登陆注册
5445500000933

第933章 CHAPTER XIX(34)

Seymour, Finch, and Tredenham, all stanch Tories, were vehement against the bill; and even Sir John Lowther on this point dissented from his friend and patron Caermarthen. Several Tory orators appealed to a feeling which was strong in the House, and which had, since the Revolution, prevented many laws from passing. Whatever, they said, comes from the Peers is to be received with suspicion; and the present bill is of such a nature that, even if it were in itself good, it ought to be at once rejected merely because it has been brought down from them. If their Lordships were to send us the most judicious of all money bills, should we not kick it to the door? Yet to send us a money bill would hardly be a grosser affront than to send us such a bill as this. They have taken an initiative which, by every rule of parliamentary courtesy, ought to have been left to us. They have sate in judgment on us, convicted us, condemned us to dissolution, and fixed the first of January for the execution.

Are we to submit patiently to so degrading a sentence, a sentence too passed by men who have not so conducted themselves as to have acquired any right to censure others? Have they ever made any sacrifice of their own interest, of their own dignity, to the general welfare? Have not excellent bills been lost because we would not consent to insert in them clauses conferring new privileges on the nobility? And now that their Lordships are bent on obtaining popularity, do they propose to purchase it by relinquishing even the smallest of their own oppressive privileges? No; they offer to their country that which will cost them nothing, but which will cost us and will cost the Crown dear. In such circumstances it is our duty to repel the insult which has been offered to us, and, by doing so, to vindicate the lawful prerogative of the King.

Such topics as these were doubtless well qualified to inflame the passions of the House of Commons. The near prospect of a dissolution could not be very agreeable to a member whose election was likely to be contested. He must go through all the miseries of a canvass, must shake hands with crowds of freeholders or freemen, must ask after their wives and children, must hire conveyances for outvoters, must open alehouses, must provide mountains of beef, must set rivers of ale running, and might perhaps, after all the drudgery and all the expense, after being lampooned, hustled, pelted, find himself at the bottom of the poll, see his antagonists chaired, and sink half ruined into obscurity. All this evil he was now invited to bring on himself, and invited by men whose own seats in the legislature were permanent, who gave up neither dignity nor quiet, neither power nor money, but gained the praise of patriotism by forcing him to abdicate a high station, to undergo harassing labour and anxiety, to mortgage his cornfields and to hew down his woods. There was naturally much irritation, more probably than is indicated by the divisions. For the constituent bodies were generally delighted with the bill; and many members who disliked it were afraid to oppose it. The House yielded to the pressure of public opinion, but not without a pang and a struggle. The discussions in the committee seem to have been acrimonious. Such sharp words passed between Seymour and one of the Whig members that it was necessary to put the Speaker in the chair and the mace on the table for the purpose of restoring order. One amendment was made. The respite which the Lords had granted to the existing Parliament was extended from the first of January to Lady Day, in order that there might be full time for another session. The third reading was carried by two hundred votes to a hundred and sixty-one. The Lords agreed to the bill as amended; and nothing was wanting but the royal assent. Whether that assent would or would not be given was a question which remained in suspense till the last day of the session.378One strange inconsistency in the conduct of the reformers of that generation deserves notice. It never occurred to any one of those who were zealous for the Triennial Bill that every argument which could be urged in favour of that bill was are argument against the rules which had been framed in old times for the purpose of keeping parliamentary deliberations and divisions strictly secret. It is quite natural that a government which withholds political privileges from the commonalty should withhold also political information. But nothing can be more irrational than to give power, and not to give the knowledge without which there is the greatest risk that power will be abused. What could be more absurd than to call constituent bodies frequently together that they might decide whether their representative had done his duty by them, and yet strictly to interdict them from learning, on trustworthy authority, what he had said or how he had voted? The absurdity however appears to have passed altogether unchallenged.

同类推荐
  • 左文襄公奏牍

    左文襄公奏牍

    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。
  • 啼笑姻缘

    啼笑姻缘

    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。
  • 斗南暐禅师语录

    斗南暐禅师语录

    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。
  • 三因极一病证方论

    三因极一病证方论

    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。
  • 佛说蚁喻经

    佛说蚁喻经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 凤梨和它的邻居们

    凤梨和它的邻居们

    第二天,神奇的故事书如约给小豆丁讲雨林里有趣的故事。雨林故事中,小凤梨的第一位房客会是谁?胖章鱼的蒜头洞洞里住着哪些房客?绿天棚城区的阳光浴场里为什么会出现“恐龙”?鹦鹉太太和大嗓门猴王因为什么吵了起来?雨林里的动物为什么会吃泥浆?赶快翻开本书,跟小豆丁一起,来听凤梨和它的邻居们的故事吧!
  • 妖魔之主

    妖魔之主

    吃人血肉,夺人魂魄,控人欲望,此乃妖魔。能对抗妖魔的,只有职介。庞相穿越到妖魔横行鬼怪乱出之世界,一步步走向超凡巅峰。
  • 妙香词

    妙香词

    前世,她遭人陷害,被打入冷宫十几年,受尽屈辱,终于等到自己的儿子登基称帝,本以为是苦尽甘来,没想到成为太后还不到一年,就因阴寒入体而死,她不甘心!自己本是相府嫡女,为什么老天将所有的苦都给了自己?一朝重生,她回到自己十一岁时,智斗姨娘,教训绿茶,看她如何笑看世间繁华!只是她旁边的智障是怎么回事?!说好的腹黑小霸王呢?!!
  • 成熟力

    成熟力

    一个人走向成熟是困难的,年龄的增长、阅历的增加,甚至历尽沧桑却并不能确保一个人的心理成熟。本书告诉你成熟的意义,怎样让自我变得成熟等内容,具体包括:认识自我就是一种成熟、成熟的人能主宰自己的心灵、成熟的人懂得放下等。
  • 总裁宠妻上瘾

    总裁宠妻上瘾

    “长得那么白,不是小白脸是什么?对你我没兴趣,那边那个还差不多!”木子指着他旁边的另一个皮肤黑点的男人。从来没有哪个女人对我没兴趣的,从小到老都不会!可眼前这个女人,长得也不怎么样,还戴着一副那么土的眼镜,真是被气炸了!
  • 穿越之君醉臣香

    穿越之君醉臣香

    东厂厂公姜寐注定是大庆史上最暧昧不清的一笔,传说他于宫宴之上色诱天子,醉入龙帷。传说他舌战群臣,力谏天子开设女子科举,震惊朝野。传说三名重臣联名上书他七条大罪,天子驳回,即日三名重臣午门腰斩,民怨沸腾。可最后,不知是何原因他被处以车裂之刑,五马分尸。行刑当日,他乍泄三千青丝,人们才知道,大奸臣姜寐,竟然是一名女子。行刑前一刻,姜寐难过的看着天子温柔轻哄的眼。“姜寐乖,告诉朕,卓王孙在哪里。”姜寐摇头。眼前这个她爱的男人,血腥且慈悲。而她就算是死也要带着这个秘密下地狱。*“皇上,如果有朝一日臣必须死在你手上,你会如何?”“朕会把你挫骨扬灰,然后——忘了你。”姜寐跪在地上,听到天子的答案,竟有点满意的笑了。她愿意用性命成就他河山,他却拒绝以爱情同她纠缠。【虐】【封面感谢镜陌绯】
  • 高血压饮食与防治(生活必备丛书)

    高血压饮食与防治(生活必备丛书)

    本书主要从以下几方面介绍高血压饮食与防治:高血压的医疗常识、高血压的日常保健、高血压的饮食保健等。
  • 本王子在地球的那些年

    本王子在地球的那些年

    本王子并非穿越而来,却在地球上东穿西越,又是电影,又是漫画,又是游戏。撕裂空间,看清本源,这个地球到底发生了什么状况,本王子才不想当什么救世主,本王子是为了逃命才来到地球的好不好?请把拯救世界,维护和平的任务交给别人吧。大牛何在?快快护驾!
  • 桓生不知情

    桓生不知情

    遭遇了饥荒,与父母走散,姐姐为保住自己被难民分食。唯一活下来的桓生流落到了一个被称作“赤狗营”的地方,求生不得,求死无力。他不能死,他的命是姐姐用自己的血肉换来的,所以他只能选择成为他们口中的“赤犬”,活到最后。本故事纯属虚构,不符合现实的地方欢迎提出来,但如果需要大篇幅改动的话,你们就随便看看吧,别当真。事先在电脑上有存货,所以更新速度不会慢……也许?