登陆注册
14818400000143

第143章

In 1660 the whole nation was mad with loyal excitement. If we had to choose a lot from among all the multitude of those which men have drawn since the beginning of the world, we would select that of Charles the Second on the day of his return. He was in a situation in which the dictates of ambition coincided with those of benevolence, in which it was easier to be virtuous than to be wicked, to be loved than to be hated, to earn pure and imperishable glory than to become infamous. For once the road of goodness was a smooth descent. He had done nothing to merit the affection of his people. But they had paid him in advance without measure. Elizabeth, after the destruction of the Armada, or after the abolition of monopolies, had not excited a thousandth part of the enthusiasm with which the young exile was welcomed home. He was not, like Lewis the Eighteenth, imposed on his subjects by foreign conquerors; nor did he, like Lewis the Eighteenth, come back to a country which had undergone a complete change. The House of Bourbon was placed in Paris as a trophy of the victory of the European confederation. The return of the ancient princes was inseparably associated in the public mind with the cession of extensive provinces, with the payment of an immense tribute, with the devastation of flourishing departments, with the occupation of the kingdom by hostile armies, with the emptiness of those niches in which the gods of Athens and Rome had been the objects of a new idolatry, with the nakedness of those walls on which the Transfiguration had shone with light as glorious as that which overhung Mount Tabor. They came back to a land in which they could recognise nothing. The seven sleepers of the legend, who closed their eyes when the Pagans were persecuting the Christians, and woke when the Christians were persecuting each other, did not find themselves in a world more completely new to them. Twenty years had done the work of twenty generations.

Events had come thick. Men had lived fast. The old institutions and the old feelings had been torn up by the roots. There was a new Church founded and endowed by the usurper; a new nobility whose titles were taken from fields of battle, disastrous to the ancient line; a new chivalry whose crosses had been won by exploits which had seemed likely to make the banishment of the emigrants perpetual. A new code was administered by a new magistracy. A new body of proprietors held the soil by a new tenure. The most ancient local distinctions had been effaced. The most familiar names had become obsolete. There was no longer a Normandy or a Burgundy, a Brittany and a Guienne. The France of Lewis the Sixteenth had passed away as completely as one of the Preadamite worlds. Its fossil remains might now and then excite curiosity. But it was as impossible to put life into the old institutions as to animate the skeletons which are imbedded in the depths of primeval strata. It was as absurd to think that France could again be placed under the feudal system, as that our globe could be overrun by Mammoths. The revolution in the laws and in the form of government was but an outward sign of that mightier revolution which had taken place in the heart and brain of the people, and which affected every transaction of life, trading, farming, studying, marrying, and giving in marriage. The French whom the emigrant prince had to govern were no more like the French of his youth, than the French of his youth were like the French of the Jacquerie. He came back to a people who knew not him nor his house, to a people to whom a Bourbon was no more than a Carlovingian or a Merovingian. He might substitute the white flag for the tricolor; he might put lilies in the place of bees; he might order the initials of the Emperor to be carefully effaced. But he could turn his eyes nowhere without meeting some object which reminded him that he was a stranger in the palace of his fathers. He returned to a country in which even the passing traveller is every moment reminded that there has lately been a great dissolution and reconstruction of the social system. To win the hearts of a people under such circumstances would have been no easy task even for Henry the Fourth.

In the English Revolution the case was altogether different.

Charles was not imposed on his countrymen, but sought by them.

His restoration was not attended by any circumstance which could inflict a wound on their national pride. Insulated by our geographical position, insulated by our character, we had fought out our quarrels and effected our reconciliation among ourselves.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 鹿晗,谢谢你的爱

    鹿晗,谢谢你的爱

    韩欣雪和鹿晗住一起,只差一步之遥,怎么办?好像把她吃掉。当韩欣雪去找未婚夫,竟然是他,这世界也太小了吧!今后的生活怎么办啊!雅礣蝶啊!
  • 南疆往事

    南疆往事

    南坡镇,一个地处南疆边陲说大不大,说小也不小的镇子近来发生一些怪事
  • 心情好,一切都好

    心情好,一切都好

    陈丽荣编著的《心情好一切都好》从各方面揭示了保持好心情的准则,如遇事不要钻牛角尖,以平常心看待得失,善待和宽容他人,懂得知足常乐,重视个人品德修养等。如果把《心情好一切都好》中的技巧和方法运用到日常生活和工作中,我们就会时时保持好心情,就会获得心灵的净化和升华。穷也好,富也好,得也好,失也好,一切都不如心情好。心情好,一切都好。
  • 无限宠物分身

    无限宠物分身

    【巅峰焦距——品牌佳作,强力推荐】:大学生陈落偶得无限宠物分身,只要兑换点充足,就可兑换出无数超级分身。化身苍龙,万丈之躯横天蔽日;变身火凤,一口神炎灼尽天下山河;妖鲨分身,大洋之中谁堪敌手!然而,陈落第一次获得分身,却是从一只蟑螂开始的……“叮!恭喜宿主获得蟑螂分身,请用分身打败303寝蟑螂族变异族王,获得异种精血……任务完成可获得永久变异蟑螂分身一具,兑换点3点,大力丸一枚……”陈落:“……”
  • 斗破苍穹之我欲凌天

    斗破苍穹之我欲凌天

    穿越少年如何笑傲斗气大陆,我欲凌天,天欲挡,那就无法无天
  • 倾尽一切我只爱你

    倾尽一切我只爱你

    他,身在黑道,受尽女人的青睐,她,都市中待放的花朵,却受尽了生活的折磨和凋零。爱她,却从不信任她。爱他,却失去了一切,或许注定一开始的相识就是一个错误,本能的执着却让他们一味地坚持。“金正轩,如果有来世,我再也不要爱上你。”“江星若,对你的承诺我做到了,你终究还是我此生,最后的女人···”
  • 甜蜜的学院生活

    甜蜜的学院生活

    她是朴荷雅,无论是舞台上还是地下独一无二的rapper朴荷雅。与边伯贤,她一开始不过是回归时去送个专辑的机会,没想到会扯出那么多事情。捆绑cp出现?不好意思她朴荷雅还不想出现呢。倒贴前辈说?不好意思她朴荷雅没那种闲心功夫。心机队员说?不好意思她朴荷雅也是被害者。她就是霸道十足信心无比,因为朴荷雅有实力有颜有人品还有什么可怕的?可是后来的时候,朴荷雅终是怕了边伯贤。不过是他们两个之间那所谓的缘分和动心。
  • 领导干部不可不知的职场智慧

    领导干部不可不知的职场智慧

    如果你希望自己成为卓越的领导者,有些原则是必须遵循的。本书围绕口才艺术、交际智慧、处世风范、心理攻略、用人之道、人格魅力、创新精神、生存哲学等几个方面,详细系统地讲述政府机关干部、企事业领导必须遵守的91条职场法则,辅以真实、典型、新鲜、趣味、可读性强的真实案例。
  • 御龙弑天下

    御龙弑天下

    虽坐拥天下,却手无实权,虽享荣华,却不快乐。但朕不甘如此,好在朕还有御龙召唤系统,朕要夺回属于朕的东西,朕要弑奸臣鸠贼子,大赦天下,朕还要东征西讨,让我中华龙旗称霸世界!看穿越皇帝的的爱恨情仇,杀伐决断。
  • 迟到陌世

    迟到陌世

    他是冥世太子,她是废柴小姐。她一朝穿越,为寻至亲,斗心机,斩宿敌。本打算寻至而归,却因他,而动了心,两人在黑暗中小心翼翼地摸索着感情,谁又知,两人早已牵线,悲欢离合,爱恨情仇,她又该如何面对……