The Fortunes of Nigel | Page 3

Walter Scott
"ancient gentlemen, who had
left their inheritance whole and well furnished with goods and chattels
(having thereupon kept good houses) unto their sons, lived to see part
consumed in riot and excess, and the rest in possibility to be utterly lost;
the holy state of matrimony made but a May-game, by which divers
families had been subverted; brothel houses much frequented, and even
great persons, prostituting their bodies to the intent to satisfy their lusts,
consumed their substance in lascivious appetites. And of all sorts, such
knights and gentlemen, as either through pride or prodigality--had
consumed their substance, repairing to the city, and to the intent to
consume their virtue also, lived dissolute lives; many of their ladies and
daughters, to the intent to maintain themselves according to their
dignity, prostituting their bodies in shameful manner. Ale-houses,
dicing-houses, taverns, and places of iniquity, beyond manner
abounding in most places."

Nor is it only in the pages of a puritanical, perhaps a satirical writer,
that we find so shocking and disgusting a picture of the coarseness of
the beginning of the seventeenth century. On the contrary, in all the
comedies of the age, the principal character for gaiety and wit is a
young heir, who has totally altered the establishment of the father to
whom he has succeeded, and, to use the old simile, who resembles a
fountain, which plays off in idleness and extravagance the wealth
which its careful parents painfully had assembled in hidden reservoirs.
And yet, while that spirit of general extravagance seemed at work over
a whole kingdom, another and very different sort of men were
gradually forming the staid and resolved characters, which afterwards
displayed themselves during the civil wars, and powerfully regulated
and affected the character of the whole English nation, until, rushing
from one extreme to another, they sunk in a gloomy fanaticism the
splendid traces of the reviving fine arts.
From the quotations which I have produced, the selfish and disgusting
conduct of Lord Dalgarno will not perhaps appear overstrained; nor
will the scenes in Whitefriars and places of similar resort seem too
highly coloured. This indeed is far from being the case. It was in James
I.'s reign that vice first appeared affecting the better classes in its gross
and undisguised depravity. The entertainments and amusements of
Elizabeth's time had an air of that decent restraint which became the
court of a maiden sovereign; and, in that earlier period, to use the words
of Burke, vice lost half its evil by being deprived of all its grossness. In
James's reign, on the contrary, the coarsest pleasures were publicly and
unlimitedly indulged, since, according to Sir John Harrington, the men
wallowed in beastly delights; and even ladies abandoned their delicacy
and rolled about in intoxication. After a ludicrous account of a mask, in
which the actors had got drunk, and behaved themselves accordingly,
he adds, "I have much marvelled at these strange pageantries, and they
do bring to my recollection what passed of this sort in our Queen's days,
in which I was sometimes an assistant and partaker: but never did I see
such lack of good order and sobriety as I have now done. The
gunpowder fright is got out of all our heads, and we are going on
hereabout as if the devil was contriving every man should blow up
himself by wild riot, excess, and devastation of time and temperance.
The great ladies do go well masqued; and indeed, it be the only show of

their modesty to conceal their countenance, but alack, they meet with
such countenance to uphold their strange doings, that I marvel not at
aught that happens."[Footnote: Harrington's Nugae Antique, vol. ii. p.
352. For the gross debauchery of the period, too much encouraged by
the example of the monarch, who was, in other respects, neither
without talent nor a good-natured disposition, see Winwood's
Memorials, Howell's Letters, and other Memorials of the time; but
particularly, consult the Private Letters and Correspondence of Steenie,
alias Buckingham, with his reverend Dad and Gossip, King James,
which abound with the grossest as well as the most childish language.
The learned Mr. D'Israeli, in an attempt to vindicate the character of
James, has only succeeded in obtaining for himself the character of a
skilful and ingenious advocate, without much advantage to his royal
client]
Such being the state of the court, coarse sensuality brought along with
it its ordinary companion, a brutal degree of undisguised selfishness,
destructive alike of philanthropy and good breeding; both of which, in
their several spheres, depend upon the regard paid by each individual to
the interest as well as the feelings of others. It is in such a time that the
heartless and shameless man of wealth and power may, like the
supposed Lord Dalgarno, brazen out
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