登陆注册
20283600000014

第14章 POLITICAL CONDITIONS(9)

The bishops were eminently respectable.They did not lead immoral lives,and if they gave a large share of preferment to their families,that at least was a domestic virtue.Some of them,Bishop Barrington of Durham,for example,took a lead in philanthropic movements;and,if considered simply as prosperous country gentlemen,little fault could be found with them.While,however,every commonplace motive pointed so directly towards a career of subserviency to the ruling class among the laity,it could not be expected that they should take a lofty view of their profession.The Anglican clergy were not like the Irish priesthood,in close sympathy with the peasantry,or like the Scottish ministers,the organs of strong convictions spreading through the great mass of the middle and lower classes.A man of energy,who took his faith seriously,was,like the Evangelical clergy,out of the road to preferment,or,like Wesley,might find no room within the church at all.His colleagues called him an 'enthusiast,'and disliked him as a busybody if not a fanatic.They were by birth and adoption themselves members of the ruling class;many of them were the younger sons of squires,and held their livings in virtue of their birth.Advowsons are the last offices to retain a proprietary character.

The church of that day owed such a representative as Horne Tooke to the system which enabled his father to provide for him by buying a living.From the highest to the lowest ranks of clergy,the church was as Matthew Arnold could still call it,an 'appendage of the barbarians.'The clergy,that is,as a whole,were an integral but a subsidiary part of the aristocracy or the great landed interest.Their admirers urged that the system planted a cultivated gentleman in every parish in the country.Their opponents replied,like John Sterling,that he was a 'black dragoon with horse meat and man's meat'--part of the garrison distributed through the country to support the cause of property and order.In any case the instinctive prepossessions,the tastes and favourite pursuits of the profession were essentially those of the class with which it was so intimately connected.Arthur Young,(19)speaking of the French clergy,observes that at least they are not poachers and foxhunters,who divide their time between hunting,drinking,and preaching.You do not in France find such advertisements as he had heard of in England,'Wanted a curacy in a good sporting country,where the duty is light and the neighbourhood convivial.'The proper exercise for a country clergyman,he rather quaintly observes,is agriculture.The ideal parson,that is,should be a squire in canonical dress.The clergy of the eighteenth century probably varied between the extremes represented by Trulliber and the Vicar of Wakefield.Many of them were excellent people,with a mild taste for literature,contributing to the Gentleman's Magazine,investigating the antiquities of their county,occasionally confuting a deist,exerting a sound judgment in cultivating their glebes or improving the breed of cattle,and respected both by squire and farmers.The 'Squarson,'in Sydney Smith's facetious phrase,was the ideal clergyman.The purely sacerdotal qualities,good or bad,were at a minimum.Crabbe,himself a type of the class,has left admirable portraits of his fellows.Profound veneration for his noble patrons and hearty dislike for intrusive dissenters were combined in his own case with a pure domestic life,a keen insight into the uglier realities of country life and a good sound working morality.Miss Austen,who said that she could have been Crabbe's wife,has given more delicate pictures of the clergyman as he appeared at the tea-tables of the time.He varies according to her from the squire's excellent younger brother,who is simply a squire in a white neckcloth,to the silly but still respectable sycophant,who firmly believes his lady patroness to be a kind of local deity.Many of the real memoirs of the day give pleasant examples of the quiet and amiable lives of the less ambitious clergy.There is the charming Gilbert White (1720-1793)placidly studying the ways of tortoises,and unconsciously composing a book which breathes an undying charm from its atmosphere of peaceful repose;William Gilpin (1724-1804)founding and endowing parish schools,teaching the catechism,and describing his vacation tours in narratives which helped to spread a love of natural scenery;and thomas Gisborne (1758-1846),squire and clergyman,a famous preacher among the evangelicals and a poet after the fashion of Cowper,who loved his native Needwood Forest as White loved Selborne and Gilpin loved the woods of Boldre;and Cowper himself (1731-1800)who,though not a clergyman,lived in a clerical atmosphere,and whose gentle and playful enjoyment of quiet country life relieves the painfully deep pathos of his disordered imagination;and the excellent W.L.Bowles (1762-1850),whose sonnets first woke Coleridge's imagination,who spent eighty-eight years in an amiable and blameless life,and was country-gentleman,magistrate,antiquary,clergyman,and poet.(20)Such names are enough to recall a type which has not quite vanished,and which has gathered a new charm in more stirring and fretful times.These most excellent people,however,were not likely to be prominent in movements destined to break up the placid environment of their lives nor,in truth,to be sources of any great intellectual stir.

同类推荐
  • 阙题

    阙题

    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。
  • 诸经要略文

    诸经要略文

    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。
  • 金刚顶经毗卢遮那一百八尊法身契印

    金刚顶经毗卢遮那一百八尊法身契印

    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。
  • 江月松风集

    江月松风集

    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。
  • 太清元道真经

    太清元道真经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 生意人的活法

    生意人的活法

    松下幸之助是一个善于冥思的智者,在他深邃的眼神中,我们可以探求其对于人生的诸多观点,比如:“物质的力量再大,也不能真正俘获人的‘心’。”“只知责备别人的人固然愚蠢、妄自尊大,但是自命不凡的人更令人不齿。”“生活在现代的我们,不能再用前人的观念与方式生活,应当互相尊重和关怀。”“在努力工作的过程中,满怀希望,就不会觉得劳累与辛苦。”本书作者在对松下幸之助的生平、思想和著作进行深入研究后汇编此书,期待大家能够真正领悟大师的智慧。面对这样一位经营之神的成功心得,我们还有什么理由不去认真阅读和领悟一番呢!
  • 相女归来:毒妃太倾城

    相女归来:毒妃太倾城

    重活一世,她以为可以平静的过她的农家小日子。可复苏的记忆,前世的恨怨,重重阴谋纷至沓来。逃避,挣扎,求存,她只是希望她所在乎的人都能好好的活着。只是,她再也不争,不意味着别人就会放过她。既然有人要苦苦相逼,她自然也不会再逃避。游戏才刚刚开始,而这一次,游戏规则由我定。
  • 重生之大明国公

    重生之大明国公

    经济高材生张凡,意外穿越到大明,成为贫困的读书人,会试中得解元。边关告急,他力挽狂澜,名扬天下,最终入主朝堂,用高超的手腕建设富强的大明皇朝。
  • 误入豪门的婚托

    误入豪门的婚托

    一场相亲引发的爱恋,四个年轻男女,四只骗死人不偿命的大骗子,她以为他只是个司机,而他真实身份是豪门富二代,她在把某经理骗得团团转的同时,也在经历着被骗得团团转的悲剧生活。她是个内衣模特,晚上躺在富二代男友的怀里欢乐,白天在良缘婚介当托骗人,遇到了对她一见钟情的穷小子以后,她的世界发生了变化。两段错位的爱情,爆笑演义在深圳这个水深火热的大都市里,究竟……谁会是最后的赢家?
  • 墙里佳人笑

    墙里佳人笑

    墙里秋千墙外道,墙外行人墙里佳人笑。多少人羡慕苏子瞻与王弗少年相识耳鬓厮磨的爱情,可却忘了,诗的上一句是天涯何处无芳草。他有太多的计较、筹谋,小心翼翼的试探不敢倾尽所有。她勇敢有余通透却不足,跌跌撞撞的将自已驻进他心里。
  • 培养自信自立自强的孩子

    培养自信自立自强的孩子

    父母都是爱孩子的,但父母不可能永远将孩子庇护在温暖和呵护中,孩子未来的路是要靠孩子自己去走的,培养一个自信、自立、自强的孩子,才是父母对孩子最好的爱。教育专家认为,给孩子讲故事或让孩子自己看故事,是最好的教育方法。因为孩子爱听故事,爱看故事。本书共分三篇,分别是自信篇、自立篇、自强篇。书中以故事的形式激励孩子自信、自立、自强,是父母家庭教育的好帮手。父母可以把书中的故事读给孩子听,也可以让孩子自己读,还可以和孩子共同交流一下体会和感受,增进亲子关系。激励孩子自信、自立、自强,才能为孩子铺就一条成才成功之路。
  • 萌到深处自然嫁

    萌到深处自然嫁

    一个是老实爱神游的意大利语老师,一个是逆天又腹黑的某知名服装企业的大BOSS,本应该没有交集的两人却接二连三意外的相遇,这就是上天扔下来的猿粪啊……此文乃三无产品,无小白,无虐,无滚滚天雷~这是不可能滴~
  • 师姐:以身相许如何

    师姐:以身相许如何

    苏岚觉得要装小白,必然要装得像,于是,她在新手村待了整整一天,才到10级。可是……那个绕了整个新手村也没找灰狼王的师弟又是怎么回事?苏岚觉得作为师姐,见死不救是不对了,于是……多年以后,苏岚想起来,悔不当初。从此,江湖上,一个叫苏幕遮的琴师旁边,必然有个叫一曲歌风的归墟。师弟:师姐,你含辛茹苦把我拉扯到这么大,你说我该怎么报答呢?苏岚:师弟觉得呢?师弟:以身相许如何?
  • 闲暇所写

    闲暇所写

    闲暇之作,只求,此生无憾!闲暇随笔,但求,死而无憾!
  • tfboys水晶之恋

    tfboys水晶之恋

    沐星辰与三只有着剪不断理还乱的情缘,看似友情,又似爱情,到底这种情缘会给他们的生活增加怎样的光彩呢?还需要你认真地看完。