Lectures on Foreign History by J M Thompson is one of my favourite books. I keep going back to it. As a tutor at Cambridge remarked, the Reverend historian wrote at a time when good writing was a prized attribute of the historian – one which we hardly see now.
Here is part of the author’s lecture on the reaction of the Church to the Reformation.
First came the Jesuits – then called ‘the Company of Jesus’. The Company was, he says, a military body living under military discipline. All religious orders had a vow of obedience, but that of the Jesuits was ‘specially strict’. The members were to be directed and ruled ‘as though they were a dead body.’
As for liberty of thought, there is no more room for patriotic agnosticism in West Point than for Jesuit agnosticism in a Jesuit College.
Well, all that has a very different ambience here and now.
Then came the Inquisition.
After this auspicious beginning, the Spanish Inquisition never looked back. It became a weapon of the State as well as the Church. It punished political liberalism as it punished unorthodoxy in religion – they were regraded as two sides of the same coin. It was turned less against Protestants than against Jews, Moors, and renegade Jewish Christians. It chose its victims from the classes best worth plundering. If they could not be burnt, at least their goods might be confiscated, or they might be frightened into purchasing their freedom cash down.
The Reverend was a man of the cloth – and surely also a man of the world.
Elsewhere, we read of the Duke of Orleans in what was called ‘the barbarous age’. ‘His Godhead was the Trinity of wealth, of women, and of wine’.
But it was said that at birth the fairies had given him every gift, but the last fairy said: ‘He will possess all the talents, except the talent for making use of them.’
I know just what the fairies meant – the risk manager’s nightmare.