the annals of the parish-第31章
按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
men; and the kings of the earth with crowns on their heads; and globes and sceptres in their hands。
I stood wondering what was to ensue; when presently I heard the noise of drums and trumpets; and anon I beheld an army with banners entering in at the gate; upon which the kings and the great men came also forth in their power and array; and a dreadful battle was foughten; but the multitude that had risen from the common graves; stood afar off; and were but lookers…on。
The kings and their host were utterly discomfited。 They were driven within the doors of their monuments; their coats…of…arms were broken off; and their effigies cast down; and the victors triumphed over them with the flourishes of trumpets and the waving of banners。 But while I looked; the vision was changed; and I then beheld a wide and a dreary waste; and afar off the steeples of a great city; and a tower in the midst; like the tower of Babel; and on it I could discern; written in characters of fire; 〃Public Opinion。〃 While I was pondering at the same; I heard a great shout; and presently the conquerors made their appearance; coming over the desolate moor。 They were going in great pride and might towards the city; but an awful burning rose; afar as it were in the darkness; and the flames stood like a tower of fire that reached unto the heavens。 And I saw a dreadful hand and an arm stretched from out of the cloud; and in its hold was a besom made of the hail and the storm; and it swept the fugitives like dust; and in their place I saw the churchyard; as it were; cleared and spread around; the graves closed; and the ancient tombs; with their coats…of…arms and their effigies of stone; all as they were in the beginning。 I then awoke; and behold it was a dream。
This vision perplexed me for many days; and when the news came that the King of France was beheaded by the hands of his people; I received; as it were; a token in confirmation of the vision that had been disclosed to me in my sleep; and I preached a discourse on the same; and against the French Revolution; that was thought one of the greatest and soundest sermons that I had ever delivered in my pulpit。
On the Monday following; Mr Cayenne; who had been some time before appointed a justice of the peace; came over from Wheatrig House to the Cross…Keys; where he sent for me and divers other respectable inhabitants of the clachan; and told us that he was to have a sad business; for a warrant was out to bring before him two democratical weaver lads; on a suspicion of high treason。 Scarcely were the words uttered when they were brought in; and he began to ask them how they dared to think of dividing; with their liberty and equality of principles; his and every other man's property in the country。 The men answered him in a calm manner; and told him they sought no man's property; but only their own natural rights; upon which he called them traitors and reformers。 They denied they were traitors; but confessed they were reformers; and said they knew not how that should be imputed to them as a fault; for that the greatest men of all times had been reformers;〃Was not;〃 they said; 〃our Lord Jesus Christ a reformer?〃〃And what the devil did he make of it?〃 cried Mr Cayenne; bursting with passion; 〃Was he not crucified?〃
I thought; when I heard these words; that the pillars of the earth sank beneath me; and that the roof of the house was carried away in a whirlwind。 The drums of my ears crackit; blue starns danced before my sight; and I was fain to leave the house and hie me home to the manse; where I sat down in my study; like a stupified creature; awaiting what would betide。 Nothing; however; was found against the weaver lads; but I never from that day could look on Mr Cayenne as a Christian; though surely he was a true government…man。
Soon after this affair; there was a pleasant re…edification of a gospel…spirit among the heritors; especially when they heard how I had handled the regicides in France; and on the following Sunday; I had the comfortable satisfaction to see many a gentleman in their pews; that had not been for years within a kirk…door。 The democrats; who took a world of trouble to misrepresent the actions of the gentry; insinuated that all this was not from any new sense of grace; but in fear of their being reported as suspected persons to the king's government。 But I could not think so; and considered their renewal of communion with the church as a swearing of allegiance to the King of kings; against that host of French atheists; who had torn the mortcloth from the coffin; and made it a banner; with which they were gone forth to war against the Lamb。 The whole year was; however; spent in great uneasiness; and the proclamation of the war was followed by an appalling stop in trade。 We heard of nothing but failures on all hands; and among others that grieved me; was that of Mr Maitland of Glasgow; who had befriended Mrs Malcolm in the days of her affliction; and gave her son Robert his fine ship。 It was a sore thing to hear of so many breakings; especially of old respected merchants like him; who had been a Lord Provost; and was far declined into the afternoon of life。 He did not; however; long survive the mutation of his fortune; but bending his aged head in sorrow; sank down beneath the stroke; to rise no more。
CHAPTER XXXV YEAR 1794
This year had opened into all the leafiness of midsummer before anything memorable happened in the parish; further than that the sad division of my people into government…men and jacobins was perfected。 This calamity; for I never could consider such heartburning among neighbours as any thing less than a very heavy calamity; was assuredly occasioned by faults on both sides; but it must be confessed that the gentry did nothing to win the commonality from the errors of their way。 A little more condescension on their part would not have made things worse; and might have made them better; but pride interposed; and caused them to think that any show of affability from them would be construed by the democrats into a terror of their power; while the democrats were no less to blame; for hearing how their compeers were thriving in France; and demolishing every obstacle to their ascendency; they were crouse and really insolent; evidencing none of that temperance in prosperity that proves the possessors worthy of their good fortune。
As for me; my duty in these circumstances was plain and simple。 The Christian religion was attempted to be brought into disrepute; the rising generation were taught to gibe at its holiest ordinances; and the kirk was more frequented as a place to while away the time on a rainy Sunday; than for any insight of the admonitions and revelations in the sacred book。 Knowing this; I perceived that it would be of no effect to handle much the mysteries of the faith; but as there was at the time a bruit and a sound about universal benevolence; philanthropy; utility; and all the other disguises with which an infidel philosophy appropriated to itself the charity; brotherly love; and welldoing inculcated by our holy religion; I set myself to task upon these heads; and thought it no robbery to use a little of the stratagem employed against Christ's kingdom; to promote the interests thereof in the hearts and understandings of those whose ears would have been sealed against me; had I attempted to expound higher things。 Accordingly; on one day it was my practice to show what the nature of Christian charity was; comparing it to the light and warmth of the sun; that shines impartially on the just and the unjustshowing that man; without the sense of it as a duty; was as the beasts that perish; and that every feeling of his nature was intimately selfish; but then when actuated by this divine impulse; he rose out of himself; and became as a god; zealous to abate the sufferings of all things that live; and; on the next day; I demonstrated that the new benevolence which had come so much into vogue; was but another version of this Christian virtue。 In like manner; I dealt with brotherly love; bringing it home to the business and bosoms of my hearers; that the Christianity of it was neither enlarged nor bettered by being baptized with the Greek