登陆注册
4705400000143

第143章

In 1660 the whole nation was mad with loyal excitement. If we had to choose a lot from among all the multitude of those which men have drawn since the beginning of the world, we would select that of Charles the Second on the day of his return. He was in a situation in which the dictates of ambition coincided with those of benevolence, in which it was easier to be virtuous than to be wicked, to be loved than to be hated, to earn pure and imperishable glory than to become infamous. For once the road of goodness was a smooth descent. He had done nothing to merit the affection of his people. But they had paid him in advance without measure. Elizabeth, after the destruction of the Armada, or after the abolition of monopolies, had not excited a thousandth part of the enthusiasm with which the young exile was welcomed home. He was not, like Lewis the Eighteenth, imposed on his subjects by foreign conquerors; nor did he, like Lewis the Eighteenth, come back to a country which had undergone a complete change. The House of Bourbon was placed in Paris as a trophy of the victory of the European confederation. The return of the ancient princes was inseparably associated in the public mind with the cession of extensive provinces, with the payment of an immense tribute, with the devastation of flourishing departments, with the occupation of the kingdom by hostile armies, with the emptiness of those niches in which the gods of Athens and Rome had been the objects of a new idolatry, with the nakedness of those walls on which the Transfiguration had shone with light as glorious as that which overhung Mount Tabor. They came back to a land in which they could recognise nothing. The seven sleepers of the legend, who closed their eyes when the Pagans were persecuting the Christians, and woke when the Christians were persecuting each other, did not find themselves in a world more completely new to them. Twenty years had done the work of twenty generations.

Events had come thick. Men had lived fast. The old institutions and the old feelings had been torn up by the roots. There was a new Church founded and endowed by the usurper; a new nobility whose titles were taken from fields of battle, disastrous to the ancient line; a new chivalry whose crosses had been won by exploits which had seemed likely to make the banishment of the emigrants perpetual. A new code was administered by a new magistracy. A new body of proprietors held the soil by a new tenure. The most ancient local distinctions had been effaced. The most familiar names had become obsolete. There was no longer a Normandy or a Burgundy, a Brittany and a Guienne. The France of Lewis the Sixteenth had passed away as completely as one of the Preadamite worlds. Its fossil remains might now and then excite curiosity. But it was as impossible to put life into the old institutions as to animate the skeletons which are imbedded in the depths of primeval strata. It was as absurd to think that France could again be placed under the feudal system, as that our globe could be overrun by Mammoths. The revolution in the laws and in the form of government was but an outward sign of that mightier revolution which had taken place in the heart and brain of the people, and which affected every transaction of life, trading, farming, studying, marrying, and giving in marriage. The French whom the emigrant prince had to govern were no more like the French of his youth, than the French of his youth were like the French of the Jacquerie. He came back to a people who knew not him nor his house, to a people to whom a Bourbon was no more than a Carlovingian or a Merovingian. He might substitute the white flag for the tricolor; he might put lilies in the place of bees; he might order the initials of the Emperor to be carefully effaced. But he could turn his eyes nowhere without meeting some object which reminded him that he was a stranger in the palace of his fathers. He returned to a country in which even the passing traveller is every moment reminded that there has lately been a great dissolution and reconstruction of the social system. To win the hearts of a people under such circumstances would have been no easy task even for Henry the Fourth.

In the English Revolution the case was altogether different.

Charles was not imposed on his countrymen, but sought by them.

His restoration was not attended by any circumstance which could inflict a wound on their national pride. Insulated by our geographical position, insulated by our character, we had fought out our quarrels and effected our reconciliation among ourselves.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 肉兔标准化生产技术

    肉兔标准化生产技术

    本书是荟萃养殖业最完备的工具书。囊括了最实用的养殖技术,最详尽的致富方法和合适的致富项目。
  • 这样做人做事最给力

    这样做人做事最给力

    不懂做人之道,就不会受人欢迎,不懂做事之道,就不能把事情做得尽善尽美。做人的价值是在做事中不断实现的,而做事是做人是否成功的重要体现。
  • 徐志摩文集2

    徐志摩文集2

    《徐志摩文集:扫荡着无际的青空》收录了徐志摩经典力作,分为散文、书信和诗歌三部分。
  • 台湾资料清仁宗实录选辑

    台湾资料清仁宗实录选辑

    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。
  • 气法要妙至诀

    气法要妙至诀

    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。
  • 嚣张宝宝财迷妈咪

    嚣张宝宝财迷妈咪

    六年前她是无所不能的黑暗圣手,他是狠辣无情的商界霸主。一夜迷情,她狼狈逃亡。六年后,她是身份多变的天才设计师,身边还带着一个无所不能的嚣张宝宝,而他则是即将与她合作的公司首席。“老头,敢跟我抢女人,你确定你这把老骨头还能经得起折腾?”某男一脸的嫌弃:“毛都没长齐还想跟我抢女人?”某娃彻底不淡定了:“老头,想跟我抢女人,你问过那边的几位叔叔了吗?”
  • 错承君王宠

    错承君王宠

    她原是游戏“草丛”中,滴落不沾身的女大学生;他是愿为自由故一切皆可抛的皇子;她的离奇穿越,为救他舍身献吻;而为她的自由,他放弃游手好闲的自由日子,掀起了一朝的巨变。情节虚构,请勿模仿!
  • 人家闺女有花戴(中篇小说)

    人家闺女有花戴(中篇小说)

    李林包里放着县文化局那张录用通知书到乡政府报到,接待他的是乡办公室文书。文书是一个白胖的老头子,样子像个老太太。文书说,我叫老尤,今天乡里人都下村去了,书记乡长叫我给你安排房间。李林说,那通知书交给你。老尤一摆手,你自己先放着吧,反正早听说你要来,又没有人冒充你。老尤把李林带到楼上,经过吱呀作响的漆黑的过道,然后打开一个房间。里面已有了一副铺盖,一床醒目的大红缎被堆在床上。老尤说,你去仓库间搬张床吧,乡里暂时安排你与计划生育员住在一起。
  • 卑鄙的圣人:曹操1

    卑鄙的圣人:曹操1

    曹操的计谋,奸诈程度往往将对手整得头昏脑涨、找不着北,卑鄙程度也屡屡突破道德底线,但他却是一个心怀天下、体恤众生的圣人;而且他还是一个柔情万丈、天才横溢的诗人;最后他还是一个敏感、自卑、内心孤独的普通男人。
  • 万界最强冥帝

    万界最强冥帝

    “万界之中,吾之所过,皆为幽冥所有。”看张炎崛起诸天,执掌幽冥。