玄珠密语

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 古琴疏

    古琴疏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 阿毗昙甘露味论

    阿毗昙甘露味论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 追云搏电录

    追云搏电录

    打铁铺的小学徒于梵。生得丰神俊逸,心地纯正,更是资质专佳的练武奇才。他奉令进打造好的“夺魂钉”去客人府上、却被九大凶人“鬼斧神鞭”的小妾夏苹哀求,要于梵带她逃走。于梵一看美人那楚楚可怜的神情不忍拒绝,带她逃出魔府凶宅,却从此落入了被不断追杀的厄运之中……
  • 不归

    不归

    一个误会将一行人的青春改写,以为每个人带着一份痛将从此往不同的轨道上行驶,然而,命运的齿轮不断翻转,他们又一次磨合到一起,将青春续写。爱与恨、友情、爱情,他们将如何抉择?青春的疼痛是否延续?他们是否又能回到最初?假如给你一次机会,你选择归还是不归。
  • 真爱S1

    真爱S1

    我在最寂寞的时候遇到了同样寂寞的她,人们将这种相遇视作缘分,缘起于此,而后相知、相恋,直至相爱到难舍彼此,最终成为一段佳话。如果我和她的身份都只是普通的男男女女,那么我们的相遇,会是一段极好的缘分的开始。到现在我还能记得她的眼睛,她的味道,她柔软的头发。我还记得我们的最后,她哭的像个孩子,紧紧抓着我的手指因为过分用力而变得发白,而我的手臂上还留着她留下的痕迹,已经不会再疼痛,却永远也不会消失了。她不属于我,我知道,从来都是。
  • 赵瑜散文

    赵瑜散文

    鲁迅文学奖获得者赵瑜散文的首次集结。赵瑜向以纪实文学力作震荡文坛。其实,他的散文同样深厚、独特而有趣。面对时下散文的疲软与苍白,赵瑜的叙述有现代气象,有北国古风,因事而作,有感而发,是将泥土夯实之后烧制而成的一块块沉砖。我们能体味到作家心灵的率性和真诚。
  • 我在青春的路上

    我在青春的路上

    一个平凡的农村女孩,一个羸弱的残疾之躯,却凭借着顽强的毅力,走出了一条属于自己的幸福之路,然而在她的内心深处,根深蒂固的信念就是“走下去”,无论脚下的路多么泥泞不堪,无论多少次跌倒摔得有多痛,只要坚定信念坚持走下去,生活总会露出笑脸来迎接你!
  • 异世之天蓝纵横

    异世之天蓝纵横

    凶险异界之旅,21世纪普通穿越一族,没有随时携带的作弊器,没有绝世的武功秘籍,没有超高的天赋,看他是如何缔造一个属于自己的传说……
  • 异世魔女出没

    异世魔女出没

    “妈妈……”离央一巴掌送上去,把那个叫她妈妈的银发少年拍飞。世界上最倒霉的事之一就是活了十八年后又得在异世界重新再活一次,之二就是还未成年就被一个比自己大的人喊妈妈,离央刚好这两样都占了。意外捡到一颗巨蛋原本想拿来吃,却不料一个晚上孵出一个怪人来,这个怪人声称失忆症患者需要寻找名字,一时昏了头脑的少女离央答应帮助他,结果当天晚上就被带到异界大陆了。蓝色之命紫色之魂黑色之路离央为了追寻少年的神秘身份,开始踏上一条通往恶魔的逆神之路在罪恶与战争中,成为逆命之人。
  • 火器营往事之闹白人

    火器营往事之闹白人

    火器营“闹白人”是二百多年来当地的一个传说,今天的我们或许可用“外星人”,“磁场”“UFO”之类的假说来加以推解,而数百年前人们只会说是撞见了鬼怪。使人惊讶的是,在六十年代居然还有人声称见到了这种怪东西。但今天的我们只能将它看成一段故事,一种饭后茶余的“姑妄听之”而已。
  • 屾峰宪禅师语录

    屾峰宪禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 宇宙尽头的眼睛:科幻春晚接龙

    宇宙尽头的眼睛:科幻春晚接龙

    《宇宙尽头的眼睛》是未来事务管理局旗下新媒体平台《不存在日报》集齐国内顶尖科幻、科普作家,在春节期间接力完成的一个以节日为主题的故事,也是中国第一台科幻春晚,由刘慈欣领衔,宝树、陈楸帆、飞氘、江波、郝景芳、凌晨、七格、王立铭、万象峰年、杨平、张冉共同创作。12双眼睛的观察如何影响了两个文明乃至整个宇宙?观察报告现已全文上架,未来事务管理局诚邀您收藏阅读。