[The History of England from the Accession of James II. by Thomas Babington Macaulay]@TWC D-Link bookThe History of England from the Accession of James II. CHAPTER XXIV 149/237
His gown excludes him from the closest and most tender of human relations, and at the same time dispenses him from the observation of the fashionable code of honour. Such a priest was Portocarrero; and he seems to have been a consummate master of his craft.
To the name of statesman he had no pretensions.
The lofty part of his predecessor Ximenes was out of the range, not more of his intellectual, than his moral capacity.
To reanimate a paralysed and torpid monarchy, to introduce order and economy into a bankrupt treasury, to restore the discipline of an army which had become a mob, to refit a navy which was perishing from mere rottenness, these were achievements beyond the power, beyond even the ambition, of that ignoble nature.
But there was one task for which the new minister was admirably qualified, that of establishing, by means of superstitious terror, an absolute dominion over a feeble mind; and the feeblest of all minds was that of his unhappy sovereign.
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