The treaty then concluded by Sir George
Macartney
was not on the terms which the Earl of Buckinghamshire had refused.
Edmund Burke
Besides, if that very specific power of levying money in the colonies were not retained as a sacred trust in the hands of Great Britain (to be used, not in the first instance for supply, but in the last exigence for con trol), it is obvious, that the presiding authority of Great Britain, as the head, the arbiter, and director of the whole empire, would vanish into an empty name, without operation or energy.
With the habit ual exercise of such a power in the ordinary course of supply, no trace of freedom could remain to Amer ica.
* If Great Britain were stripped of this right, every principle of unity and subordination in the empire was gone forever.
Whether all this can be reconciled in legal speculation, is a matter of no consequence.
It is reconciled in policy : and politics ought to be adjusted, not to human reasonings, but to human nature ; of which the reason is but a part, and by no means the greatest part.
Founding the repeal on this basis, it was judged
*4' I do not here enter into the unsatisfactory disquisition concern ing representation real or presumed. I only say, that a great people who have their property, without any reserve, in all cases, disposed of by another people, at an immense distance from them, will not think themselves in the enjoyment of freedom. It will be hard to show to those who are in such a state, which of the usual parts of the definition or description of a free people are applicable to them ; and it is neither pleasant nor wise to attempt to prove that they have no right to be comprehended in such a description.
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proper to lay before Parliament the whole detail of the American affairs, as fully as it had been laid be fore the ministry themselves. Ignorance of those af fairs had misled Parliament. Knowledge alone could 'bring it into the right road. Every paper of office was laid upon the table of the two Houses; every denomination of men, either of America, or connect
ed with it by ofiice, by residence, by commerce, by interest, even by injury; men of civil and military capacity, officers of the revenue, merchants, manu facturers of every species, and from every town in England, attended at the bar. Such evidence never was laid before Parliament. If an emulation arose among the ministers and members of Parliament, as the author rightly observes,* for the repeal of this act, as well as for the other regulations, it was not on the confident assertions, the airy speculations, or the vain promises of ministers, that it arose. It was the sense of Parliament on the evidence before them. No one so much as suspects that ministerial allure ments or terrors had any share in it.
Our author is very much displeased, that so much credit was given to the testimony of merchants. He has a habit of railing at them: and he may, if he pleases, indulge himself in it. It will not do great mischief to that respectable set of men. The sub stance of their testimony was, that their debts in America were very great: that the Americans de clined to pay them, or to renew their orders, whilst
this act continued: that, under these circumstances, they despaired of the recovery of their debts, or the renewal of their trade in that country: that they apprehended a general failure of mercantile credit.
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The manufacturers deposed to the same general pur pose, with this addition, that many of them had dis charged several of their artificers; and, if the law and the resistance to it should continue, must dis miss them all.
This testimony is treated with great contempt by our author. It must be, I suppose, because it was contradicted by the plain nature of things. Suppose then that the merchants had, to gratify this author,
'given a contrary evidence; and had deposed, that while America remained in a state of resistance, whilst four million of debt remained unpaid, whilst the course of justice was suspended for want of stamped paper, so that no debt could be recovered, whilst there was a total stop to trade, because every ship was subject to seizure for want of stamped clear ances, and while the colonies were to be declared in rebellion, and subdued by armed force, that in these circumstances they would still continue to trade cheer fully and fearlessly as before: would not such wit nesses provoke universal indignation for their folly or their wickedness, and be deservedly hooted from the bar: * would any human faith have given credit to
? * Here the author has a note altogether in his usual strain of ' rea soning ; he finds out that somebody, in the course of this multifarious evidence, had said, " that a very considerable part of the orders of 1765 transmitted from America had been afterwards suspended; but that in case the Stamp Act was repealed, those orders were to be ex ecuted in the present year, 1766 "; and that, on the repeal of the Stamp Act, " the exports to the colonies would be at least double the value of the exports of the past year. " He then triumphs exceedingly on their having fallen short of it on the state of the custom-house entries.
I
pose from these facts. He does not deny that all the orders which came from America subsequent to the disturbances of the Stamp Act were on the condition of that act being repealed; and he does not
do not well know what conclusion he draws applicable to his pur
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such assertions ? The testimony of the merchants was necessary for the detail, and to bring the matter honie to the feeling of the House; as to the general reasons, they spoke abundantly for themselves.
Upon these principles was the act repealed, and it produced all the good effect which was expected from it: quiet was restored; trade generally returned to its ancient channels; time and means were furnished for the better strengthening of government there, as well as for recovering, by judicious measures, the
affections of the people, had that ministry continued, or had a ministry succeeded with dispositions to im prove that opportunity.
assert that, notwithstanding that act should be enforced by a strong hand, still the orders would be executed. Neither does he quite ven ture to say that this decline of the trade in I766 was owing to the repeal. What does he therefore infer from favorable to the en forcement of that law'! It only comes to this, and no more; those merchants, who thought our trade would be doubled in the subse quent year, were mistaken in their speculations. So that the Stamp Act was not to be repealed unless this speculation of theirs wasa probable event. But was not repealed in order to double our trade
in that year, as everybody knows (whatever some merchants might have said), but lest in that year we should have no trade at all. The fact is, that during the greatest part of the year 1765, that is, until
about the month of October, when the accounts of the disturbances came thick upon us, the American trade went on as usual. Before this time, the Stamp Act could not afi'cct it. Afterwards, the mer chants fell into a. great consternation; general stagnation in trade ensued. But as soon as was known that the ministry favored the repeal of the Stamp Act, several of the bolder merchants ventured to
execute their orders; others more timid hung back; in this manner the trade continued in a state of dreadful fluctuation between the fears of those who had ventured, for the event of their boldness, and the anxiety of those whose trade was suspended, until the royal assent was finally given to the bill of repeal. That the trade of 1766 was
not equal to that of 1765, could not be owing to the repeal; arose VOL. 1. 26
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Such an administration did not succeed. Instead of profiting of that season of tranquillity, in the very next year theychose to return to measures of the very same nature with those which had been so sol emnly condemned; though upon a smaller scale. The effects have been correspondent. America is again in disorder; not indeed in the same degree as
formerly, nor anything like it. Such good effects have attended the repeal of the Stamp Act, that the colonies have actually paid the taxes ; and they have
sought their redress (upon however improper princi
from quite different causes, of which the author seems not to be aware: lst, Our conquests during the war had laid open the trade of the French and Spanish West Indies to our colonies much more largely than they had ever enjoyed it; this continued for some time after the peace; but at length it was extremely contracted, and in some places reduced to nothing. Such in particular was the state of Jamaica. On the taking the Havannah all the stores of that island were emptied into that place, which produced unusual orders for goods, for supplying their own consumption, as well as for further speculations of trade. These ceasing, the trade stood on its own bottom. This is one cause of the diminished export to Jamaica; and not the childish idea of the author, of an impossible contraband from the opening of the ports. -- 2nd, The war had brought a great influx of cash into America, for the pay and provision of the troops; and this an unnatural increase of trade, which, as its cause failed, must in some degree return to its ancient and natural bounds. -- 3rd, When the merchants met from all parts, and compared their accounts, they were alarmed at the immensity of the debt due to them from America. They found that the Americans had over-traded their abilities. And, as they found too that several of them were capable of making the state of political events an excuse for their failure in commercial punctuality, many of our merchants in some degree cou tracted their trade from that moment. However, it is idle, in such an immense muss of trade, so liable to fluctuation, to infer anything from such a deficiency as one or even two hundred thousand pounds. In 1767, when the disturbances subsided, this deficiency was made up again.
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ples) not in their own violence, as formerly;* but in the experienced benignity of Parliament. They are not easy indeed, nor ever will be so, under this author's schemes of taxation; but we see no longer
the same general fury and confusion, which attended their resistance to the Stamp Act. The author may rail at the repeal, and those who proposed as he pleases. Those honest men suffer all his obloquy with pleasure, in the midst of the quiet which they have been the means of giving to their country and
would think his praises for their perseverance in prenicious scheme, very bad compensation for the disturbance of our peace, and the ruin of our com merce. Whether the return to the system of 1764, for raising revenue in America, the discontents which have ensued in consequence of the general
suspension of the assemblies in consequence of these discontents, the use of the military power, and the new and dangerous commissions which now hang
over them, will produce equally good eifects, great ly to be doubted. Never, fear, will this nation and the colonies fall back upon their true centre of grav ity, and natural point of repose, until the ideas of 1766 are resumed, and steadily pursued.
As to the regulations, great subject of the au thor's accusation, they are of two sorts; one of mixed nature, of revenue and trade the other sim ply relative to trade. With regard to the former
shall observe, that, in all deliberations concerning America, the ideas of that administration were prin gipally these to take trade as the primary end, and
but as very subordinate consideration.
Q The disturbances have been in Boston only; and were not in eongeqnenoe of the late duties.
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Where trade was likely to suffer, they did not hesi tate for an instant to prefer it to taxes, whose prod uce at best was contemptible, in comparison of the object which they might endanger. The other of their principles was, to suit the revenue to the ob
Where the difficulty of collection, from the nature of the country, and of the revenue establish ment, is so very notorious, it was their policy to hold out as few temptations to smuggling as possible, by keeping the duties as nearly as they could on a bal ance with the risk. On these principles they made many alterations in the port-duties of 1764, both in the mode and in the quantity. The author has not attempted to prove them erroneous. He complains enough to show that he is in an ill-humor, not that his adversaries have done amiss.
As to the regulations which were merely relative to commerce, many were then made ; and they were all made upon this principle, that many of the colo nies, and those some of the most abounding in people, were so situated as to have very few means of traflic with this country. It became therefore our interest to let them into as much foreign trade as could be given them without interfering with our own; and to se cure by every method the returns to the mother country. Without some such scheme of enlarge ment, it was obvious that any benefit we could expect from these colonies must be extremely limited. Ac cordingly many facilities were given to their trade with the foreign plantations, and with the southern parts of Europe. As to the confining the returns to this country, administration saw the mischief and folly of a plan of indiscriminate restraint. They
their remedy to that part where the disease
ject.
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existed, and to that only: on this idea they es tablished regulations, far more likely to check the dangerous, clandestine trade with Hamburg and Holland, than this author's friends, or any of their predecessors had ever done.
The friends of the author have a method surely a
little whimsical in all this sort of discussions.
have made an innumerable multitude of commercial regulations, at which the trade of England exclaimed with one voice, and many of which have been altered
on the unanimous opinion of that trade. Still they go on, just as before, in a sort of droning panegyric on themselves, talking of these regulations as prodi gies of wisdom; and, instead of appealing to those who are most affected and the best judges, they turn
round in a perpetual circle of their own reasenings and pretences ; they hand you over from one of their own pamphlets to another: " See," say they, "this demonstrated in the ' Regulations of the Colonies. ' " " See this satisfactorily proved in 'The Considera tions. "' By and by we shall have another: "See
another method in vindicating the opposite system. I refer to the petitions of merchants for these regu lations; to their thanks when they were obtained; and to the strong and grateful sense they have ever
since expressed of the benefits received 1mder that administration.
All administrations have in their commercial reg ulations been generally aided by the opinion of some merchants ; too frequently by that of a few, and those a. sort of favorites: they have been directed by the opinion of one or two merchants, who were to merit
in flatteries, and to be paid in contracts; who fre
They
? for this 'The State of the Nation. ' " I wish to take
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quently advised, not for the general good of trade, but for their private advantage. During the admin istration of which this author complains, the meetings of merchants upon the business of trade were numer ous and public; sometimes at the house of the Mar quis of Rockingham ; sometimes at Mr. Dowdeswell's; sometimes at Sir George Savile's, a house always open to every deliberation favorable to the liberty or the commerce of his country. Nor were these meetings confined to the merchants of London. Merchants and manufacturers were invited from all the consid erable towns in England. They conferred with the ministers and active members of Parliament. No private views, no local interests prevailed. Never were points in trade settled upon a larger scale of in
They who attended these meetings well know what ministers they were who heard the most patiently, who comprehended the most clearly, and who provided the most wisely. Let then this author and his friends still continue in possession of the practice of exalting their own abilities, in their pam phlets and in the newspapers. They never will per suade the public, that the merchants of England were in a general confederacy to sacrifice their own interests to those of North America, and to destroy the vent of' their own goods in favor of the manufac tures of France and Holland.
Had the friends of this author taken these means of information, his extreme terrors of contraband in the West India islands would have been greatly qui eted, and his objections to the opening of the ports would have ceased. He would have learned, from the most satisfactory analysis of the West India trade, that we have the advantage in every essential a. rti
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ele of it; and that almost every restriction on our commimication with our neighbors there, is a re striction unfavorable to ourselves.
Such were the principles that guided, and the au thority that sanctioned, these regulations. No man ever said, that, in the multiplicity of regulations made in the administration of their predecessors, none were useful; some certainly were so ; and I defy the author to show a commercial regulation of that pe riod, which he can prove, from any authority except
his own, to have a tendency beneficial to commerce, that has been repealed. So far were that ministry from being guided by a spirit of contradiction or of innovation.
The author's attack on that administration, for their neglect of our claims on foreign powers, is by much the most astonishing instance he has given, or that, I believe, any man ever did give, of an intrepid etfrontery. It relates to the Manilla ransom; to the Canada bills; and to the Russian treaty. Could one imagine, that these very things, which he thus chooses
to object to others, have been the principal subject of charge against his favorite ministry? Instead of clearing them of these charges, he appears not so much as to have heard of them; but throws them directly upon the administration which succeeded to
that of his friends.
It is not always very pleasant to be obliged to pro
duce the detail of this kind of transactions to the pub lic view. I will content myself therefore with giving a short state of facts, which, when the author chooses to contradict, he shall see proved, more, perhaps, to his conviction, than to his liking. The first fact then is, that the demand for the Manilla ransom had been
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in the author's favorite administration so neglected as to appear to have been little less than tacitly aban doned. At home, no countenar. ce was given to the claimants; and when it was mentioned in Parlia ment, the then leader did not seem, at least, a very sanguine advocate in favor of the claim. These things made it a matter of no small difficulty to resume and press that negotiation with Spain. However, so clear was oiu. right, that the then ministers resolved to re vive it ; and so little time was lost, that though that administration was not completed until the 9th of July, 1765, on the 20th of the following August, Gen eral Conway transmitted a strong and full remon strance on that subject to the Earl of Rochfort. The argument, on which the court of Madrid most relied, was the dereliction of that claim by the preceding ministers. However, it was still pushed with so much vigor, that the Spaniards, from a positive denial to pay, 0ifered to refer the demand to arbitration. That proposition was rejected ; and the demand "being still pressed, there was all the reason in the world to ex pect its being brought to a favorable issue; when it was thought proper to change the administration. Whether under their circumstances, and in the time they continued in power, more could be done, the reader will judge; who will hear with astonishment a charge of remissness from those very men, whose inactivity, to call it by no worse a name, laid the chief difficulties in the way of the revived negotiation.
As to the Canada bills, this author thinks proper to assert, "that the proprietors found themselves un der a necessity of compounding their demands upon the French court, and accepting terms which they had often rejected, and which the Earl of Halifax
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had declared he would sooner forfeit his hand than sign. " * When I know that the Earl of Halifax says so, the Earl of Halifax shall have an answer; but I persuade myself that his Lordship has given no au thority for this ridiculous rant. In the mean time, I shall only speak of it as a common concern of that ministry.
In the first place, then, I observe, that a conven tion, for the liquidation of the Canada bills, was con cluded under the administration of 1766 ; when noth
ing was concluded under that of the favorites of this author.
2. This transaction was, in every step of
on in concert with the persons interested, and was terminated to their entire satisfaction. They would have acquiesced perhaps in terms somewhat lower than those which were obtained. The author in deed too kind to them. He will, however, let them
speak for themselves, and show what their own opin ion was of the measures pursued in their favor. 1' In what manner the execution of the convention has been since provided for, not my present business to examine.
* Page 24.
" They are happy in having found, in your zeal for the dignity
of this nation, the means of liquidating their claims, and of conclud ing with the court of France convention for the final satisfaction of their demands; and have given us commission, in their names, and on their behalf, most earnestly to eutreat your acceptance of their grateful acknowledgments. Whether they consider themselves as Britons, or as men more particularly profiting by your generous and spirited interposition, they see great reasons to be thankful, for having been supported by minister, in whose public affections, in whose wisdom and activity, both the national honor, and the interests of in dividuals, have been at once so well support/ed and secured. "'-- Thanks
of the Canada merchants to General Conway, London, April 28, 1766.
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3. The proprietors had absolutely despaired of be ing paid, at any time, any proportion of their de mand, until the change of that ministry. The 1ner chants were checked and discountenanced; they had often been told, by some in authority, of the cheap rate at which these Canada bills had been procured; yet the author can talk of the composition of them as a necessity induced by the change in administration. They found themselves indeed, before that change, under a necessity of hinting somewhat of bringing
the matter into Parliament; but they were soon si lenced, and put in mind of the fate which the New foundland business had there met with. Nothing struck them more than the strong contrast between the spirit, and method of proceeding, of the two ad ministrations. .
4. The Earl of Halifax never did, nor could, re fuse to sign this convention; because this convention, as it stands, never was before him. *
The author's last charge on that ministry, with regard to foreign affairs, is the Russian treaty of com merce, which the author thinks fit to assert, was con cluded " on terms the Earl of Buckinghamshire had refused to accept of, and which had been deemed by former ministers disadvantageous to the nation, and by the merchants unsafe and unprofitable. "1'
Both the assertions in this paragraph are equally groundless.
The treaty then concluded by Sir George Macartney was not on the terms which the Earl of Buckinghamshire had refused. The Earl of Buckinghamshire never did refuse terms, because
* See the Convention itself, printed by Owen and Harrison, War wick-lane, 1766; particularly the articles two and thirteen.
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the business never came to the point of refusal, or acceptance; all that he did was, to receive the Rus sian project for a treaty of commerce, and to trans mit it to England. This was in November, 1764; and he left Petersburg the January following, be
fore he could even receive an answer from his own court. The conclusion of the treaty fell to his suc cessor. Whoever will be at the trouble to compare it with the treaty of 1734, will, I believe, confess, that, if the former ministers could have obtained such terms, they were criminal in not accepting them.
But the merchants " deemed them unsafe and un profitable. " What merchants? As no treaty ever was more maturely considered, so the opinion of the Russia merchants in London was all along ta. ken; and all the instructions sent over were in exact con formity to that opinion. Our minister there made no step without having previously consulted our mer chants residcnt in Petersburg, who, before the sign ing of the treaty, gave the most full and unanimous
testimony in its favor. In their address to our min ister at that court, among other things they say, " It may afford some additional satisfaction to your Excel lency, to receive a public acknowledgment of the en tire and unreserved approbation of every article in this treaty, from us who are so immediately and so nearly concerned in its consequences. " This was signed by the consul-general, and every British merchant in
Petersburg.
The approbation of those immediately concerned in
the consequences is nothing to this author. He and his friends have so much tenderness for people's in terests, and understand them so much better than
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they do themselves, that, whilst these politicians arc contending for the best of possible terms, the claim ants are obliged to go without any terms at all.
One of the first and justest complaints against the administration of the author's friends, was the want of vigor in their foreign negotiations. Their imme diate successors endeavored to correct that error, along with others; and there was scarcely a foreign court, in which the new spirit that had arisen was not sensibly felt, acknowledged, and sometimes com plained of. On their coming into administration, they found the demolition of Dunkirk entirely at a stand: instead of demolition, they found construc tion; for the French were then at work on the re pair of the jettees. On the remonstrances of General Conway, some parts of these jettees were immediately destroyed. The Duke of Richmond personally sur veyed the place, and obtained a fuller knowledge of its true state and condition than any of our minis ters had done; and, in consequence, had larger of fers from the Duke of Choiseul than had ever been received. But, as these were short of. our just ex pectations under the treaty, he rejected them. Our then ministers, knowing that, in their administration, the people"s minds were set at ease upon all the es sential points of public and private liberty, and that no project of theirs could endanger the concord of the empire, were under no restraint from pursuing every just demand upon foreign nations.
The author, towards the end of this work, falls in to reflections upon the state of public morals in this country: he draws use from this doctrine, by recom mending his friend to the king and the public, as an other Duke of Sully; and he concludes the whole performance with a very devout prayer.
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The prayers of politicians may sometimes be sin cere; and as this prayer is in substance, that the au thor, or his friends, may be soon brought into power, I have great reason to believe it is very much from the heart. It must be owned too that after he has drawn such a picture, such a shocking picture, of the state of this country, he has great faith in thinking the means he prays for sufficient to relieve us: after the character he has given of its inhabitants of all ranks and classes, he has great charity in caring
much about them; and indeed no less hope, in being of opinion, that such a detestable nation can ever be come the care of Providence. He has not even found five good men in our devoted city.
He talks indeed of men of virtue and ability. But where are his men of virtue and ability to be found? Are they in the present administration? Never were a set of people more blackened by this author. Are they among the party of those (no small body) who
adhere to the system of 1766? These it is the great
? of this book to calumniate. Are they the persons who acted with his great friend, since the change in 1762, to his removal in 1765? Scarcely any of these are now out of employment; and we are
He observes, that the virtue of the most exemplary prince that ever swayed a sceptre " can never warm or illuminate the body of his people, if foul mirrors are placed so near him as to refract and dissipate the
rays at their first emanation. " * Without observing * Page 46.
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in possession of his desideratum. Yet Ithink he hardly means to select, even some of the highest of them, as examples fit for the reformation of a corrupt world.
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upon the propriety of this metaphor, or asking how mirrors come to have lost their old quality of reflect ing, and to have acquired that of refracting, and dissi pating rays, and how far their foulness will account for this change; the remark itself is common and true: no less true, and equally surprising from him, is that which immediately precedes it: " It is in vain to endeavor to check the progress of irreligion and licentiousness, by punishing such crimes in om indi vidual, if others equally culpable are rewarded with the honors and emoluments of the state. " * I am not in the secret of the author's manner of writing; but it appears to me, that he must intend these reflec tions as a satire upon the administration of his happy years. Were ever the honors and emoluments of the state more lavishly squandered upon persons scanda lous in their lives than during that period ? In these scandalous lives, was there anything more scandalous than the mode of punishing one culpable individual? In that individual, is anything more culpable than his having been seduced by the example of some of those very persons by whom he was thus persecuted?
The author is so eager to attack others, that he pro vides but indifferently for his own defence. I believe, without going beyond the page I have now before me, he is very sensible, that I have sufficient matter of further, and, if possible, of heavier charge against his friends, upon his own principle. But it is because the advantage is too great, that I decline making use of it. I wish the author had not thought that all methods are lawful in party. Above all he ought to have taken care not to wound his enemies through the sides of his country. This he has done, by mak
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ing that monstrous and overcharged picture of the distresses of our situation. No wonder that he, who finds this country in the same condition with that of France at the time of Henry the Fourth, could also find a resemblance between his political friend and
the Duke of Sully. As to those personal resem blances, people will often judge of them from their affections: they may imagine in these clouds whatso ever figures they please; but what is the conforma tion of that eye which can discover a resemblance of this country and these times to those with which the author compares them? France, a country just re covered out of twenty-five years of the most cruel and
desolating civil war that perhaps was ever known. The kingdom, under the veil of momentary quiet, full of the most atrocious political, operating upon the most furious fanatical factions. Some pretenders even to the crown ; and those who did not pretend to
the whole, aimed at the partition of the monarchy. There were almost as many competitors as provinces ; and all abetted by the greatest, the most ambitious, and most enterprising power in Europe. No place safe from treason; no, not the bosoms on which the
most amiable prince that ever lived reposed his head; not his mistresses; not even his queen'. As to the finances, they had scarce an existence, but as a mat ter of plunder to the managers, and of grants to insa
tiable and ungrateful courtiers.
How can our author have the heart to describe this
as any sort of parallel to our situation? To be sure, an April shower has some resemblance to a water spout; for they are both wet: and there is some like
ness between a summer evening's breeze and a hurri cane ; they are both wind: but who can compare our
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disturbances, our situation, or our finances, to those of France in the time of Henry? Great Britain is indeed at this time wearied, but not broken, with the efforts of a victorious foreign war; not sutficiently relieved by an inadequate peace, but somewhat bene fited by that peace, and infinitely by the conse quences of that war. The powers of Europe awed by our victories, and lying in ruins upon every side of us. Burdened indeed we are with debt, but abounding with resources. We have a trade, not perhaps equal to our wishes, but more than ever we
In effect, no pretender to the crown ; nor nutriment for such desperate and destructive factions as have formerly shaken this kingdom.
As to our finances, the author trifles with us. When Sully came to those of France, in what order was any part of the financial system? or what sys tem was there at all? There is no man in ofiice who must not be sensible that ours without the act of any parading minister, the most regular and orderly system perhaps that was ever known the best se cured against all frauds in the collection, and all mis application in the expenditure public money.
admit that, in this flourishing state of things, there are appearances enough to excite uneasiness and apprehension. admit there cankerworm in the rose:
Medio de fonte leporum
Surgit amari aliquid, quod in ipsis fioribus angat.
This nothing else than spirit of disconnection, of distrust, and of treachery among public men. It no accidental evil, nor has its effect been trusted to the usual frailty of nature; the distemper has been
inoculated. The author sensible of and we la.
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ment it together. This distemper is alone sufficient to take away considerably from the benefits of our constitution and situation, and perhaps to render their continuance precarious. If these evil disposi tions should spread much farther, they must end in our destruction; for nothing can save a people des titute of public and private faith. However, the author, for the present state of things, has extended
'the charge by much too widely; as men are but too apt to take the measure of all mankind from their own particular acquaintance. Barren as this age may be in the growth of honor and virtue, the coun try does not want, at this moment, as strong, and those not a few examples, as were ever known, of an unshaken adherence to principle, and attachment to connection, against every allurement of interest. Those examples are not furnished by the great alone ; nor by those, whose activity in public affairs may render it suspected that they make such a character
one of the rounds in their ladder of ambition; but by men more quiet, and more in the shade, on whom an unmixed sense of honor alone could operate. Such
examples indeed are not furnished in great abun dance amongst those who are the subjects of the au
? He must look for them in another camp. He who complains of the ill effects of a divid
and heterogeneous administration, is not justifi able in laboring to render odious in the eyes of the public those men, whose principles, whose maxims of policy, and whose personal character, can alone
thor's panegyric.
ed
a remedy to this capital evil of the age: is he consistent with himself, in constantly extolling those whom he knows to be the authors of the very mischief of which he complains, and which
the whole nation feels so deeply. v0L. I. 27
administer neither
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The persons who are the objects of his dislike and complaint are many of them of the first families, and weightiest properties, in the kingdom; but infinitely more distinguished for their untainted honor, public and private, and their zealous, but sober attachment to the constitution of their country, than they can be by any birth, or any station. If they are the friends of any one great man rather than another, it is not that they make his aggrandizement the end of their union ; or because they know him to be the most active in caballing for his connections the largest and speediest emoluments. It is because they know him, by personal experience, to have wise and en larged ideas of the public good, and an invincible constancy in adhering to it; because they are con vinced, by the whole tenor of his actions, that he will never negotiate away their honor or his own: and that, in or out of power, change of situation will make no alteration in his conduct. This will give to such a person in such a body, an authority and respect that no minister ever enjoyed among his ve
nal dependents, in the highest plenitude of his power ; such as servility never can give, such as ambition never can receive or relish.
This body will often be reproached by their adversa ries, for want of ability in their political transactions ; they will be ridiculed for missing many favorable con
junctures, and not profiting of several brilliant oppor tunities of fortune; but they must be contented to endure that reproach; for they cannot acquire the reputation of that kind of ability without losipg all the other reputation they possess.
They will be charged too with a dangerous spirit of exclusion and proscription, for being unwilling to
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mix in schemes of administration, which have no bond of union, or principle of confidence. That charge too they must suffer with patience. If the reason_of the thing had not spoken loudly enough, the miserable examples of the several administra
tions constructed upon the idea of systematic discord would be enough to frighten them from such mon strous and ruinous conjunctions. It is however false, that the idea of an united administration carries with it that of a proscription of any other party. It does indeed imply the necessity of having the great strong holds of government in well-united hands, in order
to secure the predominance of right and uniform prin ciples; of having the capital offices of deliberation and execution of those who can deliberate with mu tual confidence, and who will execute what is re solved with firmness and fidelity. If this system cannot be rigorously adhered to in practice, (and what system can be so? ) ought to be the constant
aim of good men to approach as nearly to as possi ble. No system of that kind can be formed, which will not leave room fully sufficient for healing coali tions: but no coalition, which, under the specious name of independency, carries in its bosom the un reconciled principles of the original discord of parties, ever was, or will be, an healing coalition. Nor will
the mind of our sovereign ever know repose, his king dom settlement, or his business order, efficieney, or grace with his people, until things are established upon the basis of some set of men, who are trusted
by the public, and who can trust one another.
This comes rather nearer to the mark than the
author's description of proper administration, un der the name of men ability and virtue, which
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conveys no definite idea at all; nor does it apply specifically to our grand national distemper. All parties pretend to these qualities. The present min istry, no favorites of the author, will be ready enough to declare themselves persons of virtue and ability; and if they choose a vote for that purpose, perhaps it would not be quite impossible for them to procure it. But, if the disease be this distrust and discon nection, it is easy to know who are sound and who are tainted ; who are fit to restore us to health, who
to continue, and to spread the contagion. The pres ent ministry being made up of draughts from all parties in the kingdom, if they should profess any adherence to the connections they have left, they must convict themselves of the blackest treachery. They therefore choose rather to renounce the prin ciple itself, and to brand it with the name of pride and faction. This test with certainty discriminates the opinions of men. The other is a description vague and unsatisfactory.
As to the unfortunate gentlemen who may at any time compose that system, which, under the plausi ble title of an administration, subsists but for the establishment of weakness and confusion; they fall into different classes, with different merits. I think the situation of some people in that state may deserve a certain degree of compassion ; at the same time that they furnish an example, which, it is to be hoped, by being a severe one, will have its effect, at least, on the growing generation ; if an original seduction, on plausible but hollow pretences, into loss of honor, friendship, consistency, security, and repose, can fur nish it. It is possible to draw, even from the very prosperity of ambition, examples of terror, and mo tivcs to compassion.
? ? ? ? on mn PRESENT STATE or THE NATION. 421
I believe the instances are exceedingly rare of men immediately passing over a clear, marked line of vir tue into declared vice and corruption. There are a sort of middle tints and shades between the two ex tremes ; there is something uncertain on the confines of the two empires which they first pass through, and which renders the change easy and imperceptible. There are even a sort of splendid impositions so well
contrived, that, at the very time the path of rectitude is quitted forever, men seem to be advancing into some higher and nobler road of public conduct. Not that such impositions are strong enough in them selves ; but a powerful interest, often concealed from those whom it affects, works at the bottom, and se cures the operation. Men are thus debauched away from those legitimate connections, which they had formed on a judgment, early perhaps, but sufficiently mature, and wholly unbiassed. They do not quit
them upon any ground of complaint, for grounds of just complaint may exist, but upon the flattering and most dangerous of all principles, that of mend
ing what is well. Gradually they are habituated to other company ; and a change in their habitudes soon makes a way for a change in their opinions. Certain persons are no longer so very frightful, when they come to be known and to be serviceable. As to
their old friends, the transition is easy ; from friend ship to civility ; from civility to enmity: few are tho steps from dereliction to persecution.
People not very well grounded in the principles of public morality find a set of maxims in offiee ready made for them, which they assume as naturally and
inevitably, as any of the insignia or instruments of the situation. A certain tone of the solid and prac
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tical is immediately acquired. Every former profes sion of public spirit is to be considered as a debauch of youth, or, at best, as a visionary scheme of unat tainable perfection. The very idea of consistency is
The convenience of the business of the day is to furnish the principle for doing it. Then the whole ministerial cant is quickly got by heart. The prevalence of faction is to be lamented. All opposition is to be regarded as the effect of envy and disappointed ambition. All administrations are de clared to be alike. The same necessity justifies all their measures. It is no longer a matter of discus sion, who or what administration is; but that admin istration is to be supported, is a general maxim. Flat tering themselves that their power is become necessary to the support of all order and government;
thing which tends to the support of that power is sanctified, and becomes a part of the public interest.
Growing every day more formed to affairs, and bet ter knit in their limbs, when the occasion (now the only rule) requires they become capable of sacri ficing those very persons to whom they had before sacrificed their original friends. It now 'only in the ordinary course of business to alter an opinion, or to betray connection. Frequently relinquishing one set of men and adopting another, they grow into
total indifference to human feeling, as they had before to moral obligation; until at length, no one original impression remains upon their minds: every principle obliterated every sentiment eflaced.
In the mean time, that power, which all these changes aimed at securing, remains still as tottering and as uncertain as ever. They are delivered up into the hands of those who feel neither respect for
exploded.
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their persons, nor gratitude for their favors; who are put about them in appearance to serve, in reality to govern them; and, when the signal is given, to abandon and destroy them in order to set up some new dupe of ambition, who in his turn is to be aban doned and destroyed.
Founding the repeal on this basis, it was judged
*4' I do not here enter into the unsatisfactory disquisition concern ing representation real or presumed. I only say, that a great people who have their property, without any reserve, in all cases, disposed of by another people, at an immense distance from them, will not think themselves in the enjoyment of freedom. It will be hard to show to those who are in such a state, which of the usual parts of the definition or description of a free people are applicable to them ; and it is neither pleasant nor wise to attempt to prove that they have no right to be comprehended in such a description.
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proper to lay before Parliament the whole detail of the American affairs, as fully as it had been laid be fore the ministry themselves. Ignorance of those af fairs had misled Parliament. Knowledge alone could 'bring it into the right road. Every paper of office was laid upon the table of the two Houses; every denomination of men, either of America, or connect
ed with it by ofiice, by residence, by commerce, by interest, even by injury; men of civil and military capacity, officers of the revenue, merchants, manu facturers of every species, and from every town in England, attended at the bar. Such evidence never was laid before Parliament. If an emulation arose among the ministers and members of Parliament, as the author rightly observes,* for the repeal of this act, as well as for the other regulations, it was not on the confident assertions, the airy speculations, or the vain promises of ministers, that it arose. It was the sense of Parliament on the evidence before them. No one so much as suspects that ministerial allure ments or terrors had any share in it.
Our author is very much displeased, that so much credit was given to the testimony of merchants. He has a habit of railing at them: and he may, if he pleases, indulge himself in it. It will not do great mischief to that respectable set of men. The sub stance of their testimony was, that their debts in America were very great: that the Americans de clined to pay them, or to renew their orders, whilst
this act continued: that, under these circumstances, they despaired of the recovery of their debts, or the renewal of their trade in that country: that they apprehended a general failure of mercantile credit.
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The manufacturers deposed to the same general pur pose, with this addition, that many of them had dis charged several of their artificers; and, if the law and the resistance to it should continue, must dis miss them all.
This testimony is treated with great contempt by our author. It must be, I suppose, because it was contradicted by the plain nature of things. Suppose then that the merchants had, to gratify this author,
'given a contrary evidence; and had deposed, that while America remained in a state of resistance, whilst four million of debt remained unpaid, whilst the course of justice was suspended for want of stamped paper, so that no debt could be recovered, whilst there was a total stop to trade, because every ship was subject to seizure for want of stamped clear ances, and while the colonies were to be declared in rebellion, and subdued by armed force, that in these circumstances they would still continue to trade cheer fully and fearlessly as before: would not such wit nesses provoke universal indignation for their folly or their wickedness, and be deservedly hooted from the bar: * would any human faith have given credit to
? * Here the author has a note altogether in his usual strain of ' rea soning ; he finds out that somebody, in the course of this multifarious evidence, had said, " that a very considerable part of the orders of 1765 transmitted from America had been afterwards suspended; but that in case the Stamp Act was repealed, those orders were to be ex ecuted in the present year, 1766 "; and that, on the repeal of the Stamp Act, " the exports to the colonies would be at least double the value of the exports of the past year. " He then triumphs exceedingly on their having fallen short of it on the state of the custom-house entries.
I
pose from these facts. He does not deny that all the orders which came from America subsequent to the disturbances of the Stamp Act were on the condition of that act being repealed; and he does not
do not well know what conclusion he draws applicable to his pur
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such assertions ? The testimony of the merchants was necessary for the detail, and to bring the matter honie to the feeling of the House; as to the general reasons, they spoke abundantly for themselves.
Upon these principles was the act repealed, and it produced all the good effect which was expected from it: quiet was restored; trade generally returned to its ancient channels; time and means were furnished for the better strengthening of government there, as well as for recovering, by judicious measures, the
affections of the people, had that ministry continued, or had a ministry succeeded with dispositions to im prove that opportunity.
assert that, notwithstanding that act should be enforced by a strong hand, still the orders would be executed. Neither does he quite ven ture to say that this decline of the trade in I766 was owing to the repeal. What does he therefore infer from favorable to the en forcement of that law'! It only comes to this, and no more; those merchants, who thought our trade would be doubled in the subse quent year, were mistaken in their speculations. So that the Stamp Act was not to be repealed unless this speculation of theirs wasa probable event. But was not repealed in order to double our trade
in that year, as everybody knows (whatever some merchants might have said), but lest in that year we should have no trade at all. The fact is, that during the greatest part of the year 1765, that is, until
about the month of October, when the accounts of the disturbances came thick upon us, the American trade went on as usual. Before this time, the Stamp Act could not afi'cct it. Afterwards, the mer chants fell into a. great consternation; general stagnation in trade ensued. But as soon as was known that the ministry favored the repeal of the Stamp Act, several of the bolder merchants ventured to
execute their orders; others more timid hung back; in this manner the trade continued in a state of dreadful fluctuation between the fears of those who had ventured, for the event of their boldness, and the anxiety of those whose trade was suspended, until the royal assent was finally given to the bill of repeal. That the trade of 1766 was
not equal to that of 1765, could not be owing to the repeal; arose VOL. 1. 26
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Such an administration did not succeed. Instead of profiting of that season of tranquillity, in the very next year theychose to return to measures of the very same nature with those which had been so sol emnly condemned; though upon a smaller scale. The effects have been correspondent. America is again in disorder; not indeed in the same degree as
formerly, nor anything like it. Such good effects have attended the repeal of the Stamp Act, that the colonies have actually paid the taxes ; and they have
sought their redress (upon however improper princi
from quite different causes, of which the author seems not to be aware: lst, Our conquests during the war had laid open the trade of the French and Spanish West Indies to our colonies much more largely than they had ever enjoyed it; this continued for some time after the peace; but at length it was extremely contracted, and in some places reduced to nothing. Such in particular was the state of Jamaica. On the taking the Havannah all the stores of that island were emptied into that place, which produced unusual orders for goods, for supplying their own consumption, as well as for further speculations of trade. These ceasing, the trade stood on its own bottom. This is one cause of the diminished export to Jamaica; and not the childish idea of the author, of an impossible contraband from the opening of the ports. -- 2nd, The war had brought a great influx of cash into America, for the pay and provision of the troops; and this an unnatural increase of trade, which, as its cause failed, must in some degree return to its ancient and natural bounds. -- 3rd, When the merchants met from all parts, and compared their accounts, they were alarmed at the immensity of the debt due to them from America. They found that the Americans had over-traded their abilities. And, as they found too that several of them were capable of making the state of political events an excuse for their failure in commercial punctuality, many of our merchants in some degree cou tracted their trade from that moment. However, it is idle, in such an immense muss of trade, so liable to fluctuation, to infer anything from such a deficiency as one or even two hundred thousand pounds. In 1767, when the disturbances subsided, this deficiency was made up again.
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ples) not in their own violence, as formerly;* but in the experienced benignity of Parliament. They are not easy indeed, nor ever will be so, under this author's schemes of taxation; but we see no longer
the same general fury and confusion, which attended their resistance to the Stamp Act. The author may rail at the repeal, and those who proposed as he pleases. Those honest men suffer all his obloquy with pleasure, in the midst of the quiet which they have been the means of giving to their country and
would think his praises for their perseverance in prenicious scheme, very bad compensation for the disturbance of our peace, and the ruin of our com merce. Whether the return to the system of 1764, for raising revenue in America, the discontents which have ensued in consequence of the general
suspension of the assemblies in consequence of these discontents, the use of the military power, and the new and dangerous commissions which now hang
over them, will produce equally good eifects, great ly to be doubted. Never, fear, will this nation and the colonies fall back upon their true centre of grav ity, and natural point of repose, until the ideas of 1766 are resumed, and steadily pursued.
As to the regulations, great subject of the au thor's accusation, they are of two sorts; one of mixed nature, of revenue and trade the other sim ply relative to trade. With regard to the former
shall observe, that, in all deliberations concerning America, the ideas of that administration were prin gipally these to take trade as the primary end, and
but as very subordinate consideration.
Q The disturbances have been in Boston only; and were not in eongeqnenoe of the late duties.
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Where trade was likely to suffer, they did not hesi tate for an instant to prefer it to taxes, whose prod uce at best was contemptible, in comparison of the object which they might endanger. The other of their principles was, to suit the revenue to the ob
Where the difficulty of collection, from the nature of the country, and of the revenue establish ment, is so very notorious, it was their policy to hold out as few temptations to smuggling as possible, by keeping the duties as nearly as they could on a bal ance with the risk. On these principles they made many alterations in the port-duties of 1764, both in the mode and in the quantity. The author has not attempted to prove them erroneous. He complains enough to show that he is in an ill-humor, not that his adversaries have done amiss.
As to the regulations which were merely relative to commerce, many were then made ; and they were all made upon this principle, that many of the colo nies, and those some of the most abounding in people, were so situated as to have very few means of traflic with this country. It became therefore our interest to let them into as much foreign trade as could be given them without interfering with our own; and to se cure by every method the returns to the mother country. Without some such scheme of enlarge ment, it was obvious that any benefit we could expect from these colonies must be extremely limited. Ac cordingly many facilities were given to their trade with the foreign plantations, and with the southern parts of Europe. As to the confining the returns to this country, administration saw the mischief and folly of a plan of indiscriminate restraint. They
their remedy to that part where the disease
ject.
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existed, and to that only: on this idea they es tablished regulations, far more likely to check the dangerous, clandestine trade with Hamburg and Holland, than this author's friends, or any of their predecessors had ever done.
The friends of the author have a method surely a
little whimsical in all this sort of discussions.
have made an innumerable multitude of commercial regulations, at which the trade of England exclaimed with one voice, and many of which have been altered
on the unanimous opinion of that trade. Still they go on, just as before, in a sort of droning panegyric on themselves, talking of these regulations as prodi gies of wisdom; and, instead of appealing to those who are most affected and the best judges, they turn
round in a perpetual circle of their own reasenings and pretences ; they hand you over from one of their own pamphlets to another: " See," say they, "this demonstrated in the ' Regulations of the Colonies. ' " " See this satisfactorily proved in 'The Considera tions. "' By and by we shall have another: "See
another method in vindicating the opposite system. I refer to the petitions of merchants for these regu lations; to their thanks when they were obtained; and to the strong and grateful sense they have ever
since expressed of the benefits received 1mder that administration.
All administrations have in their commercial reg ulations been generally aided by the opinion of some merchants ; too frequently by that of a few, and those a. sort of favorites: they have been directed by the opinion of one or two merchants, who were to merit
in flatteries, and to be paid in contracts; who fre
They
? for this 'The State of the Nation. ' " I wish to take
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quently advised, not for the general good of trade, but for their private advantage. During the admin istration of which this author complains, the meetings of merchants upon the business of trade were numer ous and public; sometimes at the house of the Mar quis of Rockingham ; sometimes at Mr. Dowdeswell's; sometimes at Sir George Savile's, a house always open to every deliberation favorable to the liberty or the commerce of his country. Nor were these meetings confined to the merchants of London. Merchants and manufacturers were invited from all the consid erable towns in England. They conferred with the ministers and active members of Parliament. No private views, no local interests prevailed. Never were points in trade settled upon a larger scale of in
They who attended these meetings well know what ministers they were who heard the most patiently, who comprehended the most clearly, and who provided the most wisely. Let then this author and his friends still continue in possession of the practice of exalting their own abilities, in their pam phlets and in the newspapers. They never will per suade the public, that the merchants of England were in a general confederacy to sacrifice their own interests to those of North America, and to destroy the vent of' their own goods in favor of the manufac tures of France and Holland.
Had the friends of this author taken these means of information, his extreme terrors of contraband in the West India islands would have been greatly qui eted, and his objections to the opening of the ports would have ceased. He would have learned, from the most satisfactory analysis of the West India trade, that we have the advantage in every essential a. rti
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ele of it; and that almost every restriction on our commimication with our neighbors there, is a re striction unfavorable to ourselves.
Such were the principles that guided, and the au thority that sanctioned, these regulations. No man ever said, that, in the multiplicity of regulations made in the administration of their predecessors, none were useful; some certainly were so ; and I defy the author to show a commercial regulation of that pe riod, which he can prove, from any authority except
his own, to have a tendency beneficial to commerce, that has been repealed. So far were that ministry from being guided by a spirit of contradiction or of innovation.
The author's attack on that administration, for their neglect of our claims on foreign powers, is by much the most astonishing instance he has given, or that, I believe, any man ever did give, of an intrepid etfrontery. It relates to the Manilla ransom; to the Canada bills; and to the Russian treaty. Could one imagine, that these very things, which he thus chooses
to object to others, have been the principal subject of charge against his favorite ministry? Instead of clearing them of these charges, he appears not so much as to have heard of them; but throws them directly upon the administration which succeeded to
that of his friends.
It is not always very pleasant to be obliged to pro
duce the detail of this kind of transactions to the pub lic view. I will content myself therefore with giving a short state of facts, which, when the author chooses to contradict, he shall see proved, more, perhaps, to his conviction, than to his liking. The first fact then is, that the demand for the Manilla ransom had been
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in the author's favorite administration so neglected as to appear to have been little less than tacitly aban doned. At home, no countenar. ce was given to the claimants; and when it was mentioned in Parlia ment, the then leader did not seem, at least, a very sanguine advocate in favor of the claim. These things made it a matter of no small difficulty to resume and press that negotiation with Spain. However, so clear was oiu. right, that the then ministers resolved to re vive it ; and so little time was lost, that though that administration was not completed until the 9th of July, 1765, on the 20th of the following August, Gen eral Conway transmitted a strong and full remon strance on that subject to the Earl of Rochfort. The argument, on which the court of Madrid most relied, was the dereliction of that claim by the preceding ministers. However, it was still pushed with so much vigor, that the Spaniards, from a positive denial to pay, 0ifered to refer the demand to arbitration. That proposition was rejected ; and the demand "being still pressed, there was all the reason in the world to ex pect its being brought to a favorable issue; when it was thought proper to change the administration. Whether under their circumstances, and in the time they continued in power, more could be done, the reader will judge; who will hear with astonishment a charge of remissness from those very men, whose inactivity, to call it by no worse a name, laid the chief difficulties in the way of the revived negotiation.
As to the Canada bills, this author thinks proper to assert, "that the proprietors found themselves un der a necessity of compounding their demands upon the French court, and accepting terms which they had often rejected, and which the Earl of Halifax
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had declared he would sooner forfeit his hand than sign. " * When I know that the Earl of Halifax says so, the Earl of Halifax shall have an answer; but I persuade myself that his Lordship has given no au thority for this ridiculous rant. In the mean time, I shall only speak of it as a common concern of that ministry.
In the first place, then, I observe, that a conven tion, for the liquidation of the Canada bills, was con cluded under the administration of 1766 ; when noth
ing was concluded under that of the favorites of this author.
2. This transaction was, in every step of
on in concert with the persons interested, and was terminated to their entire satisfaction. They would have acquiesced perhaps in terms somewhat lower than those which were obtained. The author in deed too kind to them. He will, however, let them
speak for themselves, and show what their own opin ion was of the measures pursued in their favor. 1' In what manner the execution of the convention has been since provided for, not my present business to examine.
* Page 24.
" They are happy in having found, in your zeal for the dignity
of this nation, the means of liquidating their claims, and of conclud ing with the court of France convention for the final satisfaction of their demands; and have given us commission, in their names, and on their behalf, most earnestly to eutreat your acceptance of their grateful acknowledgments. Whether they consider themselves as Britons, or as men more particularly profiting by your generous and spirited interposition, they see great reasons to be thankful, for having been supported by minister, in whose public affections, in whose wisdom and activity, both the national honor, and the interests of in dividuals, have been at once so well support/ed and secured. "'-- Thanks
of the Canada merchants to General Conway, London, April 28, 1766.
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3. The proprietors had absolutely despaired of be ing paid, at any time, any proportion of their de mand, until the change of that ministry. The 1ner chants were checked and discountenanced; they had often been told, by some in authority, of the cheap rate at which these Canada bills had been procured; yet the author can talk of the composition of them as a necessity induced by the change in administration. They found themselves indeed, before that change, under a necessity of hinting somewhat of bringing
the matter into Parliament; but they were soon si lenced, and put in mind of the fate which the New foundland business had there met with. Nothing struck them more than the strong contrast between the spirit, and method of proceeding, of the two ad ministrations. .
4. The Earl of Halifax never did, nor could, re fuse to sign this convention; because this convention, as it stands, never was before him. *
The author's last charge on that ministry, with regard to foreign affairs, is the Russian treaty of com merce, which the author thinks fit to assert, was con cluded " on terms the Earl of Buckinghamshire had refused to accept of, and which had been deemed by former ministers disadvantageous to the nation, and by the merchants unsafe and unprofitable. "1'
Both the assertions in this paragraph are equally groundless.
The treaty then concluded by Sir George Macartney was not on the terms which the Earl of Buckinghamshire had refused. The Earl of Buckinghamshire never did refuse terms, because
* See the Convention itself, printed by Owen and Harrison, War wick-lane, 1766; particularly the articles two and thirteen.
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the business never came to the point of refusal, or acceptance; all that he did was, to receive the Rus sian project for a treaty of commerce, and to trans mit it to England. This was in November, 1764; and he left Petersburg the January following, be
fore he could even receive an answer from his own court. The conclusion of the treaty fell to his suc cessor. Whoever will be at the trouble to compare it with the treaty of 1734, will, I believe, confess, that, if the former ministers could have obtained such terms, they were criminal in not accepting them.
But the merchants " deemed them unsafe and un profitable. " What merchants? As no treaty ever was more maturely considered, so the opinion of the Russia merchants in London was all along ta. ken; and all the instructions sent over were in exact con formity to that opinion. Our minister there made no step without having previously consulted our mer chants residcnt in Petersburg, who, before the sign ing of the treaty, gave the most full and unanimous
testimony in its favor. In their address to our min ister at that court, among other things they say, " It may afford some additional satisfaction to your Excel lency, to receive a public acknowledgment of the en tire and unreserved approbation of every article in this treaty, from us who are so immediately and so nearly concerned in its consequences. " This was signed by the consul-general, and every British merchant in
Petersburg.
The approbation of those immediately concerned in
the consequences is nothing to this author. He and his friends have so much tenderness for people's in terests, and understand them so much better than
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they do themselves, that, whilst these politicians arc contending for the best of possible terms, the claim ants are obliged to go without any terms at all.
One of the first and justest complaints against the administration of the author's friends, was the want of vigor in their foreign negotiations. Their imme diate successors endeavored to correct that error, along with others; and there was scarcely a foreign court, in which the new spirit that had arisen was not sensibly felt, acknowledged, and sometimes com plained of. On their coming into administration, they found the demolition of Dunkirk entirely at a stand: instead of demolition, they found construc tion; for the French were then at work on the re pair of the jettees. On the remonstrances of General Conway, some parts of these jettees were immediately destroyed. The Duke of Richmond personally sur veyed the place, and obtained a fuller knowledge of its true state and condition than any of our minis ters had done; and, in consequence, had larger of fers from the Duke of Choiseul than had ever been received. But, as these were short of. our just ex pectations under the treaty, he rejected them. Our then ministers, knowing that, in their administration, the people"s minds were set at ease upon all the es sential points of public and private liberty, and that no project of theirs could endanger the concord of the empire, were under no restraint from pursuing every just demand upon foreign nations.
The author, towards the end of this work, falls in to reflections upon the state of public morals in this country: he draws use from this doctrine, by recom mending his friend to the king and the public, as an other Duke of Sully; and he concludes the whole performance with a very devout prayer.
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The prayers of politicians may sometimes be sin cere; and as this prayer is in substance, that the au thor, or his friends, may be soon brought into power, I have great reason to believe it is very much from the heart. It must be owned too that after he has drawn such a picture, such a shocking picture, of the state of this country, he has great faith in thinking the means he prays for sufficient to relieve us: after the character he has given of its inhabitants of all ranks and classes, he has great charity in caring
much about them; and indeed no less hope, in being of opinion, that such a detestable nation can ever be come the care of Providence. He has not even found five good men in our devoted city.
He talks indeed of men of virtue and ability. But where are his men of virtue and ability to be found? Are they in the present administration? Never were a set of people more blackened by this author. Are they among the party of those (no small body) who
adhere to the system of 1766? These it is the great
? of this book to calumniate. Are they the persons who acted with his great friend, since the change in 1762, to his removal in 1765? Scarcely any of these are now out of employment; and we are
He observes, that the virtue of the most exemplary prince that ever swayed a sceptre " can never warm or illuminate the body of his people, if foul mirrors are placed so near him as to refract and dissipate the
rays at their first emanation. " * Without observing * Page 46.
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purpose
in possession of his desideratum. Yet Ithink he hardly means to select, even some of the highest of them, as examples fit for the reformation of a corrupt world.
? ? ~I
upon the propriety of this metaphor, or asking how mirrors come to have lost their old quality of reflect ing, and to have acquired that of refracting, and dissi pating rays, and how far their foulness will account for this change; the remark itself is common and true: no less true, and equally surprising from him, is that which immediately precedes it: " It is in vain to endeavor to check the progress of irreligion and licentiousness, by punishing such crimes in om indi vidual, if others equally culpable are rewarded with the honors and emoluments of the state. " * I am not in the secret of the author's manner of writing; but it appears to me, that he must intend these reflec tions as a satire upon the administration of his happy years. Were ever the honors and emoluments of the state more lavishly squandered upon persons scanda lous in their lives than during that period ? In these scandalous lives, was there anything more scandalous than the mode of punishing one culpable individual? In that individual, is anything more culpable than his having been seduced by the example of some of those very persons by whom he was thus persecuted?
The author is so eager to attack others, that he pro vides but indifferently for his own defence. I believe, without going beyond the page I have now before me, he is very sensible, that I have sufficient matter of further, and, if possible, of heavier charge against his friends, upon his own principle. But it is because the advantage is too great, that I decline making use of it. I wish the author had not thought that all methods are lawful in party. Above all he ought to have taken care not to wound his enemies through the sides of his country. This he has done, by mak
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ing that monstrous and overcharged picture of the distresses of our situation. No wonder that he, who finds this country in the same condition with that of France at the time of Henry the Fourth, could also find a resemblance between his political friend and
the Duke of Sully. As to those personal resem blances, people will often judge of them from their affections: they may imagine in these clouds whatso ever figures they please; but what is the conforma tion of that eye which can discover a resemblance of this country and these times to those with which the author compares them? France, a country just re covered out of twenty-five years of the most cruel and
desolating civil war that perhaps was ever known. The kingdom, under the veil of momentary quiet, full of the most atrocious political, operating upon the most furious fanatical factions. Some pretenders even to the crown ; and those who did not pretend to
the whole, aimed at the partition of the monarchy. There were almost as many competitors as provinces ; and all abetted by the greatest, the most ambitious, and most enterprising power in Europe. No place safe from treason; no, not the bosoms on which the
most amiable prince that ever lived reposed his head; not his mistresses; not even his queen'. As to the finances, they had scarce an existence, but as a mat ter of plunder to the managers, and of grants to insa
tiable and ungrateful courtiers.
How can our author have the heart to describe this
as any sort of parallel to our situation? To be sure, an April shower has some resemblance to a water spout; for they are both wet: and there is some like
ness between a summer evening's breeze and a hurri cane ; they are both wind: but who can compare our
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disturbances, our situation, or our finances, to those of France in the time of Henry? Great Britain is indeed at this time wearied, but not broken, with the efforts of a victorious foreign war; not sutficiently relieved by an inadequate peace, but somewhat bene fited by that peace, and infinitely by the conse quences of that war. The powers of Europe awed by our victories, and lying in ruins upon every side of us. Burdened indeed we are with debt, but abounding with resources. We have a trade, not perhaps equal to our wishes, but more than ever we
In effect, no pretender to the crown ; nor nutriment for such desperate and destructive factions as have formerly shaken this kingdom.
As to our finances, the author trifles with us. When Sully came to those of France, in what order was any part of the financial system? or what sys tem was there at all? There is no man in ofiice who must not be sensible that ours without the act of any parading minister, the most regular and orderly system perhaps that was ever known the best se cured against all frauds in the collection, and all mis application in the expenditure public money.
admit that, in this flourishing state of things, there are appearances enough to excite uneasiness and apprehension. admit there cankerworm in the rose:
Medio de fonte leporum
Surgit amari aliquid, quod in ipsis fioribus angat.
This nothing else than spirit of disconnection, of distrust, and of treachery among public men. It no accidental evil, nor has its effect been trusted to the usual frailty of nature; the distemper has been
inoculated. The author sensible of and we la.
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ment it together. This distemper is alone sufficient to take away considerably from the benefits of our constitution and situation, and perhaps to render their continuance precarious. If these evil disposi tions should spread much farther, they must end in our destruction; for nothing can save a people des titute of public and private faith. However, the author, for the present state of things, has extended
'the charge by much too widely; as men are but too apt to take the measure of all mankind from their own particular acquaintance. Barren as this age may be in the growth of honor and virtue, the coun try does not want, at this moment, as strong, and those not a few examples, as were ever known, of an unshaken adherence to principle, and attachment to connection, against every allurement of interest. Those examples are not furnished by the great alone ; nor by those, whose activity in public affairs may render it suspected that they make such a character
one of the rounds in their ladder of ambition; but by men more quiet, and more in the shade, on whom an unmixed sense of honor alone could operate. Such
examples indeed are not furnished in great abun dance amongst those who are the subjects of the au
? He must look for them in another camp. He who complains of the ill effects of a divid
and heterogeneous administration, is not justifi able in laboring to render odious in the eyes of the public those men, whose principles, whose maxims of policy, and whose personal character, can alone
thor's panegyric.
ed
a remedy to this capital evil of the age: is he consistent with himself, in constantly extolling those whom he knows to be the authors of the very mischief of which he complains, and which
the whole nation feels so deeply. v0L. I. 27
administer neither
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The persons who are the objects of his dislike and complaint are many of them of the first families, and weightiest properties, in the kingdom; but infinitely more distinguished for their untainted honor, public and private, and their zealous, but sober attachment to the constitution of their country, than they can be by any birth, or any station. If they are the friends of any one great man rather than another, it is not that they make his aggrandizement the end of their union ; or because they know him to be the most active in caballing for his connections the largest and speediest emoluments. It is because they know him, by personal experience, to have wise and en larged ideas of the public good, and an invincible constancy in adhering to it; because they are con vinced, by the whole tenor of his actions, that he will never negotiate away their honor or his own: and that, in or out of power, change of situation will make no alteration in his conduct. This will give to such a person in such a body, an authority and respect that no minister ever enjoyed among his ve
nal dependents, in the highest plenitude of his power ; such as servility never can give, such as ambition never can receive or relish.
This body will often be reproached by their adversa ries, for want of ability in their political transactions ; they will be ridiculed for missing many favorable con
junctures, and not profiting of several brilliant oppor tunities of fortune; but they must be contented to endure that reproach; for they cannot acquire the reputation of that kind of ability without losipg all the other reputation they possess.
They will be charged too with a dangerous spirit of exclusion and proscription, for being unwilling to
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mix in schemes of administration, which have no bond of union, or principle of confidence. That charge too they must suffer with patience. If the reason_of the thing had not spoken loudly enough, the miserable examples of the several administra
tions constructed upon the idea of systematic discord would be enough to frighten them from such mon strous and ruinous conjunctions. It is however false, that the idea of an united administration carries with it that of a proscription of any other party. It does indeed imply the necessity of having the great strong holds of government in well-united hands, in order
to secure the predominance of right and uniform prin ciples; of having the capital offices of deliberation and execution of those who can deliberate with mu tual confidence, and who will execute what is re solved with firmness and fidelity. If this system cannot be rigorously adhered to in practice, (and what system can be so? ) ought to be the constant
aim of good men to approach as nearly to as possi ble. No system of that kind can be formed, which will not leave room fully sufficient for healing coali tions: but no coalition, which, under the specious name of independency, carries in its bosom the un reconciled principles of the original discord of parties, ever was, or will be, an healing coalition. Nor will
the mind of our sovereign ever know repose, his king dom settlement, or his business order, efficieney, or grace with his people, until things are established upon the basis of some set of men, who are trusted
by the public, and who can trust one another.
This comes rather nearer to the mark than the
author's description of proper administration, un der the name of men ability and virtue, which
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conveys no definite idea at all; nor does it apply specifically to our grand national distemper. All parties pretend to these qualities. The present min istry, no favorites of the author, will be ready enough to declare themselves persons of virtue and ability; and if they choose a vote for that purpose, perhaps it would not be quite impossible for them to procure it. But, if the disease be this distrust and discon nection, it is easy to know who are sound and who are tainted ; who are fit to restore us to health, who
to continue, and to spread the contagion. The pres ent ministry being made up of draughts from all parties in the kingdom, if they should profess any adherence to the connections they have left, they must convict themselves of the blackest treachery. They therefore choose rather to renounce the prin ciple itself, and to brand it with the name of pride and faction. This test with certainty discriminates the opinions of men. The other is a description vague and unsatisfactory.
As to the unfortunate gentlemen who may at any time compose that system, which, under the plausi ble title of an administration, subsists but for the establishment of weakness and confusion; they fall into different classes, with different merits. I think the situation of some people in that state may deserve a certain degree of compassion ; at the same time that they furnish an example, which, it is to be hoped, by being a severe one, will have its effect, at least, on the growing generation ; if an original seduction, on plausible but hollow pretences, into loss of honor, friendship, consistency, security, and repose, can fur nish it. It is possible to draw, even from the very prosperity of ambition, examples of terror, and mo tivcs to compassion.
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I believe the instances are exceedingly rare of men immediately passing over a clear, marked line of vir tue into declared vice and corruption. There are a sort of middle tints and shades between the two ex tremes ; there is something uncertain on the confines of the two empires which they first pass through, and which renders the change easy and imperceptible. There are even a sort of splendid impositions so well
contrived, that, at the very time the path of rectitude is quitted forever, men seem to be advancing into some higher and nobler road of public conduct. Not that such impositions are strong enough in them selves ; but a powerful interest, often concealed from those whom it affects, works at the bottom, and se cures the operation. Men are thus debauched away from those legitimate connections, which they had formed on a judgment, early perhaps, but sufficiently mature, and wholly unbiassed. They do not quit
them upon any ground of complaint, for grounds of just complaint may exist, but upon the flattering and most dangerous of all principles, that of mend
ing what is well. Gradually they are habituated to other company ; and a change in their habitudes soon makes a way for a change in their opinions. Certain persons are no longer so very frightful, when they come to be known and to be serviceable. As to
their old friends, the transition is easy ; from friend ship to civility ; from civility to enmity: few are tho steps from dereliction to persecution.
People not very well grounded in the principles of public morality find a set of maxims in offiee ready made for them, which they assume as naturally and
inevitably, as any of the insignia or instruments of the situation. A certain tone of the solid and prac
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tical is immediately acquired. Every former profes sion of public spirit is to be considered as a debauch of youth, or, at best, as a visionary scheme of unat tainable perfection. The very idea of consistency is
The convenience of the business of the day is to furnish the principle for doing it. Then the whole ministerial cant is quickly got by heart. The prevalence of faction is to be lamented. All opposition is to be regarded as the effect of envy and disappointed ambition. All administrations are de clared to be alike. The same necessity justifies all their measures. It is no longer a matter of discus sion, who or what administration is; but that admin istration is to be supported, is a general maxim. Flat tering themselves that their power is become necessary to the support of all order and government;
thing which tends to the support of that power is sanctified, and becomes a part of the public interest.
Growing every day more formed to affairs, and bet ter knit in their limbs, when the occasion (now the only rule) requires they become capable of sacri ficing those very persons to whom they had before sacrificed their original friends. It now 'only in the ordinary course of business to alter an opinion, or to betray connection. Frequently relinquishing one set of men and adopting another, they grow into
total indifference to human feeling, as they had before to moral obligation; until at length, no one original impression remains upon their minds: every principle obliterated every sentiment eflaced.
In the mean time, that power, which all these changes aimed at securing, remains still as tottering and as uncertain as ever. They are delivered up into the hands of those who feel neither respect for
exploded.
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their persons, nor gratitude for their favors; who are put about them in appearance to serve, in reality to govern them; and, when the signal is given, to abandon and destroy them in order to set up some new dupe of ambition, who in his turn is to be aban doned and destroyed.
