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Corruption, An Epistle.

    By Thomas Moore



    Preface.


    The practice which has been lately introduced into literature, of writing very long notes upon very indifferent verses, appears to me a rather happy invention, as it supplies us with a mode of turning dull poetry to account; and as horses too heavy for the saddle may yet serve well enough to draw lumber, so Poems of this kind make excellent beasts of burden and will bear notes though they may not bear reading. Besides, the comments in such cases are so little under the necessity of paying any servile deference to the text, that they may even adopt that Socratic, "quod supra nos nihil ad nos."

    In the first of the two following Poems, I have ventured to speak of the Revolution of 1688, in language which has sometimes been employed by Tory writers and which is therefore neither very new nor popular. But however an Englishman might be reproached with ingratitude for depreciating the merits and results of a measure which he is taught to regard as the source of his liberties--however ungrateful it might appear in Alderman Birch to question for a moment the purity of that glorious era to which he is indebted for the seasoning of so many orations--yet an Irishman who has none of these obligations to acknowledge, to whose country the Revolution brought nothing but injury and insult, and who recollects that the book of Molyneux was burned by order of William's Whig Parliament for daring to extend to unfortunate Ireland those principles on which the Revolution was professedly founded--an Irishman may be allowed to criticise freely the measures of that period without exposing himself either to the imputation of ingratitude or to the suspicion of being influenced by any Popish remains of Jacobitism. No nation, it is true, was ever blessed with a more golden opportunity of establishing and securing its liberties for ever than the conjuncture of Eighty-eight presented to the people of Great Britain. But the disgraceful reigns of Charles and James had weakened and degraded the national character. The bold notions of popular right which had arisen out of the struggles between Charles the First and his Parliament were gradually supplanted by those slavish doctrines for which Lord Hawkesbury eulogizes the churchmen of that period, and as the Reformation had happened too soon for the purity of religion, so the Revolution came too late for the spirit of liberty. Its advantages accordingly were for the most part specious and transitory, while the evils which it entailed are still felt and still increasing. By rendering unnecessary the frequent exercise of Prerogative,--that unwieldy power which cannot move a step without alarm,--it diminished the only interference of the Crown, which is singly and independently exposed before the people, and whose abuses therefore are obvious to their senses and capabilities.    Like the myrtle over a celebrated statue in Minerva's temple at Athens, it skilfully veiled from the public eye the only obtrusive feature of royalty. At the same time, however, that the Revolution abridged this unpopular attribute, it amply compensated by the substitution of a new power, as much more potent in its effect as it is more secret in its operations. In the disposal of an immense revenue and the extensive patronage annexed to it, the first foundations of this power of the Crown were laid; the innovation of a standing army at once increased and strengthened it, and the few slight barriers which the Act of Settlement opposed to its progress have all been gradually removed during the Whiggish reigns that succeeded; till at length this spirit of influence has become the vital principle of the state,--an agency, subtle and unseen, which pervades every part of the Constitution, lurks under all its forms and regulates all its movements, and, like the invisible sylph or grace which presides over the motions of beauty,

        "illam, quicquid agit, quoquo westigia flectit,
            componit furlim subsequiturque."


    The cause of Liberty and the Revolution are so habitually associated in the minds of Englishmen that probably in objecting to the latter I may be thought hostile or indifferent to the former. But assuredly nothing could be more unjust than such a suspicion. The very object indeed which my humble animadversions would attain is that in the crisis to which I think England is now hastening, and between which and foreign subjugation she may soon be compelled to choose, the errors and omissions of 1688 should be remedied; and, as it was then her fate to experience a Revolution without Reform, so she may now endeavor to accomplish a Reform without Revolution.

    In speaking of the parties which have so long agitated England, it will be observed that I lean as little to the Whigs as to their adversaries. Both factions have been equally cruel to Ireland and perhaps equally insincere in their efforts for the liberties of England. There is one name indeed connected with Whiggism, of which I can never think but with veneration and tenderness. As justly, however, might the light of the sun be claimed by any particular nation as the sanction of that name be monopolized by any party whatsoever. Mr. Fox belonged to mankind and they have lost in him their ablest friend.

    With respect to the few lines upon Intolerance, which I have subjoined, they are but the imperfect beginning of a long series of Essays with which I here menace my readers upon the same important subject. I shall look to no higher merit in the task than that of giving a new form to claims and remonstrances which have often been much more eloquently urged and which would long ere now have produced their effect, but that the minds of some of our statesmen, like the pupil of the human eye, contract themselves the more, the stronger light is shed upon them.






   


    Boast on, my friend--tho' stript of all beside,
    Thy struggling nation still retains her pride:
    That pride which once in genuine glory woke
    When Marlborough fought and brilliant St. John spoke;
    That pride which still, by time and shame unstung,
    Outlives even Whitelocke's sword and Hawkesbury's tongue!
    Boast on, my friend, while in this humbled isle[1]
    Where Honor mourns and Freedom fears to smile,
    Where the bright light of England's fame is known
    But by the shadow o'er our fortunes thrown;
    Where, doomed ourselves to naught but wrongs and slights,[2]
    We hear you boast of Britain's glorious rights,
    As wretched slaves that under hatches lie
    Hear those on deck extol the sun and sky!
    Boast on, while wandering thro' my native haunts,
    I coldly listen to thy patriot vaunts;
    And feel, tho' close our wedded countries twine,
    More sorrow for my own than pride from thine.

        Yet pause a moment--and if truths severe
    Can find an inlet to that courtly ear,
    Which hears no news but Ward's gazetted lies,
    And loves no politics in rhyme but Pye's,--
    If aught can please thee but the good old saws
    Of "Church and State," and "William's matchless laws,"
    And "Acts and Rights of glorious Eighty-eight,"--
    Things which tho' now a century out of date
    Still serve to ballast with convenient words,
    A few crank arguments for speeching lords,--
    Turn while I tell how England's freedom found,
    Where most she lookt for life, her deadliest wound;
    How brave she struggled while her foe was seen,
    How faint since Influence lent that foe a screen;
    How strong o'er James and Popery she prevailed,
    How weakly fell when Whigs and gold assailed.

        While kings were poor and all those schemes unknown
    Which drain the people to enrich the throne;
    Ere yet a yielding Commons had supplied
    Those chains of gold by which themselves are tied,
    Then proud Prerogative, untaught to creep
    With bribery's silent foot on Freedom's sleep,
    Frankly avowed his bold enslaving plan
    And claimed a right from God to trample man!
    But Luther's schism had too much roused mankind
    For Hampden's truths to linger long behind;
    Nor then, when king-like popes had fallen so low,
    Could pope-like kings escape the levelling blow.[3]
    That ponderous sceptre (in whose place we bow
    To the light talisman of influence now),
    Too gross, too visible to work the spell
    Which modern power performs, in fragments fell:
    In fragments lay, till, patched and painted o'er
    With fleurs-de-lis, it shone and scourged once more.

        'Twas then, my friend, thy kneeling nation quaft
    Long, long and deep, the churchman's opiate draught
    Of passive, prone obedience--then took flight
    All sense of man's true dignity and right;
    And Britons slept so sluggish in their chain
    That Freedom's watch-voice called almost in vain.
    Oh England! England! what a chance was thine,
    When the last tyrant of that ill-starred line
    Fled from his sullied crown and left thee free
    To found thy own eternal liberty!
    How nobly high in that propitious hour
    Might patriot hands have raised the triple tower[4]
    Of British freedom on a rock divine
    Which neither force could storm nor treachery mine!
    But no--the luminous, the lofty plan,
    Like mighty Babel, seemed too bold for man;
    The curse of jarring tongues again was given
    To thwart a work which raised men nearer heaven.
    While Tories marred what Whigs had scarce begun,
    While Whigs undid what Whigs themselves had done.
    The hour was lost and William with a smile
    Saw Freedom weeping o'er the unfinisht pile!

        Hence all the ills you suffer,--hence remain
    Such galling fragments of that feudal chain[5]
    Whose links, around you by the Norman flung,
    Tho' loosed and broke so often, still have clung.
    Hence sly Prerogative like Jove of old
    Has turned his thunder into showers of gold,
    Whose silent courtship wins securer joys,
    Taints by degrees, and ruins without noise.
    While parliaments, no more those sacred things
    Which make and rule the destiny of kings.
    Like loaded dice by ministers are thrown,
    And each new set of sharpers cog their own.
    Hence the rich oil that from the Treasury steals
    Drips smooth o'er all the Constitution's wheels,
    Giving the old machine such pliant play[6]
    That Court and Commons jog one joltless way,
    While Wisdom trembles for the crazy car,
    So gilt, so rotten, carrying fools so far;
    And the duped people, hourly doomed to pay
    The sums that bribe their liberties away,[7]--
    Like a young eagle who has lent his plume
    To fledge the shaft by which he meets his doom,--
    See their own feathers pluckt, to wing the dart
    Which rank corruption destines for their heart!
    But soft! methinks I hear thee proudly say,
    "What! shall I listen to the impious lay
    "That dares with Tory license to profane
    "The bright bequests of William's glorious reign?
    "Shall the great wisdom of our patriot sires,
    "Whom Hawkesbury quotes and savory Birch admires,
    "Be slandered thus? shall honest Steele agree
    "With virtuous Rose to call us pure and free,
    "Yet fail to prove it? Shall our patent pair
    "Of wise state-poets waste their words in air,
    "And Pye unheeded breathe his prosperous strain,
    "And Canning take the people's sense in vain?"

        The people!--ah! that Freedom's form should stay
    Where Freedom's spirit long hath past away!
    That a false smile should play around the dead
    And flush the features when the soul hath fled![8]
    When Rome had lost her virtue with her rights,
    When her foul tyrant sat on Capreae's heights,[9]
    Amid his ruffian spies and doomed to death
    Each noble name they blasted with their breath,--
    Even then, (in mockery of that golden time,
    When the Republic rose revered, sublime,
    And her proud sons, diffused from zone to zone,
    Gave kings to every nation but their own,)
    Even then the senate and the tribunes stood,
    Insulting marks, to show how high the flood
    Of Freedom flowed, in glory's bygone day,
    And how it ebbed,--for ever ebbed away![10]

        Look but around--tho' yet a tyrant's sword
    Nor haunts our sleep nor glitters o'er our board,
    Tho' blood be better drawn, by modern quacks,
    With Treasury leeches than with sword or axe;
    Yet say, could even a prostrate tribune's power
    Or a mock senate in Rome's servile hour
    Insult so much the claims, the rights of man,
    As doth that fettered mob, that free divan,
    Of noble tools and honorable knaves,
    Of pensioned patriots and privileged slaves;--
    That party-colored mass which naught can warm
    But rank corruption's heat--whose quickened swarm
    Spread their light wings in Bribery's golden sky,
    Buzz for a period, lay their eggs and die;--
    That greedy vampire which from Freedom's tomb
    Comes forth with all the mimicry of bloom
    Upon its lifeless cheek and sucks and drains
    A people's blood to feel its putrid veins!

        Thou start'st, my friend, at picture drawn so dark--
    "Is there no light?"--thou ask'st--"no lingering spark
    "Of ancient fire to warm us? Lives there none,
    "To act a Marvell's part?"[11]--alas! not one.
    To place and power all public spirit tends,
    In place and power all public spirit ends;
    Like hardy plants that love the air and sky,
    When out, 'twill thrive--but taken in, 'twill die!

        Not bolder truths of sacred Freedom hung
    From Sidney's pen or burned on Fox's tongue,
    Than upstart Whigs produce each market-night,
    While yet their conscience, as their purse, is light;
    While debts at home excite their care for those
    Which, dire to tell, their much-loved country owes,
    And loud and upright, till their prize be known,
    They thwart the King's supplies to raise their own.
    But bees on flowers alighting cease their hum--
    So, settling upon places, Whigs grow dumb.
    And, tho' most base is he who, 'neath the shade
    Of Freedom's ensign plies corruption's trade,
    And makes the sacred flag he dares to show
    His passport to the market of her foe,
    Yet, yet, I own, so venerably dear
    Are Freedom's grave old anthems to my ear,
    That I enjoy them, tho' by traitors sung,
    And reverence Scripture even from Satan's tongue.
    Nay, when the constitution has expired,
    I'll have such men, like Irish wakers, hired
    To chant old "Habeas Corpus" by its side,
    And ask in purchased ditties why it died?

    See yon smooth lord whom nature's plastic pains
    Would seem to've fashioned for those Eastern reigns
    When eunuchs flourisht, and such nerveless things
    As men rejected were the chosen of kings;--[12]
    Even he, forsooth, (oh fraud, of all the worst!)
    Dared to assume the patriot's name at first--
    Thus Pitt began, and thus begin his apes;
    Thus devils when first raised take pleasing shapes.
    But oh, poor Ireland! if revenge be sweet
    For centuries of wrong, for dark deceit
    And withering insult--for the Union thrown
    Into thy bitter cup when that alone
    Of slavery's draught was wanting[13]--if for this
    Revenge be sweet, thou hast that daemon's bliss;
    For sure 'tis more than hell's revenge to fee
    That England trusts the men who've ruined thee:--
    That in these awful days when every hour
    Creates some new or blasts some ancient power,
    When proud Napoleon like the enchanted shield
    Whose light compelled each wondering foe to yield,
    With baleful lustre blinds the brave and free
    And dazzles Europe into slavery,--
    That in this hour when patriot zeal should guide,
    When Mind should rule and--Fox should not have died,
    All that devoted England can oppose
    To enemies made fiends and friends made foes,
    Is the rank refuse, the despised remains
    Of that unpitying power, whose whips and chains
    Drove Ireland first to turn with harlot glance
    Towards other shores and woo the embrace of France;--
    Those hacked and tainted tools, so foully fit
    For the grand artisan of mischief, Pitt,
    So useless ever but in vile employ,
    So weak to save, so vigorous to destroy--
    Such are the men that guard thy threatened shore,
    Oh England! sinking England! boast no more.



Extra Info:
[1] England began very early to feel the effects of cruelty towards her dependencies. "The severity of her government [says Macpherson] contributed more to deprive her of the continental dominions of the family of the Plantagenet than the arms of France."--See his History, vol. i.

[2] "By the total reduction of the kingdom of Ireland in 1691[says Burke], the ruin of the native Irish, and in a great measure, too, of the first races of the English, was completely accomplished. The new English interested was settled with as solid a stability as anything in human affairs can look for. All the penal laws of that unparalleled code of oppression, which were made after the last event, were manifestly the effects of national hatred and scorn towards a conquered people, whom the victors delighted to trample upon, and were not at all afraid to provoke." Yet this is the era to which the wise Common Council of Dublin refer us for "invaluable blessings," etc.

[3] The drivelling correspondence between James I and his "dog Steenie" (the Duke of Buckingham), which we find among the Hardwicke Papers, sufficiently shows, if we wanted any such illustration, into what doting, idiotic brains the plan at arbitrary power may enter.

[4] Tacitus has expressed his opinion, in a passage very frequently quoted, that such a distribution of power as the theory of the British constitution exhibits is merely a subject of bright speculation, "a system more easily praised than practised, and which, even could it happen to exist, would certainly not prove permanent;" and, in truth, a review of England's annals would dispose us to agree with the great historian's remark. For we find that at no period whatever has this balance of the three estates existed; that the nobles predominated till the policy of Henry VII, and his successor reduced their weight by breaking up the feudal system of property; that the power of the Crown became then supreme and absolute, till the bold encroachments of the Commons subverted the fabric altogether; that the alternate ascendency of prerogative and privilege distracted the period which followed the Restoration; and that lastly, the Acts of 1688, by laying the foundation of an unbounded court- influence, have secured a preponderance to the Throne, which every succeeding year increases. So that the vaunted British constitution has never perhaps existed but in mere theory.

[5] The last great wound given to the feudal system was the Act of the 12th of Charles II, which abolished the tenure of knight's service in capite, and which Blackstone compares, for its salutary influence upon property, to the boasted provisions of Magna Charta itself. Yet even in this act we see the effects of that counteracting spirit which has contrived to weaken every effort of the English nation towards liberty.

[6] "They drove so fast [says Wellwood of the ministers of Charles I.], that it was no wonder that the wheels and chariot broke."--(Memoirs p. 86.)

[7] Among those auxiliaries which the Revolution of 1688 marshalled on the side of the Throne, the bugbear of Popery has not been the least convenient and serviceable. Those unskilful tyrants, Charles and James, instead of profiting by that useful subserviency which has always distinguished the ministers of our religious establishment, were so infatuated as to plan the ruin of this best bulwark of their power and moreover connected their designs upon the Church so undisguisedly with their attacks upon the Constitution that they identified in the minds of the people the interests of their religion and their liberties. During those times therefore "No Popery" was the watchword of freedom and served to keep the public spirit awake against the invasions of bigotry and prerogative.

[8] "It is a scandal [said Sir Charles Sedley in William's reign] that a government so sick at heart as ours is should look so well in the face."

[9] The senate still continued, during the reign of Tiberius, to manage all the business of the public: the money was then and long after coined by their authority, and every other public affair received their sanction.

[10] There is something very touching in what Tacitus tells us of the hopes that revived in a few patriot bosoms, when the death of Augustus was near approaching, and the fond expectation with which they already began "bona libertatis incassum disserere."

[11] Andrew Marvell, the honest opposer of the court during the reign of Charles the Second, and the last member of parliament who, according to the ancient mode, took wages from his constituents. The Commons have, since then, much changed their pay-masters.

[12] According to Xenophon, the chief circumstance which recommended these creatures to the service of Eastern princes was the ignominious station they held in society, and the probability of their being, upon this account, more devoted to the will and caprice of a master, from whose notice alone they derived consideration, and in whose favor they might seek refuge from the general contempt of mankind.

[13] Among the many measures, which, since the Revolution, have contributed to increase the influence of the Throne, and to feed up this "Aaron's serpent" of the constitution to its present healthy and respectable magnitude, there have been few more nutritive than the Scotch and Irish Unions.



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