登陆注册
5246300001146

第1146章 CHAPTER XXIII(17)

These considerations had more weight with the Lords than with the Commons. Indeed one of the principal uses of the Upper House is to defend the vested rights of property in cases in which those rights are unpopular, and are attacked on grounds which to shortsighted politicians seem valid. An assembly composed of men almost all of whom have inherited opulence, and who are not under the necessity of paying court to constituent bodies, will not easily be hurried by passion or seduced by sophistry into robbery. As soon as the bill for punishing Duncombe had been read at the table of the Peers, it became clear that there would be a sharp contest. Three great Tory noblemen, Rochester, Nottingham and Leeds, headed the opposition; and they were joined by some who did not ordinarily act with them. At an early stage of the proceedings a new and perplexing question was raised. How did it appear that the facts set forth in the preamble were true, that Duncombe had committed the frauds for which it was proposed to punish him in so extraordinary a manner? In the House of Commons, he had been taken by surprise; he had made admissions of which he had not foreseen the consequences; and he had then been so much disconcerted by the severe manner in which he had been interrogated that he had at length avowed everything. But he had now had time to prepare himself; he had been furnished with advice by counsel; and, when he was placed at the bar of the Peers, he refused to criminate himself and defied his persecutors to prove him guilty. He was sent back to the Tower. The Lords acquainted the Commons with the difficulty which had arisen. Aconference was held in the Painted Chamber; and there Hartington, who appeared for the Commons, declared that he was authorized, by those who had sent him, to assure the Lords that Duncombe had, in his place in Parliament, owned the misdeeds which he now challenged his accusers to bring home to him. The Lords, however, rightly thought that it would be a strange and a dangerous thing to receive a declaration of the House of Commons in its collective character as conclusive evidence of the fact that a man had committed a crime. The House of Commons was under none of those restraints which were thought necessary in ordinary cases to protect innocent defendants against false witnesses. The House of Commons could not be sworn, could not be cross-examined, could not be indicted, imprisoned, pilloried, mutilated, for perjury.

Indeed the testimony of the House of Commons in its collective character was of less value than the uncontradicted testimony of a single member. For it was only the testimony of the majority of the House. There might be a large respectable minority whose recollections might materially differ from the recollections of the majority. This indeed was actually the case. For there had been a dispute among those who had heard Duncombe's confession as to the precise extent of what he had confessed; and there had been a division; and the statement which the Upper House was expected to receive as decisive on the point of fact had been at last carried only by ninety votes to sixty-eight. It should seem therefore that, whatever moral conviction the Lords might feel of Duncombe's guilt, they were bound, as righteous judges, to absolve him.

After much animated debate, they divided; and the bill was lost by forty-eight votes to forty-seven. It was proposed by some of the minority that proxies should be called; but this scandalous proposition was strenuously resisted; and the House, to its great honour, resolved that on questions which were substantially judicial, though they might be in form legislative, no peer who was absent should be allowed to have a voice.

Many of the Whig Lords protested. Among them were Orford and Wharton. It is to be lamented that Burnet, and the excellent Hough, who was now Bishop of Oxford, should have been impelled by party spirit to record their dissent from a decision which all sensible and candid men will now pronounce to have been just and salutary. Somers was present; but his name is not attached to the protest which was subscribed by his brethren of the junto. We may therefore not unreasonably infer that, on this as on many other occasions, that wise and virtuous statesman disapproved of the violence of his friends.

In rejecting the bill, the Lords had only exercised their indisputable right. But they immediately proceeded to take a step of which the legality was not equally clear. Rochester moved that Duncombe should be set at liberty. The motion was carried; a warrant for the discharge of the prisoner was sent to the Tower, and was obeyed without hesitation by Lord Lucas, who was Lieutenant of that fortress. As soon as this was known, the anger of the Commons broke forth with violence. It was by their order that the upstart Duncombe had been put in ward. He was their prisoner; and it was monstrous insolence in the Peers to release him. The Peers defended what they had done by arguments which must be allowed to have been ingenious, if not satisfactory. It was quite true that Duncombe had originally been committed to the Tower by the Commons. But, it was said, the Commons, by sending a penal bill against him to the Lords, did, by necessary implication, send him also to the Lords. For it was plainly impossible for the Lords to pass the bill without hearing what he had to say against it. The Commons had felt this, and had not complained when he had, without their consent, been brought from his place of confinement, and set at the bar of the Peers. From that moment he was the prisoner of the Peers. He had been taken back from the bar to the Tower, not by virtue of the Speaker's warrant, of which the force was spent, but by virtue of their order which had remanded him. They, therefore, might with perfect propriety discharge him.

同类推荐
  • 晦台元镜禅师语录

    晦台元镜禅师语录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • THE MASTERY OF THE AIR

    THE MASTERY OF THE AIR

    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。
  • 道德经注释

    道德经注释

    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。
  • 古城集

    古城集

    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 Country Doctor

    The Country Doctor

    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
  • 运镖三国

    运镖三国

    穿越到三国没金手指,那你混个屁啊!《运镖三国》游戏系统在手,天下我有!爆笑!升级!打怪!一个都不能少。你四世三公,声名显赫?那也得乖乖同我镖局签约;你仁义满天下,刘皇叔威武?少一分钱也不给你运!乱世奸雄曹操,最爱就是你,你手下的寒门谋士、出名大将,都跳槽来我这里打工了……这是一个带着运镖游戏系统,将整个三国搅得天翻地覆的故事。那个主角,很可能就是你。
  • 屹立娱乐之巅

    屹立娱乐之巅

    身带“金手指”的顾翘翘一头扎进竞争残酷而激烈,充满了各种利益冲突和明争暗斗,娱乐圈这个巨大的名利场。不想做流星,立志做恒星的她在向目标前进的途中,见过鲜花,也见过荆棘;听过掌声,也听倒过倒彩声,遇到过友谊,也遭到过背叛……她依然不改初心,最终走向巅峰的故事!简介无能,慢热,现实中娱乐圈的故事和虚构的人物结合在一起,半现实像。
  • 星际战之乱

    星际战之乱

    他把命给你你也愿意把命交给他这叫兄弟你为他拼命他却因为曾经救过你觉得理所当然这就只是你的一厢情愿
  • 三十七万纪年

    三十七万纪年

    玫瑰花海里兀自漫步的绝美的少年。依旧寻找着那个叫花里的女孩。不断找寻,不断迷路。在寻找着什么呢?生命里忽然出现了一个叫古叶的女孩。你在找什么呢?我可以帮你啊!那份隐藏了许多的的心跳开始复苏……
  • 为什么异次元没有物理啊

    为什么异次元没有物理啊

    异世界,以冒险著称的异世界,为什么会有这么多违反物理的事物存在!一个偶然的契机让我进入了异世界。那就让我用科学来进行科学建设吧。——当科学与奇异碰撞会发生什么呢?让我们开启轻松的冒险吐槽之旅吧!
  • 上海多云,有时有雨

    上海多云,有时有雨

    研究生毕业以后,林烟霏选择留在上海做一名离婚律师。过了三年平淡、窘迫的日子以后,一个突然而至的电话打破她所有的平静。随后,事业停滞不前,和多年闺蜜方殊可反目成仇,陷入和方邺可的姐弟恋不能自拔,又沉溺在宋梁煜的爱和包容中难以取舍,而父亲隐藏着家庭变故的秘密又突然去世……身负家庭和自我双重使命的林烟霏,在遭遇了一连串的阴谋、坎坷和挫折之后,逐渐揭开了命运的底牌……
  • 观察:玛丽安·摩尔诗集

    观察:玛丽安·摩尔诗集

    本书薄而精美,极富设计感,是摩尔本人最看重的一部作品。玛丽安·摩尔的诗用词精准,语言冷静克制,看重句式结构,精于对意象的揣摩和应用。相比较于传统的抒情诗人,她的诗歌更为理性、确切,并善于通过观察来反思生活。《观察:玛丽安·摩尔诗集》由旅美诗人明迪操刀翻译,译本可靠、简洁凝练。
  • 万界最强融合系统

    万界最强融合系统

    李韩歌获得穿越系统,本以为可以纵横天下,可是当穿越之后,才发现,这个系统比任何系统都还废。幸好来了个意外。一颗神秘的莹珠,意外与李韩歌左手融合在一起。原本以为会出现什么坏事,可出人意外,什么事情也没有出现。当过段时间之后,才发现,那颗莹珠才是真正的金.手.指。
  • 星战之最强步兵

    星战之最强步兵

    新书《娱乐圈餐饮指南》已经上传,需要各位的支持,如果有推荐票之类的,请投到那边去,星空拜谢~游戏中的顶级机械科学专家穿越了到了一个与游戏世界完全相同的现实世界中的一个底层步兵身上于是,宇宙最强步兵诞生了步兵之王?哥们要打十个!王牌机甲驾驶员?哥们不仅机甲比你开的好,研发的机甲更领先你们几十年!顶级元素操控者?哥们刚好造了几款元素系武器,冰火雷电随便挑,碾压你们几条街!这,就是一个低级步兵,一步步走上宇宙巅峰的故事
  • 九言圣

    九言圣

    开门阵、休门阵、生门阵、伤门阵…八门阵法;天遁、地遁、人遁、神遁、鬼遁…九中遁法;孰强孰弱?代表身体的临言、能量的兵言、宇宙共鸣的斗言、治愈的者言、操控人心的皆言……我将以九言后人之名破除一切,不过在那之前,我得先按照师傅的吩咐找个会神遁的媳妇。