Dickens, Charles – A Child’s History of England

should prevent the succession of the Popish Duke. After this

double-faced beginning, it established an oath which no human being

could understand, but which everybody was to take, as a proof that

his religion was the lawful religion. The Earl of Argyle, taking

it with the explanation that he did not consider it to prevent him

from favouring any alteration either in the Church or State which

was not inconsistent with the Protestant religion or with his

loyalty, was tried for high treason before a Scottish jury of which

the MARQUIS OF MONTROSE was foreman, and was found guilty. He

escaped the scaffold, for that time, by getting away, in the

disguise of a page, in the train of his daughter, LADY SOPHIA

LINDSAY. It was absolutely proposed, by certain members of the

Scottish Council, that this lady should be whipped through the

streets of Edinburgh. But this was too much even for the Duke, who

had the manliness then (he had very little at most times) to remark

that Englishmen were not accustomed to treat ladies in that manner.

In those merry times nothing could equal the brutal servility of

the Scottish fawners, but the conduct of similar degraded beings in

England.

After the settlement of these little affairs, the Duke returned to

England, and soon resumed his place at the Council, and his office

of High Admiral – all this by his brother’s favour, and in open

defiance of the law. It would have been no loss to the country, if

he had been drowned when his ship, in going to Scotland to fetch

his family, struck on a sand-bank, and was lost with two hundred

souls on board. But he escaped in a boat with some friends; and

the sailors were so brave and unselfish, that, when they saw him

rowing away, they gave three cheers, while they themselves were

going down for ever.

The Merry Monarch, having got rid of his Parliament, went to work

to make himself despotic, with all speed. Having had the villainy

to order the execution of OLIVER PLUNKET, BISHOP OF ARMAGH, falsely

accused of a plot to establish Popery in that country by means of a

French army – the very thing this royal traitor was himself trying

to do at home – and having tried to ruin Lord Shaftesbury, and

failed – he turned his hand to controlling the corporations all

over the country; because, if he could only do that, he could get

what juries he chose, to bring in perjured verdicts, and could get

what members he chose returned to Parliament. These merry times

produced, and made Chief Justice of the Court of King’s Bench, a

drunken ruffian of the name of JEFFREYS; a red-faced, swollen,

bloated, horrible creature, with a bullying, roaring voice, and a

more savage nature perhaps than was ever lodged in any human

breast. This monster was the Merry Monarch’s especial favourite,

and he testified his admiration of him by giving him a ring from

his own finger, which the people used to call Judge Jeffreys’s

Bloodstone. Him the King employed to go about and bully the

corporations, beginning with London; or, as Jeffreys himself

elegantly called it, ‘to give them a lick with the rough side of

his tongue.’ And he did it so thoroughly, that they soon became

the basest and most sycophantic bodies in the kingdom – except the

University of Oxford, which, in that respect, was quite pre-eminent

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Dickens, Charles – A Child’s History of England

and unapproachable.

Lord Shaftesbury (who died soon after the King’s failure against

him), LORD WILLIAM RUSSELL, the Duke of Monmouth, LORD HOWARD, LORD

JERSEY, ALGERNON SIDNEY, JOHN HAMPDEN (grandson of the great

Hampden), and some others, used to hold a council together after

the dissolution of the Parliament, arranging what it might be

necessary to do, if the King carried his Popish plot to the utmost

height. Lord Shaftesbury having been much the most violent of this

party, brought two violent men into their secrets – RUMSEY, who had

been a soldier in the Republican army; and WEST, a lawyer. These

two knew an old officer of CROMWELL’S, called RUMBOLD, who had

married a maltster’s widow, and so had come into possession of a

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