登陆注册
34898000000012

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
  • 超级地狱系统

    超级地狱系统

    你是四大恶人?收你做小弟。你杀人放火样样精通?我邪气凛然压你一头。你藏娇数百,家财万贯?喊声老大,我的灵魂栏给你留一个靠前的位置。人生只有逆袭,没有善恶,谁能笑到最后,谁才是最强王者。我有一把通往地狱的钥匙,我为自己带盐。
  • 有趣的昆虫王国

    有趣的昆虫王国

    广袤太空,神秘莫测;大千世界,无奇不有;人类历史,纷繁复杂;个体生命,奥妙无穷。
  • 给我三分钟

    给我三分钟

    人生如棋局,举手无悔!给我三分钟,胜天半子!本是平淡无奇的小人物,却有些不甘于平凡的梦想。实现的方式也是匪夷所思,面对那些关怪陆离尔阴我诈,不怕,我有三分钟。
  • 透视医圣

    透视医圣

    偶然获得修真界天命医宗的天命菩提,获得了传承以及透视能力……
  • 鬼王的宠妃:逆天三小姐

    鬼王的宠妃:逆天三小姐

    新书{纨绔狂妃:邪王无限宠}已发布!一朝穿越,天才重生,有怨抱怨,有仇报仇!什么?让她嫁给传说中的鬼王?相貌丑陋,冷酷无情,还是个病魔缠身的,活不过25岁的?好吧,没问题,嫁就嫁,她不怕,大不了等他死了她就继承他全部家产,到时候她就可以带着钱远走高飞了!
  • 世界上唯一的你

    世界上唯一的你

    陈咏咏和黎美宝是从小一起长大的好友。咏咏脆弱敏感,对神秘摄影师叶哲一见钟情。美宝看似坚强,却怀抱着不为人知的沉重秘密,直到有天遇到小曲……于是,四个人的命运纠缠在一起……咏咏疯狂的爱恋,美宝内心的故事,叶哲藏匿的伤痛,小曲温暖的守护,友情与爱情……
  • 武力是巅峰至上

    武力是巅峰至上

    一出生,男主的武力值就超出了当时的最高武力值的高手,当时轰动了整座城,不过也有人想要除掉男主,男主便开始了他的一生…
  • 大叔的爱恋

    大叔的爱恋

    书中记录的是一位18岁的年纪,28岁的脸,38岁的心智的“大叔”原本是一个闷骚内向的大学青年,天天与网游为生。有两个好朋友,他觉得自己的大学就这样在游戏和友情中度过。他内心为自己的堕落和闭塞惴惴不安,想要寻得自己的价值和目标。一个偶然的机会,他认识了他喜欢的一个女孩。从此,他的人生轨迹开始改变到了另一个轨道
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 倾世奇妃:妖魅王爷,别追

    倾世奇妃:妖魅王爷,别追

    “我会飞你不会。”某王爷邪笑,一日后她飞的比某王爷更高。“我可以征服天下人你不可以。”某王爷说到,两天后她成为两个大陆的主宰。某王爷宠溺摸了摸她的头说:“我可以只爱你,永生永世。”她拍下他的手说:“我不可以,自己玩去。”天下美男都征服在她的石榴裙下,她没有必要单恋一枝花。“你确定?”“确定。”某王爷衣袖一甩背对这她:“那前几天让人打劫到王府的天下珠宝就没主人了,哎!”她眼光一亮转身抱住他:“我可以爱你永生永世。”她这一世光鲜亮丽,不畏艰难从废材变为天才,那颗冰冷已久的心为他而解封。他,冷面无情,唯有她让他柔情似水,在她面前他是卑微的,可以为她背叛天下人。