登陆注册
14818400000068

第68章

The Commons refused to surrender their members. The Peers showed no inclination to usurp the unconstitutional jurisdiction which the King attempted to force on them. A contest began, in which violence and weakness were on the one side, law and resolution on the other. Charles sent an officer to seal up the lodgings and trunks of the accused members. The Commons sent their sergeant to break the seals. The tyrant resolved to follow up one outrage by another. In making the charge, he had struck at the institution of juries. In executing the arrest, he struck at the privileges of Parliament. He resolved to go to the House in person with an armed force, and there to seize the leaders of the Opposition, while engaged in the discharge of their parliamentary duties.

What was his purpose? Is it possible to believe that he had no definite purpose, that he took the most important step of his whole reign without having for one moment considered what might be its effects? Is it possible to believe that he went merely for the purpose of making himself a laughing-stock, that he intended, if he had found the accused members, and if they had refused, as it was their right and duty to refuse, the submission which he illegally demanded, to leave the House without bringing them away? If we reject both these suppositions, we must believe, and we certainly do believe, that he went fully determined to carry his unlawful design into effect by violence, and, if necessary, to shed the blood of the chiefs of the Opposition on the very floor of the Parliament House.

Lady Carlisle conveyed intelligence of the design to Pym. The five members had time to withdraw before the arrival of Charles.

They left the House as he was entering New Palace Yard. He was accompanied by about two hundred halberdiers of his guard, and by many gentlemen of the Court armed with swords. He walked up Westminster Hall. At the southern end of the Hall his attendants divided to the right and left and formed a lane to the door of the House of Commons. He knocked, entered, darted a look towards the place which Pym usually occupied, and, seeing it empty, walked up to the table. The Speaker fell on his knee. The members rose and uncovered their heads in profound silence, and the King took his seat in the chair. He looked round the House. But the five members were nowhere to be seen. He interrogated the Speaker. The Speaker answered, that he was merely the organ of the House, and had neither eyes to see, nor tongue to speak, but according to their direction. The King muttered a few feeble sentences about his respect for the laws of the realm, and the privileges of Parliament, and retired. As he passed along the benches, several resolute voices called out audibly "Privilege!"

He returned to Whitehall with his company of bravoes, who, while he was in the House, had been impatiently waiting in the lobby for the word, cocking their pistols, and crying, "Fall on." That night he put forth a proclamation, directing that the ports should be stopped, and that no person should, at his peril, venture to harbour the accused members.

Hampden and his friends had taken refuge in Coleman Street. The city of London was indeed the fastness of public liberty, and was, in those times, a place of at least as much importance as Paris during the French Revolution. The city, properly so called, now consists in a great measure of immense warehouses and counting-houses, which are frequented by traders and their clerks during the day, and left in almost total solitude during the night. It was then closely inhabited by three hundred thousand persons, to whom it was not merely a place of business, but a place of constant residence. The great capital had as complete a civil and military organization as if it had been an independent republic. Each citizen had his company; and the companies, which now seem to exist only for the sake of epicures and of antiquaries, were then formidable brotherhoods, the members of which were almost as closely bound together as the members of a Highland clan. How strong these artificial ties were, the numerous and valuable legacies anciently bequeathed by citizens to their corporations abundantly prove. The municipal offices were filled by the most opulent and respectable merchants of the kingdom. The pomp of the magistracy of the capital was inferior only to that which surrounded the person of the sovereign. The Londoners loved their city with that patriotic love which is found only in small communities, like those of ancient Greece, or like those which arose in Italy during the middle ages. The numbers, the intelligence, the wealth of the citizens, the democratical form of their local government, and their vicinity to the Court and to the Parliament, made them one of the most formidable bodies in the kingdom. Even as soldiers they were not to be despised. In an age in which war is a profession, there is something ludicrous in the idea of battalions composed of apprentices and shopkeepers, and officered by aldermen. But in the early part of the seventeenth century, there was no standing army in the island; and the militia of the metropolis was not inferior in training to the militia of other places. A city which could furnish many thousands of armed men, abounding in natural courage, and not absolutely untinctured with military discipline, was a formidable auxiliary in times of internal dissension. On several occasions during the civil war, the trainbands of London distinguished themselves highly; and at the battle of Newbury, in particular, they repelled the fiery onset of Rupert, and saved the army of the Parliament from destruction.

The people of this great city had long been thoroughly devoted to the national cause. Many of them had signed a protestation in which they declared their resolution to defend the privileges of Parliament. Their enthusiasm had, indeed, of late begun to cool.

同类推荐
  • 西山亮禅师语录

    西山亮禅师语录

    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。
  • 鸦片事略

    鸦片事略

    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。
  • Machiavelli

    Machiavelli

    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。
  • 皇朝经世文编

    皇朝经世文编

    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。
  • 诗学源流考

    诗学源流考

    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。
热门推荐
  • 彪悍娇妻:抢婚秘籍

    彪悍娇妻:抢婚秘籍

    他因为家庭的缘故被强迫娶一名他不喜欢的女生“浩然…我被我爸逼婚了……”陆浩然他确定他绝对没有听错,当陆浩然将消息告诉她时,这消息犹如一道天雷,将她雷得外焦内嫩“浩然!你确定你没有听错吗!”·“我们可以在这场婚礼上捣乱。”“捣乱?咋整。”“很简单——抢!亲!”
  • 尘封回忆不要翻

    尘封回忆不要翻

    别人总的初恋是一场浪漫的爱情剧,我的初恋就像一场独角戏。你一直向前,冲锋陷阵,我只能追随着你的脚步,永不停歇。最终,你还是胜利了,带着你的她。却忘了曾经有过一个人,为你赴汤蹈火,在所不辞。
  • 图腾世纪

    图腾世纪

    人生如戏,历史亦然。张小贤以为自己仅仅只是在玩游戏,不知不觉间,历史已经被他和他的战友所改变。
  • 网游之神武巅峰

    网游之神武巅峰

    这里没有重生,只有一款以培养出终极强者为目地的网游.这里只有一个精神病患者在游戏杀人越货,疯狂厮杀的经历.这里可以杀爆各种古代名将,爆出旷世绝学!暴打西方诸神,关羽刘备,吕布,秦始皇什么的都只是小盆友,见神不坏更是小盆友了!武学境界:明劲,高级明劲,巅峰明劲,暗劲,化劲,丹劲,罡劲,见神,封神,圆明,碍滞,沉思,入藏.见神不坏,封神不漏.圆明通融,心无碍滞.静虑沉思,身如秘藏.精神境界:静若处子,动如脱兔,举重若轻,秋风蝉知,真性本如,不闻不见,圆融无滞,静虑沉思,点燃神火,显露真心.公布一个书群:骑士的暖风花园:178978146
  • 倾世毒妃:废材三小姐

    倾世毒妃:废材三小姐

    她,是21世纪的神医与毒医“月夕颜”,同样也是21世纪的王牌特工,可惜一次意外丧失性命,“废材”,擦亮你的眼睛看看,她有一大堆神兽等着契约。“庸医”睁大你的眼睛看看,她可是妙手回春,可以和阎王抢人。“没女人味”,瞪大你的眼睛看看,在她身边的美男数不胜数。
  • 天下神偷:废材小姐很嚣张

    天下神偷:废材小姐很嚣张

    一个神偷不小心穿越到一个历史没有的国家,原主居然是个人人皆知的白痴废才?大婚之日被人一脚踢死?这个日子过得很悲惨,每天大鱼加大肉。上有弟弟是天才,下有丫环爱哭鬼。爹不疼,没娘爱,显得自己好可爱!没钱花,没钱用,熬了一夜成富翁!不愁吃,不愁穿,身旁美男围着转!“小姐,我们没银子了”“没看我脚下踩的都是银子么?”“小姐,你胡说,你踩的明明就是金子!”嗯?我是废才么?我怎么一点都感觉不到我是个废才?为什么你们都被我这个废才打趴下了还要继续骂我是废才?难道说你们连我这个废才都不如么?
  • 逆紫灵

    逆紫灵

    圣尊——12岁的王者继承人泪雪,不屈服于暗无自由的命运,倔强地闯入了凌星磊的世界,却不知这也是命运的开始。。。灵神——为何相爱的两人却只能残酷相斗?为了爱,绝不妥协,就算要前往未知异世,也一定要与你相守!!!
  • 九天凰君:湘君夜凌录

    九天凰君:湘君夜凌录

    当童颜的角色神君遇上万年腹黑妖孽湘凌第N次扶额“你丫的有恋童癖么?”“恋童癖是什么?”“就是……就是专门喜欢我这种没长开的小孩子!”“卿卿,我只恋你。”“为我做了这么多……不后悔么?”“不,我很享受。”“你怎么在我床上?”“等卿卿等的有些冷了,便上来了。”“滚下去。”“好,但我能再爬上来吗?”‘’敢爬上来……我就废了你。”“那卿卿你废了我吧,这样你需要就对我负责了。”“狐君……”“娘子我错了。”这个睁着一双萌萌的大眼睛千方百计要爬上我的床的男人是sei呀,说好那个不苟言笑霸气高傲的轮回司去哪了?我要退货呀退货!
  • 新镌绣像麴头陀济颠全传

    新镌绣像麴头陀济颠全传

    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。
  • 深夜迷宫

    深夜迷宫

    林墨的人生本应如水一般索然无味,但不知从何时起,这水变成了海,惊涛骇浪,周边更是风起云涌。而这一切,竟是因为一个U盘。这U盘里面究竟藏着什么秘密?让一无所知的她,一夕之间走入权力的深渊。