登陆注册
5406800000212

第212章 FRANCIS BACON(12)

At length he found that, while he was trying to prop the fortunes of another, he was in danger of shaking his own.He had disobliged both the parties whom he wished to reconcile.Essex thought him wanting in zeal as a friend: Elizabeth thought him wanting in duty as a subject.The Earl looked on him as a spy of the Queen; the Queen as a creature of the Earl.The reconciliation which he had laboured to effect appeared utterly hopeless.A thousand signs, legible to eyes far less keen than his, announced that the fall of his patron was at hand.He shaped his course accordingly.When Essex was brought before the council to answer for his conduct in Ireland, Bacon, after a faint attempt to excuse himself from taking part against his friend, submitted himself to the Queen's pleasure, and appeared at the bar in support of the charges.But a darker scene was behind.The unhappy young nobleman, made reckless by despair ventured on a rash and criminal enterprise, which rendered him liable to the highest penalties of the law.What course was Bacon to take? This was one of those conjunctures which show what men are.To a high-minded man, wealth, power, court-favour, even personal safety, would have appeared of no account, when opposed to friendship, gratitude, and honour.Such a man would have stood by the side of Essex at the trial, would have "spent all his power, might, authority, and amity" in soliciting a mitigation of the sentence, would have been a daily visitor at the cell, would have received the last injunctions and the last embrace on the scaffold, would have employed all the powers of his intellect to guard from insult the fame of his generous though erring friend.An ordinary man would neither have incurred the danger of succouring Essex, nor the disgrace of assailing him.Bacon did not even preserve neutrality.He appeared as counsel for the prosecution.In that situation, he did not confine himself to what would have been amply sufficient to procure a verdict.He employed all his wit, his rhetoric, and his learning, not to ensure a conviction,--for the circumstances were such that a conviction was inevitable,--but to deprive the unhappy prisoner of all those excuses which, though legally of no value, yet tended to diminish the moral guilt of the crime, and which, therefore, though they could not justify the peers in pronouncing an acquittal, might incline the Queen to grant a pardon.The Earl urged as a palliation of his frantic acts that he was surrounded by powerful and inveterate enemies, that they had ruined his fortunes, that they sought his life, and that their persecutions had driven him to despair.This was true; and Bacon well knew it to be true.But he affected to treat it as an idle pretence.He compared Essex to Pisistratus, who, by pretending to be in imminent danger of assassination, and by exhibiting self-inflicted wounds, succeeded in establishing tyranny at Athens.This was too much for the prisoner to bear.He interrupted his ungrateful friend by calling on him to quit the part of an advocate, to come forward as a witness, and to tell the Lords whether, in old times, he, Francis Bacon, had not, under his own hand, repeatedly asserted the truth of what he now represented as idle pretexts.It is painful to go on with this lamentable story.Bacon returned a shuffling answer to the Earl's question, and, as if the allusion to Pisistratus were not sufficiently offensive, made another allusion still more unjustifiable.He compared Essex to Henry Duke of Guise, and the rash attempt in the city to the day of the barricades at Paris.

Why Bacon had recourse to such a topic it is difficult to say, It was quite unnecessary for the purpose of obtaining a verdict.It was certain to produce a strong impression on the mind of the haughty and jealous princess on whose pleasure the Earl's fate depended.The faintest allusion to the degrading tutelage in which the last Valois had been held by the House of Lorraine was sufficient to harden her heart against a man who in rank, in military reputation, in popularity among the citizens of the capital, bore some resemblance to the Captain of the League.

Essex was convicted.Bacon made no effort to save him, though the Queen's feelings were such that he might have pleaded his benefactor's cause, possibly with success, certainly without any serious danger to himself.The unhappy nobleman was executed.His fate excited strong, perhaps unreasonable feelings of compassion and indignation.The Queen was received by the citizens of London with gloomy looks and faint acclamations.She thought it expedient to publish a vindication of her late proceedings.The faithless friend who had assisted in taking the Earl's life was now employed to murder the Earl's fame.The Queen had seen some of Bacon's writings, and had been pleased with them.He was accordingly selected to write A Declaration of the Practices and Treasons attempted and committed by Robert Earl of Essex, which was printed by authority.In the succeeding reign, Bacon had not a word to say in defence of this performance, a performance abounding in expressions which no generous enemy would have employed respecting a man who had so dearly expiated his offences.His only excuse was, that he wrote it by command, that he considered himself as a mere secretary, that he had particular instructions as to the way in which he was to treat every part of the subject, and that, in fact, he had furnished only the arrangement and the style.

We regret to say that the whole conduct of Bacon through the course of these transactions appears to Mr.Montagu not merely excusable, but deserving of high admiration.The integrity and benevolence of this gentleman are so well known that our readers will probably be at a loss to conceive by what steps he can have arrived at so extraordinary a conclusion: and we are half afraid that they will suspect us of practising some artifice upon them when we report the principal arguments which he employs.

同类推荐
  • 居易录

    居易录

    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。
  • 醒园录

    醒园录

    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。
  • 圣救度佛母二十一种礼赞经

    圣救度佛母二十一种礼赞经

    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。
  • 秘本诸葛神数

    秘本诸葛神数

    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。
  • 夷白斋诗话

    夷白斋诗话

    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
  • 流水落花

    流水落花

    《流水落花》内容包括:流水落花;孤恋花;迷花;一朵即将枯萎的玫瑰花;鲜血梅花;蝶恋花;诗人的行走是一朵花;杀手冷花;花非花;老人与花;那一年冬天纷扬的雪花;魂之花;古典爱情梦。
  • 灵谷传说

    灵谷传说

    几个大学生,在一次旅游探险中,不小心步入灵谷深处,醒来后,穿越到了另一个世界,变身为皇家的王子、公主,并为了帝国的巨变,开始了保卫战斗,并从中收获了来之不易的友情、爱情、亲情,可谁知这背后又隐藏着如此大的一个阴谋,悄无声息地展开,殊死搏斗中,他们最终又得到了什么,灵谷传说,一场空前的浩劫拉开了序幕……【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 我有一世温暖

    我有一世温暖

    我有一世温暖,温暖是爸爸妈妈的疼爱与呵护,温暖是爷爷奶奶的宠爱,温暖是朋友的关心。光阴是翻转的年轮,一年又一年,从稚嫩的孩童到青葱的少年,然后长大成人,我们的故事是一本厚厚的、充满温暖的书。我们渐渐苍老,谨以此书纪念我们的青春。
  • 帝少的首席

    帝少的首席

    爱上洛初,大概是运筹帷幄的君越寒这辈子唯一一次失了算的事
  • 神秘帅哥绑架我

    神秘帅哥绑架我

    “我叫千幻澈,我要你陪我三年。”暴雨中,我被一名神秘帅哥给绑架了,帅哥带着我来到了苏格拉贵族学院,在这里我碰到了其余三位帅哥,一个腹黑狡黠、一个温暖阳光、一个妖孽魅惑,而这位神秘帅哥则是冷酷霸道……四位帅哥的突然闯入,将我的生活掀起波浪,而神秘的真相究竟是什么?面对他们的追求我又该作何选择?--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 眉间心上

    眉间心上

    父亲重承诺,父母之命无法反驳。婆家穷困潦倒,夫君还和某头牌情意绵绵?婆婆花枝招展视她如眼中钉?自己心上人中意别人的赵家小姐天天没事找茬儿?生活如此鸡飞狗跳,你却如此美好,很好很好。于安歌,北平第一大商贾于家嫡女,精于筹划、谈判。嫁了便嫁了罢,全当找个由头来南边扩大家业。顾凉,安陵城无人不知的江南顾家少当家,从前陪同父亲前往北地接洽贸易,有幸一睹于安歌风采,本想上北地提个亲,却得知心心念念的人被许给安陵城内一户落魄人家,那家儿子还是安陵城出了名的“痴情人”。那日凤冠霞帔,随行嫁妆铺十里,却怎料林家欺人太甚,图人钱财的嘴脸太过龌龊。不过只要人在身边,事情就好办。且看于安歌如何逆袭这糟糕的婚姻,又是如何在江南打下一片天!
  • 教你制作生物标本(培养学生动手能力小丛书)

    教你制作生物标本(培养学生动手能力小丛书)

    《培养学生动手能力小丛书:教你制作生物标本(最新版)》是一本自然科学类读物,系统的介绍了有关生物标本创意制作等方面内容,并附有具体的操作过程和实践步骤。《培养学生动手能力小丛书:教你制作生物标本(最新版)》不仅能丰富青少年朋友课余生活,提升其动手能力,同时也能够让其理解能力和动手能力得到协调发展,从而成长为社会主义现代化建没需要的复合型人才。
  • 太上老君说安宅八阳经

    太上老君说安宅八阳经

    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。
  • 唐古拉山不会忘记

    唐古拉山不会忘记

    本书作者是青藏铁路一期和二期建设的参加者、亲历者和见证者,也是全国少数几位全程采访青藏铁路的记者之一,对青藏高原和青藏铁路一往情深。本书是伴随青藏铁路建设中在各大媒体上进行的系列报道,形成的散文特集。全书透过作者充满激情的文字,全程记录了这项世界奇迹的诞生,讴歌了那些为此付出生命的朴实而伟大的奉献者。正如作者所言:如今,青藏高原和青藏铁路,在我的心中,不仅仅是一个地理概念、一条通天大道,而是一种意味、一种境界、一种精神和生命的一部分。
  • 重生空间:天才炼丹师

    重生空间:天才炼丹师

    绝色少女重生修真,随身秘府灵药多多。爱宠霸道损友腹黑,契约血誓缠绵热烈。美妖双面酷魔狂拽,出生入死柔情仗义。师祖爱卖萌,师傅不着调,师叔无节操,师弟们二缺,还好宗主家面瘫大师兄超护短。那个谁,说我大苍朔宗没灵石,穷的弟子连本命剑都要卖?我灵药神丹砸死你!关门,剑术凶残的师兄弟们上!