登陆注册
18989900000154

第154章

Only imagine a man acting for one single day on the supposition that all his neighbours believe all that they profess, and act up to all that they believe. Imagine a man acting on the supposition that he may safely offer the deadliest injuries and insults to everybody who says that revenge is sinful; or that he may safely intrust all his property without security to any person who says that it is wrong to steal. Such a character would be too absurd for the wildest farce. Yet the folly of James did not stop short of this incredible extent. Because the clergy had declared that resistance to oppression was in no case lawful, he conceived that he might oppress them exactly as much as he chose, without the smallest danger of resistance. He quite forgot that, when they magnified the royal prerogative, the prerogative was exerted on their side, that, when they preached endurance, they had nothing to endure, that, when they declared it unlawful to resist evil, none but Whigs and Dissenters suffered any evil. It had never occurred to him that a man feels the calamities of his enemies with one sort of sensibility, and his own with quite a different sort. It had never occurred to him as possible that a reverend divine might think it the duty of Baxter and Bunyan to bear insults and to lie in dungeons without murmuring, and yet when he saw the smallest chance that his own prebend might be transferred to some sly Father from Italy or Flanders, might begin to discover much matter for useful meditation in the texts touching Ehud's knife and Jael's hammer. His majesty was not aware, it should seem, that people do sometimes reconsider their opinions; and that nothing more disposes a man to reconsider his opinions, than a suspicion, that, if he adheres to them, he is very likely to be a beggar or a martyr. Yet it seems strange that these truths should have escaped the royal mind. Those Churchmen who had signed the Oxford Declaration in favour of passive obedience had also signed the thirty-nine Articles. And yet the very man who confidently expected that, by a little coaxing and bullying, he should induce them to renounce the Articles, was thunderstruck when he found that they were disposed to soften down the doctrines of the Declaration. Nor did it necessarily follow that, even if the theory of the Tories had undergone no modification, their practice would coincide with their theory. It might, one should think, have crossed the mind of a man of fifty, who had seen a great deal of the world, that people sometimes do what they think wrong. Though a prelate might hold that Paul directs us to obey even a Nero, it might not on that account be perfectly safe to treat the Right Reverend Father in God after the fashion of Nero, in the hope that he would continue to obey on the principles of Paul. The King indeed had only to look at home. He was at least as much attached to the Catholic Church as any Tory gentleman or clergyman could be to the Church of England.

Adultery was at least as clearly and strongly condemned by his Church as resistance by the Church of England. Yet his priests could not keep him from Arabella Sedley. While he was risking his crown for the sake of his soul, he was risking his soul for the sake of an ugly, dirty mistress. There is something delightfully grotesque in the spectacle of a man who, while living in the habitual violation of his own known duties, is unable to believe that any temptation can draw any other person aside from the path of virtue.

James was disappointed in all his calculations. His hope was that the Tories would follow their principles, and that the Nonconformists would follow their interests. Exactly the reverse took place. The great body of the Tories sacrificed the principle of non-resistance to their interests; the great body of Nonconformists rejected the delusive offers of the King, and stood firmly by their principles. The two parties whose strife had convulsed the empire during half a century were united for a moment; and all that vast royal power which three years before had seemed immovably fixed vanished at once like chaff in a hurricane.

The very great length to which this article has already been extended makes it impossible for us to discuss, as we had meant to do, the characters and conduct of the leading English statesmen at this crisis. But we must offer a few remarks on the spirit and tendency of the Revolution of 1688.

The editor of this volume quotes the Declaration of Right, and tells us that, by looking at it, we may "judge at a glance whether the authors of the Revolution achieved all they might and ought, in their position, to have achieved; whether the Commons of England did their duty to their constituents, their country, posterity, and universal freedom." We are at a loss to imagine how he can have read and transcribed the Declaration of Right, and yet have so utterly misconceived its nature. That famous document is, as its very name imports, declaratory, and not remedial. It was never meant to he a measure of reform. It neither contained, nor was designed to contain, any allusion to those innovations which the authors of the Revolution considered as desirable, and which they speedily proceeded to make. The Declaration was merely a recital of certain old and wholesome laws which had been violated by the Stuarts, and a solemn protest against the validity of any precedent which might be set up in opposition to those laws. The words run thus: "They do claim, demand, and insist upon all and singular the premises as their undoubted rights and liberties." Before a man begins to make improvements on his estate, he must know its boundaries. Before a legislature sits down to reform a constitution, it is fit to ascertain what that constitution really is. This is all that the Declaration was intended to do; and to quarrel with it because it did not directly introduce any beneficial changes is to quarrel with meat for not being fuel.

同类推荐
  • 北东园笔录

    北东园笔录

    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。
  • WILD FLOWERS

    WILD FLOWERS

    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。
  • 养生秘录

    养生秘录

    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。
  • 礼忏文

    礼忏文

    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。
  • 鉴堂一禅师语录

    鉴堂一禅师语录

    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。
热门推荐
  • 无良商女

    无良商女

    锦城最富有的当属慕容老爷,一个儿子,七位女儿,个个貌美动人,被锦城誉为“七仙女”,传说谁若娶得其女,必定会飞黄腾达!偏偏五小姐被人退婚,面带愁容内心乐开了花,退婚吧,本小姐喜欢婚嫁自由。情节虚构,切勿模仿
  • 霸道校草的守护甜心

    霸道校草的守护甜心

    阮筱晴河炫鹤啸简直就是两个世界的人,炫鹤啸对阮筱晴一见钟情,但阮筱晴还傻傻的不懂他的心意。不过他并没有放弃而是更认真的呵护她,保护她,可他们在一起还不到一个月,逆天了,在看日出时阮筱晴竟奇迹般地回到了古代,而炫鹤啸因为过度悲伤而进了医院,至今未醒。炫鹤啸竟然是一名君王,但却好像失去了记忆。阮筱晴做了很多都无济于事,阮筱晴的身世,不便透露哦。她在另一个国家看到了她的两个好朋友,他们也是不知道怎么回事就穿越过来的,穿越后不仅古代,现代也发生了很多事,阮筱晴很无奈,她,,,,
  • 神予朵拉

    神予朵拉

    故事背景,在遥远的古希腊,普罗米修斯为了帮人类,得罪了天神宙斯。普罗米修斯受到了惩罚,宙斯怪罪于人类。为了给人类惩罚,宙斯让众神造一个能够祸害人类的祸水,然后女主诞生了。如果没有看懂上面的故事背景,那么请看下面的一句话总结:小白朵拉的乌龙事件簿。
  • 神仙微信

    神仙微信

    我疯狂地赶回去,一脚踹开门,却惨然地发现,我漂亮的姐姐已经被两个坏蛋给弄伤了。一怒之下我与两个坏蛋纠缠在一起。没想到从此我的人生就开启了一场奇异的旅程。先是莫名加了神仙微信,后是遇见神仙,种种只有在电视剧里才能看到的场景。居然真的有一天发生在了我的生活中!
  • 废后风华惊天下:邪君追妻

    废后风华惊天下:邪君追妻

    她是皇后侄女,他是贵妃之子。为了保住表哥的太子之位,为了家族,她欺骗了他,还间接害死了他的母妃。他登上帝位,强迎她为后,让她成为后宫的笑柄。折磨和错过,让她在后位上渐渐心如死灰,诈死出宫,朕的皇后,想逃哪里去!你得陪我一辈子!本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。
  • 每天一堂执行课

    每天一堂执行课

    执行像横阻在计划与结果之间的一道鸿沟,跨得过去就成功,跨不过去就失败。没有执行力,就没有战斗力,更没有竞争力!一天一个关于执行的小故事,一天一节关于执行的独特讲解,一天一段关于执行的深刻启示,通过每天一堂执行课真正提升自己的执行能力,使自已的职业生涯迈上一个新台阶。
  • 站住:冷漠校花别再跑

    站住:冷漠校花别再跑

    冷漠校花可怡刚来到艺昂音乐学院,刚来到学校就被男生疯狂追“捕”。因为一次偶遇,让本来死对头的“冤家”变成了亲密无间的恋人,因为一次失误,让这对天配恋人不得不分手。随着误会被一点点解开,他们又能否回到从前的样子。
  • 龙玉传奇

    龙玉传奇

    繁华的大都市突然出现一个十五岁的小女孩,她穿着一身华丽的古装衣服,脖子上戴着一块像锁一样的玉,散发出耀眼的绿光,她就像是一个天使茫然的走在大街上,仰望天空,不知何去何从……
  • 星空下的眷恋

    星空下的眷恋

    我说这些只是想说这样的人为什么还会一直呆着我们班,而没有掉下去呢,原因就是原来他是有后台的人,怪不得这么的有恃无恐呢,这就是最重要的原因。
  • 深海蓝心

    深海蓝心

    一个是帅到让人过目不忘的校草,一个是胖到人皆嘲笑的肥妞。两个都是让家长头疼,让老师厌恶的差生,第一天认识就被牵连进震惊社会的命案中,更是联手对付霸道无理的班主任,在嘀笑皆非的事故中增加感情·······胖女孩的神秘身世一步步被揭开,危险也步步紧逼,此时神秘的蓄海组织为了利益,污染了海洋,海洋的报复,让人类面临末世危机,而能拯救人类的只有来自深海的新物种——第二人类······第二人类是伸出援手拯救人类还是让人彻底从地球消失,这不仅仅是一项选择,更是对生命的反思······