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therefore with Cato, as some writers affect to do; it is certain, that if Cato's virtue feems more splendid in theory, Cicero's will be found superior in practice; the one was romantic, the other rational; the one drawn from the refinements of the schools, the other from nature and social life; the one always unfuccessful, often hurtful; the other always beneficial, often falutary to the republic.

It

To conclude; Cicero's death, though violent, cannot be called untimely: but was the proper end of such a life, which muft have been rendered less glorious, if it had owed its preservation to Antony. was therefore what he not only expected, but in the circumstances to which he was reduced, what he seems even to have wished. For he, who had before been timid in dangers and desponding in distress, yet from the time of Cæfar's death, roused by the isperate state of the republic, aslumed the fortitude of a hero: discarded all fear; defpised all danger; and when he could not free his country from a tyranny, provoked the tyrants to take that life, which he no longer cared to preferve. Thus, like a great aftor on the stage, he referved himself as it were for the last act; and after he had played his part with dignity, refolved to inish it with glory, Middleton's Cicero.

$39. The character of MARTIN LUTHER. While appearances of danger daily increafed, and the tempeft which had been fo long a-gathering, was ready to break forth in all its violence against the proteftant church, Luther was faved by a seasonable death, from feeling or beholding its deftructive rage. Having gone, though in a declining state of heath, and during a rigorous season, to his native city of Eifleben, in order to compose, by his authority, a diffenfion among the counts of Manffield, he was feized with a violent inflammation in his stomach, which in a few days put an end to his life, in the fixtythird year of his age. - As he was raised up by Providence to be the author of one of the greatest and most interesting revolutions recorded in history, there is not any perfon, perhaps, whose character has been drawn with such opposite colours. In his own age, one party, struck with horror and inflamed with rage, when they faw with what a daring hand he overturned every thing which they held to be facred, or valued as beneficial, imputed to him not only all the defects and vices of a

man, but the qualities of a dæmon. The other, warmed with admiration and grati tude, which they thought he merited, as the restorer of light and liberty to the Chriftian church, afcribed to him perfec. tions above the condition of humanity, and viewedrall his actions with a veneration bordering on that which should be paid only to those who are guided by the immediate inspiration of Heaven. It is his own conduct, not the undiilinguishing cenfure, nor the exaggerated praise of his contemporaries, which ought to regulate the opinions of the present age concerning him. Zeal for what he regarded as truth, undaunted intrepidity to maintain it, abilities both natural and acquired to defend it, and unwearied industry to propagate it, are virtues which shine so confpicuoufly in every part of his behaviour, that even his enemies must allow him to have poffefsed them in an eminent degree. To these may be added, with equal justice, such purity, and even austerity of manners, as became one who assumed the character of a reformer; fuch fanctity of life as fuited the doctrine which he delivered; and fuch perfect difinterestedness, as affords no flight prefumption of his fincerity. Superior to all felfish confiderations, a stranger to the elegancies of life, and despising its pleafures, he left the honours and emoluments of the church to his disciples; remaining fatisfied himself in his original state of professor in the university, and paftor to the town of Wittemberg, with the moderate appointments annexed to these offices. His extraordinary qualities were alloyed with no inconfiderable mixture of human frailty, and human paffions. These, however, were of fuch a nature, that they cannot be imputed to malevolence or corruption of heart, but seem to have taken their rife from the same source with many of his virtues. His mind, forcible and vehement in all its operations, roused by great objects, or agitated by violent paffions, broke out, on many occafions, with an impetuosity which astonishes men of feebler fpirits, or fuch as are placed in a more tranquil situation. By carrying some praiseworthy dispositions to excess, he bordered sometimes on what was culpable, and was often betrayed into actions which exposed him to cenfure. His confidence that his own opinions were well founded, approached to arrogance; his courage in afserting them, to raihness; his firmness in adhering to them, to obstinacy; and his zeal in confuting his adversaries, to rage and scurrility. Accustomed himself to confider every thing as fubordinate to truth, he expected the fame deference for it from other men: and, without making any allowances for their timidity or prejudices, he poured forth, against those who disappointed him in this particular, a torrent of invective mingled with contempt. Regardless of any diftinction of rank or character, when his doctrines were attacked, he chastised all his adverfaries, indiscriminately, with the fame rough hand; neither the royal dignity of Henry VIII. nor the eminent learning and ability of Erafmus, screened them from the same abuse with which he treated Tetzel or Eccius.

But these indecencies of which Luther was guilty, must not be imputed wholly to the violence of his temper. They ought to be charged in part on the manners of the age. Among a rude people, unacquainted with those maxims, which, by putting continual restraint on the passions of individuals, have polished society, and rendered it agreeable, disputes of every kind were managed with heat, and strong emotions were uttered in their natural language, without referve or delicacy. At the fame time, the works of learned men were all composed in Latin; and they were not only authorised, by the example of eminent writers in that language, to use their antagonists with the most illiberal scurrility: but, in a dead tongue, indecencies of every kind appear less shocking than in a living language, whose idioms and phrases feem gross, because they are familiar.

In pafling judgment upon the characters of men, we ought to try them by the principles and maxims of their own age, not by those of another. For although virtue and vice are at all times the fame, manners and customs vary continually. Some parts of Luther's behaviour, which to us appear most culpable, gave no difgust to, his contemporaries. It was even by some of those qualities which we are now apt to blame, that he was fitted for accomplishing the great work which he undertook. To roufe mankind, when funk in ignorance or fuperftition, and to encounter the rage of bigotry, armed with power, required the utmolt vehemence of zeal, and a temper daring to excess. A gentle call would neither have reached, nor have excited those to whom it was addressed. A fpirit, more amiable, but less vigorous than Luther's would have shrunk back from the

dangers which he braved and furmounted. Towards the close of Luther's life, though without a perceptible declension of his zeal or abilities, the infirmities of his temper increased upon him, so that he daily grew more peevish, more irafcible, and more impatient of contradiction. Having lived to be witness of his own amazing fuccess; to fee a great part of Europe embrace his doctrines; and to shake the foundation of the Papal throne, before which the mightiest monarchs had trembled, he discovered, on fome occafions, symptoms of vanity and self-applause. He must have been indeed more than man, if, upon contemplating all that he actually accomplished, he had never felt any fentiment of this kind rifing in his breait.

Some time before his death he felt his strength declining, his constitution being worn out by a prodigious multiplicity of business, added to the labour of discharging his minifterial function with unremitting diligence, to the fatigue of conftant study, befides the composition of works as voluminous as if he had enjoyed uninterrupted leisure and retirement. His natural intrepidity did not forfake him at the approach of death: his last conversation with his friends was concerning the happiness reserved for good men in a future world, of which he spoke with the fervour and delight natural to one who expected and wished to enter foon upon the enjoyment of it. The account of his death filled the Roman Catholic party with excessive as well as indecent joy, and damped the fpirits of all his followers; neither party sufficiently confidering that his doctrines were now fo firmly rooted, as to be in a condition to flourish, independent of the hand which first had planted them. His funeral was celebrated by order of the Elector of Saxony, with extraordinary pomp. He left several children by his wife, Catharine Bore, who furvived him: towards the end of the last century, there were in Saxony fome of his descendants in decent and honourable stations.

Robertson.

§ 40. Character of ALFRED, King of

England.

The merit of this prince, both in private and public life, may with advantage be fet in opposition to that of any monarch or citizen which the annals of any age or any nation can present to us. He seems, indeed, to be the complete model of that perfect

perfect character, which, under the denomination of a fage or wife man, the philosophers have been fond of delineating, rather as a fiction of their imagination, than in hopes of ever seeing it reduced to practice: so happily were all his virtues tempered together, so justly were they blended, and fo powerfully did each prevent the other from exceeding its proper bounds. He knew how to conciliate the most enterprising spirit with the coolest moderation; the most obstinate perseverance with the easiest flexibility; the most fevere juftice with the greatest lenity; the greatest rigour in command with the greatest affability of deportment; the higheft capacity and inclination for science, with the most shining talents for action. His civil and his military virtues are almost equally the objects of our admiration, excepting only, that the former being more rare among princes, as well as more ufeful, seem chiefly to challenge our applaufe. Nature also, as if desirous that so bright a production of her skill should be fet in the fairest light, had bestowed on i'm all bodily accomplishments, vigour of limbs, dignity of shape and air, and a pleasant, engaging, and open countenance. Fortune alone, by throwing him into that barbarous age, deprived him of hiftorians worthy to tranfmit his fame to posterity; and we wish to fee him delineated in more lively colours, and with more particular ftrokes, that we may at least perceive fome of those small specks and blemithes, from which, as a man, it is impoffible he could be entirely exempted, Hume.

41. Another Character of ALFRED, Alfred, that he might be the better able to extend his charity and munificence, regulated his finances with the most perfect ceconomy, and divided his revenues into A certain number of parts, which he appropriated to the different expences of the Rate, and the exercise of his own private liberality and devotion; nor was he a less ceconomist in the distribution of his time, which he divided into three equal portions, allotting one to fleep, meals, and exercise; and devoting the other two to writing, reading, business, and prayer. That this division might not be encroached upon inadvertently, he measured them by tapers of an equal fize, which he kept continually burning before the shrines of relics. Alfred seemed to be a genius self-taught, which contrived and comprehended every

thing that could contribute to the security of his kingdom. He was author of that inestimable privilege, peculiar to the fubjects of this nation, which confifts in their being tried by their peers; for he first instituted juries, or at least improved upon an old institution, by specifying the number and qualifications of jurymen, and extending their power to trials of property as well as criminal indictments; but no regulation redounded more to his honour and the advantage of his kingdom, than the measures he took to prevent rapine, murder, and other outrages, which had fo long been committed with impunity. His attention stooped even to the meaneft circumftances of his people's conveniency. He introduced the art of brick-making, and built his own houses of those materials; which being much more durable and fecure from accidents than timber, his example was followed by his subjects in general. He was, doubtleís, an object of most perfect esteem and admiration; for, exclusive of the qualities which distinguished him as a warrior and legislator, his personal character was amiable in every respect. Died 897, aged 52.

§ 42.

Smollett.

Character of WILLIAM the
Conqueror.

Few princes have been more fortunate than this great monarch, or were better entitled to prosperity and grandeur for the abilities and vigour of mind which he displayed in all his conduct. His fpirit was bold and enterprising, yet guided by prudence. His ambition, which was exorbitant, and lay little under the restraints of justice, and still less under those of humanity, ever fubmitted to the dictates of reason and found policy. Born in an age when the minds of een were intractable and unacquainted with fubmiffion, he was yet able to direct them to his purposes; and, partly from the afcendant of his vehement disposition, partly from art and dissimulation, to establish an unlimitted monarchy. Though not insensible to generosity, he was hardened against compaffion, and feemed equally oftentatious and ambitious of eclat in his clemency and his severity. The maxims of his administration were fevere; but might have been useful, had they been folely employed in preserving order in an established government; they were ill calculated for softening the rigours which under the most gentle management are infeparable from conquest. His attempt against England

was

was the last enterprize of the kind, which, during the course of seven hundred years, had fully fucceeded in Europe; and the greatness of his genius broke through those limits, which first the feudal institutions, then the refined policy of princes, have fixed on the several ftates of Chriftendom. Though he rendered himself infinitely odious to his English subjects, he tranfnitted his power to his pofterity, and the throne is ftill filled by his defcendants; a proof that the foundation which he laid was firm and folid, and that amongst all his violences, while he seemed only to gratify the prefent passion, he had still an eve towards futurity. Died Sept, 9, 1037, aged 63*. Hume.

§43. Another Charater of WILLIAM the Conqueror.

From the transactions of William's reign, he appears to have been a prince of great courage, capacity, and ambition; politic, cruel, vindictive, and rapacious; ftern and haughty in his deportment, referved and jealous in his disposition. He was fond of glory; and, though parsimonious in his houfchold, delighted much in often tation. Though fudden and impetuous in his enterprizes, he was cool, deliberate, and indefatigable, in times of danger and difficulty. His aspect was nobly fevere and imperious, his flature tall and portly: his conflitution robuft, and the compofixion of his bones and muscles strong: there was hardly a man of that age, who could bend his bow, or handle his arms. Smollett.

and at the head of armies, he joined to all the capacity that genius could give, all the knowledge and skill that experience could teach, and was a perfect master of the military art, as it was practised in the times wherein he lived. His constitution enabled him to endure any hardships, and very few were equal to him in personal strength, which was an excellence of more importance than it is now, from the manner of fighting then in ufe. It is faid of him, that none except himself could bend his bow. His courage was heroic, and he poffeffed it not only in the field, but (which is more uncommon) in the cabinet, attempting great things with means that to other men appeared totally unequal to such undertakings, and steadily profecuting what he had boldly refolved; being never difturbed or disheartened by difficulties, in the course of his enterprizes; but having that noble vigour of mind, which, instead of bending to opposition, rises against it, and feems to have a power of controlling and commanding Fortune herself.

Nor was he less superior to pleasure than to fear: no luxury foftened him, no riot disordered, no floth relaxed. It helped not a little to maintain the high respect his subjects had for him, that the majesty of his character was never let down by any incontinence or indecent excess. His temperance and his chastity were conftant guards, that secured his mind from all weakness, supported its dignity, and kept it always as it were on the throne. Through his whole life he had no partner. of his bed but his queen; a most extraordinary virtue in one who had lived, even

§ 44. Another Character of WILLIAM from his earliest youth, amidit all the licence

the Conqueror.

The character of this prince has feldom been fet in its true light; some eminent

writers having been dazzled fo much by the more shining parts of it, that they have hardly feen his faults; while others, out of a strong deteftation of tyranny, have been unwilling to allow him the praise he deferves.

He may with juffice be ranked among the greatest generals any age has produced. There was united in him activity, vigilance, intrepidity, caution, great force of judgment, and never-failing prefence of mind. He was strict in his difcipline, and kept his foldiers in perfect obedience; yet preserved their affection. Having been from his very childhood continually in war,

of camps, the allurements of a court, and the seductions of fovereign power! Had he kept his oaths to his people as well as he did his marriage vow, he would have

been the best of kings; but he indulged other paffions of a worfe nature, and infinitely more detrimental to the public than those he restrained. A luft of power, which no regard to justice could limit, the most unrelenting cruelty, and the most insatiable avarice, poffeffed his foul. It is true, in. deed, that among many asts of extreme inhumanity some thining instances of clemency may be produced, that were either effects of his policy, which taught him this method of acquiring friends, or of his magnanimity, which made him flight a weak and fubdued enemy, such as was Edgar Atheling, in whom he found neither fpirit nor talents able to contend with him for

* Smollett says, 61.

great

for the crown. But where he had no advantage nor pride in forgiving, his nature discovered itself to be utterly void of all fenfe of compaffion; and fome barbarities which he committed, exceeded the bounds that even tyrants and conquerors prescribe to themselves.

Moft of our ancient hiftorians give him the character of a very religious prince; but his religion was after the fashion of those times, belief without examination, and devotion without piety. It was a religion that prompted him to endow monafteries, and at the same time allowed him to pillage kingdoms; that threw him on his knees before a relic or cross, but fuffered him unrestrained to trample upon the liberties and rights of mankind.

As to his wisdom in government, of which some modern writers have spoken very highly, he was indeed so far wife that, through a long unquiet reign, he knew how to fupport oppreffion by terror, and employ the properest means for the carrying on a very iniquitous and violent administration. But that which alone deferves the name of wisdom in the character of a king, the maintaining of authority by the exercise of those virtues which make the happiness of his people, was what, with all his abilities, he does not appear to have possessed. Nor did he excel in those foothing and popular arts, which sometimes change the complexion of a tyranny, and give it a fallacious appearance of freedom. His government was harsh and despotic, violating even the principles of that conftitution which he himself had etablished. Yet fo far he performed the duty of a fovereign, that he took care to maintain a good police in his realm; curb ing licentiousness with a strong hand, which, in the tumultuous state of his government, was a great and difficult work. How well he performed it, we may learn even from the teftimony of a contemporary Saxon hiftorian, who says, that during his reign a man might have travelled in perfect security all over the kingdom with his bofom full of gold, nor durft any kill another in revenge of the greatest offences, nor offer violence to the chastity of a woman. But it was a poor compenfation, that the highways were safe, when the courts of jultice were dens of thieves, and when almost every man in authority, or in office, ufed his power to oppress and pillage the people. The king himself did not only tolerate, but encourage, support, and even Share these extortions. Though the great

ness of the ancient landed estate of the crown, and the feudal profits to which he legally was entitled, rendered him one of the richest monarchs in Europe, he was not content with all that opulence, but by authorifing the sheriffs, who collected his revenues in the several counties, to practife the most grievous vexations and abuses, for the railing of them higher, by a perpetual auction of the crown-lands, fo that none of his tenants could be secure of poffeffion, if any other would come and offer more; by various iniquities in the court of exchequer, which was entirely Norman; by forfeitures wrongfully taken; aud, laftly, by arbitrary and illegal taxations, he drew into his treasury much too great a proportion of the wealth of his kingdom.

It must however be owned, that if his avarice was infatiably and unjustly rapacious, it was not meanly parfimonious, nor of that fordid kind which brings on a prince dishonour and contempt. He supported the dignity of his crown with a decent magnificence; and though he never was lavith, he fometimes was liberal, more especially to his foldiers and to the church. But looking on money as a neceffary means of maintaining and increasing power, he desired to accumulate as much as he could, rather, perhaps, from an ambitious than a covetous nature; at leaft his avarice was subservient to his ambition, and he laid up wealth in his coffers, as he did arms in his magazines, to be drawn out, when any proper occafion required it, for the defence and enlargement of his dominions.

Upon the whole, he had many great qualities, but few virtues; and if those actions that most particularly diftinguish the man or the king are impartially confidered, we shall find that in his character there is much to admire, but ftill more to abhor. Lyttelton.

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