登陆注册
5445500000338

第338章 CHAPTER VII(20)

Then followed an auction, the strangest that history has recorded. On one side the King, on the other the Church, began to bid eagerly against each other for the favour of those whom tip to that time King and Church had combined to oppress. The Protestant Dissenters, who, a few months before, had been a despised and proscribed class, now held the balance of power. The harshness with which they had been treated was universally condemned. The court tried to throw all the blame on the hierarchy. The hierarchy flung it back on the court. The King declared that he had unwillingly persecuted the separatists only because his affairs had been in such a state that he could not venture to disoblige the established clergy. The established clergy protested that they had borne a part in severity uncongenial to their feelings only from deference to the authority of the King. The King got together a collection of stories about rectors and vicars who had by threats of prosecution wrung money out of Protestant Dissenters. He talked on this subject much and publicly, threatened to institute an inquiry which would exhibit the parsons in their true character to the whole world, and actually issued several commissions empowering agents on whom he thought that he could depend to ascertain the amount of the sums extorted in different parts of the country by professors of the dominant religion from sectaries. The advocates of the Church, on the other hand, cited instances of honest parish priests who had been reprimanded and menaced by the court for recommending toleration in the pulpit, and for refusing to spy out and hunt down little congregations of Nonconformists. The King asserted that some of the Churchmen whom he had closeted had offered to make large concessions to the Catholics, on condition that the persecution of the Puritans might go on. The accused Churchmen vehemently denied the truth of this charge; and alleged that, if they would have complied with what he demanded for his own religion, he would most gladly have suffered them to indemnify themselves by harassing and pillaging Protestant Dissenters.240The court had changed its face. The scarf and cassock could hardly appear there without calling forth sneers and malicious whispers. Maids of honour forbore to giggle, and Lords of the Bedchamber bowed low, when the Puritanical visage and the Puritanical garb, so long the favourite subjects of mockery in fashionable circles, were seen in the galleries. Taunton, which had been during two generations the stronghold of the Roundhead party in the West, which had twice resolutely repelled the armies of Charles the First, which had risen as one man to support Monmouth, and which had been turned into a shambles by Kirke and Jeffreys, seemed to have suddenly succeeded to the place which Oxford had once occupied in the royal favour.241 The King constrained himself to show even fawning courtesy to eminent Dissenters. To some he offered money, to some municipal honours, to some pardons for their relations and friends who, having been implicated in the Rye House Plot, or having joined the standard of Monmouth, were now wandering on the Continent, or toiling among the sugar canes of Barbadoes. He affected even to sympathize with the kindness which the English Puritans felt for their foreign brethren. A second and a third proclamation were published at Edinburgh, which greatly extended the nugatory toleration granted to the Presbyterians by the edict of February.242 The banished Huguenots, on whom the King had frowned during many months, and whom he had defrauded of the alms contributed by the nation, were now relieved and caressed. An Order in Council was issued, appealing again in their behalf to the public liberality. The rule which required them to qualify themselves for the receipt of charity, by conforming to the Anglican worship, seems to have been at this time silently abrogated; and the defenders of the King's policy had the effrontery to affirm that this rule, which, as we know from the best evidence, was really devised by himself in concert with Barillon, had been adopted at the instance of the prelates of the Established Church.243While the King was thus courting his old adversaries, the friends of the Church were not less active. Of the acrimony and scorn with which prelates and priests had, since the Restoration, been in the habit of treating the sectaries scarcely a trace was discernible. Those who had lately been designated as schismatics and fanatics were now dear fellow Protestants, weak brethren it might be, but still brethren, whose scruples were entitled to tender regard. If they would but be true at this crisis to the cause of the English constitution and of the reformed religion, their generosity should be speedily and largely rewarded. They should have, instead of an indulgence which was of no legal validity, a real indulgence, secured by Act of Parliament. Nay, many Churchmen, who had hitherto been distinguished by their inflexible attachment to every gesture and every word prescribed in the Book of Common Prayer, now declared themselves favourable, not only to toleration, but even to comprehension. The dispute, they said, about surplices and attitudes, had too long divided those who were agreed as to the essentials of religion. When the struggle for life and death against the common enemy was over, it would be found that the Anglican clergy would be ready to make every fair concession. If the Dissenters would demand only what was reasonable, not only civil but ecclesiastical dignities would be open to them; and Baxter and Howe would be able, without any stain on their honour or their conscience, to sit on the episcopal bench.

同类推荐
  • The Most Interesting Stories of All Nations

    The Most Interesting Stories of All Nations

    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。
  • 相宗八要

    相宗八要

    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。
  • 八识规矩略说

    八识规矩略说

    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。
  • 妙法莲华经广量天地品

    妙法莲华经广量天地品

    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。
  • 晚春登大云寺南楼

    晚春登大云寺南楼

    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
  • 十二盛夏2

    十二盛夏2

    一个女孩的一生中,应该有三个珍贵的玩具。一个是玻璃娃娃,美丽却脆弱,不是最想要,却因为易碎而最珍贵;如夏莫。一个是洋娃娃布偶,是最想要,最心爱,却只有两种结局,要么坏掉,要么丢掉;如顾西铭。一个是拼字卡片,对身心最有益,对未来最负责,却与爱情无关;如城谏。五月怀抱着这三个玩具,面对着三个深爱自己的男人,盛夏的光芒却只能绽放在他们身后。他们面对着她,却逆光而立。
  • The Soul of Man

    The Soul of Man

    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。
  • 我本倾城(全集)

    我本倾城(全集)

    八岁,金凌身剧毒,听闻云苍有解毒奇药,镇国公主、九华帝之义妹、燕熙之母玲珑九月,在大将军韩继的护送下入龙苍求药。此时,龙苍五国生乱,正烽火连天,一行人在龙苍失散,玲珑九月和燕熙神秘失踪,韩继为了金凌安全,将其送回九华。十年后,因为一枚订情玉佩,金凌不远万里来寻夫,三年时间,化名青城,苦苦寻夫,始不得见,却和龙苍大地上的风云人物九无擎、龙奕、拓跋弘、凤烈了结下不解之缘。金凌苦苦寻找燕熙,却不知燕熙在这十三年里发生了翻天覆地的巨变,不光毁容,残了肢体,更成为了一个常年吸人血的恶魔,被西秦帝囚禁于鍄京城内过着暗无天地的日子。
  • 三界一魄

    三界一魄

    汝可知三界之中大小之事?世代神魔不和,三界之中无一不知。神魔一日不和,三界便一日不宁。人类在三界之内有立足之地,研习御术之法穷尽一生。而芊漫桃林外的赌注便是一切的刚刚开始……
  • 卓有成效地工作者

    卓有成效地工作者

    你还在背着蜗牛工作吗,还在为低效率心烦吗?本书提出卓有成效地工作分四大步骤:有始有终、把握重点、确立架、构积极行动,教你轻轻松松做高效人士。
  • 许多张脸,许多种情绪

    许多张脸,许多种情绪

    《许多张脸,许多种情绪》内容有“好的时候非常好”、与中国有关的、不曾苟且、重读韩素音、焚烧舞台的演员、新井一二三眼中的八十年代、读董小记、香的文化史、谈笔记、岭南故纸寒香、活埋八卦里、管风琴,书生活等。本书为戴新伟先生近年文化随笔文字的结集,系“独立阅读书系”第三辑之一。
  • 影响人类一生的N个效应

    影响人类一生的N个效应

    一个效应就是一把钥匙,开启你尘封已久的生存智慧;一个效应就是一股不息的力量,帮助你不断地修正从前不正确的观念和做法;一个法则就是一根魔杖,点开你成功人生的洞天,让你窥见其间的奥妙;一个定律就是一条花香小径,让你从此开始梦想的实现之旅……
  • 枪神纪之附身系统

    枪神纪之附身系统

    他,一个二十出头的青年。却颠覆了作战天赋,拥有了非人类的行动能力。一个从普通学生到世界主宰的过程,成为了枪神纪承人。
  • 首席的亿万新妻

    首席的亿万新妻

    被前男友母亲羞辱,宋乔被迫结束初恋,面对同父异母妹妹的冷嘲热讽,大街上一怒之下随手拉过来一个男人,“先生,你有女朋友吗?没有的话我们结婚吧!”男人眯眸看她,却是点头,“好!”嫁给陆靖宸,宋乔得到了至高无上的宠爱,却在她沦陷之时,得知了一切事情的缘由……五年后,宋乔强势归来,刚踏进安城的国际机场就被直接抓了,而她只等来了眯眸浅笑的男人,“陆太太,出去旅游五年回来,可有想我和儿子?”然而宋乔面不改色,红唇轻启“抱歉,陆先生,我们已经离婚了,请叫我前妻!”男人却是不以为意,把她揽到了怀里,“离婚协议我还没签,离婚手续我也没办,哪来的前妻可说?”
  • 杨绛先生

    杨绛先生

    百岁老人杨绛的生命已经跨越了两个世纪,她的生命历经了中国社会最动荡、最混乱的几十年。本书以清新细致的笔触描绘了钱锺书眼中“最贤的妻,最才的女”,记述了这位世纪才女充满柔情、磨难的一生,展现其如何一步步获得“先生”的赞誉,让人深刻体味到穿越荆棘的朴实平静,理解何谓“活着真有希望,可以那么好”。