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rights of their country. the success of this work induced him to go back to the history of the Tudors, and having now taken
his side as the apologist of arbitrary power in England, the new work was to be made a support for the old. accordingly all
the arbitrary acts of the Tudor sovereigns were industriously selected and displayed, as regular exercises of constitutional
authority, and the resistance to them assumes the hue of factious opposition. he then went back the last step, and undertook
to fill up the chasm from the Roman invasion to the accession of the Tudors, making this, as the second work, still a justification
of the first; and, of the whole, a continued advocation of the heresy that, by the English constitution, the powers of the
monarch were every thing, and the rights of the people nothing: a heresy into which he probably would not have fallen had
he begun his history at the beginning. yet so fascinating is every part of his work, and really so valuable it’s candid parts,
that it will be read, and is read by every student, on his entrance into English history: and the young reader who can lay
down Hume under any impression favorable to English liberty, must have a mind of extraordinary vigor and self possession.
and now as the elementary & standard book of English history, the whig spirit of that country has been compleatly sapped by
it, has nearly disappeared, and toryism become the general weed of the nation. what the patriots of the last age dreaded &
deprecated from a standing army, and what could not have been atchieved for the crown by any standing army, but with torrents
of blood, one man, by the magic of his pen, has effected covertly, insensibly, peaceably; and has made voluntary converts
of the best men of the present age to the parricide opinions of the worst of the last. whether oppressive taxation is not
now reviving the feelings of liberty which Hume had lulled to rest, is a question which we cannot at this distance decide.
"
As the knolege of our own history must be based on that of England, so here, as there, Hume furnishes that basis: and here,
as there, the young reader will retain a bias unfavorable to, what that has prepared him to consider A1, the factious freedom
of the people: and when, from a student, he becomes a statesman, he will become also the tory of our constitution, disposed
to monarchise the government, by strengthening the Executive, and weakening the popular branch, and by drawing the municipal
administration of the states into the vortex of the general authority. as it is quite impracticable to put down such a book
as this, we can only sheathe it’s poison by some antidote. this is to be attempted in two ways. reprint Hume with the text
entire, and in collateral columns, or in Notes, place the Antidotes of it’s disguises, it’s misrepresentations, it’s concealments,
it’s sophisms, and ironies; by confronting with them authentic truths from Fox, Ludlow, M
c.Caulay, Rapin and other honest writers. this would make a work of great volume, and would require for it’s execution profound
judgment and learning in English history. the 2
d. method is that which Baxter has adopted. he gives you the text of Hume, purely and verbally, till he comes to some misrepresentation
or omission, some sophism or sarcasm, meant to pervert the truth; he then alters the text silently, makes it what truth and
candor say it should be, and resumes the original text again, as soon as it becomes innocent, without having warned you of
your rescue from misguidance. and these corrections are so cautiously introduced that you are rarely sensible of the momentary
change of your guide. you go on reading true history as if Hume himself had given it. it is unfortunate, I think, that Baxter
has also abridged the work; not by alterations of text but by omitting wholly such transactions and incidents as he supposed
had become less interesting to ordinary readers than they were in Hume’s day. this brings indeed the work within more moderate
compass, accomodated perhaps to the time and taste of the greater bulk of readers; yet for those who aim at a thoro’ knolege
of that history, it would have been more desirable to have the entire work corrected in the same way. but we must now take
it as it is; and, by reprinting it, place in the hands of our students an elementary history which may strengthen instead
of weakening their affections to the republican principles of their own country and it’s constitution. I say
we
should reprint it; because so deeply rooted is Humism in England, that I believe this corrective has never gone to a 2
d. edition. it still remains, as at first in the form of a ponderous 4
to. of close print, which will probably make 3. or 4. vols 8
vo.
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