CHAPTER IV
THE
INVADERS
Those
who live by agriculture or in towns, and are descended from the
remnant of the ancients, are divided, as I have previously said, into
numerous provinces, kingdoms, and republics. In the middle part of
the country the cities are almost all upon the shores of the Lake, or
within a short distance of the water, and there is therefore more
traffic and communication between them by means of vessels than is
the case with inland towns, whose trade must be carried on by
caravans and waggons. These not only move slowly, but are subject to
be interrupted by the Romany and by the banditti, or persons who, for
moral or political crimes, have been banished from their homes.
It
is in the cities that cluster around the great central lake that all
the life and civilization of our day are found; but there also begin
those wars and social convulsions which cause so much suffering. When
was the Peninsula at peace? and when was there not some mischief and
change brewing in the republics? When was there not a danger from the
northern mainland?
Until
recent years there was little knowledge of, and scarcely any direct
commerce or intercourse between, the central part and the districts
either of the extreme west or the north, and it is only now that the
north and east are becoming open to us; for at the back of the narrow
circle or cultivated land, the belt about the Lake, there extend
immense forests in every direction, through which, till very lately,
no practicable way had been cut. Even in the more civilized central
part it is not to this day easy to travel, for at the barriers, as
you approach the territories of every prince, they demand your
business and your papers; nor even if you establish the fact that you
are innocent of designs against the State, shall you hardly enter
without satisfying the greed of the officials.
A
fine is thus exacted at the gate of every province and kingdom, and
again at the gateways of the towns. The difference of the coinage,
such as it is, causes also great loss and trouble, for the money of
one kingdom (though passing current by command in that territory) is
not received at its nominal value in the next on account of the alloy
it contains. It is, indeed, in many kingdoms impossible to obtain
sterling money. Gold there is little or none anywhere, but silver is
the standard of exchange, and copper, bronze, and brass, sometimes
tin, are the metals with which the greater number of the people
transact their business.
Justice
is corrupt, for where there is a king or a prince it depends on the
caprice of a tyrant, and where there is a republic upon the shout of
the crowd, so that many, if they think they may be put on trial,
rather than face the risk at once escape into the woods. The League,
though based ostensibly on principles the most exalted and beneficial
to humanity, is known to be perverted. The members sworn to honour
and the highest virtue are swayed by vile motives, political hatreds,
and private passions, and even by money.
Men
for ever trample upon men, each pushing to the front; nor is there
safety in remaining in retirement, since such are accused of biding
their time and of occult designs. Though the population of these
cities all counted together is not equal to the population that once
dwelt in a single second-rate city of the ancients, yet how much
greater are the bitterness and the struggle!
Yet
not content with the bloodshed they themselves cause, the tyrants
have called in the aid of mercenary soldiers to assist them. And, to
complete the disgrace, those republics which proclaim themselves the
very home of patriotic virtues, have resorted to the same means. Thus
we see English cities kept in awe by troops of Welshmen, Irish, and
even the western Scots, who swarm in the council-chambers of the
republics, and, opening the doors of the houses, help themselves to
what they will. This, too, in the face of the notorious fact that
these nations have sworn to be avenged upon us, that their vessels
sail about the Lake committing direful acts of piracy, and that twice
already vast armies have swept along threatening to entirely
overwhelm the whole commonwealth.
What
infatuation to admit bands of these same men into the very
strongholds and the heart of the land! As if upon the approach of
their countrymen they would remain true to the oaths they have sworn
for pay, and not rather admit them with open arms. No blame can, upon
a just consideration, be attributed to either of these nations that
endeavour to oppress us. For, as they point out, the ancients from
whom we are descended held them in subjection many hundred years, and
took from them all their liberties.
Thus
the Welsh, or, as they call themselves, the Cymry, say that the whole
island was once theirs, and is theirs still by right of inheritance.
They were the original people who possessed it ages before the
arrival of those whom we call the ancients. Though they were driven
into the mountains of the far distant west, they never forgot their
language, ceased their customs, or gave up their aspirations to
recover their own. This is now their aim, and until recently it
seemed as if they were about to accomplish it. For they held all that
country anciently called Cornwall, having crossed over the Severn,
and marched down the southern shore. The rich land of Devon, part of
Dorset (all, indeed, that is inhabited), and the most part of
Somerset, acknowledged their rule. Worcester and Hereford and
Gloucester were theirs; I mean, of course, those parts that are not
forest.
Their
outposts were pushed forward to the centre of Leicestershire, and
came down towards Oxford. But thereabouts they met with the forces of
which I will shortly speak. Then their vessels every summer sailing
from the Severn, came into the Lake, and, landing wherever there was
an opportunity, they destroyed all things and carried off the spoil.
Is it necessary to say more to demonstrate the madness which
possesses those princes and republics which, in order to support
their own tyranny, have invited bands of these men into their very
palaces and forts?
As
they approached near what was once Oxford and is now Sypolis, the
armies of the Cymry came into collision with another of our invaders,
and thus their forward course to the south was checked. The Irish,
who had hitherto abetted them, turned round to defend their own
usurpations. They, too, say that in conquering and despoiling my
countrymen they are fulfilling a divine vengeance. Their land of
Ireland had been for centuries ground down with an iron tyranny by
our ancestors, who closed their lips with a muzzle, and led them
about with a bridle, as their poets say. But now the hateful Saxons
(for thus both they and the Welsh designate us) are broken, and
delivered over to them for their spoil.
It
is not possible to deny many of the statements that they make, but
that should not prevent us from battling with might and main against
the threatened subjection. What crime can be greater than the
admission of such foreigners as the guards of our cities? Now the
Irish have their principal rendezvous and capital near to the ancient
city of Chester, which is upon the ocean, and at the very top and
angle of Wales. This is their great settlement, their magazine and
rallying-place, and thence their expeditions have proceeded. It is a
convenient port, and well opposite their native land, from which
reinforcements continually arrive, but the Welsh have ever looked
upon their possession of it with jealousy.
At
the period when the Cymry had nearly penetrated to Sypolis or Oxford,
the Irish, on their part, had overrun all the cultivated and
inhabited country in a south and south-easterly line from Chester,
through Rutland to Norfolk and Suffolk, and even as far as Luton.
They would have spread to the north, but in that direction they were
met by the Scots, who had all Northumbria. When the Welsh came near
Sypolis, the Irish awoke to the position of affairs.
Sypolis
is the largest and most important city upon the northern shore of the
Lake, and it is situated at the entrance to the neck of land that
stretches out to the straits. If the Welsh were once well posted
there, the Irish could never hope to find their way to the rich and
cultivated south, for it is just below Sypolis that the Lake
contracts, and forms a strait in one place but a furlong wide. The
two forces thus came into collision, and while they fought and
destroyed each other, Sypolis was saved. After which, finding they
were evenly matched, the Irish withdrew two days' march northwards,
and the Cymry as far westwards.
But
now the Irish, sailing round the outside of Wales, came likewise up
through the Red Rocks, and so into the Lake, and in their turn
landing, harassed the cities. Often Welsh and Irish vessels,
intending to attack the same place, have discerned each other
approaching, and, turning from their proposed action, have flown at
each other's throats. The Scots have not harassed us in the south
much, being too far distant, and those that wander hither come for
pay, taking service as guards. They are, indeed, the finest of men,
and the hardiest to battle with. I had forgotten to mention that it
is possible the Irish might have pushed back the Welsh, had not the
kingdom of York suddenly reviving, by means which shall be related,
valiantly thrust out its masters, and fell upon their rear.
But
still these nations are always upon the verge and margin of our
world, and wait but an opportunity to rush in upon it. Our countrymen
groan under their yoke, and I say again that infamy should be the
portion of those rulers among us who have filled their fortified
places with mercenaries derived from such sources.
The
land, too, is weak, because of the multitude of bondsmen. In the
provinces and kingdoms round about the Lake there is hardly a town
where the slaves do not outnumber the free as ten to one. The laws
are framed for the object of reducing the greater part of the people
to servitude. For every offence the punishment is slavery, and the
offences are daily artificially increased, that the wealth of the few
in human beings may grow with them. If a man in his hunger steal a
loaf, he becomes a slave; that is, it is proclaimed he must make good
to the State the injury he has done it, and must work out his
trespass. This is not assessed as the value of the loaf, nor supposed
to be confined to the individual from whom it was taken.
The
theft is said to damage the State at large, because it corrupts the
morality of the commonwealth; it is as if the thief had stolen a
loaf, not from one, but from every member of the State. Restitution
must, therefore, be made to all, and the value of the loaf returned
in labour a thousandfold. The thief is the bondsman of the State. But
as the State cannot employ him, he is leased out to those who will
pay into the treasury of the prince the money equivalent to the
labour he is capable of performing. Thus, under cover of the highest
morality, the greatest iniquity is perpetrated. For the theft of a
loaf, the man is reduced to a slave; then his wife and children,
unable to support themselves, become a charge to the State, that is,
they beg in the public ways.
This,
too, forsooth, corrupts morality, and they likewise are seized and
leased out to any who like to take them. Nor can he or they ever
become free again, for they must repay to their proprietor the sum he
gave for them, and how can that be done, since they receive no wages?
For striking another, a man may be in the same way, as they term it,
forfeited to the State, and be sold to the highest bidder. A stout
brass wire is then twisted around his left wrist loosely, and the
ends soldered together. Then a bar of iron being put through, a half
turn is given to it, which forces the wire sharply against the arm,
causing it to fit tightly, often painfully, and forms a smaller ring
at the outside. By this smaller ring a score of bondsmen may be seen
strung together with a rope.
To
speak disrespectfully of the prince or his council, or of the nobles,
or of religion, to go out of the precincts without permission, to
trade without license, to omit to salute the great, all these and a
thousand others are crimes deserving of the brazen bracelet. Were a
man to study all day what he must do, and what he must not do, to
escape servitude, it would not be possible for him to stir one step
without becoming forfeit! And yet they hypocritically say that these
things are done for the sake of public morality, and that there are
not slaves (not permitting the word to be used), and no man was ever
sold.
It
is, indeed, true that no man is sold in open market, he is leased
instead; and, by a refined hypocrisy, the owner of slaves cannot sell
them to another owner, but he can place them in the hands of the
notary, presenting them with their freedom, so far as he is
concerned. The notary, upon payment of a fine from the purchaser,
transfers them to him, and the larger part of the fine goes to the
prince. Debt alone under their laws must crowd the land with slaves,
for, as wages are scarcely known, a child from its birth is often
declared to be in debt. For its nourishment is drawn from its mother,
and the wretched mother is the wife of a retainer who is fed by his
lord. To such a degree is this tyranny carried! If any owe a penny,
his doom is sealed; he becomes a bondsman, and thus the estates of
the nobles are full of men who work during their whole lives for the
profit of others. Thus, too, the woods are filled with banditti, for
those who find an opportunity never fail to escape, notwithstanding
the hunt that is invariably made for them, and the cruel punishment
that awaits recapture. And numbers, foreseeing that they must become
bondsmen, before they are proclaimed forfeit steal away by night, and
live as they may in the forests.
How,
then, does any man remain free? Only by the favour of the nobles, and
only that he may amass wealth for them. The merchants, and those who
have license to trade by land or water, are all protected by some
noble house, to whom they pay heavily for permission to live in their
own houses. The principal tyrant is supported by the nobles, that
they in their turn may tyrannise over the merchants, and they again
over all the workmen of their shops and bazaars.
Over
their own servants (for thus they call the slaves, that the word
itself may not be used), who work upon their estates, the nobles are
absolute masters, and may even hang them upon the nearest tree. And
here I cannot but remark how strange it is, first, that any man can
remain a slave rather than die; and secondly, how much stranger it is
that any other man, himself a slave, can be found to hunt down or to
hang his fellow; yet the tyrants never lack executioners. Their
castles are crowded with retainers who wreak their wills upon the
defenceless. These retainers do not wear the brazen bracelet; they
are free. Are there, then, no beggars? Yes, they sit at every corner,
and about the gates of the cities, asking for alms.
Though
begging makes a man forfeit to the State, it is only when he has
thews and sinews, and can work. The diseased and aged, the helpless
and feeble, may break the law, and starve by the roadside, because it
profits no one to make them his slaves. And all these things are done
in the name of morality, and for the good of the human race, as they
constantly announce in their councils and parliaments.
There
are two reasons why the mercenaries have been called in; first,
because the princes found the great nobles so powerful, and can keep
them in check only by the aid of these foreigners; and secondly,
because the number of the outlaws in the woods has become so great
that the nobles themselves are afraid lest their slaves should
revolt, and, with the aid of the outlaws, overcome them.
Now
the mark of a noble is that he can read and write. When the ancients
were scattered, the remnant that was left behind was, for the most
part, the ignorant and the poor. But among them there was here and
there a man who possessed some little education and force of mind. At
first there was no order; but after thirty years or so, after a
generation, some order grew up, and these men, then become aged, were
naturally chosen as leaders. They had, indeed, no actual power then,
no guards or armies; but the common folk, who had no knowledge, came
to them for decision of their disputes, for advice what to do, for
the pronouncement of some form of marriage, for the keeping of some
note of property, and to be united against a mutual danger.
These
men in turn taught their children to read and write, wishing that
some part of the wisdom of the ancients might be preserved. They
themselves wrote down what they knew, and these manuscripts,
transmitted to their children, were saved with care. Some of them
remain to this day. These children, growing to manhood, took more
upon them, and assumed higher authority as the past was forgotten,
and the original equality of all men lost in antiquity. The small
enclosed farms of their fathers became enlarged to estates, the
estates became towns, and thus, by degrees, the order of the nobility
was formed. As they intermarried only among themselves, they
preserved a certain individuality. At this day a noble is at once
known, no matter how coarsely he may be dressed, or how brutal his
habits, by his delicacy of feature, his air of command, even by his
softness of skin and fineness of hair.
Still
the art of reading and writing is scrupulously imparted to all their
legitimate offspring, and scrupulously confined to them alone. It is
true that they do not use it except on rare occasions when necessity
demands, being wholly given over to the chase, to war, and politics,
but they retain the knowledge. Indeed, were a noble to be known not
to be able to read and write, the prince would at once degrade him,
and the sentence would be upheld by the entire caste. No other but
the nobles are permitted to acquire these arts; if any attempt to do
so, they are enslaved and punished. But none do attempt; of what
avail would it be to them?
All
knowledge is thus retained in the possession of the nobles; they do
not use it, but the physicians, for instance, who are famous, are so
because by favour of some baron, they have learned receipts in the
ancient manuscripts which have been mentioned. One virtue, and one
only, adorns this exclusive caste; they are courageous to the verge
of madness. I had almost omitted to state that the merchants know how
to read and write, having special license and permits to do so,
without which they may not correspond. There are few books, and still
fewer to read them; and these all in manuscript, for though the way
to print is not lost, it is not employed since no one wants books.
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