An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations - Adam Smith (ebooks children's books free .TXT) 📗
- Author: Adam Smith
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which he may excite in the greater part of the individuals of the
order. Those fears and expectations may consist in the fear of
deprivation or other punishment, and in the expectation of
further preferment.
In all Christian churches, the benefices of the clergy are a sort
of freeholds, which they enjoy, not during pleasure, but during
life or good behaviour. If they held them by a more
precarious tenure, and were liable to be turned out upon every
slight disobligation either of the sovereign or of his ministers,
it would perhaps be impossible for them to maintain their
authority with the people, who would then consider them as
mercenary dependents upon the court, in the sincerity of whose
instructions they could no longer have any confidence. But should
the sovereign attempt irregularly, and by violence, to deprive
any number of clergymen of their freeholds, on account, perhaps,
of their having propagated, with more than ordinary zeal, some
factious or seditious doctrine, he would only render, by such
persecution, both them and their doctrine ten times more popular,
and therefore ten times more troublesome and dangerous, than they
had been before. Fear is in almost all cases a wretched
instrument of govermnent, and ought in particular never to be
employed against any order of men who have the smallest
pretensions to independency. To attempt to terrify them, serves
only to irritate their bad humour, and to confirm them in an
opposition, which more gentle usage, perhaps, might easily induce
them either to soften, or to lay aside altogether. The violence
which the French government usually employed in order to oblige
all their parliaments, or sovereign courts of justice, to
enregister any unpopular edict, very seldom succeeded. The means
commonly employed, however, the imprisonment of all the
refractory members, one would think, were forcible enough. The
princes of the house of Stuart sometimes employed the like means
in order to influence some of the members of the parliament of
England, and they generally found them equally intractable. The
parliament of England is now managed in another manner ; and a
very small experiment, which the duke of Choiseul made, about
twelve years ago, upon the parliament of Paris, demonstrated
sufficiently that all the parliaments of France might have been
managed still more easily in the same manner. That experiment was
not pursued. For though management and persuasion are always
the easiest and safest instruments of government as force and
violence are the worst and the most dangerous; yet such, it
seems, is the natural insolence of man, that he almost always
disdains to use the good instrument, except when he cannot or
dare not use the bad one. The French government could and durst
use force, and therefore disdained to use management and
persuasion. But there is no order of men, it appears I believe,
from the experience of all ages, upon whom it is so dangerous or
rather so perfectly ruinous, to employ force and violence, as
upon the respected clergy of an established church. The
rights, the privileges, the personal liberty of every individual
ecclesiastic, who is upon good terms with his own order, are,
even in the most despotic governments, more respected than those
of any other person of nearly equal rank and fortune. It is so in
every gradation of despotism, from that of the gentle and mild
government of Paris, to that of the violent and furious
government of Constantinople. But though this order of men can
scarce ever be forced, they may be managed as easily as any other
; and the security of the sovereign, as well as the public
tranquillity, seems to depend very much upon the means which he
has of managing them ; and those means seem to consist altogether
in the preferment which he has to bestow upon them.
In the ancient constitution of the Christian church, the bishop
of each diocese was elected by the joint votes of the clergy and
of the people of the episcopal city. The people did not long
retain their right of election; and while they did retain it,
they almost always acted under the influence of the clergy, who,
in such spiritual matters, appeared to be their natural guides.
The clergy, however, soon grew weary of the trouble of managimg
them, and found it easier to elect their own bishops themselves.
The abbot, in the same manner, was elected by the monks of the
monastery, at least in the greater part of abbacies. All the
inferior ecclesiastical benefices comprehended within the diocese
were collated by the bishop, who bestowed them upon such
ecclesiastics as he thought proper. All church preferments were
in this manner in the disposal of the church. The sovereign,
though he might have some indirect influence in those elections,
and though it was sometimes usual to ask both his consent to
elect, and his approbation of the election, yet had no direct or
sufficient means of managing the clergy. The ambition of every
clergyman naturally led him to pay court, not so much to his
sovereign as to his own order, from which only he could expect
preferment.
Through the greater part of Europe, the pope gradually drew to
himself, first the collation of almost all bishoprics and
abbacies, or of what were called consistorial benefices, and
afterwards, by various machinations and pretences, of the greater
part of inferior benefices comprehended within each diocese,
little more being left to the bishop than what was barely
necessary to give him a decent authority with his own clergy. By
this arrangement the condition of the sovereign was still worse
than it had been before. The clergy of all the different
countries of Europe were thus formed into a sort of spiritual
army, dispersed in different quarters indeed, but of which all
the movements and operations could now be directed by one head,
and conducted upon one uniform plan. The clergy of each
particular country might be considered as a particular detachment
of that army, of which the operations could easily be supported
and seconded by all the other detachments quartered in the
different countries round about. Each detachment was not only
independent of the sovereign of the country in which it was
quartered, and by which it was maintained, but dependent upon a
foreign sovereign, who could at any time turn its arms against
the sovereign of that particular country, and support them by the
arms of all the other detachments.
Those arms were the most formidable that can well be imagined. In
the ancient state of Europe, before the establishment of arts and
manufactures, the wealth of the clergy gave them the same sort of
influence over the common people which that of the great barons
gave them over their respective vassals, tenants, and retainers.
In the great landed estates, which the mistaken piety both of
princes and private persons had bestowed upon the church,
jurisdictions were established, of the same kind with those of
the great barons, and for the same reason. In those great landed
estates, the clergy, or their bailiffs, could easily keep the
peace, without the support or assistance either of the king or of
any other person; and neither the king nor any other person could
keep the peace there without the support and assistance of the
clergy. The jurisdictions of the clergy, therefore, in their
particular baronies or manors, were equally independent, and
equally exclusive of the authority of the king’s courts, as those
of the great temporal lords. The tenants of the clergy were, like
those of the great barons, almost all tenants at will, entirely
dependent upon their immediate lords, and, therefore, liable to
be called out at pleasure, in order to fight in any quarrel in
which the clergy might think proper to engage them. Over and
above the rents of those estates, the clergy possessed in the
tithes a very large portion of the rents of all the other estates
in every kingdom of Europe. The revenues arising from both those
species of rents were, the greater part of them, paid in kind, in
corn, wine, cattle, poultry, etc. The quantity exceeded greatly
what the clergy could themselves consume; and there were neither
arts nor manufactures, for the produce of which they could
exchange the surplus. The clergy could derive advantage from this
immense surplus in no other way than by employing it, as the
great barons employed the like surplus of their revenues, in the
most profuse hospitality, and in the most extensive charity. Both
the hospitality and the charity of the ancient clergy,
accordingly, are said to have been very great. They not only
maintained almost the whole poor of every kingdom, but many
knights and gentlemen had frequently no other means of
subsistence than by travelling about from monastery to monastery,
under pretence of devotion, but in reality to enjoy the
hospitality of the clergy. The retainers of some particular
prelates were often as numerous as those of the greatest
lay-lords ; and the retainers of all the clergy taken together
were, perhaps, more numerous than those of all the lay-lords.
There was always much more union among the clergy than among the
lay-lords. The former were under a regular discipline and
subordination to the papal authority. The latter were under no
regular discipline or subordination, but almost always equally
jealous of one another, and of the king. Though the tenants and
retainers of the clergy, therefore, had both together been less
numerous than those of the great lay-lords, and their tenants
were probably much less numerous, yet their union would have
rendered them more formidable. The hospitality and charity of the
clergy, too, not only gave them the command of a great temporal
force, but increased very much the weight of their spiritual
weapons. Those virtues procured them the highest respect and
veneration among all the inferior ranks of people, of whom many
were constantly, and almost all occasionally, fed by them.
Everything belonging or related to so popular an order, its
possessions, its privileges, its doctrines, necessarily appeared
sacred in the eyes of the common people; and every violation of
them, whether real or pretended, the highest act of sacrilegious
wickedness and profaneness. In this state of things, if the
sovereign frequently found it difficult to resist the confederacy
of a few of the great nobility, we cannot wonder that he should
find it still more so to resist the united force of the clergy of
his own dominions, supported by that of the clergy of all the
neighbouring dominions. In such circumstances, the wonder is, not
that he was sometimes obliged to yield, but that he ever was able
to resist.
The privileges of the clergy in those ancient times (which to
us, who live in the present times, appear the most absurd), their
total exemption from the secular jurisdiction, for example, or
what in England was called the benefit ofclergy, were the
natural, or rather the necessary, consequences of this state of
things. How dangerous must it have been for the sovereign to
attempt to punish a clergyman for any crime whatever, if his
order were disposed to protect him, and to represent either the
proof as insufficient for convicting so holy a man, or the
punishment as too severe to be inflicted upon one whose person
had been rendered sacred by religion ? The sovereign could, in
such circumstances, do no better than leave him to be tried by
the ecclesiastical courts, who, for the honour of their own
order, were interested to restrain, as much as possible, every
member of it from committing enormous crimes, or even from giving
occasion to such gross scandal as might disgust the minds of the
people.
In the state in which things were, through the greater part of
Europe, during the tenth, eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth
centuries, and
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