登陆注册
5445500000723

第723章 CHAPTER XV(25)

The Revolution opened to the Churchills a new and boundless prospect of gain. The whole conduct of their mistress at the great crisis had proved that she had no will, no judgment, no conscience, but theirs. To them she had sacrificed affections, prejudices, habits, interests. In obedience to them, she had joined in the conspiracy against her father; she had fled from Whitehall in the depth of winter, through ice and mire, to a hackney coach; she had taken refuge in the rebel camp; she had consented to yield her place in the order of succession to the Prince of Orange. They saw with pleasure that she, over whom they possessed such boundless influence, possessed no common influence over others. Scarcely had the Revolution been accomplished when many Tories, disliking both the King who had been driven out and the King who had come in, and doubting whether their religion had more to fear from Jesuits or from Latitudinarians, showed a strong disposition to rally round Anne. Nature had made her a bigot. Such was the constitution of her mind that to the religion of her nursery she could not but adhere, without examination and without doubt, till she was laid in her coffin. In the court of her father she had been deaf to all that could be urged in favour of transubstantiation and auricular confession. In the court of her brother in law she was equally deaf to all that could be urged in favour of a general union among Protestants. This slowness and obstinacy made her important. It was a great thing to be the only member of the Royal Family who regarded Papists and Presbyterians with an impartial aversion. While a large party was disposed to make her an idol, she was regarded by her two artful servants merely as a puppet. They knew that she had it in her power to give serious annoyance to the government; and they determined to use this power in order to extort money, nominally for her, but really for themselves. While Marlborough was commanding the English forces in the Low Countries, the execution of the plan was necessarily left to his wife; and she acted, not as he would doubtless have acted, with prudence and temper, but, as is plain even from her own narrative, with odious violence and insolence. Indeed she had passions to gratify from which he was altogether free. He, though one of the most covetous, was one of the least acrimonious of mankind; but malignity was in her a stronger passion than avarice. She hated easily; she hated heartily; and she hated implacably. Among the objects of her hatred were all who were related to her mistress either on the paternal or on the maternal side. No person who had a natural interest in the Princess could observe without uneasiness the strange infatuation which made her the slave of an imperious and reckless termagant. This the Countess well knew. In her view the Royal Family and the family of Hyde, however they might differ as to other matters, were leagued against her; and she detested them all, James, William and Mary, Clarendon and Rochester. Now was the time to wreak the accumulated spite of years. It was not enough to obtain a great, a regal, revenue for Anne. That revenue must be obtained by means which would wound and humble those whom the favourite abhorred. It must not be asked, it must not be accepted, as a mark of fraternal kindness, but demanded in hostile tones, and wrung by force from reluctant hands. No application was made to the King and Queen. But they learned with astonishment that Lady Marlborough was indefatigable in canvassing the Tory members of Parliament, that a Princess's party was forming, that the House of Commons would be moved to settle on Her Royal Highness a vast income independent of the Crown. Mary asked her sister what these proceedings meant. "Ihear," said Anne, "that my friends have a mind to make me some settlement." It is said that the Queen, greatly hurt by an expression which seemed to imply that she and her husband were not among her sister's friends, replied with unwonted sharpness, "Of what friends do you speak? What friends have you except the King and me?"602 The subject was never again mentioned between the sisters. Mary was probably sensible that she had made a mistake in addressing herself to one who was merely a passive instrument in the hands of others. An attempt was made to open a negotiation with the Countess. After some inferior agents had expostulated with her in vain, Shrewsbury waited on her. It might have been expected that his intervention would have been successful; for, if the scandalous chronicle of those times could be trusted, he had stood high, too high, in her favour.603 He was authorised by the King to promise that, if the Princess would desist from soliciting the members of the House of Commons to support her cause, the income of Her Royal Highness should be increased from thirty thousand pounds to fifty thousand. The Countess flatly rejected this offer. The King's word, she had the insolence to hint, was not a sufficient security. "I am confident," said Shrewsbury, "that His Majesty will strictly fulfil his engagements. If he breaks them I will not serve him an hour longer." "That may be very honourable in you," answered the pertinacious vixen, "but it will be very poor comfort to the Princess." Shrewsbury, after vainly attempting to move the servant, was at length admitted to an audience of the mistress.

Anne, in language doubtless dictated by her friend Sarah, told him that the business had gone too far to be stopped, and must be left to the decision of the Commons.604The truth was that the Princess's prompters hoped to obtain from Parliament a much larger sum than was offered by the King.

同类推荐
  • Margaret Ogilvy

    Margaret Ogilvy

    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。
  • On Generation and Corruption

    On Generation and Corruption

    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。
  • On Memory and Reminiscence

    On Memory and Reminiscence

    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。
  • 佛说八吉祥经

    佛说八吉祥经

    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。
  • 清微斋法

    清微斋法

    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。
热门推荐
  • 太子妃大人超凶的

    太子妃大人超凶的

    她,是二十一世纪的特工,医毒双绝,一朝穿越成一顶级天才幼年时,持剑斩妖邪,是人人称赞的四讲五美好少年。某天,坑爹系统助她收服了天才美男,一场爱情故事从事故开始。
  • 星河剑帝

    星河剑帝

    茫茫星河,一片亘古死域。大帝陨落,帝冢归路,求仙无门。少年手持重剑无锋,踏入星河古域,征战茫茫仙路,掀起一片血雨腥风。
  • 夜行

    夜行

    一宗发生在雨夜大巴的凶杀案,牵引出了一个神秘的青年唐研,没人知道他年龄几何,也没人知道他来自哪里。甚至有人在一张几十年前的老照片上看到过他,也有人说他在两个相隔千里的地方同时出现过。而随着他的出现,各种离奇事件开始接二连三的发生,种种挑战认知的超能力犯罪也层出不穷。人迹罕至的荒岛频繁产生异响。巨大的天然湖泊突然变成了温泉。古老的岩石上突现栩栩如生的人形壁画。这一切的源头究竟是什么?唐研究竟是谁?他真的能不老不死,化身千万吗?一切终将迎来一个震撼人心的答案!
  • 寻芳渡

    寻芳渡

    她,儿时死了娘,长大死了爹,就连刚嫁了不久的夫君也死了,连重生也改变不了她的命运。只想做一个平凡的女子,却被逼着登上了皇位。究竟命运是待她凉薄,还是对她寄予厚望?如果可以重来一次,皇位与心爱之人你将如何选择呢?
  • 次元系统在异界

    次元系统在异界

    一朝系统一朝神,手持系统我超神。能力不够,经验来凑。“让我来告诉你们什么叫做‘金箍棒’,顺便教教你们‘神罗天征’的武技!”
  • 不可思议的大陆

    不可思议的大陆

    顾集,大一医学生,在日常浏览灵异直播时,电脑突然弹出一个绿色界面,他点击确定后获得了‘不可思议系统’。随后系统让顾集穿越到了另一个和地球差不多的平行世界,在那里他占据了不可思议大陆世界上的“少年顾集”身体。从穿越到这个世界开始,顾集的命运注定不平凡。杀手事件;学院生活;伦纳多城的沦陷;帝国之间的战争;英雄父母,同学的过往,许多秘密慢慢浮现……
  • 做“财”女有“钱”途:女人一定要知道的理财知识

    做“财”女有“钱”途:女人一定要知道的理财知识

    本书共分六篇,前五篇分别从管钱、赚钱、省钱、生钱、花钱几个方面为你做"财女"指明了"钱"途;第六篇辑录了世界各地财富女性找到"钱"途的成功事例,为你走向财富之路树立了成功的典范。与传统妇女把钱放在银行里的理财方法相比。当今的“财女”已经不满足于只“吃”利息。关注投资领域,关注时尚潮流,关注自己的生活品质,已成为“财女”们营造美丽人生的三大法宝。不管是炒股票、买基金、做房地产,还是投资书画、古董,她们都没问题。“财女”们相信,只要认准投资目标并聪明理财,就能过上美满幸福的生活。
  • 春秋武林

    春秋武林

    楚乔,本应家道殷实,平淡一生。突然有一天开始:有白虎?收了他,有玄武?收了他,有青龙?收了他,有朱雀?收了他。从此开始了武林之行,游戏江湖,权谋庙堂,碾压沙场,那就通通我来做主。看平凡小子养成记,本书拒绝小白文。
  • 真理即深渊

    真理即深渊

    疯狂者,憎恶之物,恐惧与未知遍布城市。神圣投影的降临将这座城市彻底拖入了崩溃与扭曲的深渊。背负“头颅”之名的少年看见了疯狂与扭曲,也感受到了人性的光辉。在未知恐惧的阴影之中,寻找生存的希望,对抗既定的命运。神话书籍,真理密咒,蒸汽义肢,远古遗城。有一群与少年相同的人探寻着真理的秘密,于崩溃深渊痛苦游走,于人性光辉下获得救赎。又名《奈亚大人的培养计划》,《作死者》。
  • 都市之无上大主宰

    都市之无上大主宰

    一个快递,一枚戒指,让苏磊的人生有了翻天覆地的变化。丹药……自己想要多少有多少!符箓……批量大甩卖,买一赠五!功法……在座的诸位,你们修炼的都是垃圾!……“人生啊,寂寞如雪!怎么一个能打的都没有?”苏磊一脸的惆怅。“请宿主停止装逼!否则会受到本神器的惩罚!”