Part 44 (2/2)
Great as the calamity was, yet from a sanitary point of view it did immense good. Nothing short of fire could have effectually cleansed the London of that day, and so put a stop to the periodical ravages of the plague. By sweeping away miles of narrow streets crowded with miserable buildings black with the encrusted filth of ages, the conflagration in the end proved friendly to health and life.
A monument near London Bridge still marks the spot where the flames first burst out. For many years it bore an inscription affirming that the Catholics kindled them in order to be revenged on their persecutors. The poet Pope, at a later period, exposed the falsehood in the lines:
”Where London's column pointing toward the skies Like a tall bully lifts its head and lies.”[2]
[2] ”Moral Essays,” Epistle III.
Sir Christopher Wren, the most famous architect of the period, rebuilt the city. The greater part of it had been of wood, but it rose from the ashes brick and stone. One irreparable loss was the old Gothic church of St. Paul. Wren erected the present cathedral on the foundations of the ancient structure. On a tablet near the tomb of the great master builder one reads the inscription in Latin, ”Reader, if you seek his monument, look around.”[1]
[1] ”Lector, si monumentum requiris, circ.u.mspice.”
475. Invasion by the Dutch (1667).
The new city had not risen from the ruins of the old, when a third calamity overtook it. Charles was at war with France and Holland.
The contest with the latter nation grew out of the rivalry of the English and the Dutch to get the exclusive possession of foreign trade (S459). Parliament granted the King large sums of money to build and equip a navy, but the pleasure-loving monarch wasted it in dissipation. The few s.h.i.+ps he had were rotten old hulks, but half provisioned, with crews ready to mutiny because they could not get their pay.
A Dutch fleet sailed up the Thames. It was manned in part by English sailors who had deserted in disgust because when they asked for cash to support their families they got only worthless government tickets.
There was no force to oppose them. They burned some half-built men-of-war, blockaded London for several weeks, and then made their own terms of peace.
476. The ”Cabal” (1667-1673); Treaty of Dover, 1670; the King robs the Exchequer (1672).
Shortly after this humiliating event the enemies of Clarendon drove him from office (S471). The fallen minister was accused of high treason. He had been guilty of certain arbitrary acts, and, rather than stand trial, he fled to France, and was banished for life. He sent a humble pet.i.tion to the Lords, but they promptly ordered the hangman to burn it. Six years later the old man begged piteously that he might ”come back and die in his own coutnry and among his own children.” Charles refused to let him return, for Clarendon had committed the unpardonable offense of daring to look ”sourly” at the vices of the King and his shameless companions flushed ”with insolence and wine.” Charles now formed a new ministry or ”Cabal,”[1]
consisting of five of his most intimate friends. Several of its members were notorious for their depravity, and Macaulay calls it the ”most profligate administration ever known.”[2] The chief object of its leaders was to serve their own private interests by making the King's power supreme. The ”Cabal's” true spirit was not unlike that of the council of the ”infernal peers” which Milton portrays in ”Paradise Lost,” first published at that time. There he shows us the five princes of evil, Moloch, Belial, Mammon, Beelzebub, and Satan, meeting in the palace of Pandemonium to plot the ruin of the world.[3]
he chief ambition of Charles was to rule without a Parliament; he did not like to have that body inquire too closely how he spent the money which the taxpayers granted him. But his lavish outlays on his favorites made it more and more difficult for him to avoid summoning a Parliament in order to get supplies of cash. At length he hit on a plan for securing the funds he wanted without begging help from Parliament.
[1] This word was originally used to designate the confidential members of the King's private council, and meant perhaps no more than the word ”cabinet” does to-day. In 1667 it happened, however, by a singular coincidence, that the initial letters of the five persons comprising it, namely, (C)lifford, (A)shley-Cooper [Lord Shaftesbury], (B)uckingham, (A)rlington, and (L)auderdale, formed the word ”CABAL,”
which henceforth came to have the odious meaning of secret and unscrupulous intrigue that it has ever since retained. It was to Charles II's time what the political ”ring” is to our own.
[2] Macaulay's ”Essay on Sir William Temple.”
[3] Milton's ”Paradise Lost,” Book II. The first edition was published in 1667, the year the ”Cabal” came into power, though its members had long been favorites with the King. It has been supposed by some that the great Puritan poet had them in his mind when he represented the Pandemonic debate. Shaftesbury and Buckingham are also two of the most prominent characters in Dryden's noted political satire of ”Absalom and Achitophel,” published in 1681; and compare Butler's ”Hudibras.”
Louis XIV of France, then the most powerful monarch in Europe, wished to conquer Holland, with the double object of extending his own kingdom and the power of Catholicism. He saw in Charles the tool he wanted to gain this end. With the aid of two members of the ”Cabal,”
Charles negotiated the secret Treaty of Dover, 1670. Thereby Louis bribed the English King with a gift of 300,000 pounds to help him carry out his scheme. Thus, without the knowledge of Parliament, Charles deliberately sold himself to the French sovereign, who was plotting to destroy the political liberty and Protestant faith of Holland.
In addition to the above sum, it was furthermore agreed that Louis should pay Charles a pension of 200,000 pounds a year from the date when the latter should openly avow himself a Roman Catholic. Later (1671), Charles made a sham treaty with Louis XIV in which the article about his avowing himself a Catholic was omitted in order to deceive Parliament.[1]
[1] See Summary of Const.i.tutional History in the Appendix, p. xix, S21.
True to his infamous contract, Charles provoked a new war with the Dutch, but found that he needed more money to prosecute it successfully. Not knowing where to borrow, he determined to steal it. Various London merchants, bankers, and also persons of moderate means had lent to the government sums of money on promise of repayment from the taxes.
A part of the national revenue amounting to about 1,300,000 pounds, a sum equal to at least $10,000,000 now, had been deposited in the exchequer, or government treasury, to meet the obligation. The King seized this money,[2] partly for his needs, but chiefly to squander on his vices, and to satisfy the insatiate demands of his favorites,--of whom a single one, the d.u.c.h.ess of Portsmouth, had spent 136,000 pounds within the s.p.a.ce of a twelvemonth! The King's treacherous act caused a financial panic which shook London to its foundatyions and ruined great numbers of people.
[2] ”`Rob me the Exchequer, Hal,' said the King to his favorite minister in the `Cabal'; then `all went merry as a marriage bell.'”--Evelyn's ”Diary.”
477. More Money Schemes; Declaration of Indulgence; Test Act, 1673.
By declaring war against Holland Charles had now fulfilled the first part of his secret treaty with Louis (S476), but he was afraid to undertake the second part and openly declare himself a convert to the Church of Rome. He, however, did the next thing to it, by issuing a cautiously worded Declaration of Indulgence, 1673, suspending all penal laws affecting the religious liberty of Protestant Dissenters (SS382, 472) and Roman Catholics. Under cover of this act the King could show especial favor to the Catholics. Parliament issued such a vigorous protest, however, that the King withdrew the Declaration.
Parliament next pa.s.sed the Test Act,[1] 1673, requiring every government officer to acknowledge himself a Protestant according to the rites of the Church of England. Charles became alarmed at this decided stand, and now tried to conciliate Parliament, and coax from it another grant of money by marrying his niece, the Princess Mary, to William of Orange, President of the Dutch republic, and head of the Protestant party on the Continent.
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