登陆注册
5246300001064

第1064章 CHAPTER XXII(4)

And now the Council of Regency, almost in despair, had recourse to the Bank of England. Two hundred thousand pounds was the very smallest sum which would suffice to meet the King's most pressing wants. Would the Bank of England advance that sum? The capitalists who lead the chief sway in that corporation were in bad humour, and not without reason. But fair words, earnest entreaties and large promises were not spared; all the influence of Montague, which was justly great, was exerted; the Directors promised to do their best; but they apprehended that it would be impossible for them to raise the money without making a second call of twenty per cent. on their constituents. It was necessary that the question should be submitted to a General Court; in such a court more than six hundred persons were entitled to vote; and the result might well be doubted. The proprietors were summoned to meet on the fifteenth of August at Grocers' Hall. During the painful interval of suspense, Shrewsbury wrote to his master in language more tragic than is often found in official letters. "If this should not succeed, God knows what can be done. Any thing must be tried and ventured rather than lie down and die."710 On the fifteenth of August, a great epoch in the history of the Bank, the General Court was held. In the chair sate Sir John Houblon, the Governor, who was also Lord Mayor of London, and, what would in our time be thought strange, a Commissioner of the Admiralty. Sir John, in a speech, every word of which had been written and had been carefully considered by the Directors, explained the case, and implored the assembly to stand by King William. There was at first a little murmuring. "If our notes would do," it was said, "we should be most willing to assist His Majesty; but two hundred thousand pounds in hard money at a time like this." The Governor announced explicitly that nothing but gold or silver would supply the necessities of the army in Flanders. At length the question was put to the vote; and every hand in the Hall was held up for sending the money. The letters from the Dutch Embassy informed the States General that the events of that day had bound the Bank and the government together in close alliance, and that several of the ministers had, immediately after the meeting, purchased stock merely in order to give a pledge of their attachment to the body which had rendered so great a service to the State.711Meanwhile strenuous exertions were making to hasten the recoinage. Since the Restoration the Mint had, like every other public establishment in the kingdom, been a nest of idlers and jobbers. The important office of Warden, worth between six and seven hundred a year, had become a mere sinecure, and had been filled by a succession of fine gentlemen, who were well known at the hazard table of Whitehall, but who never condescended to come near the Tower. This office had just become vacant, and Montague had obtained it for Newton.712 The ability, the industry and the strict uprightness of the great philosopher speedily produced a complete revolution throughout the department which was under his direction.713 He devoted himself to his task with an activity which left him no time to spare for those pursuits in which he Ihad surpassed Archimedes and Galileo. Till the great work was completely done, he resisted firmly, and almost angrily, every attempt that was made by men of science, here or on the Continent, to draw him away from his official duties.714 The old officers of the Mint had thought it a great feat to coin silver to the amount of fifteen thousand pounds in a week. When Montague talked of thirty or forty thousand, these men of form and precedent pronounced the thing impracticable. But the energy of the young Chancellor of the Exchequer and of his friend the Warden accomplished far greater wonders. Soon nineteen mills were going at once in the Tower. As fast as men could be trained to the work in London, bands of them were sent off to other parts of the kingdom. Mints were established at Bristol, York, Exeter, Norwich and Chester. This arrangement was in the highest degree popular. The machinery and the workmen were welcomed to the new stations with the ringing of bells and the firing of guns. The weekly issue increased to sixty thousand pounds, to eighty thousand, to a hundred thousand, and at length to a hundred and twenty thousand.715 Yet even this issue, though great, not only beyond precedent, but beyond hope, was scanty when compared with the demands of the nation. Nor did all the newly stamped silver pass into circulation; for during the summer and autumn those politicians who were for raising the denomination of the coin were active and clamorous; and it was generally expected that, as soon as the Parliament should reassemble, the standard would be lowered. Of course no person who thought it probable that he should, at a day not far distant, be able to pay a debt of a pound with three crown pieces instead of four, was willing to part with a crown piece, till that day arrived. Most of the milled pieces were therefore hoarded.716 May, June and July passed away without any perceptible increase in the quantity of good money. It was not till August that the keenest observer could discern the first faint signs of returning prosperity.717The distress of the common people was severe, and was aggravated by the follies of magistrates and by the arts of malecontents. Asquire who was one of the quorum would sometimes think it his duty to administer to his neighbours, at this trying conjuncture, what seemed to him to be equity; and as no two of these rural praetors had exactly the same notion of what was equitable, their edicts added confusion to confusion. In one parish people were, in outrageous violation of the law, threatened with the stocks, if they refused to take clipped shillings by tale. In the next parish it was dangerous to pay such shillings except by weight.718 The enemies of the government, at the same time, laboured indefatigably in their vocation. They harangued in every place of public resort, from the Chocolate House in Saint James's Street to the sanded kitchen of the alehouse on the village green. In verse and prose they incited the suffering multitude to rise up in arms. Of the tracts which they published at this time, the most remarkable was written by a deprived priest named Grascombe, of whose ferocity and scurrility the most respectable nonjurors had long been ashamed. He now did his best to persuade the rabble to tear in pieces those members of Parliament who had voted for the restoration of the currency.719 It would be too much to say that the malignant industry of this man and of men like him produced no effect on a population which was doubtless severely tried. There were riots in several parts of the country, but riots which were suppressed with little difficulty, and, as far as can be discovered, without the shedding of a drop of blood.720 In one place a crowd of poor ignorant creatures, excited by some knavish agitator, besieged the house of a Whig member of Parliament, and clamorously insisted on having their short money changed. The gentleman consented, and desired to know how much they had brought. After some delay they were able to produce a single clipped halfcrown.721 Such tumults as this were at a distance exaggerated into rebellions and massacres. At Paris it was gravely asserted in print that, in an English town which was not named, a soldier and a butcher had quarrelled about a piece of money, that the soldier had killed the butcher, that the butcher's man had snatched up a cleaver and killed the soldier, that a great fight had followed, and that fifty dead bodies had been left on the ground.722 The truth was, that the behaviour of the great body of the people was beyond all praise. The judges when, in September, they returned from their circuits, reported that the temper of the nation was excellent.723 There was a patience, a reasonableness, a good nature, a good faith, which nobody had anticipated. Every body felt that nothing but mutual help and mutual forbearance could prevent the dissolution of society. A hard creditor, who sternly demanded payment to the day in milled money, was pointed at in the streets, and was beset by his own creditors with demands which soon brought him to reason.

同类推荐
  • The Critique of Practical Reason

    The Critique of Practical Reason

    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。
  • 棠阴比事

    棠阴比事

    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 Princess of Cleves

    The Princess of Cleves

    The Princess de Montpensier by Mme. de Lafayette Introduction by Oliver C. ColtThis story was written by Madame de Lafayette and published anonymously in 1662.汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 太和正音谱

    太和正音谱

    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。
  • 法华文句记

    法华文句记

    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。
热门推荐
  • 穿书之这都是命啊

    穿书之这都是命啊

    对于24岁独自开着一家婚礼会馆的孤女钱多多来说,睡一觉起来发现自己穿进书里神马的其实不是什么太大的问题,反正她无牵无挂孑然一身,哪儿不是活着?可是穿成个最后死的很悲惨的恶毒女配什么的,就不太友好了,逼不得已,钱多多决定,砍!号!重!练!拎着小包袱,带着被托付的男扮女装的小丫鬟,开启美好新生活去。可是,可但是,但可是,谁来告诉她,为啥她已经这么自觉远离主线剧情当个小人物了,最后还是被兜兜转转绕回了京城,甚至成了传说中的圣亲王妃呢?而且,而且,她明明已经特意选的这个看起来远离皇权斗争,被边缘化的可怜小世子,为啥,最后成了终极大BOSS呢?那个好吧,事到如今,她只能说一句,都***的是命啊。
  • 成功人生必知的68个理财技巧(上)

    成功人生必知的68个理财技巧(上)

    作者根据自己几十年的经验及对各金融大师们的研究,用简洁风趣的笔调概括了成功投资者行之有效的取胜策略。阐述了有关成长投资、价值投资、新兴市场、市场心理学、新投资思想、买卖时机掌握、专职损策略及如何回避风险等许多新的理念。该书对投资者极具参考价值和实践指导意义,对取胜技巧的分析会有助于每个投资者取得成功。
  • 批评对立面的确立

    批评对立面的确立

    诗歌的批评,也许就存在于对批评的“对立面”确立的过程之中,这是人们对诗歌批评“独特性”的一种常见的理解。孙绍振当时就意识到了这一问题的“严重性”:“没有对权威和传统挑战甚至亵渎的勇气,思想解放就是一句奢侈性的空话。在当艺术革新潮流开始的时候,传统、群众和革新者往往有一个互相摩擦、甚至互相折磨的阶段。”
  • 焦金流石:旱灾与高温的防范自救

    焦金流石:旱灾与高温的防范自救

    本系列主要内容包括“自然灾害”、“火场危害”、“交通事故”、“水上安全”、“中毒与突发疾病”、“突发环境污染”等,书中主要针对日常生活中遇到的各种灾害问题作了详细解答,并全面地介绍了防灾减灾的避险以及自救的知识。居安思危,有备无患。我们衷心希望本书能够帮助青少年迅速掌握各种避险自救技能。
  • 那年那人那山

    那年那人那山

    一个少年离奇的被人抬上长途大巴,进入了大山深处…历尽种种令人爆笑的磨难,在令人啼笑皆非的多次衰神附体返乡途中,邂逅精神失常女主,卷入一场看似平淡却曲折惊人的命案无法脱身,亲身经历了一场生生死死的旷世虐恋,陷入女主令人扼腕的伟大亲情爱情之中…真相大白…惨相丛生…多年后少年重返旧地,不见那年那人,甚至…连当年那愚公也移不走的大山都不见了踪影……作者用朴素的文笔深层次揭露了人性丑陋,以诙谐深沉两种笔风无缝转换剖析世间暖冷……
  • 最强修仙实验系统

    最强修仙实验系统

    大学生叶空做实验时发生事故穿越到了修仙界,随他而去的还有一个神奇的修真实验室。第一次做实验就不小心把一只人参变得成精了……
  • 铁血王朝:德国皇室

    铁血王朝:德国皇室

    皇室家族的兴衰,既是相关国家历史发展的缩影,也是世界历史的重要组成部分。皇族人物,特别是君王、重臣的起伏生死,构成了国别史、地区史,乃至世界历史整个剧情中丰富多彩的场景片段。因此,皇室家族既是历史的产物,又是历史的重要组成部分。
  • 探索宝藏未解之谜

    探索宝藏未解之谜

    人类最大的幸福之一就是对未知的探索,而人类社会的进步也完全有赖于这种探索。当科学家去研究一个定理时,他根本就不知道这个理论对未来会有什么用,就像一个伟大的科学家所说的,我们能要求一个婴儿做什么呢?但事实证明,每项发现与发明都有它实际的用处。而对于宝藏的追求,实际的好处是显而易见的,而人们对这一领域的探索更是热情无比。
  • 盗走总裁心

    盗走总裁心

    他是出了名的高富帅,那时,谁提起他不会夸一句:君子端方,温润如玉。她则是不知天高地厚的丫头,那时,谁惹了她,就是天王老子,她也敢揍。可就是这样的她,遭遇他,却是败得一塌糊涂。再次华丽而归后,她一路披荆斩棘,杀入娱乐圈,做一个风光无限的女明星!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 大洞玉经

    大洞玉经

    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。