登陆注册
14818400000151

第151章

Every sect clamours for toleration when it is down. We have not the smallest doubt that, when Bonner was in the Marshalsea, he thought it a very hard thing that a man should be locked up in a gaol for not being able to understand the words, "This is my body," in the same way with the lords of the council. It would not be very wise to conclude that a beggar is full of Christian charity, because he assures you that God will reward you if you give him a penny; or that a soldier is humane because he cries out lustily for quarter when a bayonet is at his throat. The doctrine which from the very first origin of religious dissensions, has been held by all bigots of all sects, when condensed into a few words, and stripped of rhetorical disguise is simply this: I am in the right, and you are in the wrong. When you are the stronger you ought to tolerate me; for it is your duty to tolerate truth. But when I am the stronger, I shall persecute you; for it is my duty to persecute error.

The Catholics lay under severe restraints in England. James wished to remove those restraints; and therefore he held a language favourable to liberty of conscience. But the whole history of his life proves that this was a mere pretence. In 1679 he held similar language, in a conversation with the magistrates of Amsterdam; and the author of the "Continuation" refers to the circumstance as a proof that the King had long entertained a strong feeling on the subject. Unhappily it proves only the utter insincerity of all the King's later professions. If he had pretended to be converted to the doctrines of toleration after his accession to the throne, some credit might have been due to him. But we know most certainly that, in 1679, and long after that year, James was a most bloody and remorseless persecutor.

After 1679, he was placed at the head of the government of Scotland. And what had been his conduct in that country? He had hunted down the scattered remnant of the Covenanters with a barbarity of which no other prince of modern times, Philip the Second excepted, had ever shown himself capable. He had indulged himself in the amusement of seeing the torture of the Boot inflicted on the wretched enthusiasts whom persecution had driven to resistance. After his accession, almost his first act was to obtain from the servile parliament of Scotland a law for inflicting death on preachers at conventicles held within houses, and on both preachers and hearers at conventicles held in the open air. All this he had done, for a religion which was not his own. All this he had done, not in defence of truth against error, but in defence of one damnable error against another, in defence of the Episcopalian against the Presbyterian apostasy. Lewis the Fourteenth is justly censured for trying to dragoon his subjects to heaven. But it was reserved for James to torture and murder for the difference between two roads to hell. And this man, so deeply imbued with the poison of intolerance that, rather than not persecute at all, he would persecute people out of one heresy into another, this man is held up as the champion of religious liberty. This man, who persecuted in the cause of the unclean panther, would not, we are told, have persecuted for the sake of the milk-white and immortal hind.

And what was the conduct of James at the very time when he was professing zeal for the rights of conscience? Was he not even then persecuting to the very best of his power? Was he not employing all his legal prerogatives, and many prerogatives which were not legal, for the purpose of forcing his subjects to conform to his creed? While he pretended to abhor the laws which excluded Dissenters from office, was he not himself dismissing from office his ablest, his most experienced, his most faithful servants, on account of their religious opinions? For what offence was Lord Rochester driven from the Treasury? He was closely connected with the Royal House. He was at the head of the Tory party. He had stood firmly by James in the most trying emergencies. But he would not change his religion, and he was dismissed. That we may not be suspected of overstating the case, Dr. Lingard, a very competent, and assuredly not a very willing witness, shall speak for us. "The King," says that able but partial writer, "was disappointed. he complained to Barillon of the obstinacy and insincerity of the treasurer; and the latter received from the French envoy a very intelligible hint that the loss of office would result from his adhesion to his religious creed. He was, however, inflexible; and James, after a long delay, communicated to him, but with considerable embarrassment and many tears, his final determination. He had hoped, he said, that Rochester, by conforming to the Church of Rome, would have spared him the unpleasant task; but kings must sacrifice their feelings to their duty." And this was the King who wished to have all men of all sects rendered alike capable of holding office.

These proceedings were alone sufficient to take away all credit from his liberal professions; and such, as we learn from the despatches of the Papal Nuncio, was really the effect. "Pare," says D'Adda, writing a few days after the retirement of Rochester, "pare che gli animi sono inaspriti della voce che corre tra il popolo, d'esser cacciato il detto ministro per non essere Cattolico, percio tirarsi al esterminio de' Protestanti" Was it ever denied that the favours of the Crown were constantly bestowed and withheld purely on account of the religious opinions of the claimants? And if these things were done in the green tree, what would have been done in the dry? If James acted thus when he had the strongest motives to court his Protestant subjects, what course was he likely to follow when he had obtained from them all that he asked?

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 原来是王妃

    原来是王妃

    风雨馨,世人眼中的天之娇女,一朝穿越,莫名的带上了球,还是两个,只是这个播种的是谁?一个个阴谋,一层层算计,使她变得清冷狠辣,到最后究竟是谁温暖了她渐渐冷绝的心?【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 浮生拈花辞

    浮生拈花辞

    流年花香折枝雪,多少面靥笑无声?卿本佳人珠泪挂,终成葱茏忆无痕。“南止央,你以下棋者的身份,操控着所有人,却因她而失了天下,值得吗?”“为何不值?若是连她都离开了,我要天下还有什么意义吗?”
  • 最期盼的那十年

    最期盼的那十年

    本是X市筱家千金,但因为家庭离奇死亡,姐姐也离奇失踪,让她深受打击,却只能自身下凡“体验”生活,于是改名换姓成为平凡的筱倪雅,但是生活充满无尽的挫折和希望?不是吗?
  • 群雄争霸:中国历史演义春秋战国篇

    群雄争霸:中国历史演义春秋战国篇

    公元前770年,周平王将都城从镐京迁到了洛邑。因为镐京在西边,所以历史上就把周朝京都在镐京的时期称为西周;洛邑在东边,就把平王东迁以后到秦统一中国前这一时期叫做东周。
  • 花千骨之妖神绝恋

    花千骨之妖神绝恋

    她花千骨五百年了,终于重生了!白子画,接受我的怒火吧!呵呵,你以为,我还是当初那个花千骨吗?你已经沉睡五百年了,是时候让我再次回到你的体内,你我合力统领六界了。我终于可以冲破封印了,呵呵。小骨,我找了你五百年了,你在哪里?
  • 神易近人

    神易近人

    玉帝一觉醒来,发现整个天庭有些不对劲。太上老君用炼丹炉崩爆米花。月老乱牵红绳成全万千基佬。十万天兵天将在南天门尬舞。哮天犬携玉兔共享人世繁华。为寻群仙元神,天庭关闭玉帝下凡,燃并暖的天庭扛把子该何去何从?玉帝:自己的天庭自己救!这是玉帝带领群仙重返天庭的爆笑故事。
  • 白色眷恋

    白色眷恋

    因为不满皇马6比2的比分,中国青年律师沈星怒砸啤酒瓶,结果电光火石间,他穿越成了佛罗伦蒂诺的儿子,且看来自09年的小伙子如何玩转03年的欧洲足坛
  • 淬明成灭

    淬明成灭

    一代绝世天才为何惨遭人抛弃?他是明灭,他狂妄,那是因为他背后的艰辛;他杀人不眨眼,那是因为无故差一点被人打死。他明白了,只有强者才不会被欺负,只有强者才可以保护自己想要保护的人
  • 霸道恶少:别惹刁蛮公主

    霸道恶少:别惹刁蛮公主

    她,,是任性的刁蛮公主,,,,他是有权有势的霸道恶少,,,,他在不知不觉中爱她,,,,他们在冥冥中会是怎样的
  • 传奇诸侯

    传奇诸侯

    当地球精英的意识和异界的思想在这里闪出火花,剑圣被传送百年,屠龙勇者五百年后已经鲜有人提起,传奇诸侯却让人们在他以后的历史再也绕不过他的名字这一切绝不是武力所能做到的