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XLV.

CHA P. uncontrouled afcendant over her people; and while the merited all their esteem by her real virtues, fhe also engaged their affection by her pretended ones. Few fove603. reigns of England fucceeded to the throne in more difficult circumftances; and none ever conducted the government with fuch uniform fuccefs and felicity. Though unacquainted with the practice of toleration, the true fecret for managing religious factions, the preferved her people, by her fuperior prudence, from those confufions, in which theological controverfy had involved all the neighbouring nations: And though her enemies were the most powerful princes of Europe, the most active, the moft enterprifing, the leaft fcrupulous, he was able, by her vigour, to make deep impreffions on their fate: Her own greatness, mean while, remained untouched and unimpaired.

THE wife minifters and brave warriors, who flourifhed under her reign, thare the praise of her fuccefs; but instead of leffening the applaufe due to her, they make great addition to it. They owed, all of them, their advancement to her choice; they were fupported by her conftancy; and, with all their ability, they were never able to acquire any undue afcendant over her. In her family, in her court, in her kingdom, the remained equally mistress: The force of the tender paffions was great over her, but the force of her mind was ftill fuperior; and the combat, which her victory visibly coft her, ferves only to difplay the firmnefs of her refolution, and the loftinefs of her ambitious fentiments.

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THE fame of this princefs, though it has furmounted the prejudices both of faction and bigotry, yet lies ftill expofed to another prejudice, which is more durable because more natural, and which, according to the different views in which we furvey her, is capable either of exalting beyond measure, or diminishing the luftre of her character. This prejudice is founded on the confideration of her sex. When we contemplate her as a woman, we are apt to be ftruck with the higheft admiration of her great qualities and extenlive capacity; but we are alfo apt to require fome more foftness of difpofition, fome greater lenity of temper, fome of thofe amiable weakneffes by which her

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fex is diftinguished. But the true method of eftimating CHA P. her merit, is to lay afide all these confiderations, and XLV. confider her merely as a rational being, placed in authority, and entrusted with the government of mankind. We may find it difficult to reconcile our fancy to her as a wife or a miftrefs; but her qualities as a fovereign, though with fome confiderable exceptions, are the object of undisputed applause and approbation.

APPENDIX.

APPENDIX

III.

Commerce

Government of England-Revenues-
Military force-Manufactures-Learning.

Appendix TH
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HE party amongst us, who have diftinguifhed themielves by their adhering to liberty and a popular government, have long indulged their prejudices against the fucceeding race of princes, by beltowing ment of unbounded panegyrics on the virtue and wifdom of EliEngland. zabeth. They have even been fo extremely ignorant of the tranfactions of this reign, as to extol her for a quaJiry, which, of all others, the was the leaft poffeffed of; a tender regard for the constitution, and a concern for the liberties and privileges of her people. But as it is fcarcely poffible for the prepoffetlions of party to throw a veil much longer over facts fo palpable and undeniable, there is danger left the public thould run into the oppofite extreme, and fhould entertain an aversion to the memory of a princefs, who exercised the royal authority in a manner fo contrary to all the ideas, which we at prefent entertain of a legal conftitution. But Elizabeth only fupported the prerogatives, tranfmitted to her by her immediate predeceffors: She believed that her fubjects were entitled to no more liberty than their ancestors had enjoyed: She found that they entirely acquiefced in her arbitrary administration: And it was not natural for her to find fault with a form of government, by which the herself was invefted with fuch unlimited authority. In the particular exertions of power, the queftion ought never to be forgot, What is beft? But in the general diftribution of power among the feveral members of a constitution, there can seldom be admitted any other question, than, What is ufual? Few examples occur of princes, who have willingly refigned their power:, None of thole who have, without struggle and reluctance, allowed it to be extorted from them. If any other rule than efta

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blished practice be followed, factions and diffentions must Appendix multiply without end: And though many conftitutions, and none more than the British, have been improved even by violent innovations, the praise bestowed on those patriots, to whom the nation was indebted for its privileges, ought to be given with fome referve, and furely without the leaft rancour against those who adhered to the antient conftitution L

In order to understand the antient conftitution of England, there is not a period which deferves more to be ftudied than the reign of Elizabeth. The prerogatives of this princess were scarcely ever difputed, and the therefore employed them without fcruple. Her imperious temper, a circumftance in which he went far beyond her fucceffors, rendered her exertions of power violent and frequent, and difcovered the full extent of her authority: The great popularity which he enjoyed, proves, that he did not infringe any established liberties of the people: There remain monuments numerous enough to afcertain the most noted acts of her administration: And though these monuments must be derived from a fource wide of the ordinary hiftorians, they become only the more authentic on that account, and serve as a stronger proof, that the particular exertions of her power were conceived to be nothing but the ordinary course of administration, fince they were not thought remarkable enough to be recorded even by contemporary writers. If there was any difference in this particular, the people, in former reigns, seem rather to have been more fubmiffive than even during the age of Elizabeth M. It may not here

L By the antient conftitution, is here meant that which prevailed before the fettlement of our prefent plan of liberty. There was a more antient conftitution, where, though the people had perhaps lefs liberty than under the Tudors, yet the king had also lefs authority: The power of the barons was a great check upon him, and exercised great tyranny over them. But there was still a more antient conftitution, viz. that before the figning of the charters, where neither the people nor the barons had any regular privileges, and the power of the government, during the reign of an able prince, was almoft wholly in the king. The English conftitution, like all others, has been in a flate of continual fluctuation.

M In a memorial of the state of the realm, drawn by fecretary Cecil, in 1569, there is this paffage: "Then followeth

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Appendix here be improper to recount fome of the antient prerogaili. tives of the crown, and lay open the fources of that great power, which the English monarchs formerly enjoyed.

ONE of the most antient and moft eftablished inftruments of power was the court of ftar-chamber, which poffeffed an unlimited difcretionary authority of fining, imprifoning, and inflicting corporal punishment, and whofe jurifdiction extended to all forts of offences, contempts, and diforders, that lay not within reach of the common law. The members of this court confifted of the privy council and the judges; men, who all of them enjoyed their offices during pleafure: And when the prince himself was prefent, he was the fole judge, and all the others could only interpose with their advice. There needed but this one court, in any government, to put an end to all regular, legal, and exact plans of liberty. For who durft fet himself in oppofition to the crown and miniftry, or aspire to the character of being a patron of freedom, while expofed to fo arbitrary a jurifdi&tion? I much question, whether any of the abfolute monarchies in Europe contain, at present, so illegal and defpotic a tribunal.

THE Court of High Commiffion was another jurifdiction still more terrible; both because the crime of heresy, of which it took cognizance, was more undefinable than any civil offence, and because its methods of inquifition, and of administering oaths, were more contrary to all the moft fimple ideas of juftice and equity. The fines and imprisonments impofed by this court were frequent: The deprivations and fufpenfions of the clergy for nonconformity were alfo numerous, and comprehended at one time the third of all the ecclefiaftics of England N. The queen, in a letter to the archbishop of Canterbury, faid exprefsly, that he was refolved, "That no man "fhould be fuffered to decline, either on the left or on "the

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"the decay of obedience in civil policy, which being compared with the fearfulness and reverence of all inferior ef"tates to their superiors in times paft, will aftonish any wife "and confiderate perfon, to behold the defperation of refor"mation." Haynes, p. 586. Again, p. 588.

N Neal, vol. i. p. 479.

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