登陆注册
5445500001055

第1055章 CHAPTER XXI(52)

Parkyns came next. He had been deeply concerned in the worst part of the plot, and was, in one respect, less excusable than any of his accomplices; for they were all nonjurors; and he had taken the oaths to the existing government. He too insisted that he ought to be tried according to the provisions of the new Act. But the counsel for the Crown stood on their extreme right; and his request was denied. As he was a man of considerable abilities, and had been bred to the bar, he probably said for himself all that counsel could have said for him; and that all amounted to very little. He was found guilty, and received sentence of death on the evening of the twenty-fourth of March, within six hours of the time when the law of which he had vainly demanded the benefit was to come into force.680The execution of the two knights was eagerly expected by the population of London. The States General were informed by their correspondent that, of all sights, that in which the English most delighted was a hanging, and that, of all hangings within the memory of the oldest man, that of Friend and Parkyns excited the greatest interest. The multitude had been incensed against Friend by reports touching the exceeding badness of the beer which he brewed. It was even rumoured that he had, in his zeal for the Jacobite cause, poisoned all the casks which he had furnished to the navy. An innumerable crowd accordingly assembled at Tyburn.

Scaffolding had been put up which formed an immense amphitheatre round the gallows. On this scaffolding the wealthier spectators stood, row above row; and expectation was at the height when it was announced that the show was deferred. The mob broke up in bad humour, and not without many fights between those who had given money for their places and those who refused to return it.681The cause of this severe disappointment was a resolution suddenly passed by the Commons. A member had proposed that a Committee should be sent to the Tower with authority to examine the prisoners, and to hold out to them the hope that they might, by a full and ingenuous confession, obtain the intercession of the House. The debate appears, from the scanty information which has come down to us, to have been a very curious one. Parties seemed to have changed characters. It might have been expected that the Whigs would have been inexorably severe, and that, if there was any tenderness for the unhappy men, that tenderness would have been found among the Tories. But in truth many of the Whigs hoped that they might, by sparing two criminals who had no power to do mischief, be able to detect and destroy numerous criminals high in rank and office. On the other hand, every man who had ever had any dealings direct or indirect with Saint Germains, or who took an interest in any person likely to have had such dealings, looked forward with dread to the disclosures which the captives might, under the strong terrors of death, be induced to make.

Seymour, simply because he had gone further in treason than almost any other member of the House, was louder than any other member of the House in exclaiming against all indulgence to his brother traitors. Would the Commons usurp the most sacred prerogative of the Crown? It was for His Majesty, and not for them, to judge whether lives justly forfeited could be without danger spared. The Whigs however carried their point. ACommittee, consisting of all the Privy Councillors in the House, set off instantly for Newgate. Friend and Parkyns were interrogated, but to no purpose. They had, after sentence had been passed on them, shown at first some symptoms of weakness;but their courage had been fortified by the exhortations of nonjuring divines who had been admitted to the prison. The rumour was that Parkyns would have given way but for the entreaties of his daughter, who adjured him to suffer like a man for the good cause. The criminals acknowledged that they had done the acts of which they had been convicted, but, with a resolution which is the more respectable because it seems to have sprung, not from constitutional hardihood, but from sentiments of honour and religion, refused to say any thing which could compromise others.682In a few hours the crowd again assembled at Tyburn; and this time the sightseers were not defrauded of their amusement. They saw indeed one sight which they had not expected, and which produced a greater sensation than the execution itself. Jeremy Collier and two other nonjuring divines of less celebrity, named Cook and Snatt, had attended the prisoners in Newgate, and were in the cart under the gallows. When the prayers were over, and just before the hangman did his office, the three schismatical priests stood up, and laid their hands on the heads of the dying men who continued to kneel. Collier pronounced a form of absolution taken from the service for the Visitation of the Sick, and his brethren exclaimed "Amen!"This ceremony raised a great outcry; and the outcry became louder when, a few hours after the execution, the papers delivered by the two traitors to the Sheriffs were made public. It had been supposed that Parkyns at least would express some repentance for the crime which had brought him to the gallows. Indeed he had, before the Committee of the Commons, owned that the Assassination Plot could not be justified. But, in his last declaration, he avowed his share in that plot, not only without a word indicating remorse, but with something which resembled exultation. Was this a man to be absolved by Christian divines, absolved before the eyes of tens of thousands, absolved with rites evidently intended to attract public attention, with rites of which there was no trace in the Book of Common Prayer or in the practice of the Church of England?

同类推荐
  • 小鸣稿

    小鸣稿

    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。
  • 黄帝阴符经心法

    黄帝阴符经心法

    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。
  • 元始高上玉检大箓

    元始高上玉检大箓

    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。
  • 耳食录

    耳食录

    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。
  • Captains of the Civil War

    Captains of the Civil War

    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
  • 纯阳真人浑成集

    纯阳真人浑成集

    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。
  • 长生文其三

    长生文其三

    离家几年后,修仙归来的陈之晋看着当年的未婚妻,看着越加衰老的父母,看到自己真正喜爱的人儿,心里如同起浪的大海,波澜不休。
  • 我在明朝当厂长

    我在明朝当厂长

    万历十五年这是平平淡淡的一年此时魏忠贤年满十九,尚未登上政治舞台此时张居正逝去五年,朝野上下派系纷争此时万历皇帝厌倦朝务,无为而治此时,在公孙侯府内,世袭侯的内院中,公孙家的嫡长子公孙胜......开始了他的潇洒人生
  • 人脉课:人脉就是命脉 人脉就是财富

    人脉课:人脉就是命脉 人脉就是财富

    渴望财富是人类的一种正常心理。假如你希望变为有钱人,想成为一名成功人士,那么你千万不要错过这堂“人脉课”。本书将告诉你如何去积累财富,创造财富,找到属于自己的人脉财富圈!
  • 位面之穿梭系统

    位面之穿梭系统

    新书《诸天之剑豪》已上传,请大家移步点击收藏。“系统,这是福利任务!?我差点死了知道吗?”季末嘴角抽搐着。“如果宿主连这么简单的任务都完不成的话,只能证明你没潜力,那么,死了就死了,世界上那么多人,你死了,再重新找一个宿主就是。”好吧,系统果然很系统。“咦,这个任务很简单啊,系统你还是有点人性的嘛!”“等等,我收回我刚刚说的话!”看着系统颁布的任务,季末神情淡定的捡起刚刚夸系统的话,吞回到了肚子里……这是季末在各个电影,动漫位面穿梭,拥有别样人生的精彩故事!
  • 中国新战略

    中国新战略

    回顾30多年改革路,中国经济的腾飞震惊世界,中国奇迹何以实现?放眼当下,中国经济快车驶入新常态,深化改革势在必行,中国是否走在正确的改革道路上?未来经济形势又将如何演变?如何建设发展平衡的良治社会?中国国情研究领域首要开拓者胡鞍钢博览国情研究领域内的重要著作与文献纲领,审慎拿捏各方观点,冷静剖析中国经济体制与中国经济飞跃的内在关联,深入探讨经济成败背后的制度体系,理智反思经济社会大转型下的贫富差距、政商腐败、环境负债问题,为中国提升国家治理能力,实现公平的长期繁荣,解决大转型时代的社会与民生问题,突破经济发展的环境约束,实施国际视野下的新战略建言献策。
  • 探寻动物王国

    探寻动物王国

    地球上除了人类组成的国家,还有一个国家叫做动物王国。动物王国五花八门,无奇不有。动物们生活在水里、天上、沙漠、草原、林间以及我们想象不到的地方。翻开本书,隐藏在文字背后的是这些活力四射的飞禽走兽,仿佛走进了动物王国的微观博物馆。动物是人类的朋友,但是我们似乎对它们并不了解。让我们一起走进大自然,探寻动物王国不为人知的秘密。
  • 为将之道:世界名将的成名之路和领导艺术

    为将之道:世界名将的成名之路和领导艺术

    战争是指挥的艺术,这是战争最大的魅力所在,将领是的灵魂,是战争艺术的创造者,走入战争,领略名将的指挥艺术,追寻名将的成名之路,清晰定格名将成名道路上的点点滴滴,透过成名之路与领导艺术,品味世界名将的为将为之道。
  • 自谈

    自谈

    自身见解,无关大体。不喜勿喷,厌弃勿阅。由于是随感,因此更新不定。群号:963782816
  • 魔法塔的星空

    魔法塔的星空

    身为天文学的专科与爱好者,每每仰望着夜空那以亿万计的星辰时,很难想象在这庞大的数量中,人类却是孤独地生活在宇宙里。再次睁开眼,却已身处在以知识、力量、权柄、信仰、财富、灵巧、感知、神秘等八种权能为基础元素的魔法世界里。抬头仰望着异世界的星空,自己的家乡是不是也在这亿万星辰当中?搜寻着可能的回家道路。也许得花一辈子,也许是十辈子,但总是个盼望。