登陆注册
4699400000183

第183章

According to these reports most of the monasteries and convents were homes of sin and vice, and many of the monks and nuns were guilty of heinous crimes, but, though in particular instances there may have been some grounds for these charges, there is good reason for not accepting as trustworthy this account of monastic discipline. In the first place the royal visitors traversed the country with such lightning-like rapidity that it would have been impossible for them to arrive at a correct judgment even had they been impartial and honest men. That they were neither honest nor impartial is clear enough from their own correspondence. They were sent out by Cromwell to collect evidence that might furnish a decent pretext for suppressing the monasteries and for confiscating the monastic possessions, and they took pains to show their master that his confidence in them had not been misplaced. Their only mistake was that in their eagerness to black the character of the unfortunate religious they exceeded the limits of human credulity. They positively revelled in sin, and the scandals they reported were of such a gross and hideous kind that it is impossible to believe that they could have been true, else the people, instead of taking up arms to defend the religious houses, would have risen in revolt to suppress such abominations. Nor is it correct to say that the /Comperta/ were submitted to Parliament for discussion, and that the members were so shocked by the tale they unfolded that they clamoured for the suppression of these iniquitous institutions. There is abundant evidence to prove that Parliament was reluctant to take any action against the religious houses, that it was only by the personal intervention of the king that the bill for the suppression of the lesser monasteries was allowed to pass, and that it is at least doubtful if any but general statements founded on the /Comperta/ were brought before Parliament. The story of the production of the "Black Book" supposed to contain the reports is of a much later date, and comes from sources that could not be regarded as unprejudiced. It had its origin probably in a misunderstanding of the nature of the /Compendium Compertorum/, which dealt only with parishes of the northern province. It is strange that though the commissioners made no distinction between the condition of the larger and the smaller monasteries, the Act of Parliament based upon these reports decreed only the suppression of the smaller monasteries, as if vice and neglect of discipline were more likely to reign in the small rather than in the larger communities; and it is equally strange that the superiors of many of the houses, about which unfavourable reports had been presented, were promoted to high ecclesiastical offices by the king and by his vicar-general, who should have been convinced of the guilt and unworthiness of such ministers, had they trusted their own commissioners. In the case of some of the dioceses, as for example Norwich, it is possible to compare the results of an episcopal visitation held some years previously with the reports of Cromwell's commissioners, and though it is sufficiently clear from these earlier reports that all was not well with discipline, the discrepancy between the accounts of the bishops and the royal commissioners is so striking, that it is difficult to believe that the houses could have degenerated so rapidly in so short a space of time as to justify the /Comperta/ of the commissioners. But what is still more striking is the fact that after the decree of suppression had gone forth, other commissioners, drawn largely from the local gentry, many of whom were to share in the plunder of the monastic lands, visited several of the houses against which serious charges had been made, and found nothing worthy of special blame. These men were not likely to be prejudiced in favour of the monks and nuns. They were well acquainted with the people of the district, and had every opportunity of learning the verdict of the masses about the discipline of the religious communities. They were, therefore, in a much better position to arrive at the truth than the royal commissioners who could only pay a flying visit of a few hours or at most of a few days.[34]

The real object of the visitation and of the scandalous reports to which it gave rise, was to secure some specious pretext that would justify the king in the eyes of the nation in suppressing the monasteries and in confiscating their possessions. The idea that the monastic establishments enjoyed only the administration of their lands and goods, and that these might be seized upon at any moment for the public weal, was not entirely a new one either in the history of England or in that of some of the Continental countries. Years before, Cardinal Wolsey, for example, had dissolved more than twenty monasteries in order to raise funds for his colleges at Ipswich and Oxford, while not unfrequently the kings of England rewarded their favourites and servants by granting them a pension to be paid by a particular monastery. With the rise of the middle classes to power and the gradual awakening of greater agricultural and commercial activity, greedy eyes were turned to the monasteries and the farms owned by the religious institutions. Unlike the property of private individuals these lands were never likely to be in the market, and humanly speaking a transfer of ownership could be effected only by a violent revolution. Many people, therefore, though not unfriendly to the monks and nuns as such, were not disinclined to entertain the proposals of the king for the confiscation of religious property, particularly as hopes were held out to the nobles, wealthy merchants, and the corporations of cities and towns that the property so acquired could take the place of the taxes that otherwise must be raised to meet local and national expenditure.

同类推荐
  • Washington and his Comrades in Arms

    Washington and his Comrades in Arms

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 刘公案

    刘公案

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Canadian Dominion

    The Canadian Dominion

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 自遣

    自遣

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 续眉庐丛话

    续眉庐丛话

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 续焚书

    续焚书

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 洪荒之不灭邪帝

    洪荒之不灭邪帝

    看破生死,我却唯独不能没有你,洪荒众人,尔等皆说我是邪恶的化身,那我便以邪入道,称霸世界,成就帝位,让尔等付出代价,一青年怒吼道,之后哈哈一笑,形神俱灭,重生在一个少年林云身上,之后记忆苏醒,走上强者巅峰,这是一个强者为尊的世界,等级分为:武徒,武士,武师,武王,武尊,武宗,武圣,武帝,且看少年凌晨,一步步走向巅峰,成就帝位
  • 老总·师哥·女助理

    老总·师哥·女助理

    去顺义的路上,师哥拿出一个存折对刘占五说:“你的企业,我给你管了将近两年,因为身体越来越不行,让别人管我又不放心,最后我把它卖了,现在一个浙江人在那里当老板。我把卖厂的钱都放在这个存折里,足够你下辈子享用的了。你要用它赎回你的厂子,可能也差不多。”刘占五突然抱住了师哥,大声地喊道:“师哥,这都是因为什么呀?本来,咱们可以过得好好的!”
  • 美女总裁的兵王高手

    美女总裁的兵王高手

    一代执行特殊任务的兵王返回都市,无奈被美女总裁缠上,只好顺从,从此怀抱美人。
  • 与伤痕干杯:失小节伤大雅

    与伤痕干杯:失小节伤大雅

    人生短暂,时光无情,谁不希望能够活得快快乐乐、轻轻松松,相信这也是每个人心中的梦想。然而当我们面对现实时,才发现快乐是最不容易实现的情感。尼采说:“人生就是一场苦难。”诚然,人生需要经历困苦磨难,大起大伏,没有谁可以决定自己的命运,因为命运通常让我们措手不及,防不胜防。太多的境遇是在没有准备好的时候空如其来,让我们一进找不到出去的路。
  • 下雨时蔷薇会开

    下雨时蔷薇会开

    单纯的少女珠雨田似乎在一夜之间拥有了人生全部的幸运:突然出现的生父,竟然是有名的地产商;偶遇的漂亮姐姐,是名牌大学前途无量的女博士;连生日宴会上见到的富豪都与她一见钟情,和她一同走入甜蜜的热恋,然而在这“天降幸运”的背后,是否有人为操作的痕迹?当珠雨田察觉到反常,试图寻找答案时,她发现自己早已陷入一个有人厮杀、有人拯救的旋涡。
  • 元古剑魂

    元古剑魂

    少年莫名穿越,神秘碎片显威,觉醒逆天之器,自此踏上修仙之路,斩禁地,踏天骄,傲视群雄,登临元古之巅。最黑暗的阴谋终将浮出水面,那曾经消逝的一界,正在缓缓归来......
  • 楚歌

    楚歌

    她说,她的世界永远都是这个样子。就好像战火峰飞时的一首楚歌,即便战败。她依然有自己想要爱、想要守护的人。
  • 霸汉(5)

    霸汉(5)

    西汉末年,王莽篡汉,酿就天下大乱。汉室武皇刘正七次蹄踏皇城,以无可匹敌的武力屠尽王莽的各道势力,但其仍不是宿命之帝,心灰意冷终让复国大业由天而定。无赖少年林渺出身神秘,从小混迹于市井之中,一身痞气却满腹经纶,至情至性,智深若海。偶涉武道,以天纵之资无师而成绝世高手,凭借超凡的智慧和胆识自乱世之中脱颖而出。在万般劫难之后,恰逢赤眉绿林之乱,乃聚小城之兵,以奇迹般的速度在乱世中崛起。他巧造声势,妙借诸雄之力,更以无人能敌的勇猛与战无不胜的军事天赋,带领一群忠心不二的部下征战天下,慑服群雄。历经千战终独霸大汉江山,成一代无敌皇者。他就是——东汉光武帝刘秀!
  • 中华营养百味:高血压调养食谱

    中华营养百味:高血压调养食谱

    为了满足高血压患者了解科学配餐,营养饮食的需要,通过寓医于食来预防疾病,减轻病痛,甚至帮助治愈疾病,《高血压调养食谱》针对高血压患者精选了具有食疗作用和营养功效的美味佳肴。使他们在家中就可以轻轻松松地做出既美味又有营养的饭菜来。让他们在品尝美味佳肴享受生活的同时,更收获到了营养、美丽和健康。