登陆注册
5246300000853

第853章 CHAPTER XVIII(2)

A report made by the Commissioners who had been appointed in the preceding year to examine the public accounts disclosed some facts which excited indignation, and others which raised grave suspicion. The House seemed fully determined to make an extensive reform; and, in truth, nothing could have averted such a reform except the folly and violence of the reformers. That they should have been angry is indeed not strange. The enormous gains, direct and indirect, of the servants of the public went on increasing, while the gains of every body else were diminishing. Rents were falling; trade was languishing; every man who lived either on what his ancestors had left him or on the fruits of his own industry was forced to retrench. The placeman alone throve amidst the general distress. "Look," cried the incensed squires, "at the Comptroller of the Customs. Ten years ago, he walked, and we rode. Our incomes have been curtailed; his salary has been doubled; we have sold our horses; he has bought them; and now we go on foot, and are splashed by his coach and six." Lowther vainly endeavoured to stand up against the storm. He was heard with little favour by the country gentlemen who had not long before looked up to him as one of their leaders. He had left them;he had become a courtier; he had two good places, one in the Treasury, the other in the household. He had recently received from the King's own hand a gratuity of two thousand guineas.147It seemed perfectly natural that he should defend abuses by which he profited. The taunts and reproaches with which he was assailed were insupportable to his sensitive nature. He lost his head, almost fainted away on the floor of the House, and talked about righting himself in another place.148 Unfortunately no member rose at this conjuncture to propose that the civil establishment of the kingdom should be carefully revised, that sinecures should be abolished, that exorbitant official incomes should be reduced, and that no servant of the State should be allowed to exact, under any pretence, any thing beyond his known and lawful remuneration. In this way it would have been possible to diminish the public burdens, and at the same time to increase the efficiency of every public department. But unfortunately those who were loudest in clamouring against the prevailing abuses were utterly destitute of the qualities necessary for the work of reform. On the twelfth of December, some foolish man, whose name has not come down to us, moved that no person employed in any civil office, the Speaker, Judges and Ambassadors excepted, should receive more than five hundred pounds a year; and this motion was not only carried, but carried without one dissentient voice.149Those who were most interested in opposing it doubtless saw that opposition would, at that moment, only irritate the majority, and reserved themselves for a more favourable time. The more favourable time soon came. No man of common sense could, when his blood had cooled, remember without shame that he had voted for a resolution which made no distinction between sinecurists and laborious public servants, between clerks employed in copying letters and ministers on whose wisdom and integrity the fate of the nation might depend. The salary of the Doorkeeper of the Excise Office had been, by a scandalous job, raised to five hundred a year. It ought to have been reduced to fifty. On the other hand, the services of a Secretary of State who was well qualified for his post would have been cheap at five thousand. If the resolution of the Commons bad been carried into effect, both the salary which ought not to have exceeded fifty pounds, and the salary which might without impropriety have amounted to five thousand, would have been fixed at five hundred. Such absurdity must have shocked even the roughest and plainest foxhunter in the House. A reaction took place; and when, after an interval of a few weeks, it was proposed to insert in a bill of supply a clause in conformity with the resolution of the twelfth of December, the Noes were loud; the Speaker was of opinion that they had it; the Ayes did not venture to dispute his opinion; the senseless plan which had been approved without a division was rejected without a division; and the subject was not again mentioned. Thus a grievance so scandalous that none of those who profited by it dared to defend it was perpetuated merely by the imbecility and intemperance of those who attacked it.150Early in the Session the Treaty of Limerick became the subject of a grave and earnest discussion. The Commons, in the exercise of that supreme power which the English legislature possessed over all the dependencies of England, sent up to the Lords a bill providing that no person should sit in the Irish Parliament, should hold any Irish office, civil, military or ecclesiastical, or should practise law or medicine in Ireland, till he had taken the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy, and subscribed the Declaration against Transubstantiation. The Lords were not more inclined than the Commons to favour the Irish. No peer was disposed to entrust Roman Catholics with political power. Nay, it seems that no peer objected to the principle of the absurd and cruel rule which excluded Roman Catholics from the liberal professions. But it was thought that this rule, though unobjectionable in principle, would, if adopted without some exceptions, be a breach of a positive compact. Their Lordships called for the Treaty of Limerick, ordered it to be read at the table, and proceeded to consider whether the law framed by the Lower House was consistent with the engagements into which the government had entered. One discrepancy was noticed. It was stipulated by the second civil article, that every person actually residing in any fortress occupied by an Irish garrison, should be permitted, on taking the Oath of Allegiance, to resume any calling which he had exercised before the Revolution. It would, beyond all doubt, have been a violation of this covenant to require that a lawyer or a physician, who had been within the walls of Limerick during the siege, should take the Oath of Supremacy and subscribe the Declaration against Transubstantiation, before he could receive fees. Holt was consulted, and was directed to prepare clauses in conformity with the terms of the capitulation.

同类推荐
  • 妙好宝车经

    妙好宝车经

    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。
  • 起世因本经

    起世因本经

    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。
  • 道法心传

    道法心传

    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。
  • 夜航船

    夜航船

    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 Soul of the Indian

    The Soul of the Indian

    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
  • 红尘有爱几多苍凉

    红尘有爱几多苍凉

    雪下来了,已是冬天。 我喜欢冬天的黄昏,那时候,太阳刚刚回到山那边去,天空燃烧起一片橘红色的晚霞,沉郁的,散漫的,悠然的,油画般深远静美。西边黛色的山峦宛转起柔和的山际线,越来越远地模糊和遥渺,枯树枝在天空和山峦之间构成一个美丽的图案,偶尔有一两只鸟飞过,四周很安静,若是下了雪,山脉与大地又是别样的景致。这时候的黄昏,恬适、淡雅,诗意的美,让我觉得一种忧伤着的蜜甜与温馨。如果有月亮,在晚霞渐渐暗淡下去的时候,月亮就从东边升起,玉盘样挂在天幕上,美得辽阔而又孤独。
  • 落日时分

    落日时分

    著名作家达真最新的小说集,由四篇小说构成,分别是《落日时分》、《小红帽》、《放电影的张丹增》及《逃跑》。作品的时代从几十年前的前尘旧事,到鲜活的当下,内容既有藏族少女美好的恋爱,也有凡世成人的忏悔与心路吟唱。无论是爱情亲情还是友情,作者都用慈悲的心体察着,用细腻优美的笔触娓娓道出,阅读的感动如酥油茶的清香沁人心脾,久久不散。
  • 皇室千金哪里逃

    皇室千金哪里逃

    【新文《exo就是喜欢你》已发,求支持!阅读地址:】他为了她买下了一座学校,只为封住悠悠之口;他为了她买下了一个庄园,只为种她喜欢的红玉帘;他为了她不惜以兄妹相称,只为了把她留在自己身边……多年之后,他依然记当初那些温暖的片段。【“身份证呢?”“没有!”“在哪上学?”“没有户口,辍学了!”若伊瞥了皇甫少轩一眼:“我是黑户!”不到一天时间,一张身份证摆在自己的面前,上面赫然大字——皇甫若伊!若伊带着笑意望着对面的皇甫少轩,轻声问道:“那么,皇甫若伊跟皇甫少轩是什么关系呢?”“……?”“那么我是你的姐姐还是你的妹妹呢?”皇甫少轩不屑地瞧了她一眼:“让你姓皇甫家的姓是对你的恩赐!也不是白给你用的。而是要付出代价的!”】
  • 少室六门

    少室六门

    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。
  • 异界黑网游

    异界黑网游

    《混元》骨灰级玩家洛一二穿越了。随他一起穿越的还有《混元》这款网络游戏。“注册一个新用户吧,迷影踪不传之秘《疾风步》,只用一个技能点就能兑换!”“注册一个新用户吧,包你十日淬体、百日炼气,一年入逍遥,成就圣人都不再是梦想啊!”“什么,没有神魂?哈哈,《混元》里修行不要神魂!”“什么,讨厌打斗?那你可以经商啊亲,《混元》里满世界的天材地宝、金山银山,闭着眼都能发财。”……“什么,这个服务器满了?大家不要急,混元九区马上开服,保证人人都能玩得上……”
  • 夜帝你的马甲又掉了

    夜帝你的马甲又掉了

    盛世婚礼,外面大炮列成排,无人机在教堂上空嚣鸣。夜帝不怒反笑;“女人,你敢答应试试!”没有想到一夜成瘾,他对她穷追不舍,她对他避如蛇蝎。她逃,他追。蓝梦璃揉着小蛮腰无力道:“要怎样你才会放过我?”夜寂冥邪侫道:“放过你,除非我死!”蓝梦璃想的是,只要她还一息尚存,她就要逃。夜寂冥想的是:只要他还一息尚存,他就要追。
  • 培养不服输男孩儿的方法

    培养不服输男孩儿的方法

    《培养不服输男孩儿的方法》一书中引用了大量名言警句,作为父母教育孩子、引导孩子的一个参考。这对于提高和增强孩子的想象力、理解力、记忆力、分析力、反应力和模仿力,都有很好的作用。这些教育方法不仅可以促进孩子的身心发展,还可以让孩子获得一个健康快乐的人生,从而生活得更幸福。我们有理由相信,孩子的未来重于一切、高于一切,所以,从现在起,做一个充满智慧的家长,用您的头脑和双手,为培养一个聪明、高智商的孩子做好充分的准备,以让孩子拥有一个光辉灿烂的明天。
  • 重生之加油新生活

    重生之加油新生活

    黎冉重生了,她不能保证这一生会比前世过得好,但,总要努力不是吗?!新建群组16128297
  • 论语

    论语

    《论语》是儒家的经典之作,以语录体和对话体为主,记录了孔子及其弟子的言行,同时较为集中地反映了孔子的道德观念、政治主张、伦理思想以及教育原则等。它与《大学》《中庸》《孟子》《诗经》《尚书》《礼记》《易经》《春秋》并称《四书五经》。本书在忠于原著的基础上,主要从原文、注释、译文、解说四大方面进行精练的解读。同时适当穿插孔子门人故事,以期让读者更好地理解孔子及孔子所处的时代。"
  • 我真没想当明星啊

    我真没想当明星啊

    为了追求整天幻想着当明星的小姐姐,沈默骗她说自己是个导演,小姐姐竟然真的信了!沈默一不想花钱,二不想干活,更不想当明星,但为了应付差事,于是给小姐姐出了个歪主意,教她去拍短视频。没想到,她火了。“这下玩崩了,她这一火,更难追了啊!”