What do you think?
Rate this book


608 pages, Paperback
First published October 6, 1980
If all this were not bad enough, those politicians who with a fair degree of certainty can be classified as Whigs and Tories at the end of William’s reign appear to hold different ideas and have different aims from those Whigs and Tories before and immediately after the Glorious Revolution. Looking at the political history of the 1690s, the historian is in danger of suffering from attacks of double vision. With one eye he sees Whigs and Tories; with the other he sees court and country MPs.
Prolific though he was as a writer and preacher, there is very little evidence that Sacheverell had any profound intellectual ability. His gifts lay in the propounding of ideas not in their formulation; he was the most prominent of a crop of brilliant, if detestable, Anglican preachers produced by Oxford University in the eighteenth century. Like most self-appointed spokesmen of “the silent majority” Sacheverell not only voiced the fears of many, but also in the process exaggerated them and so inflamed public opinion, sometimes to the point of violence.Unlike our open forums that appear to exist without restraint, Dr. Sacheverell’s activities met with sanction. He was impeached by Parliament and convicted, albeit with a slight punishment – three years’ suspension from preaching.