登陆注册
5445500001019

第1019章 CHAPTER XXI(16)

It may be said that the orders given to Glenlyon were of so peculiar a nature that, if he had been a man of virtue, he would have thrown up his commission, would have braved the displeasure of colonel, general, and Secretary of State, would have incurred the heaviest penalty which a Court Martial could inflict, rather than have performed the part assigned to him; and this is perfectly true; but the question is not whether he acted like a virtuous man, but whether he did that for which he could, without infringing a rule essential to the discipline of camps and to the security of nations, be hanged as a murderer. In this case, disobedience was assuredly a moral duty; but it does not follow that obedience was a legal crime.

It seems therefore that the guilt of Glenlyon and his fellows was not within the scope of the penal law. The only punishment which could properly be inflicted on them was that which made Cain cry out that it was greater than he could bear; to be vagabonds on the face of the earth, and to carry wherever they went a mark from which even bad men should turn away sick with horror.

It was not so with the Master of Stair. He had been solemnly pronounced, both by the Commission of Precognition and by the Estates of the Realm in full Parliament, to be the original author of the massacre. That it was not advisable to make examples of his tools was the strongest reason for making an example of him. Every argument which can be urged against punishing the soldier who executes the unjust and inhuman orders of his superior is an argument for punishing with the utmost rigour of the law the superior who gives unjust and inhuman orders. Where there can be no responsibility below, there should be double responsibility above. What the Parliament of Scotland ought with one voice to have demanded was, not that a poor illiterate serjeant, who was hardly more accountable than his own halbert for the bloody work which he had done, should be hanged in the Grassmarket, but that the real murderer, the most politic, the most eloquent, the most powerful, of Scottish statesmen, should be brought to a public trial, and should, if found guilty, die the death of a felon. Nothing less than such a sacrifice could expiate such a crime. Unhappily the Estates, by extenuating the guilt of the chief offender, and, at the same time, demanding that his humble agents should be treated with a severity beyond the law, made the stain which the massacre had left on the honour of the nation broader and deeper than before.

Nor is it possible to acquit the King of a great breach of duty.

It is, indeed, highly probable that, till he received the report of his Commissioners, he had been very imperfectly informed as to the circumstances of the slaughter. We can hardly suppose that he was much in the habit of reading Jacobite pamphlets; and, if he did read them, he would have found in them such a quantity of absurd and rancorous invective against himself that he would have been very little inclined to credit any imputation which they might throw on his servants. He would have seen himself accused, in one tract, of being a concealed Papist, in another of having poisoned Jeffreys in the Tower, in a third of having contrived to have Talmash taken off at Brest. He would have seen it asserted that, in Ireland, he once ordered fifty of his wounded English soldiers to be burned alive. He would have seen that the unalterable affection which he felt from his boyhood to his death for three or four of the bravest and most trusty friends that ever prince had the happiness to possess was made a ground for imputing to him abominations as foul as those which are buried under the waters of the Dead Sea. He might therefore naturally be slow to believe frightful imputations thrown by writers whom he knew to be habitual liars on a statesman whose abilities he valued highly, and to whose exertions he had, on some great occasions, owed much. But he could not, after he had read the documents transmitted to him from Edinburgh by Tweedale, entertain the slightest doubt of the guilt of the Master of Stair. To visit that guilt with exemplary punishment was the sacred duty of a Sovereign who had sworn, with his hand lifted up towards heaven, that he would, in his kingdom of Scotland, repress, in all estates and degrees, all oppression, and would do justice, without acceptance of persons, as he hoped for mercy from the Father of all mercies. William contented himself with dismissing the Master from office. For this great fault, a fault amounting to a crime, Burnet tried to frame, not a defence, but an excuse. He would have us believe that the King, alarmed by finding how many persons had borne a part in the slaughter of Glencoe, thought it better to grant a general amnesty than to punish one massacre by another. But this representation is the very reverse of the truth. Numerous instruments had doubtless been employed in the work of death; but they had all received their impulse, directly or indirectly, from a single mind. High above the crowd of offenders towered one offender, preeminent in parts, knowledge, rank and power. In return for many victims immolated by treachery, only one victim was demanded by justice;and it must ever be considered as a blemish on the fame of William that the demand was refused.

On the seventeenth of July the session of the Parliament of Scotland closed. The Estates had liberally voted such a supply as the poor country which they represented could afford. They had indeed been put into high good humour by the notion that they had found out a way of speedily making that poor country rich. Their attention had been divided between the inquiry into the slaughter of Glencoe and some specious commercial projects of which the nature will be explained and the fate related in a future chapter.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 腹黑女boss

    腹黑女boss

    上一世的我因为获得幻云灵戒,导致我穿越时间来到异世界,既然如此,那么在这一世你们欺负我东方雨歌的人,都给我等着吧!看废柴大小姐如何逆袭!
  • Forensics
  • 好心态才会更健康(青少年心理健康指导丛书)

    好心态才会更健康(青少年心理健康指导丛书)

    人生的道路,没有坦途,但也并非尽是奇趣,只要坚定目标,明确方向,乐观坚韧地走下去,就能笑到最后。青少年朋友们,未来的路就在脚下,把握好航向,以一颗平常心。踏实地走好每一步,寻找人生旅途的乐趣,享受生命的美好!
  • 家庭急救百问百答

    家庭急救百问百答

    孩子咬断体温表,水银入肚怎么办?浴室里洗澡时突然晕倒怎么办?蛀牙引起牙髓炎疼痛怎么办?落枕怎么办?头皮外伤出血特多,怎样急救?头部受伤后起“包”怎么办?大块头皮撕脱伤怎样急救?下巴掉下来怎么办?挤车后胸部疼痛怎么办?小儿手臂被牵拉后,肘关节不能活动怎么办?……《家庭急救百问百答》为“金阳光新农村丛书”之一,对上述关于家庭急救问题进行了全面解答。全书新颖实用,简明易懂。
  • JOHN BARLEYCORN

    JOHN BARLEYCORN

    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。
  • 恋歌:蒂斯代尔情诗集

    恋歌:蒂斯代尔情诗集

    萨拉·蒂斯代尔是美国当代杰出的浪漫派女诗人,她的诗歌颇受读者喜爱。内容多以女人对美丽、爱情和死亡不断变化的视点为中心,许多诗描绘了她自身生活的发展经历:从圣路易斯一个受到呵护的姑娘,到纽约市一名成功但日益不安的作家,再到沮丧幻灭并于1933年自杀的女人。虽然后来的一些评论家并不把蒂斯代尔视为一名大诗人,但是她一生都受到大众和评论家的欢迎。
  • 紫禁域

    紫禁域

    灾厄步步急逼,救世的皮囊之中怀揣着怎样的阴谋,阴谋的面具背后又隐藏着何种的邪恶,在机甲和魔法碰撞出的烟火中寻找答案吧......
  • 流离的萤火爱情

    流离的萤火爱情

    抬头看到的就是他那双孤傲的眼睛,散发着无数的寒气,让人不寒而栗,那张脸简直无懈可击,与哥哥相比似乎更胜一筹,但是他满脸的高傲和不屑,瞬间拒人于千里之外。那个冰山男依旧惜字如金,没有表情,我开始有些怀疑,老哥是不是认错人啦?呼呼,不理他们啦,走咯“答应我一个要求!”说得这么爽快?是早有预谋吗?可是不应该,总不至于他是策划者吧“要求?行,但是你不可以说…”委屈啊,莫名其妙地要答应冰山男一个要求。“不管如何,你都要信我!”那是你对我的乞求吗?一次次的错过,一次次的误会,他们之间是否经得起时间的考验?可爱善良的韩雪柔能够等到幸福钟声响起吗?面对昔日的男友、今时的未婚夫,她该如何抉择?求收藏,求推荐,求订阅,嘻嘻,我会再接再厉的~~~推荐——http://m.pgsk.com/a/450433/《邪魅总裁:女人,乖乖躺着!》推荐新作温馨治愈系列:听说,爱情回来过。http://m.pgsk.com/a/702512/
  • 万界大妖

    万界大妖

    曾经,他身为妖域之主,万妖之王,却惨遭擎仙杀害,身陨道消。现在,偶然的机会,他被主动献舍,重生归来,再走修行路,回到妖域时,却发现“自己”竟然在执掌妖域,统御群妖。……【百万完本,信誉保证,每日双更,不定时爆发】
  • 超级败家学生

    超级败家学生

    每天都在花钱,每天都要花很多的钱,花不完还要受到惩罚。好烦,钱太多,不知道怎么花,谁来给我出出主意?新书:读者爸爸真香,连载中...