FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1612   1613   1614   1615   1616   1617   1618   1619   1620   1621   1622   1623   1624   1625   1626   1627   1628   1629   1630   1631   1632   1633   1634   1635   1636  
1637   1638   1639   1640   1641   1642   1643   1644   1645   1646   1647   1648   1649   1650   1651   1652   1653   1654   1655   1656   1657   1658   1659   1660   1661   >>   >|  
cre_ of the inhabitants; and in obedience to his command, seven thousand men, women and children were butchered in the space of three hours. The foregoing are a few of many instances in the history of Rome, and of a countless multitude in the history of the world, illustrating the truth, that the lodgement of arbitrary power, in the best human hands, is always a fearfully perilous experiment; that the mildest tempers, the most humane and benevolent dispositions, the most blameless and conscientious previous life, with the most rigorous habits of justice, are no security, that, in a moment of temptation, the possessors of such power will not make their subjects their victims; illustrating also the truth, that, while men may exhibit nothing but honor, honesty, mildness, justice, and generosity, in their intercourse with those of their own grade, or language, or nation, or hue, they may practice towards others, for whom they have contempt and aversion, the most revolting meanness, perpetrate robbery unceasingly, and inflict the severest privations, and the most barbarous cruelties. But this is not all: history is full of examples, showing not only the effects of arbitrary power on its victims, but its terrible reaction on those who exercise it; blunting their sympathies, and hardening to adamant their hearts toward _them_, at least, if not toward the human race generally. This is shown in the fact, that almost every tyrant in the history of the world, has entered upon the exercise of absolute power with comparative moderation; multitudes of them with marked forbearance and mildness, and not a few with the most signal condescension, magnanimity, gentleness and compassion. Among these last are included those who afterwards became the bloodiest monsters that ever cursed the earth. Of the Roman Emperors, almost every one of whom perpetrated the most barbarous atrocities, Vitellius seems to have been the only one who cruelly exercised his power from the _outset_. Most of the other emperors, sprung up into fiends in the hot-bed of arbitrary power. If they had not been plied with its fiery stimulants, but had lived under the legal restraints of other men, instead of going to the grave under the curses of their generation, multitudes might have called them blessed. The moderation which has generally distinguished absolute monarchs at the commencement of their reigns, was doubtless in some cases assumed from policy; in the grea
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1612   1613   1614   1615   1616   1617   1618   1619   1620   1621   1622   1623   1624   1625   1626   1627   1628   1629   1630   1631   1632   1633   1634   1635   1636  
1637   1638   1639   1640   1641   1642   1643   1644   1645   1646   1647   1648   1649   1650   1651   1652   1653   1654   1655   1656   1657   1658   1659   1660   1661   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

history

 

arbitrary

 
mildness
 

multitudes

 

victims

 

justice

 

moderation

 

generally

 

exercise

 

absolute


barbarous

 
illustrating
 
bloodiest
 

monsters

 
included
 
compassion
 

cursed

 

perpetrated

 

atrocities

 

Vitellius


Emperors

 

gentleness

 

magnanimity

 

entered

 

tyrant

 

butchered

 

children

 

forbearance

 

signal

 
condescension

marked

 

policy

 
comparative
 

thousand

 

assumed

 
restraints
 

stimulants

 
curses
 

generation

 
monarchs

commencement

 

reigns

 

distinguished

 
called
 

blessed

 

inhabitants

 
outset
 

obedience

 

command

 
cruelly