Читать книгу Magna Carta: A Commentary on the Great Charter of King John. With an Historical Introduction онлайн

6 страница из 194

I am indebted to four friends who have kindly read my proof sheets, to Mr. W. R. J. Gray, and Mr. Robert A. Moody, whose good offices in this direction are not now rendered for the first time, and to two of the members of my Honours Class of 1903-4, Mr. A. C. Black, Jun., and Mr. D. B. Mungo, all of whom have been zealous in help and fertile in suggestion.

Knightswood, Elderslie,

Renfrewshire, 6th February, 1905

HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION.

ssss1

PART I.

EVENTS LEADING TO MAGNA CARTA.

ssss1

The Great Charter is too often treated as the outcome of purely accidental causes. Students of its origin are sometimes content to explain it as a mere tangible product of the successful resistance called forth by the tyrannies of King John. That monarch’s personal misdeeds, it is maintained, goaded into determined action a fierce unflinching opposition which never rested until it had achieved success; and the outcome of this success was the winning of the Great Charter of Liberties. The moving causes of events of such tremendous moment are thus sought in the characteristics and vices of one man. If John had never lived and sinned, so it would appear, the foundations of English freedom would never have been laid.

Правообладателям