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quisite. He was as good a writer and speaker | ways taken off his hat when he went into a as any modern sovereign has been. But he church! The character of Charles would was not fit for active life. In negotiation he scarcely rise in our estimation, if we believed was always trying to dupe others, and duping that he was pricked in conscience after the only himself. As a soldier, he was feeble, manner of this worthy loyalist; and that, while dilatory, and miserably wanting, not in perso- violating all the first rules of Christian moralinal courage, but in the presence of mind which ty, he was sincerely scrupulous about churchhis station required. His delay at Gloucester government. But we acquit him of such weaksaved the parliamentary party from destruc-ness. In 1641, he deliberately confirmed the tion. At Naseby, in the very crisis of his fortune, his want of self-possession spread a fatal panic through his army. The story which Clarendon tells of that affair, reminds us of the excuses by which Bessus and Bobadil explain their cudgellings. A Scotch nobleman, it seems, begged the king not to run upon his death, took hold of his bridle, and turned his horse round. No man who had much value for his life would have tried to perform the same friendly office on that day for Oliver Cromwell.

Scotch declaration, which stated that the government of the church by archbishops and bishops was contrary to the word of God. In 1645, he appears to have offered to set up Popery in Ireland. That a king who had established the Presbyterian religion in one kingdom, and who was willing to establish the Catholic religion in another, should have insurmountable scruples about the ecclesiastical constitution of the third, is altogether incredible. He himself says in his letters that he looks on Episcopacy as a stronger support of monarchical power than even the army. From causes which we have already considered, the Established Church had been, since the Reformation, the great bulwark of the prerogative. Charles wished, therefore, to preserve it. He thought himself necessary both to the Parliament and to the army. He did not foresee, till too late, that by paltering with the Presbyterians he should put both them and himself into the power of a fiercer and more daring party If he had foreseen it, we suspect that the royal blood, which still cries to Heaven every thirtieth of January for judgments only to be averted by salt fish and egg-sauce, would never have been shed. One who had swallowed the Scotch Declaration would scarcely strain at the Covenant.

One thing, and one alone, could make Charles dangerous-a violent death. His tyranny could not break the high spirit of the English people. His arms could not conquer, his arts could not deceive them; but his humiliation and his execution melted them into a generous compassion. Men who die on a scaffold for political offences almost always die well. The eyes of thousands are fixed upon them. Enemies and admirers are watching their demeanour. Every tone of voice, every change of colour, is to go down to posterity. Escape is impossible. Supplication is vain. In such a situation pride and despair have often been known to nerve the weakest minds with fortitude adequate to the occasion. Charles died patiently and bravely; not more patiently or bravely, indeed, than many other victims of political The death of Charles, and the strong mearage; not more patiently or bravely than his sures which led to it, raised Cromwell to a own judges, who were not only killed, but tor-height of power fatal to the infant commontured; or than Vane, who had always been considered as a timid man. However, his conduct during his trial and at his execution made a prodigious impression. His subjects began to love his memory as heartily as they had hated his person; and posterity has estimated his character from his death rather than from his life.

To represent Charles as a martyr in the cause of Episcopacy is absurd. Those who put him to death cared as little for the Assembly of Divines as for the Convocation; and would in all probability only have hated him the more if he had agreed to set up the Presbyterian discipline; and, in spite of the opinion of Mr. Hallam, we are inclined to think that the attachment of Charles to the Church of England was altogether political. Human nature is indeed so capricious that there may be a single sensitive point in a conscience which everywhere else is callous. A man without truth or humanity may have some strange scruples about a trifle. There was one devout warrior in the royal camp whose piety bore a great resemblance to that which is ascribed to the king. We mean Colonel Turner. That gallant cavalier was hanged after the Restoration for a flagitious burglary. At the gallows he told the crowd that his mind received great consolation from one reflection-he had al

wealth. No men occupy so splendid a place in history as those who have founded monarchies on the ruins of republican institutions. Their glory, if not of the purest, is assuredly of the most seductive and dazzling kind. In nations broken to the curb, in nations long accustomed to be transferred from one tyrant to another, a man without eminent qualities may easily gain supreme power. The defection of a troop of guards, a conspiracy of eunuchs, a popular tumult, might place an indolent senator or a brutal soldier on the throne of the Roman world. Similar revolutions have often occurred in the despotic states of Asia. But a community which has heard the voice of truth and experienced the pleasures of liberty, in which the merits of statesmen and of systems are freely canvassed, in which obedience is paid not to persons but to laws, in which magistrates are regarded not as the lords but as the servants of the public, in which the excitement of party is a necessary of life, in which political warfare is reduced to a system of tactics;-such a community is not easily reduced to servitude. Beasts of burden may easily be managed by a new master; but will the wild ass submit to the bonds? will the unicorn serve and abide by the crib? will leviathan hold out his nostrils to the hook? The mythological conqueror of the East, whose

enchantments reduced the wild beasts to the tameness of domestic cattle, and who harnessed lions and tigers to his chariot, is but an imperfect type of those extraordinary minds which have thrown a spell on the fierce spirits of nations unaccustomed to control, and have compelled raging factions to obey their reins, and swell their triumph. The enterprise, be it good or bad, is one which requires a truly great man. It demands courage, activity, energy, wisdom, firmness, conspicuous virtues, or vices so splendid and alluring as to resemble virtues.

which rose on the ruins of the old system. The admirers of Inigo Jones have always maintained that his works are inferior to those of Sir Christopher Wren only because the great fire of London gave to the latter such a field for the display of his powers as no architect in the history of the world ever possessed. Similar allowance must be made for Cromwell. If he erected little that was new, it was because there had been no general devastation to clear a space for him. As it was, he reformed the representative system in a most judicious manner. He rendered the administration of justice uniform throughout the island. We will quote a passage from his speech to the Parliament in September, 1656, which contains, we think, stronger indications of a legislative mind than are to be found in the whole range of orations delivered on such occasions before or since.

Those who have succeeded in this arduous undertaking form a very small and a very remarkable class. Parents of tyranny, but heirs of freedom, kings among citizens, citizens among kings, they unite in themselves the characteristics of the system which springs from them, and of the system from which they have sprung. Their reigns shine with a dou- "There is one general grievance in the nable light, the last and dearest rays of depart-tion. It is the law.... I think, I may say it, I ing freedom, mingled with the first and brightest glories of empire in its dawn. Their high qualities lend to despotism itself a charm drawn from the institutions under which they were formed, and which they have destroyed. They resemble Europeans who settle within the tropics, and carry thither the strength and the energetic habits acquired in regions more propitious to the constitution. They differ as widely from princes nursed in the purple of 2 imperial cradles as the companions of Gama from their dwarfish and imbecile progeny, which, born in a climate unfavourable to its growth and beauty, degenerates more and more at every descent from the qualities of the original conquerors.

In this class three men stand pre-eminent; Cæsar, Cromwell, and Bonaparte. The highest place in this remarkable triumvirate belongs undoubtedly to Cæsar. He united the talents of Bonaparte to those of Cromwell; and he possessed also what neither Cromwell nor Bonaparte possessed, learning, taste, wit, eloquence, the sentiments and the manners of an accomplished gentleman.

have as eminent judges in this land as have been had, or that the nation has had for these many years. Truly, I could be particular as to the executive part, to the administration; but that would trouble you. But the truth of it is, there are wicked and abominable laws that will be in your power to alter. To hang a man for sixpence, threepence, I know not what to hang for a trifle and pardon murder, is in the ministration of the law through the ill-framing of it. I have known in my experience abominable murders quitted; and to see men lose their lives for petty matters! This is a thing that God will reckon for; and I wish it may not lie upon this nation a day longer than you have an opportunity to give a remedy; and I hope I shall cheerfully join with you in it."

Mr. Hallam truly says, that though it is im possible to rank Cromwell with Napoleon as a general, yet "his exploits were as much above the level of his contemporaries, and more the effects of an original uneducated capacity." Bonaparte was trained in the best military schools; the army which he led to Italy was one of the finest that ever existed. Cromwell Between Cromwell and Napoleon Mr. Hal- passed his youth and the prime of his manhood lam has instituted a parallel scarcely less in- in a civil situation. He never looked on war, genious than that which Burke has drawn be- till he was more than forty years old. He had tween Richard Cœur de Lion and Charles the first to form himself; and then to form his Twelfth of Sweden. In this parallel, however, troops. Out of raw levies he created an army, and indeed throughout his work, we think the bravest and the best disciplined, the most that he hardly gives Cromwell fair measure. orderly in peace, and the most terrible in war, "Cromwell," says he, "far unlike his anti-that Europe had seen. He called his body type, never showed any signs of a legislative mind, or any desire to place his renown on that noblest basis, the amelioration of social institutions." The difference in this respect, we conceive, was not in the characters of the men, but in the characters of the revolutions by means of which they rose to power. The civil war in England had been undertaken to defend and restore; the republicans of France set themselves to destroy. In England the principles of the common law had never been disturbed, and most even of its forms had been held sacred. In France the law and its ministers had been swept away together. In France, therefore, legislation necessarily became the first business of the first settled government

into existence. He led it to conquest. He never fought a battle without gaining a victory. He never gained a victory without annihilating the force opposed to him. Yet his triumphs were not the highest glory of his military system. The respect which his troops paid to property, their attachment to the laws and religion of their country, their submission to the civil power, their temperance, their intelligence, their industry, are without parallel. It was after the Restoration that the spirit which their great leader had infused into them was most signally displayed. At the command of the established government, a government which had no means of enforcing obedience, fifty thou sand soldiers, whose backs no enemy had ever

seen, either in domestic or continental war, | ed, he was punctilious only for his country. laid down their arms, and retired into the mass His own character he left to take care of itself; of the people; thenceforward to be distinguished only by superior diligence, sobriety, and regularity in the pursuits of peace, from the other members of the community which they had saved.

he left it to be defended by his victories in war and his reforms in peace. But he was a jealous and implacable guardian of the public honour. He suffered a crazy Quaker to insult him in the midst of Whitehall, and revenged himself only by liberating him and giving him a dinner. But he was prepared to risk the chances of war to avenge the blood of a private Englishman.

In the general spirit and character of his administration we think Cromwell far superior to Napoleon. "In civil government," says Mr. Hallam, "there can be no adequate parallel be- No sovereign ever carried to the throne so tween one who had sucked only the dregs of large a portion of the best qualities of the mida besotted fanaticism, and one to whom the dling orders, so strong a sympathy with the stores of reason and philosophy were open." feelings and interests of his people. He was These expressions, it seems to us, convey the sometimes driven to arbitrary measures; but highest eulogium on our great countryman. he had a high, stout, honest, English heart. Reason and philosophy did not teach the con- Hence it was that he loved to surround his queror of Europe to command his passions, or throne with such men as Hale and Blake. to pursue, as a first object, the happiness of the Hence it was that he allowed so large a share people. They did not prevent him from risk- of political liberty to his subjects, and that, even ing his fame and his power in a frantic contest when an opposition, dangerous to his power against the principles of human nature and the and to his person, almost compelled him to golaws of the physical world, against the rage of vern by the sword, he was still anxious to leave the winter and the liberty of the sea. They did a germ from which, at a more favourable seanot exempt him from the influence of that most son, free institutions might spring. We firmly pernicious of superstitions, a presumptuous fa- believe, that if his first parliament had not com talism. They did not preserve him from the menced its debates by disputing his title, his inebriation of prosperity, or restrain him from government would have been as mild at home indecent querulousness and violence in adver- as it was energetic and able abroad. He was sity. On the other hand, the fanaticism of a soldier-he had risen by war. Had his amCromwell never urged him on impracticable bition been of an impure or selfish kind, it undertakings, or confused his perception of the would have been easy for him to plunge his public good. Inferior to Bonaparte in inven- country into continental hostilities on a large tion, he was far superior to him in wisdom. scale, and to dazzle the restless factions which The French Emperor is among conquerors he ruled by the splendour of his victories. what Voltaire is among writers, a miraculous Some of his enemies have sneeringly remarkchild. His splendid genius was frequently ed, that in the successes obtained under his clouded by fits of humour as absurdly perverse administration, he had no personal share; as as those of the pet of the nursery, who quar- if a man who had raised himself from obscurirels with his food, and dashes his playthings to ty to empire, solely by his military talents, pieces. Cromwell was emphatically a man. could have any unworthy reason for shrinking He possessed, in an eminent degree, that mas- from military enterprise. This reproach is his culine and full-grown robustness of mind, that highest glory. In the success of the English equally diffused intellectual health, which, if navy he could have no selfish interests. Its our national partiality does not mislead us, triumphs added nothing to his fame; its inhas peculiarly characterized the great men of crease added nothing to his means of overEngland. Never was any ruler so conspicu- awing his enemies; its great leader was not ously born for sovereignty. The cup which his friend. Yet he took a peculiar pleasure in has intoxicated almost all others, sobered him. encouraging that noble service, which, of all the His spirit, restless from its buoyancy in a lower instruments employed by an English governsphere, reposed in majestic placidity as soon ment, is the most impotent for mischief, and the as it had reached the level congenial to it. He most powerful for good. His administration had nothing in common with that large class was glorious, but with no vulgar glory. It was of men who distinguished themselves in lower not one of those periods of overstrained and posts, and whose incapacity becomes obvious convulsive exertion which necessarily produce as soon as the public voice summons them to debility and languor. Its energy was natural, take the lead. Rapidly as his fortunes grew, healthful, temperate. He placed England at his mind expanded more rapidly still. Insigni- the head of the Protestant interest, and in the ficant as a private citizen, he was a great gene- first rank of Christian powers. He taught ral; he was a still greater prince. The manner every nation to value her friendship and to of Napoleon was a theatrical compound, in dread her enmity. But he did not squander her which the coarseness of a revolutionary guard-resources in a vain attempt to invest her with room was blended with the ceremony of the old that supremacy which no power, in the modern court of Versailles. Cromwell, by the confes- system of Europe, can safely affect, or can sion even of his enemies, exhibited in his de- long retain. ineanour the simple and natural nobleness of a Inan neither ashamed of his origin nor vain of his elevation; of a man who had found his proper place in society, and who felt secure that he was competent to fill it. Easy, even to familiarity, where his own dignity was concern

This noble and sober wisdom had its reward. If he did not carry the banners of the Commonwealth in triumph to distant capitals; if he did not adorn Whitehall with the spoils of the Stadthouse and the Louvre; if he did not portion out Flanders and Germany into princi

palities for his kinsmen and his generals; he | cuting fires of Rome. Even to the present day,
did not, on the other hand, see his country his character, though constantly attacked, and
overrun by the armies of nations which his scarcely ever defended, is popular with the
ambition had provoked. He did not drag out great body of our countrymen.
the last years of his life in exile and a prisoner,
in an unhealthy climate and under an ungener-
ous jailor; raging with the impotent desire of
vengeance, and brooding over visions of de-
parted glory. He went down to his grave in
the fulness of power and fame; and left to his
son an authority which any man of ordinary
firmness and prudence would have retained.

But for the weakness of that foolish Ishbosheth, the opinions which we have been expressing would, we believe, now have formed the orthodox creed of good Englishmen. We might now be writing under the government his Highness Oliver the Fifth, or Richard the Fourth, Protector, by the Grace of God, of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland and Ireland, and the dominions thereto belonging. The form of the great founder of the dynasty, on horseback, as when he led the charge at Naseby, or on foot, as when he tock the mace from the table of the Commons, would adorn all our squares, and overlook our public offices from Charing-Cross; and sermons in his praise would be duly preached on his lucky day, the third of September, by court-chaplains, guiltless of the abominations of the surplice.

The most questionable act of his life was the execution of Charles. We have already strongly condemned that proceeding; but we by no means consider it as one which attaches any peculiar stigma of infamy to the names of those who participated in it. It was an unjust and injudicious display of violent party spirit; but it was not a cruel or perfidious measure. It had all those features which distinguish the errors of magnanimous and intrepid spirits from base and malignant crimes.

We cannot quit this interesting topic without saying a few words on a transaction, and which Mr. Hallam has made the subjec of a severe accusation against Cromwei. which has been made by others the subject of a severe accusation against Mr. Hallam. We conceive that both the Protector and the historian may be vindicated. Mr. Hallam tells us that Cromwell sold fifty English gentlemen For making this as slaves in Barbadoes. statement he has been charged with two high literary crimes. The first accusation is, that, The second, from his violent prejudice against Oliver, he has calumniated him falsely. preferred by the same accuser, is, that from But, though his memory has not been taken his violent fondness for the same Oliver, he under the patronage of any party, though every has hidden his calumnies against him at the device has been used to blacken it, though to fag end of a note, instead of putting them into praise him would long have been a punishable the text. Both these imputations cannot poshappens that neither is so. crime, yet truth and merit at last prevail. sibly be true, and Cowards, who had trembled at the very sound His censors will find, when they take the trouof his name, tools of office, who, like Downing, ble to read his book, that the story is mentioned had been proud of the honour of lacqueying his in the text as well as in the notes; and they coach, might insult him in loyal speeches and will also find, when they take the trouble to addresses. Venal poets might transfer to the read some other books, with which speculators king the same eulogies, little the worse for on English history ought to be acquainted, that wear, which they had bestowed on the Pro- the story is true. If there could have been tector. A fickle multitude might crowd to any doubt about the matter, Burton's Diary shout and scoff round the gibbeted remains of must have set it at rest. But, in truth, there the greatest Prince and Soldier of the age. was abundant and superabundant evidence, But when the Dutch cannon startled an effemi- before the appearance of that valuable publinate tyrant in his own palace, when the con- cation. Not to mention the authority to which quests which had been made by the armies of Mr. Hallam refers, and which alone is perCromwell were sold to pamper the harlots of fectly satisfactory, there is Slingsby Bethel's Charles, when Englishmen were sent to fight, account of the proceedings of Richard Cromunder the banners of France, against the inde- well's Parliament, published immediately after pendence of Europe and the Protestant reli- its dissolution. He was a member he must gion, many honest hearts swelled in secret at therefore have known what happened: and the thought of one who had never suffered his violent as his prejudices were, he never could country to be ill-used by any but himself. It have been such an idiot as to state positive must indeed have been difficult for any Eng-falsehoods with respect to public transactions lishman to see the salaried Viceroy of France, which had taken place only a few days before. at the most important crisis of his fate, saun- It will not be quite so easy to defend Cromtering through his harem, yawning and talking nonsense over a despatch, or beslobbering his brothers and his courtiers in a fit of maudlin affection, without a respectful and tender remembrance of him, before whose genius the young pride of Louis, and the veteran craft of Mazarin, had stood rebuked; who had humbled Spain on the land, and Holland on the sea; and whose imperial voice had arrested the victorious arms of Sweden, and the perse

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well against Mr. Hallam, as to defend Mr. Hallam against those who attack his history. But the story is certainly by no means so bad as he takes it to be. In the first place, this slavery was merely the compulsory labour to which every transported convict is liable. Nobody acquainted with the language of the last century can be ignorant that such con victs were generally termed slaves; until discussions about another species of slavery, far more miserable and altogether anmerited, ren dered the word too odious to be applied even to felons of English origin. These persons

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enjoyed the protection of the law during the term of their service, which was only five years. The punishment of transportation has been inflicted, by almost every government that England has ever had, for political offences. After Monmouth's insurrection, and after the rebellions in 1715 and 1745, great numbers of the prisoners were sent to America. These considerations ought, we think, to free Cromwell from the imputation of having inflicted on his enemies any punishment which in itself is of a shocking and atrocious character. To transport fifty men, however, without a trial, is bad enough. But let us consider, in the first place, that some of these men were taken in arms against the government, and that it is not clear that they were not all so taken. In that case, Cromwell or his officers might, according to the usages of those unhappy times, have put them to the sword, or turned them over to the provost-marshal at once. This, we allow, is not a complete vindication; for execution by martial law ought never to take place but under circumstances which admit of no delay; and, if there is time to transport men, there is time to try them.

The defenders of the measure stated in the House of Commons, that the persons thus transported not only consented to go, but went with remarkable cheerfulness. By this, we suppose, it is to be understood, not that they had any very violent desire to be bound apprentices in Barbadoes, but that they considered themselves as, on the whole, fortunately and leniently treated, in the situation in which they had placed themselves.

When these considerations are fairly estimated, it must, we think, be allowed, that this selling into slavery was not, as it seems at first sight, a barbarous outrage, unprecedented in our annals, but merely a very arbitrary proceeding, which, like most of the arbitrary proceedings of Cromwell, was rather a violation of positive law than of any great principle of justice and mercy. When Mr. Hallam declares it to have been more oppressive than any of the measures of Charles the Second, he forgets, we imagine, that under the reign of that prince, and during the administration of Lord Clarenden, many of the Roundheads were, without any trial, imprisoned at a distance from England, merely in order to remove them beyond the reach of the great liberating writ of our law. But, in fact, it is not fair to compare the cases. The government of Charles was perfectly secure. The "res dura et regni novitas" is the great apology of Cromwell.

war, even the bad cause had been rendered respectable and amiable, by the purity and elevation of mind which many of its friends displayed. Under Charles the Second, the best and noblest of ends was disgraced by means the most cruel and sordid. The rage of faction succeeded to the love of liberty. Loyalty died away into servility. We look in vain among the leading politicians of either side for steadiness of principle, or even for that vulgar fidelity to party, which, in our time, it is esteemed infamous to violate. The inconsist ency, perfidy, and baseness, which the leaders constantly practised, which their followers defended, and which the great body of the people regarded, as it seems, with little disapprobation, appear in the present age almost incredible. In the age of Charles the First, they would, we believe, have excited as much astonishment.

Man, however, is always the same. And when so marked a difference appears between two generations, it is certain that the solution may be found in their respective circumstances. The principal statesmen of the reign of Charles the Second were trained during the civil war, and the revolutions which followed it. Such a period is eminently favourable to the growth of quick and active talents. It forms a class of men, shrewd, vigilant, inventive, of men whose dexterity triumphs over the most perplexing combinations of circumstances, whose presaging instinct, no sign of the times, no incipient change of public feelings, can elude. But it is an unpropitious season for the firm and masculine virtues. The statesman who enters on his career at such a time, can form no permanent connections-can make no accurate observations on the higher parts of political science. Before he can attach himself to a party, it is scattered; before he can study the nature of a government, it is overturned. The oath of abjuration comes close on the oath of alle giance. The association which was subscribed yesterday, is burned by the hangmen to-day. In the midst of the constant eddy and change, self-preservation becomes the first object of the adventurer. It is a task too hard for the strongest head, to keep itself from becoming giddy in the eternal whirl. Public spirit is out of the question; a laxity of principle, without which no public man can be eminent, or even safe, becomes too common to be scandalous; and the whole nation looks coolly on instances of apostasy, which would startle the foulest turncoat of more settled times.

From the moment that Cromwell is dead and The history of France since the revolution buried, we go on in almost perfect harmony affords some striking illustrations of these with Mr. Hallam to the end of his took. The remarks. The same man was minister of the umes which followed the Restoration peculiarly republic, of Bonaparte, of Louis the Eight require that unsparing impartiality which is eenth, of Bonaparte again after his return from his most distinguishing virtue. No part of Elba, of Louis again after his return from our history, during the last three centuries, Ghent. Yet all these manifold treasons by no presents a spectacle of such general dreari- means seemed to destroy his influence, or even ness. The whole breed of our statesmen seem to fix any peculiar stain of infamy on his cha to have degenerated; and their moral and in-racter. We, to be sure, did not know what to tellectual littleness strikes us with the more disgust, because we see it placed in immediate contrast with the high and majestic qualities of the race which they succeeded. In the great civil

make of him; but his countrymen did not seem to be shocked; and in truth they had little right to be shocked: for there was scarcely one Frenchman distinguished in the

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