History of England, from the Accession of James the Second, the — Volume 5 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 347 pages of information about History of England, from the Accession of James the Second, the — Volume 5.

History of England, from the Accession of James the Second, the — Volume 5 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 347 pages of information about History of England, from the Accession of James the Second, the — Volume 5.

That the Scotch are a people eminently intelligent, wary, resolute and self possessed, is obvious to the most superficial observation.  That they are a people peculiarly liable to dangerous fits of passion and delusions of the imagination is less generally acknowledged, but is not less true.  The whole kingdom seemed to have gone mad.  Paterson had acquired an influence resembling rather that of the founder of a new religion, that of a Mahomet, that of a Joseph Smith, than that of a commercial projector.  Blind faith in a religion, fanatical zeal for a religion, are too common to astonish us.  But such faith and zeal seem strangely out of place in the transactions of the money market.  It is true that we are judging after the event.  But before the event materials sufficient for the forming of a sound judgment were within the reach of all who cared to use them.  It seems incredible that men of sense, who had only a vague and general notion of Paterson’s scheme, should have staked every thing on the success of that scheme.  It seems more incredible still that men to whom the details of that scheme had been confided should not have looked into any of the common books of history or geography in which an account of Darien might have been found, and should not have asked themselves the simple question, whether Spain was likely to endure a Scotch colony in the midst of her Transatlantic dominions.  It was notorious that she claimed the sovereignty of the isthmus on specious, nay, on solid, grounds.  A Spaniard had been the first discoverer of the coast of Darien.  A Spaniard had built a town and established a government on that coast.  A Spaniard had, with great labour and peril, crossed the mountainous neck of land, had seen rolling beneath him the vast Pacific, never before revealed to European eyes, had descended, sword in hand, into the waves up to his girdle, and had there solemnly taken possession of sea and shore in the name of the Crown of Castile.  It was true that the region which Paterson described as a paradise had been found by the first Castilian settlers to be a land of misery and death.  The poisonous air, exhaled from rank jungle and stagnant water, had compelled them to remove to the neighbouring haven of Panama; and the Red Indians had been contemptuously permitted to live after their own fashion on the pestilential soil.  But that soil was still considered, and might well be considered, by Spain as her own.  In many countries there were tracts of morass, of mountain, of forest, in which governments did not think it worth while to be at the expense of maintaining order, and in which rude tribes enjoyed by connivance a kind of independence.  It was not necessary for the members of the Company of Scotland trading to Africa and the Indies to look very far for an example.  In some highland districts, not more than a hundred miles from Edinburgh, dwelt clans which had always regarded the authority of King, Parliament, Privy Council and Court of Session, quite as little as the

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History of England, from the Accession of James the Second, the — Volume 5 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.