登陆注册
5246300001144

第1144章 CHAPTER XXIII(15)

A few days later, the bill of pains and penalties against Duncombe passed the Commons. It provided that two thirds of his enormous property, real and personal, should be confiscated and applied to the public service. Till the third reading there was no serious opposition. Then the Tories mustered their strength.

They were defeated by a hundred and thirty-eight votes to a hundred and three; and the bill was carried up to the Lords by the Marquess of Hartington, a young nobleman whom the great body of Whigs respected as one of their hereditary chiefs, as the heir of Devonshire, and as the son in law of Russell.

That Duncombe had been guilty of shameful dishonesty was acknowledged by all men of sense and honour in the party to which he belonged. He had therefore little right to expect indulgence from the party which he had unfairly and malignantly assailed.

Yet it is not creditable to the Whigs that they should have been so much disgusted by his frauds, or so much irritated by his attacks, as to have been bent on punishing him in a manner inconsistent with all the principles which governments ought to hold most sacred.

Those who concurred in the proceeding against Duncombe tried to vindicate their conduct by citing as an example the proceeding against Fenwick. So dangerous is it to violate, on any pretence, those principles which the experience of ages has proved to be the safeguards of all that is most precious to a community.

Twelve months had hardly elapsed since the legislature had, in very peculiar circumstances, and for very plausible reasons, taken upon itself to try and to punish a great criminal whom it was impossible to reach in the ordinary course of justice; and already the breach then made in the fences which protect the dearest rights of Englishmen was widening fast. What had last year been defended only as a rare exception seemed now to be regarded as the ordinary rule. Nay, the bill of pains and penalties which now had an easy passage through the House of Commons was infinitely more objectionable than the bill which had been so obstinately resisted at every stage in the preceding session.

The writ of attainder against Fenwick was not, as the vulgar imagined and still imagine, objectionable because it was retrospective. It is always to be remembered that retrospective legislation is bad in principle only when it affects the substantive law. Statutes creating new crimes or increasing the punishment of old crimes ought in no case to be retrospective.

But statutes which merely alter the procedure, if they are in themselves good statutes, ought to be retrospective. To take examples from the legislation of our own time, the Act passed in 1845, for punishing the malicious destruction of works of art with whipping, was most properly made prospective only. Whatever indignation the authors of that Act might feel against the ruffian who had broken the Barberini Vase, they knew that they could not, without the most serious detriment to the commonwealth, pass a law for scourging him. On the other hand the Act which allowed the affirmation of a Quaker to be received in criminal cases allowed, and most justly and reasonably, such affirmation to be received in the case of a past as well as of a future misdemeanour or felony. If we try the Act which attainted Fenwick by these rules we shall find that almost all the numerous writers who have condemned it have condemned it on wrong grounds.

It made no retrospective change in the substantive law. The crime was not new. It was high treason as defined by the Statute of Edward the Third. The punishment was not new. It was the punishment which had been inflicted on traitors of ten generations. All that was new was the procedure; and, if the new procedure had been intrinsically better than the old procedure, the new procedure might with perfect propriety have been employed. But the procedure employed in Fenwick's case was the worst possible, and would have been the worst possible if it had been established from time immemorial. However clearly political crime may have been defined by ancient laws, a man accused of it ought not to be tried by a crowd of five hundred and thirteen eager politicians, of whom he can challenge none even with cause, who have no judge to guide them, who are allowed to come in and go out as they choose, who hear as much or as little as they choose of the accusation and of the defence, who are exposed, during the investigation, to every kind of corrupting influence, who are inflamed by all the passions which animated debates naturally excite, who cheer one orator and cough down another, who are roused from sleep to cry Aye or No, or who are hurried half drunk from their suppers to divide. For this reason, and for no other, the attainder of Fenwick is to be condemned. It was unjust and of evil example, not because it was a retrospective Act, but because it was an act essentially judicial, performed by a body destitute of all judicial qualities.

The bill for punishing Duncombe was open to all the objections which can be urged against the bill for punishing Fenwick, and to other objections of even greater weight. In both cases the judicial functions were usurped by a body unfit to exercise such functions. But the bill against Duncombe really was, what the bill against Fenwick was not, objectionable as a retrospective bill. It altered the substantive criminal law. It visited an offence with a penalty of which the offender, at the time when he offended, had no notice.

同类推荐
  • Plays and Puritans

    Plays and Puritans

    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。
  • 阴符经三皇玉诀

    阴符经三皇玉诀

    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。
  • 法苑珠林

    法苑珠林

    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。
  • 大乘破有论

    大乘破有论

    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。
  • 六十种曲赠书记

    六十种曲赠书记

    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
  • 炼蛊

    炼蛊

    灾变无尽,妖魔乱世。人如蝼蚁,命如草芥。在这混沌危险的世界里,奇妙的蛊虫成为撬动宿命的杠杆。
  • 师父我想娶大师兄

    师父我想娶大师兄

    颜晓棠是将军府逃出来的野马驹,有才可貌不行。不过她觉得正好,大师兄有貌啊!至于才的话……听说以前很牛掰,现在就只会吐吐血,白白嘴唇,数铜板都没她利索。什么?你说师父容貌逆天,也可互补?no、no、no,师父乃天人之姿,我等凡人可配不上!她就一门心思地瞅着大师兄,至少这个努把力,还是能娶到手的……吧?为了娶大师兄,颜晓棠豁出去了——刚拜师就被追杀,她来想招躲;师门穷,她去挣钱;师父想重振,她管招兵买马。等一切水到渠成,大师兄还是又冰又扎的怎么破?颜晓棠:哼哼……到时候还由得你。
  • 穿幕行动

    穿幕行动

    20世纪50年代后期,台湾国民党空军加紧了对大陆纵深的高空侦察,美国从“全球战略”出发,开始向台湾提供U-2型高空侦察机。台湾空军由此组建了“第三十五中队”,隶属国民党空军总部情报署。U-2型机最大飞行速度800公里/小时,最大航程7000公里,续航时间可高达9个小时,实用升限22870米。机上装备侦察、夜航、电子对抗、电磁波探测等先进系统。可在20000米高空拍摄照片,可供判读的横向范围达150里。国民党空军将U-2机的纵深飞行,称为“穿幕”行动。下面是40年前发生在当年祖国腹地的一幕幕惊心动魄的故事。
  • 石板塘(上卷)

    石板塘(上卷)

    洞庭湖南岸那一大片低矮的丘陵上,有一座孤零零的高山突兀而起。那山呈带状,高低起伏,绵延百里,很像一条卧伏的蚕虫,故名卧蚕山。但卧蚕山只是地图上的名字,老百姓并不这么叫她。当地人最重风水,起房盖屋时,讲究“前有照,后有靠,左右山环水抱”。卧蚕山巍然耸立,气势雄伟,形状颇有点像照壁,且终年郁郁葱葱,风光秀丽,还有许多历史遗迹、离奇传说以及名人的活动踪影。
  • 十八家诗钞

    十八家诗钞

    《十八家诗钞》是一部古代诗歌选集。清代曾国藩编选。十八家为魏晋南北朝的曹植﹑阮籍﹑陶渊明﹑谢灵运﹑鲍照﹑谢朓六家﹐唐代的王维﹑孟浩然﹑李白﹑杜甫﹑韩愈﹑白居易﹑李商隐﹑杜牧八家﹐宋代的苏轼﹑黄庭坚﹑陆游三家﹐金代元好问一家。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 青少年最应该懂得的100条人生哲理

    青少年最应该懂得的100条人生哲理

    展示自我篇”则针对阻碍人们表现最美好的自己的诸多因素,为青少年朋友打开通向阳光的大门;“投入社会篇”与青少年朋友联手展望未来,共同面对机遇与挑战;“享受生活篇”是一杯茉莉香片,让青少年朋友在忙碌里环顾左右,享受真诚的友谊和情感,让生活更充实。
  • 明实录宣宗实录

    明实录宣宗实录

    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。
  • 成大事必备的九种心态

    成大事必备的九种心态

    九种心态不是空洞的说教,而是理论与实际相结合,真正深入细致的分析,以起到拨云见日的作用。说到底,那些成大事者并不是天生宠儿,也是经过磨炼后才有了一番成就。那些站在人类最高处的“大人物”自然非常人可比。但你总可以根据自己的能力有所作为,这也是成大事。读者诸君请鉴,读懂九种心态,必能成就一番大事业,这不是胡乱妄言,而是有的放矢。
  • 龙王传说之光与暗

    龙王传说之光与暗

    龙王传说的同人,意外身亡的少年,等待他的却不是天堂或者地狱。这里是斗罗大陆,这里没有斗气,魔法。只有武魂。少年重生成为乐正宇的妹妹乐正绫。本以为只要在家族中快乐成长度过一生。却发现黑暗来的太快。光与暗,起源与终焉的交汇。混沌的诞生,这是灾难属于这个世界的终结。
  • 缘劫愿

    缘劫愿

    “情爱之事谁能说的完全。我们之间谁是谁的缘,谁是谁的劫,你不知我更如是。我只知,你是我毕生的愿,是我永世的念。”[1V1仙侠耽美!]