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3:4
SHORT STUDIES,
Charles had no son, and the Duke of York was
not Catholic only, but fanatically Catholic. Lord
Russell led the opposition in Parliament. He shared
to the bottom of his heart in the old English dread
and hatred of Popery. He impeached Buckingham
and Arlington. He believed to the last in tle
reality of the. Popish plot, and he accepted Oates
and Dangerfield as credible witnesses. He carried
a Bill prohibiting Papists from sitting in Parliament.
If Papists could not sit in Parliament, still less
ought they to be on the throne, and the House of
Commons, under his influence, passed the Exclusion
Bill, cutting off the Duke of York. Russell carried
it with his own hands to the House of Lords, and
session after session, dissolution after dissolution,
he tried to force the Lords to agree to it, No
wonder that the Duke of York hated him, and
would not spare him when he caught him tripping.
When constitutional opposition failed, a true Russell
would have been content to wait. But the husband
of Lady Rachel drifted into something which, if not
treason, was curiously like it, and under the shadow
of his example a plot was formed by ruder spirits to
save the nation by killing both the Duke and the
King. Lord Russell was not privy to the Rye House
affair, but he admitted that he had taken part in a