登陆注册
38634800000228

第228章 FRANCIS BACON(28)

Again, it seems strange that Mr.Montagu should not perceive that, while attempting to vindicate Bacon's reputation, he is really casting on it the foulest of all aspersions.He imputes to his idol a degree of meanness and depravity more loathsome than judicial corruption itself.A corrupt judge may have many good qualities.But a man who, to please a powerful patron, solemnly declares himself guilty of corruption when he knows himself to be innocent, must be a monster of servility and impudence.Bacon was, to say nothing of his highest claims to respect, a gentleman, a nobleman, a scholar, a statesman, a man of the first consideration in society, a man far advanced in years.Is it possible to believe that such a man would, to gratify any human being, irreparably ruin his own character by his own act? Imagine a grey-headed judge, full of years and honours, owning with tears, with pathetic assurances of his penitence and of his sincerity, that he has been guilty of shameful malpractices, repeatedly asseverating the truth of his confession, subscribing it with his own hand, submitting to conviction, receiving a humiliating sentence and acknowledging its justice, and all this when he has it in his power to show that his conduct has been irreproachable! The thing is incredible.But if we admit it to be true, what must we think of such a man, if indeed he deserves the name of man, who thinks anything that kings and minions can bestow more precious than honour, or anything that they can inflict more terrible than infamy?

Of this most disgraceful imputation we fully acquit Bacon.He had no defence; and Mr.Montagu's affectionate attempt to make a defence for him has altogether failed.

The grounds on which Mr.Montagu rests the case are two: the first, that the taking of presents was usual, and, what he seems to consider as the same thing, not discreditable; the second, that these presents were not taken as bribes.

Mr Montagu brings forward many facts in support of his first proposition.He is not content with showing that many English judges formerly received gifts from suitors, but collects similar instances from foreign nations and ancient times.He goes back to the commonwealths of Greece, and attempts to press into his service a line of Homer and a sentence of Plutarch, which, we fear, will hardly serve his turn.The gold of which Homer speaks was not intended to fee the judges, but was paid into court for the benefit of the successful litigant; and the gratuities which Pericles, as Plutarch states, distributed among the members of the Athenian tribunals, were legal wages paid out of the public revenue.We can supply Mr.Montagu with passages much more in point.Hesiod, who, like poor Aubrey, had a "killing decree "made against him in the Chancery of Ascra, forgot decorum so far that he ventured to designate the learned persons who presided in that court, as Basileas dorophagous.Plutarch and Diodorus have handed down to the latest ages the respectable name of Anytus, the son of Anthemion, the first defendant who, eluding all the safeguards which the ingenuity of Solon could devise, succeeded in corrupting a bench of Athenian judges.We are indeed so far from grudging Mr.Montagu the aid of Greece, that we will give him Rome into the bargain.We acknowledge that the honourable senators who tried Verres received presents which were worth more than the fee-****** of York House and Gorhambury together, and that the no less honourable senators and knights who professed to believe in the alibi of Clodius obtained marks still more extraordinary of the esteem and gratitude of the defendant.In short, we are ready to admit that, before Bacon's time, and in Bacon's time, judges were in the habit of receiving gifts from suitors.

But is this a defence? We think not.The robberies of Cacus and Barabbas are no apology for those of Turpin.The conduct of the two men of Belial who swore away the life of Naboth has never been cited as an excuse for the perjuries of Oates and Dangerfield.Mr.Montagu has confounded two things which it is necessary carefully to distinguish from each other, if we wish to form a correct judgment of the characters of men of other countries and other times.That an immoral action is in a particular society, generally considered as innocent, is a good plea for an individual who, being one of that society, and having adopted the notions which prevail among his neighbours, commits that action.But the circumstance that a great many people are in the habit of committing immoral actions is no plea at all.We should think it unjust to call St.Louis a wicked man, because in an age in which toleration was generally regarded as a sin, he persecuted heretics.We should think it unjust to call Cowper's friend, John Newton, a hypocrite and monster, because at a time when the slave-trade was commonly considered by the most respectable people as an innocent and beneficial traffic, he went, largely provided with hymn-books and handcuffs, on a Guinea voyage.But the circumstance that there are twenty thousand thieves in London is no excuse for a fellow who is caught breaking into a shop.No man is to be blamed for not ****** discoveries in morality, for not finding out that something which everybody else thinks to be good is really bad.But, if a man does that which he and all around him know to be bad, it is no excuse for him that many others have done the same.We should be ashamed of spending so much time in pointing out so clear a distinction, but that Mr.Montagu seems altogether to overlook it.

Now, to apply these principles to the case before us; let Mr.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 不注定的一切

    不注定的一切

    我们生而平凡,却向往着不凡。命运不是天注定,一切还需自己拼…
  • 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!
  • 这个剑仙不单纯

    这个剑仙不单纯

    太监了,回头再重发,走吧,断更了,快走吧
  • 霸道总裁的独家新娘

    霸道总裁的独家新娘

    在墨家,她是墨家骄傲冷漠的千金,在外,她是性感妖娆的playgirl,大胆,热情。“不过一个主动送上门的女人而已,还真的以为会对她上心?”一句嘲弄的话,把她的心,刺的鲜血淋漓,甚至,不顾及她的身体,强行打掉她肚子里的孩子,囚禁已然失去生机的她,更是残忍的逼迫她看着他别的女人亲热恩爱。在订婚前夕,一夜肆虐,却不知,那是他们最后一次见面,留下的只有地上的斑斑血迹……六年后她挽着丈夫,抱着孩子,出现在他面前,嫉妒,悔恨,在他如墨的眼眸里深深的烙下印记,她已经是他连求的机会都没有了的人。向来骄傲的他,毫不犹豫的跪在她的面前:“我求你,让我留在你身边,只要你能看我一眼!”
  • 仙世浮沉

    仙世浮沉

    本是宗门中极为有天赋的弟子,却遭受背叛,妻子成了跟班的女人,并且与跟班共同谋害自己,无奈借尸还魂与乌龟之躯,苟活于世……一次次在强大的缝隙中秋生存,一件件奇异的事件,一个个未知的谜底,一步步的将主角推向一个深渊……他不停的探索世界的起源,寻找遗留的线索,最终他发现了自开天以来最大的秘密……
  • 萌萌酒馆

    萌萌酒馆

    话说在宋朝南方的一个小镇的一个小巷子的尽头,有着这样的一个“酒馆”,叫做“萌萌酒馆”,围绕“酒馆”发生着一些稀奇古怪又有趣的故事,或喜或悲,从这里开始……
  • 昔日恩师今若在怎舍徒儿战群狼

    昔日恩师今若在怎舍徒儿战群狼

    汇阴阳,动乾坤,开八门,动八卦,爻六界!
  • 我跟龙骑的那点破事

    我跟龙骑的那点破事

    我本来只是个在边境小城混吃等死的“神偷”少女,为啥啥事都要往我身上找?为啥我莫名奇妙就会卷入阴谋?真是气煞我也!
  • 最初底线

    最初底线

    一场横跨数百年的精密布局。一次来自数百年后的决意守护。当然,还有——复仇!虚空之中被唤醒的星球意志,在夹缝中求生的人和一路行来身后淌着血的新生空间!一路行来,无数强者倒在他的脚下,为他的强大做上不容置疑的脚注!当然,还有兄弟,还有爱人。如果有一天,你能来到这个空间,你一定会听到他们的故事。他们的成长和幼稚、善良和恶毒。还好,一切还草创未就,你,准备好了吗?和苏铎一起,撑起这草创未就的空间——里墟!和苏铎一起,守护一个身为生活在此间的人类最后的底线!
  • 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!