constant vigilance is the price of liberty. The
tendency of our own times, stimulated by scientific
discoveries and their practical application, is to
political consolidation, to the absorption of lesser
communities in greater; just as disintegration was
the leading characteristic of the darker ages.
The scheme of Charlemagne to organize Europe into
a single despotism was a brilliant failure because
the forces which were driving human society into local
and gradual reconstruction around various centres of
crystallization: were irresistible to any countervailing
enginry which the emperor had at his disposal.
The attempt of Philip, eight centuries later, at universal
monarchy, was frivolous, although he could dispose
of material agencies which in the hands of Charlemagne
might have made the dreams of Charlemagne possible.
It was frivolous because the rising instinct of the
age was for religious, political, and commercial freedom
in a far intenser degree than those who lived in that
age were themselves aware. A considerable republic
had been evolved as it were involuntarily out of the
necessities of the time almost without self-consciousness
that it was a republic, and even against the desire
of many who were guiding its destinies. And it
found itself in constant combination with two monarchs,
despotic at heart and of enigmatical or indifferent
religious convictions, who yet reigned over peoples,
largely influenced by enthusiasm for freedom.
Thus liberty was preserved for the world; but, as
the law of human progress would seem to be ever by
a spiral movement, it; seems strange to the superficial
observer not prone to generalizing, that Calvinism,
which unquestionably was the hard receptacle in which
the germ of human freedom was preserved in various
countries and at different epochs, should have so
often degenerated into tyranny. Yet notwithstanding
the burning of Servetus at Geneva, and the hanging
of Mary Dyer at Boston, it is certain that France,
England, the Netherlands, and America, owe a large
share of such political liberty as they have enjoyed
to Calvinism. It may be possible for large masses
of humanity to accept for ages the idea of one infallible
Church, however tyrannical but the idea once admitted
that there may be many churches; that what is called
the State can be separated from what is called the
Church; the plea of infallibility and of authority
soon becomes ridiculous—a mere fiction
of political or fashionable quackery to impose upon
the uneducated or the unreflecting.
And now Essex, Raleigh and Howard, Vere, Warmond and Nassau were about to invade the shores of the despot who sat in his study plotting to annex England, Scotland, Ireland, France, the Dutch republic, and the German empire to the realms of Spain, Portugal, Naples, Milan, and the Eastern and Western Indies, over which he already reigned.