登陆注册
5246300001049

第1049章 CHAPTER XXI(46)

That signal was to be given by a fire, of which the fuel was already prepared on the cliffs of Kent, and which would be visible across the straits.665But a peculiar fate has, in our country, always attended such conspiracies as that of Barclay and Charnock. The English regard assassination, and have during some ages regarded it, with a loathing peculiar to themselves. So English indeed is this sentiment that it cannot even now be called Irish, and till a recent period, it was not Scotch. In Ireland to this day the villain who shoots at his enemy from behind a hedge is too often protected from justice by public sympathy. In Scotland plans of assassination were often, during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, successfully executed, though known to great numbers of persons. The murders of Beaton, of Rizzio, of Darnley, of Murray, of Sharpe, are conspicuous instances. The royalists who murdered Lisle in Switzerland were Irishmen; the royalists who murdered Ascham at Madrid were Irishmen; the royalists who murdered Dorislaus at the Hague were Scotchmen. In England, as soon as such a design ceases to be a secret hidden in the recesses of one gloomy and ulcerated heart, the risk of detection and failure becomes extreme. Felton and Bellingham reposed trust in no human being; and they were therefore able to accomplish their evil purposes. But Babington's conspiracy against Elizabeth, Fawkes's conspiracy against James, Gerard's conspiracy against Cromwell, the Rye House conspiracy, the Cato Street conspiracy, were all discovered, frustrated and punished. In truth such a conspiracy is here exposed to equal danger from the good and from the bad qualities of the conspirators. Scarcely any Englishman, not utterly destitute of conscience and honour, will engage in a plot for slaying an unsuspecting fellow creature; and a wretch who has neither conscience nor honour is likely to think much on the danger which he incurs by being true to his associates, and on the rewards which he may obtain by betraying them. There are, it is true, persons in whom religious or political fanaticism has destroyed all moral sensibility on one particular point, and yet has left that sensibility generally unimpaired. Such a person was Digby. He had no scruple about blowing King, Lords and Commons into the air. Yet to his accomplices he was religiously and chivalrously faithful; nor could even the fear of the rack extort from him one word to their prejudice. But this union of depravity and heroism is very rare.

The vast majority of men are either not vicious enough or not virtuous enough to be loyal and devoted members of treacherous and cruel confederacies; and, if a single member should want either the necessary vice or the necessary virtue, the whole confederacy is in danger. To bring together in one body forty Englishmen, all hardened cutthroats, and yet all so upright and generous that neither the hope of opulence nor the dread of the gallows can tempt any one of them to be false to the rest, has hitherto been found, and will, it is to be hoped, always be found impossible.

There were among Barclay's followers both men too bad and men too good to be trusted with such a secret as his. The first whose heart failed him was Fisher. Even before the time and place of the crime had been fixed, he obtained an audience of Portland, and told that lord that a design was forming against the King's life. Some days later Fisher came again with more precise intelligence. But his character was not such as entitled him to much credit; and the knavery of Fuller, of Young, of Whitney and of Taffe, had made men of sense slow to believe stories of plots. Portland, therefore, though in general very easily alarmed where the safety of his master and friend was concerned, seems to have thought little about the matter. But, on the evening of the fourteenth of February, he received a visit from a person whose testimony he could not treat lightly. This was a Roman Catholic gentleman of known courage and honour, named Pendergrass. He had, on the preceding day, come up to town from Hampshire, in consequence of a pressing summons from Porter, who, dissolute and unprincipled as he was, had to Pendergrass been a most kind friend, indeed almost a father. In a Jacobite insurrection Pendergrass would probably have been one of the foremost. But he learned with horror that he was expected to bear a part in a wicked and shameful deed. He found himself in one of those situations which most cruelly torture noble and sensitive natures. What was he to do? Was he to commit a murder? Was he to suffer a murder which he could prevent to be committed? Yet was he to betray one who, however culpable, had loaded him with benefits? Perhaps it might be possible to save William without harming Porter? Pendergrass determined to make the attempt. "My Lord," he said to Portland, "as you value King William's life, do not let him hunt tomorrow. He is the enemy of my religion; yet my religion constrains me to give him this caution. But the names of the conspirators I am resolved to conceal; some of them are my friends; one of them especially is my benefactor; and I will not betray them."Portland went instantly to the King; but the King received the intelligence very coolly, and seemed determined not to be frightened out of a good day's sport by such an idle story.

Portland argued and implored in vain. He was at last forced to threaten that he would immediately make the whole matter public, unless His Majesty would consent to remain within doors during the next day; and this threat was successful.666Saturday the fifteenth came. The Forty were all ready to mount, when they received intelligence from the orderlies who watched Kensington House that the King did not mean to hunt that morning.

"The fox," said Chambers, with vindictive bitterness, "keeps his earth." Then he opened his shirt; showed the great scar in his breast, and vowed revenge on William.

同类推荐
  • 客座偶谈

    客座偶谈

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Art of Writing

    The Art of Writing

    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。
  • 太上保真养生论

    太上保真养生论

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Army of the Cumberland

    The Army of the Cumberland

    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。
  • 东华录选辑

    东华录选辑

    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。
热门推荐
  • 灿若烟火

    灿若烟火

    青春的花火,热辣辣地烧成一片夏日流火。散在流年里的星星,在脑海里记成完整的轮回。少女脸颊微红,双手紧紧握着那些隐晦心事。知道吗?喜欢你,像夏日明媚的烈阳那样喜欢。你把阳光捡进来,眼底就多了一抹流光。你问我的愿望是什么?我啊,最喜欢大家在一起了。在一起,在这里。
  • 天庭卖乖日常

    天庭卖乖日常

    十七是一只单纯可爱的小狐狸,在妖界过着没心没肺、无忧无虑的美好日子,直到有一天……突然就飞升成仙了?为什么天帝的态度这么古怪?初见时要打要杀,再见时关切备至,再后来……妈呀,他是个神经病吗?-=-=-=
  • 安徒生童话故事集

    安徒生童话故事集

    本书是安徒生这位童话大师笔下最具魅力的作品,迄今仍代表着世界童话的最高水平。这些人类心灵的篇章,处处凝聚着作家的实际生活感受洋溢着作家的浪漫向往,加上诗一般优美的语言,不仅使孩子们为之着迷,成年读来也会爱不释手。
  • 檐醉杂记

    檐醉杂记

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 线操纵模型飞机

    线操纵模型飞机

    线操纵模型飞机是人类历史上种可以直接控制的模型飞机。线操纵模型飞机项目也是我国早开展的航空模型可操纵项目,同时也是我国在世界航空模型锦标赛中夺得金牌和奖牌多的项目,在国际级线操纵特技模型飞机(F2B)项目上更是历史性地创造了个人和团体世界冠军“双五连冠”的佳绩。本书从国际级线操纵特技模型飞机开始,由浅入深地介绍了线操纵模型飞机的各个项目和当前我国的技术状态,尤其是图文并茂地介绍了国手制作国际级线操纵特技模型飞机的过程,使读者能够参照进行制作。本书各章内容相对独立,方便读者根据兴趣有选择地阅读。
  • 至强魔幻穿越系统

    至强魔幻穿越系统

    如同系统小说一样,主角林枫获得了一个系统,穿梭到了一个个神奇的大陆,走上称王称霸的旅程。但是就在他即将站在巅峰时,他却遭到背叛陷入死亡的境遇,可身怀系统的他没有彻底死去,重生后的他再次踏上了旅程,走上了一条不一样的道路,一条入魔后的邪恶之路。
  • 限你3秒,快点滚

    限你3秒,快点滚

    千金大小姐一定要是淑女吗?哼,我就是例外!淑女?什么东西?“限你3秒,快点滚!”这句话一出来,保证马上有人遭殃,可是有人却偏偏要挑战她的极限!3个有黑道背景的迷人男子与宫穆研相识,会发生什么故事勒?
  • 爸爸是孩子最好的榜样

    爸爸是孩子最好的榜样

    爸爸对孩子的最大影响,在于生活态度和人格倾向。好爸爸是孩子的榜样,也是孩子崇拜的对象。爸爸及早认识到自己对子女的影响,是开展良好教育的前提。孩子可以从父亲身上潜移默化地培养出许多好的品质,有些品质还会使其终身难忘,并终生受益,从这点上说,爸爸作为一个榜样的作用的作用,比金钱财富更为珍贵。
  • 大时代的梦

    大时代的梦

    这是一个关于中国梦的故事。每个人都有自己的梦想。为了心中的那束光,这一路上要经历多少次蜕变与离别。花谢又花开,失散又重逢。无论艳阳暴雨,终将使我们成长为真正的自己。那些残缺的终究圆满,那些到达圆满的终于活成一个谜……本小说包含艺术描写,穿插了唐卡、电子商务、买房难、整形医生、儒商、人工智能、留守儿童、元宵花灯、寿山石、乡村支教、军营生活、新农村、传统民居土楼、网红、飞花令、炒股、高铁、老茶树、布袋木偶、川剧变脸、田园综合体、非洲援助、盼台湾回归、空竹等内容。不局限于世俗的生活,日日都是好日。有了艺术和梦想,现实也可以很丰满。每个人都有权利仰望星空,不随意妥协,造自己的中国梦!
  • 刺马

    刺马

    温亚军,现为北京武警总部某文学杂志主编。著有长篇小说伪生活等六部,小说集硬雪、驮水的日子等七部。获第三届鲁迅文学奖,第十一届庄重文文学奖,《小说选刊》《中国作家》和《上海文学》等刊物奖,入选中国小说学会排行榜。中国作家协会会员。