登陆注册
4705400000031

第31章

When on charges as wild as Mother Goose's tales, on the testimony of wretches who proclaimed themselves to be spies and traitors, and whom everybody now believes to have been also liars and murderers, the offal of gaols and brothels, the leavings of the hangman's whip and shears, Catholics guilty of nothing but their religion were led like sheep to the Protestant shambles, where were the loyal Tory gentry and the passively obedient clergy? And where, when the time of retribution came, when laws were strained and juries packed to destroy the leaders of the Whigs, when charters were invaded, when Jeffreys and Kirke were making Somersetshire what Lauderdale and Graham had made Scotland, where were the ten thousand brisk boys of Shaftesbury, the members of ignoramus juries, the wearers of the Polish medal?

All-powerful to destroy others, unable to save themselves, the members of the two parties oppressed and were oppressed, murdered and were murdered, in their turn. No lucid interval occurred between the frantic paroxysms of two contradictory illusions.

To the frequent changes of the government during the twenty years which had preceded the Restoration, this unsteadiness is in a great measure to be attributed. Other causes had also been at work. Even if the country had been governed by the house of Cromwell or by the remains of the Long Parliament, the extreme austerity of the Puritans would necessarily have produced a revulsion. Towards the close of the Protectorate many signs indicated that a time of licence was at hand. But the restoration of Charles the Second rendered the change wonderfully rapid and violent. Profligacy became a test of orthodoxy, and loyalty a qualification for rank and office. A deep and general taint infected the morals of the most influential classes, and spread itself through every province of letters. Poetry inflamed the passions; philosophy undermined the principles; divinity itself, inculcating an abject reverence for the Court, gave additional effect to the licentious example of the Court. We look in vain for those qualities which lend a charm to the errors of high and ardent natures, for the generosity, the tenderness, the chivalrous delicacy, which ennoble appetites into passions, and impart to vice itself a portion of the majesty of virtue. The excesses of that age remind us of the humours of a gang of footpads, revelling with their favourite beauties at a flash-house. In the fashionable libertinism there is a hard, cold ferocity, an impudence, a lowness, a dirtiness, which can be paralleled only among the heroes and heroines of that filthy and heartless literature which encouraged it. One nobleman of great abilities wanders about as a Merry-Andrew. Another harangues the mob stark naked from a window. A third lays an ambush to cudgel a man who has offended him. A knot of gentlemen of high rank and influence combine to push their fortunes at Court by circulating stories intended to ruin an innocent girl, stones which had no foundation, and which, if they had been true, would never have passed the lips of a man of honour. A dead child is found in the palace, the offspring of some maid of honour by some courtier, or perhaps by Charles himself. The whole flight of pandars and buffoons pounce upon it, and carry it in triumph to the royal laboratory, where his Majesty, after a brutal jest, dissects it for the amusement of the assembly, and probably of its father among the rest. The favourite Duchess stamps about Whitehall, cursing and swearing. The ministers employ their time at the council-board in making mouths at each other and taking off each other's gestures for the amusement of the King. The Peers at a conference begin to pommel each other and to tear collars and periwigs. A speaker in the House of Commons gives offence to the Court. He is waylaid by a gang of bullies, and his nose is cut to the bone. This ignominious dissoluteness, or rather, if we may venture to designate it by the only proper word, blackguardism of feeling and manners, could not but spread from private to public life. The cynical sneers, and epicurean sophistry, which had driven honour and virtue from one part of the character, extended their influence over every other. The second generation of the statesmen of this reign were worthy pupils of the schools in which they had been trained, of the gaming-table of Grammont, and the tiring-room of Nell. In no other age could such a trifler as Buckingham have exercised any political influence. In no other age could the path to power and glory have been thrown open to the manifold infamies of Churchill.

The history of Churchill shows, more clearly perhaps than that of any other individual, the malignity and extent of the corruption which had eaten into the heart of the public morality. An English gentleman of good family attaches himself to a Prince who has seduced his sister, and accepts rank and wealth as the price of her shame and his own. He then repays by ingratitude the benefits which he has purchased by ignominy, betrays his patron in a manner which the best cause cannot excuse, and commits an act, not only of private treachery, but of distinct military desertion. To his conduct at the crisis of the fate of James, no service in modern times has, as far as we remember, furnished any parallel. The conduct of Ney, scandalous enough no doubt, is the very fastidiousness of honour in comparison of it. The perfidy of Arnold approaches it most nearly. In our age and country no talents, no services, no party attachments, could bear any man up under such mountains of infamy. Yet, even before Churchill had performed those great actions which in some degree redeem his character with posterity, the load lay very lightly on him. He had others in abundance to keep him in countenance. Godolphin, Orford, Danby, the trimmer Halifax, the renegade Sunderland, were all men of the same class.

同类推荐
  • THE VALLEY OF FEAR

    THE VALLEY OF FEAR

    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。
  • The Iceberg Express

    The Iceberg Express

    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。
  • 长爪梵志请问经

    长爪梵志请问经

    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。
  • 宝庆四明志

    宝庆四明志

    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。
  • 大方广佛华严经不思议佛境界分

    大方广佛华严经不思议佛境界分

    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
  • 辰曦传

    辰曦传

    将军百战死,壮士十年归!一曲离歌起,多少往事尽。
  • 交换杀人

    交换杀人

    本书为“中国当代故事文学读本”悬疑推理系列之四,不仅收入了当今故事界优秀作者的短篇精品力作,还首次整合了《故事会》杂志创刊以来尚未开发的悬疑推理中篇故事资源。故事悬念迭起,疑云密布,让热爱悬疑推理故事的读者尽享阅读故事的乐趣。
  • 雍正墓陵

    雍正墓陵

    1915年间,军阀混战,为了补充军队军饷,军阀张作甫命令营长李强到民间偷盗陵墓,而吴江正好是李强营里的参谋长便跟随李强来到了金阳山。李强拿着一本不知名的册子在命人潜入金阳山上的墨湖,自己带一部分人去了金阳山深处,吴江在上山路上正好拉肚子和部队走散。吴江花了一天一夜的时间找到部队,部队里所有人都倒在血泊中,全身被高度啃咬,死因不明,吴江在尸体上仅仅发现了掉落的虫子,吴京把虫子抓在布袋里,又拿走那本不知名的册子就去墨湖那找下水的人。
  • 现代妖管所

    现代妖管所

    一场别开生面的招聘,一个十分特殊的机关,颠覆了章嫣二十二年的人生经历!你说这只长着狐狸尾巴的人是我的同事?你说这只吐着大舌头的阿飘是凶手?你说我就是传说中张天师的后人?开什么玩笑我姓立早章不是弓长张!章嫣心中咆哮不止,泪眼朦胧地看着某人:“我现在退出还来得及吗?”某人邪魅一笑:“乖,先过来帮我按住这只小鬼。”
  • 别笑,我是高考零分作文(第2季)

    别笑,我是高考零分作文(第2季)

    最雷人、最搞笑、最荒诞、最天才的零分作文,高考一族的减压零食,都市白领的幽默早餐!另附小学生爆笑“撒谎作文”必杀篇,绝对挑战你的想象极限!《央视新闻频道》等28家电视台,《新华日报》《南方日报》《重庆晨报》等120家报纸、数千家网站报道推荐!
  • 处事绝学(历代经典文丛)

    处事绝学(历代经典文丛)

    “知己,可扬长避短、精益求精;知人,可以让人更好地把握交往的尺度,因人而异地运用交往艺术;知己知人,可以让我们在生活中更从容自信、游刃有余!”古往今来,凡成大事者除具备真才实学外,均深谙为人处世之道。可以说,中华五千年的谋略精华、处世绝学在他们身上得到了最集中的体现。而成功的黄金定律也已被一代又一代人实践和运用并收到了巨大成效。
  • 茶里加盐的味道(闪小说哲理篇)

    茶里加盐的味道(闪小说哲理篇)

    本套书精选3000余篇闪小说,所有篇目均在国内公开报刊发表过。每篇都有独到的思想性,画面感强,适合改编手机短信小说。这些闪小说除了通过故事的演绎让读者了解这些闪小说的可感和领悟其中的深刻含义外,特别对广大初高中生读者的心灵是一次很好的洗涤。
  • 影帝大大甜到家

    影帝大大甜到家

    “傅司霆,我喜欢你!嫁给我好吗!”二十岁的陆晓晓站在百花奖的舞台上,朝评委席上的国宝级影帝傅司霆大声喊道。十年,她的童年、青春和成长都与那人交缠在一起,而她终于在今天迈出了这大胆的一步!被万众瞩目的大影帝双眸带笑,接过话筒时,不经意秀出了自己无名指上的陆晓晓同款戒指。“老婆别闹,我们不是已经领过证了吗?”“……唉?!什么时候?你都没求婚的!”“那我现在求婚,你答不答应?”此话一出,现场一片灯光闪烁,陆晓晓大囧!卧槽,当着千万观众和你的粉丝们求婚,这求婚我敢拒绝吗?敢吗敢吗敢吗???傅司霆!今晚回家跪键盘!
  • 汉晋文学中的《庄子》接受

    汉晋文学中的《庄子》接受

    本书主要探讨汉晋时期思想学术领域庄学全面复兴的背景下,文学中的《庄子》接受状况。回答了以下问题:汉魏之际庄学复兴有何表现?复兴的原因是什么?汉晋文学以怎样的方式接受《庄子》?汉晋各时期的《庄子》接受有何特点?汉晋文学主要接受了《庄子》的哪些方面?有何表现?《庄子》强烈的生命精神及由此生发的诗性精神是汉晋士人和文学对其进行选择接受时的一个主要兴奋点。本书以此为中心,对汉晋文学与《庄子》在生命意识、理想人生境界的建构及叙述方式上的深层联系进行了专题研究。
  • 智读三国谋略高手

    智读三国谋略高手

    本书从以上四方面立意、引证的史料简洁而生动,同时辅之以现代社会的事例,力求做到史有所出,论有所证,例析结合。品读三国,借鉴古今。以此你可以获得一个历练人生的机会。历史的追述与人生的体悟在这里可以重合,可以结晶。