登陆注册
14818400000012

第12章

All who know anything of those times, know that the conduct of Hampden in the affair of the ship-money met with the warm approbation of every respectable Royalist in England. It drew forth the ardent eulogies of the champions of the prerogative and even of the Crown lawyers themselves. Clarendon allows Hampden's demeanour through the whole proceeding to have been such, that even those who watched for an occasion against the defender of the people, were compelled to acknowledge themselves unable to find any fault in him. That he was right in the point of law is now universally admitted. Even had it been otherwise, he had a fair case. Five of the judges, servile as our Courts then were, pronounced in his favour. The majority against him was the smallest possible. In no country retaining the slightest vestige of constitutional liberty can a modest and decent appeal to the laws be treated as a crime. Strafford, however, recommends that, for taking the sense of a legal tribunal on a legal question, Hampden should be punished, and punished severely, "whipt," says the insolent apostate, "whipt into his senses. If the rod," he adds, "be so used that it smarts not, I am the more sorry." This is the maintenance of just authority.

In civilised nations, the most arbitrary governments have generally suffered justice to have a free course in private suits. Stratford wished to make every cause in every court subject to the royal prerogative. He complained that in Ireland he was not permitted to meddle in cases between party and party.

"I know very well," says he, "that the common lawyers will be passionately against it, who are wont to put such a prejudice upon all other professions, as if none were to be trusted, or capable to administer justice, but themselves: yet how well this suits with monarchy, when they monopolise all to be governed by their year-books, you in England have a costly example." We are really curious to know by what arguments it is to be proved, that the power of interfering in the law-suits of individuals is part of the just authority of the executive government.

It is not strange that a man so careless of the common civil rights, which even despots have generally respected, should treat with scorn the limitations which the constitution imposes on the royal prerogative. We might quote pages: but we will content ourselves with a single specimen: "The debts of the Crown being taken off, you may govern as you please: and most resolute I am that may be done without borrowing any help forth of the King's lodgings."

Such was the theory of that thorough reform in the state which Strafford meditated. His whole practice, from the day on which he sold himself to the court, was in strict conformity to his theory. For his accomplices various excuses may be urged; ignorance, imbecility, religious bigotry. But Wentworth had no such plea. His intellect was capacious. His early prepossessions were on the side of popular rights. He knew the whole beauty and value of the system which he attempted to deface. He was the first of the Rats, the first of those statesmen whose patriotism has been only the coquetry of political prostitution, and whose profligacy has taught governments to adopt the old maxim of the slave-market, that it is cheaper to buy than to breed, to import defenders from an Opposition than to rear them in a Ministry. He was the first Englishman to whom a peerage was a sacrament of infamy, a baptism into the communion of corruption. As he was the earliest of the hateful list, so was he also by far the greatest; eloquent, sagacious, adventurous, intrepid, ready of invention, immutable of purpose, in every talent which exalts or destroys nations pre-eminent, the lost Archangel, the Satan of the apostasy. The title for which, at the time of his desertion, he exchanged a name honourably distinguished in the cause of the people, reminds us of the appellation which, from the moment of the first treason, fixed itself on the fallen Son of the Morning, "Satan;--so call him now--His former name Is heard no more in heaven."

The defection of Strafford from the popular party contributed mainly to draw on him the hatred of his contemporaries. It has since made him an object of peculiar interest to those whose lives have been spent, like his, in proving that there is no malice like the malice of a renegade; Nothing can be more natural or becoming than that one turncoat should eulogize another.

Many enemies of public liberty have been distinguished by their private virtues. But Strafford was the same throughout. As was the statesman, such was the kinsman and such the lover. His conduct towards Lord Mountmorris is recorded by Clarendon. For a word which can scarcely be called rash, which could not have been made the subject of an ordinary civil action, the Lord Lieutenant dragged a man of high rank, married to a relative of that saint about whom he whimpered to the peers, before a tribunal of slaves. Sentence of death was passed. Everything but death was inflicted. Yet the treatment which Lord Ely experienced was still more scandalous. That nobleman was thrown into prison, in order to compel him to settle his estate in a manner agreeable to his daughter-in-law, whom, as there is every reason to believe, Strafford had debauched. These stories do not rest on vague report. The historians most partial to the minister admit their truth, and censure them in terms which, though too lenient for the occasion, axe still severe. These facts are alone sufficient to justify the appellation with which Pym branded him "the wicked Earl."

In spite of all Strafford's vices, in spite of all his dangerous projects, he was certainly entitled to the benefit of the law; but of the law in all its rigour; of the law according to the utmost strictness of the letter, which killeth. He was not to be torn in pieces by a mob, or stabbed in the back by an assassin.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 萌妻求宠:傲娇王爷欠调教

    萌妻求宠:傲娇王爷欠调教

    第一次见她,年纪和身材都小小的她偷穿着他的衣服,不伦不类的样子甚是好笑,时隔三年,第二次见她,已经出落得楚楚动人的她依旧偷穿着他的衣服。一向杀伐决断的他第一次动了侧隐之心,突然发现她竟然看懂母亲当初写的字,“你若想活着离开,就把这些本子上的内容一字不差地给我译出来”呃,本子上的字是现代简体字,她当然看得懂,“除非你娶我为妻,不然我不译”“我心里已有妻子人选”......后来,他才知道,他心里的人是谁,“主子,听说常姑娘回到京州要与六皇子定亲”嘭的一声桌子就散架了,“我的女人也敢动?”
  • 快穿:女配的完美逆袭

    快穿:女配的完美逆袭

    阎初七,从小生活在二十一世纪的书香家族中,但她的母亲是一名魔女,她也就成为了魔女,有着无限的潜力。因为一次意外事故,开启了穿越到各种位面帮助女配逆袭的任务,只有达成条件才可以获得一次重生的机会,回到现实世界,过她美好的生活。所以,阎初七开始了攻略男主的任务。看一介魔女是如何改变炮灰的命运的。
  • 青春文学:花火故事

    青春文学:花火故事

    亲爱的姑娘,所有的痛苦终将过去,你不要再伤心地哭了,这样不漂亮。
  • 异世界的勇者物语

    异世界的勇者物语

    萝莉有三好:轻音、柔体、易推倒。某只宅一觉醒来,发现自己竟然身处一个周围全是萌萌哒的萝莉的世界。这尼玛是在闹哪样,这种生活想想就让人觉得羡慕嫉妒恨啊喂!总感觉这种人不烧对不起我大FFF团的至高荣耀啊,火把已备好!好吧,以下是正经的内容简介……=。=某只宅以勇者的身份被召唤进而穿越到异世界,周围还是一群萌萌哒的萝莉,这点是绝对不会变的啦!=。=可是呢,这只宅在异世界和萝莉们的生活也是有欢笑、有泪水、有感动、有燃点的,相信每个看过本文的读者都是不会失望的!(自我膨胀中……=。=)本文中有各式各样的萝莉,总有一款是你的菜,尽情挑选,然后为了挚爱的萝莉厮杀吧,吼吼吼!=。=最后,萝莉即是正义!=。=(唉,凑个作品简介的字数好难的说,嘿嘿……新书首发,希望各位多多支持啦!=。=)
  • 重生之无上天赋

    重生之无上天赋

    无论是在血雨腥风的武林,还是在强者簇立的圣天大陆;人们拼的不是爹,不是钱,也不是脸;人们拼的是天赋,只有天赋极高的人才能够成为真正的强者。
  • 丹符至尊

    丹符至尊

    一粒丹,开万世仙途;一张符,镇古今无敌;仙、魔、鬼、人,粉墨登场,演四界恢弘。真域争霸,儒、道、佛、玄四家演义,看北辰带领玄门制霸真域。人为魔,诸天万界,皆可葬灭,打他个天地陆沉,万灵寂灭又何妨!魔做人,天地玄黄,宇宙洪荒,等他个千秋万载,无量量劫!
  • 六宫无妃

    六宫无妃

    水莲乃一介宫女,无奈曾在太后身前当差,更代替太后礼佛多年,可谓红人一个,人称太后身边最有心计女。只因新帝和太后不和,回宫后即清扫太后余党,忖也是迟早的事情,因此从逃宫未遂到李代桃僵,从假怀龙种到非礼王爷。她最终成为天子元宏的小魔头,独一无二。但作为一个女人,水莲再是心计和潇洒,仍逃不过一个女人对宠爱渐失的恐惧,因为她的爱人是王,拥有天下,也属于天下人,醋妒的滋长,最终由爱生恨,鸳梦跌到谷底。就在失魂落魄,生命之光几近燃尽的时刻,另一个男人再次站到她身边——三王爷元嘉,水莲是他的小娇娃,举世无双。尽管水莲对他百般辜负……然实际却是两个此生不能相守的人不约而同地为彼此走上不同的战场。
  • 始皇之玉

    始皇之玉

    郑战一个貌似普通战士家庭的孩子,被命运选中,需要去完成一个前人们一直在默默努力完成的使命。退缩还是战斗,战!战出一条康庄大道,战出一个郎朗乾坤,战出一片安宁的天下。不论疼还是苦,一路勇往直前披荆斩棘,战败一切对手,战败一切邪恶,战败一切阴谋。一往无前是成为战神的唯一途径。
  • 风起惊蛰

    风起惊蛰

    苍穹惊雷现,异世少年出。山河缥缈,神境重塑,神灵遗世,人杰辈出。七千年一因果,数万世之沉浮。少年行上高天坠入沉湖,修灵力为翼,纵横天上地下地狱人间。神族、灵血都不能阻止蛰伏万物惊世出!
  • 相思谋:妃常难娶

    相思谋:妃常难娶

    某日某王府张灯结彩,婚礼进行时,突然不知从哪冒出来一个小孩,对着新郎道:“爹爹,今天您的大婚之喜,娘亲让我来还一样东西。”说完提着手中的玉佩在新郎面前晃悠。此话一出,一府宾客哗然,然当大家看清这小孩与新郎如一个模子刻出来的面容时,顿时石化。此时某屋顶,一个绝色女子不耐烦的声音响起:“儿子,事情办完了我们走,别在那磨矶,耽误时间。”新郎一看屋顶上的女子,当下怒火攻心,扔下新娘就往女子所在的方向扑去,吼道:“女人,你给本王站住。”一场爱与被爱的追逐正式开始、、、、、、、