A Philosophical Enquiry is an unequal,
and, in the main, rather jejune, treatise of which the fairest criticism
is probably Lessing's, that it ‘is uncommonly useful as a collection
of all the occurrences and perceptions which the philosophers
must assume as indisputable in inquiries of this kind.
and, in the main, rather jejune, treatise of which the fairest criticism
is probably Lessing's, that it ‘is uncommonly useful as a collection
of all the occurrences and perceptions which the philosophers
must assume as indisputable in inquiries of this kind.
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v11
Robert
Pollok
203
## p. xi (#19) ##############################################
1
Contents
xi
CHAPTER XI
THE PROSODY OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
By GEORGE SAINTSBURY, M. A.
PAGE
Changes in the Heroic Couplet of Dryden. The Octosyllabic Couplet.
The Spenserian Stanza. Blank Verse. Lyric Poetry of the
Eighteenth Century. Edward Bysshe's Art of Poetry. Eigh-
teenth Century Prosodists. Joshua Steele. Young. Shenstone.
Gray. Johnson. John Mason. Mitford. Cowper. Summary
245
.
CHAPTER XII
THE GEORGIAN DRAMA
Panas!
By HAROLD V. ROUTH, M. A. , Peterhouse, Leeturer in
English Literature at Goldsmiths' College, London" (rimariset,
'
londe, Bertoni
The Decay of the Drama and the Advance of the Actor. The Theatre
in the Eighteenth Century and its Audiences. Richard Cumberland.
The Brothers. The West Indian Lesser Playwrights. Oliver
Goldsmith. She Stoops to Conquer. Richard Brinsley Sheridan.
The Rivals. A Trip to Scarborough. The School for Scandal.
Hannah More. Percy. Hannah Cowley. General Burgoyne.
The Heiress. Thomas Holcroft. The Road to Ruin. The
Deserted Daughter. Elizabeth Inchbald. George Colman the
Younger. Inkle and Yarico. Thomas Morton and others.
Cumberland's Jew. Realism and the Drama
257
CHAPTER XIII
THE GROWTH OF THE LATER NOVEL
By GEORGE SAINTSBURY
多,。
nh
Thomas Amory. John Buncle. Memoirs of Several Ladies. William
Beckford. Vathek. William Godwin, Caleb Williams, St Leon.
Thomas Holcroft. Autobiography. Novels. Mrs Inchbald.
A Simple Story. Nature and Art. Robert Bage. Hermsprong.
Maria Edgeworth. Belinda. The Absentee. Ormond. Tales
for the Young. Charlotte Smith. Regina Maria Roche. Eaton
Stannard Barrett. Clara Reeve. Ann Radcliffe. The Mysteries
of Udolpho and other works. Matthew Gregory Lewis. The
Monk. Charles Robert Maturin. Melmoth the Wanderer. Jane
and Anna Maria Porter. Thaddeus of Warsaw. The Scottish
Chiefs. Thomas Hope. Anastasius. Thomas Love Peacock
285
## p. xii (#20) #############################################
xii
Contents
CHAPTER XIV
BOOK PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION, 1625—1800
By H. G. ALDIS, M. A. , Peterhouse, Secretary of the
University Library
PAGE
14
Attempts at State Control under Charles I and the Commonwealth.
The Censorship of L'Estrange. Lapse of the Licensing Laws.
Copyright before 1709. The first Copyright Act. The battle for
Perpetual Copyright. The relations between Author and Publisher
in the Seventeenth Century. Milton, Baxter. Earnings of play-
wrights. Literature becomes a Profession. Increase of the Reading
Classes. Patrons and Dedications. The Publisher as Patron and
Employer. Leading Publishers in Commonwealth and Restoration
times. The Eighteenth Century. Tonson, Lintot, Dodsley, Millar.
Trade books. Society for Encouragement of Learning. Bell's
Poets and Johnson's Poets. Paternoster Row Numbers. Book-
sellers' Clubs. Cadell, Strahan. Literary Booksellers. Curll
and Grub Street. "The Trade' in London. Little Britain. Scot,
Bateman, the Ballards. Other Localities. Westminster Hall.
Literary Coffeehouses. Payne, Davies. Popular Literature.
Practical Divinity, Chapbooks. The Retail Bookseller. Sale by
auction. Printed Catalogues. James Lackington. Circulating
Libraries and Book Clubs. Trade Lists of Current Publications.
Trade sales. The Provincial Trade. Scotland and Ireland .
311
CHAPTER XV
THE BLUESTOCKINGS
By Mrs H. G. ALDIS
The term 'Bluestocking! Conversation parties. Mrs Vesey. Mrs
Montagu. Her share in Lord Lyttelton's Dialogues of the Dead.
Her Essay on Shakespeare. Mrs Montagu and Voltaire. Mrs
Elizabeth Carter. Her Translation of Epictetus. Hannah More.
Her friendship with Horace Walpole. Mrs Chapone.
343
## p. xiii (#21) ############################################
Contents
X111
CHAPTER XVI
CHILDREN'S BOOKS
By F. J. HARVEY DARTON, sometime Scholar of St John's
College, Oxford
PAGE
Schoolbooks. The Hornbook. Books of Courtesy. Hell-fire tales.
Exemplary' Compilations. Bunyan's Divine Emblems. Watte's
Divine Songs. The Chapbook. Fairy Tales. Nursery Rimes.
John Newbery. Dorothy Kilner. Sarah Trimmer. Mrs Sherwood.
Maria Edgeworth. Thomas Day's Sandford and Merton. The
Moral Tale in Verse. Ann and Jane Taylor's Original Poems.
Miss Turner's Cautionary Stories. Charles and Mary Lamb.
Later Writings for Children
366
388
Bibliographies .
Table of Principal Dates
Index of Names
493
.
.
196
.
## p. xiv (#22) #############################################
3
## p. 1 (#23) ###############################################
1
CHAPTER I
EDMUND BURKE
>
EDMUND BURKE, the greatest of English orators, if we measure
greatness not by immediate effect alone but by the durability and
the diffusive power of that effect, and one of the profoundest, most
suggestive and most illuminating of political thinkers, if we may
not call a philosopher one who did not elaborate any system and
who refrained on principle from the discussion of purely theoretical
issues, was an Irishman of the usual blended native and English
strain, born(1729) in a family which united the two creeds that divide
Ireland more profoundly and fatefully than any distinction of race.
His father, a small Dublin solicitor, was a protestant, his mother a
catholic. Burke himself was educated in the protestant faith, but
his sister adhered to the religion of her mother, and his wife was a
catholic who conformed to the Anglican church after her marriage.
Burke always professed his protestantism frankly and sincerely,
'We are protestants not from indifference but from zeal'—and
the charges that were brought against him of having, at one time
or other, been a catholic are without foundation, but his attitude
towards the catholic church was at once tolerant and sympathetic.
To him, she and every other church were allies in the defence of
the religious conception of life which was the centre of all his
thought about morals and politics, and of which atheistical
Jacobinism was the antithesis. In the last years of his life, he
fought for the cause of catholic emancipation in Ireland no less
ardently than he opposed a 'regicide' peace with France. The
'directory of Ireland' which upheld protestant ascendancy at
Dublin was hardly less odious to him than the Jacobin directory
in Paris.
Burke's education was received at Ballitore, under a quaker,
whose son, Richard Shackleton, became the chief friend of his
early manhood, and at Trinity college, Dublin. Fox believed
that Burke “had not any very nice critical knowledge even of
1
B, L, XL.
CH. I.
## p. 2 (#24) ###############################################
2
[CH.
Edmund Burke
Latin, still less of Greek,' but was well read in Latin authors,
especially Cicero, Vergil, Ovid, Horace and Tacitus, and that he
imitated the first mentioned of these authors most particularly,
as well in his turn of thinking as in his manner of expression. '
What survive of Burke's letters to Shackleton point to the same
conclusion as Fox's observation, that Burke was a wide and
curious reader rather than a minute scholar. Mathematics, logic,
history were, each in turn, he tells Shackleton, in one letter, a
passion, and all, for a time, yielded to poetry. The letter affords
a vivid glimpse into the education of one to whom knowledge,
knowledge varied and detailed, was always to be a passion, and
who was seldom or never to pen a sentence that has not something
in its form to arrest the attention or to give delight. But Burke
was not a poet. He could do many things that were beyond the
power of his less strenuous and less profound fellow student,
Oliver Goldsmith, but he could never have written The Deserted
Village or The Vicar of Wakefield. Nor, magnificent as Burke's
prose was to be, picturesque, harmonious and full of cadence, is
it ever the prose which affects us as poetry. It is always the
prose of an orator, addressed to an audience and aiming at a
practical effect. Beauty, as in the meditations of Browne or the
oratory of Taylor, is never to Burke an end in itself.
The wide and varied reading which began at Trinity college
was, apparently, the chief activity of the nine obscure years
(1750—59) which Burke spent as a student of law in London,
eating dinners at the Middle Temple, sojourning at country inns
or rooms during the vacation with his namesake and, perhaps,
kinsman William Burke, and making tentative excursions into
letters with an ironical answer to Bolingbroke's posthumous
writings in A Vindication of Natural Society (1756) and an
essay in aesthetics after Addison in A Philosophical Enquiry
into the Origin of our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful
(1756). Fulness of mind was the quality of Burke's conversation
which impressed Johnson and all who came to know him in these
and later years—knowledge and the power of applying that
knowledge, 'diversifying the matter infinitely in your own mind. '
‘His stream of mind is perpetual,' was Johnson's comment;
‘Burke is the only man whose common conversation corresponds
with the general fame which he has in the world.
whatever topic you please, he is ready to meet you. Burke
owed his success in the House of Commons and its committees
not more, perhaps, to his eloquence than to this fulness of mind,
Take up
## p. 3 (#25) ###############################################
1]
Early Life and Work
3
to the fact that, whatever topic he handled, America, India,
Ireland, finance or trade, he spoke from a copious and close
knowledge of the subject.
The works which Burke composed during these years are not
of great importance.
A Philosophical Enquiry is an unequal,
and, in the main, rather jejune, treatise of which the fairest criticism
is probably Lessing's, that it ‘is uncommonly useful as a collection
of all the occurrences and perceptions which the philosophers
must assume as indisputable in inquiries of this kind. ' Burke
distinguishes the sublime so sharply from the beautiful that his
description of the latter includes little which goes beyond the
pretty. More interesting and suggestive is the analysis of the
pleasure we take in terrible and painful spectacles—whether a
tragedy in the theatre or an execution in the street. But, perhaps,
most interesting of all is his discussion of the aesthetic and
emotional qualities of words, which he finds to depend less on the
images which they evoke than their other properties of sound and
association. The business of poetry and rhetoric is 'to affect
rather by sympathy than imitation; to display rather the effect of
things on the mind of the speaker, or of others, than to present
a clear idea of the things themselves. ' The germ of Laocoon is
contained in these paragraphs.
A Vindication is a much more characteristic and significant
document. In parodying the eloquence of Bolingbroke, Burke
caught some of the first tones of his own more sonorous and
varied harmonies. The conception of the essay, a defence of
religion by the application of a reductio ad absurdum to Boling-
broke's method of attack, revealed the deep religious spirit
in which all Burke's political and social speculation bottoms
and roots itself. Bolingbroke had indicted revealed religions by
pointing to some of the consequences which, in history, had
flowed from dogmatic creeds, and Burke answers him by applying
the same method to the criticism of political society.
Shew me an absurdity in religion, and I will undertake to shew you an
hundred for one in political laws and institutions. . . . If after all, you should
confess all these things, yet plead the necessity of political institutions, weak
and wicked as they are, I can argue with equal, perhaps superior, force con-
cerning the necessity of artificial religion; and every step you advance in your
argument, you add a strength to mine.
But, perhaps, the most interesting quality of the essay is the
sidelight that it throws on Burke's temperament, the sensitive,
brooding imagination which, coupled with a restless, speculative
1-2
## p. 4 (#26) ###############################################
4
[CH.
Edmund Burke
intellect, seeking ever to illuminate facts by principles, gives tone
to Burke's speeches and pamphlets ; for it is this temperament
which imparts vividness and colour to the dry details of historical
and statistical knowledge, and it is this temperament which at
once directs, keeps in check and prescribes its limits to, that
speculative, enquiring intellect. In the sentences in which Burke
paints the lot of those who bear the burden of political society,
the unhappy wretches employed in lead, tin, iron, copper and
coal mines, who scarce ever see the light of the sun, the enfans
perdus of the army of civil society; in these vivid paragraphs,
and not less in his failure to draw from them any but an ironical
conclusion, a reductio ad absurdum of Bolingbroke's paradoxes,
we get an insight into one of the most radical characteristics
of Burke's mind. In his later works, he did not often touch
directly on the subject of the poor and their lot, though it was
a theme, he says, on which he had 'often reflected and never
reflected without feeling from it’; but his sensibility was not
more acute than his conviction was profound that legislation
and political adjustment could do little or nothing to alleviate
their lot. Burke's whole life was a prolonged warfare against the
folly and injustice of statesmen ; but there was no admixture
in his nature of what the old physiologists called the sanguine
temperament. His political life was inspired by no gleam of
the confidence which animated a statesman like Gladstone. The
connection between revealed religion and political society was, to
him, a deeper one than the superficial irony of A Vindication
might suggest. If we confine our view to this life, the lot of
humanity must always seem a dubious one. Wise government
may lighten the lot of men, it can never make it more than
tolerable for the great majority. The effect of this cast of mind
on Burke's attitude towards the French revolution, and the
interval which it creates between him and the great poets of
the romantic revival, with whom he has otherwise much in common,
will appear later.
In closing Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790),
Burke declares that
they come from one, almost the whole of whose public exertion has been a
struggle for the liberty of others; from one in whose breast no anger durable
or vehement has ever been kindled, but by what he considered as tyranny.
In all those struggles, he declared in 1795, when his hopes for
catholic emancipation in Ireland were shattered by the dismissal
of Lord Fitzwilliam, he had been unsuccessful.
## p. 5 (#27) ###############################################
5
1] Outline of his Political Career
My sanguine hopes are blasted, and I must consign my feelings on that
terrible disappointment to the same patience in which I have been obliged
to bury the vexation I suffered on the defeat of the other great, just, and
honourable causes in which I have had some share, and which have given
more of dignity than of peace to a long laborious life.
A brief enumeration of these 'great, just, and honourable causes'
will indicate sufficiently for the purposes of this History the
outlines of Burke's public career.
After a brief time as secretary to William Gerard Hamilton,
then chief secretary for Ireland, Burke entered public life as
member for Wendover (1765), to which he was presented by Lord
Verney, the friend and fellow-speculator of Burke's kinsman and
namesake mentioned above. At the same time, he became
secretary to Lord Rockingham, then in power and engaged in
repealing Grenville's unfortunate Stamp act. Thenceforth, through
the life of that short administration and in the sixteen years of
opposition which followed, Burke was the animating spirit of the
Rockingham section of the whigs, the germ of the subsequent
liberal party. The two chief causes for which he fought during
these years were those of the freedom of the House of Commons
against the designs of George III and the ‘king's friends, and
of the American colonies against the claim of the home govern-
ment to tax them directly. The writings in which Burke's views
in these conflicts are most fully preserved are Observations on
a late publication entitled 'The Present State of the Nation'
(1769), Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents (1770),
the speech On American Taxation (1774), that On moving his
Resolutions for Conciliation with the Colonies (1775) and A
Letter . . . to. . . [the] Sheriffs of. . . Bristol (1777)”. These, of course,
are only those utterances which Burke thought fit to issue to the
public. Of his innumerable speeches on these and other subjects,
including the great speech against employing Indians in the war,
we have only the scantiest records.
Two other topics interested Burke during these years : Ireland
and India, and, as the American war drew to an end, they became
his chief preoccupation. He had early reflected and written on
the iniquity of the penal laws—though the draft which he
prepared about 1760—5 was not issued till much later and
he supported and watched with sympathy the policy or revolution
which emancipated Irish trade and secured the independence
1 To these may be added the posthumously published An Address to the King, drawn
ap when a secession of the whigs from parliament was contemplated in 1777 and an
Address to the British Colonists in North America.
6
## p. 6 (#28) ###############################################
6
[ch.
Edmund Burke
of the Irish parliament (1778–82). By reason of his support of
Irish trade, he lost, in 1780, the representation of Bristol, which
his opposition to the American war had gained for him in
1774 ; and Two Letters. . . to Gentlemen in the City of Bristol
(1778), with the Speech at the Guildhall, in Bristol, previous to
the late Election (1780), are the noble record of his courage, inde-
pendence and wisdom in this hour of defeat. In the years following
the outbreak of the French revolution, Burke advocated, with
unabated ardour, the cause of catholics, his views being expressed,
not in speeches, but in long letters to Sir Hercules Langrishe,
Thomas Burgh, his son Richard Burke, Dr Hussey and others.
In the government of our East Indian dominions, Burke was
early interested. It is usual now to affirm dogmatically that he
participated in the speculations of his brother Richard, his
kinsman William and Lord Verney, in East India stock. It may
be so, but is not proved; and Burke himself declared, in 1772,
'I have never had any concern in the funds of the East India com-
pany, nor have taken any part whatsoever in its affairs, except when
they came before me in the course of parliamentary proceedings. '
During the attempts made by Lord North's government to regulate
the East India company, Burke was the warm supporter and
diligent adviser of the company (1766—74). It was after 1780
that he became an active member of the committees which
investigated the affairs of India, and, in consequence of what was
revealed, the relentless foe of Warren Hastings and of the privileges
and powers of the company. In the East India bill of 1783, he
flung to the winds that fear of increasing the influence of the
crown which had dictated his earlier support of the company, and
proposed to transfer to parliament and the crown the whole
administration and patronage of India. In 1785, he entered upon
the attack upon Hastings which was to occupy him for ten years.
In the same year, he delivered the famous Speech on the . . . Nabob of
Arcot's Private Debts. The articles of indictment against Hastings,
with the speeches delivered by Burke, fill some six volumes of the
collected works. With the speeches of 1783 and 1785, they are
the record of his labours in this cause, in conducting which he
exhibited at once all the vast range of his knowledge, the varied
powers of bis eloquence and the worst errors of taste and judg-
ment of which his great and increasing sensibility of mind made
him guilty in the years from 1780 onwards.
The last great cause in which Burke fought his usual splendid
but losing battle was that of resistance to the French revolution
## p. 7 (#29) ###############################################
1]
Pamphlets on Public Affairs
7
and the philosophy and spirit of atheistical Jacobinism. Beginning
with a speech on the army estimates (9 February 1790), the crusade
was continued with ever increasing indignation through the famous
Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790), A Letter. . . to a
Member of the National Assembly (1791), An Appeal from the
New to the Old Whigs (1791), Thoughts on French Affairs (1791),
Remarks on the Policy of the Allies (1793), A Letter . . . to a Noble
Lord (1795) and Letters. . . on the Proposals for Peace with the
Regicide Directory of France (1795—7). Burke died in 1797
with his last hopes for justice to Irish catholics shattered, and
believing that his country was on the eve of a peace which could
be no peace but only a humiliating truce while the enemy made
ready to pursue their destructive crusade.
These, in outline, are the campaigns of Burke. Whatever be
now our judgment on the questions of a bygone age with which he
was concerned, the importance of the principles to which his mind
always gravitated, his preoccupation at every juncture with the
fundamental issues of wise government, and the splendour of the
eloquence in which he set forth these principles, an eloquence in
which the wisdom of his thought and the felicity of his language
and imagery seem inseparable from one another, an eloquence that
is wisdom (not ‘seeming wisdom'as Hobbes defined eloquence),
have made his speeches and pamphlets a source of perennial
freshness and interest.
The first of the pamphlets on public affairs was a brief
statement of what had been achieved by the Rockingham
administration to restore order and good government at home
and in the colonies. The Observations are a more detailed
defence of that administration against the attack of an anonymous
pamphlet, attributed to George Grenville. Grenville, in this
pamphlet, defended his own government, which was responsible
for the peace of Paris and the first proposal to tax the colonies,
and criticised the repeal of the Stamp act. Both the peace and
the resolution to tax America were the consequence, he argued,
of the charges incurred by the great wars. Burke's reply
consists in showing that Grenville had underestimated the power
of England and her expanding trade to support these increased
charges, and especially had exaggerated the sufferings of this
country when compared with those of France, the condition of
whose lower classes, and the straitness and distraction of whose
finances,' seemed, to Burke, at this period, to forbode ‘some
extraordinary convulsion . . . the effect of which on France, and
6
## p. 8 (#30) ###############################################
8
[CH.
Edmund Burke
even on all Europe, it is difficult to conjecture. ' But much of
the ground that is covered in this first controversial pamphlet
was again traversed with a more confident step, with a wider
outlook and a loftier eloquence, in the writings which followed
it. Less hampered by the necessity of controverting an opponent,
Burke addresses himself to the fundamental constitutional and
imperial questions at issue in a spirit of elevated political wisdom.
The position which Burke adopts in Present Discontents
(1770) is eloquent of the temper in which he ever approached
questions affecting the constitution. The conflict which raged
round Wilkes and the Middlesex election was, he saw clearly,
a conflict between the crown and the constituencies, the crown
acting by an instrumental house of commons. ' He admitted
the ultimate authority of the people. Although government
certainly is an institution of divine authority, yet its forms, and
the persons who administer it, all originate from the people. '
But he shrank from the inference that, if government were
emancipating itself from the control of the people, if the crown
were threatening to deprive the House of Commons of its peculiar
'virtue, spirit and essence,' namely, to be “the express image of
the feelings of the nation' it was because the constituencies
themselves had ceased to represent the people. The proposals
to enlarge the number of constituents, coupled, as they were,
with the expedient of triennial parliaments, he always re-
sisted. To Burke, a constitutional state was one in which, in
some degree, a balance had been secured between the various
powers which, in the state, represent the complex nature of man,
and, in the British constitution, as it had taken shape in history;
and especially with the revolution, he saw, if not an ideal, yet,
the weak and imperfect nature of man considered, a wonderful
balance of powers, aristocracy (the power which springs from
man's natural regard for inherited distinction and privilege) and
property exerting in a healthy and not sinister fashion their
natural and inevitable influence, while the popular will made
itself felt directly and indirectly, by actual and by virtual'
representation, as a controlling and, at times, an inspiring in-
fluence. He would not do anything to disturb this balance.
‘Our constitution stands on a nice equipoise with steep precipices
and deep waters upon all sides of it. In removing it from a
dangerous leaning towards one side there may be a risk of over-
setting it on the other. He would rather ‘by lessening the number
add to the weight and independency of our voters.
## p. 9 (#31) ###############################################
1]
The Present Discontents
9
Unable, therefore, to acquiesce in the only practical means by
which the people were to recover the control of parliament, and
enforce loyalty to principle and party, Burke could only indicate
the chief symptom of the disease, the disintegration of party, and
elaborate a philosophic defence of party-government, which, since
Bolingbroke, it had become the fashion, and was now the interest,
of many to decry.
Characteristically, Burke defends party as an indispensable
instrument of practicable statesmanship, and as an institution
which has its roots in some of the profoundest and most beautiful
instincts of the heart; for utility, but utility rooted—if one may
so speak-in man's moral constitution, is Burke's court of appeal
in all questions of practical politics. Bolingbroke’s condemnation
of party as identical with faction, and his dream of a patriot king
who should govern without reference to party, must have seemed
to Burke the result of a view of human nature that was at once
too cynical and too sanguine. Party-loyalty might degenerate into
self-seeking factiousness, but, in its idea, party is 'a body of men
united for promoting by their joint endeavours the national
interest upon some particular principle in which they are all
agreed’; and the feelings which cement a party are not purely
selfish, but include and 'bring into the service and conduct of the
common-wealth''the dispositions that are lovely in private life. '
To be unable to act in loyal concert with others is to condemn
ourselves to ineffectiveness, and 'all virtue which is impracticable
is spurious,' for public life is a situation of power and energy : he
trespasses against his duty who sleeps upon his watch, as well as
he that goes over to the enemy. ' 'In the way which they call
party,' he declared, when, at a later juncture, he was charged with
factiousness, 'I worship the constitution of your fathers; and I
shall never blush for my political company. '
Though not one of the best, and certainly the most inconclusive,
of all Burke's political writings, Present Discontents reveals the
chief characteristics of his thought and style—the tendency to
go at once to the root of the matter, to illuminate facts by
principles, and to clothe these in felicitous images and phrases
which seem to shed a new light, to 'pour resistless day,' on the
moral and political constitution of man. In these things, Burke
is without a rival. His aphorisms crowd upon one another and
rise out of one another (as was noted by one who heard his first
speech in the House of Commons) until the reader can hardly go
forward, so many vistas of fresh thought are opened before him.
## p. 10 (#32) ##############################################
IO
[ch.
Edmund Burke
And Burke's political aphorisms are so pregnant that they distend
the mind with the same sense of fulness with which Shakespeare's
lines affect the student of the passions and movements of the
human heart.
But Burke's oratory was not here illumined by the vision of a
large concrete issue in which the future of an empire and the fate
of peoples depended on the wisdom or unwisdom of the policy
chosen and pursued. That came with the American controversy.
It
may be clear to the student of history that the causes of that
conflict, and of the ultimate separation of the colonies from the
mother country, lay deeper than in the schemes of taxation by
which Grenville, Townshend and North precipitated matters. It is
yet equally certain that, at a great juncture, English statesmanship
was found wanting in the wisdom, imagination and sympathy
requisite to solve the problem of governing a growing overseas
empire. It was his gifts of sympathy and imagination, combined
with a wise spirit of practicable statesmanship which distinguishes
Burke among all who discussed the colonial question on one side
or the other, and have caused his words to bear fruit in the long
run, fruitless as, at the moment, they seemed to be.
Two or three principles underlie all that Burke said or
wrote on the question. The first of these is that, in practical
politics, the guiding star of statesmanship is expediency, not
legal or abstract right. Our arguments on political questions
may often be
conclusive as to right, but the very reverse as to policy and practice. '
‘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. ' 'The
opinion of my having some abstract right in my favour would not put me
much at my ease in passing sentence; unless I could be sure that there were
no rights which in their exercise were not the most odious of all wrongs, and
the most vexatious of all injustice. '
Such quotations could be multiplied. It is the principle which
dictated the coupling of the Declaratory act with the repeal of
the Stamp act in 1766, the assertion of a legal right which, in
some conceivable emergency, it might be necessary to assert, but
the general exercise of which was to be regulated by an entire
regard for liberty and the spirit of the British constitution.
When the word 'expediency' is given its full moral significance,
this principle may be said to be the foundation-stone of Burke's
political philosophy.
The second position reiterated in these speeches is that, in the
search for what is expedient and, therefore, right, the statesman
## p. 11 (#33) ##############################################
1] Principles of the American Speeches II
must be guided by circumstances, of which the most important is
the temper and character of the people for whom he is legislating.
The statesman, like Bacon's natural philosopher, rules by obeying.
The principle is obvious, but its application requires sympathy
and imagination, and George III, with his entire lack of both, was
a better representative of the average Englishman than either
Burke or Chatham. Burke's imagination was filled with the
greatness of the American people, the wild, irregular greatness
of a people who had grown up to manhood nurtured by a wise
and salutary neglect. ' 'Nothing in history is parallel to it,' he
declares in his earliest reply to Grenville. 'All the reasonings
about it that are likely to be at all solid must be drawn from its
actual circumstances. ' And such reasoning will include the all-
important consideration that these people are Englishmen with
the inherited tradition of political liberty and self-government.
The magnificent paragraphs, in the speech On Conciliation,
devoted to the Americans, their numbers, their enterprise, their
spirit and the sources from which it is sustained, are not a purple
patch of diffuse, descriptive oratory alone. Like the similar
.
paragraphs on the peoples and civilisation of India, in a later
speech, they are an appeal to the imagination of the speaker's
audience, that, realising the magnitude of the issue at stake, they
may rise above a narrow legalism to the contemplation of what is
greater even than America, namely an empire which shall include
free peoples, and different civilisations.
But, to discover what is expedient in the complexity of cir-
cumstances, which include the tempers of people, is no easy task,
and, hence, Burke's third principle, that our safest guide is
experience. The past illumines the future, it may be but a few
feet in advance, yet sufficiently to walk by.
Again and again and again revert to your own principles-leave America, if
she has taxable matter in her, to tax herself. . . . Leave the Americans as they
anciently stood, and these distinctions born of our unhappy contest will die
along with it. . . . Be content to bind America by laws of trade; you have always
done it. Let this be your reason for binding their trade. Do not burthen
them with taxes; you were not used to do so from the beginning. Let this
be your reason for not taxing. These are arguments for states and kingdoms.
Leave the rest to the schools; for there only they may be discussed with
safety.
Such are the principles which guided Burke in adumbrating
in these speeches the lines to be followed in solving the problem
the character and complexity of which he alone seems to have
grasped, the problem of governing and maintaining the great
## p. 12 (#34) ##############################################
I 2
[CH.
Edmund Burke
empire which Chatham's successful wars had called into exist-
ence,
of reconciling the strong presiding power that is so useful towards the con-
servation of a vast, disconnected, infinitely diversified empire, with that
liberty and safety of the provinces, which they must enjoy (in opinion and
practice at least) or they will not be provinces.
He was provided with no theoretical plan that would suit all
circumstances, the natives of Hindustan and those of Virginia
alike, the Cutchery court and the grand jury of Salem. ' His
appeal was to the wisdom of experience, the spirit of the English
constitution and the magnanimity of statesmen.
Of the American speeches, the greatest, as it is the most
elaborate, is, doubtless, the second, On Conciliation ; but the first,
On American Taxation, which has more the character of being,
as, indeed, it was, the spontaneous product of debate, combines,
in a wonderful manner, simplicity and directness of reasoning with
ardour and splendour of eloquence. There is something of Rubens
or Rembrandt in the easy, broad, bold strokes with which Burke
paints the history of English policy in America ; the rich, diffused,
warm colouring of the whole ; the concentration of the high lights
and more brilliant tints on the chief episodes and figures—the
upright but narrow-minded Grenville ; Conway, whose face in the
hour of victory was as the face of an angel; the tessellated ministry
of Chatham ; the passing of that great and theatrical figure, and
the dazzling advent of Townshend. Such characters' had been a
feature of earlier oratory and history like that of Bolingbroke and
Clarendon-both of them writers with whose work Burke was inti-
mately acquainted—but these, again, are, in Burke's speeches, no
mere rhetorical device or literary ornament. They illustrate his con-
viction that politics have their roots in human character ; that, to
understand policies, we must study personalities, whether indivi-
duals or corporate bodies like the House of Commons and the
National Assembly.
The speech On Conciliation is the most greatly builded of all
Burke's speeches, not excepting those on India, which belong rather
to forensic than deliberative oratory. Perhaps its structure is too
elaborate for its immediate purpose. The sonorous parade of the
parallel cases of Wales, Chester and Ireland was not likely to have
much weight with the House of Commons. It is rather a great
concio ad populum et regem, a last impassioned, elevated and
conciliatory appeal to the government and the nation; and, if
delivered under the conditions of a later period, when it would
6
## p. 13 (#35) ##############################################
1
1]
Speech On Conciliation
13
>
have been read in every household on the day following, could not
but have reacted with power on both House and government. As
it is, it remains some compensation to English literature for the
dismemberment of the British empire. Whether we reflect on the
art with which it is constructed, the skill with which the speaker
winds into the heart of his subject and draws from it the material
of his splendid peroration on 'the spirit of the English constitution'
and its power to unite, invigorate and vivify the British empire in
all its diverse members; or reflect on the temper, passionate and
moving yet restrained and conciliatory, in which the argument is
conducted; or recall simply the greater flights of picturesque
eloquence, the description of American industry and enterprise, the
imagery in which the speaker clothes his conception of the spirit of
the English constitution and the sovereign authority of parliament-
the speech takes its own place beside the greatest masterpieces of
our literature, the plays of Shakespeare and the poems of Milton.
It produces the same impression of supremacy in its own kind; it
abounds, like these, in phrases which seem to enrich our language
with a new felicity and dignity: ‘enjoyments which deceive the
burthen of life,' a wise and salutary neglect,' 'I do not know the
method of drawing up an indictment against a whole people,' 'man
acts from adequate motives relative to his interest, and not on
metaphysical speculations,’ ‘magnanimity in politics is not seldom
the truest wisdom; and a great empire and little minds go ill
together
In these speeches, Burke is the orator following consciously
the ancient tradition of oratory; combining all the styles, the plain,
the ornate, the impassioned, each used as the theme requires, in the
manner which Cicero, in the Orator, describes as constituting the
authentic Attic and Demosthenic eloquence. In Burke's Letter to
the Sheriffs of Bristol, the style is more uniform and unadorned,
a vigorous and straight hitting polemic. He sweeps aside with
the scorn of which he was a master the cant charges which, in
time of war, are levelled at those who question either the foolish
policy or arbitrary tyranny of the government, and defines,
more clearly than ever, what had always been his conception of
the nature of the problem presented by the government of a com-
plex and scattered empire, and the entire competence in the
matter of 'prudence, constituted as the god of this lower world,'
and prudence only.
What Burke deplored in the American policy of George III
1 See Boswell's Life of Johnson (ed. Hill, G. B. , vol. 11, p. 260).
## p. 14 (#36) ##############################################
14
(ch.
Edmund Burke
>
and his ministers was the entire absence of this prudence. He did
not take any side in the battle of 'rights,' natural and legal, but
stood firmly upon the basis of experience and expediency. In the
cases of Ireland and India, he showed that, by a policy based on
expediency he understood something very different from oppor-
tunism ; that, if he disdained discussion of metaphysical rights, it
was not that he did not believe in the existence of rights prior to
and above all human conventions and laws, but because he deemed
that their abstract definition was either an impossible or a useless
labour, apt to hinder, rather than to promote, their practical realisa-
tion. But that there is an eternal law of which human law is, at its
best, but declaratory is the assumption and the express affirmation
underlying his attacks on the tyranny of the penal laws in Ireland
and on the claim to arbitrary power in India put forward by Warren
Hastings, as the vindication of his treatment of the rajah of
Benares. There is a law which neither despot nor people may
violate ; any law in contradiction of it not only may, but must, be
resisted,
because made against the principle of a superior law, which it is not in the
power of any community, or of the whole race of men to alter-I mean the
will of Him who gave us our nature, and in giving impressed an invariable
law upon it. It would be hard to point out any error more truly subversive
of all the wonder and beauty, of all the peace and happiness of human society,
than the position—that any body of men have a right to make what laws they
please, or that laws can derive any authority from their institution merely
and independent of the quality of the subject-matter. No argument of policy,
reason of state, or preservation of the constitution can be pleaded in favour of
such a practice.
So he wrote between 1760 and 1765 in Tracts relative to the Laws
against Popery in Ireland and his position is unchanged in 1788
when he denounces Warren Hastings.
Arbitrary power is a thing which neither any man can hold nor any man
can give. . . . We are all born in subjection.
Pollok
203
## p. xi (#19) ##############################################
1
Contents
xi
CHAPTER XI
THE PROSODY OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
By GEORGE SAINTSBURY, M. A.
PAGE
Changes in the Heroic Couplet of Dryden. The Octosyllabic Couplet.
The Spenserian Stanza. Blank Verse. Lyric Poetry of the
Eighteenth Century. Edward Bysshe's Art of Poetry. Eigh-
teenth Century Prosodists. Joshua Steele. Young. Shenstone.
Gray. Johnson. John Mason. Mitford. Cowper. Summary
245
.
CHAPTER XII
THE GEORGIAN DRAMA
Panas!
By HAROLD V. ROUTH, M. A. , Peterhouse, Leeturer in
English Literature at Goldsmiths' College, London" (rimariset,
'
londe, Bertoni
The Decay of the Drama and the Advance of the Actor. The Theatre
in the Eighteenth Century and its Audiences. Richard Cumberland.
The Brothers. The West Indian Lesser Playwrights. Oliver
Goldsmith. She Stoops to Conquer. Richard Brinsley Sheridan.
The Rivals. A Trip to Scarborough. The School for Scandal.
Hannah More. Percy. Hannah Cowley. General Burgoyne.
The Heiress. Thomas Holcroft. The Road to Ruin. The
Deserted Daughter. Elizabeth Inchbald. George Colman the
Younger. Inkle and Yarico. Thomas Morton and others.
Cumberland's Jew. Realism and the Drama
257
CHAPTER XIII
THE GROWTH OF THE LATER NOVEL
By GEORGE SAINTSBURY
多,。
nh
Thomas Amory. John Buncle. Memoirs of Several Ladies. William
Beckford. Vathek. William Godwin, Caleb Williams, St Leon.
Thomas Holcroft. Autobiography. Novels. Mrs Inchbald.
A Simple Story. Nature and Art. Robert Bage. Hermsprong.
Maria Edgeworth. Belinda. The Absentee. Ormond. Tales
for the Young. Charlotte Smith. Regina Maria Roche. Eaton
Stannard Barrett. Clara Reeve. Ann Radcliffe. The Mysteries
of Udolpho and other works. Matthew Gregory Lewis. The
Monk. Charles Robert Maturin. Melmoth the Wanderer. Jane
and Anna Maria Porter. Thaddeus of Warsaw. The Scottish
Chiefs. Thomas Hope. Anastasius. Thomas Love Peacock
285
## p. xii (#20) #############################################
xii
Contents
CHAPTER XIV
BOOK PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION, 1625—1800
By H. G. ALDIS, M. A. , Peterhouse, Secretary of the
University Library
PAGE
14
Attempts at State Control under Charles I and the Commonwealth.
The Censorship of L'Estrange. Lapse of the Licensing Laws.
Copyright before 1709. The first Copyright Act. The battle for
Perpetual Copyright. The relations between Author and Publisher
in the Seventeenth Century. Milton, Baxter. Earnings of play-
wrights. Literature becomes a Profession. Increase of the Reading
Classes. Patrons and Dedications. The Publisher as Patron and
Employer. Leading Publishers in Commonwealth and Restoration
times. The Eighteenth Century. Tonson, Lintot, Dodsley, Millar.
Trade books. Society for Encouragement of Learning. Bell's
Poets and Johnson's Poets. Paternoster Row Numbers. Book-
sellers' Clubs. Cadell, Strahan. Literary Booksellers. Curll
and Grub Street. "The Trade' in London. Little Britain. Scot,
Bateman, the Ballards. Other Localities. Westminster Hall.
Literary Coffeehouses. Payne, Davies. Popular Literature.
Practical Divinity, Chapbooks. The Retail Bookseller. Sale by
auction. Printed Catalogues. James Lackington. Circulating
Libraries and Book Clubs. Trade Lists of Current Publications.
Trade sales. The Provincial Trade. Scotland and Ireland .
311
CHAPTER XV
THE BLUESTOCKINGS
By Mrs H. G. ALDIS
The term 'Bluestocking! Conversation parties. Mrs Vesey. Mrs
Montagu. Her share in Lord Lyttelton's Dialogues of the Dead.
Her Essay on Shakespeare. Mrs Montagu and Voltaire. Mrs
Elizabeth Carter. Her Translation of Epictetus. Hannah More.
Her friendship with Horace Walpole. Mrs Chapone.
343
## p. xiii (#21) ############################################
Contents
X111
CHAPTER XVI
CHILDREN'S BOOKS
By F. J. HARVEY DARTON, sometime Scholar of St John's
College, Oxford
PAGE
Schoolbooks. The Hornbook. Books of Courtesy. Hell-fire tales.
Exemplary' Compilations. Bunyan's Divine Emblems. Watte's
Divine Songs. The Chapbook. Fairy Tales. Nursery Rimes.
John Newbery. Dorothy Kilner. Sarah Trimmer. Mrs Sherwood.
Maria Edgeworth. Thomas Day's Sandford and Merton. The
Moral Tale in Verse. Ann and Jane Taylor's Original Poems.
Miss Turner's Cautionary Stories. Charles and Mary Lamb.
Later Writings for Children
366
388
Bibliographies .
Table of Principal Dates
Index of Names
493
.
.
196
.
## p. xiv (#22) #############################################
3
## p. 1 (#23) ###############################################
1
CHAPTER I
EDMUND BURKE
>
EDMUND BURKE, the greatest of English orators, if we measure
greatness not by immediate effect alone but by the durability and
the diffusive power of that effect, and one of the profoundest, most
suggestive and most illuminating of political thinkers, if we may
not call a philosopher one who did not elaborate any system and
who refrained on principle from the discussion of purely theoretical
issues, was an Irishman of the usual blended native and English
strain, born(1729) in a family which united the two creeds that divide
Ireland more profoundly and fatefully than any distinction of race.
His father, a small Dublin solicitor, was a protestant, his mother a
catholic. Burke himself was educated in the protestant faith, but
his sister adhered to the religion of her mother, and his wife was a
catholic who conformed to the Anglican church after her marriage.
Burke always professed his protestantism frankly and sincerely,
'We are protestants not from indifference but from zeal'—and
the charges that were brought against him of having, at one time
or other, been a catholic are without foundation, but his attitude
towards the catholic church was at once tolerant and sympathetic.
To him, she and every other church were allies in the defence of
the religious conception of life which was the centre of all his
thought about morals and politics, and of which atheistical
Jacobinism was the antithesis. In the last years of his life, he
fought for the cause of catholic emancipation in Ireland no less
ardently than he opposed a 'regicide' peace with France. The
'directory of Ireland' which upheld protestant ascendancy at
Dublin was hardly less odious to him than the Jacobin directory
in Paris.
Burke's education was received at Ballitore, under a quaker,
whose son, Richard Shackleton, became the chief friend of his
early manhood, and at Trinity college, Dublin. Fox believed
that Burke “had not any very nice critical knowledge even of
1
B, L, XL.
CH. I.
## p. 2 (#24) ###############################################
2
[CH.
Edmund Burke
Latin, still less of Greek,' but was well read in Latin authors,
especially Cicero, Vergil, Ovid, Horace and Tacitus, and that he
imitated the first mentioned of these authors most particularly,
as well in his turn of thinking as in his manner of expression. '
What survive of Burke's letters to Shackleton point to the same
conclusion as Fox's observation, that Burke was a wide and
curious reader rather than a minute scholar. Mathematics, logic,
history were, each in turn, he tells Shackleton, in one letter, a
passion, and all, for a time, yielded to poetry. The letter affords
a vivid glimpse into the education of one to whom knowledge,
knowledge varied and detailed, was always to be a passion, and
who was seldom or never to pen a sentence that has not something
in its form to arrest the attention or to give delight. But Burke
was not a poet. He could do many things that were beyond the
power of his less strenuous and less profound fellow student,
Oliver Goldsmith, but he could never have written The Deserted
Village or The Vicar of Wakefield. Nor, magnificent as Burke's
prose was to be, picturesque, harmonious and full of cadence, is
it ever the prose which affects us as poetry. It is always the
prose of an orator, addressed to an audience and aiming at a
practical effect. Beauty, as in the meditations of Browne or the
oratory of Taylor, is never to Burke an end in itself.
The wide and varied reading which began at Trinity college
was, apparently, the chief activity of the nine obscure years
(1750—59) which Burke spent as a student of law in London,
eating dinners at the Middle Temple, sojourning at country inns
or rooms during the vacation with his namesake and, perhaps,
kinsman William Burke, and making tentative excursions into
letters with an ironical answer to Bolingbroke's posthumous
writings in A Vindication of Natural Society (1756) and an
essay in aesthetics after Addison in A Philosophical Enquiry
into the Origin of our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful
(1756). Fulness of mind was the quality of Burke's conversation
which impressed Johnson and all who came to know him in these
and later years—knowledge and the power of applying that
knowledge, 'diversifying the matter infinitely in your own mind. '
‘His stream of mind is perpetual,' was Johnson's comment;
‘Burke is the only man whose common conversation corresponds
with the general fame which he has in the world.
whatever topic you please, he is ready to meet you. Burke
owed his success in the House of Commons and its committees
not more, perhaps, to his eloquence than to this fulness of mind,
Take up
## p. 3 (#25) ###############################################
1]
Early Life and Work
3
to the fact that, whatever topic he handled, America, India,
Ireland, finance or trade, he spoke from a copious and close
knowledge of the subject.
The works which Burke composed during these years are not
of great importance.
A Philosophical Enquiry is an unequal,
and, in the main, rather jejune, treatise of which the fairest criticism
is probably Lessing's, that it ‘is uncommonly useful as a collection
of all the occurrences and perceptions which the philosophers
must assume as indisputable in inquiries of this kind. ' Burke
distinguishes the sublime so sharply from the beautiful that his
description of the latter includes little which goes beyond the
pretty. More interesting and suggestive is the analysis of the
pleasure we take in terrible and painful spectacles—whether a
tragedy in the theatre or an execution in the street. But, perhaps,
most interesting of all is his discussion of the aesthetic and
emotional qualities of words, which he finds to depend less on the
images which they evoke than their other properties of sound and
association. The business of poetry and rhetoric is 'to affect
rather by sympathy than imitation; to display rather the effect of
things on the mind of the speaker, or of others, than to present
a clear idea of the things themselves. ' The germ of Laocoon is
contained in these paragraphs.
A Vindication is a much more characteristic and significant
document. In parodying the eloquence of Bolingbroke, Burke
caught some of the first tones of his own more sonorous and
varied harmonies. The conception of the essay, a defence of
religion by the application of a reductio ad absurdum to Boling-
broke's method of attack, revealed the deep religious spirit
in which all Burke's political and social speculation bottoms
and roots itself. Bolingbroke had indicted revealed religions by
pointing to some of the consequences which, in history, had
flowed from dogmatic creeds, and Burke answers him by applying
the same method to the criticism of political society.
Shew me an absurdity in religion, and I will undertake to shew you an
hundred for one in political laws and institutions. . . . If after all, you should
confess all these things, yet plead the necessity of political institutions, weak
and wicked as they are, I can argue with equal, perhaps superior, force con-
cerning the necessity of artificial religion; and every step you advance in your
argument, you add a strength to mine.
But, perhaps, the most interesting quality of the essay is the
sidelight that it throws on Burke's temperament, the sensitive,
brooding imagination which, coupled with a restless, speculative
1-2
## p. 4 (#26) ###############################################
4
[CH.
Edmund Burke
intellect, seeking ever to illuminate facts by principles, gives tone
to Burke's speeches and pamphlets ; for it is this temperament
which imparts vividness and colour to the dry details of historical
and statistical knowledge, and it is this temperament which at
once directs, keeps in check and prescribes its limits to, that
speculative, enquiring intellect. In the sentences in which Burke
paints the lot of those who bear the burden of political society,
the unhappy wretches employed in lead, tin, iron, copper and
coal mines, who scarce ever see the light of the sun, the enfans
perdus of the army of civil society; in these vivid paragraphs,
and not less in his failure to draw from them any but an ironical
conclusion, a reductio ad absurdum of Bolingbroke's paradoxes,
we get an insight into one of the most radical characteristics
of Burke's mind. In his later works, he did not often touch
directly on the subject of the poor and their lot, though it was
a theme, he says, on which he had 'often reflected and never
reflected without feeling from it’; but his sensibility was not
more acute than his conviction was profound that legislation
and political adjustment could do little or nothing to alleviate
their lot. Burke's whole life was a prolonged warfare against the
folly and injustice of statesmen ; but there was no admixture
in his nature of what the old physiologists called the sanguine
temperament. His political life was inspired by no gleam of
the confidence which animated a statesman like Gladstone. The
connection between revealed religion and political society was, to
him, a deeper one than the superficial irony of A Vindication
might suggest. If we confine our view to this life, the lot of
humanity must always seem a dubious one. Wise government
may lighten the lot of men, it can never make it more than
tolerable for the great majority. The effect of this cast of mind
on Burke's attitude towards the French revolution, and the
interval which it creates between him and the great poets of
the romantic revival, with whom he has otherwise much in common,
will appear later.
In closing Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790),
Burke declares that
they come from one, almost the whole of whose public exertion has been a
struggle for the liberty of others; from one in whose breast no anger durable
or vehement has ever been kindled, but by what he considered as tyranny.
In all those struggles, he declared in 1795, when his hopes for
catholic emancipation in Ireland were shattered by the dismissal
of Lord Fitzwilliam, he had been unsuccessful.
## p. 5 (#27) ###############################################
5
1] Outline of his Political Career
My sanguine hopes are blasted, and I must consign my feelings on that
terrible disappointment to the same patience in which I have been obliged
to bury the vexation I suffered on the defeat of the other great, just, and
honourable causes in which I have had some share, and which have given
more of dignity than of peace to a long laborious life.
A brief enumeration of these 'great, just, and honourable causes'
will indicate sufficiently for the purposes of this History the
outlines of Burke's public career.
After a brief time as secretary to William Gerard Hamilton,
then chief secretary for Ireland, Burke entered public life as
member for Wendover (1765), to which he was presented by Lord
Verney, the friend and fellow-speculator of Burke's kinsman and
namesake mentioned above. At the same time, he became
secretary to Lord Rockingham, then in power and engaged in
repealing Grenville's unfortunate Stamp act. Thenceforth, through
the life of that short administration and in the sixteen years of
opposition which followed, Burke was the animating spirit of the
Rockingham section of the whigs, the germ of the subsequent
liberal party. The two chief causes for which he fought during
these years were those of the freedom of the House of Commons
against the designs of George III and the ‘king's friends, and
of the American colonies against the claim of the home govern-
ment to tax them directly. The writings in which Burke's views
in these conflicts are most fully preserved are Observations on
a late publication entitled 'The Present State of the Nation'
(1769), Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents (1770),
the speech On American Taxation (1774), that On moving his
Resolutions for Conciliation with the Colonies (1775) and A
Letter . . . to. . . [the] Sheriffs of. . . Bristol (1777)”. These, of course,
are only those utterances which Burke thought fit to issue to the
public. Of his innumerable speeches on these and other subjects,
including the great speech against employing Indians in the war,
we have only the scantiest records.
Two other topics interested Burke during these years : Ireland
and India, and, as the American war drew to an end, they became
his chief preoccupation. He had early reflected and written on
the iniquity of the penal laws—though the draft which he
prepared about 1760—5 was not issued till much later and
he supported and watched with sympathy the policy or revolution
which emancipated Irish trade and secured the independence
1 To these may be added the posthumously published An Address to the King, drawn
ap when a secession of the whigs from parliament was contemplated in 1777 and an
Address to the British Colonists in North America.
6
## p. 6 (#28) ###############################################
6
[ch.
Edmund Burke
of the Irish parliament (1778–82). By reason of his support of
Irish trade, he lost, in 1780, the representation of Bristol, which
his opposition to the American war had gained for him in
1774 ; and Two Letters. . . to Gentlemen in the City of Bristol
(1778), with the Speech at the Guildhall, in Bristol, previous to
the late Election (1780), are the noble record of his courage, inde-
pendence and wisdom in this hour of defeat. In the years following
the outbreak of the French revolution, Burke advocated, with
unabated ardour, the cause of catholics, his views being expressed,
not in speeches, but in long letters to Sir Hercules Langrishe,
Thomas Burgh, his son Richard Burke, Dr Hussey and others.
In the government of our East Indian dominions, Burke was
early interested. It is usual now to affirm dogmatically that he
participated in the speculations of his brother Richard, his
kinsman William and Lord Verney, in East India stock. It may
be so, but is not proved; and Burke himself declared, in 1772,
'I have never had any concern in the funds of the East India com-
pany, nor have taken any part whatsoever in its affairs, except when
they came before me in the course of parliamentary proceedings. '
During the attempts made by Lord North's government to regulate
the East India company, Burke was the warm supporter and
diligent adviser of the company (1766—74). It was after 1780
that he became an active member of the committees which
investigated the affairs of India, and, in consequence of what was
revealed, the relentless foe of Warren Hastings and of the privileges
and powers of the company. In the East India bill of 1783, he
flung to the winds that fear of increasing the influence of the
crown which had dictated his earlier support of the company, and
proposed to transfer to parliament and the crown the whole
administration and patronage of India. In 1785, he entered upon
the attack upon Hastings which was to occupy him for ten years.
In the same year, he delivered the famous Speech on the . . . Nabob of
Arcot's Private Debts. The articles of indictment against Hastings,
with the speeches delivered by Burke, fill some six volumes of the
collected works. With the speeches of 1783 and 1785, they are
the record of his labours in this cause, in conducting which he
exhibited at once all the vast range of his knowledge, the varied
powers of bis eloquence and the worst errors of taste and judg-
ment of which his great and increasing sensibility of mind made
him guilty in the years from 1780 onwards.
The last great cause in which Burke fought his usual splendid
but losing battle was that of resistance to the French revolution
## p. 7 (#29) ###############################################
1]
Pamphlets on Public Affairs
7
and the philosophy and spirit of atheistical Jacobinism. Beginning
with a speech on the army estimates (9 February 1790), the crusade
was continued with ever increasing indignation through the famous
Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790), A Letter. . . to a
Member of the National Assembly (1791), An Appeal from the
New to the Old Whigs (1791), Thoughts on French Affairs (1791),
Remarks on the Policy of the Allies (1793), A Letter . . . to a Noble
Lord (1795) and Letters. . . on the Proposals for Peace with the
Regicide Directory of France (1795—7). Burke died in 1797
with his last hopes for justice to Irish catholics shattered, and
believing that his country was on the eve of a peace which could
be no peace but only a humiliating truce while the enemy made
ready to pursue their destructive crusade.
These, in outline, are the campaigns of Burke. Whatever be
now our judgment on the questions of a bygone age with which he
was concerned, the importance of the principles to which his mind
always gravitated, his preoccupation at every juncture with the
fundamental issues of wise government, and the splendour of the
eloquence in which he set forth these principles, an eloquence in
which the wisdom of his thought and the felicity of his language
and imagery seem inseparable from one another, an eloquence that
is wisdom (not ‘seeming wisdom'as Hobbes defined eloquence),
have made his speeches and pamphlets a source of perennial
freshness and interest.
The first of the pamphlets on public affairs was a brief
statement of what had been achieved by the Rockingham
administration to restore order and good government at home
and in the colonies. The Observations are a more detailed
defence of that administration against the attack of an anonymous
pamphlet, attributed to George Grenville. Grenville, in this
pamphlet, defended his own government, which was responsible
for the peace of Paris and the first proposal to tax the colonies,
and criticised the repeal of the Stamp act. Both the peace and
the resolution to tax America were the consequence, he argued,
of the charges incurred by the great wars. Burke's reply
consists in showing that Grenville had underestimated the power
of England and her expanding trade to support these increased
charges, and especially had exaggerated the sufferings of this
country when compared with those of France, the condition of
whose lower classes, and the straitness and distraction of whose
finances,' seemed, to Burke, at this period, to forbode ‘some
extraordinary convulsion . . . the effect of which on France, and
6
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8
[CH.
Edmund Burke
even on all Europe, it is difficult to conjecture. ' But much of
the ground that is covered in this first controversial pamphlet
was again traversed with a more confident step, with a wider
outlook and a loftier eloquence, in the writings which followed
it. Less hampered by the necessity of controverting an opponent,
Burke addresses himself to the fundamental constitutional and
imperial questions at issue in a spirit of elevated political wisdom.
The position which Burke adopts in Present Discontents
(1770) is eloquent of the temper in which he ever approached
questions affecting the constitution. The conflict which raged
round Wilkes and the Middlesex election was, he saw clearly,
a conflict between the crown and the constituencies, the crown
acting by an instrumental house of commons. ' He admitted
the ultimate authority of the people. Although government
certainly is an institution of divine authority, yet its forms, and
the persons who administer it, all originate from the people. '
But he shrank from the inference that, if government were
emancipating itself from the control of the people, if the crown
were threatening to deprive the House of Commons of its peculiar
'virtue, spirit and essence,' namely, to be “the express image of
the feelings of the nation' it was because the constituencies
themselves had ceased to represent the people. The proposals
to enlarge the number of constituents, coupled, as they were,
with the expedient of triennial parliaments, he always re-
sisted. To Burke, a constitutional state was one in which, in
some degree, a balance had been secured between the various
powers which, in the state, represent the complex nature of man,
and, in the British constitution, as it had taken shape in history;
and especially with the revolution, he saw, if not an ideal, yet,
the weak and imperfect nature of man considered, a wonderful
balance of powers, aristocracy (the power which springs from
man's natural regard for inherited distinction and privilege) and
property exerting in a healthy and not sinister fashion their
natural and inevitable influence, while the popular will made
itself felt directly and indirectly, by actual and by virtual'
representation, as a controlling and, at times, an inspiring in-
fluence. He would not do anything to disturb this balance.
‘Our constitution stands on a nice equipoise with steep precipices
and deep waters upon all sides of it. In removing it from a
dangerous leaning towards one side there may be a risk of over-
setting it on the other. He would rather ‘by lessening the number
add to the weight and independency of our voters.
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1]
The Present Discontents
9
Unable, therefore, to acquiesce in the only practical means by
which the people were to recover the control of parliament, and
enforce loyalty to principle and party, Burke could only indicate
the chief symptom of the disease, the disintegration of party, and
elaborate a philosophic defence of party-government, which, since
Bolingbroke, it had become the fashion, and was now the interest,
of many to decry.
Characteristically, Burke defends party as an indispensable
instrument of practicable statesmanship, and as an institution
which has its roots in some of the profoundest and most beautiful
instincts of the heart; for utility, but utility rooted—if one may
so speak-in man's moral constitution, is Burke's court of appeal
in all questions of practical politics. Bolingbroke’s condemnation
of party as identical with faction, and his dream of a patriot king
who should govern without reference to party, must have seemed
to Burke the result of a view of human nature that was at once
too cynical and too sanguine. Party-loyalty might degenerate into
self-seeking factiousness, but, in its idea, party is 'a body of men
united for promoting by their joint endeavours the national
interest upon some particular principle in which they are all
agreed’; and the feelings which cement a party are not purely
selfish, but include and 'bring into the service and conduct of the
common-wealth''the dispositions that are lovely in private life. '
To be unable to act in loyal concert with others is to condemn
ourselves to ineffectiveness, and 'all virtue which is impracticable
is spurious,' for public life is a situation of power and energy : he
trespasses against his duty who sleeps upon his watch, as well as
he that goes over to the enemy. ' 'In the way which they call
party,' he declared, when, at a later juncture, he was charged with
factiousness, 'I worship the constitution of your fathers; and I
shall never blush for my political company. '
Though not one of the best, and certainly the most inconclusive,
of all Burke's political writings, Present Discontents reveals the
chief characteristics of his thought and style—the tendency to
go at once to the root of the matter, to illuminate facts by
principles, and to clothe these in felicitous images and phrases
which seem to shed a new light, to 'pour resistless day,' on the
moral and political constitution of man. In these things, Burke
is without a rival. His aphorisms crowd upon one another and
rise out of one another (as was noted by one who heard his first
speech in the House of Commons) until the reader can hardly go
forward, so many vistas of fresh thought are opened before him.
## p. 10 (#32) ##############################################
IO
[ch.
Edmund Burke
And Burke's political aphorisms are so pregnant that they distend
the mind with the same sense of fulness with which Shakespeare's
lines affect the student of the passions and movements of the
human heart.
But Burke's oratory was not here illumined by the vision of a
large concrete issue in which the future of an empire and the fate
of peoples depended on the wisdom or unwisdom of the policy
chosen and pursued. That came with the American controversy.
It
may be clear to the student of history that the causes of that
conflict, and of the ultimate separation of the colonies from the
mother country, lay deeper than in the schemes of taxation by
which Grenville, Townshend and North precipitated matters. It is
yet equally certain that, at a great juncture, English statesmanship
was found wanting in the wisdom, imagination and sympathy
requisite to solve the problem of governing a growing overseas
empire. It was his gifts of sympathy and imagination, combined
with a wise spirit of practicable statesmanship which distinguishes
Burke among all who discussed the colonial question on one side
or the other, and have caused his words to bear fruit in the long
run, fruitless as, at the moment, they seemed to be.
Two or three principles underlie all that Burke said or
wrote on the question. The first of these is that, in practical
politics, the guiding star of statesmanship is expediency, not
legal or abstract right. Our arguments on political questions
may often be
conclusive as to right, but the very reverse as to policy and practice. '
‘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. ' 'The
opinion of my having some abstract right in my favour would not put me
much at my ease in passing sentence; unless I could be sure that there were
no rights which in their exercise were not the most odious of all wrongs, and
the most vexatious of all injustice. '
Such quotations could be multiplied. It is the principle which
dictated the coupling of the Declaratory act with the repeal of
the Stamp act in 1766, the assertion of a legal right which, in
some conceivable emergency, it might be necessary to assert, but
the general exercise of which was to be regulated by an entire
regard for liberty and the spirit of the British constitution.
When the word 'expediency' is given its full moral significance,
this principle may be said to be the foundation-stone of Burke's
political philosophy.
The second position reiterated in these speeches is that, in the
search for what is expedient and, therefore, right, the statesman
## p. 11 (#33) ##############################################
1] Principles of the American Speeches II
must be guided by circumstances, of which the most important is
the temper and character of the people for whom he is legislating.
The statesman, like Bacon's natural philosopher, rules by obeying.
The principle is obvious, but its application requires sympathy
and imagination, and George III, with his entire lack of both, was
a better representative of the average Englishman than either
Burke or Chatham. Burke's imagination was filled with the
greatness of the American people, the wild, irregular greatness
of a people who had grown up to manhood nurtured by a wise
and salutary neglect. ' 'Nothing in history is parallel to it,' he
declares in his earliest reply to Grenville. 'All the reasonings
about it that are likely to be at all solid must be drawn from its
actual circumstances. ' And such reasoning will include the all-
important consideration that these people are Englishmen with
the inherited tradition of political liberty and self-government.
The magnificent paragraphs, in the speech On Conciliation,
devoted to the Americans, their numbers, their enterprise, their
spirit and the sources from which it is sustained, are not a purple
patch of diffuse, descriptive oratory alone. Like the similar
.
paragraphs on the peoples and civilisation of India, in a later
speech, they are an appeal to the imagination of the speaker's
audience, that, realising the magnitude of the issue at stake, they
may rise above a narrow legalism to the contemplation of what is
greater even than America, namely an empire which shall include
free peoples, and different civilisations.
But, to discover what is expedient in the complexity of cir-
cumstances, which include the tempers of people, is no easy task,
and, hence, Burke's third principle, that our safest guide is
experience. The past illumines the future, it may be but a few
feet in advance, yet sufficiently to walk by.
Again and again and again revert to your own principles-leave America, if
she has taxable matter in her, to tax herself. . . . Leave the Americans as they
anciently stood, and these distinctions born of our unhappy contest will die
along with it. . . . Be content to bind America by laws of trade; you have always
done it. Let this be your reason for binding their trade. Do not burthen
them with taxes; you were not used to do so from the beginning. Let this
be your reason for not taxing. These are arguments for states and kingdoms.
Leave the rest to the schools; for there only they may be discussed with
safety.
Such are the principles which guided Burke in adumbrating
in these speeches the lines to be followed in solving the problem
the character and complexity of which he alone seems to have
grasped, the problem of governing and maintaining the great
## p. 12 (#34) ##############################################
I 2
[CH.
Edmund Burke
empire which Chatham's successful wars had called into exist-
ence,
of reconciling the strong presiding power that is so useful towards the con-
servation of a vast, disconnected, infinitely diversified empire, with that
liberty and safety of the provinces, which they must enjoy (in opinion and
practice at least) or they will not be provinces.
He was provided with no theoretical plan that would suit all
circumstances, the natives of Hindustan and those of Virginia
alike, the Cutchery court and the grand jury of Salem. ' His
appeal was to the wisdom of experience, the spirit of the English
constitution and the magnanimity of statesmen.
Of the American speeches, the greatest, as it is the most
elaborate, is, doubtless, the second, On Conciliation ; but the first,
On American Taxation, which has more the character of being,
as, indeed, it was, the spontaneous product of debate, combines,
in a wonderful manner, simplicity and directness of reasoning with
ardour and splendour of eloquence. There is something of Rubens
or Rembrandt in the easy, broad, bold strokes with which Burke
paints the history of English policy in America ; the rich, diffused,
warm colouring of the whole ; the concentration of the high lights
and more brilliant tints on the chief episodes and figures—the
upright but narrow-minded Grenville ; Conway, whose face in the
hour of victory was as the face of an angel; the tessellated ministry
of Chatham ; the passing of that great and theatrical figure, and
the dazzling advent of Townshend. Such characters' had been a
feature of earlier oratory and history like that of Bolingbroke and
Clarendon-both of them writers with whose work Burke was inti-
mately acquainted—but these, again, are, in Burke's speeches, no
mere rhetorical device or literary ornament. They illustrate his con-
viction that politics have their roots in human character ; that, to
understand policies, we must study personalities, whether indivi-
duals or corporate bodies like the House of Commons and the
National Assembly.
The speech On Conciliation is the most greatly builded of all
Burke's speeches, not excepting those on India, which belong rather
to forensic than deliberative oratory. Perhaps its structure is too
elaborate for its immediate purpose. The sonorous parade of the
parallel cases of Wales, Chester and Ireland was not likely to have
much weight with the House of Commons. It is rather a great
concio ad populum et regem, a last impassioned, elevated and
conciliatory appeal to the government and the nation; and, if
delivered under the conditions of a later period, when it would
6
## p. 13 (#35) ##############################################
1
1]
Speech On Conciliation
13
>
have been read in every household on the day following, could not
but have reacted with power on both House and government. As
it is, it remains some compensation to English literature for the
dismemberment of the British empire. Whether we reflect on the
art with which it is constructed, the skill with which the speaker
winds into the heart of his subject and draws from it the material
of his splendid peroration on 'the spirit of the English constitution'
and its power to unite, invigorate and vivify the British empire in
all its diverse members; or reflect on the temper, passionate and
moving yet restrained and conciliatory, in which the argument is
conducted; or recall simply the greater flights of picturesque
eloquence, the description of American industry and enterprise, the
imagery in which the speaker clothes his conception of the spirit of
the English constitution and the sovereign authority of parliament-
the speech takes its own place beside the greatest masterpieces of
our literature, the plays of Shakespeare and the poems of Milton.
It produces the same impression of supremacy in its own kind; it
abounds, like these, in phrases which seem to enrich our language
with a new felicity and dignity: ‘enjoyments which deceive the
burthen of life,' a wise and salutary neglect,' 'I do not know the
method of drawing up an indictment against a whole people,' 'man
acts from adequate motives relative to his interest, and not on
metaphysical speculations,’ ‘magnanimity in politics is not seldom
the truest wisdom; and a great empire and little minds go ill
together
In these speeches, Burke is the orator following consciously
the ancient tradition of oratory; combining all the styles, the plain,
the ornate, the impassioned, each used as the theme requires, in the
manner which Cicero, in the Orator, describes as constituting the
authentic Attic and Demosthenic eloquence. In Burke's Letter to
the Sheriffs of Bristol, the style is more uniform and unadorned,
a vigorous and straight hitting polemic. He sweeps aside with
the scorn of which he was a master the cant charges which, in
time of war, are levelled at those who question either the foolish
policy or arbitrary tyranny of the government, and defines,
more clearly than ever, what had always been his conception of
the nature of the problem presented by the government of a com-
plex and scattered empire, and the entire competence in the
matter of 'prudence, constituted as the god of this lower world,'
and prudence only.
What Burke deplored in the American policy of George III
1 See Boswell's Life of Johnson (ed. Hill, G. B. , vol. 11, p. 260).
## p. 14 (#36) ##############################################
14
(ch.
Edmund Burke
>
and his ministers was the entire absence of this prudence. He did
not take any side in the battle of 'rights,' natural and legal, but
stood firmly upon the basis of experience and expediency. In the
cases of Ireland and India, he showed that, by a policy based on
expediency he understood something very different from oppor-
tunism ; that, if he disdained discussion of metaphysical rights, it
was not that he did not believe in the existence of rights prior to
and above all human conventions and laws, but because he deemed
that their abstract definition was either an impossible or a useless
labour, apt to hinder, rather than to promote, their practical realisa-
tion. But that there is an eternal law of which human law is, at its
best, but declaratory is the assumption and the express affirmation
underlying his attacks on the tyranny of the penal laws in Ireland
and on the claim to arbitrary power in India put forward by Warren
Hastings, as the vindication of his treatment of the rajah of
Benares. There is a law which neither despot nor people may
violate ; any law in contradiction of it not only may, but must, be
resisted,
because made against the principle of a superior law, which it is not in the
power of any community, or of the whole race of men to alter-I mean the
will of Him who gave us our nature, and in giving impressed an invariable
law upon it. It would be hard to point out any error more truly subversive
of all the wonder and beauty, of all the peace and happiness of human society,
than the position—that any body of men have a right to make what laws they
please, or that laws can derive any authority from their institution merely
and independent of the quality of the subject-matter. No argument of policy,
reason of state, or preservation of the constitution can be pleaded in favour of
such a practice.
So he wrote between 1760 and 1765 in Tracts relative to the Laws
against Popery in Ireland and his position is unchanged in 1788
when he denounces Warren Hastings.
Arbitrary power is a thing which neither any man can hold nor any man
can give. . . . We are all born in subjection.
