But this was not the state of the English nation,at the time we speak of.We were not yet corrupted,nor even quite ripe for corruption.Parties there were;and the contests of these parties gave occasion to the rise and growth of factions;some of which ran into the most seditious practices against the government,and others into the vilest submission to it.But still a spirit of liberty remained in many,uncorrupted and un-extinguished,and such as worked our national deliverance in the days of distress,that soon followed.We were freemen then,in the proper sense and full extent of the words;because not only the laws,which asserted our common rights,were maintained and improved,but private independency,which can alone support public liberty under such a government as ours,was itself supported by some of that ancient economy and simplicity of manners,that were growing,but not grown,out of fashion.Such a people,as we then were,could neither be bought,nor driven;and I think King Charles could not have divided and led them,if he had wanted any of the qualities he possessed,or had held another conduct than he held.Far from being proud,haughty,or brutal,'he had not a grain of pride,or vanity,in his whole composition';but was the most affable,best-bred man alive.He treated his subjects like noblemen,like gentlemen,like freemen,not like vassals,or boors.Whatever notion he had of his hereditary right,he owned his obligation for the crown he wore to his people,as much as he would have been bound to do,in reason,in justice,in honour,and in prudence,if he had stood at the greatest distance from it,in the course of lineal succession,and had been called to it from the low state in which he was before,by the free gift and choice of the nation.His professions were plausible,and his whole behaviour engaging;so that he won upon the hearts,even whilst he lost the good opinion of his subjects,and often balanced their judgment of things,by their personal inclination.These qualities and this part of his conduct went a great way to give him credit with his people,and an hold on their affections.But this was not all.He observed their temper,and he complied with it.He yielded to them in points,from which he had determined,and declared too,that he would never depart.To know when to yield in government,is at least as necessary,as to know when to lose in trade;and he who cannot do the first,is so little likely to govern a kingdom well,that it is more than probable he would govern a shop ill.King Charles gave up to the murmurs of his people,not one or two such ministers as may be found almost behind every desk,those awkward pageants of courts,those wooden images,which princes gild and then worship;but several great and able men,nay,whole cabals of such,who had merit with him,though they had none with the nation.He started often out of the true interest of his people,but the voice of his people almost as often reclaimed him.He made the first Dutch war,but he made the Triple Alliance too.He engaged with France in the war of 1672,but he made a separate peace with Holland.True it is,indeed,that neither the representations of his parliament,nor the desires of his people,could prevail on him to go farther,and to enter in earnest into the war against France.But the confidence between him and his parliament was so broken at that time,that they would not trust him,nor he them.At this I am not surprised,and for that very reason,Iconfess,I have always been so at the strong and repeated instances made to force him into that war;since it cannot surely be better policy to drive a prince into a war,which he has no inclination to make,than it would be to be drawn by him into a war,if he had no ability to conduct it.In home affairs,besides his frequent concessions,whenever the nation took umbrage at his proceedings,he passed the Test and Habeas Corpus bills,and many others for the public benefit:and I scarce remember any popular act,which stopped at the throne in his time,except that about the militia,which he apprehended to be a dangerous encroachment on his prerogative,and another in favour of the Dissenters,which was contrived,meanly enough,to be stolen off the table in the House of Lords.
同类推荐
The Spirit of Place and Other Essays
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
妆嗜宠
这个男人霸气,阴冷,甚至凶狠。他对她很狠,狠到让她感到绝望。可他对她也很宠,宠到能把世界都搬到她面前。他们两一个天一个地,他决绝果断,她柔韧坚强,然而他却是她命定的煞星。乔小妆是官家小姐,可认识她的人只知道她是个普通大学生。庄千夜是个手段狠戾的男人,可熟悉他的人都知道只有对乔小妆他才会温柔,甚至百般呵护。【强推新文:特种军官的腻宠:】【推荐连载文:夕钰皇妃:】她有男朋友,她跟他站在一起,很般配,她自己也这么觉得。可是,遇到他,她开始不幸。他是庄千夜,抢了兄弟的女人,他说:"这女人本来就是我的,从小就烙上了我的痕迹,你拿什么跟我争?"她说:我的命由我不由天他说:那得看你头顶这片天的是谁,你就是孙猴子,我也制得服你。她一直相信老天是公平的,却不知道老天把这只禽兽送到她身边来是折磨她还是对他的眷顾。她恨他,恨之入骨,她以为终于摆脱他了,她的生活终于风平浪静了。可是,他却摇身一变,成了家族联姻的对象,非她不娶。他爱她,爱得痴狂,宁负天下人也得要她。然而他爱她,她却从来都不知道。他除了强迫她,威胁她还能做什么?她不知道她眼里的禽兽为什么在母亲眼里,朋友眼里,甚至她最疼惜的弟弟眼里,他都是她的最佳夫婿。很多年以后,他在她耳边轻吐:"我就是掌控命运的神,不管我们相隔多远,相差多大,我爱你,你就是我的,你怎么躲也躲不掉。"本文定义:强宠、强娶豪宠=====================================蝎子年度新文震撼出世:《嚣张宝贝黑道妈》推荐:《婚内兽爱》《名门,高攀不起》《夕钰皇妃》推荐完结文:《囚徒》《燃爱》《燃爱Ⅱ》========================================【群:一九零八零零九七五】德川家康(新版)13:长河落日
日本版的《三国演义》,史书、权书、商书“三书合一”,政企商业领袖必读图书!一部日本首相要求内阁成员必须熟读的书,一部经营之神松下幸之助要求松下干部必须研读的书,一部美国驻日大使认为,要了解日本、超越日本,必先阅读的书,一部韩国媒体评为“影响韩国CEO最有价值古典图书。”美国前驻日大使赖世和说:“每一个日本人都是一个德川家康,要了解日本、超越日本,必须先了解德川家康。”德川家康究竟是何许人?德川家康结束了日本百余年的战乱,开创三百年太平盛世,建立了完整意义上的日本国。《德川家康》将日本战国中后期织田信长、武田信玄、丰臣秀吉、德川家康等群雄并起的历史苍劲地铺展开来。