登陆注册
4904300000170

第170章

Three hundred years ago it would have been enough for the statesman to have the support of the Crown. It would now, we hope and believe, be enough for him to enjoy the confidence and approbation of the great body of the middle class. A hundred years ago it would not have been enough to have both Crown and people on his side. The Parliament had shaken off the control of the Royal prerogative. It had not yet fallen under the control of public opinion. A large proportion of the members had absolutely no motive to support any administration except their own interest, in the lowest sense of the word. Under these circumstances, the country could be governed only by corruption.

Bolingbroke, who was the ablest and the most vehement of those who raised the clamour against corruption, had no better remedy to propose than that the Royal prerogative should be strengthened. The remedy would no doubt have been efficient. The only question is, whether it would not have been worse than the disease. The fault was in the constitution of the Legislature; and to blame those ministers who managed the Legislature in the only way in which it could be managed is gross injustice. They submitted to extortion because they could not help themselves. We might as well accuse the poor Lowland farmers who paid black-mail to Rob Roy of corrupting the virtue of the Highlanders, as accuse Sir Robert Walpole of corrupting the virtue of Parliament. His crime was merely this, that he employed his money more dexterously, and got more support in return for it, than any of those who preceded or followed him.

He was himself incorruptible by money. His dominant passion was the love of power: and the heaviest charge which can be brought against him is that to this passion he never scrupled to sacrifice the interests of his country.

One of the maxims which, as his son tells us, he was most In the habit of repeating, was quieta non movere. It was indeed the maxim by which he generally regulated his public conduct. It is the maxim of a man more solicitous to hold power long than to use it well. It is remarkable that, though he was at the head of affairs during more than twenty years, not one great measure, not one important change for the better or for the worse in any part of our institutions, marks the period of his supremacy. Nor was this because he did not clearly see that many changes were very desirable. He had been brought up in the school of toleration, at the feet of Somers and of Burnet. He disliked the shameful laws against Dissenters. But he never could be induced to bring forward a proposition for repealing them. The sufferers represented to him the injustice with which they were treated, boasted of their firm attachment to the House of Brunswick and to the Whig party, and reminded him of his own repeated declarations of goodwill to their cause. He listened, assented, promised, and did nothing. At length, the question was brought forward by others, and the Minister, after a hesitating and evasive speech, voted against it. The truth was that he remembered to the latest day of his life that terrible explosion of high-church feeling which the foolish prosecution of a foolish parson had occasioned in the days of Queen Anne. If the Dissenters had been turbulent he would probably have relieved them; but while he apprehended no danger from them, he would not run the slightest risk for their sake. He acted in the same manner with respect to other questions. He knew the state of the Scotch Highlands. He was constantly predicting another insurrection in that part of the empire. Yet, during his long tenure of power, he never attempted to perform what was then the most obvious and pressing duty of a British Statesman, to break the power of the Chiefs, and to establish the authority of law through the furthest corners of the Island. Nobody knew better than he that, if this were not done, great mischiefs would follow. But the Highlands were tolerably quiet in his time. He was content to meet daily emergencies by daily expedients; and he left the rest to his successors. They had to conquer the Highlands in the midst of a war with France and Spain, because he had not regulated the Highlands in a time of profound peace.

Sometimes, in spite of all his caution, he found that measures which he had hoped to carry through quietly had caused great agitation. When this was the case he generally modified or withdrew them. It was thus that he cancelled Wood's patent in compliance with the absurd outcry of the Irish. It was thus that he frittered away the Porteous Bill to nothing, for fear of exasperating the Scotch. It was thus that he abandoned the Excise Bill, as soon as he found that it was offensive to all the great towns of England. The language which he held about that measure in a subsequent session is strikingly characteristic. Pulteney had insinuated that the scheme would be again brought forward.

"As to the wicked scheme," said Walpole, "as the gentleman is pleased to call it, which he would persuade gentlemen is not yet laid aside, I for my part assure this House I am not so mad as ever again to engage in anything that looks like an Excise; though, in my private opinion, I still think it was a scheme that would have tended very much to the interest of the nation."

The conduct of Walpole with regard to the Spanish war is the great blemish of his public life. Archdeacon Coxe imagined that he had discovered one grand principle of action to which the whole public conduct of his hero ought to be referred.

同类推荐
  • 喜逢妻弟郑损因送入

    喜逢妻弟郑损因送入

    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。
  • 祖亮启禅师语录

    祖亮启禅师语录

    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。
  • 康熙侠义传

    康熙侠义传

    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。
  • 双龙传

    双龙传

    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。
  • 新安志

    新安志

    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
  • 该娅

    该娅

    时空交错,世界相连,被迫进行着一场没有终止的种族之战。那里有着不被人所知的地球的另一部分。肖哉偶然在学校后山捡到一块水晶,从而开始了两个时空之间的穿越之旅。数万年来,一场巨大的阴谋逐渐露出狰狞面貌,两个地球的联系越发紧密,而遗失在毁灭里的秘辛也一点一点现世。人类文明的遗迹,将于灰烬重生。
  • 定义爱情

    定义爱情

    我是穆圣,二十五岁,我的朋友们都说我的情商很低,不过他们说得对,我从来没有恋爱过,也没有真正刻骨铭心的喜欢过一个女孩,我所接触过的女人,不是母亲就是姐妹,即使有女同学和我交往也就是把我当成她们的书或者字典,查一查资料,问一问问题,然后就丢在一边,彻底忘了,下次再用的时候才会想起来。学习生活大概都是这么过的,直到我顺利的参加了工作,到了结婚的年龄……
  • 我在武侠大陆捡属性

    我在武侠大陆捡属性

    酷爱武侠的杨浩明,穿越到了一片以武为尊的世界!绑定了一个莫名其妙的系统!与人交手,百分百随机掉落一门武学残章!“请跟我交手!”“别走....再走,我就只能杀了你!”【叮,与魔教教主交手,掉落‘葵花宝典’残章!是否修炼?要修炼,必先自宫......】【叮,与扫地僧交手,掉落‘易筋经’残章!是否修炼?需要看破无我、无相..】
  • 大隋燕云

    大隋燕云

    他们快如风,烈如火,所到之处,寸草不留。他们神出鬼没,长枪硬弩,冲锋陷阵,以一敌百。他们是异族眼中的魔鬼,他们是骁勇恐怖的无敌铁骑,他们是只存在于传说中的特种部队--致燕云十八骑。膜拜完毕,林峰也不含糊,双手把电力能源奉上,长枪火炮贡献出来,直接把隋朝拉进能源科技时代。
  • 竹马溺爱法则:吻安,小青梅

    竹马溺爱法则:吻安,小青梅

    那一年,他七岁,她六岁,仅仅相差一岁的年龄却仿佛有十年的代沟。“启程哥哥,陪我玩过家家好不好?你当爹地,我当妈咪。”“幼稚。”-“启程哥哥,要抱抱!”“走开。”就是这样一个木讷又无趣的人,却在那年将她扑到,曲斯念懵了,当年那个沉默寡言的启程哥哥呢?为什么变得这么开放?!陆起辰嘴角微扬:“不然你以为我为什么小时候一直沉默寡言?”面对这张清秀俊朗而又妖孽无比的面孔,曲斯念表示:为了不让他去祸害别的小姑娘,她就好心收了这个傲娇的竹马大人吧!【1v1甜宠,男女主身心干净,作者更新慢√】
  • 何以相爱不相知

    何以相爱不相知

    婆家当我是丧门星,难产也不许剖腹。老公带着狐狸精出现,巴不得我一尸两命。我纵身一跳,在楼下的病房遇到了江涵风。他用深情解救我的胆怯。他见过我最落魄的困窘,也叹过我最绝美的惊艳。可当我爱之深思之切时,却突然看不透他的眸。江涵风说:“辛然,如果能重来,你还会选择爱我吗?”“……”
  • 萌妻不好欺

    萌妻不好欺

    相个亲而已,谁知对方竟是前男友的亲舅舅,怎么破?他说:“嫁给我你就是公爵夫人,全国最高贵的女人。”她不屑:“我对权势没有兴趣。”他又说:“嫁给我,你前男友就得叫你舅妈。”她一脸激动:“这个可以有!”于是叶流沙就这样成了慕容陌白的妻子,然而婚后她发现这个看似一本正经的冰山男其实又闷骚又腹黑,实则是个……怎么办?带球跑喽!
  • 你现在受的苦,未来都会照亮你的路

    你现在受的苦,未来都会照亮你的路

    《你现在受的苦,未来都会照亮你的路》是一本送给所有年轻人的心灵励志指南,用一篇篇温暖而励志的故事和感悟,告诉所有正在路上奋斗的人,即使路途遥远,即使梦想遥遥无期,但只要坚持下去,总会得到最好的结果。
  • 随机超武

    随机超武

    血月当空,灾难伊始!全球的动植物一夜之间发生了异变。在那场破晓之战后人类开始建造了一座座堡垒,和怪物对峙了长达百年。......穿越过来的徐熤在系统的摧残下一步步走向巅峰。驱除异族,振兴人类!“现发布任务:请宿主在高考中一鸣惊人,被顶尖大学所录取(随机要求:宿主要在全市中排名第一,且总分要甩开第二名100分以上,否则任务判定失败!)随机奖励:????”“神经病!”
  • 天堂湾(锐·小说系列第二辑)

    天堂湾(锐·小说系列第二辑)

    本书由《天堂湾》《一对登上世界屋脊的猪》《乐坝村杀人案》三个中篇组成。作家丰富的生活阅历为小说带来独特的创作风格,他善于营造大气悲壮的氛围,衬托出微小生命的多维和昂扬向上的精神。小说主人公性格塑造立体丰满,细致勾勒了现代军人丰富的内心世界,拓展了军旅小说的写作题材。反映新时代军旅文学创作的高度,在现代小说创作中颇具特点。