On this page
-
Text (1)
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
gland . " It might have been more correct to say that the church suffered martyrdom for his follies and passions . To call such an incendiary a martyr to the interests of the community to which he belonged , is as much to the purpose as it would be to call a servant who should in a mad freak blow himself and his roaster ' s house about his ears with gunpowder , a martyr to his fidelity in sticking to his post .
In his biographer ' s eyes every thing is sanctified by Laud ' s zeal for the ecclesiastical system of uniformity which it was the business of his life to build up by any and every means , with an utter disregard of consequences , and with all the stupid infatuation of a madman who chose to dash in pieces the whole frame of society , rather than give up any whim of his own , or tolerate any contempt of his tyranny . All the means which he adopted for the promotion of his ends become virtuous and praiseworthy , or at least
excusable , in the eyes of his historian , who is surprised at nothing but the weak and wicked infatuation of those misguided rebels to lawful authority , who were so unreasonable as to prefer wearing their ears and noses in their natural state , to submitting to have them cropt and slit by priests and knaves , who had the impudence at the same time to call themselves the true champions of the Protestant Reformation . Such violent operations upon the gifts of nature they were perverse enough to resist , even from the popes of
" the Church of England ; " and vfhat wonder that many became but too apt scholars of such a system ? Cropping of ears leads somewhat naturally ( and perhaps happily , so far as the fear of retribution keeps tyrants in order ) to cropping of heads ; and we must say that those who begin with " the minor offence , " have little reason to complain ( though the world may have some cause for rejoicing ) if they sooner or later suffer the penalty inflicted upon them by the reaction of outraged humanity . " Persecution , " our author
acknowledges , ** is detestable , under whatever form and by whomsoever inflicted ; " yet it is plain that unless this sentiment be limited , the reasonings of his book and his estimate of Laud ' s character are utterly false . It is clear that he does not intend to call by so ugly a name as persecution the wholesome severities which Laud rejoiced to employ in support , of his church , and indeed he qualifies the apothegm so as to keep out of view any share on the part of the church in the precept or its performance , by adding , " whether it proceed from Popish conclaves , Parliamentary committees on religion , Presbyterian Synods , or general assemblies , " Poor suffering rulers of the Church of England , that sustained interruption in the innocent occupation of mutilating your fellow-creatures !
If any one ' s curiosity should be excited as to the causes which have seduced the worthy biographer into such a chivalrous attempt as that of patching up the broken reputation of Archbishop Laud , the clue to their discovery may be found in the preface , by which we learn that a bold flight of the Quarterly Review has been the ignis fatuus which has danced him over the quagmire , and left him floundering and bewildered in the vain attempt at filling up the picture which the Reviewer was wag enough onl y to sketch in outline . We shall repeat the quotation , because its spirit will be the best interpreter of our author ' s plans and objects : " Did our limits permit , we would shew what has been well observed by a most diligent and meritorious author , * intimately conversant with the history of that age , and better acquainted than Uny other person with what were then the bearing's and effects of religious opinions upon ecclesiastical affairs , that ¦ •<¦ ' -- .... ¦¦ . ... . - . —
* " Mr . James Nichols , iu his ' Calvinism and Arm ' mianism compared . ' "
Untitled Article
370 Life and Times of Archbishop Laud .
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 2, 1829, page 370, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2573/page/2/
-