The Master of Stair seems to have proposed to himself a truly great and good end, the pacification and civilisation of the Highlands. He was, by the acknowledgment of those who most hated him, a man of large views. He justly thought it monstrous that a third part of Scotland should be in a state scarcely less savage than New Guinea, that letters of fire and sword should, through a third part of Scotland, be, century after century, a species of legal process, and that no attempt should be made to apply a radical remedy to such evils. The independence affected by a crowd of petty sovereigns, the contumacious resistance which they were in the habit of offering to the authority of the Crown and of the Court of Session, their wars, their robberies, their fireraisings, their practice of exacting black mail from people more peaceable and more useful than themselves, naturally excited the disgust and indignation of an enlightened and politic gownsman, who was, both by the constitution of his mind and by the habits of his profession, a lover of law and order. His object was no less than a complete dissolution and reconstruction of society in the Highlands, such a dissolution and reconstruction as, two generations later, followed the battle of Culloden. In his view the clans, as they existed, were the plagues of the kingdom; and of all the clans, the worst was that which inhabited Glencoe. He had, it is said, been particularly struck by a frightful instance of the lawlessness and ferocity of those marauders. One of them, who had been concerned in some act of violence or rapine, had given information against his companions. He had been bound to a tree and murdered. The old chief had given the first stab; and scores of dirks had then been plunged into the wretch's body.223 By the mountaineers such an act was probably regarded as a legitimate exercise of patriarchal jurisdiction. To the Master of Stair it seemed that people among whom such things were done and were approved ought to be treated like a pack of wolves, snared by any device, and slaughtered without mercy. He was well read in history, and doubtless knew how great rulers had, in his own and other countries, dealt with such banditti. He doubtless knew with what energy and what severity James the Fifth had put down the mosstroopers of the border, how the chief of Henderland had been hung over the gate of the castle in which he had prepared a banquet for the King;how John Armstrong and his thirty-six horsemen, when they came forth to welcome their sovereign, had scarcely been allowed time to say a single prayer before they were all tied up and turned off. Nor probably was the Secretary ignorant of the means by which Sixtus the Fifth had cleared the ecclesiastical state of outlaws. The eulogists of that great pontiff tell us that there was one formidable gang which could not be dislodged from a stronghold among the Apennines. Beasts of burden were therefore loaded with poisoned food and wine, and sent by a road which ran close to the fastness. The robbers sallied forth, seized the prey, feasted and died; and the pious old Pope exulted greatly when he heard that the corpses of thirty ruffians, who had been the terror of many peaceful villages, had been found lying among the mules and packages. The plans of the Master of Stair were conceived in the spirit of James and of Sixtus; and the rebellion of the mountaineers furnished what seemed to be an excellent opportunity for carrying those plans into effect. Mere rebellion, indeed, he could have easily pardoned. On Jacobites, as Jacobites, he never showed any inclination to bear hard. He hated the Highlanders, not as enemies of this or that dynasty, but as enemies of law, of industry and of trade. In his private correspondence he applied to them the short and terrible form of words in which the implacable Roman pronounced the doom of Carthage. His project was no less than this, that the whole hill country from sea to sea, and the neighbouring islands, should be wasted with fire and sword, that the Camerons, the Macleans, and all the branches of the race of Macdonald, should be rooted out.
同类推荐
热门推荐
贾樟柯:From文艺范儿To新生代导演
著名作家罗银胜的一部倾力之作,演绎了一个文艺青年的梦想之路,同时也是一本内含文艺见解的轻松读物。记述中国第六代电影导演领军人物贾樟柯的成长历程,以及富有个性的独特导演经历,尤其是对贾樟柯心路历程的描写十分细腻,不少是独家披露,一个文艺青年动人的成长故事跃然纸上,相信一定会勾起曾经或正在抱有文艺梦的青年的追忆和共鸣。 生动展现了贾樟柯对电影、文艺理解的精神世界,让我们认识到,贾樟柯的思考和探索,触及文艺的核心和本质。腹黑王爷下堂妃:我不倾城谁倾城
她苏吉儿要嫁人了,结果发现老公爱的是他她安娜穿越了,结果穿到了帅哥皇帝身上,那就KISS下吧她倾城要嫁人了,结果武林盟主不肯娶她,那就……爆笑小白,切勿提内涵二字回家过年(中国好小说)
“我”的四弟刘四喜,忠厚老实的农民工,在回家过年之际,因讲义气并想多挣点钱而不惜加班加点,日夜操劳,总算按时完成任务,拿到了工钱。但最后却因劳累过度,躺在医院收费大厅的椅子上在梦中离开人世,乡亲们只能拉着老四的尸体“回家过年”。过妻不候:陆总的隐婚情人
因为无意间的举动,她被迫和一个毫无感情的男人结了婚。两年的时间,没有人知道她陆太太的身份。就连陆家,也对她的存在嗤之以鼻。在她将孕检报告放在他的面前时,只换来了他一句冷笑。“想要为陆家生儿育女?只怕你还没有这个资格!”只是,既然没有资格,三年之后,又是谁将她压在了身下,掐着她的脖子恶狠狠的说道,“不是我的孩子,就不应该出生!”他不爱她,却一定要禁锢着她,哪怕她遍体鳞伤,体无完肤。他就是要留着她,就算只剩下尸体!--情节虚构,请勿模仿