登陆注册
4705400000121

第121章

Had this plan, with some modifications, been tried at an earlier period, in a more composed state of the public mind, and by a better sovereign, we are by no means certain that it might not have effected the purpose for which it was designed. The restraint imposed on the King by the Council of thirty, whom he had himself chosen, would have been feeble indeed when compared with the restraint imposed by Parliament. But it would have been more constant. It would have acted every year, and all the year round; and before the Revolution the sessions of Parliament were short and the recesses long. The advice of the Council would probably have prevented any very monstrous and scandalous measures; and would consequently have prevented the discontents which follow such measures, and the salutary laws which are the fruit of such discontents. We believe, for example, that the second Dutch war would never have been approved by such a Council as that which Temple proposed. We are quite certain that the shutting up of the Exchequer would never even have been mentioned in such a Council. The people, pleased to think that Lord Russell, Lord Cavendish, and Mr. Powle, unplaced and unpensioned, were daily representing their grievances and defending their rights in the Royal presence, would not have pined quite so much for the meeting of Parliaments. The Parliament, when it met, would have found fewer and less glaring abuses to attack. There would have been less misgovernment and less reform. We should not have been cursed with the Cabal, or blessed with the Habeas Corpus Act. In the mean time the Council, considered as an executive Council, would, unless some at least of its powers had been delegated to a smaller body, have been feeble, dilatory, divided, unfit for everything that requires secrecy and despatch, and peculiarly unfit for the administration of war.

The Revolution put an end, in a very different way, to the long contest between the King and the Parliament. From that time, the House of Commons has been predominant in the State. The Cabinet has really been, from that time, a committee nominated by the Crown out of the prevailing party in Parliament. Though the minority in the Commons are Constantly proposing to condemn executive measures, or to call for papers which may enable the House to sit in judgment on such measures, these propositions are scarcely ever carried; and, if a proposition of this kind is carried against the Government, a change of Ministry almost necessarily follows. Growing and struggling power always gives more annoyance and is more unmanageable than established power.

The House of Commons gave infinitely more trouble to the Ministers of Charles the Second than to any Ministers of later times; for, in the time of Charles the Second, the House was checking Ministers in whom it did not confide. Now that its ascendency is fully established, it either confides in Ministers or turns them out. This is undoubtedly a far better state of things than that which Temple wished to introduce. The modern Cabinet is a far better Executive Council than his. The worst House of Commons that has sate since the Revolution was a far more efficient check on misgovernment than his fifteen independent counsellors would have been. Yet, everything considered, it seems to us that his plan was the work of an observant, ingenious, and fertile mind.

On this occasion, as on every occasion on which he came prominently forward, Temple had the rare good fortune to please the public as well as the Sovereign. The general exultation was great when it was known that the old Council, made up of the most odious tools of power, was dismissed, that small interior committees, rendered odious by the recent memory of the Cabal, were to be disused, and that the King would adopt no measure till it had been discussed and approved by a body, of which one half consisted of independent gentlemen and noblemen, and in which such persons as Russell, Cavendish, and Temple himself had seats.

Town and country were in a ferment of joy. The bells were rung; bonfires were lighted; and the acclamations of England were echoed by the Dutch, who considered the influence obtained by Temple as a certain omen of good for Europe. It is, indeed, much to the honour of his sagacity that every one of his great measures should, in such times, have pleased every party which he had any interest in pleasing. This was the case with the Triple Alliance, with the treaty which concluded the second Dutch war, with the marriage of the Prince of Orange, and, finally, with the institution of this new Council.

The only people who grumbled were those popular leaders of the House of Commons who were not among the Thirty; and, if our view of the measure be correct, they were precisely the people who had good reason to grumble. They were precisely the people whose activity and whose influence the new Council was intended to destroy.

But there was very soon an end of the bright hopes and loud applauses with which the publication of this scheme had been hailed. The perfidious levity of the King and the ambition of the chiefs of parties produced the instant, entire, and irremediable failure of a plan which nothing but firmness, public spirit, and self-denial on the part of all concerned in it could conduct to a happy issue. Even before the project was divulged, its author had already found reason to apprehend that it would fail.

Considerable difficulty was experienced in framing the list of counsellors. There were two men in particular about whom the King and Temple could not agree, two men deeply tainted with the vices common to the English statesman of that age, but unrivalled in talents, address, and influence. These were the Earl of Shaftesbury, and George Savile Viscount Halifax.

同类推荐
  • 净琉璃净土标

    净琉璃净土标

    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。
  • 佛国禅师文殊指南图赞

    佛国禅师文殊指南图赞

    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。
  • 佛说决定毗尼经

    佛说决定毗尼经

    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。
  • 劝报亲恩篇

    劝报亲恩篇

    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。
  • 陈书

    陈书

    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。
热门推荐
  • 影后逆袭:我要做影后

    影后逆袭:我要做影后

    她有惊天身份却二十年未知?!为何彼此在乎,却不见?开书《影后逆袭:我要做影后》,倾心揭开娱乐圈谜团。满足你所有的好奇。
  • 萌妻来袭:爹地,我缺个妈咪

    萌妻来袭:爹地,我缺个妈咪

    相亲遇渣男,萌宝来救美!但是没想到这个眨巴眨巴眼睛的小正太也是个披着羊皮的小狼宝。“我缺个妈咪,爹地缺个老婆,一举两得。”陆夜白皱眉头,似乎有哪里不太对劲。本以为只是个哄小孩的游戏,却不想有人想假戏真做。
  • 走开江

    走开江

    《走开江》较为全面地展示了川东小平原-开江秀美的自然风光与厚重传奇的历史文化。作者历时五年,足迹遍及开江的旮旮旯旯,然后用笔用心记录下那些秀美的自然风光,厚重的历史文化,传奇的历史人物。对研究者来说,《走开江》算是一本历史补充资料;对游客来说,《走开江》算是一本旅游手册;对读者来说,《走开江》是一本散文大全。《走开江》在不动声色中,将人们带进开江的画卷长廊中,让人们摸到了开江的脉络,听到了开江的心跳,看到了开江的面相。写出了开江精神,全方位、多角度展示了开江的人文地理、山川河流、历史传奇,是开江地域文学的百科全书,是开江地域文学的“清明上河图”,甚至是达州市一部具有地理标志性的作品。
  • 唯识学概论

    唯识学概论

    《中观学概论》和《唯识学概论》两书的作者弘学居士,本名李英武,重庆南岸人氏。外祖母、母亲都是虔诚的佛教徒。弘学是我汉藏教理院同班同学正果法师的忠实弟子。1993年他写了《佛学概论》,我专门为他写了序,并希望他能“写出中、高两级佛学院校学生阅读的佛学书籍,并作为各级佛学院校的教材或参考资料”。
  • 有一种幸福叫淡定 有一种智慧叫宽心 有一种境界叫放下

    有一种幸福叫淡定 有一种智慧叫宽心 有一种境界叫放下

    世事喧嚣,人事纷扰,让人们的心绪难以平静;名缰利锁,诱惑重重,让人们欲望丛生,烦恼不断,焦虑、忧郁、抱怨、迷茫、彷徨、失落……如何才能回归宁静的心灵?如何才能活出真实的自己?如何才能找到真正的幸福?人生之所以感到不幸福和快乐,是因为我们欲望太多,迷失本性,从而被世俗的功名利禄所俘虏,被人生的挫折困顿所击倒。在物欲横流、充满诱惑的社会里,最大的幸福莫过于守住一颗淡定而宁静的心,顺境中宠辱不惊、怡然自得,逆境里不悲不愁、不弃不馁,行至水穷处,坐看云起时,如此,你才能拥有真正的幸福,活出生命的色彩。
  • 魔尊她又帅又俏美

    魔尊她又帅又俏美

    称霸诸天的魔尊殿下一朝变成废柴大小姐,只想找回男宠继续双修,却有一帮瞎眼极品以为她可欺凌践踏!恶毒亲戚要演宅斗?杀。渣男白莲花联手泼脏水?杀。正派人士装逼围剿她?杀杀杀。被打的屁滚尿流的人调头找靠山。“邪帝陛下!魔尊萧离杀人如麻,天怒人怨,请您出来主持大局!”某腹黑邪帝宠溺一笑:“怎么了,我宠的。不服气的,通通弄死!”回到内殿,邪帝倚榻宽衣:“离儿,外面人人都想杀你。快和本帝继续双修,增强功力吧。”萧离咬牙:“这世上竟然还有比本尊更禽兽的人?”霸气魔尊遇腹黑邪帝,双修才是王道!
  • 三千独宠

    三千独宠

    【蓬莱岛】她是逍遥王爷的宠妃,却被囚禁在凤阳侯的府中。权倾朝野的侯爷,一个无权无势的王爷……他被世人讥讽绿云罩顶,依然不改初衷。他玩弄权势,用权力把人困在自己身边,可最后失去的却是……
  • 无极往生门

    无极往生门

    异域大陆,仙道飘渺……中州世界,侯爷失踪,是偶然,还是命运?筑基结丹,问道天机;看十方血海,尽是魔影。上古六派,裂天弟子,参通天战诀,修战神金身,遍碧落黄泉,试问何处是长生……
  • 财富如水

    财富如水

    《财富如水》是警世大言,给一个时代提供了一种道德方向,伦理精神,带有启示性。书里面充满一种庄严感和良知感。是我们迫切需要的一本书,充满了智慧,充满了问题,提供了很多很可靠的答案。 财富对每个人都极其重要,然而如何获取财富和如何对待财富将是一个与人的生命同等深奥和深刻的问题。《财富如水》为我们透析了这样一个人类共同关心的重大课题,因而读它有无限益处。这部书看起来不厚,但每一篇东西都充满经典。
  • 我家夫人是只妖

    我家夫人是只妖

    【3元订阅全本】从我记事起,我就在做着一件匪夷所思的事情——渡魂。他们都说渡魂,是因为我身上有太多的罪孽。而我不知道我到底犯了什么错。*阎王说,“白扇,你是渡魂的鬼差,不该有感情。”繁花说:“扇子,别对任何人动情,不然就完了。”我谨记在心,将一个又一个的鬼魂送上奈何桥。而我一直在想,如果有一天我能喝了孟婆汤,走过奈何桥,会是如何。*算命先生说我是妖孽转世,该诛。我笑,不置可否,却不晓得我到底是怎样的妖孽。直至那日,我站在奈何桥上,看着对岸边一身白袍的他。他笑的清浅,对我说,“扇儿,我来带你回家。”我惊诧,原来,我竟是有家的。