Page:Hume - Essays and Treatises on Several Subjects - 1809 - Vol. 1.djvu/75

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THE PARTIES OF GREAT BRITAIN.
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thoughts, is always fatal to priestly power, and to those pious frauds, on which it is commonly founded; and, by an infallible connection, which prevails among all kinds of liberty, this privilege can never be enjoyed, at least has never yet been enjoyed, but in a free government. Hence it must happen, in such a constitution as that of Great Britain, that the established clergy, while things are in their natural situation, will always be of the Court-party; as, on the contrary, dissenters of all kinds will be of the Country-party; since they can never hope for that toleration, which they stand in need of, but by means of our free government. All princes, that have aimed at despotic power, have known of what importance it was to gain the established clergy: As the clergy, on their part, have shewn a great facility in entering into the views of such princes[1]. Gustavus Vasa was, perhaps, the only ambitious monarch that ever depressed the church, at the same time that he discouraged liberty. But the exorbitant power of the bishops in Sweden, who, at that time, over-topped the crown itself, together with their attachment to a foreign family, was the reason of his embracing such an unusual system of politics.

This observation, concerning the propensity of priests to the government of a single person, is not true with regard to one sect only. The Presbyterian and Calvinistic clergy in Holland were professed friends to the family of Orange; as the Arminians, who were esteemed heretics, were of the Louvestein faction, and zealous for liberty. But if a prince have the choice of both, it is easy to see

  1. Judæi sibi ipsi reges imposuere; qui mobilitate vulgi expulsi, resumpta, per arma dominatione; fugas civium, urbium eversiones, fratrum, coniugum, parentum neces, aliaque solita regibus ausi, superstitionem fovebant; quia honor sacerdotti firmamentum potentiæ adsumebatur.Tacit. hist. lib. v.
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